And yet the team wins more with Blake or Bayless. Again, what is the goal of the exercise - to play the guys with the highest PER or to win more games?
Of course the goal is to win more games. You continue to misuse a single stat to "prove" Miller doesn't help his teams win. I really don't feel like typing it all up again and updating it for the two games since (split with Lakers and Cavs). So, here again is the more comprehensive data (not just a single misused stat) to show that Miller is better statistically AND helps the team more than Blake:
If you look at several additional stats, you start to see the whole picture:
PER (from basketball-refernce.com):
Blake = 9.9
Miller = 15.7
Bayless = 14.7
Advantage Miller
Production vs. Opponents (from 82games.com):
Blake: OWN = 11.0, OPP = 14.2, NET = -3.2
Miller: OWN = 16.4, OPP = 14.8, NET = +1.6
Bayless: OWN = 16.4, OPP = 16.2, NET = +0.2
Advantage Miller
Win Shares (from basketball-refernce.com):
Blake = 1.5
Miller = 2.4
Bayless = 1.3
Advantage Miller
Net Points Per 100 Possessions (from 82games.com):
Blake: On Court +4.8, Off Court +5.8, Net -1.5
Miller: On Court +6.9, Off Court +2.3, Net +4.7
Bayless: On Court +7.5, Off Court +3.9, Net +3.6
Advantage Miller
Even though Blake has played more minutes than Miller (59% vs. 57%), the team has outscored their opponents by more (+107 points vs. +72 points) when Miller is on the floor than when Blake is. For the sake of completeness, Bayless has played less than half as many minutes as Blake or Miller (27%) and the team net scoring is +50 points when he's in the game (comparable to Miller's +107 points in 57% of the team's minutes).
Also, the team record with Miller starting is 15-6 (now 16-7). With him not starting, it's 7-9. This may be the most important stat of all in Miller's favor - and the ONE stat you think Nate would care most about.
I could continue to site many more stats that show Miller produces more individually than Bayless (slightly) and Blake (greatly) AND that the team does better with Miller on the court, but hopefully this will be enough to get a general overall view of individual and team production for the three players in question.
I really don't think you need all these fancy stats to see that Miller is a better player than Steve Blake. The comparison between Bayless and Miller is much closer, but still slightly in Miller's favor.
Really? You do not recall anyone saying that Nate needs to change his system to fit Miller, you do not recall anyone that called Roy a primadona because he wants to play the way he is comfortable?
A good coach WILL adapt his syetem to the strengths of his personel. There is a difference between fitting in and being "featured". Joel "fits in" but he's hardly "featured " in the Blazers offense (when healthy, of course). Miller and Roy seem to be fitting quite well in the backcourt now that they are finally starting togther at their best natural positions. Too bad we had to loose half the team to injury before Nate would even TRY starting them togther in the backcourt.
Define productive. Individually, or from a team perspective?
Both, and it's not even close. There is no disputing that Miller's individual stats are much better than Blake's. There is also no disputing that the team scores more and gives up fewer points when Miller is on the court than when Blake is. Miller's WinScore also trumps Blakes by a wide margin.
You have also compared Andre Miler to Zach Randolph as a player who puts up good stats, but doesn't help his team win. If Andre Miller is such a team wrecking cancer, how does he have, by a substantial margin, the highest assist rate on the team? His AST% is 29.0 compared to Blake's 18.9. Why are both Roy AND Webster shooting the ball MUCH better now that they are starting with Miller at PG? Could it possibly be that he does a good job setting up his teammates and geting them good, open looks that they can knock down at a high percentage?
I do not ignore it. I just do not think it is relevant to the situation, since Miller's arrival here did not bring the same change, nor did it do so elsewhere. His only winning years were in Denver (and they have been winning after he left), and here (and we have been winning before he came).
I've already mentioned Miller's impact on the 76ers (0.240 before he arrives, 0.500 while he was there and 0.294 after he left with no other significant roster changes). So, you want to talk about his impact in Denver? Sure, why not. The season before he arrived in Denver they won 17 games. In addition to Miller, they also added Carmelo Anthony and proceeded to win 43 games - a 26-game improvement. Sure a lot of credit goes to Carmelo, but there is no way the rookie Carmelo all by himself takes a team from 17 wins to 43. Hell the Cavs added LeBron that same year and they only went from 17 wins to 35 and the year the Blazers added Brondon Roy AND LaMarcus Aldridge, they only improved from 21 wins to 32. So, Andre Miller should get some credit for Denver's 26-game improvement.
The next year, the Nuggets further improved to win 49 games. The following year, the team has some injuries and regressed to 44 wins. The following December the Nuggets traded Miller to Philadelphia for Allen Iverson. I've already mentioned Miller's impact on the 76ers (from 0.240 to 0.510 that season). What about the Nuggets? They were 11-7 when they traded Miller. That's a 50-win pace. They ended up winning 45 games after adding Allen Iversoon AND Steve Blake.
In Cleveland, the Cavs won 22 games the year before drafting Miller. They won 32 games his rookie season. A 10 game improvement.
Good for the 76ers. When you have a garbage team, another good player is clearly important. Of course, the Blazers were not a garbage team before Miller, and his arrival has not taken them higher, so far, given the data we have.
And this is somehow Miller's fault? He was not allowed to start in the backcourt with Roy until very recently - and only then after half the team was lost to injuries. I have never claimed Miller was our savior, and quite frankly, I have never read anyone else say so in this forum. He's not a superstar. Nobody is claiming he is. What he is is an above average starting PG, which makes him much, much better than this year's version fo Steve Blake. You seem obsessed with "people" claiming Miller is better than he is. I just haven't seen those posts.
It amazes me that you continue to call me out for noticing a long-term pattern with Miller's results, from a team perspective
The problem is your long term pattern shows that Miller has a carfeer won/loss percentage of around 0.500. I don't have a problem with that. What I have a problem with is you continuing to ignore how bad those teams were before Miller arrived. When a single player turns a 0.240 team into a 0.510 team, that's a significant impact. Yes, that's still barely a 0.500 team, but the results are far, far better than before Miller arrived.
while berating me for ignoring his long-term pattern of being a good player, individually. Andre Miller does not provide a skill that is that important to this team.
Really??? He has a team leading AST% of 29%. How does that not help this team - especially now that we are missing so many key offenseive players (Oden, Outlaw, Rudy, etc.)? Since when is creating easy scoring opportunites for your teammates NOT a skill that is important to this team?
BNM