SmartWentCrazy wrote:bondom34 wrote:SmartWentCrazy wrote:
PER is just one of the many statistics grading Brown out favorably. Facts are, Bender was pathetic at every facet related to offensive performance other than providing spacing because his entire game relies on him parking behind the 3 point line.
He may grade out better defensively per APM (though, I'll plead ignorance, what are the inputs? Could you provide me a link to last year's grades? The only thing I could see online is a distinct warning from the authors on small sample sizes, which likely applies to both Brown and Bender), but I'd argue that Brown still showed well on that end for a rookie.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1CiOqGlz6zjjmjUlJBNOXflG6wYAS1RLjZjtZSQHraF4/edit?usp=sharing
It's RAPM. Lineup data is the main input along w/ scoring margin. And Brown doesn't show remotely well, he's near worst in the NBA. Brown wasn't good offensively either, wasn't good defensively, and is older. And RAPM is generally more predictive than other metrics.
I'm confused how you can rely on RAPM when it comes to evaluating Brown vs Bender and also not 100% love the Bradley for Morris trade? Moving to player ~150 from ~420 at the expense of a second rounder in 2019 feels like it should be a home run A+ move, especially when considering contracts. Yet you seemed ambivalent. Why?
Because it's not the only thing I use, and Boston has about 100 SFs when Bradley was tradable for a big? And Morris is really redundant, doesn't fill a need, and you gave up a 2nd? You got a slightly better player who doesn't fit a need and gave up assets.







