The blue line is a 20-game moving average (the orange is cumulative), and you’re seeing that right a team close to the middle of the pack dropped nearly two standard deviations, or from near the top to near the bottom of the league. The yellow and grey lines indicate one standard deviation above and below league-average historical possession (using 2-Period Shot Percentage, or 2pS%, explained here). The graph above is just one example of their tank, and man is that bad. Case in-point: the 1983-84 Pittsburgh Penguins, routinely considered the most overt of tankers in NHL history. While tanking is a hot topic in this year’s NHL, the act of tanking is as old as the idea of granting the worst teams a shot at the #1 pick in the draft.
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