penbeast0 wrote:Cavsfansince84 wrote:It is in terms of age though it may have helped that he didn't start playing major minutes until he was 25. Also his ability to play pg with an absurdly low t/o% helped his metrics a lot.
Not sure what you are referring to. Chris Paul is the player with the absurdly low t/o% (career 13.4), Stockton's is up in the much more normal range for a PG (career 20.8, a bit higher than either Jason Kidd or Steve Nash to use two comps) though his a/t rate is extremely high because of his amazing assist totals. On the other hand, you couldn't mean Chris Paul because he started playing big NBA minutes at 20. I think you may be improperly conflating the two stats.
What I was referring to was strictly Stockton in his age 36-40 years(nothing to do with CP3). CP3's to% is even better but what I was specifically commenting on is things that went into how good Stockton's metrics were in his late 30's ie him not playing major minutes until he was 25 and his low turnovers at that age. Nash's to% in his late 30's was noticeably higher than Stockton's.