Texas Chuck wrote:NO-KG-AI wrote:Jaivl wrote:PPG is automatically giving cretit just for shooting, even though you could be the worst scorer ever. Oh noes.
Not even close to the same thing.
it actually kind of is.
But let's ignore that since its bothering you. Don't these formulas usually give you credit for attempting 3 pt shots even if you aren't good at making them? With the idea that just taking 3's helps spacing? If we are okay with that notion, we should be okay with the height for defense one.
I actually think there are too many "subjective" decisions being made and then selling the end product as "objective", but I don't really want to be labeled the anti +/- guy despite my continue belief that none of these versions do nearly as good a job isolating individual player impact as they claim they do.
I agree here to a large extent but I want to make a couple points:
1. Correct me if I’m wrong, but I don’t think “pure objectivity” was ever the main selling point of the RAPM family. To me, the idea is “we have all of these ways to measure what a player is doing on the floor, but none of them try to measure the thing we’re actually concerned with as analysts. Let’s at least try”. Obviously RAPM is very very imperfect and should only be used as one slice of the analysis pie. But it’s value comes from the fact that it at least aims higher than any other stat ever did, in taking a stab at which players actually affect winning. That’s a great thing, because of course that’s the goal of team sports.
2. If subjectivity here bothers you, don’t ever sit in as a science journal article is being edited

. The truth is all of science is subjective. The whole point is to find things that are relatively consistent about the way the world works, and then use those truths to make a statement about the world- one that can be tested. Every journal article you’ve ever read has 2 sections: 1. “Here are the results” I.e. pure numbers that nobody cares about “ 2. Here is what
we think the results mean, and here’s how other scientists can prove us right or wrong
I personally don’t take most stats all that seriously anymore. I take RAPM for what it is, flawed but with the right intentions. My own personal method is sloppy and imperfect as well, and I can get it wrong to a much greater degree than someone who is more stat-focused. But that’s a judgement call, because my method gets me closer to where I want to actually be - determining which players actually move the needle in helping their teams win.
In other words, aim for the higher target, even if sometimes you miss by a lot.