ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally!

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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#121 » by LoveDaBoo » Wed Apr 9, 2014 2:51 am

jinxed wrote:
LoveDaBoo wrote:
Keller61 wrote:DJ Augustin has helped the Bulls tremendously. I don't see how anyone could deny that.

Normally, I'm pro-stats. But I have to agree with Dice here. I've watched all the Bulls games. There's simply no way Augustin has been one of the worst Bulls. He's clearly been one of the best. Maybe he's the best outlier there is for this stat. But really, if anyone who has watched this team thinks it functions better with Hinrich... well, I don't know what they're watching.


Well I don't know what you are watching..

With Hinrich in the games the Bulls outscore their opponents by 4.8 pts per 100 possessions compared to when he is off, according to 82games.com com

The Bulls play 1.1 points better when Augustin is on the bench than when he is in the game.



Almost all of this variation takes place on the defensive side of the ball where Augustin is just awful.

It's just noise, like the noise showing Boozer to be a great defender.
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#122 » by dice » Wed Apr 9, 2014 2:56 am

jinxed wrote:
LoveDaBoo wrote:
Keller61 wrote:DJ Augustin has helped the Bulls tremendously. I don't see how anyone could deny that.

Normally, I'm pro-stats. But I have to agree with Dice here. I've watched all the Bulls games. There's simply no way Augustin has been one of the worst Bulls. He's clearly been one of the best. Maybe he's the best outlier there is for this stat. But really, if anyone who has watched this team thinks it functions better with Hinrich... well, I don't know what they're watching.


Well I don't know what you are watching..

With Hinrich in the games the Bulls outscore their opponents by 4.8 pts per 100 possessions compared to when he is off, according to 82games.com com

The Bulls play 1.1 points better when Augustin is on the bench than when he is in the game.



Almost all of this variation takes place on the defensive side of the ball where Augustin is just awful.

AUGUSTINE HAS BEEN MUCH MORE EFFECTIVE OFFENSIVELY THAN KIRK HINRICH

explain why the timberwolves team WAR sums to almost TWENTY-FIVE more than that of the pelicans. humor us

after that, go and check the other teams individual WARs and compare to team record. hint: the average differential is not close to 15. maybe half that

RAPM is valuable. it's also variable. it's quite apparent that there are glitches in the matrix
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#123 » by Doctor MJ » Wed Apr 9, 2014 3:42 am

dice wrote:explain why the timberwolves team WAR sums to almost TWENTY-FIVE more than that of the pelicans. humor us


It's because the Wolves by average margin of victory look much better than their record. Any metric like this isn't going to go from actual team record and work backwards, it's going to from the individual stats which make Minny players on the whole look significantly more successful than their record suggests.
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#124 » by hands11 » Wed Apr 9, 2014 3:46 am

crazy_me_87 wrote:
mysticbb wrote:
crazy_me_87 wrote:could someone sum it up real simple..??? i am a little confused how it works


The numbers have to be read as: Player x changes the result per 100 poss by y amount of points, if y is the RPM value. An average player has 0. Right now the league average rating per 100 poss is about 106.5. Meaning, an average team is scoring 106.5 points in 100 possession, while they also allow 106.5 points in 100 poss. If we take Anthony Davis here as an example, his values means that with him on the court and 4 average players, the expected result would be +1.09 over average on offense (rounding to 1.1) and +0.52 over average on defense (rounded to 0.5). Translating that to the team result would mean, that a team would be expected to score 107.6 points per 100 poss, while they would allow 106.0 points per 100 poss (a value for defense has to be subtracted), therefore creating a scoring margin per 100 poss of 1.6 points (or 1.61 points when the accurate numbers are used, like we see his value at RPM is). Hope that helps to interpret the numbers.

Obviously, someone playing more minutes than another player adds value. Also, the RPM value might be heavily effected by the role a player is assigned to on a team, while a different role might change the value in one way or another. Usually players are following a development curve over their career, but rather staying within a small range at their respective "prime".

The numbers are derived via regression analysis; that is a method used to determine the impact from various variables on a result. In that case each player is seen as a variable and the overall scoring margin would be the result. The method in case of RPM is ridge regression, which helps to get better predictive values; which comes with the price of getting a worse explaination (which is why some people adding up those WAR values aren't getting the exact number of wins for each team). The "creator" also uses a baysian distribution, adjusts for coaching differences, applies such a development curve as well as uses prior values for each player based on boxscore stats in order to achieve an even better prediction.

