There is a positive correlation between turnover differential and winning percentage. We can conclude that 44% of the variation in a team’s winning percentage can be explained by their turnover differential.
http://blog.minitab.com/blog/the-statistics-game/a-statistical-look-at-how-turnovers-impacted-the-nfl-seasonThe Dolphins have enjoyed an 8-1 turnover margin during their recent four-game win streak.
Extrapolated to a 16-game season, that's a turnover margin of 32-4, or +28.
Here are the teams
leading the league, and their turnover margins, over the last five regular seasons:
2015 Carolina Panthers: +20
2014 Green Bay Packers: +14
2013 Seattle Seahawks: +20
2012 New England Patriots: +25
2011 San Francisco 49ers: +28
Of course the average team in the league during those five years likely had a turnover margin around zero, and the worst teams in the league with regard to turnover margin were as bad as -24 (the 2012 Philadelphia Eagles, for example).
Here are some other facts about turnovers, taken from the same page linked above:
With regard to fumble recoveries:
This clearly shows that there is no skill in causing and recovering fumbles in the NFL. The number of fumbles a defense recovers in the 1st half of the season explains 1.6% of the variation in the number of fumbles they recover in the 2nd half of the season. It’s completely random. But even though teams have no control over their fumble recoveries, we saw previously that it plays a huge part in their record.
With regard to defensive interceptions:
Just like fumbles, defensive interceptions are completely random! Look at Tampa Bay at the top of the plot. After the 1st half of the season they had only 6 interceptions and were 0-8. Would anybody have predicted that in the 2nd half of the season they would more than double their interceptions and have as many as the Seattle Seahawks (considered one of the best defenses in the NFL)? Of course not!
Oh, and after going 0-8 to start the season, Tampa Bay finished 4-4. Their increase in interceptions was a major factor, as 11 of their 15 interceptions in the 2nd half of the season came in their 4 wins. It’s easy to look back in hindsight and say those interceptions explain why they won. But this plot shows that defensive interceptions are so random that it is impossible to predict in which games they will occur.
With regard to interceptions thrown:
There is a weak [emphasis mine] positive correlation between interceptions in the 1st and 2nd half of the season. So of all the turnovers that we looked at, this is the only one that isn’t completely random. The small R-squared value shows that interceptions can still be erratic, but there is at least some skill in not throwing interceptions.
So with this information in tow, one could argue that the Dolphins' recent four-game win streak has been accomplished largely with "smoke and mirrors" if you will, in that it has relied largely upon their being the beneficiaries of good luck in an area that's strongly related to winning.
When one benefits from events that are largely random in nature, one is purely
lucky.
So, the folks here are certainly smart enough to know what all this can potentially mean for the Dolphins' future.