Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:
Thank my ex-wife for grief that made most of Christmas eve sleepless......
While I agree with Ruz in the thread, I feel your pain, having been there.
Merry Christmas, my brother.
Moderators: montestewart, LyricalRico, nate33
Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:
Thank my ex-wife for grief that made most of Christmas eve sleepless......
Illuminaire wrote:Thanks for taking the time to look up all this stuff, CCJ.
My 2 cents is to be cautious about drawing direct conclusions, because all of these hard numbers are still one step removed from any actual causation. It's not Wall getting six rebounds that makes us win... there's something else going on there. Uncovering the reasons *why* those numbers show up when we're winning is the harder, but ultimately more useful, part of stat diving.
I do think the assist numbers stand out. It seems like when the Wiz are using actual ball movement, we're a much better team.
Question: Can you cross reference the high-block games with opponents' eFG%? I'm curious to see if McGee's block parties dissuade teams from taking shots in the paint, despite the seemingly endless parade of easy layups he gives up to pump fakes.
w dumseld wrote:CCJ,
I think you nailed it. When Blatche and McGee are drawing fouls it means they are attacking the basket. Same for Wall and free throws. When we heist, we lose. But our coach doesn't use an inside-out attack and our GM doesn't draft post players. (He loves tall skinny guys that pass the pre-Moneyball eye-test but not the actual effectiveness test, so we end up with guys like Opec or YI and not guys like Faried or Milsap. Basketball is meant to be played inside out, but that's only for the good teams/organizations.
So 100% of the time that Flip and Grunfeld run the Wiz, we suck donkey sticks.
BTW, the big surprise from the work you did for me was that Nick's offense doesn't seem to help us win. I wonder if we looked at his counterpart's PER, that maybe when he plays good D we win. My eye-ball test says we are better with him but maybe its actually his man to man D and not the shooting or maybe the Wiz really aren't better or worse with him. I'm a Nick fan, but the numbers don't lie.
Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:While Nick outshot his counterpart SGs in eFG .501 to .488, he also lost rebound and assists per 48 at SG. Nick is a great shooter, but 90% of the time he took jump shots and he had a poor passing ratio. Per-82 games, Nick's opponent SGs took (only) 82% jumpers. Their inside FG% was 18 to Nick's 10. Not sure what to make of this.
Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:Anybody see anything else?
Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:(EDITED: This post is somewhat in error--see page two in response to w dumseld)
Nick Young
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... gni01.html
Guess what?
I couldn't find ANYTHING to note. Nick's huge scoring nights didn't seem to make a difference. Nor did his free throw attempts. Nor did assists. Nor did rebounds. I was actually shocked.
CONCLUSION
The one-year qualifying offer was a very good move or the Wizards could have parted ways with Nick.
I know it looks like the team won't win without jump shooting or anybody who can make shots. However, I can't see where Nick made that big of a difference on wins or losses. I still think he's a very good dude and a nice scorer. I really wish the Wizards would trade him to a team like San Antonio or another contending team; like they did Stevenson, Haywood, and Butler last season. Nick could help there.
Does anybody see something I missed on Young?
Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:Best Worst of hoopsstats.com is quickly becoming one of my favorite features.
Blatche's Best 10: Wizards 7-3
Blatche's Worst 10: Wizards 0-10
http://www.hoopsstats.com/basketball/fa ... /11/30/422
Just glance at the differences in free throws, rebounds, assists in games at the top vs bottom.
Nivek wrote:While I find this interesting, one of the problems is that it isolates each individual player's performance in a way that may not be meaningful. How often does Wall have a 6 rebound game, for example, when McGee is also blocking more shots?
There's also a big issue with assists. Were "high-assist" games at home or on the road? Most NBA teams tend to generate more assists (and blocks and steals) at home. Some of that could be that they're performing better, some of it could be home-town scorekeeping. The other issue with assists is that we know nothing qualitative about them. In other words, are a higher number of assists in a game a sign of better ball movement, or are they just the result of random fluctuations in shooting performance -- they go up and down depending on how the team is shooting that night?
I agree with CCJ's basic premise -- that setting statistical benchmarks for players would be a good idea. I think there's a great deal more analysis that needs to go into what those benchmarks should be, however.
Also, CCJ: I could use some clarification on what you're posting. On one hand you seem to be suggesting the players would benefit from having defined roles (something I agree with). On the other hand, you seem to ripping Flip when he attempts to define those roles for players. Is it just that you don't like the roles Flip is laying out?
Final point: I'd caution against using statements to the press as a basis for condemning or praising a coach's work with a particular player. The coach is with the players for thousands of hours per season. He talks to reporters for a few minutes before a game and a few minutes after. There's no way he's going to convey more than the most bare-bones summary of any interactionb between them. I'm reasonably certain that Flip's coaching to McGee extends far beyond "substance over style." All he's giving to the media is the catchphrase he uses to remind McGee of the countless specific coaching encounters they've had through the years.