therealbig3 wrote:rebirthoftheM wrote:therealbig3 wrote:
Who's doing this btw?
And it's disingenuous to keep referring to it as just one stat, as if it's basically the same as PPG or PER. It's a stat that encompasses everything that happens on the basketball court, and with enough sample size, it's very valuable and trumps the value of the box score, because it's showing us what those box score stats are actually translating into in terms of the final score.
And the sample size is huge with KG. In a variety of situations. That's why it's so convincing to so many of us.
It is huge? The sample size in the 04 playoffs where he was off was 86 minutes. 86 minutes!. That's minuscule and is subject to a whole lotta noise. What about match-up/line-up issues? Momentum/trending issues? End of game score running by an opponent?
Or are you using cumulative on/offs from multiple playoff runs (a lot of them being 1st round exits) to interpret a single years on/off? If so, IMO this would be a fallacy. What KG did in the 2002 playoffs has zero bearing in the 2004 Playoffs. They are two separate years, against separate teams, with their own unique circumstances. We need proper context to these on/off splits.
This isn't to say that KG was not having big impact in the playoffs. I mean, we know he was a high high impact player during his prime/peak. But the monster on/offs we see in the PS, even they occur across several years, again are not at all definitive. Sample sizes way way too small.
I'm not drawing conclusions off the PS +/-, I think they just tend to show the same thing that the RS +/- consistently showed us.
I brought up PS +/- in one series just to counter the point that KG didn't play well in that series. What +/- in a small sample size can tell us is if a player was helping his team or not. If KG posts a +47 on/off in a playoff series, I think it's safe to say that the team pretty much lived and died with him in that particular series. Drawing any conclusions other than that is tricky, but it does run counter to the idea that he didn't play well.
I am not in the boat that says KG didn't play well in the PS, though what I see from him is not conclusive enough to conclude that he played at the same level in the PS, or upped his play in the PS, like other ATGs. In fact in 04, I find it hard pressed to argue that KG was better in the PS than he was in the RS. The decontexualised on/off stuff does not move me. We all need more context.
But let me flip this.
KG was not only a RS impact monster, but also a monster in the box score department. He was putting up big numbers that registered on the stat gazers mind. He was no Steve Nash.
But somehow, his PS numbers in the one extended PS run he had with the Wolves (04) drop. And I mean drop. And the same applies to 02-03, another peak year for him. His shooting percentages also tumbled down in both years (more significantly in 03/04).
Yet, we are meant to believe that KG was exhibiting the same level of impact in the PS, like he was in the RS, despite his numbers and efficiency all dropping? Where is the evidence for this, other than decontexualised on/off? I see people say his defense was epic, but again, defensive indicators are hella problematic for a variety of reasons.
I am not saying it is not possible. I am also not denying he had high impact in the playoffs. But to dismiss that a dude, who was a monster in the RS in box score + impact metrics, and then sees his box score indicators, including efficiency tumble down in the PS, might have actually under-performed in the PS, and might have been exhibiting less impact than his RS version, without actual substantive proof is simply not good analysis. Again, not saying this is true. But we all need more context and information to make conclusions. And at the moment, I see a dude who had amazing box score indicators+ had high impact in the RS and then saw his box score stuff fall off in the PS. You'd have to argue that the box score fall off was more than made up with increased impact, which again needs proof.
Otherwise (and I love RWB- my favorite player in the league at the moment) we'll have to celebrate Westbrook's 1st round performance, and deem it one of the most impactful performances of all time, despite their being serious issues with such a conclusion.





