I hope that helped a little bit ...


thanks dude

yeah it did help

but i dont see the use of it to be honest

i just cant translate it to my "common basketball sense" ^^

anthony davis for example leads the NBA in Blocks and is a good rebounder.. so by everything i know and experienced in nearly 20 years watching the NBA he cant he just cant be just an average NBA defender..sure he may not be amazing because he makes some mistakes because he is young but a player who blocks alot of shots,rebounds well and stays on the floor was a defensive anchor for as long as i remember...

it just seems to be a useless stat at least to me... what do i take from knowing that Hashem Thabeet is a Top five defensive guy by that rating?? ... nothing because i still cant play him many minutes because he sucks at everything else other than beeing huge and blocking some shots..so if i have him i can feel assured i have a defensive gem for 9 minutes a game?

i might sound a bit too sarcastic here and i am sorry for that but what good is a new Stat that doesnt really help me compare players or draw new conclusions

i already knew by every other stat already that Paul George is awfully mediocre on offense and a little bit overrated on defence

i already knew that Lebron is as good as ever offensivly but lacks a bit this season defensivly

so where is the "ah thats new,i didnt knew that" hype that some here have? i just dont see why some here are so excited.. sure its nice to have one more stat but is anything special about this one?


I enjoy being able to see things like eFG and TS and AST%. Things like that. Most of what I need to know about stats regarding a player comes from those things. The rest is using my eye/mind and understanding it a game of 5 players on the floor and 13 active. The thing that matter is fitting the right set of players together the perform a group function against another set of 5 player and their available bench. It how they function as team and individually to achieve specific tastes in different conditions.

At the end of the day, its a very complex model of pieces and situations. The coach plays a very important role in this and so does the mind of the players. That what ultimately needs to get compiled properly. Its why Pops and SA are so great. The stats read the results of these things. I find whats more important is the cause.
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#125 » by bwgood77 » Wed Apr 9, 2014 3:53 am

JohnsHopkins wrote:
criteriado wrote:
koolcrud wrote:If your new stat says that Channing Frye is better than Blake Griffin, it might not be a very good stat. And Iggy > Durant. And Nick Collison > Tim Duncan. This thing is :lol:


Brandan Wright is better than Griffin on PER. PER is trash, too? Every advanced stat is flawed, but having them helps us understanding the game much more.

I used RAPM this years to see which role players are hugely undervalued. Like with PER, it's flawed on some players, but it's still a good stat.

And Iguodala is not having a bad year, he's been outrageously good defensively.



F*** John Hollinger. He has ruined a once very good Memphis Grizzlies team. Outside of the trade of Rudy Gay, all his moves have caused the grizz to take a huge step back, esp the firing of lionell hollins.


Well, Gasol was injured. Once he returned, they went 29-12, which happens to be 41 games, or half a season. Double that, and you get to 58-24, which would be the 2 seed in the West or the 1 seed in the East. So using the logic that if Memphis was healthy the whole year, maybe they are better this year. They don't get to the WCF last year if Westbrook was healthy.
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#126 » by hands11 » Wed Apr 9, 2014 4:10 am

Winsome Gerbil wrote:
dice wrote:
MisterHibachi wrote:PER is a box score measurement. It tells you which players put up the best box scores and its pretty good at doing that. It does what it claims to do. Not garbage.

it's widely referenced as a single number indicator of a player's value. and by that measure it is severely flawed. it largely ignores defense and overvalues chucking

there ARE no reliable widely referenced single number indicators of player value. i'd say RAPM comes about as close as any, though there is an obvious problem with outliers


I can't believe I am going to go to bat for PER of all things, but just let me note that a basketball-reference.com search of:

all players with a career PER of 20 or more
who played at least 10,000 career minutes

produces a list where of the Top 50 players all time in PER, only Kevin Love, Yao Ming, Pau Gasol, Chris Webber and Manu Ginoboli are not HOF locks, and frankly there's a good chance all of those players make it too. You can say it misjudges that, does not take into account this, and I would not entirely disagree with assessment. But what it DOES measure is staggeringly accurate when it comes to lining up with what GMs, coaches, and HOF voters have always valued. I would be shocked if there is any stat, simple or advanced, that more accurately predicts HOF inclusion at the highest levels.


I'm not shocked by that. Only the best players are going to shoot that much over that long a period of time. The ones that shoot a lot that don't make it to elite eventually dont get resigned as starters and find lessor roles.

