Dumping
The percentages I used:
Chance of scoring from the x yard line
Yard line 70 60 40 20 10
Great team .5 .57 .71 .86 .93
Average .3 .4 .6 .8 .9
Poor .07 .2 .47 .73 .87
Chance of a player completing a y yard pass
Yards 40 20 10 -5 (4 different ones)
Great .4 .75 .85 .98 .95 .9 .8
Average .3 .6 .75 .98 .95 .9 .8
Poor .2 .45 .6 .98 .95 .9 .8
At first glance, these completion rates may appear low. However, they were chosen to reflect the difficulty of completing a pass at a high stall count, which is when the dump should be used.
Simplifying assumptions:
Other relevant data:
At Nationals this year, the Open division had a completion rate of 88%, and the Women completed 82.5%. Goal scoring rate was about 90% once a team crossed the 10, about 35% from their own goal line.
Results:
I have the full matrix available, but I'll summarize the trends.
Conclusions:
Being able to dump will increase a player's value to almost every team. A high percentage dump pass, even though the team is further away from scoring than before and thus will have a lower likelihood of scoring, is often the best option available.
In general, if a team is likely to score, a conservative option should be chosen. If a team is unlikely to score, the higher risk, higher gain pass should be taken.
If you reran the numbers using completion rates at all stall counts, the dump would probably be advantageous only for poor players on good teams. But this article is looking at the use of the dump as a high stall count option.