doclinkin wrote:PIF being a **** as usual LOL, after a bunch of bloviating uncovered an interesting idea when he wrotepayitforward]That must be why stars like Kemba Walker, Nicolas Batum, Jimmy Butler, Ty Lawson, Trey Burke, Courtney Lee and Vander Blue are down there near their fellow star Durant. Right?.[/quote]
I think the ...test case example will be Draymond Green who was a bottom feeder on the list of most foul prone heavy minute players, but whose playoff work not only got him mightily well paid but raised his reputation league wide as a great defender etc etc. If his foul rate drops significantly after his team has won then it tends to go towards b/a's point: winners get more leeway, better calls. [/quote]
Nah. For one thing, a single instance can't work that way in answering this kind of question: you can find a single instance of anything you want.
More importantly, there is no question that stars get some calls other guys don't get. No one has denied that in this thread. That doesn't mean these calls are significant in determining wins and losses. Keep in mind that pretty much every team has *some* kind of (at least so-called) star.
[quote="doclinkin wrote:Cousins is a big whiner sissypants baby. ...I think Boogie whines less when he is winning. Thus he surely would get better calls on a winning team. And I think Wall is one of the few players who can catch his attention and calm him down once he gets in a rant or a sulk or a pamper wetting tantrum.
1 - 'big... baby' -- tell me, Doc, how many actual games have you actually seen Cousins actually play that you can blithely characterize him that way? You got any actual evidence for any of that? for "sissypants", "big... baby", or even "whiner" for that matter?
2 - 'whines less when... winning' -- tell me, Doc, do you have any evidence of any kind for this claim? Or is it just (so-called) common sense climbing up to the papal throne and declaiming ex cathedra?
3. 'I think Wall... can... calm him down' -- tell me, Doc, do you know John Wall? DeMarcus Cousins? Someone who knows them both well?
Oh... and along those same lines, you don't know me either -- so stop calling me names, ok? Even ones obscured by asterisks. I don't call you names, Doc; don't call me names.doclinkin wrote:But if the real argument is Gortat vs Boogie, I think the stat that the PIFfler brought out is the one that is more relevant: Cuzzo draws fouls like a gravity well. He's a load to handle, and because of that opponents often have no choice but to hack and hang on, and even then he still scores through the contact. And to me this is more key in the playoffs: the ability to score despite the defense, even when the refs allow more contact etc.
Sorry, no prize. First off, it's the ability to score *efficiently*, not just to score, that matters. Cousins hasn't shown that ability. Yet, if you miss a shot but are fouled, the attempt isn't counted. If you make, you also go to the line. That's hyper-efficient, no doubt about it. Yet, even with all his foul shots, Cousins is quite inefficient for a big. If it were true that "he still scores through contact", If he has all those hyper-efficient scores, how's that happen?




















