Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics

Moderators: trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier, Doctor MJ

ceoofkobefans
Senior
Posts: 540
And1: 305
Joined: Jun 27, 2021
Contact:
     

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#21 » by ceoofkobefans » Fri Dec 30, 2022 11:54 pm

migya wrote:
MiamiBulls wrote:Win Shares is fairly junky and archaic. One thing that's very obvious about Win Shares is that WS overweights Rebounding specifically Defensive Rebounding.


Yet Garnett has low ws/48 compared to most star bigs and he rebounds among the best.


That’s because the other thing that is heavily overvalued by WS is raw efficiency which KG isn’t great in (usually around +2 to +3 rTS in his prime)
ty 4191
Veteran
Posts: 2,598
And1: 2,017
Joined: Feb 18, 2021
   

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#22 » by ty 4191 » Fri Dec 30, 2022 11:57 pm

OhayoKD wrote:
ty 4191 wrote:Which players have the highest career on/off in the playoffs, all time?

Going off ben's videos(note it doesn't include non jordan pre-97 players), going by 3 year stretches you have Duncan/Drob topping, 16-18 Lebron second(among the players he shows), and then curry, shaq and jordan tied for 3rd iirc(shaq actually shows up at 2nd but then unibro and 70's found ben made a statistical error.


To clarify further, per 100 possessions.

A few notables (don't know how to sort this on BBRef):

-KG: +14.5 (career) Prime (97'-08'): +13.3
-LeBron: +10.8 (career) Prime (08'-18'): +13.1
-Duncan: +7.5 (career) Prime (98'-08'): +9.0
-Curry: +11.7 (career) Prime (12'-19'): +14.6

Anyone have on/off per 100 poss organized in a database for pre 96'-97' players?

Thanks!
ceoofkobefans
Senior
Posts: 540
And1: 305
Joined: Jun 27, 2021
Contact:
     

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#23 » by ceoofkobefans » Fri Dec 30, 2022 11:58 pm

OhayoKD wrote:
70sFan wrote:
migya wrote:
How?

You can read about it here:

https://fansided.com/2019/01/08/nylon-calculus-best-advanced-stat/

You may have seen this before, but for posterity, this study builds off ben's base(or at least claims to):
https://dunksandthrees.com/blog/metric-comparison

ceoofkobefans wrote:Funnily enough WS (and especially adjusting it to /48 minutes) is up there for one of the worst impact metrics there is lol. I love WS so I try not to **** on it but it is based on the player versions of ORTG and DRTG which makes it one of the worst metrics at evaluating defense and it’s ok at evaluating offense. Some of the best impact metrics are EPM DARKO DPM RAPTOR And everyone’s favorite RAPM (although needs a large sample). Historically RAPTOR and Back Picks’ version of BPM are probably the best impact metrics you’ll get

Eh........RAPTOR and BPM don't have historical plus-minus data pre-97 which means they're basically just ws/48 or PER when it comes to "historic" players.

You're probably better off using WOWY(and then applying knowledge to account for fit, team context, ect). At least for players we don't have other methods for(jordan has on/off and some rapm from his peak, Hakeem has some RAPM in off-years).


1. I never said that RAPTOR or BPM have historical +/- data I just said they’re the best IMPACT METRICS pre +/- which they are (impact metric ≠ Plus minus data an impact metric is just something trying to capture how impactful a player is. Technically PER isn’t an impact metric)

2. No they are a lot better than WS (and especially PER).

3. WOWY only works if you have a sample and even then it still has noise issues like most on/off data does
OhayoKD
Head Coach
Posts: 6,042
And1: 3,933
Joined: Jun 22, 2022

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#24 » by OhayoKD » Sat Dec 31, 2022 12:05 am

ty 4191 wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:
ty 4191 wrote:Which players have the highest career on/off in the playoffs, all time?

Going off ben's videos(note it doesn't include non jordan pre-97 players), going by 3 year stretches you have Duncan/Drob topping, 16-18 Lebron second(among the players he shows), and then curry, shaq and jordan tied for 3rd iirc(shaq actually shows up at 2nd but then unibro and 70's found ben made a statistical error.


To clarify further, per 100 possessions.

