Crives wrote:Mogspan wrote:Crives wrote:
48 wins and 11th place is a mediocre finish.
Trying to justify and award Jokic theoretical wins doesn’t change reality, this nuggets team is mediocre and the MVP should not be getting demolished like this.
Basketball is 5 on 5, bro. We have tools that allow us to isolate value that individual players provide. You have to be smart enough to grasp that a guy whose best teammate is rookie drafted late in the first round and losing to a team with 3+ All-Star-caliber players can still be an incredibly valuable player. The Nuggets absolutely should be getting demolished like this.
Do you know how those tools work? You realize we had tools 10+ years ago like PER that analytics community now laughs at. It’s going to be the same thing in 10 years when everyone looks back on how this mvp was awarded and the metrics used to justify.
It’s actually impossible to accurately isolate value that players provide. Every single one of these all in one advanced metrics are heavily flawed. You realize many of these “advanced stats” are just user set weighted averages of different box score stats?
You don't even need advanced stats to get an impression of his value.
Take on/off:
Bucks: +8 with Giannis on the floor; -3 with him off
76ers: +7.5 with Embiid on the floor; - 4 with him off
Nuggets: +8.4 with Jokić on the floor;
-8 with him off
Suns: +9.7 with Booker on the floor;
+4.9 with him off
In other words, the Nuggets with Jokić on the floor are about as good as any team with their best player on floor. When he's off the floor, his team is worse than the Pistons. This is noisy, but the more advanced stats make an attempt to account for the quality of one's teammates. When this is done, Jokić looks even better.