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Real +/- NBA ratings so far......

Kanter by far has the best RPM on the OKC bench with the exception of Nick Collison who kanter still has better RPM but only barely. Your RPM is very dependent on who you play with. Considering Kanter is 2 or even 3 points better in RPM compared to who he usually plays with. Too much talk about Kanter and not enough about Trey Lyles....

Trey Lyles is a 19 yr old rookie.
 
GSW have 5 players who are top 5 RPM in their position. I have a sneaking suspicion it doesn't adjust enough.

GS is starting with a +13.4 points per game so even when you deduct for other great players on the floor you are going to wind up with top ratings (or there is something very wrong with the stat).
 
DRPM among centers:
....Only four of 73 centers have a negative DRPM and Kanter's is -1.34
....max = 6.17
....min = negative 1.56
....median = 1.7
....Last two season Kanter was dead last
 
DRPM among centers:
....Only four of 73 centers have a negative DRPM and Kanter's is -1.34
....max = 6.17
....min = negative 1.56
....median = 1.7
....Last two season Kanter was dead last

Well RPM looks at your team with you vses without you. Kanter defense was compared against Rudy Gobert in DRPM last year.

Now it is compared against the pairing of Serge Ibaka and Steven Adams.

Not very many centers have such good defensive counterparts in the same position as Kanter does.

Kanter is bad at defense. And in the conversation as top 5 worst in the NBA for a starting caliber center. If he was better he would be an Allstar considering his good scoring and elite rebounding.

Trey Lyles is a 19 yr old rookie.


Jazz gets a bunch of young talent and loses/gets rid of them as soon as they start to get a little bit older so Jazz fans are able to recycle the "oh he is only just young" excuse when they play absolutely abysmal. Very hard to find people who played as bad as Lyles is outside the lottery. Jan Vesely and Thomas Robinson maybe?

The early returns of Lyles are horrible, regardless of age.
 
Well RPM looks at your team with you vses without you. Kanter defense was compared against Rudy Gobert in DRPM last year.

Now it is compared against the pairing of Serge Ibaka and Steven Adams.

Not very many centers have such good defensive counterparts in the same position as Kanter

Sorry this is wrong. What happens in the game when the rated player is on the bench is irrelevant to their ranking. All that matters is how your team fares when you are on the floor and how good are the other 9 players who are on the floor with you.
 
One thing that I think it severely lacks is rating who the player is playing against. Another thing that it doesn't account for is chemistry between players.

It does adjust for all 5 opponents equally, not just the player you are defending and who is defending you.

It most definately does account for chemistry to the degree that chemistry leads to more points for your team and fewer points for your opponents. which is the bottom line.
 
Sorry this is wrong. What happens in the game when the rated player is on the bench is irrelevant to their ranking. All that matters is how your team fares when you are on the floor and how good are the other 9 players who are on the floor with you.

"RPM estimates how many points each player adds or subtracts, on average, to his team's net scoring margin for each 100 possessions played. The RPM model also yields separate ratings for the player's impact on both ends of the court: offensive RPM (ORPM) and defensive RPM (DRPM)."

https://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/10740818/introducing-real-plus-minus

RPM adjusts for your teamates by comparing how they do with and without you. When Kanters teamates aren't playing with Kanter they are playing with a defensive stud at center which hurts his score. One of the reasons Gobert doesn't look as elite this year compared to last year on DRPM.
 
I don't see any links to the exact formula. There is some vague stuff about what it claims to do. So you are taking all of the claims of the salesman at face value. I'm looking at the outcomes and saying, you know, I don't agree that's a great metric when KG is considered a far superior Defender to Rudy THIS YEAR.

It seems to do a decent job with putting Lebron, Steph and co at the top, but after that it gets off imo.

Regarding who you are playing against is the age old starters vs scrubs. Does it account for garbage time, how does it weigh against the rating of the opponent? Scoring 30 on Rudy vs dropping 30 on Pleiss in my mind are two very separate achievements. It says it does adjust for each teammate and opposing player, but exactly how. Based on results I say it is off somewhere in that.