A few notables (don't know how to sort this on BBRef):

-KG: +14.5 (career) Prime (97'-08'): +13.3
-LeBron: +10.8 (career) Prime (08'-18'): +13.1
-Duncan: +7.5 (career) Prime (98'-08'): +9.0
-Curry: +11.7 (career) Prime (12'-19'): +14.6

Anyone have on/off per 100 poss organized in a database for pre 96'-97' players?

Thanks!

Ben's team found some for jordan during his prime but to my knowledge we don't have anyone that stuff for anyone else:
https://youtu.be/RqGDLV-do9c?t=840
Keep in mind ben makes an error with Shaq's rating which should actually be down next to MJ and Curry
OhayoKD
Head Coach
Posts: 6,042
And1: 3,933
Joined: Jun 22, 2022

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#25 » by OhayoKD » Sat Dec 31, 2022 12:47 am

ceoofkobefans wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:
70sFan wrote:You may have seen this before, but for posterity, this study builds off ben's base(or at least claims to):
https://dunksandthrees.com/blog/metric-comparison


Eh........RAPTOR and BPM don't have historical plus-minus data pre-97 which means they're basically just ws/48 or PER when it comes to "historic" players.

You're probably better off using WOWY(and then applying knowledge to account for fit, team context, ect). At least for players we don't have other methods for(jordan has on/off and some rapm from his peak, Hakeem has some RAPM in off-years).


1. I never said that RAPTOR or BPM have historical +/- data I just said they’re the best IMPACT METRICS pre +/- which they are (impact metric ≠ Plus minus data an impact metric is just something trying to capture how impactful a player is. Technically PER isn’t an impact metric)

What is this a response to?
2. No they are a lot better than WS (and especially PER).

Are they? Aren't their primary advantages over WS and PER are plus-minus and player-tracking? To my knowledge neither exists for the years in question.
3. WOWY only works if you have a sample and even then it still has noise issues like most on/off data does

Well, at least per the studies I've seen, box-heavy stuff actually loses out to on/off-based data in terms of stability. With historic RAPTOR and BPM basically just being a box-aggregate, I'm not seeing why it would have a big "noise" edge here.

Regardless, noise can be adjusted for by closer contextual/granular analysis. How precisely do you adjust for inaccuracies/funkiness with outputs derived from arbitrarily weighed inputs? Analysis taking work is not a good reason to avoid it. And i'm still not sure what the basis for there being a noise advantage is
migya
General Manager
Posts: 8,185
And1: 1,507
Joined: Aug 13, 2005

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#26 » by migya » Sat Dec 31, 2022 5:05 am

rk2023 wrote:
migya wrote:Of all the advanced metrics winshares seems to be the best at indicating the value of a player. Contribution to winning is the aim of any player and the team. An owner of a franchise wants to win the most possible as that is success in basketball.

On/off stats are often mentioned as a good indication of the value of a player. It seems logical that the higher the number in this metric the higher the value of a player and thus the higher the contribution to winning.

That is not the case with some players. This is the case with Garnett who has among the highest on/off numbers and relatively low winshares and winshares per 48 minutes, particularly compared to other great players.

What is the view in relation to these statistics?


Hello Migya,

It seems you are a sage mind when it comes to leveraging basketball reference as a source of analysis. Being one who hasn't toggled with the platform as much, am curious as to how Chris Paul stacks up to Stephen Curry and Magic Johnson with that as a point of reference - and how would you rank (arguably) the 3 best points guards of the last 40 years? Your intel would be appreciated


Hi rk.

Looking at the ws, ws/48 and offensive and defensive ratings for all three:


Magic- 110.6ows, 45.2dws, 155.8ws, .225ws/48, 121OR, 104DR

Curry - 90.8ows, 33.6dws, 124.4ws, .204ws/48, 118OR, 107DR

CP - 146.3ows, 54.8dws, 201.1ws, .238ws/48, 120OR, 108DR


I've always included offensive(OR) and defensive(DR) rating as it shows impact on both ends for a player.

As expected Magic and CP look the best as their primes were longer and they were both the primary playmakers for their teams. CP had much impact on his teams, like him or not. With the Clippers he was huge as they needed a good PG and he maximised the players on that team. He did similar in NO. Curry took a few years to reach his prime and has only had about ten years. Curry's peak looks higher, as agreed by many views. Magic was the SG for the Lakers his fist three years and his impact wasn't as high as he wasn't the absolute playmaker for that team, sharing with Nixon. It is to note that when Kareem was older and not the scorer he was Magic's impact was higher, hence his significantly higher ws/48. He showed his value to raise his team without Kareem from 86 onwards and even took his team to the finals in 91. CP had a few good scorers on his teams but he was outright the best player and it stands out.
I have Magic in my top 10 and CP border top 20, Curry not even top 25. Magic took his teams to greater heights in a much tougher era. Bpm is even between Magic and CP, while Curry is a little less which is consistent with the value of their careers.

