Heej wrote:It seems you're somehow approaching this with the understanding that I think this is Ben doing this intentionally. Which in retrospect, maybe it's my fault for using the word "juicing", when I've reiterated over and over again that I think it's just him subconsciously allowing his bias to affect his analysis and over-credit off-ball players for certain plays.
Okay. Full stop.
Of course it's your fault that someone is interpreting your choice of titling your thread with words that implied the allegation of active manipulation as meaningful.
If you don't want people to take issue with you in this way, change how you talk. (That's advice I need to take to heart better myself, but the fact I have analogous issues shouldn't be a surprise. You and I have been swimming in the same ocean.)
Listen, you clearly think that the implied hyperbole of your title is just part of some universal parlance that doesn't actually mean what it says, and that I'm somehow too dense to realize this, but my entire point is that you are wrong about the whole "doesn't actually mean" part.
This is the broader social internet issue I'm speaking to, and this is at the heart with why I'm so frustrated at the tone I'm seeing in discussion on RealGM now.
If we push the feelings of you and others toward Ben to the side right now, what we still have is a choice of thread framing that leaves us talking about Ben instead of talking about actual basketball. And the more we do that, the more we waste time when we could be gaining understanding of basketball, and instead spending it on something a) we don't necessarily think we're interested in when we're coming to these boards - people rather than basketball, and b) we have a clear tendency to develop false knowledge along the way.
And really, few things are more dangerous than false knowledge at this point in time. It's the great cancer of the internet.
But then there are the feelings involved. When we argue contentiously, we develop polarized valence. We develop identity and pride based on being right. And when two sides both have this, they tend to look to cut deeper and deeper. We divide the community we are in, and we cripple it.
I realize that many who read these words will just roll their eyes, but for you Heej, and for everyone else, I want to emphasize that to me this really isn't about the specific topic or specific posters, and I'm sorry if I've said things that feel like personal attacks.
As I've said, by no means am I saying that you or anyone else here is incapable of building up this community, or that you or anyone else are incapable of great insights into basketball that I've never considered before. This isn't about anyone's fundamental capabilities, it's about epistemic approach - about how we try to make sense of the world.
The internet has unleashed vast conduits of information and interaction that has propelled knowledge learning forward at a never before seen rate in human history...but it's done so without guardrails, and as a result we're seeing rapid acquisition of false knowledge through problematic approach.
Such issues are not a new thing to be clear. They've been around since before we had writing, and even in what we could call the Scientific era (really gaining traction in the 1600s), there are various examples attempted-science falling down problematic rabbit holes in grappling with these issues.
But if those issues involved cupping water from a stream and bringing it to your mouth, now we're drinking from the firehose.
Heej wrote:And why is it an issue if you think it's a stat I "don't particularly use" when from what I've seen in a lot of discussions Ben's word as far as certain players' creation. (especially in Kobe and MJ) comparisons is kind of taken almost as word of God. And I felt it prudent to point me out that there are some obvious gaps here watching an off-ball guy in Curry that doesn't seem to show up nearly as much when seeing him dissect on-ball possessions by Jokic for example.
And just to make it clear, I in fact have invited other people's opinions on how much significance Curry has in some of these clips and have been pleased to find people that both agreed with my stance and found their own examples while others have allowed me the opportunity to defend my stance. Meanwhile you're accusing me of claiming conspiracy when I challenge you to find any sort of post where I outright claim I think Ben is doing this on purpose, because as far as I'm concerned I just think his interpretations of creation in these off-ball clips are symptoms of a longer-standing bias against on-ball players. Do I think he's incapable of doing his best to be objective? No. Do I think it affects his ability to be perfectly objective despite his best efforts? Clearly it does.
And it seems you're missing the issue here while citing his automated system because if the fundamental basis of the player tracking it's based on is flawed then it follows that any automated outputs are going to see varying degrees of the same issues.
So, you chose to title your thread focusing not on how Ben watches basketball, but about him biasing one of his statistics, and not because you're using that statistic and are trying to optimize your interpretations from it. And, why? Well, now by your own words, you are bothered by the authority you feel he's allocated by the people you interact with, and are seeking to tear that down.
And again, you chose to use a specific verb in your title that imply active action on his part, and now you want to treat someone pointing out this as unreasonable because you later insisted that that wasn't what you meant. You just wanted to tear down the opinion of the guy's analysis, it's just a coincidence that as you did so you used language to imply premeditated manipulation on his part as well.
Re: Affect his objectivity, clearly it does. Except, you haven't shown that. I would agree that we all have vulnerabilities along these lines, and Ben's no exception, but what you've done is look at a video, decided you'd evaluate what Ben's looking at differently than he does - no problem yet - and then proceed to use that as proof that statistics he's posted on the subject must deviate the precise same way.
Aside from the question of whether him deviate from you means that HE is the one with the problematic objectivity, the more fundamental problem in the chain of logic is the assumption of the correlation between what you see in the video and what the stat says.
As I've said, the stats Ben publishes on the subject are from back when he was actively doing this hand-tracking. When was that? We're talking 2010-ish. A time not simply before Curry was CURRY in the NBA, but before Ben was thinking on the subject like he does today.
None of that makes the stat in question any better - frankly it makes out-dated - but the key point here is that you made assumptions you didn't realize you were making that gave you a false set of confidence that you were drawing meaningful conclusions.
Again, this is a thing that can happen to all of us. It's not particular damning about you that it happened to you here...so long as you can learn from it.
Heej wrote:Ironic employment of the flat-earth trigger phase as it seems the one espousing conspiracy theories here is now you, seeing as how not once have I ever said Ben is part of a grand conspiracy to devalue on-ball players. News flash my man, nobody's perfect and even the best analysts in any field find themselves prey to certain biases that can subconsciously creep into their analysis despite their best efforts. If me pointing out that sometimes I think he over-credits off-ball players for creating baskets is "destructive" to you then idk what to tell you brotha. Maybe you need to let these flat-earth guys traumatize you a bit less.
Conversely, I would say the best thing I can do is bring this to other people's attention and hopefully have others collaborate on this just like how eminence did submitting the Jokic 37 points in the second half video where it seems to me that there were nowhere near as many ticky-tack clips of him over-crediting Jokic on the ball.
I use the term "conspiratorial" because I think people have a sense what I mean. It's not the most accurate term to use because of the implication of group coordination. A better term would be paranoid apophenia. It's something that exists in the head of individual people that when they join together tends to lead to the propagation of conspiracy theories.
Re: "you need to let those flat-earth guys traumatize you a bit less". I would suggest you need to recognize how much you have in common with them in this thread.
Frankly, I think we all do.
Best of luck to you Heej. I think I've already outstayed my welcome in this thread, and so I'll exit and let you have the last word.
Cheers,
Doc





. News flash my man, nobody's perfect and even the best analysts in any field find themselves prey to certain biases that can subconsciously creep into their analysis despite their best efforts. If me pointing out that sometimes I think he over-credits off-ball players for creating baskets is "destructive" to you then idk what to tell you brotha. Maybe you need to let these flat-earth guys traumatize you a bit less. 


















