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Kblaze8855
05-22-2010, 06:40 AM
Id like to take a moment to spread a layer of rich creamy douche on the toast that ISH by pointing out a number of things I feel are true and have little to no respect for your opinion if you disagree with. It has become my custom to pop up and ramble on now and then about issues nobody much cares about and after 8 years im still not tired of it. Perhaps I just love the sounds of a keyboard hard at work....

2 things before I start...

1. I type run on sentences of epic proportions so be prepared for that..

2. It is customary to at some point in my posts get bored and wander off mentally...perhaps physically. So around the time I suspect the brave few who read this to be getting sick of it....I will offer an intermission complete with 4 unrelated things I think might brighten your day.



Now...the issue at hand.


I kinda hate you all. Not individually but what you(and I) have created in the last 10 years.

Internet forums...especially sports related ones...have stopped being about sports as much as about people trying to prove this or that....arguing....repeating themselves...just in general being uninteresting stand ins for basketball fans. And do you know what did it?

Numbers and a need to be proven right.

Now I understand the interest people have in numbers. I bought a basketball almanac every year when I was a kid. No internet...so I had to read books, listen to my uncle and his people, and watch games. Record games. I remember when having a VCR was a somewhat new concept. I used to buy packs of 3 tapes to record on fridays when my mom might give me a couple dollars. A tape never lasted more than 1-2 games because our VCR was cheap and could only record at the speed that made an 8 hour tape record 2 hours.

So id record say...the Celtics/Bulls game and if it was good it went into the "Dont tape over" box and if it wasnt id watch it 1-2 times and tape over it. I watched some of those tapes so many times I can still remember where games that got taped over would be when the first game ended. that was the only way to know what was happening. Who was good and why. That and a blue background segment showcasing a few league leaders at halftime on CBS.

I didint know what anyones point per shot was. PER was 20 years away. Assist to turnover ratio was about as complicated as it got and even that I heard of like 3-4 times before the late 90s.

Ive seen a dozen times on ISH before someone well meaning and usually not an idiot say something along the lines of:

"Thats just your opinion. But *inset numbers* says ___".

Or to get out of the hypothetical...ill show the exact words of someone who will remain nameless:


The point is, your "my opinion blah blah blah" argument is so weak it's not even funny. All it takes is another contrary opinion (which will pop up), and its' gone.


The problem with this and similar lines of thinking....is that talking about basketball is arguing points that cant be proven.

I think the strive for proof is the source of most of problems with people online these days. Unless you want to be an ass and say something like "So I cant prove Jordan was better than Steve Kerr?"...its damn near impossible to prove anything.

All we can prove is who won and who lost. Which numbers a player has. and what awards he was given. Thats it. And every single one of them lie.

Difference between shooting 44 and 50 for a guy who shoots 18 times a game is one make or miss. In a game with perhaps 160 posessions there are people who let something like that decide who they think is a good player and who isnt. Or more likely who is an ok player and who is great. Since 50% is now a magical number that makes you great.

People act like they dont watch games and see what makes these numbers. Jason Kidd for one helped to slaughter his shooting percentages with halfcourt rainbows all the time in his prime. He just didnt give a damn. Same for Sam Cassell for a while. To me its a sign of a winner. I hate seeing guys dribble out the clock instead of shooting it. Never know right?

In a game with maybe 150-160 posessions one missed jumper often a bailout shot for a superstar isnt the difference between being good or bad. You have guys like Lebron, Kobe, and even lesser players like Ben Gordon, Jason Terry, and Jamal crawford taking bail out shots at the end of shot clocks/quarters that just flat out destroy their shooting percentages. It makes their numbers worse...but it does it because they have skills that let their teammates lean on them in such situations.

They are great shooters of often contested shots. have balls enough to take the shots. So their teams feed them the ball in otherwish bad situations. So they miss 1-2 shots a game that lesser skilled guys wouldnt be given....and it greatly impacts their shooting numbers. And its a direct result of a POSITIVE. Being good....gets you bad shots. As I said earlier one miss can take you from 50% to 44%. And a guy like AI? You watch one of his Philly games and hes taking almost EVERY bailout shot. A better indicator of quality shots being taken would probably be...shooting percentage with 3 or more seconds on the clock. But we have prople trying to fix that issue already...


We now have bullshit like true shooting and eFG% or PPS which reward threes and making FTs with no concern for the situation leading to those things. For the most part guys who take a lot of threes(even when they make them) do so for lack of the talents needed to get a better shot. So you can shoot. You take 3s. Have idiots talking about how many 3s you can miss and still produce as many point as you do making less 2s.

Am I the only one who sees the downside of taking a bad shot? you dont get 3 for the shot because its a good shot. You get it because its difficult. And people who take difficult shots dont tend to win when it matters because you cant count on making tough shots. You can however count on running good offense that gets good shots. Often you can take bad shots...and miss more shots...but if they are 3s you get a better rating? Lets not even go into the impact on transition D when you give up long rebounds off threes as opposed to missing a shot in the lane....


True shooting al ltime leaders does include some greats(Bird, Magic, Barkley and others) but any stat that in any way measure a positive(like making shots) will include some great. But really....

1. Cedric Maxwell .6294
6. Reggie Miller .6139
10. Brent Barry .6066
17. Ed Pinckney .6019
18. Steve Johnson .6002
19. Mario Elie .5982
Kevin Martin .5982

And this is perhaps most laughable to me:

25. Steve Kerr .5932
26. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar* .5924


Im gonna let that stand on its own...

Factoring in all forms of shooting numbers to make one number to decide something is just a ****ing stupid idea to begin with. For one...your field goal percentage itself is misleading for all number of reasons. your 3 point percentage can be impacted by so many things unrelated to your talent its a joke. And FT percentages? Relevant...but key to greatness?

How how many truly elitep layers shot 85% for their careers? Forget the bigmen like Wilt, Kareem, Russell, Shaq and so on. Few people do at any position. People who matter I mean. Not Jordan. Not Oscar. Not Magic. Not Kobe. Not west. 79 people have done it and 6 of them are or can be expected to eventually be in the HOF.

Being a great Ft shooter would be good for anyone. But fact is its often indicative of a less than complete game. A guy like Steve Kerr can do nothing but shoot because what else is he gonna be doing?

Getting away from scoring numbers...

Kblaze8855
05-22-2010, 06:41 AM
Assists and rebounds.

Assists are often used to judge a point. Ive seen topics along the lines of "Is ___ a real point guard" followed by assist numbers and turnover ratios and such.

Really...what kind of idiot thinks 6 assists as opposed to say...8...shows a lack of point guard skills or running the team? Im gonna use Magic as an example...

In 1986 he averaged 13 assists a game. The Lakers took 89 shots a game. Magic took 13 of them. 3.7 turnovers. So...his numbers give you his input on about 30 posessions a game between shots, assists, and turnovers. 30...of 89 shots the Lakers took. Factor in that many(if not most) of Magics assists were on the break.....as well as a good percentage of his shot attempts...

Magic may well have only 10-12 posessions a game of halfcourt basketball for which we have any number for. So what is happening the vast vast majority of the time we have no number? Those are the times a point guards ability is shown most.

Sure the assists suggest something that is reality with Magic(that he was an awesome playmaker). But its just not always the case. Michael Adams racked up 11-12 a game and nobody who remembers how would tell you he was just that great a playmaker. Aside from his odd ass jumper and double behind the back passes there is nothing special really about him.

But he got 11 assists a game. Sure it was because they shot in like 5 seconds every time and guys were firing up garbage for the sake of shooting but...whatever. There are those who would conclude he was a very good point. So whats the difference between Magics assists and Adams?

Well..if you remember Michael Adams(you likely dont) you have seen Chris Jackson and Orlando coming down and spotting up from the same spots on the break with Michael just deciding which side of the court to pass the ball to so they could either shoot or make a quick move and shoot. I remember years ago Kobe fans talking about his "attempted assists" when the issue was his assists compared to Lebron. You have never seen attempted assists leading to missed shots without watching those nuggets. Dude comes down just over halfcourt and fires it to one of like 3 spots and someone takes a jumper or one dribble and shoots. If its too well defended they might run a little offense but not if they could avoid it.

I maybe saw them(90...or 91 Nuggets) 3-4 times that year and I didnt know then how insane they were. Gave up 131ppg and scored 119. I just remember them shooting all the time. But how ever he did it...Michael Adams pulled 27 and 11 out of his ass.

Meanwhile Magic is in LA running the team far better than his assists showed. Its not being a great point to get 10 assists. Its being a great point to run the team well. Magic spotted a mismatch like few ive seen. Would break off a play and direct worthy to the post at a moments notice. He ran some of the best plays off offensive rebounds to get a good second shot. He would slaughter smaller guards trying to play him anywhere near the basket. Blow by bigger forwards to score. And yes...if you have the shot its not being a good point to pass it up. Its the points job to get the best shot not to pass the ball.

But now we have know nothing idiots online complaining about Derrick Rose(a guy with the ability to get a solid shot almost all the time) not passing more to.....who? We have people on here talking about Chris Pauls backup point having good numbers proves hes overrated when anyone who watched them both sees that Paul is far better setting the tempo, knowing when to defer to others, and most importantly...when not to. A point is supposed to have command. Not bend to the will of more established teammates. Maybe a shaq or jordan. but there arent many of them. If Chris Paul played with Lebron I suspect he would still tell him where to be and what to do...because its his job. Anyone else see how many turnovers Collison caused just by being indecisive?

But there are people pushing Paul as overrated because of it? Its not by chance Darren had similar numbers but Paul had them in like the 8th seed.

And rebounding? Ive seen so many times people say this guy or that one is better due to rebounds. Rebounds more than maybe anything but assists is a matter of coaching and teammates. Rebounds are for many players just a matter of choosing to get them. I dont mean the will to fight for them either. Watch Chris Paul or Kidd...

Two of my favorite players. you cant tell me they get rebounds by just going into the trees and beasting guys for them. They(Kidd especially) sometimes do go get them to make up for shitty bigmen. But compare them to someone like Rondo? Or even a guy like...Rod Strickland? Those guys just go and take it. Offensive. Defensive. Contested. neither of them ever averaged the rebounds Kidd or Paul have but you cant watch the 4 and conclude that the guys with the most rebounds are just the best at going and getting the ball.

Having more players willing and able to go get the ball combined with a coach who is more concerned with getting back on D? Or a system like the KJ/Chambers suns with 2 rebounders and everyone else streaking up the court like wideouts looking for hail marys? You just wont get as many rebounds.