Regarding Chemistry. What if you are on Big Als team and its iso ball all the time and you never get set up, then you get a few mins while he is out that you have better chemistry with his replacement, so all of the sudden you are much more effective. Since you spent 25 mins with Al watching him and 10 mins with somebody else, does the formula adjust for that? Sure you got good marks for the 10 mins where you were in the game log, but the other 25 when it was sparse, was that weighted to eliminate the affect of that chemistry?

IMHO it gets some right and misses a lot. Something to take with a grain of salt. I could trust more if we knew the formula, since we could better rule out situations it can't measure.

Drawing on advanced statistical modeling techniques (and the analytical wizardry of RPM developer Jeremias Engelmann, formerly of the Phoenix Suns), the metric isolates the unique plus-minus impact of each NBA player by adjusting for the effects of each teammate and opposing player.

The RPM model sifts through more than 230,000 possessions each NBA season to tease apart the "real" plus-minus effects attributable to each player, employing techniques similar to those used by scientific researchers when they need to model the effects of numerous variables at the same time.

RPM estimates how many points each player adds or subtracts, on average, to his team's net scoring margin for each 100 possessions played. The RPM model also yields separate ratings for the player's impact on both ends of the court: offensive RPM (ORPM) and defensive RPM (DRPM).

Thats the full explanation of what it does. It leaves me with many more questions than answers.
 
I don't see any links to the exact formula. There is some vague stuff about what it claims to do. So you are taking all of the claims of the salesman at face value. I'm looking at the outcomes and saying, you know, I don't agree that's a great metric when KG is considered a far superior Defender to Rudy THIS YEAR.

It seems to do a decent job with putting Lebron, Steph and co at the top, but after that it gets off imo.

Regarding who you are playing against is the age old starters vs scrubs. Does it account for garbage time, how does it weigh against the rating of the opponent? Scoring 30 on Rudy vs dropping 30 on Pleiss in my mind are two very separate achievements. It says it does adjust for each teammate and opposing player, but exactly how. Based on results I say it is off somewhere in that.

Regarding Chemistry. What if you are on Big Als team and its iso ball all the time and you never get set up, then you get a few mins while he is out that you have better chemistry with his replacement, so all of the sudden you are much more effective. Since you spent 25 mins with Al watching him and 10 mins with somebody else, does the formula adjust for that? Sure you got good marks for the 10 mins where you were in the game log, but the other 25 when it was sparse, was that weighted to eliminate the affect of that chemistry?

IMHO it gets some right and misses a lot. Something to take with a grain of salt. I could trust more if we knew the formula, since we could better rule out situations it can't measure.



Thats the full explanation of what it does. It leaves me with many more questions than answers.

Rudy Gobert had a much better DRPM last year when he was opposed to Kanter.
 
What if you are on Big Als team and its iso ball all the time and you never get set up, then you get a few mins while he is out that you have better chemistry with his replacement, so all of the sudden you are much more effective. Since you spent 25 mins with Al watching him and 10 mins with somebody else, does the formula adjust for that? Sure you got good marks for the 10 mins where you were in the game log, but the other 25 when it was sparse, was that weighted to eliminate the affect of that chemistry?

Yes, it weights who you are on the floor with by time played. So if you are on the floor with an ineffective player (with a poor +/-) it increases your RPM.

Plus/minus ignores who you are on the floor with. So if you rack up point while on the floor with 4 starters while the opposing team plays scrubs, RPM is adjusted downward.

So I think it is an improvement over simple plus/minus, which is more flawed and misleading. But, like all statistics, they give you limited information and you can't just turn your brain off and say "because player X has a higher RPM than player Y, therefore player X is better" Instead combine various stats with other factors and make that (subjective) decision.
 
Your RPM is very dependent on who you play with. QUOTE]

Your PM is very dependent on who you play with.

RPM attempts to correct for this by lowering the RPM when:
.....playing with better players
.....playing against worse players

And raising RPM when
....playing with worse players
....playing against better players

You may be arguing that RPM does not adjust enough, but I'm not sure how you can say this since they are using an algorithm and not a formula to calculate the stat. So I'd call this an opinion without facts to support or refute.
 
Greg Monroe has a higher defensive RPM than Gobert this year. Safe to say the stat isn't perfect. Taken in 2 year sample sizes, it's worth looking at.
 
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