Post by Lasagna and tears of failure on Jun 9, 2020 18:03:59 GMT -8
Red’s Rookie evaluation 02 edition
Her we are in the third season of BBS2020 and it is time to see who shines and who doesn’t in the Yearly REDS chart, this time looking at rookies.
Included are two new stats for people to drool over, Points per Shot and Ball in hand Points!
Points per shot is just that, total points from FGs and 3pointers divided by FGA. Ball in players hand is the same but it also looks at FT’s too, basically it comes down to, everytime a person tries to score, this is their average per attempt. The guys that have the highest BihP are the guys you want to have the ball in one position game with time running out.
It is no surprise that Yao and DD are the top 2, what came as a shock was how efficient Hilario is to have garnered the number 3 spot!
As is plain to see there were also numerous step right up guys to help a team out, be it Boozer’s offence, to Mbenga’s D and Boards.
To really get the comparison going the top 10 from the other article are included and Ray Ray takes top honors for both PpS and BihP. Kobe almost took BihP from Ray Ray, but Ray's PpS lead was just too much to overtake. Miller really shouldn’t be on the list as he is only avg garbage minutes a game. The other reason to do the comparison is to give some perspective of the players RPEF for comparing to the Rookie class.
Since PpS and BihP accurately look at shot selection, this is why the numbers are different from the other article. Many thanks for the idea to use the information I was already collecting to add even more numbers for people to see.
Her we are in the third season of BBS2020 and it is time to see who shines and who doesn’t in the Yearly REDS chart, this time looking at rookies.
Included are two new stats for people to drool over, Points per Shot and Ball in hand Points!
Points per shot is just that, total points from FGs and 3pointers divided by FGA. Ball in players hand is the same but it also looks at FT’s too, basically it comes down to, everytime a person tries to score, this is their average per attempt. The guys that have the highest BihP are the guys you want to have the ball in one position game with time running out.
It is no surprise that Yao and DD are the top 2, what came as a shock was how efficient Hilario is to have garnered the number 3 spot!
As is plain to see there were also numerous step right up guys to help a team out, be it Boozer’s offence, to Mbenga’s D and Boards.
To really get the comparison going the top 10 from the other article are included and Ray Ray takes top honors for both PpS and BihP. Kobe almost took BihP from Ray Ray, but Ray's PpS lead was just too much to overtake. Miller really shouldn’t be on the list as he is only avg garbage minutes a game. The other reason to do the comparison is to give some perspective of the players RPEF for comparing to the Rookie class.
Since PpS and BihP accurately look at shot selection, this is why the numbers are different from the other article. Many thanks for the idea to use the information I was already collecting to add even more numbers for people to see.
Finally we look at the Rooks sorted by best BihP rating to see we have a couple rising stars, and that DD isn’t the only rookie that could have made the list of some of the best in production in the league when trying to score.
Well there you have it, some new stats that hopefully Royal wont hate, with all the effort still put in.
For those that do not read ever article I write little history about the RPEF:*
I looked at the PER formula by John Hollinger, and realized while I would not mind programming it, doing it in excel would blow chunks. So I looked at combining a basic version of his idea with the outdated ( (ppg+R+A+B+S-TO) to come up with a rating that not only rewarded a good EFT, but also penalized people from missing fee points. I’m sure Shaq hates this formula that I developed. While it really hurt his points portion of the formula, his nonstop rebounding and the best assist per game rate of any of the Centers has him as one of the best Centers in the game. Now to validate the formula I looked at historical data of some of the best players to ever play the game and then further tweaked the formula to reward steals a tad more than blocks as a block doesn’t automatically cause a turnover. At no point was the PEF copied or tweaked, just a few ideas about what he has done. That said assists are going even more down in value that they have now.