Post#7 » by ronnymac2 » Tue Feb 1, 2011 8:05 am
Amare pretty easily. I like Nene though. I voted him as my western conference all-star C this year.
I'm starting to understand how efficiency stats work now. Nene is a mega-efficient player, but at a modest usage, at a modest volume, and in somewhat limited minutes. He's also only the second or third option on his team.
Stoudemire is simply an efficient player, but at a crazy usage, at elite volume, and in superstar minutes. He's the first option on his team. Obviously, Stoudemire is more valuable statistically.
This is why players like Horace Grant and Nene and Tyson Chandler have insanely good efficiency numbers such as offensive rating, offensive win shares, etc. They do their SIMPLE job at an elite level. The superstar offensive players like Jordan, Melo, and Nowitzki do a far more difficult job. Their main function is at a different level, as evidenced by their greater volume, usage, and overall responsibility (as seen from the eye test). Nene, Grant, and Chandler don't need to take the offensive risks that superstars take to carry their teams. The middle-job guys only need to play efficiently, stay within the scope of their skills, and play off the mega-stars.
Then we get into what enables Amar'e to be better offensively than Nene....Amar'e is a hybrid of Melo and Rip Hamilton plus height. Another way of looking at Amar'e's skills is that he is the power forward version of Michael Jordan AS A SCORER (not as good as Jordan, but in style, they actually have a lot in common). Nene is merely a very good offensive role player who can score reasonably in isolation every once in a while.
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