TeamRicky wrote:Advanced Stat that nobody seems to pay attention to is BPM (Box Score Plus Minus):
Averaging the BPM for their first three years:
Wiggins: BPM is -2.4
Zach: BPM is -2.0
Ricky: BPM is 1.5
Ricky has a positive BPM in every year (including each of his first three years) except for his 22 game injury shortened year. Zach and Wiggins have a BPM that is negative every year. And posters are wondering if we can win with Ricky as our point guard. This is Bizarre. We should be asking if we can win with Wiggins and Zach.
I quoted BPM as one of the stats I put together showing our top 5 guys. Since it is reliant strictly on the box score, it has the usual problems of measuring defense. Since LaVine and Wiggins don't get many defensive rebounds, steals, and blocks, they tend to do poorly on the D-BPM portion of this metric.
According to BPM, Klay is the 9th best player on the Warriors. Anyone who watches that guy play defense knows that he is a master at moving his feet, holding his ground, and contesting shots. He's probably their second best defender after Green. But....he's a -2.1 in D-BPM because he doesn't get a ton of boards, blocks and steals. That in turn weighs down his overall BPM score.
Now here is the problem....Neither Andrew Wiggins or LaVine are Klay Thompson on defense. But...I am hoping that at least Wiggins eventually becomes a much more skilled positional one-on-one defender that doesn't light up the box score, but still gets a lot of stops using his quick feet, length, and smarts. We've seen him do this in spurts, but he tends to get screened off too easily and falls asleep at times when he is defending off the ball.