BorisDK1 wrote:Synergy is completely out to lunch. I hate to sound so dogmatic and arrogant by saying that, but they're doing a poor job of tracking because what they look at is so narrow.
Bargnani has been brutal this year. He's not even putting the effort forward in guarding his own position, let alone anything else. I have him with a stop% of .452 this year, down from .552 last year: he's getting his ass beaten on a regular basis, he guards the opponents' worst big man and still can't be bothered to play anything looking like effective one-on-one defense. Our ball screens with him involved are the easiest things in the world to score against, and if people want to believe tracking only direct post-ups negates any of that, they're on really, really thin ice.
No matter how you look at it, stats never tell the whole story.
Maybe your stats are deeper than Synergy's, but there will always be a part of the story that you won't be able to tell.
On the other hand, I like new stats.
Classic stats have been around so long, now, that some players play the game with a virtual statsheet in their mind. Adding one in the rebounding column everytime they grab a rebound, checking the double-double box when they get their 10'th assist. Don't tell me some players don't use stats to their advantage, by disregarding aspects of the game that don't appear on statsheets.
These new stats will change how we rate players, especially the ones we don't get to watch often.
But like any new stats, players will get used to it and learn how to skew them in their favour.
Can you blame them? Their salary is decided by their stats because of guys like Cuban. The whole thing is up for debate, in my opinion.