2015_Year_in_Review

The Performance Rankings were introduced in 2012 as a statistical analysis based on the average numerical score of all cigars assessed on Cigar Coop. Originally this was done by brand, but last year was expanded to include Country of Origin and Vitola Today we slice this data by Country of Origin. This is not meant to be necessarily an award, but a look at how scoring went, and what can we learn from it.

For 2016, a total of 243 (down from 247 in 2015) cigars were considered for this analysis.

We used the following criteria to implement this:

  1. The cigar must have its scored published during the 2016 Cigar Coop Cigar Year that ran from November 27, 2015 to November 24, 2016.
  2. All cigars scored were eligible regardless of release date. The goal here is to see how the brand performed during the Cigar Coop Cigar Year.
  3. The majority of the cigars smoked are from the Dominican Republic, Honduras, and Nicaragua. As a result these three countries have a significantly larger sample set than other cigar producing countries. As a result, the sampling data has been divided into two groups – small and large.
  4. Countries where there was not a country of origin specified are not included.

Large Sampling Data > 20 Cigars

 Rank

 Country

 Avg Score
# of Cigars (2016) 


 Avg Score
# of Cigars (2015) 


 Difference 

 1  Dominican Republic  91.44 (83)  91.27 (93)  0.17
 2  Nicaragua  90.62 (115)  90.73 (100)  -0.11
 3  Honduras  90.3 (21)  90.29 (28)  0.04

Small Sampling Data <= 20 Cigars

 Rank 

 Country 

 Avg Score
# of Cigars (2016) 


 Avg Score
# of Cigars (2015)
 Difference 

 1  Costa Rica  91.55 (11)  91.43 (7)  0.12
 2  United States  91.25 (8)  91.75 (8)  -0.50
 3  Mexico  91  —-  —
 4  Brazil  90.0 (8)  87.0 (8)  3.00

 

Assessing the Results

  1. The big observation is how close the scoring was by Country of Origin between 2015 and 2016. In fact there was not a huge difference in the amount of cigars smoked. Throwing out Brazil and Mexico which each only had one cigar assessed, the scoring in the smaller data set was even close.
  2. The Dominican Republic once again beat out Nicaragua for the second year in a row. This year the gap between the two countries widened in favor of the Dominican Republic. Last year the gap was 0.54.  This year the gap was 0.82. A strong year by Davidoff can be considered a contributing factor here.
  3. Technically Costa Rica was the winner of the average score, but 11 cigars is still ultimately too small a set. Much of Costa Rica’s strength was done because Bombay Tobak (who makes its cigars in Costa Rica) had a very strong year on Cigar Coop.
  4. Mexico and Brazil are included for completeness, but only one cigar from each of these countries was assessed.
  5. Like last year, one can argue with only 281cigars reviewed from Honduras compared to 100 from Nicaragua, that Honduras didn’t have enough sampling data for an apples to apples comparison. At the same time, the sample set was significantly more than the U.S. and Costa Rica.  Ultimately rather than create a middle category, I chose to put it with the Larger Sampler.