One_and_Done wrote:penbeast0 wrote:One_and_Done wrote:It's a good example of how inaccurate those stats can be.
Facts will never change some people's opinions. This number is a small sample size and affected by things like lineups but it's not inaccurate. It's completely accurate in what it is measuring; only some people interpretation is inaccurate and those that dismiss data are probably further from any understanding of the truth than those who attempt to understand and adjust their personal bias to take data into account.
It measures something, but whether that thing is indicative of certain outcomes is another matter.
Advanced stats think D.Rob was amazing in his final year too, and the Spurs were 15-3 in games he missed. D.Rob looked invisible at times in his later years, and even in 99 he was very overrated, which I've discussed at length before.
viewtopic.php?t=2424823#p116090755
In the Lakers series in 99 D.Rob put up 13-6 and only played 28mpg. He could have been replaced with a pretty average 5 and the Spurs still would have won.
The problem with your arguments that Robinson was not extremely impactful in those years is you never actually identify any actual reason that the data would be “wrong.” Importantly, the idea that Robinson was really impactful in those years is not something that’s actually reliant on small sample sizes. He does look amazing in small playoff samples, but he also looks fantastic in larger samples. For instance, NBArapm has him at 6th in the NBA in 1999-2002 four-year RAPM and 8th in the NBA in 1999-2003 five-year RAPM (RS+playoffs for both). Those are 325-game and 412-game samples. Those are large samples! And, while samples that large are generally not particularly noisy, they’re probably *even more* reliable for Robinson in those periods than for other players, since his relatively low minutes load makes the “off” sample quite big (and the “off” sample is generally the noisiest aspect of things). Notably, the RAPM data fully accounts for what happened in those games the Spurs went 15-3 without him, so that’s really not much of a valid counter. Basically, we have very reliable data telling us that Robinson was an extremely impactful player in that era. Furthermore, to a lesser extent, your position also requires you to ignore box data, which for instance includes Robinson being 4th in the NBA in BPM in 1999. Unsurprisingly, box-impact hybrid data also is very high on him—for instance, EPM has Robinson ranked 6th in the league in 2001 and 9th in the league in 2002 (though he was down to 30th in 2003; note: EPM doesn’t exist prior to 2001, so that’s why I’m not listing previous data). He’s also #1 in xRAPM in 1999, #5 in 2000, #4 in 2001, 10th in 2002, and 20th in 2003. In the interests of time, I won’t list other things like RAPTOR and DPM, but suffice to say that everything is pretty similar and all looks very impressive for Robinson.
Your response on all this is basically to say that all data is wrong and Robinson looked stiff to you so the data is wrong and he wasn’t very good. It’s really not convincing. You do not even attempt to identify flaws in the data, to explain why it might be biased in Robinson’s favor. You essentially just say that data isn’t perfect and since you don’t like what it tells you then it must be “wrong” in this case, without any explanation as to how that might have happened. And let’s remember that this isn’t some random scrub that data tells us was great. It’s an all-time great in the latter stages of his career, in a set of years where his team did really well. Our baseline assumption should probably be that he was still really good, so there’s not a lot of reason for skepticism, unless we’ve simply decided that we really want to maximize the credit given to Duncan and that that requires downplaying his teammates.