The league does a pretty efficient job of weeding out players. But on the flip side, there are player that never make it because they were not tapped as the right player to invest in. Some come in with a green light for shots and minutes and their early struggles are excepted as part of the process. Others don't get that chance. Lots of this has to do with the coach. Are they in save their job mode or do they have the backing to develop players.

It just is what it is. Ultimately people are involved and they make decisions. Everyone doesn't get the same opportunity.
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#127 » by big_ticket » Wed Apr 9, 2014 7:06 am

bron will always be numeru uno..
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#128 » by mysticbb » Wed Apr 9, 2014 7:12 am

dice wrote:coincidence, perhaps. small sample size? i don't see how two different point guards can reasonably have such a big differential in how many times their TEAMMATES turn the ball over


Really? The accuracy of the passing as well as where the players are getting the ball has an effect on the turnovers. In fact, the perfect PG is passing the ball to a teammate when he can score right away without doing anything else, in that way, the only thing between making and not making a basket is "how well does he shot". When a PG passes the ball to a player in his sweet spot, he will likely have a higher scoring efficiency. Also, when a player does not need to dribble the ball or gets the ball passed to when he is not in a "crowded" area, he will likely turn the ball over less. Hinrich is better at passing in terms of accuracy and timing, making it overall easier for a player to handle the ball. And Hinrich is doing that for years better than Augustin, that is not just coincedence. With the same players on the court, those teammates are in average more efficient and less turnover prone with Hinrich instead of Augustin. That is a fact!

dice wrote:i'm not gonna argue for a second that d.j. has the intangibles that hinrich does. just that he's better offensively than hinrich. by a significant margin


Nope, Augustin is better as a scorer, but that's all he is better at. The effect on his teammates is worse overall than for Hinrich, but his better own scoring is still making him an overall slightly better offensive player. Don't confuse such scoring with "per se better". If Augustin is that great, why are the Bulls are still clearly worse offensively than average? Everyone else just sucks in his role? Do you really not see the incredible great difference between Rose and Augustin in terms of running an offense that you believe that Augustin is somehow a really good offensive PG?

Keller61 wrote:DJ has to play in the unit with Tony Snell and Nazr Mohammed. Kirk does not. Kirk also shares almost all of his minutes with Noah, while DJ plays the minutes when Noah is on the bench.


I'm talking about numbers adjusted for the teammates, so don't come up with such nonsense reply.

LoveDaBoo wrote:Normally, I'm pro-stats. But I have to agree with Dice here. I've watched all the Bulls games. There's simply no way Augustin has been one of the worst Bulls. He's clearly been one of the best. Maybe he's the best outlier there is for this stat. But really, if anyone who has watched this team thinks it functions better with Hinrich... well, I don't know what they're watching.


Don't confuse the "own scoring" with "the team is functioning better". With Augustin on the court and no Hinrich, Boozer for examples has a 6.2 percentage points lower TS% and a 0.4 percentage points higher TOV% in comparison to his time with Hinrich and without Augustin. Jimmy Butler has -2.3 on TS% and +0.9 in TOV% under those conditions. In average a player with Augustin and without Hinrich scores about 1 percentage point lower in terms of efficiency and has a 1 percentage point higher TOV% than with Hinrich and without Augustin on the court.

We saw a similar effect last season with Nate Robinson. I think people simply don't appreciate the differences in terms of running an offense, and confuse better scoring and some assists with "per se better offense". And yeah, just "watching games", when the focus of the presentation is basically only on scoring, will not show you the difference.

Anyway, to make that clear again, the Bulls still have a better overall offense with Augustin, due to the fact that Hinrich is clearly a worse scorer, but that makes overall just 0.6 points per 100 poss and the team is way below average offensively with Augustin in and Hinrich out. Btw, Augustin has also less turnovers when Hinrich is in, and when both are on the court the Bulls are playing much better offensively.
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#129 » by mysticbb » Wed Apr 9, 2014 7:18 am

dice wrote:comically misguided on every point there


No, he is not. The replacement level is choosen to be at -2.35, but such a team (consisting of only -2.35 players) is still expected to win about 11 games. WAR means wins above replacement, which then means, the teams are summing up to about 11 wins below their expected wins based on pythagorean expectation.
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#130 » by justin12140 » Wed Apr 9, 2014 5:14 pm

yeah, this RPM stat is useless. how the hell does Tyson Chandler, as **** as hes played this season, have a higher impact than Carmelo Anthony, Eric Bledsoe, Paul Milsap, Al Horford, and Al Jefferson.

