Author Topic: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)  (Read 11998 times)

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Re: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)
« Reply #60 on: January 12, 2016, 12:28:06 AM »

Offline LarBrd33

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... FWIW, I struggle to see the point from the Pelicans perspective beyond ridding themselves of Asik's contract.

No need to struggle. They're not paying Anderson, Jerebko, or Lee after this season. That leaves Sullinger, IT, and $47 million in cap savings over 4 years for Holiday. That's a great deal.
Right... but they probably wouldn't want to pay SUlly after this season either... so all they'd really be doing is downgrading from Holiday to Thomas, losing Ryan Anderson for nothing, and getting Asik off the books.   Getting Asik off the books seems like the only benefit.

If that's the only benefit, they might as well just trade Asik and Anderson for expiring contracts.

Re: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)
« Reply #61 on: January 12, 2016, 12:36:06 AM »

Offline CapnDunks

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I don't know that Jrue Holiday has more success in Isaiah's role considering the way the rest of the team is playing offensively. But let's say that's the case.

If Smart and Bradley can stay healthy and Smart can find his shot(big/huge ifs), then Isaiah will go back to being our sixth man. Would you rather have Jrue over Isaiah if they were coming off the bench? Especially taking his contract into account...

I haven't given up on Smart yet, I hope Ainge hasn't either. I think Boston says no. Add Asik and it seems extremely unlikely to me.

Re: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)
« Reply #62 on: January 12, 2016, 12:42:13 AM »

Offline colincb

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... FWIW, I struggle to see the point from the Pelicans perspective beyond ridding themselves of Asik's contract.

No need to struggle. They're not paying Anderson, Jerebko, or Lee after this season. That leaves Sullinger, IT, and $47 million in cap savings over 4 years for Holiday. That's a great deal.
Right... but they probably wouldn't want to pay SUlly after this season either... so all they'd really be doing is downgrading from Holiday to Thomas, losing Ryan Anderson for nothing, and getting Asik off the books.   Getting Asik off the books seems like the only benefit.

If that's the only benefit, they might as well just trade Asik and Anderson for expiring contracts.

No one's taking Asik at this point. Not the same player as before.

IT's the better player. Here's the stats. Net off-def rating is +3. JH is -5. Much better shooter, much higher PER, and similar assist%.

http://bkref.com/tiny/Mlt4Y

And they'd love to have Sullinger.

Re: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)
« Reply #63 on: January 12, 2016, 12:44:23 AM »

Offline alldaboston

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... FWIW, I struggle to see the point from the Pelicans perspective beyond ridding themselves of Asik's contract.

No need to struggle. They're not paying Anderson, Jerebko, or Lee after this season. That leaves Sullinger, IT, and $47 million in cap savings over 4 years for Holiday. That's a great deal.
Right... but they probably wouldn't want to pay SUlly after this season either... so all they'd really be doing is downgrading from Holiday to Thomas, losing Ryan Anderson for nothing, and getting Asik off the books.   Getting Asik off the books seems like the only benefit.

If that's the only benefit, they might as well just trade Asik and Anderson for expiring contracts.

I feel like every player you have on your CBPL-Bellevue Leprechauns team is who you want to trade for/think is the best. We've already seen it with your infatuations for Randle, Gordon, Holiday.
I could very well see the Hawks... starting Taurean Prince at the 3, who is already better than Crowder, imo.

you vs. the guy she tells you not to worry about

Re: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)
« Reply #64 on: January 12, 2016, 01:01:26 AM »

Offline crimson_stallion

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Problem with any +/- stat is that it doesn't take into account lineups and replacement players.  Whoever shares the court with LeBron James is going to have a better +/- than the guy coming off the bench with Richard Jefferson.   

You do understand the difference between basic +/- and the Real Plus Minus (RPM), right?

RPM (as I understand it) is built up upon the foundations of Advanced Plus Minus (APM) and Regularized Adjusted Plus Minus (RAPM).

APM is defined as follows:

"It reflects the impact of each player on his team's scoring margin after controlling for the strength of every teammate and every opponent during each minute he's on the court.

Adjusted +/- ratings indicate how many additional points are contributed to a team's scoring margin by a given player in comparison to the league-average player whose adjusted +/- value is zero over the span of a typical game. It is assumpted that in a typical game a team has 100 offensive and 100 defensive possessions. For example, if a +6.5 "adjusted +/-" player is on the floor with 4 average teammates, his team will average about 6.5 points better per 100 possessions than 5 average players would."


