Dat2U wrote:payitforward wrote:...getting a zillion rookies is not my point -- understanding how to value picks is my point.
Where we fundamentally disagree is that your answer to this is Ibaka, Batum & Jordan and not Russ Westbrook who was the 5th pick with a career vorp of 52.2!
I don't argue for argument's sake, dat, & I don't have any stupid ideas either -- which doesn't mean I'm incapable of being wrong! I'm wrong about players -- in fact, I bet I'm wrong about players more often about than you are.
Thus, I hope you understand me when I now say that once again you've misunderstood my point. You, not I, are wrong about this. & Russell Westbrook (who went #4 not #5, btw)
makes my point rather than disproving it!
You will notice that he has been a better player than the guy taken above him at #3.
Notice as well that he has been a better player than the guy taken above him at #2.
Finally, be conscious as well that he has been better than the guy taken above him at #1.
Thus, as I say, a higher pick doesn't necessarily get you a better player. The 3 picks higher than #4 where Russ went did not get a better player than he is (or even as good a player, for that matter).
That's simple & true. & the force of it is strengthened by looking at more & more draft data. You are correct that it is tiresome to have to repeat this demonstration over & over, so I won't pick yet another draft at random & demonstrate it all over again.
But... why is this?
Why doesn't a higher pick pretty regularly get you a better player? There are 2 core reasons: 1) FOs simply can't do a good enough job of determining the right sequence -- plus, a couple of mistakes will throw everything out of whack, & 2) prospects are moving targets -- it would be absolutely impossible to know in advance how they are going to develop &/or the impact of chance factors on their futures.
Those two facts are enough to create -- pretty much every year -- the results I noted in 2008. There are a few years which count as exceptions, naturally. But, to tell the truth, even those exceptions are caused by chance not by the skill of NBA GMs & scouts.
Those are the facts. You may not like them, but they are the facts all the same. Still, when you write...
Dat2U wrote:...every situation is a case by case basis. You scout. You trust your scouting and you determine whether the situation calls for a trade down or if you need to stay put because the scouting process says you might be drafting a potential star.
...no one could argue with any of that!
It's just that with all these activities, you will still do as well as... as GMs do -- which we can see from the data I supplied.
& that's why it's a mistake to over-value a higher pick position. Period.