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Game 45: The Booker Watch against the Hawks.

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Re: Game 45: The Booker Watch against the Hawks. 

Post#341 » by AtheJ415 » Tue Jan 26, 2016 4:17 am

bwgood77 wrote:
AtheJ415 wrote:
Nope. They're right there at basketball reference. WS/48 and Offensive-defensive differential, which are both, imo, better numbers to use for guys playing on the same team but in different roles and as different types of players. But hey, different strokes.


Well regardless, you are cherry picking stats, and I figured you might resort to win shares, which I don't like as much, but clearly "all the advanced stats" don't favor Warren over Tucker. And again, for the record, right now, I would play Warren as much as possible over Tucker because of the state of our team, but despite people hating Hornacek, he has seemed to get the most out of young players, particularly in season one, but when he first gave Booker and Warren big minutes they did well....when he gives them fewer I imagine he has a good reason.

I don't think the "throwing guys out there because they are young" tactic is a proven tactic, though some will resort to 1 in a million player like LeBron or Kobe or whoever.


I'm not saying throw Warren out there because he's young. I'm saying throw him out there because he's better.

And it's not really cherry picking, instead it's using individual numbers that are rate based as opposed to numbers including teammates and that are impacted by minutes played. VORP is calculated in basketball reference using minutes played, so PJ's is impacted by his higher minutes, and box plus minus is a 5 person stat. In that scenario, VORP is like comparing Knight to Booker on the season despite one getting drastically more minutes. In fact, Knight's VORP of 0.6 is much higher than Booker's -0.2, and yes that's NEGATIVE 0.2. That's why VORP is best used for guys in similar scenarios and who play the same style.

Box plus minus over 45 games with one guy playing off the bench and another as a starter can't give a great value either. That's like using wins and losses outright to compare players on different teams, since it's a 5 person stat that is largely dependent on how balanced your team is. It's a great stat for long-term measuring of players with comparably deep teams or in similar roles, but not here. If you're going to buy into box +/- over 45 games, then you shouldn't have a problem with ORtg-DRtg since that is at least an individual estimate, and that being a negative number means we're more likely to lose every minute PJ is on the court. That is not the case with TJ.

Also, I'd argue that PJ's rebounding whore mentality inflates his numbers quite a bit. He frequently takes easy rebounds away from his own bigs (particularly Len), and those do not in any way help us win.
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Re: Game 45: The Booker Watch against the Hawks. 

Post#342 » by RunDogGun » Tue Jan 26, 2016 4:19 am

AtheJ415 wrote:
RunDogGun wrote:
bwgood77 wrote:
You keep mentioning that overall numbers drastically favor TJ. Every time I look it up, this isn't what I see. Exactly what numbers are you talking about?

Now don't get me wrong, I'd rather see much more of Booker and Warren than older guys, but the numbers don't say what you say they do....and the reason Warren and Booker rank so low is because their defense is really bad..you can follow the links to see the breakdown of the below numbers of what makes up the net number between offensive or defensive RPM/BPM

If I go to basketball reference and look at BPM

Under the advanced section, if you sort by BPM, the list comes out as:

Bledsoe 3.1
Tucker .3
Price .2
Teletovic 0
Knight -.4
Leuer -.5
Warren -.9
Chandler -1.1
Len -2.3
Booker -2.8
Goodwin -4.2
Markieff -5.5

http://www.basketball-reference.com/teams/PHO/2016.html

If you sort by VORP (value over replacement player), the list is:

Bledsoe 1.4
Tucker .7
Knight .6
Teletovic .4
Price .3
Leuer .3
Warren .3
Chandler .2
Len -.1
Booker -.2
Goodwin -.2
Markieff -.6

And here are the RPM ratings for each of our players this year. For those who don't know what RPM is, here is the description

Bledsoe 3.03
Price .57
Teletovic .55
Leuer .44
Chandler -.93
Len -1.01
Tucker -1.2
Knight -1.63
Warren -1.76
Markieff -2.65
Goodwin -3.6
Booker -3.92

http://espn.go.com/nba/statistics/rpm/_/page/1/sort/RPM

He meant the numbers you may not be able to find. :o Good research BW.


Nope. They're right there at basketball reference. WS/48 and Offensive-defensive differential, which are both, imo, better numbers to use for guys playing on the same team but in different roles and as different types of players. But hey, different strokes.

Sorry I took your "overall" as meaning overall, not just one stat. Maybe it was a poor choice of words? :wink:
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Re: Game 45: The Booker Watch against the Hawks. 

Post#343 » by bwgood77 » Tue Jan 26, 2016 4:32 am

AtheJ415 wrote:
bwgood77 wrote:
AtheJ415 wrote:
Nope. They're right there at basketball reference. WS/48 and Offensive-defensive differential, which are both, imo, better numbers to use for guys playing on the same team but in different roles and as different types of players. But hey, different strokes.


