Doctor MJ wrote:bondom34 wrote:therealbig3 wrote:
Not trying to challenge you or call you out or anything, I was actually curious.
Because it's just really hard to argue with Davis's statistical output this season, and it's not like he disappointed in the playoffs at all. Unless there's something that says he's having a lot less impact than it seems, what exactly is keeping him back from those other players?
In terms of the playoffs, he also had a clearly worse team around him than anyone else still playing. And if that's the requirement, then why isn't the fact that he made the playoffs and Westbrook didn't enough to give Davis the nod?
Ultimately, Davis making the postseason alone wasn't enough, his team had the same record and a worse SRS. I watched WB all season, and that team was literally non-functional w/o him, at the least the Pels were semi-functional w/o AD. I can't argue his output but felt in the end Westbrook's was greater as a whole toward getting OKC to where they were. I can't put either of those 2 ahead of the top 4 clearly,
but think that if you took both of them off their respective teams, the Thunder end up having a greater dropoff than the Pelicans, if that makes sense. And no prob questioning, its good to have people who are interested

.
Welp, here I go again. Let the record show bondom has never been anything but polite even though I end up being negative toward a guy on his team repeatedly:
Your logic makes sense generally, it's just weird given that your reasoning is essentially the basis behind +/- statistics, and literally all of them say Davis had more impact:
Raw +/- rate: Davis +5.6, Westbrook +4.7
Raw on/off: Davis +11.3, Westbrook +6.6 (and let's note that this represents Westbrook's career best)
NPI RAPM: Davis +6.81, Westbrook +1.00
Real Plus Minus: Davis +8.17, Westbrook +7.08
Now in terms of raw wins and losses Westbrook appears to have an edge:
Westbrook 40-27, Davis 39-29
Slight edge for Westbrook, but of course that includes times spent with Durant, and your statement about the team without Westbrook surely means sans Durant also. Here's Westbrook without Durant:
Westbrook 22-18
So to summarize: Every +/- based metric we have favors Davis and without Durant in the lineup, Westbrook had nowhere near the success Davis had.
I think clearly you'd say Westbrook without Durant has much less material to work with in response to the 22-18 point, and I get that, but I feel like your sense of these guys might be based on particular stretches. A stretch where Davis' team did okay without him, and a stretch where Westbrook seemed to make the Thunder downright good with super heroic tactics. Just keep in mind that when you look at the whole season there no metrics that say anything other than: The Pelicans missed Davis like crazy when he didn't play and the Thunder led by Westbrook as the lone star were mediocre.
None of that is outright proof that you're wrong of course, and clearly you think of the Thunder as being really, really weak outside of Westbrook this year which makes your thinking make sense, but if someone asked me to lay out a data-based argument for Westbrook here, I'm honestly not sure how I'd do it.
My argument is based flatly off watching what happened. I'm going to be that guy, but sometimes you really do have to watch the games. I know you're all in on plus/minus and really don't like Westbrook, but I'm running in circles trying to explain at this point. Every time I look at RAPM I'm finding that we're ultimately looking at a game and taking everything we want to see as fans and projecting it onto certain players, and I'm finding it bizarre that certain traits inherently have made players "good" or "bad". The board has suddenly proclaimed Davis better than Durant and Kawhi is a top 5 player, on the basis of a single metric.
In the end, Westbrook had a team in which the following happened, and I'd note all of this is affecting the numbers you're seeing:
1. Start the season, roster is 8 men deep.
2. He returns. Looks okay.
3. KD comes back, fantastic play for a few weeks, he goes out.
4. He looks fantastic for 2 months.
5. Adams, Roberson, and Collison go out while Perkins is traded for Kanter. The defense of the entire team is shot, completely wrecking any semblance of ability to use plus/minus effectively for defense.
6. Adams comes back, team looks amazing again.
7. Ibaka goes out, defense again shot.
So, in summary, Davis's team had actually more continuity w/o him than WB's. There's nothing plus/minus can tell me when the team missed this many key members for weeks on end and they never had a full lineup over 2 weeks. I'm all for the data, but in the end if I can't get any complete data, I need to use what happened and look at what would likely be inferred. Here's an image for games lost and impact (PO teams are green):

Again, I realize you can't stand WB's game, but he had nothing to work with. Given the lack of continuity entirely and what he did, and the fact that according to everyone outside OKC, his coach was as incompetent or moreso than AD's, people just aren't giving credit.
And one final number, to emphasize....
Team games in which players were inactive:
OKC: 196
NOP: 98
Plus/minus can't work with that small a sample and be reliable, its like using it for the playoffs or other small samples early in the season.
I needed a rant. More coffee please this morning.

Edit (re-edited to 2 man lineups):
Lineup minutes for the most used 2 man lineups:
AD:
1915
1375
1320
1110
878
Westbrook:
1411
1228
998
980
778