dhsilv2 wrote:You can look at his on off data if you need a ball park. And again, I'm just starting with ball parks.
Look at his on/off data for what, exactly? I’ve asked multiple times how you’re arriving at figures like +1.1 per steal or +1.5 from rebounding — and more importantly, how you’re accounting for the points he gives up through the same defensive behaviors you’re crediting as positives.
You can’t just take “1.5 steals per game” and conclude he saves X number of points without also factoring in how many points he allows by gambling for those steals. Your “quantifications” ignore this trade-off entirely. Does on/off data fix that? No — as you’ve already acknowledged, it’s a team metric. And you and I both know his on/off looks better because he’s consistently had weak backups.
dhsilv2 wrote:Jokic sucks at lowering eFG%. Now the point I kept making, and I guess crudely about how GREAT Jokic is with not fouling...about 2 defensive fouls per game and as you showed us, with nearly 20 shots against him (this is godly stuff here)...he ranks in FT Rate reduction in the 100th, 95th, 100th, and 90th percentile.
Jokic isn’t “great” at not fouling — he just doesn’t defend much. This is the same pattern: you praise a surface-level stat without considering the underlying behavior.
And just to reiterate, the data I shared is playoff data, where Jokic actually defends better by his standards. He averaged 3.4 fouls per game, which isn’t good. You’re also misinterpreting the “20 DFGA” figure. That doesn’t mean he’s actively defending 20 shots per game — it simply means he’s the nearest defender.
In the playoffs, he
contested 5.5 shots per game. So by your framework, that’s 3.4 fouls per 5.5 contests — which isn’t “godly,” it’s god-awful.
I hope with that in mind we can finally put that argument to rest, or at least add some tension
dhsilv2 wrote:Look at turnovers where we both know Jokic generates a lot of them
No we don't, as far as I know he forced 2 turnovers a game. That doesn't wave a wand against how many points he gives up.
dhsilv2 wrote:I am simply using these numbers and giving the credit roughly to Jokic to give us some reasonable number to talk about. As there has to be an explanation as to why the Nuggets are a better defense with him vs without him.
And that’s the issue — you’re arbitrarily assigning credit to Jokic without demonstrating why he deserves it. The Nuggets could defend better with him on the floor for several reasons: he might be better than his backup, or he might just be surrounded by better defensive lineups. There are plausible explanations you could actually quantify, but instead, you’re skipping straight to “it must be Jokic.”
dhsilv2 wrote:So for a second step back from being a skeptic and answer this really simple question. If these 3 key factors are mostly attributable to Jokic. Is it not reasonable to conclude that Jokic is an average to slightly plus defender?
Maybe — sure. But the problem is, you haven’t shown that these three factors are “mostly attributable” to him. That’s the step you keep skipping.