monsterpile wrote:m4gor wrote:monsterpile wrote:m4gor wrote:monsterpile wrote:m4gor wrote:interesting fact is though that Lavine had 10.6PER at PG and allowed 19.5 PER for opponent, however at SG he had 13.3PER at SG and held opponents to nice 11.8PER, so your argument is not valid and playing Lavine anywhere else than SG is completely and utterly stupid as that is more 10 PER difference, so even 52yo guy with no stat/math background should get this one
How far did you dig into those numbers?
it is from here http://www.82games.com/1415/14MIN4.HTM
look if there would not be this huge difference i would not bring that here, i have a degree in math so i understand what sample sizes are for and what statisticaly sound difference looks like
Ok well now my expectation for you digging into those numbers with a detailed explanation has raised significantly!!! I've seen the webpage before I posted my earlier question. I am waiting :)
look at net production per 48 by position, even if you would count off whole Rubio net difference you will still be left with statistical difference
my biggest issue with Flip/Sam is that if you dont believe in math at all, you are not making your rotations well enough so you could end up with good quality data
What about the fact that Zach played a significant portion of his PG minutes as a starter?
Ah, a much more persuasive argument than my argument that defensive numbers are impacted by who you are playing with! They're impacted even more by who you are playing against. Doesn't it stand to reason that Zach's defensive numbers playing against backup SG's would be much better than his numbers playing against starting PG's?