mysticbb wrote:Rerisen, I think you are trying to rationalize your personal belief here much more than "putting numbers into context"
Everyone's is a 'personal' belief, your personal belief is just in the infallibility of RAPM as a predictor, at least relative to anything else, while I prefer a more wholesome approach using all metrics we have to evaluate players, including firsthand observations, and understanding that players do not have static values.
The issue I have with that is the fact that the results aren't showing it. If the difference is indeed bigger and Rose is more important we should see that either in the results directly or we should see some sort of inconsistency in the data. But neither of those things is there. The results are pretty much in agreement. It just adds up.
The problem is nearly all our ‘results’ are *with* Rose on the team as a starter, other than a weak 10 game sample this year. Which you are giving high esteem to since it just happens to jive with past results, but it’s still not a strong sample of the type and length we truly need to figure out how this team would fare without either player long-term, in order to determine true value.
You say the Bonner example isn’t congruous because of his minutes. And I’m saying that it is similar because you are telling me snippets of Deng playing a few minutes without Rose per game, are going to tell us how the team does at large for 48 minutes every game without him, including closing every tight game the team gets into. It’s not remotely the same circumstances to draw from. That the team choose to purposely rest Rose probably longer than they needed to because they knew they could run over about 5-7 poor teams isn’t really proving much here.
You mentioned Vegas, that’s interesting, be curious to see the source. Last I read about this, none of the stat based models are beating Vegas yet. Though I think last year, Hollinger was the only one to do it. Of course he predicts with a high reliance on PER, and PER doesn’t like Luol Deng too much (it obviously undervalues him), and so does he after
his crack about Deng not being a worthy All-Star. But historically, simply using the last season records of most teams, and repeating them as a prediction, ends up beating most stat based predictions for team wins.
What we find as reasoning against this failure to predict often, is that ‘if only’ players played the same as they had during the time the data was built on these stats, that the predictions would have held true. Yet something is missing there. Do players not play the same only because they get better or worse, which certainly happens, but maybe also because their circumstances change? And that most stats have very little way to understand these circumstance changes.
Ronnie Brewer and Joakim Noah are tied for 3rd biggest impact on the Bulls by RAPM. So are both equally valuable to the Bulls assuming even minutes? RAPM would apparently think so, but losing Joakim would hurt far more, because the Bulls have Rip Hamilton now.
If we play a Bulls season without Rose and without Deng, and the Bulls won noticeably less with Deng, your reasoning would be that Deng just played much worse, impacted less. As indeed he might (at least offensively) if the team was robbed of a legit first option for an entire season.
But just perhaps his decline would be because the burden on him suddenly became much greater. Much greater than it is in a giant pool of minutes, but where most of that pool is made up of little drops from individual games where Deng only plays without Rose for a few minutes at a time, against mostly subpar opponents, and where he is never asked to produce as much in crunch time. When expectations were highest for Deng to become a superstar in 08, and he was nearly traded, he pretty much fell apart mentally and had a depressed season under the strain.
I could be wrong and that the Bulls would do worse with Rose and no Deng. And that at the end of a season Luol Deng would have the exact same RAPM with or without Rose on the team. However, I don’t think so, because I do not believe in an absolute static value of players regardless of circumstance. And a team losing its best player (or I guess 2nd best, if you believe Deng is secretly the Bulls best player…) is a pretty massive circumstance change. Not as big as Lebron going from Cleveland to Miami, but pretty big.
However, a team losing its *perceived* best player, and unquestionable leader, which is certainly Rose, would without question be more devastating. I.e, losing Rose over Deng. The Bulls are built on the symbiotic drive of Thibodeau and Rose, coach and best player working together. That Rose misses 10 games means little if everyone knows he is coming back (I think Vegas knew). But If he is not coming back… then your team morale and cohesion sees something much different likely occur. Not admitting this is living in a fantasy world where human beings and psychology do not exist.
Specifically about Deng’s RAPM, it has not stayed static as it is the last few years. Common belief is that a glue guy gains value the better a team becomes, and I think this makes sense. It also matches up with Deng’s value being highest when the Bulls have been better. Take Derrick Rose off the Bulls and they are a lot worse. Take Deng off and they are too of course, but in either situation where the team is noticeably worse, good chance Rose’s ability to impact wins increases relative to Deng, and even RAPM apostles might see how history shows this to be true.
Deng RAPM by year:
2007 4.3 (Team won 49)
2008 1.8 (Team won 33)
2009 1.8 (Team won 41)
2010 2.6 (Team won 41)
2011 4.8 (team won 62)
2012 5.8 (team on a 64 win pace)
So has Deng suddenly become much better? He is pretty much the same player he’s always been, other than Thibodeau imposing on him that he shoot threes instead of so many long two’s. Yet his efficiency has went down this year despite it, and his overall production has yet to again match what it was in 2007. Deng is really not that different of a player, but he is a player that is being maximized in the current team environment. Change that environment around drastically, especially making it worse, and I think Deng is far more at risk than Derrick Rose in losing impact. So... I could almost buy Deng as MVP on the
current Bulls... but they could afford to lose Rose far less. ---- Sorry for length.