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PG: SNATCHING VICTORY FROM THE JAWS OF DEFEAT

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Re: PG: SNATCHING VICTORY FROM THE JAWS OF DEFEAT 

Post#181 » by NecessaryEvil » Thu Mar 12, 2015 9:11 pm

AirP. wrote:Not sure if this was posted already...
This is a fan's perspective sitting next to the Bulls Bench.

http://www.reddit.com/r/nba/comments/2y ... ench_last/

Alright, this is downright hilarious. When the game entered OT, the Bulls really started to pull away with it. For players near the end of the bench it was usually difficult for them to hear Thibs shouting for them to sub in. To help fix this, the players on the bench would shout down to the end and tell that player to check-in. Noah **** with Hinrich at the end of the game, and lied THREE TIMES that coach called for him to check in. It was hilarious, Kirk fell for it every time. Below is a link to the video of Noah trying to apologize and Kirk having none of it.


Video of Noah trying to apologize to Kirk

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QKYjUisdTyM&feature=youtu.be[/youtube]


So cool, thx for posting that..
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Re: PG: SNATCHING VICTORY FROM THE JAWS OF DEFEAT 

Post#182 » by AirP. » Thu Mar 12, 2015 9:19 pm

Not trying to double post, but the "correct" location for the fan's perspective of the 76er's/Bulls game is...

http://www.reddit.com/r/nba/comments/2ytkpm/i_literally_sat_on_the_chicago_bulls_bench_last/

Mentioned chatting with Gibson...
He said he could probably play in the next few games, but they’re playing it smart and will probably give the bone bruise time to heal.

This is from his perspective....
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Re: PG: SNATCHING VICTORY FROM THE JAWS OF DEFEAT 

Post#183 » by Ice Man » Thu Mar 12, 2015 9:28 pm

Career assists per 36 -

Augustine 6.0
Brooks 5.1
Nate 4.7
JL3 4.4

About as I had figured, that's why DJ is my favorite of the bunch.

I don't like this habit of the Bulls of requiring rescues by little SGs, but I must grant we have had quite a few of those in recent years. It must be some sort of record.
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Re: PG: SNATCHING VICTORY FROM THE JAWS OF DEFEAT 

Post#184 » by DuckIII » Thu Mar 12, 2015 9:39 pm

Rerisen wrote:Random aside, but eye test taking a beating in this thread.



Really odd post given the content of the thread. I was able to write that post about Doug's +/- because of having watched the game unfold, with my eyeballs, and then using those same eyeballs to rewatch video to confirm what I saw. Eyeballs just publicly depantsed the +/- metric and made sweet love to its wife.

I love how +/- is always garbage


In single game sample sizes, it is always garbage. Always. Sometimes is accidentally reflects an individual's level of play, but there is literally always a better way to break it down than +/-. Single game +/- is garbage.

, but in separate arguments every single player in the game can be excused for the team's performance while they were in, passing the buck style. Logically, someone on the Bulls had to be a factor in the score being what it was with them in the game, and this applies every game.

I.e. personally I thought E'twan Moore played decent in his 12 minutes. Made 1/2 shots, grabbed 2 boards, 2 assists, played his usual fundamental defense.

So if its not Moore, not Doug, and not Hinrich, all individually argued to be excused, then I guess poor old Nazr is entirely responsible for the 2nd units bad play, or random luck.


Second unit? Those guys didn't all play with each other at the same time. Nor did they play with the same unit Philly was running out. Both the Bulls' players and Philly's players were playing in different combinations, with different matchups, going through different hot and cold spells, at different points of the game. Comparing and weighing their respective +s vs. -s means nothing. Hell, even having a + or a - in a single game says absolutely nothing about one individual player's play.

As we see eye test alone often just boils down to who one's 'guys' are, people defend or criticize the same players over and over, and thus over the long term I'd trust the metrics are telling us something much more objective than any single person's opinion. +/- may get every player a little wrong each game, and a couple players a lot wrong, but over dozens of games, its going to get guys more right than wrong in a general fashion, just by nature of that the winning team plays better and that is going to be reflected. Eventually a trend starts building worth looking at. It's not random chance that the best players in the league have the best +/- almost unfailingly by the season's end and bad players have bad +/-. Even more true once you apply adjustments.


Only when you apply adjustments. Otherwise its completely thrown off by the quality of the team, and which units you play with. Full season +/- is certainly better than a small sample size. But its still a really, really poor way of evaluating individual play due to the large number of factors impacting it, which are outside of any one player's control.

Something also worth considering in individual evaluation. Measuring defense and offense are much different. If a player just plays sound defense and doesn't make mistakes, he can get a passing grade there. But offensively even if a players does nothing obviously wrong, i.e. doesn't miss shots, doesn't have turnovers, that *doesn't* mean he played good offense. Because *someone* has to score the ball for the team. If your team has superstars out there, a player might get a passing grade for just not making mistakes, or just standing around providing spacing. But when the whole unit has no creative or volume scorer, then every single player that is not helping create positive offense is going to be sharing the blame for the team not scoring, even if they individually don't miss shots or have turnovers.


