payitforward wrote:Actually, I'd call this an F so far, not an incomplete (hoping that you don't mind me tweaking you of course!!), and Drummond is the poster child for what's wrong. On many fronts.
First, you rated Drummond tier 6 and Tyler Zeller Tier 3. Now, I assume you don't think Zeller's "physical attributes" are superior to Drummond's. In fact, it's substantially the opposite!
In the Wages of Wins 2012 "Draft Extravaganza," Drummond was rated as the 67th "best" prospect in that draft. WP had Zeller 35th. Among the top rated prospects according to WP were: William Mosley, Jesse Sanders and Ken Horton.
So it must have been his productivity (Drummond's "college numbers weren't impressive"). But what do we see in WS40 when we compare Drummond and Zeller as freshmen? Drummond had a WS40 of 10.5; Zeller was at 7. Now, Zeller didn't play much as a Freshman (that itself is testimony to Drummond!). As a Sophomore, he registered 10.2 -- a little closer to Drummond.
WS/40 and physical attributes both strongly say Drummond (your Tier 6) over Zeller (your Tier 3). And... lo and behold, Drummond outperformed Zeller as a rookie -- by a country mile! Moreover, he's way younger, meaning he has much more room to improve.
Yep, Drummond's freshman year was VASTLY superior to Zeller's. In YODA, Drummond's freshman year was also better than Zeller's sophomore and junior years. Zeller made a BIG jump in his senior year. Results like this have me taking another look at the age component in what I'm doing, as well as considering how much of a player's college career should be included in the final draft score. I've been using just the final year, but that might not be the best approach.
Now, I note that you have Davis at Tier 1 -- and for good reason off his college performance. No argument there. And then you have him outperforming Drummond as a rookie too. Sorry, you are wrong there. Wrong by a lot.
Minor stats (assists, steals, blocks, TOs, fouls): Drummond has fewer TOs, more blocks and more steals. But he's slightly down on assists and slightly higher in fouls. Still, overall these stats slightly favor Drummond.
Every 40 minutes, Drummond gets 15.2 rebounds (5.8 Orbs), Davis gets 11.2 (3.5 Orbs). Not even close.
Efg% -- Drummond .59, Davis .51 -- and TS% Drummond .56, Davis .55 -- more or less a wash, but Drummond has a little edge.
As to the usage argument, it's BS: consider this -- every 40 minutes, Davis takes 3.7 more shots, but he only makes 1.1 of them. In other words, if Drummond's teammates shoot 30% on those extra shots he leaves them, the team is is getting more from them.
Now... Davis is having an outstanding rookie year; he's a shoe-in to get the RoY award. But Drummond, who won't get it, and who has only played 1000 minutes has been minute for minute the most productive player in the NBA. Bar none. Period.
You describe him as "limiting his game to what he's good at." Apparently, what he's good at is getting his team more extra possessions than any player in the league and converting his own shots at a rate among the highest in the league. Those are the two key factors in winning basketball games.
In other words, again, in re: your comparison of them so far in the NBA, you get an F. WP48 has it right. Add Zeller into the picture. Add your *way too low* estimation of Beal and Kidd-Gilchrist in comparison to Crowder (!). And having Denmon a tier higher than BB and MK-G?? And on a level with Jason Kidd and Tim Duncan? Note that I *like* Crowder (wd have taken him @32) and Denmon (might have taken him @46).
Don't take umbrage, ok? You are doing interesting work. But the idea that YODA can predict a prospect's likely nba results is false on the face of it. It can't even assess relative performance w/ the results in front of it.
I appreciate your complete faith in WP48. I don't share it.
























