Douchebag K
Well-Known Member
lol because that my friend is exactly what Elfrid Payton is worth.The Jazz could have traded for Payton for next to nothing at the trade deadline.
lol because that my friend is exactly what Elfrid Payton is worth.The Jazz could have traded for Payton for next to nothing at the trade deadline.
Yep, not arguing that Payton's stats overall haven't been better, even mentioned that in my post. I laugh at the morans that use PER to try and prove a point.
PER is one of the best stats out there. There are a few outliers like Big Al, but one thing is clear: when your PER is as low as Exum's YOU SUCK ***.
Go back to the big boy table and tell all your cousins how everyone else is a moran.
Nah PER is not a great stat at all. The best stats are highly targeted and used in combination with others to make specific points. PER is a catchall boxscore counting stat that needs to die.PER is one of the best stats out there. There are a few outliers like Big Al, but one thing is clear: when your PER is as low as Exum's YOU SUCK ***.
Go back to the big boy table and tell all your cousins how everyone else is a moran.
es: Exum, Nuggets, Wolves, Turner
March 28th 2018 at 3:18pm CST by Luke Adams
Point guard Dante Exum has played in just 72 games since his rookie year, having had to deal with injuries in each of the last three seasons. He’s healthy now, and playing regular backup minutes for the Jazz, but he’s on track for restricted free agency this summer, and one general manager tells Sean Deveney of The Sporting News that it may be worth rolling the dice on Exum despite his injury history.
“I think you have to look at him as a physically gifted guy who is only 22 (he turns 23 in July) and has already gone through the huge NBA learning curve,” the GM said. “There are guys in this year’s draft who will be 22 but aren’t going to have the kind of knowledge of the league he has, and don’t have the physical gifts.”
According to Deveney, one front office executive estimated that a two-year deal in the $18-20MM range might be enough to pry Exum away from the Jazz. That would be a steep price for a fourth-year player who has yet to deliver on the promise he showed heading into the 2014 draft, but overpaying a restricted free agent is often necessary to avoid having his old team match.
“He’s a gamble,” that same executive told Deveney. “But $10MM a year is not as big a gamble as it once was. He could show something here.”
Be a sad day knowing Jazz had him and were seeing him breakout ,only to see him sign on to another team.
This line made me laugh so hard that I couldn't read the rest of your post.Payton's might be good if his hair didn't do such a good job defending him.
Nah PER is not a great stat at all. The best stats are highly targeted and used in combination with others to make specific points. PER is a catchall boxscore counting stat that needs to die.
PER leaders by season in descending order:
Harden
Westbrook
Curry
AD
KD
LeBron for 6 years
Wade
Nowitzki
Garnett 2x
McGrady
Shaq 5x
Malone
Robinson 3x
Jordan 7x
Larry Bird 2x
Yup, looks like PER is garbage. Do me a favor and go correlate PER with WS and VORP. Holy ****! Those 3 lists are nearly identical guis! But PER still sucks.
PER is fine when comparing similar roles or players. It doesn't really give you much outside of knowing that high usage guys who fill a stat sheet are awesome at it. You feel free to keep using it though since most of the analytics community has rejected it as a truly useful stat.
High usage stat stuffer Rudy Gobert has 22. In fact, can you give me examples of good players who have terrible PER?
Good defensive low usage offensive players often have bad PER's. But in Exum's case I think his PER just shows the limited role he's had offensively. Big guys also seem to benefit quite a bit from rebounding as it relates to PER which makes sense in Gobert's case.
A limited role because he's a limited player. But I agree that if you're a non-factor offensively, and don't rebound or get any other stat, then your PER will be low.
PS, I'm still interested in examples of these good players with bad PER.
He's limited by the role they give him. He could have scored and assisted more with more usage last year. But that's going to end up just being an opinion thing, so what's the point? I already know your feelings for Exum. I'm comfortable with my opinion. I wouldn't think any differently of him if he had a 14 PER last year because he got to handle the ball more often. You are the one that asked for good low PER players and that was never my point. But again having a low PER is normal for a young wing/guard players with a marginal offensive role. So Idk if you want to go find some more low PER good players feel free to do so and let us know.
If nothing else his rise in PER each year (this year the SS is obviously tiny) should be a great sign to the true PER believers. He must be making progress!
Not really. There have been a lot of young players with small roles that had lower PER's. During those seasons Exum wasn't a good offensive player by that measurement. You need more context than a number like PER to understand how a young player is developing. That is one example where PER fails or isn't intended to be used how you guys are trying to use it. Numbers without context aren't that useful.You opinion is bad. And your rule only applies to Exum, since you obviously can't find any shred of evidence to support it.
2009-10 OKC. 50-32 Record. Thabo Sefolosha played the 4th-highest minutes on the team even though he sucked, since he had a 9.8 PER.PS, I'm still interested in examples of these good players with bad PER.
I just think you can get a much better picture of a player by looking at some simpler stats. TS%, Usage, rebound% among many others. Those combined with watching the games and looking at the context of the numbers is how I try to evaluate players. WS is another stat that I don't really have much respect for. The less noise the better.