Wolves2011 wrote:Let me emphasize again, that NBA Efficiency Rating and PER give the identical value to rebounds as Wins Score.
Only if you believe 1 in 100 is the same rate as 1 in a million. Since you are basically admitting that you do, it is much easier to see how you could worship the WOW methodology.
The difference between the systems is relative. "NBA efficiency rating" (and PER) gives greater relative weight [vs. win score] to all forms of scoring, both efficient and inefficient. If you score you benefit.
Wins produced gives less relative weight [vs NBA ER or PER] to shooting, but greater relative weight [within the wins score system] to shooting efficiently (most important of all parts of formula) vs shooting inefficiently (keep in mind its penalizing all the inefficient shooters).
You said you were going to think about the link I sent you that refutes this. I guess you decided to hold off on the thinking for a while?
Lets compare NBA Efficiency Rating for shooters to Win Score:
WIN SCORE= Points - ALL FGA
shoot 6 for 10 -- win score = 2 points
shoot 4 for 10 -- win score = minus 2 points.
NBA EFFICIENCY RATING = Points - missed FG
shoot 6 for 10 -- NBA ER = 8 points
shoot 4 for 10 -- NBA ER = 2 points
As you can see in the simple example, NBA efficiency rating (and PER) gives great weight to all forms of shooting, both good and bad. You greatly benefit if you are a good shooter. You still benefit if you are a bad shooter.
Yep, and Win Score does the same thing with rebounds. It starts from zero, rather than starting from the league average. League average scoring gives you nothing (hence the higher weight in rebounds), league average rebound gives you a major positive. This is illogical.
For Win Score, you benefit much less from being a good shooter. You are penalized for being a bad shooter.
Yep. Instead, you benefit from being a good rebounder. Hence the ridiculousness of Andrew Bynum being better than Kobe Bryant and Dennis Rodman being better than Michael Jordan.
Lets define those two models again.
Wins Score = Points + Rebounds + Steals + ½*Assists + ½*Blocked Shots - Field Goal Attempts – ½*Free Throw Attempts – Turnovers – ½*Personal Fouls
NBA Efficiency = Points + Rebounds + Steals + Assists + Blocked Shots – All Missed Shots – Turnovers
So what are the other differences besides FG shooting? Win Score (minus) NBA ER =
So besides the shooting differences, NBA Efficiency Rating credits full assists rather than half, credits full blocked shots rather than half, and has no penalty for missed free throws, and no penalty for committing fouls. Other than that, the systems are identical.
Otherthan that? That's kind of like saying Charlie Manson was a great guy, other than all those people he killed!
Getting possession -- steals, rebounds and turnovers, is valued the same way in all three systems.
Yes, getting a defensive rebound that very likely has nothing to do with anything you specifically did other than be under the basket, has the same value as making a 2 point shot.
And that makes sense to you, right?
Right?