****intermission****

Kblaze8855
05-22-2010, 06:48 AM
Just 4 things to smile at that ive probably posted before but stil lenjoy:

The Clippers being a joke/themselves

http://i301.photobucket.com/albums/nn45/kblaze888555/clippers.gif


The forgotten broken backboard:

http://i301.photobucket.com/albums/nn45/kblaze888555/morris.gif


Worship Clydes one foot leaping:

http://i301.photobucket.com/albums/nn45/kblaze888555/Clyde.gif


I miss that Vince:


http://i301.photobucket.com/albums/nn45/kblaze888555/VCcross.gif

Kblaze8855
05-22-2010, 06:50 AM
back to business:



So many people base everything they think on numbers. And im not just...saying throw them out. If a guy had 34...he had 34. Got 14 assists. It was 14. Whatever. But when you go to the extent some here have? Literally disregarding what they see...what common sense says...due to numbers? I had a guy tell me on here that if common sense tells you one thing(that say...Dwight Howard isnt the 98th best player in the NBA) and the formula says otherwise...its not proving the formula wrong. Its proving that we as fans...are wrong.

At that point...why are we even watching games?

I dont blame you(us) really...but we let it happen. We let ESPN manipulate numbers and generate records out of thin air and ooh and ahh. Show up to games with signs of guys going for "records" that dont exist. Its to the point it actually impacts games on the floor. I watched Kevin Durant vs the Mavs shooting at the end to stat pad his way to 25 points to continue his streak in a decided game.

What the **** is that? A guy shooting pointless shots....to continue a streak...of most 25 point games in the last 24 years? How is this even discussed?

We have jackass stat "experts" plugging in stat minimums on basketball reference to find the last time someone had 33 points on a friday afternoon road game while down 0-2 and people turning around and giving it justification by discussing it.

And it is ****ing crazy.

The obsession with these random numbers has destroyed basketball fanhood.

Ive often argued that the supposed lack of fundamentals in modern basketball is really just overspecialization. Partly as a result of the 3 point shot. Until the late 80s everyone(ABA players aside) who learned to shoot only needed to make a 15-18 footer. That was an outside shot when I was a kid. Even with the 3. That was considered an outside shot in the 80s. As the 90s came guys became 3 point shooting specalists. And with so many others looking to be Jordan and slash....you divide the league. Shooters and slashers. The midrange game dies. People ask..."Why take a 20 footer when a step back gets 3?" disregarding that you are less likely to make the longer shot on average(or at least would be if people didnt stop taking long 2s and become out of practice with it).

We go from everyone being able to shoot midrange because thats the only kind of jumper to take....to needing a 3 to be called a good shooter. Your midrange practice suffers, your off the ball play to get said jumpers goes with it, and we have guys playing NBA jam ball. Either dunks/layups or 3s with no in between. Fundamentals dont exactly die...but they do take a hit.

And I see something similar with fans. Used to be a basketbal lfan had to love basketball. He couldnt go online and download a game he missed or even see highlights more than a few hours old. If you wanna see a sick pass magic had 3 months ago you better have it taped or wait till the all star starters are announced and CBS plays "You are on hold" style music over first half of the season highlights. You were a fan you had to love and follow the game. Watch it. Talk about it. Record it. check the paper(yes...the ****ing news paper...we used to get sports news from them).

It bred a different kind of fan. Online? you can be lazy. you dont need to know who is a good shooter. There is a number telling you who makes the most midrange jumpers. dont need to know who is the best passer. We have assist to turnover, assist splits, and so on....nevermind who runs the proper plays most often. Who passes to guys in position to shoot(Mark Jackson) instead of just giving you the ball(Steve Francis).

With all the bullshit we have today we created notebook experts. forum arguers who specalize in one issue. They have all the numbers for their issue...and they stick to it. Kobe fans. Lebron fans. Jordan lovers. Guys pushing their favorite formula or that one. And everyone has an agenda...everyone has a specific stance on every issue because people come to argue...not to talk.

And when you have 200 concurrent arguments its no longer about who knows the most. Its who has the best fact. The best number. The best little bit of trivia to stand out....because in the land of the blind the one eyed man is king. We have people who know little being beaten over the head by people who know little...other than numbers....because it will convince someone else who knows little that one of them is being owned. Guys posting emoticons laughing at people who know no less than them....

And it gets so ooooooooooooold.

Overspecialization

Players lost their midrange jumpers and fans lost the ability to talk basketball because of the agendas driven by the need to be right all the time...and to prove it. The strive for proof is where these numbers come from. And its in these numbers we lose our all around fanhood.

We went from a bunch of Scottie Pippens to a bunch of Kyle Korvers. we stand outside and take bad shots because these days...its a good shot. Its effective.

We get the right number and we are correct....we hit the 3 and our ball handling is irrelevant.

Al these numbers are just people looking to prove they are right....ignoring that if you can PROVE it....you are probably wrong in some respect. The NBAs leading scorer isnt always the best scorer. The best rebounder wouldnt be the besti n all situations. PER doesnt account for half of basketball. field goal percentage is impacted by way mroe than shooting ability or shot selection...and can be HURT by having more talent. Steals leaders often play shitty D. Blocks are often poor help defense failing to prevent the drive to begin with. All D teams are often reputaiton based. People win MVPs when nobody would give it to in retrospect because the media is full of easily excited flare for the moment bandwaggoners. Its ALL arguable.

Everything. If you cant argue it you are probably wrong because only numbers are inarguable.

This isnt me hating on the youth...just hating on the lack of belief people show in their own eyes. I may be an angry old man but ill make my point quoting one of your generation:


http://img8.imageshack.us/img8/3228/lilwayne11560608062008o.jpg "If we too simple...then yall dont get the basics."

iamgine
05-22-2010, 06:56 AM
How old are you Kblaze?

AJ2k8
05-22-2010, 07:34 AM
Once again a very nice post KBlaze, always enjoy reading your rants(if you don't mind to calling them that):cheers:

Can't really argue with what you've said, I joined this forum and noticed early on that your opinion is good for perhaps a bump in a few months:oldlol:

By the way loved this:


We have jackass stat "experts" plugging in stat minimums on basketball reference to find the last time someone had 33 points on a friday afternoon road game while down 0-2 and people turning around and giving it justification by discussing it.

ZeN
05-22-2010, 07:39 AM
Brilliant stuff, Kblaze is the man. Repped.

knickscity
05-22-2010, 07:43 AM
Blaze, I read your first post in the thread and was like WOW!

Couldn't have agreed more, then next and next were you too.

Great Rant.

Orlando Magic
05-22-2010, 07:46 AM
I've never seen such a high level of narcissism out of a non celebrity. Wow.

The sad thing is people are going to continue to fuel it for no good reason.

Summary of your post...

1) People are stupid.
2) The internet and a heavy focus on stats ruin basketball discussions.
3) I've watched basketball for a long time and I can talk about players from a few decades back.
4) Blah... blah... blah.

I'm not saying your points are invalid, because frankly, they don't interest me one way or another or inform me of anything I didn't already know. I am blown away though, by how self centered you are, every single time. I guess I shouldn't be... I meet people like that on a daily basis. And I'm one of the most self centered people I know... lol...

kNIOKAS
05-22-2010, 07:50 AM
i just read it whole but i'm going to say i'm not going to read this much.

YouGotServed
05-22-2010, 08:07 AM
Thanks KBlaze, I always read all your stuff. :cheers:


We have people on here talking about Chris Pauls backup point having good numbers proves hes overrated when anyone who watched them both sees that Paul is far better setting the tempo, knowing when to defer to others, and most importantly...when not to. A point is supposed to have command. Not bend to the will of more established teammates.

:applause:

mlh1981
05-22-2010, 08:20 AM
You may have touched on this, but when you were talking about Kobe/LeBron/MJ "stans," one thing that strikes me is how defensive people get, and how people seemingly have to trash the other guys to prop their own guy.

At the end of the day, they are all basketball players. They have skills and abilities that we should appreciate. When we spend time hating on someone, we are missing out on their excellence. I understand team rivalries and all that. Like, as a Cavs fan, it's not in my best interest to see their rivals do well. Still, I appreciate other great players, and whenever I make an argument trying to support my guys, I try not to bash the opposition to prop my guy.

at the end of the day, who really cares about who the GOAT of all time is, or what random records get broken. I miss the simple era when we could just watch basketball and form our own analysis and opinions, without ESPN trying to tell us what to think.

Shep
05-22-2010, 09:08 AM
adams > magic

SCdac
05-22-2010, 09:27 AM
It's not just message boards though, and ESPN, it's the whole culture of fast and easy to access online fantasy sports. I've heard stories, rumors, or jokes about even some of the players themselves taking part in it, whether NBA or NFL (I'm sure players for decades have always betting on games, but fantasy sports and online leagues has grown quickly, I'm sure keeping track of boxscores was much more tasking 15-20 years ago). There seems to be a very stat-centric focus on all of sports nowadays, but certainly in basketball where there's alot of them for alot of players (not that there's something fatally wrong with that, as in, it's not crippling the enjoyment of the game to me). To be honest as long as you respect stats for what they are and what they aren't, they're very useful, especially to coaching staffs and anybody wanting fairly objective data of what occurred on the floor... it's just all about understanding and not misrepresenting the data (which itself is not always 100% accurate)... One thing is certain, unlike fantasy sports, having the "best stats" or "worst stats" does not equate to the best or worst player... young fans can't seem to soak that in enough.

But like anything in this technologically savvy and know-it-all society we live in, replacing actually doing something (like watching a game live, picking up a basketball, attending games in person, etc) with faux expertise has become all too easy. I agree with what you said, "people who know little being beaten over the head by people who know little". There's no humility or integrity in sports conversation on these online boards, yet there's a shit load of absolutism and agenda for some reason. People are slowing forgetting about the joy... of being wrong or being surprised... the pleasures you can get out of not trying to assume the role of resident "enter player name" expert, not trying to project everything that will happen or could happen or should happen, not trying to quantify everything into something measurable... it's the people that are able to separate themselves from raw numbers and, worst of all, player rankings that are worth listening to nowadays.

ZenMaster
05-22-2010, 09:48 AM
Fair post. There are some problems with part of it though.

As much as you try to direct your rant towards the fans and the media it also highly becomes directed towards some very prominent coaches.

Coaches jobs are to win basketball games, you do that by playing the most efficient basketball at both ends of the floor, so you design your offense towards playing the most efficient basketball that's possible for your team and your defense towards getting the other team to play the least efficient basketball possible for the other team.
And how coaches coach affect the mentality of players and how they think of and play basketball, thus ultimately the fans.


We now have bullshit like true shooting and eFG% or PPS which reward threes and making FTs with no concern for the situation leading to those things. For the most part guys who take a lot of threes(even when they make them) do so for lack of the talents needed to get a better shot. So you can shoot. You take 3s. Have idiots talking about how many 3s you can miss and still produce as many point as you do making less 2s.

That's a rubbish statement!

True shooting% and PPS indicates how well you have done at getting points on the fewest amount of shots. The natural question to ask yourself as a coach is: how do we do that as a team?

What's the best shot in basketball? A wide open layup, but those are hard to get and often become contested so the number of times layups are made go down. So if you're a good FT shooter you actually score more efficient points off of that than layups.