My top three PGs the last 40 years are Magic, Stockton and Chris Paul.
MyUniBroDavis
General Manager
Posts: 7,827
And1: 5,034
Joined: Jan 14, 2013

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#27 » by MyUniBroDavis » Sat Dec 31, 2022 5:47 am

[gfycat][/gfycat]
migya wrote:Of all the advanced metrics winshares seems to be the best at indicating the value of a player. Contribution to winning is the aim of any player and the team. An owner of a franchise wants to win the most possible as that is success in basketball.

On/off stats are often mentioned as a good indication of the value of a player. It seems logical that the higher the number in this metric the higher the value of a player and thus the higher the contribution to winning.

That is not the case with some players. This is the case with Garnett who has among the highest on/off numbers and relatively low winshares and winshares per 48 minutes, particularly compared to other great players.

What is the view in relation to these statistics?


Win shares are essentially useless. They’re good in the sense that if you’ve never watched basketball they can approximate if well if you don’t understand how to use the other stats, but they attempt to be an all in one impact indicator without an impact component and aren’t good at doing that

You could make a better stat than win shares in less than a few days right now I’d assume
MyUniBroDavis
General Manager
Posts: 7,827
And1: 5,034
Joined: Jan 14, 2013

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#28 » by MyUniBroDavis » Sat Dec 31, 2022 5:51 am

migya wrote:
rk2023 wrote:
migya wrote:Of all the advanced metrics winshares seems to be the best at indicating the value of a player. Contribution to winning is the aim of any player and the team. An owner of a franchise wants to win the most possible as that is success in basketball.

On/off stats are often mentioned as a good indication of the value of a player. It seems logical that the higher the number in this metric the higher the value of a player and thus the higher the contribution to winning.

That is not the case with some players. This is the case with Garnett who has among the highest on/off numbers and relatively low winshares and winshares per 48 minutes, particularly compared to other great players.

What is the view in relation to these statistics?


Hello Migya,

It seems you are a sage mind when it comes to leveraging basketball reference as a source of analysis. Being one who hasn't toggled with the platform as much, am curious as to how Chris Paul stacks up to Stephen Curry and Magic Johnson with that as a point of reference - and how would you rank (arguably) the 3 best points guards of the last 40 years? Your intel would be appreciated


Hi rk.

Looking at the ws, ws/48 and offensive and defensive ratings for all three:


Magic- 110.6ows, 45.2dws, 155.8ws, .225ws/48, 121OR, 104DR

Curry - 90.8ows, 33.6dws, 124.4ws, .204ws/48, 118OR, 107DR

CP - 146.3ows, 54.8dws, 201.1ws, .238ws/48, 120OR, 108DR


I've always included offensive(OR) and defensive(DR) rating as it shows impact on both ends for a player.

As expected Magic and CP look the best as their primes were longer and they were both the primary playmakers for their teams. CP had much impact on his teams, like him or not. With the Clippers he was huge as they needed a good PG and he maximised the players on that team. He did similar in NO. Curry took a few years to reach his prime and has only had about ten years. Curry's peak looks higher, as agreed by many views. Magic was the SG for the Lakers his fist three years and his impact wasn't as high as he wasn't the absolute playmaker for that team, sharing with Nixon. It is to note that when Kareem was older and not the scorer he was Magic's impact was higher, hence his significantly higher ws/48. He showed his value to raise his team without Kareem from 86 onwards and even took his team to the finals in 91. CP had a few good scorers on his teams but he was outright the best player and it stands out.
I have Magic in my top 10 and CP border top 20, Curry not even top 25. Magic took his teams to greater heights in a much tougher era. Bpm is even between Magic and CP, while Curry is a little less which is consistent with the value of their careers.

My top three PGs the last 40 years are Magic, Stockton and Chris Paul.



