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Liam Osborn's avatar

Thanks for this.

Is context and game state not important here too?

In the St Mirren example for instance, Celtic get the combined xG for those chances, but you could argue, given they all happen in the same short sequence, we were only ever going to score one goal there, so the xG from missing all of the shots is an inflated representation of our probability of scoring said goal.

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Conor Cahalane's avatar

Tks. Good article

Is total xg at the end of the game just the total of individual xGs?

E.g if Celtic had an xG at the end of a game of 1.5 that could be ten shots with an xG of 0.15 or 2 shots with an xG of 0.8 and 0.7

If that's the case should xG at the end be divided by no of shots?

Tks again

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