But as layups is the most efficient points you can score without the clock being stopped that's what you go for, what happens when you go for layups more so then when you go for a mid range shot? You create fouls leading to FT's and get the other teams players in foul trouble thus having to sub for lesser talent. "In the NBA, the team that takes the most foul shots wins 9 out of 10 times " - Hubie Brown

The 2nd best shot without the clock being stopped is the corner 3, it's shorter than some 2 point spots and gets you 1.5x more points whenever you make the shot.
The reason Greg Popovich was ahead of the curve for so long was that he realized the importance of the corner 3pt shot offensively and defensively before the other coaches, so he game planned for it. To this day a lot of other coaches still haven't closed that gap.

Layups and open 3s are also indicators of the defense having been broken down, and as much as 3s leads to fastbreak opportunities for the other team it's also easier to get offensive rebounds off 3's and layups, again it's because of the defense having been broken down, but also because you have more time to get in the right position for the offensive rebound. Mid range shots on the other hand doesn't often mean that the defense has been truly broken down, so it's harder to get offensive rebounds off of them as defenders are in better position to box out.

Overall when you talk about this stuff I think your'e looking at it way to individualistic, you talk about single players abilities and the relation to the stats you don't like and that's not right. It's a team game, 5vs5 and not 1vs1 X 5.

Saying a statistic that take shooting 3 pointers at a good rate isn't valid is crap, as long as there's a 3pt line in basketball it's a valid ability to be a good shooter from that distance. Your argument should be made towards the rules of the game, that there shouldn't be a 3pt line as you don't think it's a valid ability to be able to make tougher/longer shots than other guys. It's a very valid argument, Bob Knight for example believes in this.

But the rules of basketball being what they are, coaches has to relate to that, and like I said to begin with, the way coaches coach the game affects how players play it, and therefore how fans view it.

I know a lot of old school fans like to talk about the beauty of the mid range game, but mostly it's just that, beauty, it's not really what wins you basketball games, coaches and players have adjusted to this, you should too.

insidious301
05-22-2010, 09:58 AM
Numbers have always been a great indicator of how 'special' a player is.

Hubie Brown may have a bone to pick with you. Back during the Chamberlain ERA, stats were a way of life in basketball. People cared about STATS just like they do now. You don't think fans were in awe of Wilt's huge double double's, colossal scoring etc? Don't belittle a generation for doing the same things you, I, or any fan did back when collecting basketball cards(too see their stats) were in like flynn.

Real Men Wear Green
05-22-2010, 10:29 AM
I did actually read most of the first post before skipping down to the pictures. I was hoping for a video. Oh well.
I miss that Vince:


http://i301.photobucket.com/albums/nn45/kblaze888555/VCcross.gif
I don't. That guy could actually lead Orlando past the Celtics. If he existed.

dutchguy
05-22-2010, 10:57 AM
Nice
I have to say I also agree with insidious### that stats are a part of fandom too, but it shouldn't be the be-all end-all in a discussion about basketball.

On a more pompous, pretentious note: if you're concerned with numbers dictating a big part of our life, and you like long sentences, you should read "the philosophy of money" by Georg Simmel. It's an old dude (1900) writing about how we want to grasp everything in numbers, but in the process loose an appreciation for quality. It's a real book, not on the internet:lol

Brandon Roy
05-22-2010, 12:59 PM
Nice post.

I have read articles from sociologists who say that this (the dumbing down of thought into bite-sized bits) is a problem in all of current society, not just sports.

We went from reading books that were hundreds of pages (as a norm) to being limited to a few lines of text on Twitter. Only so much thought can be displayed on four lines of a Tweet/Facebook status, or even 20-something minutes of a television program; likewise, only so much can be learned and experienced from a line of numbers put on a screen. The quality of thought and life has been dumbed down.

Yeah, I'm getting old.

ZeN
05-22-2010, 01:17 PM
We went from reading books that were hundreds of pages (as a norm) to being limited to a few lines of text on Twitter. Only so much thought can be displayed on four lines of a Tweet/Facebook status, or even 20-something minutes of a television program; likewise, only so much can be learned and experienced from a line of numbers put on a screen. The quality of thought and life has been dumbed down.



QFT

Chalkmaze
05-22-2010, 01:24 PM
The Clippers being a joke/themselves

http://i301.photobucket.com/albums/nn45/kblaze888555/clippers.gif


=

:roll: I missed it at first... man... that is hillarious!!!

pete's montreux
05-22-2010, 02:08 PM
What do you think of win-share, and defensive-win-share?

Samurai Swoosh
05-22-2010, 02:23 PM
KBlaze on his soap box. He's that guy at a bar with your friends who doesn't shut up because he comes off as a psuedo intellectual or elitist, and simply just loves to hear himself talk. Or in this case ... type. I mean really, dude just wrote an essay on a state of the union address for a basketball message board.

:oldlol:

Kblaze8855
05-22-2010, 02:44 PM
I do plan to answer most of the thingsi n here at some point but I just got up and dont feel like putting 2 hours into itat the moment....

Couple things caught my eye though...



And I'm one of the most self centered people I know... lol...

Shogun? Not sure if thats you or not. You seem to change names every couple years.



I know a lot of old school fans like to talk about the beauty of the mid range game, but mostly it's just that, beauty, it's not really what wins you basketball games, coaches and players have adjusted to this, you should too.

I was wondering about that recently. How much the teams that make a lot of threes win when it matters. And while ive only checked the last 11 years so far....its not looking good. Im gonna wait till ive checked all 30 to confirm what I assume is the case. I'll tll you this though...

The 04 Pistons made only 333 threes. Of the 7 teams to make 365 and under...4 of them were in the conference finals. Of the 6 teams to make 500+...5 of them were either lottery teams or out in the first round.

I'll get back to you when ive looked into that a little more fully...but unless the Suns or Magic win it all im not sure there has ever been a team that was top 5 in made threes and won the title(least lately...back when 100 threes was a lot for a team perhaps). Not sure where the Lakers and Celtics were this year though. Since im not done I wont say for sure. Just been glancing through the years....

Kblaze8855
05-22-2010, 02:47 PM
KBlaze on his soap box. He's that guy at a bar with your friends who doesn't shut up because he comes off as a psuedo intellectual or elitist, and simply just loves to hear himself talk. Or in this case ... type. I mean really, dude just wrote an essay on a state of the union address for a basketball message board.


Actually...I dont think ive had much of anything to say here for some time. Not a lot interest me. Partly for the reasons listed in here....but I dont say a tenth of what I used to. I think the last" real" topic I made was probably months ago. And I cant even remember what it was about.

Samurai Swoosh
05-22-2010, 02:52 PM
Actually...I dont think ive had much of anything to say here for some time. Not a lot interest me. Partly for the reasons listed in here....but I dont say a tenth of what I used to. I think the last" real" topic I made was probably months ago. And I cant even remember what it was about.
The point I'm making is you still come across as being ego-centric, self serving in the vast majority of your posts.

I'm not talking about the numbers of posts you make.

Kblaze8855
05-22-2010, 03:02 PM
You think if I cared about coming off "ego-centric" id write 4,000 word posts to a bunch of people who for the most part are gonna scoff and not read it? And who isnt self serving? Who should I be serving? You? The difference between me and many others is that I preface my opinions by letting you know I think im smarter than everyone. But everyone thinks the same thing. If people didnt think their opinions were right and others were wrong...they wouldnt have them to begin with and be on a basketball forum arguing about them.

Im just much more straight to the point. Im also something of a parody of myself. Sometimes im a little suprised how serious I can be taken when clearly not being serious.

GOBB
05-22-2010, 03:04 PM
I'm the type who looks for something to argue. Play Devils Advocate a bit. I cant do that here because too much makes sense and I agree with. Long read no doubt. But much better than sifting thru crap pages 1-3 pgs lookin for something to reply/bump. And less annoying than seeing another Kobe thread created "Does Kobe get enough credit for the 3peat" in 2010.

joe
05-22-2010, 03:08 PM
Something else you must watch the games to notice: there's a difference between good 3's and bad 3's. The championship Spurs took good 3's. Manu attacks the defense and kicks it out to Bowen in the corner.. Splash. Duncan finds Brent Barry out of the double.. Splash. Baron Davis spotting up off the dribble with a guy in his face? Not so much.

And good 3's aren't just about how open you are. Or coming in the flow of the offense. It's also your teammates awareness to get back on defense and stop the fast-break.

I wouldn't be surprised if few championship teams led the league in 3's. Those teams play great defense and have multiple stars. Still, a team with a great defense, multiple stars, and great 3-point shooting would be even better.

That's why I'd take those championship Spurs over these Lakers or Celtics - they had all 3.

pete's montreux
05-22-2010, 03:13 PM
Something else you must watch the games to notice: there's a difference between good 3's and bad 3's. The championship Spurs took good 3's. Manu attacks the defense and kicks it out to Bowen in the corner.. Splash. Duncan finds Brent Barry out of the double.. Splash. Baron Davis spotting up off the dribble with a guy in his face? Not so much.

And good 3's aren't just about how open you are. Or coming in the flow of the offense. It's also your teammates awareness to get back on defense and stop the fast-break.

I wouldn't be surprised if few championship teams led the league in 3's. Those teams play great defense and have multiple stars. Still, a team with a great defense, multiple stars, and great 3-point shooting would be even better.

That's why I'd take those championship Spurs over these Lakers or Celtics - they had all 3.
Boston and San Antonio had virtually the same three point shooting numbers during their championship years. I didn't look at LA, though. Boston was slightly better at defending the three as well.

GOBB
05-22-2010, 03:22 PM
The point I'm making is you still come across as being ego-centric, self serving in the vast majority of your posts.

You are too concerned about how a poster makes you feel reading thier material. Especially someone who rarely ever posts here. You're not holding a grudge from a past discussion btween you 2 are you.

Samurai Swoosh
05-22-2010, 03:24 PM
You are too concerned about how a poster makes you feel reading thier material. Especially someone who rarely ever posts here.
Who said I was concerned about how posters make me feel?

I'm talking about the clear cut fact that dude thinks he's important. Much like some other poster who just showed up in this thread.

:oldlol:

Keep instigating

joe
05-22-2010, 03:25 PM
Boston and San Antonio had virtually the same three point shooting numbers during their championship years. I didn't look at LA, though. Boston was slightly better at defending the three as well.

In the spirit of Kblaze's post, I didn't look at the numbers and relied on my own opinion. In 2008, Boston matched 2007 San Antonio with 38% 3's. That was better than any other championship Spurs team.

From memory, I see Bruce Bowen, Manu Ginobli, and Brent Barry as better than Ray Allen, Pierce, and Eddie House. It's cool if you disagree. Just how I felt when I watched the teams play.

GOBB
05-22-2010, 03:28 PM
Who said I was concerned about how posters make me feel?

Your replies say it all.


I'm talking about the clear cut fact that dude thinks he's important.

Insecure much?


Much like some other poster who just showed up in this thread.

Like I said you are concerned too much about how a poster makes you feel.


Keep instigating

Nothing to instigate. Just find your complaining in here annoying and pointless.

Samurai Swoosh
05-22-2010, 03:29 PM
Nothing to instigate. Just find your complaining in here annoying and pointless.
I'm not the only one that notices it ... yet you feel the need to jump on my sack.

