TS% vs FG%
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TS% vs FG%
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TS% vs FG%
Which one should be valued more? I was leaning towards TS% because it can more or less tell you what FG% doesn't.
For example, if you're comparing Kobe and Wade, Wade blows Kobe out of the water with his FG%. (Wade: '06-'12 49%FG ; Kobe: '06-'12 45%FG ) But when you look into TS% it gets much closer : 56% for Kobe to 57% for Wade.
Which would be a better indicator of efficiency on offense?
For example, if you're comparing Kobe and Wade, Wade blows Kobe out of the water with his FG%. (Wade: '06-'12 49%FG ; Kobe: '06-'12 45%FG ) But when you look into TS% it gets much closer : 56% for Kobe to 57% for Wade.
Which would be a better indicator of efficiency on offense?
Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
Both have value, but it obviously depends on what you want to know. If you want to know at what rate someone converts his field goal attempts, FG% is telling you that. If you want to know how efficient someone is converting his scoring opportunities, TS% will tell you that. TS% is a better indicator in terms of overall scoring impact than FG%. So, when you use PPG as one variable to get a grasp on the scoring volume, TS% should be used to determine efficiency.
Re: TS% vs FG%
- sixerswillrule
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Re: TS% vs FG%
You don't even need to look as far as TS% to see that gap close between Wade and Kobe. eFG% shows that. Kobe shoots more threes than Wade. Threes are worth more than twos. FG% is a poor and generally useless stat because it combines shots that are worth different amounts of points. For scoring efficiency from the field, use eFG%. For overall scoring efficiency, use TS%.
Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
FG% is really meaningless unless you're comparing two guys who never shoot 3's.
eFG% vs TS% is a more interesting debate.
eFG% vs TS% is a more interesting debate.
Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
Ahh, I see.
But lets say you're comparing Michael Beasley vs. Nicolas Batum, purely on offense:
MB: .472%FG | .407%3pt | .772%FT( 2009 ) -- 13.9PPG
NB: .451%FG | .391%3pt | .836%FT( 2012 ) -- 13.9PPG
Beasley shot a better percentage from the field, and 3 point line, but Batum edged him out at the FT line. Beasley's TS% was .528, and Batum's .575. Is it worth it to value the FG% and 3pt% differential between the two( Though marginal ), even though Batum's TS% was higher?
But lets say you're comparing Michael Beasley vs. Nicolas Batum, purely on offense:
MB: .472%FG | .407%3pt | .772%FT( 2009 ) -- 13.9PPG
NB: .451%FG | .391%3pt | .836%FT( 2012 ) -- 13.9PPG
Beasley shot a better percentage from the field, and 3 point line, but Batum edged him out at the FT line. Beasley's TS% was .528, and Batum's .575. Is it worth it to value the FG% and 3pt% differential between the two( Though marginal ), even though Batum's TS% was higher?
Re: TS% vs FG%
- sixerswillrule
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Re: TS% vs FG%
This was already answered for you in viewtopic.php?f=344&t=1188160
Just looking at the each percentage doesn't tell you much. Beasley barely took threes that year. Less than 10 percent of his shots were threes. 43 percent of Batum's shots were threes. There is the difference. Batum scored more points with the shots he took.
Just looking at the each percentage doesn't tell you much. Beasley barely took threes that year. Less than 10 percent of his shots were threes. 43 percent of Batum's shots were threes. There is the difference. Batum scored more points with the shots he took.
Re: TS% vs FG%
- sixerswillrule
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Re: TS% vs FG%
Example:
Player A
50 for 100 from the field = 50%
4 for 10 from three = 40%
17 for 20 from FT = 85%
Player B
47 for 100 from the field = 47%
11 for 30 from three = 37%
32 for 40 from FT = 80%
Looking at percentages: Player A is clearly the better scorer
Reality: .556 TS% for player A vs. .582 for player B = player B is clearly the better scorer
Player A
50 for 100 from the field = 50%
4 for 10 from three = 40%
17 for 20 from FT = 85%
Player B
47 for 100 from the field = 47%
11 for 30 from three = 37%
32 for 40 from FT = 80%
Looking at percentages: Player A is clearly the better scorer
Reality: .556 TS% for player A vs. .582 for player B = player B is clearly the better scorer
Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
sixerswillrule wrote:This was already answered for you in viewtopic.php?f=344&t=1188160
Just looking at the each percentage doesn't tell you much. Beasley barely took threes that year. Less than 10 percent of his shots were threes. 43 percent of Batum's shots were threes. There is the difference. Batum scored more points with the shots he took.
My bad. I didn't even look at the shot attempts this time for some reason.
Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
When looking at bigs (most bigs) FG% is going to be what you're looking at since most don't shoot 3s. A good scoring big doesn't have to shoot 3s to be a good scorer in this instance. A high fg% will indicate that he's high percentage shooter (regardless of whether he's shooting most of them from underneath the basket). 60% fg% is pretty darn efficient which is what your top Centers can shoot. Your guards and SFs who shoot 3s at a pretty good clip will be the ones who have the higher TS%.
