What's up with that? The machine must have the same vision of the Hawks future as me

Moderators: dms269, HMFFL, Jamaaliver
tbhawksfan1 wrote:If you put in a Hawks trade it inevitably gives us a minus return on the win/loss. Even trading Baze for an All-Star gets us a negtive win/lose.
What's up with that? The machine must have the same vision of the Hawks future as me
jayu70 wrote:tbhawksfan1 wrote:If you put in a Hawks trade it inevitably gives us a minus return on the win/loss. Even trading Baze for an All-Star gets us a negtive win/lose.
What's up with that? The machine must have the same vision of the Hawks future as me
How is that possible? So if you trade Baze for say Klay or Giannis straight up, we still end up with less wins?
what does the RealGM trade checker say?
tbhawksfan1 wrote:If you put in a Hawks trade it inevitably gives us a minus return on the win/loss. Even trading Baze for an All-Star gets us a negtive win/lose.
What's up with that?
Peachtree HoopsAtlanta’s mark was accumulated despite being outscored by opponents for the season (-0.4 net rating per 100 possessions) and that forecasts a regression. Three notable projection systems have weighed in on what to expect from the Hawks after the All-Star break and, in a weird twist, all three reached the same conclusion.
...[for] the Hawks to finish with a 45-37 record and in fifth place in the Eastern Conference. (NOTE: Atlanta would need to post a 13-13 record after the break to reach the 45-win mark)
Given that the Hawks essentially boast a net rating of a .500 team -- and the fact that Atlanta’s schedule becomes significantly more difficult in March -- the combination makes a great deal of sense.
Jamaaliver wrote:tbhawksfan1 wrote:If you put in a Hawks trade it inevitably gives us a minus return on the win/loss. Even trading Baze for an All-Star gets us a negtive win/lose.
What's up with that?
Just a guess - we over achieved in the first half due to an easy schedule and are expected to regress to the mean after the break:Peachtree HoopsAtlanta’s mark was accumulated despite being outscored by opponents for the season (-0.4 net rating per 100 possessions) and that forecasts a regression. Three notable projection systems have weighed in on what to expect from the Hawks after the All-Star break and, in a weird twist, all three reached the same conclusion.
...[for] the Hawks to finish with a 45-37 record and in fifth place in the Eastern Conference. (NOTE: Atlanta would need to post a 13-13 record after the break to reach the 45-win mark)
Given that the Hawks essentially boast a net rating of a .500 team -- and the fact that Atlanta’s schedule becomes significantly more difficult in March -- the combination makes a great deal of sense.