yeah, I know. It's why I didn't list career winshares. it's also a cumulative stat; the more games and more years you play, the higher the winshares. That's why I just listed winshares for Portland last year, and it was to show what Portland was losing from last year's squad
I then listed winshares/48. While winshares is a measure of cumulative production, winshares/48 is a measure of production rates. Obviously, that can still be skewed by team success. Two players can have about equal production and efficiency; if one is on a 25 win team while the other is on a 50 win team, the 2nd guy is going to have about twice the winshare/48. More win to go around
but looking at the players I listed, there may only be about 2 players that has much skew. Hezonja and Bazemore. But Bazemore, in 7 seasons, has played on teams that won 47, 51 (2/3 of a season), 60, 48, & 43 games. It's only the last two years (and 23 games with Lakers) that he's played on crappy teams. So I don't think there's a lot of skew with him. In Hezonja's case, he's played on crappy teams for sure; but he's also posted some pretty crappy numbers
I think people are underrating what Portland lost in players that left. Now, maybe the new guys can offset the losses and more, but I thought it was worth noting that when the season starts, the Blazers have lost: 7 of their top 10 players in PER, Winshares, winshares/48, box plus/minus, & value over replacement. Defensively, they've lost 7 of their 10 best in defensive winshares, and 8 of their 10 best in defensive box plus/minus. The 'new' guys have a lot of make up for