LaMarcus > Bosh

Discussion in 'Portland Trail Blazers' started by MAS RipCity, Mar 26, 2009.

  1. Da_O

    Da_O Abe Vigoda lives!

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    The difference(mainly) between Aldridge and Bosh, is Bosh has a much better ability to get to the FT line. Bosh doubles Aldridge's amount of FTA's. Since his rookie year, Aldridge has marginally improved in this area. When your shot isn't falling the next best thing is taking it to the rim and get foul shots. The thing is, LaMarcus' game is akin to shooting the little elbow jumpers, turn-around fadeaways, and baby hooks. It's weird to me that we haven't seen a slight increase in FTA's a game when Aldridge's low post game is much improved(at least IMO).

    In rebounding they're even, I might even give Aldridge the slight edge. Reason being, is that Aldridge plays on one of the slowest pace teams in the league. Rebounding Rate adjusts for this, however Aldridge also plays on one of the best rebounding teams in the NBA. Portland 2nd while Toronto is 25th http://insider.espn.go.com/nba/hollinger/teamstats?sort=rr&seasonType=2&league=nba) So while Aldridge doesn't rebound at a higher rate than Bosh he doesn't give up that many either. My point is, it's harder to get your rebounding numbers with the rebounding vacuum known as Pryzbilla.:lol:

    Defensively Aldridge is extremely effective with his constantly "active" hands. Always tipping balls to teammates or slapping it out of guys hands as they go up to what "appear" to be easy lay-ins/dunks. In our type of defense, Aldridge has to have the lateral quickness to stay with smaller forwards/guards as we're always switching on the picks. He's been extremely good at forcing quicker and smaller players into tough shots. He has longer arms than Bosh and he uses his length to make it extremely hard for people to shoot over him. I haven't watched enough of Bosh to make a fair assessment of him, but from what I've seen he's not a horrible defender but not great either.

    In summary, I would love for Aldridge to get to the line more as he's a terrific FT shooter for a big man, but I just don't know if his game is conducive to doing that. Also if we ran some more fastbreaks, especially when he's in the second unit because he's one of the fastest PF's in the game.
     
    Last edited: Mar 27, 2009
  2. MrJayremmie

    MrJayremmie Well-Known Member

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    Very nice post, Da_O.
     
  3. Nikolokolus

    Nikolokolus There's always next year

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    Regarding LMA's FT attempts: Aside from LaMarcus' natural inclination to pick n' pop or shoot a fadeaway jumper his first two years in the league, his handle still is nowhere nearly as developed as it needs to be; it's much better this year after a summer spent doing nothing but working on it, but until he's more comfortable moving with the dribble it's going to be tough for him to get to the line consistently.

    Right now the handle and fluidity of movement with the dribble is the main thing I see separating Bosh from LMA.
     
  4. crowTrobot

    crowTrobot die comcast

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    that and 40+ million dollars cost over the next 5 years.
     
  5. andalusian

    andalusian Season - Restarted

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    Right on the money. Bosh can attack the rim facing up off the dribble, Aldridge can not.

    On the other hand - Aldridge is already a better post-up player than Bosh and a better defender.

    Love Bosh - but Aldridge is a beast and anyone who thinks that a guy that already has all these moves he has will not develop his face-up off-the-dribble game is crazy.
     
  6. Nikolokolus

    Nikolokolus There's always next year

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    LMA will be a max or close to max contract guy as soon as the team extends him this summer, so that's not really all that relevant.
     
  7. crowTrobot

    crowTrobot die comcast

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    it certainly is relevant. even if aldridge is maxed bosh would cost 40+ million more over the next 5 (including in a conservative amount of extra luxury tax).
     
  8. alex42083

    alex42083 Thanks Brandon

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    Nothing about last night's game told me LaMarcus is a softie anymore. He was in the paint, rebounding and outmuscling and took advantage of his mismatch against Barnes on the post all night long.
    He wasn't afraid to take it in against Shaq and drew some physical fouls.

    LaMarcus is playing at an All-Star level right now, and it's scary to think he's only 23 years old.
     
  9. bobf

    bobf Well-Known Member

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    I have a +/- linear regression using data since 2005. It has Bosh better but it seems to show that LMA might be underrated, especially defensively. This is an overall rating of all years combined, equally weighted. I don't do a current year only because this technique requires huge sample sizes in order to become reliable.