Insecure, much?

Leviathon1121
05-22-2010, 03:30 PM
Fair post. There are some problems with part of it though.

As much as you try to direct your rant towards the fans and the media it also highly becomes directed towards some very prominent coaches.

Coaches jobs are to win basketball games, you do that by playing the most efficient basketball at both ends of the floor, so you design your offense towards playing the most efficient basketball that's possible for your team and your defense towards getting the other team to play the least efficient basketball possible for the other team.
And how coaches coach affect the mentality of players and how they think of and play basketball, thus ultimately the fans.



That's a rubbish statement!

True shooting% and PPS indicates how well you have done at getting points on the fewest amount of shots. The natural question to ask yourself as a coach is: how do we do that as a team?

What's the best shot in basketball? A wide open layup, but those are hard to get and often become contested so the number of times layups are made go down. So if you're a good FT shooter you actually score more efficient points off of that than layups.

But as layups is the most efficient points you can score without the clock being stopped that's what you go for, what happens when you go for layups more so then when you go for a mid range shot? You create fouls leading to FT's and get the other teams players in foul trouble thus having to sub for lesser talent. "In the NBA, the team that takes the most foul shots wins 9 out of 10 times " - Hubie Brown

The 2nd best shot without the clock being stopped is the corner 3, it's shorter than some 2 point spots and gets you 1.5x more points whenever you make the shot.
The reason Greg Popovich was ahead of the curve for so long was that he realized the importance of the corner 3pt shot offensively and defensively before the other coaches, so he game planned for it. To this day a lot of other coaches still haven't closed that gap.

Layups and open 3s are also indicators of the defense having been broken down, and as much as 3s leads to fastbreak opportunities for the other team it's also easier to get offensive rebounds off 3's and layups, again it's because of the defense having been broken down, but also because you have more time to get in the right position for the offensive rebound. Mid range shots on the other hand doesn't often mean that the defense has been truly broken down, so it's harder to get offensive rebounds off of them as defenders are in better position to box out.

Overall when you talk about this stuff I think your'e looking at it way to individualistic, you talk about single players abilities and the relation to the stats you don't like and that's not right. It's a team game, 5vs5 and not 1vs1 X 5.

Saying a statistic that take shooting 3 pointers at a good rate isn't valid is crap, as long as there's a 3pt line in basketball it's a valid ability to be a good shooter from that distance. Your argument should be made towards the rules of the game, that there shouldn't be a 3pt line as you don't think it's a valid ability to be able to make tougher/longer shots than other guys. It's a very valid argument, Bob Knight for example believes in this.

But the rules of basketball being what they are, coaches has to relate to that, and like I said to begin with, the way coaches coach the game affects how players play it, and therefore how fans view it.

I know a lot of old school fans like to talk about the beauty of the mid range game, but mostly it's just that, beauty, it's not really what wins you basketball games, coaches and players have adjusted to this, you should too.

The mid range game doesn't win you basketball games? I am not sure how it is possible to be this far off with an opinion.

Kobe Bryant : Excellent mid range game
Michael Jordan : Excellent mid range game
Hakeem : Excellent mid range game
Tim Duncan : Excellent mid range game (Gotten a lot worse with age)

What do these have in common? 16 of the last 20 NBA championships featured players who's mid range game is one of the best in the league. I wonder why that is? Could it be because is wreaks havoc on defenses? Probably not since you claimed it is basically a useless skill.

These guys commanded double teams before they were near the paint, killing defenses and setting up wide open shots for their team. Not what wins you basketball games? You have got to be kidding me.

Like KBlaze pointed out, any formula that puts Steve Kerr ahead of Kareem simply because he shoots a lot of threes is very flawed somewhere.

pete's montreux
05-22-2010, 03:31 PM
In the spirit of Kblaze's post, I didn't look at the numbers and relied on my own opinion. In 2008, Boston matched 2007 San Antonio with 38% 3's. That was better than any other championship Spurs team.

From memory, I see Bruce Bowen, Manu Ginobli, and Brent Barry as better than Ray Allen, Pierce, and Eddie House. It's cool if you disagree. Just how I felt when I watched the teams play.
I didn't even realize what I was doing. Just like you, I'd take my guys over your guys 10 out of 10 times, but that's just how we are, I guess. For me, you only have one go-to-shooter and that's Manu. We have three. Don't underestimate Eddie. I've never in my life seen someone get as hot as Eddie, and I've also never seen someone go cold so fast, either.

Both great championships teams, though.

GOBB
05-22-2010, 03:33 PM
I'm not the only one that notices it ... yet you feel the need to jump on my sack.

Insecure, much?

And that poster is in the same boat as you are.

There you go crying errr complaining again "Hey he did it too. Why slap me?".

Samurai Swoosh
05-22-2010, 03:34 PM
There you go crying errr complaining again "Hey he did it too. Why slap me?".
And I have every right to complain.

:oldlol:

Kblaze's post are boring, self absored, lengthy and redundant.

Dasher
05-22-2010, 03:35 PM
Kid is probably still sore about Ben>Hinrich

hayden695
05-22-2010, 03:47 PM
Your replies say it all.



Insecure much?



Like I said you are concerned too much about how a poster makes you feel.



Nothing to instigate. Just find your complaining in here annoying and pointless.
You aren't instigating, yet on the last page you claimed "I am the type of person who just looks for something to argue." Come on GOBB.

Kblaze8855
05-22-2010, 03:47 PM
Im so unimportant you feel the need to come and discuss it? You know what I do with unimportant things that are of no interest to me? Disregard them. why would I discuss something that isnt interesting? Just seems to be in conflict. Oh well.

I suggest a 360 2k10 game for the right to be a picky douche on ISH. Loser has to show common sense enough to ignore the things he doesnt like instead of argue with them which will generate more of what he supposedly doesnt like.

Care to go one on one with the great one for the rights to be ISHs most abrasive jackass?

Samurai Swoosh
05-22-2010, 03:48 PM
You aren't instigating, yet on the last page you claimed "I am the type of person who just looks for something to argue." Come on GOBB.
That's all he provides the boards, and it's been like that for sometime. I hate to speculate on his life outside of the interwebs but jesus ... lots of hate in that one's heart. LOL

EroticVanilla
05-22-2010, 03:53 PM
Back to the thread topic. Something that bothers me even more then people using in-game stats as the end-all be-all to determine the effectiveness of a player is when people use Combine results to try and predict how good a player will be. Like the John Wall (http://www.insidehoops.com/forum/showthread.php?t=175209) thread (though that poster obviously has an agenda).

At least in game statistics are measuring performance on the court. Combine results are just arbitrary tests in a clinical setting thats completely separated from actually game play.

hayden695
05-22-2010, 03:54 PM
That's all he provides the boards, and it's been like that for sometime. I hate to speculate on his life outside of the interwebs but jesus ... lots of hate in that one's heart. LOL
Actually I think GOBB posts quite a bit of good to great knowledgable posts. Just that made me laugh.

joe
05-22-2010, 03:57 PM
I didn't even realize what I was doing. Just like you, I'd take my guys over your guys 10 out of 10 times, but that's just how we are, I guess. For me, you only have one go-to-shooter and that's Manu. We have three. Don't underestimate Eddie. I've never in my life seen someone get as hot as Eddie, and I've also never seen someone go cold so fast, either.

Both great championships teams, though.

Boston did have great 3 point shooters, can't disagree with you. What I like better about the Spur is, they had more role players who could stroke it. You had your core (Duncan Ginobli Parker), and then you had your Bowen's, Barry's, Jackson's, Kerr's. Obviously I'm grouping players from different years but you get my drift, hopefully.

With the Celtics, one of their core guys (Allen) was meant to take a bulk of 3's, and you're left with only Eddie House. So if Ray's killing you from 3, well he's a star and he was supposed to. If Bowen or Barry are killing you from 3.. you pretty much lost.

I'm a Suns fan FYI so the Spurs are somewhat the opposite of "my guys" (To say the least, Ha!). And no, I would never underestimate Eddie House. Him and JR Smith are two of the most dangerous shooters in the league when they're hot. Out of the role-players especially.

pete's montreux
05-22-2010, 04:09 PM
Boston did have great 3 point shooters, can't disagree with you. What I like better about the Spur is, they had more role players who could stroke it. You had your core (Duncan Ginobli Parker), and then you had your Bowen's, Barry's, Jackson's, Kerr's. Obviously I'm grouping players from different years but you get my drift, hopefully.

With the Celtics, one of their core guys (Allen) was meant to take a bulk of 3's, and you're left with only Eddie House. So if Ray's killing you from 3, well he's a star and he was supposed to. If Bowen or Barry are killing you from 3.. you pretty much lost.

I'm a Suns fan FYI so the Spurs are somewhat the opposite of "my guys" (To say the least, Ha!). And no, I would never underestimate Eddie House. Him and JR Smith are two of the most dangerous shooters in the league when they're hot. Out of the role-players especially.

Can't really compare them if you're going classic and naming the Kerr's. I've got one season to go off of, basically. :lol

GOBB
05-22-2010, 04:23 PM
Kid is probably still sore about Ben>Hinrich

Pretty much. I had an argument with dude before and he got all butt hurt. So whenever dude replies to my posts its some nutty evaluation rant of me as a poster, and human being offline. Dude competing with D.Wade ex wife on not letting sh!t go and moving on.


Actually I think GOBB posts quite a bit of good to great knowledgable posts. Just that made me laugh.

I find it annoying when posters hold grudges from previous discussions where they disagreed. I also find it annoying I look and see threads not worthy of a reply get replies (see Rekindles threads). Or threads from a regular like konex "Does Kobe get enough credit for the 3peat?" in 2010. Combination of crap threads where posters dont use thier brains and someone complaining about a thread well thought out. And not so much of the content but the poster because they cant get over a past argument. Its dumb.

hayden695
05-22-2010, 04:37 PM
Pretty much. I had an argument with dude before and he got all butt hurt. So whenever dude replies to my posts its some nutty evaluation rant of me as a poster, and human being offline. Dude competing with D.Wade ex wife on not letting sh!t go and moving on.



I find it annoying when posters hold grudges from previous discussions where they disagreed. I also find it annoying I look and see threads not worthy of a reply get replies (see Rekindles threads). Or threads from a regular like konex "Does Kobe get enough credit for the 3peat?" in 2010. Combination of crap threads where posters dont use thier brains and someone complaining about a thread well thought out. And not so much of the content but the poster because they cant get over a past argument. Its dumb.
I agree completely. I really don't understand the obsession with making threads on topics that we all saw a couple years ago. Especially about Kobe. I can understand for teams or whatever from decades ago.

joe
05-22-2010, 05:12 PM
Can't really compare them if you're going classic and naming the Kerr's. I've got one season to go off of, basically. :lol

Yeah you're right, that wasn't a fair comparison. I'll just go off of one season.


2007 Spurs (their best 3 shooting team)..

3 guys over 100 3's hit (128, 128, 104), 4 others with at least 30 (89, 50, 36, 33).