Uhh, Chris Paul over Curry all time is a pretty disgusting take my guy
migya
General Manager
Posts: 8,185
And1: 1,507
Joined: Aug 13, 2005

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#29 » by migya » Sat Dec 31, 2022 5:59 am

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
migya wrote:
rk2023 wrote:
Hello Migya,

It seems you are a sage mind when it comes to leveraging basketball reference as a source of analysis. Being one who hasn't toggled with the platform as much, am curious as to how Chris Paul stacks up to Stephen Curry and Magic Johnson with that as a point of reference - and how would you rank (arguably) the 3 best points guards of the last 40 years? Your intel would be appreciated


Hi rk.

Looking at the ws, ws/48 and offensive and defensive ratings for all three:


Magic- 110.6ows, 45.2dws, 155.8ws, .225ws/48, 121OR, 104DR

Curry - 90.8ows, 33.6dws, 124.4ws, .204ws/48, 118OR, 107DR

CP - 146.3ows, 54.8dws, 201.1ws, .238ws/48, 120OR, 108DR


I've always included offensive(OR) and defensive(DR) rating as it shows impact on both ends for a player.

As expected Magic and CP look the best as their primes were longer and they were both the primary playmakers for their teams. CP had much impact on his teams, like him or not. With the Clippers he was huge as they needed a good PG and he maximised the players on that team. He did similar in NO. Curry took a few years to reach his prime and has only had about ten years. Curry's peak looks higher, as agreed by many views. Magic was the SG for the Lakers his fist three years and his impact wasn't as high as he wasn't the absolute playmaker for that team, sharing with Nixon. It is to note that when Kareem was older and not the scorer he was Magic's impact was higher, hence his significantly higher ws/48. He showed his value to raise his team without Kareem from 86 onwards and even took his team to the finals in 91. CP had a few good scorers on his teams but he was outright the best player and it stands out.
I have Magic in my top 10 and CP border top 20, Curry not even top 25. Magic took his teams to greater heights in a much tougher era. Bpm is even between Magic and CP, while Curry is a little less which is consistent with the value of their careers.

My top three PGs the last 40 years are Magic, Stockton and Chris Paul.



Uhh, Chris Paul over Curry all time is a pretty disgusting take my guy


It's the opposite. Curry is a scorer and shooter, he had nothing else on CP.
LukaTheGOAT
Analyst
Posts: 3,272
And1: 2,983
Joined: Dec 25, 2019
 

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#30 » by LukaTheGOAT » Sat Dec 31, 2022 7:44 am

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
migya wrote:
rk2023 wrote:
Hello Migya,

It seems you are a sage mind when it comes to leveraging basketball reference as a source of analysis. Being one who hasn't toggled with the platform as much, am curious as to how Chris Paul stacks up to Stephen Curry and Magic Johnson with that as a point of reference - and how would you rank (arguably) the 3 best points guards of the last 40 years? Your intel would be appreciated


Hi rk.

Looking at the ws, ws/48 and offensive and defensive ratings for all three:


Magic- 110.6ows, 45.2dws, 155.8ws, .225ws/48, 121OR, 104DR

Curry - 90.8ows, 33.6dws, 124.4ws, .204ws/48, 118OR, 107DR

CP - 146.3ows, 54.8dws, 201.1ws, .238ws/48, 120OR, 108DR


I've always included offensive(OR) and defensive(DR) rating as it shows impact on both ends for a player.

As expected Magic and CP look the best as their primes were longer and they were both the primary playmakers for their teams. CP had much impact on his teams, like him or not. With the Clippers he was huge as they needed a good PG and he maximised the players on that team. He did similar in NO. Curry took a few years to reach his prime and has only had about ten years. Curry's peak looks higher, as agreed by many views. Magic was the SG for the Lakers his fist three years and his impact wasn't as high as he wasn't the absolute playmaker for that team, sharing with Nixon. It is to note that when Kareem was older and not the scorer he was Magic's impact was higher, hence his significantly higher ws/48. He showed his value to raise his team without Kareem from 86 onwards and even took his team to the finals in 91. CP had a few good scorers on his teams but he was outright the best player and it stands out.
I have Magic in my top 10 and CP border top 20, Curry not even top 25. Magic took his teams to greater heights in a much tougher era. Bpm is even between Magic and CP, while Curry is a little less which is consistent with the value of their careers.

My top three PGs the last 40 years are Magic, Stockton and Chris Paul.



