Dreadfully long...
to suggest you can evaluate every player and every game from a box score is stupid, its the combination of stats and in actual game analysis that one could arive at a conclusion.
In theory, a mix of opinions and stats and common sense is the best
I am not suggesting that we should completely ignore any studying of the games visually. I am stating the truth that watching the games is in no way superior to having actual hard data. Watching the games is a method of gathering data, using stats is simply taking data someone else already gathered for us. Yes, using them together is better, because, wait for it,
you have even more data.
The point of my position in this thread, is simple. No one on this forum has watched enough games to accurately quantify the defensive, or any other, production of any player in the league. Therefore we all must use data that has been gathered regarding the players to provide evidence for our arguments on the forum. I am also contending the insane claims that "watching players is better than looking at data 10 out of 10 times" or that "defense cannot be measured" that have been presented.
Proof? Source? benji, you know better than posting something without proof, or else no one will believe you.
I figured this was common knowledge, it is not like the commentators do not mention it every single game. Hence why I said "it is said" as I did not consider it a worthwhile mission to unearth online recordings of these second-hand claims. But here is from the first page of results for "Shaq free throws practice" on Google.
InsideHoops.com wrote:Second, the fact that Shaq shoots a respectable percentage in practice may have persuaded Riley that there's nothing fundamentally wrong with his technique or delivery. If so, let's count Riley among the many coaches who have yet to figure out that everyone - even Wilt and Big Ben - shoots reasonably well in practice.
Detroit News wrote:Saunders said that Wallace's free-throw shooting is baffling because he has decent form on the shots and in practice, he makes 70 and 80 percent of them.
Sports Illustrated wrote:Shaq wants badly to do better. He makes 100 extra free throws after every practice and returns to the Lakers' gym many nights and makes another 300. Sometimes he shoots them with his eyes closed. Sometimes he lies on his back and shoots them. Sometimes he shoots them while his free-throw-shooting guru, Ed Palubinskas, stands in the lane and screams at him to distract him. "I swear, we're shooting about 84 percent in practice," says Palubinskas, "and better than 50 percent with his eyes closed."
Anyway.
Some people may think blocking is more important, while others may think causing turnovers is more important
Turnovers are ALWAYS more important. They are completely ending the offensive possession, while blocking a shot is recovered by the defense about 30% of the time.
Yes, but only the result of that play.
Which, for the five-thousandth time is all that matters. If a player gets lucky on all 2000 defensive possessions he faces over a three-year span, then that matters far more than his defensive skills. He clearly is using some sort of illegal magical powers, which I would consider a lot more important than good positioning.
If I'm gonna analyze a player, I'd put probably 60% into watching him, and 40% in his statistical production.
Why would you ever use stats? You said watching the players is better 100% of the time. So you are saying that when you analyze a player you are willingly using an entirely worthless method four times out of ten.
Just because Chris Duhon stopped his man 3.4% more than Hinrich this past season doesn't make him a better defender. Watch them both and you will quickly see the little things Hinrich does that caused him to get this reputation. Thing's that stats can't record.
Well, there
is three years of aggregate data using different systems and all of them say, Duhon has been more defensively productive over that span. At that point, it kinda becomes a "trend" and not a "fluke due to luck over an entire season", no?
And you have yet to provide evidence Hinrich is the second best defensive point guard in the league. I have shown my data and reasoning why I do not believe Hinrich to be the second best defender in the league. I am still waiting on this evidence that he is.