Thomas-Panda-Saxby
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Because Tyreke Evans is no Monta Ellis. I don't even know why Tyreke is involved
nolafan33 said:You know what, let me try it this way. Why is Ellis on a different level than Tyreke?
You see, none of that regarding Tyreke is true. It's why I stress research and not just looking at raw stats.Mobruler said:One guy has a long track record, seven seasons of 19.0 ppg or higher and a career .455 FG%
The other guy has a five season track record, has been steadily falling off of the face of a cliff since his only 19.0+ ppg season as a rookie, and looks like a completely lost cause.
nolafan33 said:You see, none of that regarding Tyreke is true. It's why I stress research and not just looking at raw stats.
I'm not sure why track record matters either, this isn't a life time award.
Because I do my research and trust in what I see and read. I'm not blinded by raw stats. They are very similar in their overall impact of the game, especially when you consider the difference of defensive impact on and off the ball.Mobruler said:Come on man, Ellis is clearly an established veteran with a long track record of production and Evans is not that at all. Why are you choosing to fight this battle.
Played the majority of his minutes at SF.Thomas-Panda-Saxby said:Also where the fuck is DeMar DeRozan here? Easily 2nd can be argued for first
nolafan33 said:Because I do my research and trust in what I see and read. I'm not blinded by raw stats. They are very similar in their overall impact of the game, especially when you consider the difference of defensive impact on and off the ball.
I always say, maybe Monta accounts for 32 points a game, and Tyreke only accounts for 26. But if Monta is giving up 28 points a game and Tyreke is allowing 22, does that make Monta better because you can't judge a players defensive impact based on the box score you read?
Mobruler said:
We both know the defensive discrepancy is not that and it would have to be quite a discrepancy since Ellis is a vastly more efficient scorer. Tyreke Evans is not Michael Curry. And raw stats... you win the game by putting the ball through the rim.
Thomas-Panda-Saxby said:Whoever deleted my comment, sorry for the language
nolafan33 said:
Just random numbers I made up lol, not anything official. But yes, Tyreke is a SIGNIFICANTLY better defender than Ellis. We're talking about a guy that allows more than a half a point per more per defensive play per possession. 0.814 points per possession for Ellis to 0.756 points per possession for Tyreke to be exact. Tyreke also fouled shooters significantly less (4.8% to 7.3%), and this is on ball and off ball. The difference in their defense on the ball is even greater.
And yes, you win the game by putting the ball through the rim. But there is so much more meaningful things to qualify exactly how effective you are at putting the ball in the rim. I mean just throw Monta and Reke out of this. Does one player having more possessions, more shots, more opportunities to score the ball now make him better than someone else? Even if that player who put the ball through the rim more is less efficient at doing it? Are we now penalizing players for playing in a halfcourt offense as opposed to an offense that pushes the ball in the open court? The possibilities are endless.
bosoxlover12 said:I mean, come on nola. You look at game tape and you see, Monta was far more instrumental in the Mavs winning 49 games than Tyreke for the Pels 34 win season; he ran their friggin offense. He scored more, he had more assists, he shot better from the field, shot better from the line, was miles better from 3. He led the league in transition baskets last year, and he is one of the better attackers in the league. Statistically, he produced more steals than Evans too, although steals isnt a great barometer for how defense is played.
Ellis isnt a great defender, but also look at the team he played on last year. the lineup he played with mostly was with VC and Calderon in the backcourt; Monta was the top defender there. He had to take on the Westbrooks, the Parkers, the Lillards, the Currys. Meanwhile, Reke had Gordon and Holiday; he never had to face any of those guys. Ellis surely held his own, and I think he is a much better defender than he gets credit for. Either way, neither are good defenders, but I'd give Monta a slight edge.
Seriously, I dont see how you can make an argument for Tyreke Evans being better than Monta Ellis, aside from being a blatant homer. Seriously.
But there is so much more meaningful things to qualify exactly how effective you are at putting the ball in the rim. I mean just throw Monta and Reke out of this. Does one player having more possessions, more shots, more opportunities to score the ball now make him better than someone else? Even if that player who put the ball through the rim more is less efficient at doing it? Are we now penalizing players for playing in a halfcourt offense as opposed to an offense that pushes the ball in the open court? The possibilities are endless.