You just took a huge crap on +/-, but I'm not sure you realize it given the parts of your post which came before it.
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Re: PG: SNATCHING VICTORY FROM THE JAWS OF DEFEAT 

Post#185 » by Ice Man » Thu Mar 12, 2015 9:46 pm

vvgotgame19 wrote:I'm kind of starting to notice the more minutes he gets/knows he's gonna play, the lazier he's been getting.


I don't really see that about Niko. His defense has greatly improved, he rotates, challenges shots. Perhaps he could box out more consistently but he rebounds well. Doesn't move well off the ball on offense, but I doubt that is laziness -- it's just not (yet) a skill of his.

Yesterday Pau went up for a shot, missed, and fell down. Niko was the only other Bull near the ball, jumped for the rebound, the Sixers got it. They broke the other way. Niko turned, sprinted full speed down the court stride for stride with the guard who had the ball, the guard passed to Nerlens for a dunk. Stacey then chastized Niko for not covering Nerlens in Pau's absence. Yeah sure. Not only not possible there, but with Taj not being himself this year Niko for sure runs the court the most of any Bulls big.
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Re: PG: SNATCHING VICTORY FROM THE JAWS OF DEFEAT 

Post#186 » by Rerisen » Thu Mar 12, 2015 10:04 pm

DuckIII wrote:Really odd post given the content of the thread. I was able to write that post about Doug's +/- because of having watched the game unfold, with my eyeballs, and then using those same eyeballs to rewatch video to confirm what I saw. Eyeballs just publicly depantsed the +/- metric and made sweet love to its wife.


It probably seems odd because my post wasn't directly weighing on either side of what you guys were discussing, so your review of Doug being good or not has no bearing on what I wrote. Rather my point was an indirect one concerning different people's opinions on the same game. You watched the game with your eyeballs, saw Doug do well, and then played up Hinrich's -18, as probably a bigger part of the reason for Doug's on floor number.

(b) Hinrich's +/- was -18.

(c) In the first half (7.5 minutes) Doug's was -7. During that time, the only Bulls to convert shots were Pau, Niko and Doug. Everyone else's contributions were turnovers and missed shots.

(d) Also during that time (in the first half in which the Sixers outscored the Bulls by 7), Isaiah Canaan had just come into the game, and then right after Doug entered proceeded to light up Hinrich for 3-for-3 from long distance in a 2 minute stretch. Indeed, that 2 minute hot-streak by Canaan draining 3s ON KIRK accounts for the ENTIRETY of McDermott's -5.


While in the lead up to this thread in the Game Thread, and a bit carry over here, it was just about derailed with an argument about how Kirk's -18 number meant nothing since he played such a competent floor game. Which was also from someone else who 'used their eyeballs' to watch the game.

I don't think you really got my post, it wasn't about rating Doug's play at all, but about how two people can watch the same game and come away with entirely different reads on players performance. And such is the eye test only method of evaluation.

Those guys didn't all play with each other at the same time.


Kirk, Doug, Nazr, and Moore, as a 4 man unit played together for about 8 minutes and went -7, the 5th guy was alternately Pau then Niko.

I love how +/- is always garbage


In single game sample sizes, it is always garbage. Always. Sometimes is accidentally reflects an individual's level of play, but there is literally always a better way to break it down than +/-. Single game +/- is garbage.


Didn't I just say +/- gets every player a 'little wrong' each game? And some players a lot wrong? I did. But people thinking that means the stat in general is garbage don't understand the stat.

My point was that something real is being captured on the scoreboard when one team outscores another by 5, 7 whatever points. One team played better, the other played worse. And among those 10 players, each is responsible to lesser or greater degrees for that outcome. Whether 10% responsible by virtue of merely being 1 out of 10 players out there, or being much more or less impactful than 10% by being that good or that bad. And we reach a point of incongruency with the eye test when every player that was on the floor when the team did bad, or every player that had a negative, is separately argued by different people's eye test to not have been the reason.

At the end of the season, +/-. and more specifically adjusted +/- tends to suss out the truth more than not, even if in any individual win or loss it over or undershoots each player by a certain, sometimes large %. It's not random coincidence that LeBron James has the best RPM in the league 4/6 of the last six seasons (behind only Howard '11, and Curry, Harden, this year).
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Re: PG: SNATCHING VICTORY FROM THE JAWS OF DEFEAT 

Post#187 » by Stratmaster » Thu Mar 12, 2015 11:18 pm

DuckIII wrote:
coldfish wrote:
DuckIII wrote:
Butterfly effect is your argument? I thought your argument was that Doug would have actually been responsible. Here's my counter: In every Bulls game that was a close loss, if Doug had played more they very well could have won! Conclusion: Doug is played the exact right amount of minutes in games we win, not enough in the games we lose.