RAPM is described as follows:

In "Regularized Adjusted Plus-Minus" (RAPM), the goal is to provide more accurate results by employing a special technique called "ridge regression" (a.k.a. regularization). It significantly reduces standard errors in Adjusted Plus-Minus (APM).


Conventional adjusted plus-minus is shown to do a poor job of predicting the outcome of future games, particularly when fit on less than one season of data. Adding regularization greatly improves accuracy, and some player ratings change dramatically. The enhancement with the RAPM is a Bayesian technique in which the data is combined with a priori beliefs regarding reasonable ranges for the parameters in order to produce more accurate models.


Ultimately, Real Plus Minus actually takes into account the teammates and opponents the said player is sharing the court with at the time.

Now I am not by any means trying to suggest it is a perfect statistic that NEVER gives the wrong idea.  There are going to be cases (for example, low minute sample sizes) that are going to at times give off not entirely accurate results.  That's the same with ANY statistic - even your basic PPG, FG% and PER stats are going to be inelastically skewed in some cases.

The fact is that RPM (and similar +/- based stats) is really one of the only of the only quantifiable statistics that gives some insight into the way a player impacts games outside of box score numbers.

It's not the 'be all end all' but it's a nice angle to have on things, and it can help to one to appreciate the true value of guys like Amir Johnsons and Paul Millsaps out there - the guys who are so much more valuable / impactful to their teams than their basic stat lines would indicate.

On the other hand, it also helps to identify the guys out there like Derek Rose, Jahlil Okafor, Ty Lawson, Kobe Bryant and Bradley Beal - guys who stellar stats and/or reputations, but who actually seem to hurt their teams more than they help them.

Now I do think RPM probably is at it's most powerful when used to analyse players who have held similar trends over more than one context (for example, more than one season or with multiple teams).  That lends some additional weight to your agument for Holiday as a defensive player, since his DRPM stats have been positive for two out of the past three seasons, suggesting that he is (overall) a good defensive player.

However it still doesn't help your agument that he's a better offensive player than Thomas, because in terms of ORPM Thomas has been a good +2 or more advantage over Holiday every year since RPM stats have been recorded.


I really don't need to look at +/- stats to know that Jrue HOliday (when healthy) is a better shooter and better defender than Isaiah Thomas.   If you don't like the trade idea, it's cool.  I was bored and wondered which team would say no.  Obvious this forum is bias towards Celtic players so it doesn't surprise me that they'd hate a trade that effectively has us giving up a backup point guard (Thomas) and a backup big who isn't likely to be here next year (Sully)... for a quality PG who can start long term when healthy (Jrue), a player a lot of people think would be a great fit as a starting PF in Brad's system (Ryan Anderson), and an albatross contract. 

1) You never said Holiday is a better shooter than Isaiah Thomas.  You said he is a better offensive player than Isaiah Thomas.   There is a very distinct difference between those two claims, different enough that it might change my stance on whether I agree / disagree with you on it.   

So which is it?


2) Why is it that you consider Ryan Anderson a starting PF, but refer to Thomas a starting PG?  I get the impression you simply use the terms "starting" and "backup" as you see fit in order to selectively credit / discredit players with the aim of adding weight to your argument.  However I don't see much reasoning in the real world as to why Anderson would be considered starting calber, while Thomas wouldn't be. 

For example...

Ryan Anderson:
* He's averaged 25.8 MPG for his career, which are basically sixth man minutes
* He's a below average defender (-2.92 DPM)
* He's a medciore rebounder for his position (7.7 Per 36 for his career)
* He's a below average passer (1.2 Assists Per 36 and 0.9 Ast:TO for his career)
* He's a below average finisher in the paint (55% FG inside 3 feet for his career)
* He's mediocre at getting to the line but good at finishing there  (21.2% career FTR & 86% FT)
* He's a got an average scoring efficiency  (1.22 Pts Per FGA)
* He's an excellent outside shooter (37.8% 3PT and 42% on long twos)

