mystic wrote:
Those are legitimate questons. And that has indeed not much to do with sampling errors.
Let us take a look at Carter. Carter is big for a SG, he does not have problems to compete with any kind of other SG. That helps his defense, especially when guards are trying to post him up. Carter is one of the best in terms of defending the post-up. Carter has still long arms and is pretty quick on his feet. He can cover ground and that helps to defend shots at the perimeter. His opponents does not have an easy way to get by Carter, Carter stays in front of him and that forces more contested shots. Compare Carter and Bryant for example in terms of closing out on a 3pt shooter, Carter is better at that. It is also the case that Carter can defend the p&r pretty well. In fact the ball handler is more often in trouble. Overall Carter's defensive abilities and his size is causing a clear positive impact on the defensive end. Tougher shots for the opponents with a clearly lower conversation rate. That explains Carter's positive defensive RAPM. The value comes mainly from him being matched up with SG. When he plays SF, his quickness in comparison helps to limit drives to the basket. But he also doesn't have the size advantage anymore, which takes value away.
His value on offense comes from shooting, passing and from attacking the basket. His shooting range helps spreading the floor. Especially in comparison to Marion at SF, the Mavericks with Carter are becoming a much better offensive team while Carter plays the SF spot. The floor spreading is not just seen by clearly better 3pt shooting, but opens up the middle also for Nowitzki and makes it easier to create those midrange shots. Carter's passing helps to limit turnovers, provide better ball movement, which overall leads to a better team offensive efficiency.
Carter in 2009 had a negative RAPM ... either he got significantly better at age 35, or there's sampling error. He started in 2009 and in 2012, so I wouldn't expect playing situationally to be a factor, like it was proposed for Bonner.
Obviously Carter has ability, but at this point in his career there are dozens of other wings who can do similar things. Yes Carter rated well defending the post, but he only faced 31 post-up possessions all season, so I doubt that matters much. And wings routinely rate really well in post defense because their opponents usually aren't as skilled in that position. See guys like Carmelo, Joe Johnson, Lou Williams, Daequan Cook, Roddy Beaubois who aren't regarded as great defenders but had a better PostUp defense rating this year. P&R same thing ... faced just 59 possessions, and nobodies like Jason Kapono, Roger Mason, Mike Miller rated ahead of him. Carter's defensive numbers also have been pretty average in past years...
But I think the easier argument is that, while Carter has his strengths, so do Chris Paul, Kevin Garnett, Dwyane Wade, Pau Gasol, Dwight Howard, Kevin Durant, and Kobe Bryant ... and yet Carter is rated ahead of all of them. I can agree that Carter is still a positive contributor, but he doesn't have the track record of elite defense, and doesn't have the box score numbers to make me think he was a top 10 efficiency player this season while playing on a starting line.
RAPM is basically a proportional shrinkage of APM ... there's just under a .8 correlation between the two ratings when factoring in minutes played. 1-year APMs
clearly have huge standard error issues, so there's no reason to expect standard error to not be a problem in RAPM. Fewer weird multicollinearity effects, but there will still be overestimated and underestimated players.