OddEnormous
I'M FLYING!! I'M FLYING!!
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Fail.
The love affair with this OKC team by is ESPN is almost as ridiculous as the one by some so-called Blazer fans on this board. Even people in OKC aren't as excited about the Thunder as Mixum - judging by their attendance.
Irritating though it may be, it's not without merit. They have the 2nd leading scorer in the game. They have the #7 assist man in the league. They're on a 50-win pace. At this point, they've won 12 of their past 14 games, including wins over Denver, Atlanta, and Dallas. Their losses in that span are a two-point loss to Phoenix (where they led by 10 late), and a loss to the Spurs the next night (road B2B), so even those are respectable. There's a lot to love about the Thunder right now.
The Thunder has feasted on teams under .500, getting 21 of their 36 wins (58 percent) against that competition. They are 21-2 in such games. But in games against teams above .500, OKC is just 15-21. Against the Western Conference they are 18-17 and are 7-10 against teams in the West’s top eight.
Jesus bloody Christ.
We have a PREVIOUS ranking in this? This isn't a one time thing?
This is the stupidest bit of sports writing I've ever heard of.
Irritating though it may be, it's not without merit. They have the 2nd leading scorer in the game. They have the #7 assist man in the league. They're on a 50-win pace. At this point, they've won 12 of their past 14 games, including wins over Denver, Atlanta, and Dallas. Their losses in that span are a two-point loss to Phoenix (where they led by 10 late), and a loss to the Spurs the next night (road B2B), so even those are respectable. There's a lot to love about the Thunder right now.
Although that would be very hard to do, this does have to come close. It's a bit like national rankings of first-grade basketball prospects. It's also inviting schadenfreude, much as critics of Jerry Krause post-Jordan experienced, and critics of the Blazers are trying to experience now. It's also odd to see the Lakers in there. I guess it is true that they've played very well without Bryant, who is just on the verge of starting to break down, but Odom and Gasol aren't exactly striplings.
And what are we supposed to take out of this? Predictions for championships? Who, the season before, predicted that Boston would win? Or, the season before the Gasol trade, that the Lakers would win? And besides which, "assets" seems to be totally subjective - practically nobody would've said the Lakers had the assets to trade for Gasol. So yes, this whole idea is stupid. And so is discussing it.
This doesn't seem like a stupid concept to me at all.
It looks at the net present value of all the teams' rosters and rights to players and projects, all other things being equal, how they will do.
It's not a prophecy, and it's not even a prediction. It's a straightforward forecast.
It's done every day with financial instruments and with students/standardized tests and with potential employees. Why shouldn't it be done with NBA teams, too?
Ed O.
It's done every day with financial instruments and with students/standardized tests and with potential employees. Why shouldn't it be done with NBA teams, too?
Ed O.
It isn't a "straightforward forecast" unless there is a "straightforward" way to estimate future injuries, as that factor appears to be the biggest factor for determining how successful we will be.
All future estimates have to use statistics and forecast models to try and estimate these, so it's not like there is no way to do it - but, to be honest - I really do not think this "future ranking" is worth the paper it is written on - it is nothing more than a couple of douche-bags with no real statistical / analysis background doing it.
Right, standardized testing is exactly like ESPN NBA power rankings.
Well done.
It isn't a "straightforward forecast" unless there is a "straightforward" way to estimate future injuries, as that factor appears to be the biggest factor for determining how successful we will be.
I'm curious how they attempt to account for injuries. If they ignore them or don't try to account for them in the future, I don't see how they can rank OKC above the Blazers.
Last year, with the Blazers effective average age being younger than this year's OKC, the Blazers were a 54-win team, with the point-differential indicating we were ready to start crushing teams.
IMO, there is no way the current OKC team beats last year's Blazer team, and chances are that without all of the injuries, this year's Blazer team is better than last year's.
Even with all of our injuries, OKC is 2 games ahead of the Blazers.
Good job keeping up with logic.
I would have been able too had there been some.
I was commenting on the concept. Not the execution.
Companies do crappy job interviews that let them hire total morons pretty systematically, but that doesn't change the fact that job interviews TEND to help a company make better decisions on whom to hire.
Ed O.
Distorting what I said to restate it as "standardized testing is exactly like ESPN NBA power rankings" is not at all consistent with what I wrote or what my logic was.
It is what you said. then you compared ESPN's Future Power Rankings to hiring someone at a company.
I agree with you. I'm having a tough time keeping up with this logic.
You're not speaking English very well. Or you're intentionally attempting to confuse me. Or you're high.
Maybe all three.
I did NOT say anything was "exactly like" anything. I did not say that this version of the ESPN Power poll was like anything else.
Please re-read (and pay attention to) what I actually wrote if you're interested in making a useful comment about it. If you're confused by what I mean by "net present value", you can ask me or you can Google it...
Ed O.
Miamithey've got Wade and little else of note besides cap room
what is this list supposed to be measuring again? Next year? The next 5 years???
STOMP
Ed likes it because
(a) He loves "potential", and
(b) he thinks absolutely everything is quantifiable.
How is this different from saying "the Thunder are good and they're young"? That's fine, but then how do you talk about teams like NY who have just cleared enormous cap room just before a big free agent summer? Surely they've got UNLIMITED potential!
And it's a bit disingenuous to say that the concept is good, just that this particular realisation of it is bad unless you suggest ways that the obvious difficulties can be fixed.
How do you compare teams like NY with teams like OKC? What do you say about teams like the Suns where it's been rumored for ages that they would trade Stoudemire? Did they have more potential when it looked like they had a great trade set up with Golden State?
Face it, it just isn't quantifiable. Stick to saying the Thunder have good young players, the Knicks have a lot of caproom and a big ad market, etc., etc., and stop pretending that you can compare them.
So you're going with the message board classic "You're too stupid to get this!" when someone disagrees with you.
It shifts the focus off of you.
You were either lazy, ignorant, or stupid. I'm not sure which.
But you're not tracking with a comparison not equaling "exactly the same as", and you're not understanding that I'm distinguishing a concept from an execution of the concept. Are you saying that it's my fault that you can't read so good?
It's not about me. It's about what I posted and how horrifically you mangled it.
Ed O.

You're not speaking English very well.
Like I said. "YOU'RE STUPID!!!!!!"
Something is either a good comparison or it's not. Correct?
If it's not exactly like standardized testing (which you are now saying) why make the comparison?
If you're using that as an example (a measurement of skill) ESPN's power rankings are like the company picnic sack race no?
