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Some Centers are clearly better, like Howard, Duncan and Bynum, some are clearly worse like Dalembert or Krstic, and then there are a lot that should be in the conversation around Oden like Lopez, Noah, Gasol et al.
Well so far, Oden outplayed Duncan on their head to head match-up. Also, Oden has beat up on Okafor and Chandler too. I would say he is getting much better. I am still holding on to my prediction of 15 points/12.6 rebounds/2.1 blocks a game. By mid season, it should be around 12 points, 10 rebounds and 2.6 blocks a game, but as the season ends, I suspect his blocks to go down a bit, since he will be more of an offensive presence.
I almost left Duncan off that list, but with all his history, and still putting up a 25+ PER, I thought that I would give him the nod as being better than Oden. In any single matchup, a lesser player can outplay the better one.
Oden is probably a top-10 center in the league so far. As soon as he can stay on the court for 35 minutes, he will be top-5.
Right now, Oden is putting up a nice PER in severely limited minutes. That makes him either a really good back-up, or a barely adequate starter.
Not playing = not contributing. Blame the refs, blame Nate, blame the guards...the equation doesn't change. He can't be compared to the best starting centers until he plays starters' minutes.
WTF? Adequate starter = PER 15.00 Oden is higher then Roy right now...does that make you higher then Jesus (To use a Onionized version of a Lennon quote)?Right now, Oden is putting up a nice PER in severely limited minutes. That makes him either a really good back-up, or a barely adequate starter.
Not playing = not contributing. Blame the refs, blame Nate, blame the guards...the equation doesn't change. He can't be compared to the best starting centers until he plays starters' minutes.
If not PER, then how do you want to compare the centers? A PER of 21.7 is not even close to a "good back-up" or "barely adequate starter". That puts him at 20th in the league overall and 4th for centers.
Please provide a better metric to use to compare the players.
If I had to look at his body of work this season so far, I'd grade it a D+ or C-.
He is a starting center that can't seem to stay on the floor most of the time. As such, he's failing there.
That said, when he can manage to stay on the floor he does a good job. Not great, but good.
If not PER, then how do you want to compare the centers? A PER of 21.7 is not even close to a "good back-up" or "barely adequate starter". That puts him at 20th in the league overall and 4th for centers.
Please provide a better metric to use to compare the players.
Put it this way - would you prefer a player who has an 18 PER in 36 MPG, or a player who has a 21 PER in 18 MPG?
I don't know where to find this, but I imagine that "Total Wins Added" is a pretty good metric. If he's doing well in that, it doesn't matter if he's on the court for 18 or 36 minutes.
That's where VA (Value Added) comes in. It measures contribution and includes playing time (PER is efficiency).
Again, in VA - Oden is the #8 center in the league this year. That's your answer, right there. Top-10.
I don't know where to find this, but I imagine that "Total Wins Added" is a pretty good metric. If he's doing well in that, it doesn't matter if he's on the court for 18 or 36 minutes.


Looking at other measures, BBR has Win-Score - which is a bit like EPA - based on their formula, Greg Oden's Win-Score so far this year is 2nd/3rd/4th among centers with Bynum and Horford at 1.3 behind D-12 at 1.7
That's where VA (Value Added) comes in. It measures contribution and includes playing time (PER is efficiency).
Again, in VA - Oden is the #8 center in the league this year. That's your answer, right there. Top-10.
Since Greg averages 22 MPG - I am not sure where the 18 MPG comes from.
But, Greg, at 21+ PER for 22 MPG is ranked higher, in VA than Nene - with 18 PER at 34 MPG
Looking at other measures, BBR has Win-Score - which is a bit like EPA - based on their formula, Greg Oden's Win-Score so far this year is 2nd/3rd/4th among centers with Bynum and Horford at 1.3 behind D-12 at 1.7
My problem with win-score and the like are the bias toward players on good teams. While an "individualized" stat, it is dependent on teammates, as there is no true statistic to extract an individual player's impact on winning games. I like the stat, but honestly, I like PER more as a comparative tool.
I am not sure how VA is calculated, but win score will benefit teams with better records just as PER does not take into account minutes played. Lopez is on the terrible Net's, so my guess is that his win score would be low, but he is a very good C.
This is an area where I suspect stat-rats and coaches are *not* on the same page. I have no doubt that most coaches would prefer having Nene on the court, to having Oden on the bench. If nothing else, having a guy you can rely on for big minutes every night gives the team more consistency and continuity.
The Blazers are very lucky to have Joel around to step in! Otherwise, people wouldn't be so quick to dismiss the issue.