I'm confused. The team did not do well when Doug was on the court. That actually happened. In the game. Yesterday. Its an amateurish projection to say that would have continued in more minutes but its better than completely pulling something out of your ass and saying that it would have reversed itself, which is what you are saying.



I just spent 35 minutes reviewing the game log and watching a video of every basket scored and writing a post about it, which then was dropped. So I'm going to try to summarize very quickly:

(a) Doug played with Hinrich all 10 minutes of his game time (and Nazr for most of his first half minutes - what a unit!).

(b) Hinrich's +/- was -18.

(c) In the first half (7.5 minutes) Doug's was -7. During that time, the only Bulls to convert shots were Pau, Niko and Doug. Everyone else's contributions were turnovers and missed shots.

(d) Also during that time (in the first half in which the Sixers outscored the Bulls by 7), Isaiah Canaan had just come into the game, and then right after Doug entered proceeded to light up Hinrich for 3-for-3 from long distance in a 2 minute stretch. Indeed, that 2 minute hot-streak by Canaan draining 3s ON KIRK accounts for the ENTIRETY of McDermott's -5.

(e) During that first half, Doug hit 66% from the floor, and only gave up one bucket (to Jeremi Grant, who hit a 3 off of a drive and kick that Doug had collapsed to help on - totally routine).

(f) In Doug's whopping 2.5 minutes in the second half, the man he was defending never scored.

(g) Conversely, Doug shot 100% from the floor, and was one of only 2 Bulls to hit a field goal while he was in the game. The other was Mike Dunleavy's half court toss.

In other words, any attempt to attribute the -5 to Doug's play is completely and totally without merit and, in fact, had it not been for Doug during those stretches, the +/- of every player who was out there with him would have been much worse. Put another way, your argument is terrible and unsupported in every single way except for the way you chose to support it, which is with the worst use of +/- I've seen used on realgm, ever.

Sorry to be snarky but this is a pretty ridiculous point to argue. The team sucked it up with Doug on the court and barely won, its not really going out on a limb to say that if he had played more the team very well might have lost.


Oh, it is. It really, really is. Because while "the team" might have been sucking it up while Doug was on the court, Doug wasn't sucking it up. He was one of the only things keeping them afloat. And I know this because I didn't stop at "-5? That's not good!"

I think I'll just put this one on the shelf with your argument that getting experience in NBA games doesn't help you play better in NBA games.


I think we should just forget all the analysis and settle on "It was Hinrich's fault" for all games going forward. It would save a lot of people a lot of carpal tunnel issues. And since Hinrich was -18 and that supposedly means something, then Snell's +18 must mean he played the game of his career, right?

In other words, any attempt to attribute any meaning to an individual's single game +/- is completely and totally without merit, whether you are using it or the person who disagrees with you. I believe any attempt to assign any meaning to any volume of +/- is without merit. The numbers are skewed every game. How does accumulating bad data make the end result good data?

You could make the same argument about Hinrich you did for Doug. For a good number of his minutes he was on the court with Nazr, McD, MDJ and i believe Moore. Mirotic missed an easy layup and Gasol missed at least two shots in the paint that all would have been assists for Hinrich.

Doug played OK. By previous Doug standards he played great. Doug was not significantly hurting the team, nor was he significantly helping the team. Hinrich actually played well offensively, setting up the offense when others couldn't seem to make a simple entry pass, getting assists, and rebounding at a high level for a palyer his size. He did suck defensively for a stretch. The foot injury is obviously taking it's toll on an already old player; he can barely keep his balance out there. That type of injury affects you more defensively (where you have to make quick adjustments to the offensive players movements) than when you are a set em up type PG in the half court (where you know what you are going to do next).

But hey, they pulled out a win. There is no reason not to continue to slowly consider more time for Doug if he continues to show improvement.
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Re: PG: SNATCHING VICTORY FROM THE JAWS OF DEFEAT 

Post#188 » by pylb » Thu Mar 12, 2015 11:23 pm

AirP. wrote:Not sure if this was posted already...
This is a fan's perspective sitting next to the Bulls Bench.

http://www.reddit.com/r/nba/comments/2ytkpm/i_literally_sat_on_the_chicago_bulls_bench_last/(sorry, updated to url)

Alright, this is downright hilarious. When the game entered OT, the Bulls really started to pull away with it. For players near the end of the bench it was usually difficult for them to hear Thibs shouting for them to sub in. To help fix this, the players on the bench would shout down to the end and tell that player to check-in. Noah **** with Hinrich at the end of the game, and lied THREE TIMES that coach called for him to check in. It was hilarious, Kirk fell for it every time. Below is a link to the video of Noah trying to apologize and Kirk having none of it.


Video of Noah trying to apologize to Kirk

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QKYjUisdTyM&feature=youtu.be[/youtube]

The Snell picture is a classic.

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