yosemiteben wrote:mrknowitall215 wrote:Maybe it's just me, but I consider the fact that McRoberts was better than Williams in virtually every aspect (some by a wide margin like AST% & eFG%) and the only advantage Williams have over McRoberts is 3 points per 36 minutes due to a larger usage percentage, I have no choice but to view McRoberts as the superior player
Well I considered each of the stats that I discussed, which you apparently didn't feel compelled to take the time to read. If you're going to ignore them then that's your prerogative, but to continue to argue that based on advanced stats McRoberts is the superior three point shooter, rebounder and defender "by a wide margin" is objectively false.
I read everything you stated, and you didn't state anything wrong in your review. It's just that when I compare two players and one player has 'advantage, advantage, advantage, advantage, draw, advantage, advantage, draw, advantage, advantage', I tend to look at the player with '8 advantages to 2 draws' as the superior player as in a boxing match it would be a 'unanimous decision' even if each statistic advantage was just slight as a '10-9' score per round. That's all












