colts18 wrote:Does Wayne Winston have APM data for 2000?
Yes.
Moderators: Doctor MJ, trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier
colts18 wrote:Does Wayne Winston have APM data for 2000?
DavidStern wrote:colts18 wrote:Does Wayne Winston have APM data for 2000?
Yes.
DavidStern wrote: Really? Mystic was saying that his own metric and RAPM are the best metrics available for predictions.
And when they played less Jazz defense was worse, sometimes below average.
In modern basketball without hand checking. But before rules change it was different story and small players defense was more important (impactfull) than today.
What do you guys think of Cowens being in the conversation soon? I think he's a mini version of Walton and KG to an extent. Elite defense and rebounding, fabulous passing (halfcourt and on the break) and floor spacing puts him in an elite class of "makes teammates better offensively" (edit: Among Cs) - and he's still pretty respectable as scoring when the team needed it, getting up 19-20ppg, he was the Celtics leading scorer in 76 which is the year I plan on voting for. He also seems like one the players who plays with enough energy and heart that it legitimately improves his teammates'. He's as crazy as KG. KG and Walton are clearly better, but the concept of taking a franchise C who can anchor a defense while doing a lot of great supporting things offensively, and perfect intangibles, has value.
I think Moses, Dwight, Cowens is an interesting argument. Moses is the best offensively, but clearly the worst defensively and I don't trust his impact on the defensive glass nearly as much as the other two. Dwight and Cowens are probably close defensively, offensively they are yin and yang - Dwight the powerful scorer who doesn't make his teammates better via passing or floor spacing at all, while that's Cowen's strength. Dwight still makes his teammates better by attracting defense attacking the basket though. I'll have to think about that one (leaning Dwight), but I'd probably take both over Moses. As with Ewing, I believe getting a much better defensive player who still does a lot offensively, is preferrable to Moses who's awesome offensively but hard to trust defensively. The 83 Sixers with Cowens or Howard would've killed the league too.
Dr Positivity wrote:Vote 2003 Tmac
His skillset for a wing is flawless. Penetration, size, shooting, passing, defense. Definitely in the class of best player on a championship team caliber.
I'm not voting for him yet and I know he's not going to get votes against Karl or Tmac, but copying my post on Cowens from last threadWhat do you guys think of Cowens being in the conversation soon? I think he's a mini version of Walton and KG to an extent. Elite defense and rebounding, fabulous passing (halfcourt and on the break) and floor spacing puts him in an elite class of "makes teammates better offensively" (edit: Among Cs) - and he's still pretty respectable as scoring when the team needed it, getting up 19-20ppg, he was the Celtics leading scorer in 76 which is the year I plan on voting for. He also seems like one the players who plays with enough energy and heart that it legitimately improves his teammates'. He's as crazy as KG. KG and Walton are clearly better, but the concept of taking a franchise C who can anchor a defense while doing a lot of great supporting things offensively, and perfect intangibles, has value.
I think Moses, Dwight, Cowens is an interesting argument. Moses is the best offensively, but clearly the worst defensively and I don't trust his impact on the defensive glass nearly as much as the other two. Dwight and Cowens are probably close defensively, offensively they are yin and yang - Dwight the powerful scorer who doesn't make his teammates better via passing or floor spacing at all, while that's Cowen's strength. Dwight still makes his teammates better by attracting defense attacking the basket though. I'll have to think about that one (leaning Dwight), but I'd probably take both over Moses. As with Ewing, I believe getting a much better defensive player who still does a lot offensively, is preferrable to Moses who's awesome offensively but hard to trust defensively. The 83 Sixers with Cowens or Howard would've killed the league too.
MisterWestside wrote:The point is: Stockton also was old but looks much better than Malone.
As an avid Stockton fan (I think he's better than Nash career-wise), RAPM can get out of here with ranking Malone 288th in 2002.
And anyone who thinks Malone was actually at that ranking or anywhere close to it is kidding themselves.
Doctor MJ wrote:Okay, let me say some stuff on this:
The reason to dismiss a start like what you're saying about Malone right off the bat is to say the sample size is too low. What makes the results we're seeing so eye-opening to me is that we now have many years of Malone data:
'04 +0.6
'03 +0.5
'02 -0.9
'01 +2.1
'00 +2.7
colts18 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:Okay, let me say some stuff on this:
The reason to dismiss a start like what you're saying about Malone right off the bat is to say the sample size is too low. What makes the results we're seeing so eye-opening to me is that we now have many years of Malone data:
'04 +0.6
'03 +0.5
'02 -0.9
'01 +2.1
'00 +2.7
Where did you get those 2000 numbers from?
Doctor MJ wrote:
http://stats-for-the-nba.appspot.com/PBP/2000.html
Of note, I think Engelmann mislabeled the numbers at first, which made people thins link referred to '00-01, but no it's '99-00.
An Unbiased Fan wrote:RAPM is just a number. People are putting way too much stock in a lineup evaluation metric, when it overrides so much other evidence of Malone's impact.
Doctor MJ wrote:I'm certainly not willing to put Malone in the Melo zone, but the data is telling me that there's a major disconnect here somewhere.
colts18 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
http://stats-for-the-nba.appspot.com/PBP/2000.html
Of note, I think Engelmann mislabeled the numbers at first, which made people thins link referred to '00-01, but no it's '99-00.
That's not 2000. Charles Barkley and Dennis Rodman played in 2000, but they aren't on that list.
Doctor MJ wrote:
Players who don't play enough minutes don't get assigned ratings.