Uhh, Chris Paul over Curry all time is a pretty disgusting take my guy


No, it isn't.
MyUniBroDavis
General Manager
Posts: 7,827
And1: 5,034
Joined: Jan 14, 2013

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#31 » by MyUniBroDavis » Sat Dec 31, 2022 8:06 am

LukaTheGOAT wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
migya wrote:
Hi rk.

Looking at the ws, ws/48 and offensive and defensive ratings for all three:


Magic- 110.6ows, 45.2dws, 155.8ws, .225ws/48, 121OR, 104DR

Curry - 90.8ows, 33.6dws, 124.4ws, .204ws/48, 118OR, 107DR

CP - 146.3ows, 54.8dws, 201.1ws, .238ws/48, 120OR, 108DR


I've always included offensive(OR) and defensive(DR) rating as it shows impact on both ends for a player.

As expected Magic and CP look the best as their primes were longer and they were both the primary playmakers for their teams. CP had much impact on his teams, like him or not. With the Clippers he was huge as they needed a good PG and he maximised the players on that team. He did similar in NO. Curry took a few years to reach his prime and has only had about ten years. Curry's peak looks higher, as agreed by many views. Magic was the SG for the Lakers his fist three years and his impact wasn't as high as he wasn't the absolute playmaker for that team, sharing with Nixon. It is to note that when Kareem was older and not the scorer he was Magic's impact was higher, hence his significantly higher ws/48. He showed his value to raise his team without Kareem from 86 onwards and even took his team to the finals in 91. CP had a few good scorers on his teams but he was outright the best player and it stands out.
I have Magic in my top 10 and CP border top 20, Curry not even top 25. Magic took his teams to greater heights in a much tougher era. Bpm is even between Magic and CP, while Curry is a little less which is consistent with the value of their careers.

My top three PGs the last 40 years are Magic, Stockton and Chris Paul.



Uhh, Chris Paul over Curry all time is a pretty disgusting take my guy


No, it isn't.


Uhhh, all time? I don’t really see how one could argue Paul over Curry given the past few years lol
MyUniBroDavis
General Manager
Posts: 7,827
And1: 5,034
Joined: Jan 14, 2013

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#32 » by MyUniBroDavis » Sat Dec 31, 2022 8:08 am

migya wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
migya wrote:
Hi rk.

Looking at the ws, ws/48 and offensive and defensive ratings for all three:


Magic- 110.6ows, 45.2dws, 155.8ws, .225ws/48, 121OR, 104DR

Curry - 90.8ows, 33.6dws, 124.4ws, .204ws/48, 118OR, 107DR

CP - 146.3ows, 54.8dws, 201.1ws, .238ws/48, 120OR, 108DR


I've always included offensive(OR) and defensive(DR) rating as it shows impact on both ends for a player.

As expected Magic and CP look the best as their primes were longer and they were both the primary playmakers for their teams. CP had much impact on his teams, like him or not. With the Clippers he was huge as they needed a good PG and he maximised the players on that team. He did similar in NO. Curry took a few years to reach his prime and has only had about ten years. Curry's peak looks higher, as agreed by many views. Magic was the SG for the Lakers his fist three years and his impact wasn't as high as he wasn't the absolute playmaker for that team, sharing with Nixon. It is to note that when Kareem was older and not the scorer he was Magic's impact was higher, hence his significantly higher ws/48. He showed his value to raise his team without Kareem from 86 onwards and even took his team to the finals in 91. CP had a few good scorers on his teams but he was outright the best player and it stands out.
I have Magic in my top 10 and CP border top 20, Curry not even top 25. Magic took his teams to greater heights in a much tougher era. Bpm is even between Magic and CP, while Curry is a little less which is consistent with the value of their careers.

My top three PGs the last 40 years are Magic, Stockton and Chris Paul.



Uhh, Chris Paul over Curry all time is a pretty disgusting take my guy


It's the opposite. Curry is a scorer and shooter, he had nothing else on CP.


Curry is just a shooter is wild
LukaTheGOAT
Analyst
Posts: 3,272
And1: 2,983
Joined: Dec 25, 2019
 

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#33 » by LukaTheGOAT » Sat Dec 31, 2022 8:14 am

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
LukaTheGOAT wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:

Uhh, Chris Paul over Curry all time is a pretty disgusting take my guy


No, it isn't.


