http://wagesofwins.com/2011/12/11/wins- ... -stronger/
Here's his rationale:The “proof” some people constructed focused on the value of rebounds. Because Wins Produced argues that non-scorers who grab many rebounds are quite valuable – and conventional wisdom argues that non-scorers are simply not that valuable – it must be the case that Wins Produced overvalues rebounds.
A variety of arguments have been offered in response to this critique. Many of these were detailed in the Frequently Asked Question page. For example, it was noted that
although diminishing returns – as detailed in Stumbling on Wins — certainly exists for defensive rebounds (but not for offensive rebounds), the size of the effect is “small”.
to illustrate, when the impact of diminishing returns with respect to defensive rebounds is accounted for, the ranking of the players doesn’t seem to change much (a point made on the FAQ page).
As a consequence, Wins Produced has historically ignored this issue.
As the lockout dragged on and on, though, I began to think that maybe it might be better to just incorporate this effect into the measure we post at the WoW Journal. After all, the effect has been measured and it can be included. So why not just make the adjustment and therefore remove the argument “Wins Produced overvalues rebounds” from the discussion.
So that is what I have done. The specific calculations – which are somewhat more complicated than what was posted before — are detailed at the new “Calculating Wins Produced” website.
http://wagesofwins.com/wins-produced/ho ... -produced/
More specifically, for the above specification we see that each one-unit increase the teammate’s defensive rebounds reduces a player’s defensiverebounds per-minute by 0.504. In other words, some of a player’s defensive rebounds are taken from the player’s teammates. In contrast, on the offensive glass the teammate’s offensive rebounds per-minute do not have a statistically significant effect, suggesting that a player’s offensive rebounds do not come from the player’s teammates. These results make sense when we consider how teams go for rebounds on each end of the court. On the defensive end one suspects teams will send more players to the boards then they need because the team cannot begin its offensive possession if it doesn’t have the ball. Consequently, as already noted, one suspects that some defensive rebounds are just taken from a player’s teammates. On the offensive end, though, it’s a different story. Teams have to have some players back to play defense. So the offensive glass sees little competition among teammates, and therefore, offensive rebounds are primarily taken from a player’s opponent.