GeorgeMarcus wrote:zonedefense wrote:Watch the game @Knicks and you will have all the answers. Luka is struggling from the field but without him the Mavs would be down double digits. Nobody can hit a shot. They miss open layups, uncontested putbacks and wide open 3s.
Luka scored 13 of 23 points and had 2 assists. Responsible for 80% of the Mavs offense. That´s not how it should be but there is no other option right now.
The bolded should reveal itself in the on/off data. Perhaps it will overtime, but it hasn't yet.
But you see, in this logic lays your fault. It is not true that the bolded would reveal itself in on/off. Not necessarily at least.
Firstly you are using average stas, not median stats. One game could throw your whole metric off balance, which it did (the Denver game). Luka's on/off for the first 10 games has been positive 6 times and negative 4 times. So he is a net positive player on average.
Even with that, both on/off and+/- have the same flaw, which is that the premise for them both is, all things being equal if a player is on court the team scores this much if he is not, they score or are scored on this much. The fundamental flaw with this is, that all things are never equal. The same situation in game never happens. Both +/- and on/off don't take into account game flow and momentum.
Who is to say that in the first 5 minutes of the game and Luka plays and Dallas is losing by 10 (his +/- then being -10) Dallas wouldn't be losing by 20 if THJ was playing instead of him? You would say, well THJ's +/- numbers say that ofcourse, which is incorrect. THJ's +/- and on/off only say that the next 5 minutes he plays the team does better. But those 5 minutes of the game are not the same as the previous ones. May be the opposite team exhausted themselves trying desperately to take that 20 pt run, or may be their run was broken by a timely pass, a timely 3pt etc. The point is, you can't know, how THJ would have done in the first 5 minutes instead of Luka. YOu can only know, how he does
after Luka based on on/off and +/-.
The second fault, from an
impact perspective is that +/- tracks score shifts, but doesn't track runs. It doesn't track how a player can take over a game. For example, lets say Luka plays the first 10 minutes, Dallas is loosing by 10 for those 10 minutes and his +/- being -10. He goes and sits, THJ comes in, the score shifts by 2, THJ is at +2. Luka comes back in, the teams trade baskets but the score doesn't shift, his +/1 stays -10. THJ comes in again, Kleber makes a 3 to end the second q, THJ's +/- is now +5. Dallas is still down 5. THJ starts the third, Dallas starts strong shifting the score by 3, THJ'S +/- is now +8, he fouls the opposing player, who is rewarded 2 FTS. Before he takes them, THJ is subbed out and Luka is Subbed in, the opposing player makes both FTs, Luka's +/- is now -12. Dallas is down by 4 now.
Luka takes over the game and is crucial in a 10-0 run. Dallas takes the lead by 6, and is able to hold the lead till the end of the game. Luka has a +/- of -2, THJ has a +/- of +8. The impact Luka had on the game is huge, he was responsible for the lead change and Dallas taking over the game, however +/- doesn't show that. It doesn't show the impact, it doesn't show the influence Luka had on the game momentum. That is impact, that is superstar power. Taking over a game. Imposing your will on the other team, your rhythm. IMO that is why your model is flawed.
Though TBH, i do think you are on to something, and that is, that Dallas is not using Luka correctly, and i still stand by my statement, that having him at PG is not the best thing for any team. He is not a true PG and game flow does seem to suffer because of it. Thats what I think at least. Him at SG and a an aggressive PG like Rose, Dragic, CP3 or Fox, would be amazing.
Though it could be like someone said in another thread that Carlisle is grooming him into a superstar, that is why he is giving him the usage he has atm. Which also might be true.