Uhhh, all time? I don’t really see how one could argue Paul over Curry given the past few years lol


Yeah, the past few years Curry has been trying to catchup with Paul. They weren't in lockstep in terms of career value before that.
MyUniBroDavis
General Manager
Posts: 7,827
And1: 5,034
Joined: Jan 14, 2013

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#34 » by MyUniBroDavis » Sat Dec 31, 2022 8:29 am

LukaTheGOAT wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
LukaTheGOAT wrote:
No, it isn't.


Uhhh, all time? I don’t really see how one could argue Paul over Curry given the past few years lol


Yeah, the past few years Curry has been trying to catchup with Paul. They weren't in lockstep in terms of career value before that.


I think if you were to just go by like a summation of career value I kind of get that, but I also Think it just is a tad bit absurd thinking what’s gone on over the past 7-8 years, even if it’s cheesy or narrative driven I find it hard to compare someone thats probably had the most success in the nba since he hit his stride vs a guy who gets memed for the past few years lol

I think cp3 has been a victim of unfortunate circumstance to an extent for sure though
migya
General Manager
Posts: 8,185
And1: 1,507
Joined: Aug 13, 2005

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#35 » by migya » Sat Dec 31, 2022 10:31 am

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
LukaTheGOAT wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Uhhh, all time? I don’t really see how one could argue Paul over Curry given the past few years lol


Yeah, the past few years Curry has been trying to catchup with Paul. They weren't in lockstep in terms of career value before that.


I think if you were to just go by like a summation of career value I kind of get that, but I also Think it just is a tad bit absurd thinking what’s gone on over the past 7-8 years, even if it’s cheesy or narrative driven I find it hard to compare someone thats probably had the most success in the nba since he hit his stride vs a guy who gets memed for the past few years lol

I think cp3 has been a victim of unfortunate circumstance to an extent for sure though


That is actually like someone in 2013 saying that Dwight had surpassed Garnett because of the past five years. There was much before that.
migya
General Manager
Posts: 8,185
And1: 1,507
Joined: Aug 13, 2005

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#36 » by migya » Sat Dec 31, 2022 10:52 am

ceoofkobefans wrote:
migya wrote:
MiamiBulls wrote:Win Shares is fairly junky and archaic. One thing that's very obvious about Win Shares is that WS overweights Rebounding specifically Defensive Rebounding.


Yet Garnett has low ws/48 compared to most star bigs and he rebounds among the best.


That’s because the other thing that is heavily overvalued by WS is raw efficiency which KG isn’t great in (usually around +2 to +3 rTS in his prime)



The playoff numbers don't show that for Garnett. For 03, 2010 and 12, his ts% was 53.9, 53 and 54.1 and his ws/48 was .141, .148, .149. In comparison Robinson only had comparatively low ws/48 in 94. In 93, 95, 98, 00 and 01 his ts% was 52.9, 53.6, 49.6, 46.3, 53.8 and his ws/48 was .172, .176, .183, .220 and .207. That's much higher than Garnett. Even Garnett's best PO runs in 04 and 08 were 51.3ts% and .163ws/48, 54.2ts%, .199ws/48. That's also low comparable to Robinson's low PO performances. Robinson's 96 and 99 PO runs are much better than Garnett's.

Interesting that Webber had two POs with low ts% and higher ws/48, with high bpm himself. 00 and 02 he had 48.8ts%, .153ws/48 and 9.5bpm, 53.7ts%, .157ws/48 and 5.6bpm.
f4p
Sixth Man
Posts: 1,878
And1: 1,868
Joined: Sep 19, 2021
 

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#37 » by f4p » Sat Dec 31, 2022 12:16 pm

OhayoKD wrote:You may have seen this before, but for posterity, this study builds off ben's base(or at least claims to):
https://dunksandthrees.com/blog/metric-comparison



so before i go any further, am i reading this table correctly?

Image


they put in the metric of choice, use it to predict, and the RMSE represents the average error on the team net rating?

so like they use EPM, guess +2.48 net rating and then on average, since the RMSE is 2.48 (let's just assume RMSE and MAE are close enough for government work here), the team ends up being either a 0.0 (41 wins) or a +4.96 (54 wins)? so if they plug in WS48 and guess +2.48, it could be -0.37 (40 wins) or 5.35 (55 wins)?
f4p
Sixth Man
Posts: 1,878
And1: 1,868
Joined: Sep 19, 2021
 

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#38 » by f4p » Sat Dec 31, 2022 12:19 pm

migya wrote:
ceoofkobefans wrote:
migya wrote:
Yet Garnett has low ws/48 compared to most star bigs and he rebounds among the best.