2008 Celtics..

4 guys over 100 3's hit (180, 143, 117, 106), 0 others with at least 30.


Does this make the Spurs better necessarily? No, but I thought their wealth of shooters was a huge advantage. Especially when only one of the seven players I alluded to is considered a star (Manu). Why does that matter? Because when the Spurs shot the ball well from three, it was in addition to Duncan, Parker, and Manu scoring buckets/making plays. When the Celtics hit 3's, many times that was their stars scoring buckets and making plays.

Does that distinction make sense?

Both teams shot 38% from three, but I like the Spurs many decent shooters over the Celtics top-heavyness.

And I feel it's necessary to say.. I have no "agenda." Nothing but respect for those 2008 Celtics!



http://www.basketball-reference.com/teams/SAS/2007.html

http://www.basketball-reference.com/teams/BOS/2008.html

ZenMaster
05-22-2010, 05:25 PM
The mid range game doesn't win you basketball games? I am not sure how it is possible to be this far off with an opinion.

Kobe Bryant : Excellent mid range game
Michael Jordan : Excellent mid range game
Hakeem : Excellent mid range game
Tim Duncan : Excellent mid range game (Gotten a lot worse with age)

What do these have in common? 16 of the last 20 NBA championships featured players who's mid range game is one of the best in the league. I wonder why that is? Could it be because is wreaks havoc on defenses? Probably not since you claimed it is basically a useless skill.

These guys commanded double teams before they were near the paint, killing defenses and setting up wide open shots for their team. Not what wins you basketball games? You have got to be kidding me.

Like KBlaze pointed out, any formula that puts Steve Kerr ahead of Kareem simply because he shoots a lot of threes is very flawed somewhere.

Once again you try and turn this into an individual player analysis, that's a no no. When we talk about championships we talk about teams, not players on an individual basis.

And you point out any formula that puts Steve Kerr ahead of KAJ is flawed, which is wrong. What's flawed is your way of interpreting and understanding the stat in correlation with other important stats.



I was wondering about that recently. How much the teams that make a lot of threes win when it matters. And while ive only checked the last 11 years so far....its not looking good. Im gonna wait till ive checked all 30 to confirm what I assume is the case. I'll tll you this though...


The 04 Pistons made only 333 threes. Of the 7 teams to make 365 and under...4 of them were in the conference finals. Of the 6 teams to make 500+...5 of them were either lottery teams or out in the first round.

I'll get back to you when ive looked into that a little more fully...but unless the Suns or Magic win it all im not sure there has ever been a team that was top 5 in made threes and won the title(least lately...back when 100 threes was a lot for a team perhaps). Not sure where the Lakers and Celtics were this year though. Since im not done I wont say for sure. Just been glancing through the years....

I see what you're trying to do, but your'e going about it the wrong way.

I want to start out by saying that's it's not all 3pointer and FT's that matter. What you want to look at is the 4 factors of basketball. eFG%, Off rebounding rate, turnover rate and free throws. These 4 factors go both defensively and offensively. If you want to win basketball games you better do well in these factors, and if you're lacking in one you better make it up in the other categories.

First and foremost it's defense that wins championships. So let's see how these teams did defending the 3pt line and FT's.
Let's do the 05 season, the last season before the hand checking rules went into effect if i'm not mistaking.

I'm going to use regular season stats because it's a larger sample.

Finals matchup: Pistons vs Spurs

Spurs Pistons
Pace(slowest): 8 2
Defensive rating: 1 3
Offensive rating: 9 17
Opp. eFG% 1 5
Opp. 3pt att 1 4
Opp. 3ptFG% 25(2nd in playff.) 5
Opp. FT att: 6 2
Points allowed: 1 2

Analysis of the stats

The Spurs:

SA did a crazy good job that season of not allowing 3pt shots, they where #1 with 881 att. against, allowing 190 fewer than #2 and 679 fewer than #30

Along with that they where 6th in FTatt allowed.

Combining these 2 you can figure you that when teams played against the Spurs that season they basically lived in the mid-range area, and it lead to SA being #1 defensively.

The pistons:

Detroit where #4 in opp. 3ptAtt and 5th in opp. 3pt%, so they did a good job of both allowing few 3pt shots, but also making the opponent shoot a bad % from 3.

They where also #2 in opp. FT att and #5 in opp. FG%

From that we can conclude that Detroit did a good job of not allowing other teams shooting 3's and when they did they still shot a bad %. Along with that their opp. didn't get a lot of FT's. So again it equals out to letting their opponents do most of their work in the mid-range area and it lead to them being #2 defensively.

But once again I want to point out that what really matters is the 4 factors of basketball which you need to do well in to succeed. And once again i want to point out that that you can lack in one and still do well as long as you're making it up in the others. For example if you're shooting a bad eFG% you can make up for it by getting a lot of offensive rebounds, or by creating more turnovers and therefore more shots for your team.


To finish my post off I want to say that of course you need to be able to shoot well mid-range. In a perfect basketball game you would do nothing but shoot layups and corner 3s but of course it doesn't work that way as you become predictable if you only try and do the two. So you'll automatically shoot mid-range 2's during games but it won't be what wins games for you. Game planning for maximizing your- and limiting the opponents rim shots and corner 3's will though.

niko
05-22-2010, 05:31 PM
That's all he provides the boards, and it's been like that for sometime. I hate to speculate on his life outside of the interwebs but jesus ... lots of hate in that one's heart. LOL

He seems perfectly nice to me, he comes down on people who says stupid things in one fell swoop. that makes sense to me, you say your piece and are gone. Unlike what you are doing, PICK PICK PICK PICK after every post.

Let it go.

Younggrease
05-22-2010, 05:34 PM
I agree with K-Blaze. The current crop of internet posters can not analyze the game of basketball without resorting to statistics to come to oft unfounded conclusions. What is even more troubling is that many dont have a background in statical analysis so it becomes even more troubling(many here really don't even grasp the simple concept of causation v. correlation). Basketball isnt like baseball and isnt conducive to that type of analysis or better yet isnt conducive to extreme reliance on stats.

Dasher
05-22-2010, 05:38 PM
Over reliance on stats had ISH dickriding Jose Calderon for his 50/40/90 high assist to turnover season, but they could not understand that a point guard that is too conservative is counter productive. Point guards must be dynamic and take risks from time to time.

pete's montreux
05-22-2010, 05:45 PM
Yeah you're right, that wasn't a fair comparison. I'll just go off of one season.


2007 Spurs (their best 3 shooting team)..

3 guys over 100 3's hit (128, 128, 104), 4 others with at least 30 (89, 50, 36, 33).


2008 Celtics..

4 guys over 100 3's hit (180, 143, 117, 106), 0 others with at least 30.


Does this make the Spurs better necessarily? No, but I thought their wealth of shooters was a huge advantage. Especially when only one of the seven players I alluded to is considered a star (Manu). Why does that matter? Because when the Spurs shot the ball well from three, it was in addition to Duncan, Parker, and Manu scoring buckets/making plays. When the Celtics hit 3's, many times that was their stars scoring buckets and making plays.

Does that distinction make sense?

Both teams shot 38% from three, but I like the Spurs many decent shooters over the Celtics top-heavyness.

And I feel it's necessary to say.. I have no "agenda." Nothing but respect for those 2008 Celtics!



http://www.basketball-reference.com/teams/SAS/2007.html

http://www.basketball-reference.com/teams/BOS/2008.html

I never looked at it that way. Good point, no really.

niko
05-22-2010, 05:47 PM
The problem with a lot of the arguing on this board is that its stat based, and anyone who does analysis (like me) can find points to support their argument. And its compounded by the fact people trust stats even when it goes against their eyes, and also don't trust those people who watch the team day in and day out. I remember Celtic fans arguing with me to death that Marbury was playing well as a Knick, well enough to be a starter caliber player. I saw him much much too much and knew that wasn't true, but to them it was, even though they never saw him. If you can argue anything, and just need two numbers to back it up, its hard to have any kind of discussion because anything can be right or wrong.

ZenMaster
05-23-2010, 02:32 AM
Did a little bit more research concerning TS% and it's effect on the success of teams. I was initially using basketball reference but they don't list TS% for teams, so I used another site.

Took the top 5 teams in the regular season in each of the last 4 regular seasons including this one. I'm sure you'll see the pattern.

2007
1. Dallas
2. Phoenix
3. San Antonio
4. Detroit
5. Houston

Champions: San Antonio

TS%

Dallas: 3
Phoenix: 1
San Antonio: 2
Detroit: 21
Houston: 17

Opponent TS%
Dallas: 6
Phoenix: 8
San Antonio: 1
Detroit: 4
Houston: 2

2008
1. Boston
2. Detroit
3. LA
4. NO/SA Tie
5. Phoenix

Champions: Boston

TS%
Boston: 5
Detroit: 14
LA: 4
NO: 11
SA: 12
Phoenix: 1

Opponent TS%
Boston: 1
Detroit: 3
LA: 7
NO: 11
SA: 4
Phoenix: 6

2009
1. Cleveland
2. LA
3. Boston
4. Orlando
5. Portland/Denver Tie

Champions: Lakers

TS%
Cleveland: 4
LA: 6
Boston: 2
Orlando: 5
Portland: 8
Denver: 3

Opponents TS%
Cleveland: 2
LA: 6
Boston: 4
Orlando: 1
Portland: 14
Denver: 9

2010
1. Cleveland
2. Orlando
3. LA
4. Dallas
5. Phoenix

TS%
Cleveland: 3
Orlando:2
LA: 17
Dallas: 9
Phoenix: 1

Opponents TS%
Cleveland: 3
Orlando: 1
LA: 2
Dallas: 11
Phoenix: 9

Kblaze8855
05-23-2010, 03:20 AM
Isnt that pretty much saying that teams that make their shots while keeping the other team from making theirs tend to win? Might as well say playing basketball well makes you good at basketball.

For a team I can see how that would be a factor in winning because really all a team needs to do is outscore the opponent. For a single player compared to another there are way too many issues unrelated to the individuals.

Its almost like using simple games won and lost to judge players. You can judge a teams ability by it(for the most part). Not players.

RainierBeachPoet
05-23-2010, 08:12 AM
Id like to take a moment to spread a layer of rich creamy douche on the toast that ISH by pointing out a number of things I feel are true and have little to no respect for your opinion if you disagree with. It has become my custom to pop up and ramble on now and then about issues nobody much cares about and after 8 years im still not tired of it. Perhaps I just love the sounds of a keyboard hard at work....

2 things before I start...

1. I type run on sentences of epic proportions so be prepared for that..

2. It is customary to at some point in my posts get bored and wander off mentally...perhaps physically. So around the time I suspect the brave few who read this to be getting sick of it....I will offer an intermission complete with 4 unrelated things I think might brighten your day.



Now...the issue at hand.


I kinda hate you all. Not individually but what you(and I) have created in the last 10 years.

