lessthanjake wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:lessthanjake wrote:Just to put specific numbers into the above discussion:
Against Minnesota, the Mavs have a 102.22 offensive rating with Luka on and Kyrie off.
Against Minnesota, the Nuggets had a 111.76 offensive rating with Jokic on and Murray off.
Obviously these are tiny sample sizes, but any analysis of offensive ratings in a playoff series is going to be using cripplingly small sample sizes. For that reason, I don’t think an argument based on offensive ratings in a single series for Jokic and Luka is worth essentially anything. And if that argument is based on data that pretty clearly is driven by the presence of a secondary star that is very clearly playing way better than the other guy’s secondary star, and the data flips when isolating out minutes without the secondary stars, then it seems even more obvious that it’s not a meaningful argument IMO.
Thanks! Where did you get the data?
It’s from the “WOWY” function on PBPstats.
For Jokic on Murray off: https://www.pbpstats.com/wowy/nba?0Exactly1OnFloor=203999&1Exactly1OffFloor=1627750&TeamId=1610612743&Season=2023-24&SeasonType=Playoffs&Type=Team&Opponent=1610612750
For Luka on Kyrie off: https://www.pbpstats.com/wowy/nba?0Exactly1OnFloor=1629029&1Exactly1OffFloor=202681&TeamId=1610612742&Season=2023-24&SeasonType=Playoffs&Type=Team&Opponent=1610612750
These are not remotely big enough samples to draw any conclusion. Come on man