    TOP 20

    Code:
    PlayerName	Rating	Off	Def	StdErr	Poss	Min	Raw +/- Per 48
    James, LeBron	+14.4	+11.8	-2.6	1.7	46,537	12,046	+6.0
    Garnett, Kevin	+14.2	+5.0	-9.2	1.6	37,956	9,838	+5.8
    Bryant, Kobe	+12.8	+12.1	-0.7	1.8	47,666	11,896	+6.1
    Wade, Dwayne	+11.7	+10.8	-0.9	1.7	36,504	9,307	+2.7
    Duncan, Tim	+10.8	+5.5	-5.3	1.9	38,495	10,217	+8.8
    Nash, Steve	+9.9	+12.0	+2.2	1.7	41,974	10,242	+8.6
    Paul, Chris	+8.5	+6.4	-2.1	1.8	39,970	10,384	+2.9
    Jamison, Antawn	+8.4	+7.4	-1.0	1.7	45,193	11,512	+0.6
    Kidd, Jason	+8.2	+5.5	-2.7	1.6	43,609	11,128	+2.8
    Nowitzki, Dirk	+7.8	+7.6	-0.2	1.7	42,589	11,074	+7.7
    Ginobili, Manu	+7.6	+6.0	-1.6	1.6	27,630	7,130	+10.1
    Artest, Ron	+7.5	+2.9	-4.6	1.4	35,051	8,865	+3.8
    [b][color=red]Bosh, Chris	+7.5	+6.0	-1.5	1.6	39,323	10,180	+1.7[/color][/b]
    Ming, Yao	+7.4	+1.3	-6.1	1.8	29,298	7,625	+5.9
    Harris, Devin	+6.6	+3.8	-2.7	1.6	29,332	7,555	+5.4
    Terry, Jason	+6.5	+5.2	-1.3	1.6	38,753	10,114	+6.9
    Billups, C	+6.5	+8.0	+1.5	1.7	38,460	10,227	+7.9
    Davis, Baron	+6.2	+5.1	-1.1	1.4	37,574	9,137	+1.4
    [b][color=red]Aldridge, L	+5.9	+2.4	-3.5	1.9	23,941	6,477	+1.9[/color][/b]
    Carter, Vince	+5.8	+5.7	-0.2	1.7	44,260	11,405	+0.8
    
    Rating = Overall rating based purely on +/- per possession and who was on the floor during those possessions
    Off = Offsenive rating based on +/- only
    Def = Defensive rating based on +/- only
    StdError = The Off and Def ratings should be within 2 StdErrors about 90% of the time
     
    Last edited: Mar 27, 2009
  10. Deebag

    Deebag Member

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    Where the hell is Brandon Roy on that list?
     
  11. bobf

    bobf Well-Known Member

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    64th....

    Overall +2.3
    Offsense +4.3
    Defense +2.0

    That positive defense means BAD defense.

    But keep in mind each rating statisically has a 10% chance of being off by 2 standard errors (3.6) and higher chance of being off by one standard error (1.8).

    Then again, mabye Roy's defense is actually not good?
     
    Last edited: Mar 27, 2009
  12. Minstrel

    Minstrel Top Of The Pops Global Moderator

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    Hello darkness, my old friend
    I'm curious...do you ever do a sanity test, like add up all the +/- of the players on a team and see if it's a good predictor of the team's point differential? Or, not even predictive, but comes close to the point differential the team already put up in the most recent season?

    Do all the Blazers players' +/- from your system sum to the Blazers' point differential this year?
     
  13. bobf

    bobf Well-Known Member

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    Good idea, I'll take a look at that. Actually, I can't just add them up, I need to weight them by minutes played or possessions.

    Because this is essentially a 4-year rating it does not measure the current year, it meansure all those years together. So it does not measure player improvements. So I'd expect it to underrate the Blazers in 2008-2009 since their players are improving.
     
  14. Minstrel

    Minstrel Top Of The Pops Global Moderator

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    Hello darkness, my old friend
    Right, I know it's a multi-year sample. But, from my understanding, it's a multi-year sample because that's the level of data you need for something close to "real information" (as opposed to sample size artifacts). So, even though the data is not just from this year, it should be your system's best guess as to the players' current "true talent level," right? That's why I recommended checking it against this year's team point differential.
     
  15. bobf

    bobf Well-Known Member

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    No... it is purely due to sample size. If you look at my first table, the standard errors are still kind of high even using four years of data. If I used one year of data they would be too high. Even as it is, every 10th player rating is expected to be off by 3 or more.

    So I have to use 4 years of data and I weight those years equally so it is not a current year rating. EDIT: In the sense that a vastly improved player will be rated the same as a vastly declined player if the overall performace during those four years were equal.

    82games claims you can weight current year very heavily against prior years in order to get a current year rating while at the same time obtaining low standard errors . I don't believe them. It's like polling 10,000 people but weighting that last 1000 people much more than the other 9,000 people combined and thinking you're going to get a MOE similar to polling 10,000 people. Then they wonder why Chris Paul's defensive rating improves by something like 6 points from last year to this year.

    So unfortunately I think that is a limitation of +/-. It takes years of data to reduce noise to reasonable levels, but then you are going to miss player improvement because you can't separate one year from the other. And one player's improvement missed is going to skew other player ratings somewhat. For example, Brandon Roy's improvement this year will tend to show up partly in Rudy's rating.