Internet forums...especially sports related ones...have stopped being about sports as much as about people trying to prove this or that....arguing....repeating themselves...just in general being uninteresting stand ins for basketball fans. And do you know what did it?

Numbers and a need to be proven right.

Now I understand the interest people have in numbers. I bought a basketball almanac every year when I was a kid. No internet...so I had to read books, listen to my uncle and his people, and watch games. Record games. I remember when having a VCR was a somewhat new concept. I used to buy packs of 3 tapes to record on fridays when my mom might give me a couple dollars. A tape never lasted more than 1-2 games because our VCR was cheap and could only record at the speed that made an 8 hour tape record 2 hours.

So id record say...the Celtics/Bulls game and if it was good it went into the "Dont tape over" box and if it wasnt id watch it 1-2 times and tape over it. I watched some of those tapes so many times I can still remember where games that got taped over would be when the first game ended. that was the only way to know what was happening. Who was good and why. That and a blue background segment showcasing a few league leaders at halftime on CBS.

I didint know what anyones point per shot was. PER was 20 years away. Assist to turnover ratio was about as complicated as it got and even that I heard of like 3-4 times before the late 90s.

Ive seen a dozen times on ISH before someone well meaning and usually not an idiot say something along the lines of:

"Thats just your opinion. But *inset numbers* says ___".

Or to get out of the hypothetical...ill show the exact words of someone who will remain nameless:




The problem with this and similar lines of thinking....is that talking about basketball is arguing points that cant be proven.

I think the strive for proof is the source of most of problems with people online these days. Unless you want to be an ass and say something like "So I cant prove Jordan was better than Steve Kerr?"...its damn near impossible to prove anything.

All we can prove is who won and who lost. Which numbers a player has. and what awards he was given. Thats it. And every single one of them lie.

Difference between shooting 44 and 50 for a guy who shoots 18 times a game is one make or miss. In a game with perhaps 160 posessions there are people who let something like that decide who they think is a good player and who isnt. Or more likely who is an ok player and who is great. Since 50% is now a magical number that makes you great.

People act like they dont watch games and see what makes these numbers. Jason Kidd for one helped to slaughter his shooting percentages with halfcourt rainbows all the time in his prime. He just didnt give a damn. Same for Sam Cassell for a while. To me its a sign of a winner. I hate seeing guys dribble out the clock instead of shooting it. Never know right?

In a game with maybe 150-160 posessions one missed jumper often a bailout shot for a superstar isnt the difference between being good or bad. You have guys like Lebron, Kobe, and even lesser players like Ben Gordon, Jason Terry, and Jamal crawford taking bail out shots at the end of shot clocks/quarters that just flat out destroy their shooting percentages. It makes their numbers worse...but it does it because they have skills that let their teammates lean on them in such situations.

They are great shooters of often contested shots. have balls enough to take the shots. So their teams feed them the ball in otherwish bad situations. So they miss 1-2 shots a game that lesser skilled guys wouldnt be given....and it greatly impacts their shooting numbers. And its a direct result of a POSITIVE. Being good....gets you bad shots. As I said earlier one miss can take you from 50% to 44%. And a guy like AI? You watch one of his Philly games and hes taking almost EVERY bailout shot. A better indicator of quality shots being taken would probably be...shooting percentage with 3 or more seconds on the clock. But we have prople trying to fix that issue already...


We now have bullshit like true shooting and eFG% or PPS which reward threes and making FTs with no concern for the situation leading to those things. For the most part guys who take a lot of threes(even when they make them) do so for lack of the talents needed to get a better shot. So you can shoot. You take 3s. Have idiots talking about how many 3s you can miss and still produce as many point as you do making less 2s.

Am I the only one who sees the downside of taking a bad shot? you dont get 3 for the shot because its a good shot. You get it because its difficult. And people who take difficult shots dont tend to win when it matters because you cant count on making tough shots. You can however count on running good offense that gets good shots. Often you can take bad shots...and miss more shots...but if they are 3s you get a better rating? Lets not even go into the impact on transition D when you give up long rebounds off threes as opposed to missing a shot in the lane....


True shooting al ltime leaders does include some greats(Bird, Magic, Barkley and others) but any stat that in any way measure a positive(like making shots) will include some great. But really....

1. Cedric Maxwell .6294
6. Reggie Miller .6139
10. Brent Barry .6066
17. Ed Pinckney .6019
18. Steve Johnson .6002
19. Mario Elie .5982
Kevin Martin .5982

And this is perhaps most laughable to me:

25. Steve Kerr .5932
26. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar* .5924


Im gonna let that stand on its own...

Factoring in all forms of shooting numbers to make one number to decide something is just a ****ing stupid idea to begin with. For one...your field goal percentage itself is misleading for all number of reasons. your 3 point percentage can be impacted by so many things unrelated to your talent its a joke. And FT percentages? Relevant...but key to greatness?

How how many truly elitep layers shot 85% for their careers? Forget the bigmen like Wilt, Kareem, Russell, Shaq and so on. Few people do at any position. People who matter I mean. Not Jordan. Not Oscar. Not Magic. Not Kobe. Not west. 79 people have done it and 6 of them are or can be expected to eventually be in the HOF.

Being a great Ft shooter would be good for anyone. But fact is its often indicative of a less than complete game. A guy like Steve Kerr can do nothing but shoot because what else is he gonna be doing?

Getting away from scoring numbers...

this!!

stats ALWAYS are interpreted...but there is no substitute for the "intuition" that comes from nba experience (actually watching the players/game)

knowledge +
experience (as defined above) +
solid interpretation
=
strong point of view

dutchguy
05-23-2010, 08:44 AM
Once again you try and turn this into an individual player analysis, that's a no no. When we talk about championships we talk about teams, not players on an individual basis.

I think that's been blaze's whole point. people are focusing way too much on individual stats. And looking at these boards, you can't deny that


And you point out any formula that puts Steve Kerr ahead of KAJ is flawed, which is wrong. What's flawed is your way of interpreting and understanding the stat in correlation with other important stats.
To a point you're right of course, but the more you have to interpret a stat, the less it means. If a stat puts Kerr ahead of KAJ and you say "but obviously that doesn't mean Kerr is a better player" then what does the stat mean? still, point taken.

Right now, something interesting is happening: Boston is well on it's way to the finals. You can find no stat at all that could've predicted this. But if you watched the games, you could see none of the players (except KG for a bit) were falling off, playing (significantly) worse than before. They were struggling as a team. TO's, playing inconsistent, not gelling. To me, this meant that if they could pull it together they would be instant contenders. You can't make that prediction from stats, but you can see it.

Also this makes for a much more interesting conversation. What's going on? There are an infinite number of possibilities and solutions to discuss and the outcomes will be more interesting and better predictions. With stats, the solutions are always finite and in this case they didn't show the problem at all, so you couldn't come up with a solution or a prediction.

I'd rather talk about Rondo's hustle than about the number of rebounds he has. I'd rather talk about the magic's bodylanguage than their turnovers. I'd rather talk about the great passes Ray made that were not assists but led to good things than just the passes that were counted as assists

the_chosen_1
05-23-2010, 08:44 AM
:applause:

ZenMaster
05-23-2010, 09:24 AM
Isnt that pretty much saying that teams that make their shots while keeping the other team from making theirs tend to win? Might as well say playing basketball well makes you good at basketball.

For a team I can see how that would be a factor in winning because really all a team needs to do is outscore the opponent. For a single player compared to another there are way too many issues unrelated to the individuals.

Its almost like using simple games won and lost to judge players. You can judge a teams ability by it(for the most part). Not players.

No, there's a difference, here's an example.

The 07 Spurs where 2nd in TS% at 56.1% (Utah was 6th at 55.1%).

In FG% they where tied for 2nd with Utah at 47.4%.
The difference comes when you look at the 3pt shooting where SA shot 38.1% (3pt rate of 24.7%) and Utah was at 33.5% (3pt rate of 16.3%)
So San Antonio shot both more of their shots form 3pt, and made them at a better clip.

Utah had a FT rate of 38% while San Antonio was at 31.3%

They where tied with Utah in Off. efficiency at 106.7

So Utah and San Antonio was equal in points scored pr. 100 possessions, but Utah shot a lot more FTs, San Antonio made up the difference with their 3pt shooting where they shot both more and better, and with a slightly better FT% (75.1% vs 74.3%)



In Opp. FG% the Spurs where 4th where as in Opp. TS% they where 1st.

Orlando was 3rd in Opp. FG% but only 10th in Opp. TS% !!!!!!!

Orlandos Opp. shot 44.2 FG%
San Ant Opp. shot 44.3 FG%
So basically teams playing Orlando and SA shot the same % from the field, but when playing vs SA you got 4.3pts less per. 100 possessions

Opp. 3pt FG%: SA where 2nd at 33.4% and Orlando was 10th at 35.3%
Opp. 3pt rate: SA where 1st at 17% and Orlando was 13th at 21.6%

Opp. FT rate: SA where 2nd at 27.2% and Orlando was 29th at 37.6%

So the Opp. FT and 3pt rate makes the difference between the Opp. TS% and the Opp. FG%.



----------------------



Let's go a bit further and look at the opponents shot locations vs the #1 opp. TS% ranked SA defense.

Opp. Rim shot%: 56.2% (2nd) on 24.1 att prg (11th)

Opp. <10 Feet shot%: 41.7% (15th) on 11 att prg (29th)

Opp. 10-15 Feet shot%: 41.1% (24th) on 8.7 att prg (28th)

Opp. 16-23 Feet shot%: 40.6% (22th) on 20.4 att prg (11th)

Opp. 3pt shoot: 50.1 eFG% (2nd) on 13.4 att prg (2nd)

Those are some telling stats. You can see they did a good very good job of not letting opp. score at the rim while still not giving up that many att.

In the <10 FT area, which will most often be floaters and contested shots because you couldn't get to the rim, they where only an average defense in terms of opp. shot% and almost last in att. shots prg.

In the 10-15 FT area, which would be the ultimate mid-range area right? They where almost last in both opp. FG% and allowed shots.

In the 16-23 FT area they where near the bottom in opp. FG% and in the middle in terms of opp. att prg.

As for 3pointers they where 2nd in opp. shot % and 2nd in allowed att. prg.


So basically a defense with a lot of hard closeouts to not allow/contest the opponents 3pt shoots. Good help defense to not contest shots at the rim without giving up fouls (2nd in opp. FT rate)
That leads to a lot of dribble pull ups and floaters. You can see that they where almost last in terms of giving up shots and those shots being hit from the 10-15 FT area, yet they still had the #1 defense in terms of opp. TS% and 2nd points per 100 possessions.

Like I said in a previous post, this is the reason Popovich has been ahead of the curve for so long. It's not just that he's had good defensive players, but that his teams play the right type of defense in terms of minimizing the opponents efficiency, and that is getting the other team to shoot from the mid-range area as much as possible without fouling.

ZenMaster
05-23-2010, 09:59 AM
I think that's been blaze's whole point. people are focusing way too much on individual stats. And looking at these boards, you can't deny that

No not at all, and I hate that there's so much focus on individuals in a team game.