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Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
I don't use TS% all that much. I generally use efg, which tells me about a player's shooting efficiency from the floor, and FT%, which tells me his proficiency from the line. TS% is a good combination of the two, but if I'm looking at a summary measure of efficiency, I prefer individual offensive rating, which also incorporates turnovers, assists and offensive rebounding.
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Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
if fg% was split into
2 pt fg% n 3 pt fg%.
there wouldnt be any of this confusion
2 pt fg% n 3 pt fg%.
there wouldnt be any of this confusion
Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
Check the boxscores. Most now give 3 pt shots made and shots attempted. Combine that with fga and fgm (you can do a quick calculation in your head) and you'll get a pretty good idea of what TS% or more importantly how the guy shot overall. TS% is nice if you want to do a comparison and it gives you just the one number to look at instead of having to do the calculations yourself.
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Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
Another point that can be made is this:
Zone-specific FG% is very valuable, especially when you compare it against league average for a player's position (even more so if you slap a games- and minutes-played requirement on there). It can be very useful for looking at ability in a particular area. As a descriptor of overall scoring efficiency, it's entirely lacking, though. Creating more points per possession is valuable, and TS% (especially when you look at it relative to league average and positional average, as above) starts to give you a better picture.
Zone-specific FG% is very valuable, especially when you compare it against league average for a player's position (even more so if you slap a games- and minutes-played requirement on there). It can be very useful for looking at ability in a particular area. As a descriptor of overall scoring efficiency, it's entirely lacking, though. Creating more points per possession is valuable, and TS% (especially when you look at it relative to league average and positional average, as above) starts to give you a better picture.
Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
perun wrote:if fg% was split into
2 pt fg% n 3 pt fg%.
there wouldnt be any of this confusion
It's annoying that box scores still list things as overall fg% and 3 pt fg%.
It's not a huge deal to subtract out the 3pt shots, but separating them out explicitly would be more informative at a glance (and overall fg% gets misused so often by casual fans/lazy sportswriters that it's presence should be minimized).
Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
I personally prefer TS%, which adjusts for the value of a three point shot and free throw shooting - extremely important factors in valuing someone's efficiency. FG% only tells you their percentage of overall shots from the field but doesn't take into consideration that a three point shot results in more points than a two point shot, OR that free throws matter.
TS% is a pretty good "advanced" stat because it helps show the value of players like Dirk and other perimeter shooting big men, while showing that their overall efficiency isn't much worse than more traditional big men, if at all.
TS% is a pretty good "advanced" stat because it helps show the value of players like Dirk and other perimeter shooting big men, while showing that their overall efficiency isn't much worse than more traditional big men, if at all.
Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
turk3d wrote:Check the boxscores. Most now give 3 pt shots made and shots attempted. Combine that with fga and fgm (you can do a quick calculation in your head) and you'll get a pretty good idea of what TS% or more importantly how the guy shot overall. TS% is nice if you want to do a comparison and it gives you just the one number to look at instead of having to do the calculations yourself.
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Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
I would say FG% has just about zero value. I'm quite suprised how many people fail to grasp basic math, and utilize this stat.
EFG% has more value, but is still extremly flawed, and I can't imagine ever using it.
TS% is flawed, but captures the scoring efficeincy well enough, and is the best option we have. It would be best if someone tracked each individual 'and 1', but an estimate atleast returns a reasonably accurate picture of scoring efficiency.
EFG% has more value, but is still extremly flawed, and I can't imagine ever using it.
TS% is flawed, but captures the scoring efficeincy well enough, and is the best option we have. It would be best if someone tracked each individual 'and 1', but an estimate atleast returns a reasonably accurate picture of scoring efficiency.
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Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
TS% in my opinion is pretty much the same as PPP...the formula may vary depending on whether FT's are weighted .5 or .44, and whether or not turnovers are counted, but generally TS% should be highly correlated with PPP.
I agree FG% is pretty useless. At the very least use eFG% instead.
I agree FG% is pretty useless. At the very least use eFG% instead.
Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
Hendrix wrote:I would say FG% has just about zero value. I'm quite suprised how many people fail to grasp basic math, and utilize this stat.
EFG% has more value, but is still extremly flawed, and I can't imagine ever using it.
TS% is flawed, but captures the scoring efficeincy well enough, and is the best option we have. It would be best if someone tracked each individual 'and 1', but an estimate atleast returns a reasonably accurate picture of scoring efficiency.
How is EFG% flawed?
Re: TS% vs FG%
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Re: TS% vs FG%
fallacy wrote:I just told you in my post. Having a raw, unadjusted, percentage of shots made is valuable. That would be like saying that raw assists and raw rebounds are worthless stats because we have ast% and reb%
That doesn't explain the value FG%. You just described what it measures. And called it valuable.
Raw rebounds are useless.
AST% and raw assists aren't really the same thing so they both have use. If I need to explain I can.
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