Raymond felton is more impacful than Kyrie Irving?

Steve Novak is more imactful than Ariza, Webster, Gay, PJ Tucker, and Batum?

Just the fact that Al Jefferson is sitting at 99 (only 3 higher than steve novak) is enough to tell me anyone who takes this stat seriously is a joke
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#131 » by jinxed » Thu Apr 10, 2014 1:28 am

justin12140 wrote:yeah, this RPM stat is useless. how the hell does Tyson Chandler, as **** as hes played this season, have a higher impact than Carmelo Anthony, Eric Bledsoe, Paul Milsap, Al Horford, and Al Jefferson.

Raymond felton is more impacful than Kyrie Irving?

Steve Novak is more imactful than Ariza, Webster, Gay, PJ Tucker, and Batum?

Just the fact that Al Jefferson is sitting at 99 (only 3 higher than steve novak) is enough to tell me anyone who takes this stat seriously is a joke


Almost every single one of your questions can be answered in one word.

Defense...

Do you agree that defense is HALF of basketball? Half the game right?

Kyrie Irving, Carmelo Anthony, Al Jefferson are all famously poor defenders. Tyson is a great defender. Tyson is a slightly better defender than Melo is an offensive player. That's why...
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#132 » by TrueWarrior » Thu Apr 10, 2014 2:51 pm

jinxed wrote:
justin12140 wrote:yeah, this RPM stat is useless. how the hell does Tyson Chandler, as **** as hes played this season, have a higher impact than Carmelo Anthony, Eric Bledsoe, Paul Milsap, Al Horford, and Al Jefferson.

Raymond felton is more impacful than Kyrie Irving?

Steve Novak is more imactful than Ariza, Webster, Gay, PJ Tucker, and Batum?

Just the fact that Al Jefferson is sitting at 99 (only 3 higher than steve novak) is enough to tell me anyone who takes this stat seriously is a joke


Almost every single one of your questions can be answered in one word.

Defense...

Do you agree that defense is HALF of basketball? Half the game right?

Kyrie Irving, Carmelo Anthony, Al Jefferson are all famously poor defenders. Tyson is a great defender. Tyson is a slightly better defender than Melo is an offensive player. That's why...


You must not have watched the Knicks this year and/or living in 2011.

Felton has also been god damn awful this year on both sides of the ball yet he's above average (141) in this. I'm probably not understanding it all correctly but this seems to be just another lame advanced stat.
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#133 » by Apollo64 » Thu Apr 10, 2014 3:48 pm

TrueWarrior wrote:
jinxed wrote:
justin12140 wrote:yeah, this RPM stat is useless. how the hell does Tyson Chandler, as **** as hes played this season, have a higher impact than Carmelo Anthony, Eric Bledsoe, Paul Milsap, Al Horford, and Al Jefferson.

Raymond felton is more impacful than Kyrie Irving?

Steve Novak is more imactful than Ariza, Webster, Gay, PJ Tucker, and Batum?

Just the fact that Al Jefferson is sitting at 99 (only 3 higher than steve novak) is enough to tell me anyone who takes this stat seriously is a joke


Almost every single one of your questions can be answered in one word.

Defense...

Do you agree that defense is HALF of basketball? Half the game right?

Kyrie Irving, Carmelo Anthony, Al Jefferson are all famously poor defenders. Tyson is a great defender. Tyson is a slightly better defender than Melo is an offensive player. That's why...


You must not have watched the Knicks this year and/or living in 2011.

Felton has also been god damn awful this year on both sides of the ball yet he's above average (141) in this. I'm probably not understanding it all correctly but this seems to be just another lame advanced stat.


You are understanding it 100% correctly.
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#134 » by justin12140 » Thu Apr 10, 2014 5:00 pm

jinxed wrote:
justin12140 wrote:yeah, this RPM stat is useless. how the hell does Tyson Chandler, as **** as hes played this season, have a higher impact than Carmelo Anthony, Eric Bledsoe, Paul Milsap, Al Horford, and Al Jefferson.

Raymond felton is more impacful than Kyrie Irving?

Steve Novak is more imactful than Ariza, Webster, Gay, PJ Tucker, and Batum?

Just the fact that Al Jefferson is sitting at 99 (only 3 higher than steve novak) is enough to tell me anyone who takes this stat seriously is a joke


Almost every single one of your questions can be answered in one word.

Defense...

Do you agree that defense is HALF of basketball? Half the game right?

