I think he means relative to the team average. I guess this makes sense...it is easy to be a high TS% guy on a great offensive team. However, send the same person to a low TS% team, you expect his TS% to plummet.
So looking at the TS% of players on the team relative to other players at their position probably doesn't make a lot of sense...you should compare it to the team #. So if I'm +5% over my team, but my team is terrible at scoring, this is probably suggests I'm a better scorer than a -5% guy on a GREAT offensive team.
At least, this is the way I'm interpreting his comment, I could be way off base.
Hrm, a quick calculate indicates that the team TS% is:
(
http://www.basketball-reference.com/teams/TOR/2010.html)
It appears that only Amir, Marcus, Jack, CB and Jose were above the team average (in that order).
08-09:
Code: Select all
octave:7> 8121/(6673+1861*.44)/2
ans = 0.54199
Hrm....so crudely speaking, 2.2% swing in team TS% leads to an Ortg change of 107.0 to one of 113.1?
I think an Oliver style four factors analysis of the lineups with and w/o CB last year is probably a good initial guess. I wonder how different it would be than the most crude thing you can do, just taking last year's Ortg/Drtg without CB and plugging that into Pyth wins..
Hrm, food for thought...I should think about this stuff later.