Well regardless, you are cherry picking stats, and I figured you might resort to win shares, which I don't like as much, but clearly "all the advanced stats" don't favor Warren over Tucker. And again, for the record, right now, I would play Warren as much as possible over Tucker because of the state of our team, but despite people hating Hornacek, he has seemed to get the most out of young players, particularly in season one, but when he first gave Booker and Warren big minutes they did well....when he gives them fewer I imagine he has a good reason.

I don't think the "throwing guys out there because they are young" tactic is a proven tactic, though some will resort to 1 in a million player like LeBron or Kobe or whoever.


I'm not saying throw Warren out there because he's young. I'm saying throw him out there because he's better.

And it's not really cherry picking, instead it's using individual numbers that are rate based as opposed to numbers including teammates and that are impacted by minutes played. VORP is calculated in basketball reference using minutes played, so PJ's is impacted by his higher minutes, and box plus minus is a 5 person stat. In that scenario, VORP is like comparing Knight to Booker on the season despite one getting drastically more minutes. In fact, Knight's VORP of 0.6 is much higher than Booker's -0.2, and yes that's NEGATIVE 0.2. That's why VORP is best used for guys in similar scenarios and who play the same style.

Box plus minus over 45 games with one guy playing off the bench and another as a starter can't give a great value either. That's like using wins and losses outright to compare players on different teams, since it's a 5 person stat that is largely dependent on how balanced your team is. It's a great stat for long-term measuring of players with comparably deep teams or in similar roles, but not here. If you're going to buy into box +/- over 45 games, then you shouldn't have a problem with ORtg-DRtg since that is at least an individual estimate, and that being a negative number means we're more likely to lose every minute PJ is on the court. That is not the case with TJ.

Also, I'd argue that PJ's rebounding whore mentality inflates his numbers quite a bit. He frequently takes easy rebounds away from his own bigs (particularly Len), and those do not in any way help us win.


Honestly, I think you know how these number break out better than I do, but when you say "all the numbers point to ____" I would like to see a little backup, because when I look at them I keep seeing different things. I know there are so many basketball stats these days and they are tough to decipher because of minutes played, who you are playing with, etc, but blanket statements won't leave anyone here (well yes, probably some) convinced.

I think you have very good insight as does Los Soles, but I want to see the support (which I'm guessing you can easily provide)...like Los Soles does.
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Re: Game 45: The Booker Watch against the Hawks. 

Post#344 » by AtheJ415 » Tue Jan 26, 2016 7:18 pm

RunDogGun wrote:
AtheJ415 wrote:
RunDogGun wrote:He meant the numbers you may not be able to find. :o Good research BW.


Nope. They're right there at basketball reference. WS/48 and Offensive-defensive differential, which are both, imo, better numbers to use for guys playing on the same team but in different roles and as different types of players. But hey, different strokes.

Sorry I took your "overall" as meaning overall, not just one stat. Maybe it was a poor choice of words? :wink:


Overall means most/on the whole, not ALL. But yes, the advanced stats that are appropriate to look at here show this. If you think it's fair to use stats that factor in minutes played when they don't play the same minutes, or that are influenced by their teammates, then I guess you can feel differently, but keep in mind that such stats also suggest Knight is infinitely better than Booker, and would also favor looking at wins and losses to value individual players.

Read the last paragraph below. If you want to use BPM or VORP, that's your opinion and you can, but they lead to whacky results in these scenarios because they aren't apples to apples comparisons. Yes, I used the advanced stats that I think give apples to apples comparisons to measure overall play, and removed the ones that are impacted by minutes played and teammates. What's wrong with that?
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Re: Game 45: The Booker Watch against the Hawks. 

Post#345 » by AtheJ415 » Tue Jan 26, 2016 7:42 pm

bwgood77 wrote:
AtheJ415 wrote:
bwgood77 wrote:
Well regardless, you are cherry picking stats, and I figured you might resort to win shares, which I don't like as much, but clearly "all the advanced stats" don't favor Warren over Tucker. And again, for the record, right now, I would play Warren as much as possible over Tucker because of the state of our team, but despite people hating Hornacek, he has seemed to get the most out of young players, particularly in season one, but when he first gave Booker and Warren big minutes they did well....when he gives them fewer I imagine he has a good reason.

I don't think the "throwing guys out there because they are young" tactic is a proven tactic, though some will resort to 1 in a million player like LeBron or Kobe or whoever.


I'm not saying throw Warren out there because he's young. I'm saying throw him out there because he's better.

And it's not really cherry picking, instead it's using individual numbers that are rate based as opposed to numbers including teammates and that are impacted by minutes played. VORP is calculated in basketball reference using minutes played, so PJ's is impacted by his higher minutes, and box plus minus is a 5 person stat. In that scenario, VORP is like comparing Knight to Booker on the season despite one getting drastically more minutes. In fact, Knight's VORP of 0.6 is much higher than Booker's -0.2, and yes that's NEGATIVE 0.2. That's why VORP is best used for guys in similar scenarios and who play the same style.

Box plus minus over 45 games with one guy playing off the bench and another as a starter can't give a great value either. That's like using wins and losses outright to compare players on different teams, since it's a 5 person stat that is largely dependent on how balanced your team is. It's a great stat for long-term measuring of players with comparably deep teams or in similar roles, but not here. If you're going to buy into box +/- over 45 games, then you shouldn't have a problem with ORtg-DRtg since that is at least an individual estimate, and that being a negative number means we're more likely to lose every minute PJ is on the court. That is not the case with TJ.

Also, I'd argue that PJ's rebounding whore mentality inflates his numbers quite a bit. He frequently takes easy rebounds away from his own bigs (particularly Len), and those do not in any way help us win.


Honestly, I think you know how these number break out better than I do, but when you say "all the numbers point to ____" I would like to see a little backup, because when I look at them I keep seeing different things. I know there are so many basketball stats these days and they are tough to decipher because of minutes played, who you are playing with, etc, but blanket statements won't leave anyone here (well yes, probably some) convinced.

I think you have very good insight as does Los Soles, but I want to see the support (which I'm guessing you can easily provide)...like Los Soles does.


I did provide backup. TJ's WS/48 has been double PJ's for most of the season (it was up at .122 for a long period of time, until TJ has recently struggled and PJ has done better, but it's still nearly that), and his ORtg DRtg differential is also equally huge. They aren't even remotely close to each other when viewed under that holistic spectrum. The truth is there are not that many advanced numbers you can look at that are appropriate to measure 2 players in different roles on the same team with different minutes. WS/48 is the best one in this scenario though because it eliminates the key weakness of winshare, which is that it inflates guys on good teams since they have more wins to share across their team (like comparing anyone on GS versus anyone on Philly). Here, we have the same number of wins to share, and WS/48 eliminates the minutes played differential.

I could break down every advanced offensive stat and every advanced defensive stat too but they would show nothing everybody doesn't already know, which is that TJ dominates PJ offensively and the reverse happens defensively. So of the holistic numbers that factor in both sides of the ball, there are only 4 that are commonly used. VORP is great for guys playing similar minutes, but not guys playing different minutes, so that has to get tossed. So what we're left with is box plus minus, WS, WS/48, and ORtg and DRtg differential. WS (as a total not /48) gets tossed because it factors in minutes played. WS/48 solves the minutes problems so that stays. You could keep box plus minus, but it makes less intuitive sense here since one is playing with starters while the other backups. ORating and DRating, unlike box plus minus, is an individual estimate. You have to look at differential because individually ORating and DRating don't tell you much since 1 is all offense and the other is all defense. I think differential makes more sense here because we have 2 guys who excel at each area, and the difference in that also favors TJ, and it's not close.

If you want to fall back on Box +/- over such a short period of time, or VORP for guys who play different minutes, then you have to come to grips with Brandon Knight being one of our best players. Because his numbers there are better than many of our other guys due to minutes played and getting to play with better players (particularly Bledsoe, our best player) for much of the year. Take Knight v. Booker on these numbers. You look at WS/48, and Booker is 1/3 higher, and his ORtg DRtg differential is also 3X better. Those show Booker has had the better year. For VORP Knight's is 0.6 while Booker's is -0.2, and for Box +/-, Knight is -0.4, while Booker is -2.8, both of which favor Knight in a big way. So let me ask you, who has been better this year in your mind, Booker or Knight? Because that should clarify which advanced stats are most accurate here.


http://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.cgi?request=1&sum=0&y1=2016&p1=knighbr03&y2=2016&p2=bookede01&p3=&p4=&p5=&p6=
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Re: Game 45: The Booker Watch against the Hawks. 

Post#346 » by bwgood77 » Tue Jan 26, 2016 8:26 pm

Spoiler:
AtheJ415 wrote:
bwgood77 wrote:
AtheJ415 wrote:
I'm not saying throw Warren out there because he's young. I'm saying throw him out there because he's better.

