It's very difficult to quantify, too many other factors.
Say you have 100% familiarity with the 2-3 outside runs, but your opponent has 100% defensive familiarity with those same plays, has anticipated their use, and set up a rule. He also has MONSTER ends and slot backs. You will generally get stuffed.
On the other hand, it is 3rd and short, you sub in a fresh WR and go for that 0% LP that everyone forgot was in the playbook. TD! You're a genius! . . . It does happen.
I recently had an opportunity to significantly upgrade a QB. The new guy only knows about half my current playbook well. I've made an effort to call more of the passes he knows well, but he's been struggling. Is it just . . . he will improve as he learns? . . . or some code tweak in a version change that happened about the same time? Then it's time to rethink the playbook. . . . dumb luck? . . . better opponents? . . .
Familiarity will have a greater impact at certain positions than others. My new big dumb LG knows the difference between pass block and run block. It doesn't make a whole lot of difference how well he knows the playbook, but he affects my play familiarity average score.
A team that calls 20 plays they know 100% will generally beat a team with +5 average player ratings that calls 40 plays they know 30% . . . by a lot.
To sum up - high familiarity
good, low familiarity
bad
Last edited at 3/15/2019 7:42 pm