Dat2U wrote:Just looking at Wp48 list, the order doesn't look right to me. Chris Paul ahead of LeBron? Kirilenko, Marion & Leonard are top 10 players? Reggie Evans, Jason Kidd & Pablo Prigioni are in the top 20? Color me skeptical regarding Wp48.
There would seem to be two goals when designing an analytical like WP48:
1. Correlate with team wins. IOW, if for every team in the league you list total WP (Wins Produced) by adding up what all a team's players produced (using each players WP48 and number of minutes played) and then list all 30 teams from highest to lowest resulting number, your list should be exactly the same as a list of the 30 teams by their record.
2. Verify that your tool actually distributes WP48 accurately among the players on the teams. Being right w/ #1 already indicates that you are doing roughly the right thing, but you do need more than that.
In re: #1, Dave Berri claims that WP48 correlates to a level of 94%. Given that the data is all public and can be checked, and that he publishes in refereed academic journals of Economics, there's little reason to doubt this (Btw, do the same thing with PER, and it correlates at @ 80%. That's enough evidence for me to jettison PER as a way of explaining how an individual player's performance contributes to team wins.)
The validity of #2 is more complex, and other than saying that a lot of regression analysis done w/ stat software was behind the way WP assigns values (positive and negative) to things players do, I can't tell you much -- you might want to read his books (which are *not* heavy w/ academic jargon but are quite enjoyable instead).
One check is provided by player movement: the data shows that players tend to produce very similar numbers (and therefore very similar WP48s) as they move from team to team -- and #1 remains valid.
Now, if we assume his metric is valid -- i.e. that it's not possible to contravene its results and no better-correlating metric is proposed in its place -- then the surprises you see are not grounds to question the metric. They just register the fact that one's intuitive sense of what makes a guy help your team win is not a reliable guide to reality... like most "intuitions."
I certainly am not surprised to see Kawhi Leonard where he is on the list. Nor Faried. Nor Drummond. And I'm not surprised to see Chris Paul at the top of the heap. I've thought of him as the best player in the league for a long time.
Someone like Reggie Evans is high on the list because he has an overwhelming skill -- rebounding. Guys who rebound extraordinarily and don't miss a lot of shots (take few and shoot a high %) have huge impact on wins.
Think about Reggie this way: every 40 minutes he got over 18 boards (!) of which 5.3 were offensive boards. He only missed 2.8 shots in that same time. Lets assume the opponent grabbed every one of those misses. In that case, lets remove 2.8 offensive rebounds from his numbers and remove those missed shots too.
That leaves Reggie Evans shooting 100% and grabbing over 15 boards every 40 minutes. Starts to be obvious how he gets so high on the list, doesn't it?