Kyrie Irving, Carmelo Anthony, Al Jefferson are all famously poor defenders. Tyson is a great defender. Tyson is a slightly better defender than Melo is an offensive player. That's why...

you must not actually watch games if your gunna say some stupid stuff like that. Steve Novak is one of the worst defenders in the league and yet he is ranked over players known for their defense like Ariza, Tucker, Batum. He is ranked over players having career years like Ariza, Tucker, and Webster. No one who actually watches games would say Novak is more impactful with a straight face.

Now on to Felton. Raymond Felton is one of worst pg defenders in the legaue. Especially in PnR situations leading the NYK to having the worst PnR defense in the league. and on top of that he is having near career lows on the offensive side of the ball. At his worst Kyrie is an equal defender to felton (although I believe hes better) and he is MUCH more productive/impactful on the offensive side.

Tyson Chandler lololol. go watch all the regular season knicks games this season and tell me Tyson is a good defender. Then tell me he has a greater impact on the court then melo. this aint 2012 defensive player of the year Chandler this is 2014 "Ive never contested a shot in my life" Chandler

edit: not to mention the fact that at this point in his career Melo is an average defender despite the fact that people still try to push how bad he is
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#135 » by jinxed » Fri Apr 11, 2014 1:10 am

Steve Novak was an awful defender, he has turned into a just below average defender. Hence his defensive rating of -0.33.

Raymond Felton is a bad defender, but he's a positive offensive player..

Off: 1.58
Def: -1.26

Total of 0.32, making Felton about an average player in the NBA.

Kyrie Irving is a good offensive player, atrocious defender. Absolutely atrocious.
Off: 2.51
Def: -3.22
Total: -0.71

As good as Kyrie is on offense, he gives it all up on the defensive end and then some.

this aint 2012 defensive player of the year Chandler this is 2014 "Ive never contested a shot in my life" Chandler


In the year he won defensive player of the year Tyson Chandler's block % was 3.4. This season TC block percentage is...3.4! The exact same! So if he's not contesting any shots, how is he blocking the same percentage as he was in the year he won defensive player of the year?

Now I agree Tyson was a better defender in 2012. His DRAPM that year was 4.8, this year it is 3.45, but still good. And you are right, Melo is closer to an average defensive player, and TC is an average offensive player, but TC is about as good on defense as Melo is on offense, hence the very close rating they have on a per minute basis.
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#136 » by RSCD3_ » Fri Apr 11, 2014 6:43 am

jinxed wrote:Steve Novak was an awful defender, he has turned into a just below average defender. Hence his defensive rating of -0.33.

Raymond Felton is a bad defender, but he's a positive offensive player..

Off: 1.58
Def: -1.26

Total of 0.32, making Felton about an average player in the NBA.

Kyrie Irving is a good offensive player, atrocious defender. Absolutely atrocious.
Off: 2.51
Def: -3.22
Total: -0.71

As good as Kyrie is on offense, he gives it all up on the defensive end and then some.

this aint 2012 defensive player of the year Chandler this is 2014 "Ive never contested a shot in my life" Chandler


In the year he won defensive player of the year Tyson Chandler's block % was 3.4. This season TC block percentage is...3.4! The exact same! So if he's not contesting any shots, how is he blocking the same percentage as he was in the year he won defensive player of the year?

Now I agree Tyson was a better defender in 2012. His DRAPM that year was 4.8, this year it is 3.45, but still good. And you are right, Melo is closer to an average defensive player, and TC is an average offensive player, but TC is about as good on defense as Melo is on offense, hence the very close rating they have on a per minute basis.


I vehemently dispute that raymond felton is a postive offensive player, also chandler's DPOY was more of a make up award for 2011, in 2012 I am of the believe lebron should have won for having his best defensive season by a wing in a long time and the relative dearth of impactful bigs on D

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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#137 » by justin12140 » Fri Apr 11, 2014 4:10 pm

jinxed wrote:Steve Novak was an awful defender, he has turned into a just below average defender. Hence his defensive rating of -0.33.

Raymond Felton is a bad defender, but he's a positive offensive player..

Off: 1.58
Def: -1.26

Total of 0.32, making Felton about an average player in the NBA.

Kyrie Irving is a good offensive player, atrocious defender. Absolutely atrocious.
Off: 2.51
Def: -3.22
Total: -0.71

As good as Kyrie is on offense, he gives it all up on the defensive end and then some.

this aint 2012 defensive player of the year Chandler this is 2014 "Ive never contested a shot in my life" Chandler


In the year he won defensive player of the year Tyson Chandler's block % was 3.4. This season TC block percentage is...3.4! The exact same! So if he's not contesting any shots, how is he blocking the same percentage as he was in the year he won defensive player of the year?

