mccluskey wrote:Red Larrivee wrote:Today, someone tweeted that analytics have become an erroneous substitute for true understanding of a sport. It makes sense given how fantasy basketball and football have become so popular among fans. There are a lot more box score analysts today and frankly, anyone could write a mildly informed profile on a player without actually watching tape.
I understand both sides, but I will always lean eye test first, and then statistics in any sport except baseball.
100% agreed with this. Sports are big mainstream entertainment these days, and you have a lot of people with no background or serious interest in studying them who still want to appear knowledgeable and be part of the conversation without having to really understand the game.
The missed irony in the tweet and its hubris, is how many people have a 'true understanding of the sport'. It suggests an arrogant, "I have nothing more to learn," attitude.
Of course 9 out of 10 will claim they do and then when you ask for their opinions on a player's skill at a particular thing, you will get 3 or 4 different answers among them on how good the guy is at it, based on all their subjective eye-tests.

Just read the Arron Afflalo thread for instance, people can't even agree what the guy is good at.
Numbers like TS% or +/- never give you different answers based on the same data. They aren't a bible for exact player worth, you must be able to interpret some context, but they are at minimum an objective foundation to use to help you paint the picture of a player more accurately, based on actual facts of what happened.
Not some guy seeing a couple Kobe game winners replayed over and over on sportscenter, never showing his far more often misses, and believing he's 'uber clutch'. What % of the NBA fanbase believed that myth for years? Their 'eye-test' believed it because that is all their eyes ever were shown.
The root of analytics, is of course analysis or to analyze something, and all that means is to try to understand it better.
Where the NBA has come from the 40s till now you could say is on account of 'analytics' in a generic sense, even if past advancements of understanding the game - Tom Thibodeau scribbling his own player rating system in a notebook - were done with pencil and paper instead of computers. It's nothing more than progress, the march of civilization!