payitforward wrote:Ummm, Robinson's rebounding rate is up there w/ Faried if you add 20% to it. Brian Zoubek's rebounding rate was better than Robinson's, closer to Faried. I guess that makes him even more of a Faried type?
And Robinson is "more of an offensive player" you think? Faried's eFG% as an NBA rookie was .59; Robinson's as an NCAA junior was .51. Faried averaged north of 18 points per 40 minutes.
Robinson is a good player, as I said above. But it makes zero sense to compare him to Faried. They are not similar players one bit.
Faried was certainly a better prospect. More efficient offensively,and a much better defensive player.
I'm trying to find Faried's NCAA rebound rates. Can anyone post them? Here are the rebound rates for Thomas Robinson:
Freshman:20.3
Sophomore: 25.3
Junior: 21.4
http://swishscout.com/?page_id=4377payitforward wrote:How about if we just listed all NBA Power Forwards in order of their standing reach. Do you think that list would have a statistically significant correlation w/ the same guys listed in order of rebounds per 40 minutes? If you do, please prove it. As soon as you prove it, I'll fall in right behind you to trumpet this oh so important stat. Until then, you are the one with the narrative and choosing numbers to fit it.
You sure do take a condescending or patronizing tone in a lot of your posts.
Obviously you can't just look at standing reach and tell who the superior player will be, or JaVale would be a great player. It is equally obvious however, that there really is a requisite standing reach for a frontcourt player, below which you will likely have difficulty finishing in the post, and especially defending. Why are we even arguing this? Maybe what that threshold is, is arguable.
Vague references to statistics seem to be thrown around as a crutch a lot recently. Try plotting all of the frontcourt players with a standing reach of 8'10" and higher, and then those with a standing reach of 8'9" or lower. I don't think you need to consult google to guess which group is going to include more quality NBA bigs.