    What I do like about this system though, is that it is the one rating system that can sense just about all of the intangibles except for interdependancies - stuff where the whole is greater than the sum of the parts.

    Anyhoo... here is what I get for team +/- weighted average ratings. It's really not a predictor though since it cheats by using this year's data.

    Code:
    Team	Rating	Actual
    BOS	9.3	8.1
    CLE	8.0	8.9
    LAL	6.8	8.0
    SAS	5.9	3.8
    HOU	5.6	3.8
    ORL	4.6	7.3
    POR	3.4	3.9
    DAL	3.3	1.6
    PHX	2.9	2.1
    UTA	2.8	3.6
    PHI	2.2	0.7
    DEN	2.1	3.1
    NOH	2.0	2.5
    DET	1.6	-0.7
    TOR	-0.3	-3.3
    MIA	-0.4	-0.2
    ATL	-0.6	2.0
    CHA	-0.9	-1.1
    MIL	-1.1	-1.2
    NYK	-1.3	-2.6
    CHI	-1.7	-0.7
    NJN	-2.1	-2.3
    GSW	-3.3	-3.7
    IND	-3.5	-1.9
    OKC	-6.0	-5.5
    MIN	-7.0	-4.8
    LAC	-7.7	-8.4
    SAC	-7.9	-8.4
    MEM	-8.1	-6.6
    WAS	-8.5	-7.8
    
     
    Last edited: Mar 27, 2009
  16. Minstrel

    Minstrel Top Of The Pops Global Moderator

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    Hello darkness, my old friend
    I think you misunderstood me. "It's purely due to sample size" is what I was saying. The point is, you build up that sample size to get actual information. Without a large enough sample size, you have information that is too unreliable to be considered useful.

    I realize that you weight all the years equally, but the result should be useful in evaluating the players today. If it isn't, to be frank, what's the use?

    I think it can be useful as a "today" measure, despite using multi-year data, because even though the players are improving, a larger sample size is still the best way to measure current ability. But we'd like to test that, which is what led to my original question. The fact that it doesn't track very well with actual point differentials suggests that it may not be the best evaluation tool.
     
  17. bobf

    bobf Well-Known Member

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    I think it is useful so long as you understand the limitations and the caveats. You have to factor in that we know that player's like Brandon Roy are improving while this system is measuring his overrall past performance, not last year's performance.

    The potential value of +/- over other rating systems is it's ability to see things that other sytems like PER can not see well (intangibles, defense, player A making player B look good).

    For example, this system "claims" that Amare's past performance is not nearly as valuable as PER suggests. He appears to be benefiting from Steve Nash who is rated very highly by this system in spite of his defense. And maybe things like Amare's defense are worse than we imagined. So even though that is only a past assessment averaged over many years, if true that would be very valuable thing to know. I was hoping he'd get traded so we could get a better picture of that.

    I think I'd need something to compare against in order to say it doesn't track well vs other methods.
     
    Last edited: Mar 27, 2009
  18. Minstrel

    Minstrel Top Of The Pops Global Moderator

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    Hello darkness, my old friend
    Yes, I know that. But if it is always a lagging indicator, then it may be useful for questions like, "Who WAS better, Ewing or Mourning?" but not, "Who is most valuable today?" or "Who would help the team most next season?"

    Most +/- systems try to present an indicator of current value. They have to build it using multiple seasons of data, but the goal is measuring current value. That's why I was surprised when you disavowed your system of being about current value.

    I don't know how it tracks with other +/- methods, I just meant that it doesn't seem to track closely enough to team point differential to seem better than just the normal route of using standard individual measures along with observation.
     
  19. STOMP

    STOMP mere fan

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    any extension signed this summer won't kick in until 2010-11 season

    STOMP
     
  20. bobf

    bobf Well-Known Member

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    They all lag somewhat. "Who is valuable today" is still a lagging indicator on "who will be valuable next year".

    So it's more like this:
    PER can measure how valuable a player was for the past 30 games.
    +/- can measure how valuable a player was for the past 3 years.

    But the hope is that +/- does not have built in bias due to
    a) inability to see defense & intangilbes
    b) player A stats inflated by player B

    Well past value is generally a decent measure of current value except when a player is rapidly improving or declining. I was just trying to make it clear that this system is not weighted towards recent performance.

    What this system can do (at least in theory) that PER can not is separate Nash from Amare over the past three years and measure Amares intangibles & defense. This system knows that LMA >> Zach Randolph but PER does not.

    So if Portland were contemplating trading Amare for LMA it would be extremely valuable to know their true contributions over that past three years, and then factor on top of that our observations that LMA has been improving somewhat and is more likely to improve in the future.

    I'd much rather be working from an accurate lagging indicator than an inaccurate up-to-date one.
     
    Last edited: Mar 27, 2009

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