B-Roy
If it takes months
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Some of you may have seen this already, but for those who haven't...
Essentially, he's taking Blazer players, and using stats to find comparable players who have already made their mark in the league. I think it's really interesting and will make for some good discussion. Oh, and I think MARIS will cream his pants.
Blazers Reserves:
http://www.blazersedge.com/2009/2/3/748430/kevin-pelton-s-stat-bomb-f
Blazer Starters:
http://www.blazersedge.com/2009/2/4/749102/kevin-pelton-s-stat-bomb-s
You guys should know KP2 by now, but if not, Kevin Pelton is one of the kinky young minds behind Basketball Prospectus. I recently realized he also runs the best-named WNBA blog in the history of ever.
KP2 used to work for the Sonics and we share an affinity for Kevin Durant. Recently, he casually mentioned in a facebook message that KD's "similarity" list includes Kobe Bryant near the very top. KEVIN DURANT IS GOING TO BE THE NEXT KOBE... Well, no, not exactly. After I took a shower to cool down, I asked him to explain "similarity" to me.
Similarity, officially, is a comparative rating (on a 1 to 100 scale) between any two players from NBA history (1979-1980 on -- since the advent of the 3 point line -- and with a minimum of 250 minutes played). For reference, KP2 says, "two identical players would score a similarity of 100. In practice, a score of 98 is virtually identical, 95 is very similar and anything below 90 is getting pretty sketchy."
So similarity ratings aren't going to guarantee or even predict a player's career path, but you can take any player and create a list of other players who had the most similar stats at this point in their respective careers. So today's Durant (age 20) is being compared to Kobe at age 20, not the current Kobe. Make sense? You can then run similarity scores for any one player against EVERY player in NBA history and then rank them from most similar to least similar. Sweet!
Similarity is a tantalizing piece to add to our own qualitative basketball observations, especially for younger players. For Blazers fans, it can add a new dimension to our understanding of our ridiculously young roster... sure, Jerryd Bayless looks a lot like Monta Ellis when he came into the league, but what do the numbers say? How similar, exactly, are the two players? Is there anyone more similar to JB than Monta? That's the type of question that similarity aims to answer.
Essentially, he's taking Blazer players, and using stats to find comparable players who have already made their mark in the league. I think it's really interesting and will make for some good discussion. Oh, and I think MARIS will cream his pants.
Blazers Reserves:
http://www.blazersedge.com/2009/2/3/748430/kevin-pelton-s-stat-bomb-f
Blazer Starters:
http://www.blazersedge.com/2009/2/4/749102/kevin-pelton-s-stat-bomb-s