To a point you're right of course, but the more you have to interpret a stat, the less it means. If a stat puts Kerr ahead of KAJ and you say "but obviously that doesn't mean Kerr is a better player" then what does the stat mean? still, point taken.

Right now, something interesting is happening: Boston is well on it's way to the finals. You can find no stat at all that could've predicted this. But if you watched the games, you could see none of the players (except KG for a bit) were falling off, playing (significantly) worse than before. They were struggling as a team. TO's, playing inconsistent, not gelling. To me, this meant that if they could pull it together they would be instant contenders. You can't make that prediction from stats, but you can see it.

Also this makes for a much more interesting conversation. What's going on? There are an infinite number of possibilities and solutions to discuss and the outcomes will be more interesting and better predictions. With stats, the solutions are always finite and in this case they didn't show the problem at all, so you couldn't come up with a solution or a prediction.

I'd rather talk about Rondo's hustle than about the number of rebounds he has. I'd rather talk about the magic's bodylanguage than their turnovers. I'd rather talk about the great passes Ray made that were not assists but led to good things than just the passes that were counted as assists

Lots of good points that I agree with.

But as for the TS% being a flawed stat, it just doesn't make any sense. All you have to do to interpret it is look at shoots per game, basically the same with FG%.

You could also just look at PPS, but he said that stat was bad as well.

You just can't tell me that a stat that combines the 3 ways possible of scoring in a basketball game is a bad stat. He used the reasoning that guys who shoot a lot of 3's do it because they're not good at something else and therefore it's not a valid ability in terms of being a basketball player, and that's a bunch of BS, as long as there's a 3pt line it's a valid ability to be able to shoot from that distance.
Same thing with FT's, as long as they count for a point pr. make it's a valid ability to create and make FT's for yourself and your team.

RainierBeachPoet
05-23-2010, 10:42 AM
stats are helpful after the fact. they help interpret why and team won/lost. but they are always a partial picture and needs interpretation with other factors

intangibles play a huge part in winning/losing. pure stats do not cover well the psychological parts of any game. here are a few areas:

-timing of missed/made shots
-hustle plays
-fights
-being benched
-choking
-the affect of the crowd
-lucky plays/shots
-coach's involvement/lack thereof
-injuries
-chemistry of the team
when a team "gives up"

dutchguy
05-23-2010, 10:56 AM
No not at all, and I hate that there's so much focus on individuals in a team game.
?? so you agree? :)



But as for the TS% being a flawed stat, it just doesn't make any sense. All you have to do to interpret it is look at shoots per game, basically the same with FG%.

You could also just look at PPS, but he said that stat was bad as well.

You just can't tell me that a stat that combines the 3 ways possible of scoring in a basketball game is a bad stat. He used the reasoning that guys who shoot a lot of 3's do it because they're not good at something else and therefore it's not a valid ability in terms of being a basketball player, and that's a bunch of BS, as long as there's a 3pt line it's a valid ability to be able to shoot from that distance.
Same thing with FT's, as long as they count for a point pr. make it's a valid ability to create and make FT's for yourself and your team.

Agree that the argument that shooting 3s is some sign of weakness is nonsense, just as ft's. Still, Blaze made a rant, a provoking opinion, in which he didn't say stats are all useless, but that stats are vastly overrated. And that's the same with TS% even when combined with the volume of shots taken. The picture you get from that is very minimal.
I see your side of the story, but it doesn't take away his.

ZenMaster
05-23-2010, 11:12 AM
?? so you agree? :)



Agree that the argument that shooting 3s is some sign of weakness is nonsense, just as ft's. Still, Blaze made a rant, a provoking opinion, in which he didn't say stats are all useless, but that stats are vastly overrated. And that's the same with TS% even when combined with the volume of shots taken. The picture you get from that is very minimal.
I see your side of the story, but it doesn't take away his.

Yeah i highly agree with the individualistic approach in a team sport is getting obnoxious.

I don't agree that the TS% is vastly overrated. The factors that go into having a good TS% on offense and forcing a bad TS% on defense are so big for winning in basketball.

A good TS% is evident of a team shooting a lot of lay ups (breaking down the defense), hitting 3's at a good rate (stretches the defense and is often a sign of many and good ball reversals which is in direct correlation with defensive breakdowns), and shooting FT's which puts pressure on the other team in terms of foul trouble which ultimately leads to more bad defensive decisions and more defensive breakdowns.

dutchguy
05-23-2010, 11:33 AM
Yeah i highly agree with the individualistic approach in a team sport is getting obnoxious.

I don't agree that the TS% is vastly overrated. The factors that go into having a good TS% on offense and forcing a bad TS% on defense are so big for winning in basketball.

A good TS% is evident of a team shooting a lot of lay ups (breaking down the defense), hitting 3's at a good rate (stretches the defense and is often a sign of many and good ball reversals which is in direct correlation with defensive breakdowns), and shooting FT's which puts pressure on the other team in terms of foul trouble which ultimately leads to more bad defensive decisions and more defensive breakdowns.
Would you say that if I show you two teams and their TS% from a game against each other, that the team with the higher TS% is always the winner (except for some exception that proves the rule)?
Because I wouldn't be surprised if that was only the case 60% or something.

gts
05-23-2010, 11:40 AM
ok finally sat down and read the op

kblaze, you rock!

ZenMaster
05-23-2010, 11:46 AM
Would you say that if I show you two teams and their TS% from a game against each other, that the team with the higher TS% is always the winner (except for some exception that proves the rule)?
Because I wouldn't be surprised if that was only the case 60% or something.

I'd say that the vast majority of the time the team will have the higher TS%, I think it's higher than 60%, way higher but I'll look into it a little bit.

I my former post I was very close to writing that if I could only have one stat to look at from a game or season to determine the winner(not being points scored obv :) ) I would pick offensive TS% vs defensive TS%.

ZeN
05-23-2010, 11:49 AM
ok finally sat down and read the op

kblaze, you rock!


QFT

If only ISHers had better reasoning skills like The Blaze..

Jailblazers7
05-23-2010, 12:00 PM
I agree about the rabid over use of stats on this site. I understand people need some sort of arbitrary measuring stick in an argument but it isn't the end all be all of a players ability. It only irks me because people don't even comment about the actual game and the observations they make while watching and if they do its an overreaction and not a genuine look at the players body of work. Everyone thought deron Williams was the best PG after the first round and now its rondo. And most people based these beliefs on stats during a 5 or 6 game stretch.

ZenMaster
05-23-2010, 12:14 PM
Would you say that if I show you two teams and their TS% from a game against each other, that the team with the higher TS% is always the winner (except for some exception that proves the rule)?
Because I wouldn't be surprised if that was only the case 60% or something.

OK so I did a probable finals match up of the Celtic and the Lakers for their games so far in these playoffs.

In games the Lakers have played this post season the team with the highest TS% have won 10 out of 12 times. In the 2 games where the team with the lowest TS% won the games where won by 3 points and 1 point.

In games the Celtics have played this post season the team with the highest TS% have won 12 out of 14 times. In the 2 games where the team with the lowest TS% won the games where decided by 2 and 9 points.

Qwyjibo
05-23-2010, 12:18 PM
What's with the backlash against stats? They are a great tool to help you determine which players and teams are better. If you look at a combination of most advanced metrics, they give you a good idea of who is playing well and who isn't whether it's on offense or defense. People who don't know how to interpret the stats or use them wrong ("this guy has a higher FG% so he is a better shooter.") are the problem. Sure there are many intangible aspects to all sports but the main stuff comes down to are you a productive player on both ends or not? That can be captured using many statistics. Someone in this thread mentioned intangible aspects like "effect of the crowd". Really? I mean come on, do you realize how small of an effect this has on the production of players? This can also be shown by looking at home/away splits among other things.

Unless someone watches every single game of every single team/player, you should be using stats in your argument because it gives you a bigger sample for a basis of comparison. No, the 10 games you watched of Chris Paul and Deron Williams this year to compare them is not enough. Baseless arguments is what pisses me off about ISH. People spouting off claims without any sort of proof to support them.

Deeper statistical analysis is a good thing. Why not try to become smarter about the game? Why not try to look for things that will be better predictors of future performance? People are finally coming around on this when it comes to baseball and it's becoming a valuable tool. Basketball is a different sport obviously but learning more about the game is not a bad thing.

dutchguy
05-23-2010, 12:38 PM
OK so I did a probable finals match up of the Celtic and the Lakers for their games so far in these playoffs.

In games the Lakers have played this post season the team with the highest TS% have won 10 out of 12 times. In the 2 games where the team with the lowest TS% won the games where won by 3 points and 1 point.

In games the Celtics have played this post season the team with the highest TS% have won 12 out of 14 times. In the 2 games where the team with the lowest TS% won the games where decided by 2 and 9 points.
:bowdown:
Ok I gotta hand it to you, you do good research. So definitely more than 60% and this will probably translate to a larger sample, or even league wide. Now for the next challenge:oldlol:
If this stat really means anything, it must be able to predict something. I could also use a stat to tell you which team won a certain game: The final score.
The point of using these stats is that they give insight in A: the way/style a team plays (which i think it doesn't much unless you compare off and def TS% for both teams) B: how this team will perform in the future. I'm interested if that can be done, I don't think so, because TS% depends too much on the opponent. If it doesn't predict, than it's just as easy to just look at the score.

ZenMaster
05-23-2010, 02:38 PM
:bowdown:
Ok I gotta hand it to you, you do good research. So definitely more than 60% and this will probably translate to a larger sample, or even league wide. Now for the next challenge:oldlol:
If this stat really means anything, it must be able to predict something. I could also use a stat to tell you which team won a certain game: The final score.
The point of using these stats is that they give insight in A: the way/style a team plays (which i think it doesn't much unless you compare off and def TS% for both teams) B: how this team will perform in the future. I'm interested if that can be done, I don't think so, because TS% depends too much on the opponent. If it doesn't predict, than it's just as easy to just look at the score.


I think it definitely covers very well how the best teams defend. TS% is a direct indicator of covering the 3pt line and the paint without giving up a big amount of FT's.

As for the offensive side I couldn't help but think of the Houston Rockets. Daryl Morey is a firm believer in this stuff and the Rockets have a tendency to overachieve compared to the talent of their roster.

2009 is a great example of this. While the Lakers had the way better point differential for the season they where taken to 7 games in their series with the Rockets, the only team to do so vs the Lakers, there's a reason for this:

Even though the Lakers where the team with the highest point differential in the WC for the season at +7.7 they where not the team with the biggest differential in TS%, the Rockets where. Lakers had a TS% diff. of 2.5 vs Rockets 3.2

This is in direct effect with how they play and what kind of shots Adelman has designed the offense to get. You can see that off these charts, which has Rockets players peak in rim shots and 3pts attempted, the same shots that highly affect TS% outside of FT shooting. I'm pretty sure you'd see somewhat equal charts for teams like Cleveland, Boston and Orlando. The Rockets though go all the way.

http://www.red94.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/rockets_shooting.png

http://www.red94.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/rockets_pg_shooting.png

http://www.red94.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/rockets_swing_shooting.png

http://www.red94.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/rockets_bigs_shooting.png



In the EC last year the Cavs where the team with the highest point differential for the season, but not the highest TS% diff, that was Orlando.
Cleveland had a pt diff of +8.9 and a TS% diff of +4.5
Orlando had a pt diff of +7.5 but a TS% diff of +5.1

Orlando ended up beating Cleveland when it mattered.

