Rerisen wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:Re: Deng plays more time with the bench. Again, the quality of players he shares the court with are accounted for. There's also the matter that using the fact that the starter who plays the most minutes by definition must spend a decent amount of time with bench guys against him just seems odd.
From what I've seen in obviously being an avid Bulls watcher is the 'accounting' of other players is not something that in reality has constant value.
For instance, when the Bulls play scrub teams without Derrick they stomped many of them. And I actually don't think they would have won much bigger even with Rose. But when they play much better teams that can pressure the Bulls limited ball handlers, the Bulls ability to produce good shots without Rose falls to nearly nil.
Therefore, the other players RAPM is attempting to account for with adjustments do not have static value across all situations. Which would normally wash out in the numbers, but relevant to this year, is skewed because of the vast majority of the team's minutes without Rose were played against very poor competition.
Some good thought here.
Rerisen wrote:In general, you are right, the examination of Deng's various +/- numbers being out of whack with his production stats is not really about him vs Rose. Though you did label the post that way. But rather if we are to believe these numbers, Deng is not just more valuable to the Bulls than perceived, but actually more valuable than a bunch of superstars are to their teams, who are generally considered superior. Is Deng really as valuable as Kevin Durant?
An interesting thing to bandy about. I made the thread I did because I thought just focusing on Deng on the Bulls was the most fundamental aspect of this.
I'll admit that depending on what I experience in this thread, I may start mentioning Deng on longer MVP lists.






