eagereyez wrote:Killboard wrote:eagereyez wrote:A 1.60 ORPM that is offset by his hugely negative DRPM.
DRPM weight rebounds a lot, just as any other defensive advanced stat, and the Wolves are bad in defense as a whole.
Is hard to distinguish who the fault is when you have 3 21 YO players beside him at all times and a bench full of scrubbs.
To know exactly where Wiggins is defensively you would put him besides competent defenders. Maybe that could happen as soon as next season. But I know something for sure, he is a lot better defending SG than SF, given his current weight and strenght.
He could not be a positive player on Defense (which I think is becoming as a late) but definetly he isnt the worst NBA defender in his position, as DRPM weights.
Where did you find that DRPM weighs rebounds? RPM doesn't use box score stats. It uses play by play data. It's from the same family of stats as +/-. Maybe you're confusing DRPM with DBPM.
RPM is a propietary stat, so there isnt a published formula, but people that tried to recreate RPM find this:
http://nyloncalculus.com/2016/02/19/freelance-friday-deconstructing-rpm-the-mighty-prior/
Overall a linear combination of RAPM and BPM is quite good at predicting RPM. BPM is actually a better predictor than RAPM. That shows in part how important the prior is.
Actually, I split it into predicting ORPM and DRPM separately and combined the two. The model for DRPM also improved by adding Height as a variable. It is not used in BPM, but is used in Engelmann’s prior.
So basically is some proportion of BPM, RAPM and Height.