I used the comparison to point differential because there's a strong belief amongst media NBA "experts" that point differential is the strongest indicator of how teams will perform in the playoffs.

A couple of other notes concerning last season:

1) Boston was only 0.1 behind Orlando for the best TS% diff and they had a .8 larger point diff. I wouldn't put it past them that they would have been in the finals if it wasn't for the KG injury.

2) The Lakers is kind of the team that stands out in these stats compared to their success, but I think it can be explained.
First of all their offense isn't designed to maximize 3pt and rim shots opportunities. I have heard Phil comment that he sometimes regret not getting his teams more 3pt shots, but that he has stuck with the triangle offense because it's an equal opportunity offense and that's important as it fits his basketball philosophy of having everybody involved.

But he understands the importance of the 3pt shot and that you have to defend against it, especially these last few years. This is shown during his teams playoffs runs when they win:

Opp. 3pt FG% in the playoffs for the Lakers:
2010: 5th 32% going to win
2009: 2nd 31% won
2008: 8th 35% lost finals
2007: 10th 35% 1st rnd exit
2006: 14th 40% 1st rnd exit
2004: 6th 31% lost finals
2003: 14th 40% 2nd rnd exit
2002: 6th 31% won
2001: 3rd 27% won
2000: 10th 37% won

dutchguy
05-23-2010, 02:55 PM
OK, I'm convinced. :cheers:
Just can't beat that. I won't abandon looking at stats any time soon.

1 thing though


Opp. 3pt FG% in the playoffs for the Lakers:
2010: 5th 32% going to win
2009: 2nd 31% won
2008: 8th 35% lost finals
2007: 10th 35% 1st rnd exit
2006: 14th 40% 1st rnd exit
2004: 6th 31% lost finals
2003: 14th 40% 2nd rnd exit
2002: 6th 31% won
2001: 3rd 27% won
2000: 10th 37% won

It doesn't really add up, the correlation between 3pt% and playoffs outcome is way too weak, which I think is obvious, but goes to show that this isn't the end-all be-all stat, but you said that yourself. However a smart combination of stats like you proposed offensive and defensive TS% interpreted the right way can lead to interesting conclusions.

and ehh....


Opp. 3pt FG% in the playoffs for the Lakers:
2010: 5th 32% going to win:no:

Hell no....celtics baby
:pimp:

ZenMaster
05-23-2010, 03:09 PM
OK, I'm convinced. :cheers:
Just can't beat that. I won't abandon looking at stats any time soon.

1 thing though

It doesn't really add up, the correlation between 3pt% and playoffs outcome is way too weak, which I think is obvious, but goes to show that this isn't the end-all be-all stat, but you said that yourself. However a smart combination of stats like you proposed offensive and defensive TS% interpreted the right way can lead to interesting conclusions.

and ehh....

Hell no....celtics baby
:pimp:

But what you have to remember is that this whole statistical revelation in the NBA is no more than a few years old and it's very much still going on. So all this focus on covering the 3pt line is a fairly new concept to a lot of teams. Like I said in an earlier post, Popovich was the guy to go with this concept first and thus his success during this last decade.

It's going to be one hell of a finals series this year :cheers:

dutchguy
05-23-2010, 04:22 PM
But what you have to remember is that this whole statistical revelation in the NBA is no more than a few years old and it's very much still going on. So all this focus on covering the 3pt line is a fairly new concept to a lot of teams. Like I said in an earlier post, Popovich was the guy to go with this concept first and thus his success during this last decade.

I can quite distinctly remember my coach teaching us the same thing when I was about 15. So I don't think it's really new. And believe me, in my league there were no NBA/NCAA caliber shooters:oldlol:
But the more advanced statistics have come over from Baseball only a few years ago, agreed. One of these 'advanced' statistics I hate is PER. That might work in baseball which is much more static and it's also understandable that you want to try to get as much info as possible in one clearly comparable number, but it's not working in a dynamic game as bball.

Makes me think of Ginobli, who in my opinion does so much on the floor, but it's impossible to translate that in objective stats. He always makes passes that get the advance the offence, but that are not direct assists. Can't translate that. Just like floor spacing.
And than you have people like this guy from the Mavs, who has this Mathletics site and he's saying stuff like "Durant's +/- is so low we wouldn't sign him if we could" You can't make coaching or acquisition decisions based on those stats.
But we've discussed that and I believe you agree.



It's going to be one hell of a finals series this year :cheers:
Epic

magnax1
05-23-2010, 04:50 PM
Players lost their midrange jumpers and fans lost the ability to talk basketball because of the agendas driven by the need to be right all the time...and to prove it. The strive for proof is where these numbers come from. And its in these numbers we lose our all around fanhood.
Very true. I always try to stay away from conversations I know I'm biased on, and it really starts to become idiotic when a person pulls out the same argument which sort of makes sense, but everyone disagrees except for the biased few who pull out the exact same argument.

I also agree that the three pointer is over rated. Its an especially terrible shot in the last few minutes of the game because, while it might be more efficient statistically you're only going to make it 1/3 times and you might only have 3 possessions left while you'd be making an inside shot half the time even if its less efficient.
However just shooting a spot up three mid game instead of a jump shot is better because it is more efficient, it creates better spacing and its a momentum shifting shot if you keep making them.

Jailblazers7
05-23-2010, 07:01 PM
What's with the backlash against stats? They are a great tool to help you determine which players and teams are better. If you look at a combination of most advanced metrics, they give you a good idea of who is playing well and who isn't whether it's on offense or defense. People who don't know how to interpret the stats or use them wrong ("this guy has a higher FG% so he is a better shooter.") are the problem. Sure there are many intangible aspects to all sports but the main stuff comes down to are you a productive player on both ends or not? That can be captured using many statistics. Someone in this thread mentioned intangible aspects like "effect of the crowd". Really? I mean come on, do you realize how small of an effect this has on the production of players? This can also be shown by looking at home/away splits among other things.

Unless someone watches every single game of every single team/player, you should be using stats in your argument because it gives you a bigger sample for a basis of comparison. No, the 10 games you watched of Chris Paul and Deron Williams this year to compare them is not enough. Baseless arguments is what pisses me off about ISH. People spouting off claims without any sort of proof to support them.

Deeper statistical analysis is a good thing. Why not try to become smarter about the game? Why not try to look for things that will be better predictors of future performance? People are finally coming around on this when it comes to baseball and it's becoming a valuable tool. Basketball is a different sport obviously but learning more about the game is not a bad thing.

Good post.

The problem on this board is that no one really uses stats properly in the context of an argument. They will say player X has more assists than player Y because they average more assists. A lot of guys who do this provide absolutely no real interpretation or observations on the players or teams or coaches they are debating about. Its gotta make you question whether or not they even watch these players.

That is the reason I like reading posts by guys like Thorpe, KBlaze, Da KO King, wang4three, and a bunch of other guys because they provide their opinions of playing style and observations they have made while actually watching games.

I do agree that statistics are a valuable tool tho. For instance, I probably only get to watch like 5 or 6 Kings games a year so I won't have very much first hand knowledge about Tyreke Evans. However, by looking at stats and doing comparisons I can come up with a reasonable estimate of where he should be placed among NBA players. I still refrane from speaking about guys like this who I don't watch very often because I don't have much to offer except stats that everyone has access to. What I really enjoy in a post is something unique within the anaylsis and not just a statistical breakdown I can get from NBA.com.

ZenMaster
06-11-2010, 12:12 PM
No in-depth response from you Kblaze? I was hoping for it.

Kblaze8855
06-29-2010, 05:47 PM
Im looking over it now. When first I saw it my only thought was "Did this guy really create a series of charts and graphs?". Not that im complaining about too much effort being put in. I respect taking the time to explain yourself well. I just....was suprised by it.

BlueandGold
06-29-2010, 05:50 PM
http://officeforward.com/main/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/1067629-cool_story_bro_super.gif

ZenMaster
06-29-2010, 08:11 PM
Im looking over it now. When first I saw it my only thought was "Did this guy really create a series of charts and graphs?". Not that im complaining about too much effort being put in. I respect taking the time to explain yourself well. I just....was suprised by it.

Well they where already made, I just used them as I thought they where relevant for the discussion.

Hamburgers
06-29-2010, 09:09 PM
http://i45.tinypic.com/8yyulw.gif

Gifted Mind
06-29-2010, 10:46 PM
I think the problem is not having a in-depth use of statistics. Most just post 1 or 2 and think they have proven their point. However, 1-2 stats rarely tell the whole picture. But if you include more and more, you will get a more clearer understanding and get closer to the actual truth.

I think Zenmaster in this thread has shown good examples of this.


I can also give an example for one of the examples the OP used to show statistics don't tell the real story



We have people on here talking about Chris Pauls backup point having good numbers proves hes overrated when anyone who watched them both sees that Paul is far better setting the tempo, knowing when to defer to others, and most importantly...when not to. A point is supposed to have command. Not bend to the will of more established teammates.

Here is a classic case where the given numbers don't tell the whole story. So what added statistics will cover for this case? Team production. Your team's offensive production when Paul was the PG vs. Darren. I mean, essentially that is what you said Paul does better. It can be shown by statistics.


I could go on, but essentially almost everything can somehow be quantified. The key is to analyze the situation correctly. Nonetheless, you still will never have proven anything. "Prove" is too strong of a word. You will have greatly strengthen your argument, and that's usually all that is needed.

In summary, proper analyzation and statistical use can get you pretty close to the truth. Notice, analyzation requires watching the game. But after that, to make it more than just your interpretation of the game, you have to somehow quantify it, this is usually possible. If not, use strong logic.

eliteballer
05-19-2019, 01:49 AM
:applause:

The Iron Fist
05-19-2019, 09:59 AM
And still, this place is a cesspool.

AirFederer
05-19-2019, 11:20 AM
Isnt that pretty much saying that teams that make their shots while keeping the other team from making theirs tend to win? Might as well say playing basketball well makes you good at basketball.

For a team I can see how that would be a factor in winning because really all a team needs to do is outscore the opponent. For a single player compared to another there are way too many issues unrelated to the individuals.

Its almost like using simple games won and lost to judge players. You can judge a teams ability by it(for the most part). Not players.
:biggums:

:rolleyes:

Leviathon1121
05-19-2019, 03:15 PM
And still, this place is a cesspool.
Kblaze tried but I’m fairly certain he was told not to ban any of Simons accounts anymore because that is all this forum is at this point.

Turbo Slayer
05-19-2019, 08:23 PM
kBlaze, youre the GOAT
:applause: