SelfishPlayer wrote:TTP wrote:SelfishPlayer wrote:Dario Saric currently has a -5 BPM while Richaun Holmes has a 2.2 BPM...
Dario Saric is "really bad."

BPM is a box score stat that doesn't do a great job of measuring intangibles (the things that don't show up in the box score).
I've already postulated that Saric is very good at things that don't show up in the box score. You still haven't answered my question though so I'll ask it again. You think Saric is horrible on offense, but if that's the case, why is the Sixers' offense best when he's on the floor?
Sounds like you are attempting to make Saric into some kind of team player glue guy that does everything great that the coach asks of him, most of which is not quantifiable, yet it's all for a team with ZERO WINS!

That's what is quantifiable, he's a horrible basketball player starting on a team with zero wins while there are players on the bench that are better than he is, one of them the former #3 pick in the draft. How the hell is Saric starting over the #3 pick in the draft and stinking up the joint while doing it?

I'm attempting to use data and all available information to come to an informed and logical conclusion. Sounds like you are attempting to dodge my question and then use caps in order to sensationalize and try to make up for a weak argument.
You are saying these things are not quantifiable, but that's not entirely true. Certain statistics do a better job telling the entire story than others. RPM does a better job quantifying things that BPM, PER, etc do not. Looking at on/off splits does a decent job of indicating whether a player makes his team better.
Why does it matter that we have zero wins for the context of our discussion? It doesn't make the statistics any less relevant.
Give it up with the #3 pick in the draft argument. It's weak and we have a year's worth of pro data that is significantly more relevant than anything from pre-draft. Anthony Bennett was the #1 pick in his draft - that alone does not make him worthy of playing time over those that have earned it by playing better. The irony here is that Okafor's career BPM is -4.1, so by your own logic, he's pretty bad and not worthy of playing time.
It is a pretty interesting comparison though. Saric has been one of the least efficient scorers on the team, yet lineups that include him have been among the team's best offenses. Okafor has been among the more efficient scorers on the team, yet lineups that include him have been among the team's worst offenses. Assuming this kept up over a larger sample, what would you make of that?