And it's not really cherry picking, instead it's using individual numbers that are rate based as opposed to numbers including teammates and that are impacted by minutes played. VORP is calculated in basketball reference using minutes played, so PJ's is impacted by his higher minutes, and box plus minus is a 5 person stat. In that scenario, VORP is like comparing Knight to Booker on the season despite one getting drastically more minutes. In fact, Knight's VORP of 0.6 is much higher than Booker's -0.2, and yes that's NEGATIVE 0.2. That's why VORP is best used for guys in similar scenarios and who play the same style.

Box plus minus over 45 games with one guy playing off the bench and another as a starter can't give a great value either. That's like using wins and losses outright to compare players on different teams, since it's a 5 person stat that is largely dependent on how balanced your team is. It's a great stat for long-term measuring of players with comparably deep teams or in similar roles, but not here. If you're going to buy into box +/- over 45 games, then you shouldn't have a problem with ORtg-DRtg since that is at least an individual estimate, and that being a negative number means we're more likely to lose every minute PJ is on the court. That is not the case with TJ.

Also, I'd argue that PJ's rebounding whore mentality inflates his numbers quite a bit. He frequently takes easy rebounds away from his own bigs (particularly Len), and those do not in any way help us win.


Honestly, I think you know how these number break out better than I do, but when you say "all the numbers point to ____" I would like to see a little backup, because when I look at them I keep seeing different things. I know there are so many basketball stats these days and they are tough to decipher because of minutes played, who you are playing with, etc, but blanket statements won't leave anyone here (well yes, probably some) convinced.

I think you have very good insight as does Los Soles, but I want to see the support (which I'm guessing you can easily provide)...like Los Soles does.


I did provide backup. TJ's WS/48 has been double PJ's for most of the season (it was up at .122 for a long period of time, until TJ has recently struggled and PJ has done better, but it's still nearly that), and his ORtg DRtg differential is also equally huge. They aren't even remotely close to each other when viewed under that holistic spectrum. The truth is there are not that many advanced numbers you can look at that are appropriate to measure 2 players in different roles on the same team with different minutes. WS/48 is the best one in this scenario though because it eliminates the key weakness of winshare, which is that it inflates guys on good teams since they have more wins to share across their team (like comparing anyone on GS versus anyone on Philly). Here, we have the same number of wins to share, and WS/48 eliminates the minutes played differential.

I could break down every advanced offensive stat and every advanced defensive stat too but they would show nothing everybody doesn't already know, which is that TJ dominates PJ offensively and the reverse happens defensively. So of the holistic numbers that factor in both sides of the ball, there are only 4 that are commonly used. VORP is great for guys playing similar minutes, but not guys playing different minutes, so that has to get tossed. So what we're left with is box plus minus, WS, WS/48, and ORtg and DRtg differential. WS (as a total not /48) gets tossed because it factors in minutes played. WS/48 solves the minutes problems so that stays. You could keep box plus minus, but it makes less intuitive sense here since one is playing with starters while the other backups. ORating and DRating, unlike box plus minus, is an individual estimate. You have to look at differential because individually ORating and DRating don't tell you much since 1 is all offense and the other is all defense. I think differential makes more sense here because we have 2 guys who excel at each area, and the difference in that also favors TJ, and it's not close.

If you want to fall back on Box +/- over such a short period of time, or VORP for guys who play different minutes, then you have to come to grips with Brandon Knight being one of our best players. Because his numbers there are better than many of our other guys due to minutes played and getting to play with better players (particularly Bledsoe, our best player) for much of the year. Take Knight v. Booker on these numbers. You look at WS/48, and Booker is 1/3 higher, and his ORtg DRtg differential is also 3X better. Those show Booker has had the better year. For VORP Knight's is 0.6 while Booker's is -0.2, and for Box +/-, Knight is -0.4, while Booker is -2.8, both of which favor Knight in a big way. So let me ask you, who has been better this year in your mind, Booker or Knight? Because that should clarify which advanced stats are most accurate here.


http://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.cgi?request=1&sum=0&y1=2016&p1=knighbr03&y2=2016&p2=bookede01&p3=&p4=&p5=&p6=


Well overall obviously Knight's been better. He's had a couple of monster games, but due to expectations, salary, having a bright young player that looks to have more upside on a rookie contract, giving up a probable lotto pick and a young pg to get Knight, I am very disappointed in Knight overall, and extremely happy with Booker relative to expectations.

I definitely want to see Warren play over PJ and Booker play over Knight, so it's kind of pointless for me to engage in debate on the subject.

I just kept seeing you mention that all the advanced metrics prove that TJ is even better than PJ overall when I kept looking it up and didn't see that. So I get your point that you prefer WS/48. Not entirely sure about throwing other stuff out completely though. Theoretically going against second unit guys should help your case, not hurt it, and even though we didn't have a great starting five, we had pretty solid depth for most of the year, so I don't think playing with the second unit should have hurt a players advanced numbers on our team.
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