ty 4191 wrote:What year did the rules change? Do you have a source for this?
What rules? The scorekeepers have always had discretion when it came to recording stats, since most stats are at least partly subjective.
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ty 4191 wrote:What year did the rules change? Do you have a source for this?
SomeBunghole wrote:ty 4191 wrote:What year did the rules change? Do you have a source for this?
What rules? The scorekeepers have always had discretion when it came to recording stats, since most stats are at least partly subjective.
ty 4191 wrote:You're telling me the rules and enforcement of said rules (re: what constitutes an assist) haven't changed?
mid-post wrote:I've bitched about how overstated the assist is (especially if it's not scored the right way).
But I have another problem with the assist as a statistic; it's one thing to recognize a teammate being open for an easy basket and hitting him for a look you know he'll hit at a high percentage. It's a whole different story if all you do is have the ball the whole game and pass the ball to teammates 80 times hoping they shoot it every time.
I'm not saying that's totally how it breaks down, but as an offensive efficiency metric the assist is lacking. I think a better way to measure it would be: what percentage of passes after a teammate has taken a shot leads to an actual assist? That way you're better measuring whether a guy is making the right reads on a per-possession basis or if he's just giving it up to guys who like to shoot the ball a lot, playing in a really high-pace offense, etc.
So you'd have stats like:
FGA/pass into a shot
FG/pass into a shot
FG%/pass into a shot
ie Mike Conley passes it to Marc 5 times, Marc takes the shot 3 times and makes it twice.
So just to make it clearer:
3 Field Goal attempts/5 passes into a shot
2 FG/5 passes into shots
2FG/3FGA=.666FG%/pass into a shot
I think that would be a lot better at measuring the kinds of looks you actually create for teammates and how good you are at reading offensive situations. And I don't think it would be that hard to keep track of.
The other problem with the assist is that it also rewards guys who play in a system where people are more likely to take jumpers, because if you're dropping it off to guys down low, a lot of the time they're getting fouled and going to the line instead of scoring a basket. I don't know if it breaks down that way statistically, but that's what I suspect anyway.
WhateverBro wrote:While todays assist numbers are inflated: they're just as inflated as Stocktons and Magics numbers. So Rondos features isn't less impressive than theirs, we'd have to go back longer to actually notice a difference. Cousy is a good example.
Phreak50 wrote:WhateverBro wrote:While todays assist numbers are inflated: they're just as inflated as Stocktons and Magics numbers. So Rondos features isn't less impressive than theirs, we'd have to go back longer to actually notice a difference. Cousy is a good example.
This is complete garbage.
The current era assist is a completely different thing to what Stockton and Magic had.
You can pass to a guy now who is completely stationary. He can jab step, pump fake, then drive, dribbling as long as he wants, then stop, fake out a defender and hit a shot. That is an assist today. Every day of the week.
It has never, ever been that bad.
If the guy catching the ball has to do any work, it shouldn't be an assist.
You should watch some of the disgraceful **** the Spurs scorers gave Wemby an assist for in his first bunch of games.
WhateverBro wrote:Phreak50 wrote:WhateverBro wrote:While todays assist numbers are inflated: they're just as inflated as Stocktons and Magics numbers. So Rondos features isn't less impressive than theirs, we'd have to go back longer to actually notice a difference. Cousy is a good example.
This is complete garbage.
The current era assist is a completely different thing to what Stockton and Magic had.
You can pass to a guy now who is completely stationary. He can jab step, pump fake, then drive, dribbling as long as he wants, then stop, fake out a defender and hit a shot. That is an assist today. Every day of the week.
It has never, ever been that bad.
If the guy catching the ball has to do any work, it shouldn't be an assist.
You should watch some of the disgraceful **** the Spurs scorers gave Wemby an assist for in his first bunch of games.
I wrote that post 11 years ago.
Doctor MJ wrote:
I think the way to look at stats like this is:

The lower FG% league wide, when we compare shot quality from when Oscar played to later seasons and now is also a factor. If Oscar threw similar quality passes now with the same assist rules as when he played, he would also get more apg simply because more of the shots would be made.ty 4191 wrote:SomeBunghole wrote:ty 4191 wrote:What year did the rules change? Do you have a source for this?
What rules? The scorekeepers have always had discretion when it came to recording stats, since most stats are at least partly subjective.
Did you see my post several posts up?
viewtopic.php?p=109267330#p109267330
They've been tracking assist % since 1964-1965. The overall leader, Oscar Robertson, for the first 10 years of tracking wouldn't even be in the top 20 in assist % the past 10 years!!!
You're telling me the rules and enforcement of said rules (re: what constitutes an assist) haven't changed?

ty 4191 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
I think the way to look at stats like this is:
Hi Doc,
https://www.reddit.com/r/nba/comments/9c546y/in_the_1968_nba_season_when_wilt_chamberlain_lead/
First hand testimonials re: the assist rules in the 60's.
(Clearly, far more stringent and restrictive/limiting of assists than the past 40 years.)
Vindicater wrote:Put it this way.
Bob Cousy won an assist title averaging 7apg in an era where teams scored well over 100ppg average.
The assist stat is ridicilous. I have seen guys get an assist after the person they passed to took three dribbles and did a spin move.
I think at the moment you are given an assist if you are the last person to pass to someone before they score. Even if they waste 20 seconds of the clock in an iso move.
Harry Garris wrote:I think it has more to do with the quality of the scorekeepers and how much home cooking goes on than the era in history. John Stockton's assist per game average at home was much higher than on road games for example.

ty 4191 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
I think the way to look at stats like this is:
Hi Doc,
https://www.reddit.com/r/nba/comments/9c546y/in_the_1968_nba_season_when_wilt_chamberlain_lead/
First hand testimonials re: the assist rules in the 60's.
(Clearly, far more stringent and restrictive/limiting of assists than the past 40 years.)

og15 wrote:ty 4191 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
I think the way to look at stats like this is:
Hi Doc,
https://www.reddit.com/r/nba/comments/9c546y/in_the_1968_nba_season_when_wilt_chamberlain_lead/
First hand testimonials re: the assist rules in the 60's.
(Clearly, far more stringent and restrictive/limiting of assists than the past 40 years.)
Are people are lot more lenient on Wilt with all these stat padding and basically selfish play stories that are there about him than they are on a guy like Westbrook grabbing fee defensive rebounds for example? Westbrook’s situation isn’t hurting the team, but Wilt not wanting to pass to guys who wouldn’t shoot right away because of assists it all levels bad for a team atmosphere.

Hoppy1 wrote:From NBA Video Rule Book:
An assist is credited to the player tossing the last pass leading directly to a made field goal, but only if the player scoring the goal demonstrates an immediate reaction toward the basket after receiving the pass.

Hoop Hunter wrote:The player receiving a pass can make 1 dribble and it's still a assist. That's it as for as rules go.
Not sure when or if the rules have ever changed.