That’s because the other thing that is heavily overvalued by WS is raw efficiency which KG isn’t great in (usually around +2 to +3 rTS in his prime)



The playoff numbers don't show that for Garnett. For 03, 2010 and 12, his ts% was 53.9, 53 and 54.1 and his ws/48 was .141, .148, .149. In comparison Robinson only had comparatively low ws/48 in 94. In 93, 95, 98, 00 and 01 his ts% was 52.9, 53.6, 49.6, 46.3, 53.8 and his ws/48 was .172, .176, .183, .220 and .207. That's much higher than Garnett. Even Garnett's best PO runs in 04 and 08 were 51.3ts% and .163ws/48, 54.2ts%, .199ws/48. That's also low comparable to Robinson's low PO performances. Robinson's 96 and 99 PO runs are much better than Garnett's.

Interesting that Webber had two POs with low ts% and higher ws/48, with high bpm himself. 00 and 02 he had 48.8ts%, .153ws/48 and 9.5bpm, 53.7ts%, .157ws/48 and 5.6bpm.



without looking into the team ratings, win shares loves good team defense. the spurs most likely had very good numbers. the wolves likely did not. so robinson is bumped by having good defensive teammates and pop. KG is dragged down by whatever collection he was playing with. of course, it is always a bit mysterious why KG gets offensive bonus points for good wolves offenses (they seem to have offensively-slanted personnel) but usually no deduction for terrible wolves defenses.
MyUniBroDavis
General Manager
Posts: 7,827
And1: 5,034
Joined: Jan 14, 2013

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#39 » by MyUniBroDavis » Sat Dec 31, 2022 2:05 pm

migya wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
LukaTheGOAT wrote:
Yeah, the past few years Curry has been trying to catchup with Paul. They weren't in lockstep in terms of career value before that.


I think if you were to just go by like a summation of career value I kind of get that, but I also Think it just is a tad bit absurd thinking what’s gone on over the past 7-8 years, even if it’s cheesy or narrative driven I find it hard to compare someone thats probably had the most success in the nba since he hit his stride vs a guy who gets memed for the past few years lol

I think cp3 has been a victim of unfortunate circumstance to an extent for sure though


That is actually like someone in 2013 saying that Dwight had surpassed Garnett because of the past five years. There was much before that.


Curry literally started an offensive revolution and won 4 rings and been to 6 finals in the last 7 years, comparing that to dwight is almost as ridiculous as saying Curry is just a shooter.
MyUniBroDavis
General Manager
Posts: 7,827
And1: 5,034
Joined: Jan 14, 2013

Re: Winshares,winshares/48 and on/off metrics 

Post#40 » by MyUniBroDavis » Sat Dec 31, 2022 2:08 pm

migya wrote:
ceoofkobefans wrote:
migya wrote:
Yet Garnett has low ws/48 compared to most star bigs and he rebounds among the best.


That’s because the other thing that is heavily overvalued by WS is raw efficiency which KG isn’t great in (usually around +2 to +3 rTS in his prime)



The playoff numbers don't show that for Garnett. For 03, 2010 and 12, his ts% was 53.9, 53 and 54.1 and his ws/48 was .141, .148, .149. In comparison Robinson only had comparatively low ws/48 in 94. In 93, 95, 98, 00 and 01 his ts% was 52.9, 53.6, 49.6, 46.3, 53.8 and his ws/48 was .172, .176, .183, .220 and .207. That's much higher than Garnett. Even Garnett's best PO runs in 04 and 08 were 51.3ts% and .163ws/48, 54.2ts%, .199ws/48. That's also low comparable to Robinson's low PO performances. Robinson's 96 and 99 PO runs are much better than Garnett's.

Interesting that Webber had two POs with low ts% and higher ws/48, with high bpm himself. 00 and 02 he had 48.8ts%, .153ws/48 and 9.5bpm, 53.7ts%, .157ws/48 and 5.6bpm.



Wait do you genuinely believe win shares are the best advanced stat or are you trolling, I assumed this was bait because I didn’t think anyone would seriously think that

Return to Player Comparisons