Now I agree Tyson was a better defender in 2012. His DRAPM that year was 4.8, this year it is 3.45, but still good. And you are right, Melo is closer to an average defensive player, and TC is an average offensive player, but TC is about as good on defense as Melo is on offense, hence the very close rating they have on a per minute basis.

See and this is exactly what I'm talking about. All of those stats you just brought up & you still got the info wrong. Felton is an atrocious defender. Absolutely horrible, guards feast of him night in and night out. If the stats don't reflect that then that's in them but he is definitely top 5 worst starting defensive pg. He is very average contributed on offense but he is not more impact fil than Irving. If you can't see that you must be crazy

And chandler has been pretty bad this season. Awful on the PnR letting player get uncontested layups or sagging of to hard and giving them a wide open pull-up. Just go to the Knicks board and ask them about Tyson's defense it's been awful. & on offense his impact doesn't go any farther than setting screens and rolling to the basket. He's effecient but he's not an average offensive player. Doesn't have very good touch around the rim either.no way his defensive contributions are equal to Melos. Bring up those abritraru stats don't prove anything because anyone tgat just watches knick games can see their clearly misleading

& u still didn't explain how Novak is higher than players that are more impact fil on offense & defense like ariza, tucker, & batum
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#138 » by Xerxes_Tetra » Fri Apr 11, 2014 9:43 pm

jinxed wrote:ESPN has finally gotten on board with the statistical revolution and added their version of adjusted plus/minus.

http://espn.go.com/nba/statistics/rpm/_/sort/RPM

This stat is the best because it measures all the little things that don't show up in a box score, but help your team win, and on defense. In terms of wins added (RAPM + minutes played)...here are the most productive players in the league..

1 LeBron James,
2 Kevin Durant,
3 Stephen Curry,
4 Chris Paul,
5 Kevin Love,
6 Dirk Nowitzki,
7 DeAndre Jordan,
8 Andre Iguodala,
9 Blake Griffin,
10 LaMarcus Aldridge,
11 Tim Duncan,
12 Ricky Rubio,
13 Kyle Lowry,
14 Goran Dragic,
15 Joakim Noah


Wow not a single Pacer on the list.
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#139 » by Leslie Forman » Sat Apr 12, 2014 12:25 am

jinxed wrote:Steve Novak was an awful defender, he has turned into a just below average defender. Hence his defensive rating of -0.33.

Raymond Felton is a bad defender, but he's a positive offensive player..

Off: 1.58
Def: -1.26

Total of 0.32, making Felton about an average player in the NBA.

These are basically the kinds of things someone who doesn't ever actually watch games but simply looks at stats would say.

There is no Toronto or New York fan that would buy any of your opinions, Bulls fans clearly don't care for what the stat says about Augustin…perhaps this stat is not as impeccable as you think?
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Re: ESPN adds new overall stat...REAL PLUS/MINUS..Finally! 

Post#140 » by jinxed » Sat Apr 12, 2014 3:10 am

tong po wrote:
jinxed wrote:Steve Novak was an awful defender, he has turned into a just below average defender. Hence his defensive rating of -0.33.

Raymond Felton is a bad defender, but he's a positive offensive player..

Off: 1.58
Def: -1.26

Total of 0.32, making Felton about an average player in the NBA.

These are basically the kinds of things someone who doesn't ever actually watch games but simply looks at stats would say.

There is no Toronto or New York fan that would buy any of your opinions, Bulls fans clearly don't care for what the stat says about Augustin…perhaps this stat is not as impeccable as you think?


When it comes down to a choice between the opinions of dumb fans, or the objective measure of a stat that is considered the BEST stat by everyone knowledgeable in the field. All the best teams pay good money to have guys who do these stats for them internally..that includes the Mavericks (Mark Cuban hired the first guys to make this stat), The Spurs, the Rockets, the Grizzlies, the Phoenix Suns, the Heat

not too mention the the best gamblers..see Bob Voulgaris who makes millions upon millions a year better on NBA basketball..heck he has got millions of dollars of action going on a single night and constantly tweets about how Chandler is the best player on the Knicks (per minute)

So to review...in favor of RPM we have..

The best stats guru
The best basketball minds on NBA front offices
The best basketball gamblers

or the opinion of a college age fan posting on an internet forum...hmm..tough choice...
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