bwgood77 wrote:Booker's defense not looking so good here. Nor is Jackson's or Ulis' offense.
Team defense has been bad. Its all about numbers, but when you watch the game, you see different things.
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bwgood77 wrote:Booker's defense not looking so good here. Nor is Jackson's or Ulis' offense.
bwgood77 wrote:Booker's defense not looking so good here. Nor is Jackson's or Ulis' offense.
jcsunsfan wrote:bwgood77 wrote:Booker's defense not looking so good here. Nor is Jackson's or Ulis' offense.
Team defense has been bad. Its all about numbers, but when you watch the game, you see different things.
bwgood77 wrote:Booker's defense not looking so good here. Nor is Jackson's or Ulis' offense.
SideSwipe wrote:bwgood77 wrote:Booker's defense not looking so good here. Nor is Jackson's or Ulis' offense.
There are some very interesting people in the top right quadrant. Vuc, Kanter and Drummond, among others. Those are three guys who haven't be known for their defense. I hope this is accurate. I know Vuc has been balling this season, and Kanter has been doing fairly well in NY as well. Glad to see Drummond may be turning his defense around a little as well.
That said, I would like to see how these numbers are calculated.
Who are some good candidates in the top right we might want to focus on in trade?
As such, the formula for TPA is rather simple. It’s broken down into two parts—offensive points added (OPA) and defensive points saved (DPS)—and each is calculated in the same vein.
OPA is derived by adjusting offensive box plus/minus (OBPM) to account for the number of possessions the player in question is present for. Similarly, DPS is derived from a similar adjustment of defensive box plus/minus (DBPM) with that same number of possessions. OBPM and DBPM, both calculated by Basketball-Reference.com, estimate the per-100-possessions value of a player on either end of the court.
Add OPA and DPS together, and you have TPA. A score of zero indicates a player was perfectly average (by no means a bad thing for rookies or lifelong end-of-bench players), while anything positive means they were better than an average-level replacement.
bwgood77 wrote:As such, the formula for TPA is rather simple. It’s broken down into two parts—offensive points added (OPA) and defensive points saved (DPS)—and each is calculated in the same vein.
OPA is derived by adjusting offensive box plus/minus (OBPM) to account for the number of possessions the player in question is present for. Similarly, DPS is derived from a similar adjustment of defensive box plus/minus (DBPM) with that same number of possessions. OBPM and DBPM, both calculated by Basketball-Reference.com, estimate the per-100-possessions value of a player on either end of the court.
Add OPA and DPS together, and you have TPA. A score of zero indicates a player was perfectly average (by no means a bad thing for rookies or lifelong end-of-bench players), while anything positive means they were better than an average-level replacement.
https://nbamath.com/tpa-model/
You can look at the complete list by ranking here:
https://nbamath.com/2017-18-nba-tpa/
According to this metric though, Chriss is our team's leader in DPS, so it being driven by box scores, blocks probably influence it a lot.
SideSwipe wrote:bwgood77 wrote:As such, the formula for TPA is rather simple. It’s broken down into two parts—offensive points added (OPA) and defensive points saved (DPS)—and each is calculated in the same vein.
OPA is derived by adjusting offensive box plus/minus (OBPM) to account for the number of possessions the player in question is present for. Similarly, DPS is derived from a similar adjustment of defensive box plus/minus (DBPM) with that same number of possessions. OBPM and DBPM, both calculated by Basketball-Reference.com, estimate the per-100-possessions value of a player on either end of the court.
Add OPA and DPS together, and you have TPA. A score of zero indicates a player was perfectly average (by no means a bad thing for rookies or lifelong end-of-bench players), while anything positive means they were better than an average-level replacement.
https://nbamath.com/tpa-model/
You can look at the complete list by ranking here:
https://nbamath.com/2017-18-nba-tpa/
According to this metric though, Chriss is our team's leader in DPS, so it being driven by box scores, blocks probably influence it a lot.
It's interesting, but the fallacy of those scores is that they are related to your own team more than related to anyone on another team. I do use those metrics often, but because they are off/on they have some weaknesses. If there is a big disparity between players on the same team they will show up exacerbated in metrics like this. Likewise if there is not a big difference between players then it will show positive signs in the metrics, even if both are bad. This type of metric is better as a team rating than it is at individual rating, IMO, because of those differences.
MilotheSlayer wrote:I see Millsap could be out for awhile. Someone think of a trade where we get Mudiay, 1st for Monroe. Not sure what kind of baggage needs to be added but it should be something McD is looking at. Wouldn't it be hilarious if we traded Bled for 2 1st and Mudiay?
Saberestar wrote:MilotheSlayer wrote:I see Millsap could be out for awhile. Someone think of a trade where we get Mudiay, 1st for Monroe. Not sure what kind of baggage needs to be added but it should be something McD is looking at. Wouldn't it be hilarious if we traded Bled for 2 1st and Mudiay?
I do not think they need Monroe because he is a C, he can not play PF in the current NBA.
Jokic, Plumlee and Faried are enough to play PF/C for them, and they have other players like Hernangomez and Arthur that can play at PF too.
Bobby Marks
ESPN
The one thing that the Nuggets don't have a shortage of players at is power forward. Including Paul Millsap, Denver entered the season with 6 PF on the roster and could even add backup center Mason Plumlee to that mix.
oldscho0led wrote:Baseball is all about momentum. Pirates will carry their winning ways and beat Giants in the Wildcard.
A's over Royals. Lester and experience will prove that he's worth the trade.
Tigers winning it all. Tigers are, imo, peaking at the right time.
jcsunsfan wrote:I just doubt the metrics. It has some notoriously bad defenders listed above the line.
LukasBMW wrote:It really sucks Porter went down for the season. I wonder if he will still enter the draft?
Back surgery is no joke. Even if he recovers, disc issues and surgery already are scary for his age.
Does this knock him down to late lottery?
AtheJ415 wrote:LukasBMW wrote:It really sucks Porter went down for the season. I wonder if he will still enter the draft?
Back surgery is no joke. Even if he recovers, disc issues and surgery already are scary for his age.
Does this knock him down to late lottery?
It does really suck for him, though it could be a blessing for Phoenix if it stays in the mid lottery area. This is basically the only way he might fall out of the top 5.