-- how can you say you don't care what the stats say? I find that fascinating. What is your philosophy for how to evaluate who should play? Doesn't the data help you determine the best matchups?
When they develop a statistic that captures the entirety of the game of basketball we'll use that. Until then Stats are nothing more than tidbits of information that are regularly flawed.
They're flawed when they say Allen Iverson's 27 and 7 makes him the most important player for Denver. They fail to account for his ball dominating ways. They fail to account for his consistent refusal to pass the ball without an opportunity to get an assist. They fail to account for that contested fadeaway he took instead of hitting the open shooter.
They're flawed when they say Marcus Camby is the best defender in the league because of his 13 rebounds and 3.6 blocks a night. They fail to say he's the fourth best post defender behind Najera, Nene, Kenyon. That he regularly gets pushed around down low. That he rarely defends the opposing team's best big man because he's a thoroughly mediocre man-to-man defender. They fail to count the layups he gives up by over-gambling when looking for blocks. They fail to account for his failed defensive rotations where he stays back and looks for a block on a layup instead of closing off the lane earlier. They fail to say that despite being a regular in the league's top 10 rebounders his teams consistently under-perform on the backboards because he doesn't box out and gives up too many boards.
Are they flawed for Powe in some ways? Sure. He gets 4.2 boards in 14.5 minutes. That's a truly great clip. But they fail to say the team's defensive rebounding is at it's worst when he's on the floor. The team as a whole gets more defensive boards when KG is on, when Perk is on, and when BBD is on. BBD doesn't grab many boards, how can this be? Because he clears out space in the paint and denies the opposition space to rebound.
Reminds me of the Nets. Over the past couple of years every analyst bemoans the Nets big men's inability to rebound the basketball. Jason Kidd led them in rebounds for the past three and half seasons. That players like Jason Collins were terrible rebounds because he pulled down only 2.4 boards in 16 minutes or 4 boards in 24 minutes. They fail to recognize the Nets are regular amongst the league leaders for fewest offensive rebounds conceded. They fail to recognize that all of their big men do a terrific job of keeping the opposition of the backboards. They fail to recognize that the Nets' gameplan since Kidd arrived has been for the bigs to box out and allow Jason to run down the middle of the lane, then catch the rebound in order to start their fastbreak quicker because now the ball is in their point guard's hands quicker.
They fail to account that BBD does a better job of moving the basketball. They also don't count BBD's better rotations and better man-to-man defense very well. Team defensive possessions is alright and does give some semblence of the picture but not a total look.
Or there things that Powe does that aren't accounted well? Sure but not many. He's an odd player in that very little of his actions aren't counted for. The best example is his movement off the ball. Powe is better than every other big man on this team of recognizing where the space is, where to cut, how to create a passing lane for his guards, how to get an open lane to the rim. His movement without the basketball is excellent.
Then you have teams like Denver who were top of the league in combined blocks/steals this season yet they're a weak defensive team becuase they give up easy shots from all their gambling and so their opponents shoot a higher FG percentage than you'd expect.
There's so many other areas like high assist players who don't truly involve their teammates (Stephon Marbury). High assist players who don't actually create anything because none of their passes were risky and they didn't create the space for the basket by penetration (Rondo at times, Earl Watson, Jason Terry, Billups). Guys who get high steals but regularly don't contest their opponents shot tough enough (Chris Paul). Guys who move the ball superbly but don't get assists (Oberto). So many other things too.
My rambling point ...... I don't like stats only discussions. There's so much of the game that gets ignored when we talk solely about stats. I trust my eyes more than the stats and that's how I evaluate players.
For the record I think Powe should play. The supporting cast is struggling to score and the Big Three need someone to step up and get a couple of buckets to help space the floor for them. There's no real offense out there when Rondo is off his game. Getting another offensive option on the floor should be a priority, it'll help snap the offense back in shape.