motherwell wrote:
Hey, thanks for quoting me, but you know, maybe provide some context.
Are you Alique Williams? Because that is who I quoted!
motherwell wrote:
When they signed Marcin Gortat to a contract – a good contract for a guy that never played many minutes – the only metric that “rated” him was WP48.
The context makes the quote make sense, no? And was there a way Dallas COULD trade Dirk for Humphries? Did their salaries ever match?
What? Gortat was listed with 17.1 PER and 0.200 WS/48. Both times clearly above average. He was listed after the 2009 playoffs with a +2.92 APM. My SPM had him with +1.2. There is NO indication that no other metric had Gortat "rated". He was above average and was supposed to be able to keep that with average minutes. His +/- numbers suggested better than average. That the Mavericks offered him a full MLE contract isn't something so out of the ordinary. Signing a guy supposed to be above average for the average salary is hardly something you can base on WP48.
Kris Humphries PLAYED for the Dallas Mavericks! He was TRADED away by the Mavericks in January 2010. At that time WP48 ranked him above Dirk Nowitzki. The Mavericks could have easily kept Humphries and his better WP48, but instead they decided to trade him to save some salary and take back Eduardo Najera, a guy basically having ZERO value according to WP48.
It makes no sense at all to assume that the Mavericks used WP48 in order to make decisions. It is quite absurd to think that given their history of moves.
motherwell wrote:
That's an interesting question, but couldn't you work out the number of 24 second shot clock violations and attribute a value to the untaken shots?
http://82games.com/random30.htm shows that there was an average in 06-07 of 1.14 per game TOTAL, e.g. .55 per NBA team per game. I can't find more recent stats sorry

Lol, what kind of argumentation is that? You just showed that the players, coaches, etc. in the NBA are not dumb. They rather shoot than commiting a turnover. That is pretty smart, because even after a missed shot the probability to score in that particular possession is HIGHER than after a turnover.
motherwell wrote:Anyway, it seems like it isn't a large problem to me, but if the claim is that passing up shots HELPS a player, and taking them can HURT, I'm not sure that gels with the other data, e.g. that players get paid well for scoring (no matter efficiency). Seems a rational NBA player would willingly take those extra shots, even ones they shouldn''t take.
I don't even know where to start. In any case WP48 would award players for passing up shots and instead letting the shot clock expire unless it is a 3pt shot or free throws. Why? Because a player has to make 51.5% of his 2pt field goals in order to break even. That is above league average. So, in average a 2pt shot is costing a team wins according to WP48.
motherwell wrote:
In any case, I wonder if criticisms like this are "orders of magnitude" problems, or if they are minor issues. Seems like all criticisms are laid out as "orders of magnitude" problems, but surely that isn't always the case?
Well, to me it rather seems like that you don't understand the issue at all.
motherwell wrote:
I also find the specific player complaint arguments weird. Tolliver, Anthony is currently ranked 5th in 2 Year Adj. +/-. Tolliver for Lebron anyone?
Why? If we take the minutes into account James adds more value to a team than Tolliver. I brought up examples in which the inferior player brought more value according to WP to a team. A big difference here. Let alone that Tolliver plays a different role than James, while Humphries plays, according to WP, the same role as Nowitzki, PF.