ElGee wrote:The great irony, of course, is that ppg and wins ARE STATS. The people who are denigrating anything more detailed than those two stats are often themselves banking a huge amount of their analysis ON STATS. (And 2 horribly confounded ones, at that.) They are measurements we've had since the beginning of the sport, only no one bothered to think of the game ITO of efficiency, which, as a possession-based sport, it simply is.
What about this approach:
Bodhi wrote:mysticbb wrote:Tom Heinsohn wrote:The mathematics of that approach were obvious. If we took 100 shots and made only 40 percent, we’d still have as many points as a team that took 80 shots and made 50 percent. The meant if the other team was trying to limit its number of shots by playing a slower game, it was going to have to shoot a much higher percentage than we did in order to beat us.
There is so much wrong with that statement, it is really sad, because in essence his earlier point was a good one. Getting easier opportunities than the opponent is the key. The Celtics lived off their abiltity to make it really tough for the other team to score. Providing stuff like more advanced transition defense with a really fast Russell inside. Basketball is a possession-based game, you can't get more shots than the opponents just because you run a faster paced offense. You can limited their shots by forcing turnovers and limiting the offensive rebounds. And the latter was what the Celtics did.
You can't just with just a faster offense, but you can maximize the advantage you get from forcing turnovers and winning the rebound battle. So say the Celtics were to get 10% more possessions than their opponent over the course of a game because they can rebound better and force turnovers. Wouldn't their advantage in terms of possessions increase numerically if they increased the total number of possessions in the game? Assuming they're 10% better at 100 possessions and 10% better at 150, they'd much rather be at 150.
Is that not a way to win a basketball game despite scoring inefficiently? I don't think the semantic distinction between a single possession and an extra field goal attempt via an offensive rebound makes a difference here. What matters, if this was indeed the Celtics' philosophy, is that this philosophy flouts the now-precious idea of offensive efficiency, that Red Auerbach had bothered to think of it (in however an unsophisticated/roundabout way) long before Dean Oliver or John Hollinger were born, and that it fueled the most successful run in NBA history.
So, sticking with the ppg/efficiency issue...if we count up all the possessions in a game, and count up all the points, we can figure out how efficient a team is. The more efficient team wins 99.99% of the time. Similarly, we can count up all the points a player scores when he shoots (TS%) and this tells us more, as a game of possessions, than raw ppg and FG% about the value of WHAT WE'VE COUNTED. Literally, there is NO NEW COUNTING occurring, just a better way to understand what we've counted.
That's it -- we are measuring "when he shoots the sphere at the cylinder, how often does it go in?"
Wait, has that actually been demonstrated? Link? Was each game counted, one by one, or was efficiency just correlated over a huge sample to winning, more than any other existing stats? Exactly which kind of efficiency, how was efficiency defined?
That people reject this and view O/DRtg and TS% (or other concepts, even the +/- family) as "made up" is missing a concept about as badly as anyone could possibly miss a concept. It's like declaring 2+2 = apple and that math is imaginary. (I don't think I'm being too extreme with that analogy - thoughts?)
Finally, the common criticism of almost every one of these people is "your new stats doesn't tell you everything." But somehow, they don't hold ppg and wins to the same standard.
Horrified, I will now end this rant.
I can understand how exasperated you and your brethren must feel, considering all the jackasses who complain in jackass ways about stats. But I think y'all have defended yourselves and the usefulness of stats for so long, to the point where you stopped being mindful of the limits. So, for example, no matter how extremely useful a stat points-per-possession is, it's still going to wildly overrate/underrate a few players out of, say, 100, isn't it? But if there's a player whose PPS surprisingly puts him in an elite echelon or surprisingly kicks him out of it, you won't find a PPS proponent willing to entertain the notion that that player is the mistake that is sure to occur, instead the proponent will always treat that player as a new revelation. I can understand how maddening it must be to defend stats against claims of zero utility. But I don't see much or any real recognition from you all that a stat is bound to fail big time here and there, or fail a little everywhere.