Isaiah Thomas:
* He's averaged 28.8 MPG for his career, which are much closer to starter minutes
* He's a below average defender (-2.11 DRPM)
* He's a mediocre rebounder for his position (3.1 Per 36 for his career)
* He's an above average passer (6.1 Assists Per 36 and 2.3 Ast:TO for his career)
* He's a below average finisher in the paint (63.7% FG inside 3 feet for his career)
* He is elite at getting to the free throw line and finishing there (career 37.2% FTR & 86.4% FT)
* He's a got an excellent scoring efficiency 1.33 Pts Per FGA for his career)
* He's a good outside shooter (career 35.8% on threes and 40.3% on long twos)

Thought I'd make use of that RPM stat there, since I know you love it so much :)


There's better fake trades to fantasize about.   Getting into this with you would be similar to the years I spent trying to convince this forum why Rondo's role was inflating his stats and why a player like Steph Curry would flourish if given the same opportunity.  I don't have the energy for it in such an insignificant thread.   If you want to believe Thomas is better than a healthy Jrue Holiday, that's fine.   Whatever.

I don't get it.

First of all, why do you a debate such as this so personally, when nothing that I am saying is a personal attack on you?  As I said earlier, I've tried my best this whole time to remain fair and objective in my tone, and haven't made any attempts to mock you or to make fun of your trade - all I've been doing this whole time is trying to understand your point of view. 

Secondly, why do you feel the need to bring up completely unrelated arguments (like the Rondo / Curry things) every single time somebody doesn't agree with one of your views, in an attempt to add credibility to your argument?  Everybody takes guesses / predictions about things, and everybody is going to have some predictions they end up right about, and some they end up wrong about. 

For example, I predicted that the 2014 draft class was way overrated.  I predicted Wiggins would end up a 20 PPG player but not a franchise level player, that Jabari Parker would be nowhere near as good as Melo (as people were comparing him to), that Embiid would be lucky to play his first season, and that Gordon was a bum.  So far I've been right on all four counts. 

I also predicted that Vonleh would be a beast, and that Lavine wouldn't be any good, and that Smart would be a poor-man's Dwyane Wade.  I was dead wrong on all three of those counts.

We aren't fortune tellers, so we're not going to be right on everything, and nobody will hold that against you if you approach your predictions / arguments with some modesty and humility. 

In your case you were right about Curry, but you were wrong about Rondo...since he's now out of Boston, is no longer playing with three hall of famers, and is arguably putting up numbers that are up there with the best of his career (11.7 Points, 11.6 assists, 6.4 rebounds, 1.9 steals, 45% FG, 33% 3PT).

You have also been wrong about a number of other things, but (unlike many people here) I'm not going to pull you up on that, because I don't believe it's fair...nor do I believe it is relevant to this specific argument.  Hence bringing up such things would (IMHO) be in line with making a personal attack.

That said, when you go and do exactly that (by bringing up things like the Curry / Rondo arguments) you are opening up a giant can of worms, and you're just asking for people to bring up other past non-thread-relevant things to try to discredit you. 

My suggestion is that if you want people to respect and appreciate your opinion, try to do the following guidelines:

1) If you are making an argument based purely on opinion, then state this
2) If you are making an argument based on fact, then justify you argument with actual facts
3) Stick to the subject at hand rather than clutching at past unrelated discussions for credibility

For example with this thread - the only thing you said that I took any issue with was when you made the claim that Jrue Holiday was a better offensive player than Isaiah Thomas, and hence I called you out and asked you why you feel that.

All you had to do is either:
a) Say you felt this to be the case because of statistical reason XYZ or
b) Say you didn't have anything objective to back it up, but you just personally prefer the way he plays

I'd have respected either of those responses, or anything along the same lines. 

Instead you reply by (in a nutshell) saying "he is better (fact) and I can't be bothered giving reasons" - which kinda comes across as both an arrogant and lazy response.
« Last Edit: January 12, 2016, 01:51:40 AM by crimson_stallion »

Re: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)
« Reply #65 on: January 12, 2016, 01:28:53 AM »

Offline Csfan1984

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I hear LarBrd33 on Holiday over IT but as some have point out they are close and the other pieces involved are a rental and a cap eater. Again this is why I see at lateral move at best.

Re: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)
« Reply #66 on: January 12, 2016, 01:42:57 AM »

Offline tarheelsxxiii

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The LarBrd obsession runs as deep as ever. You guys are all very good posters in your own right -- no need to trump or "one up" him in order to be recognized as such.
The Tarstradamus Group, LLC

Re: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)
« Reply #67 on: January 12, 2016, 01:56:45 AM »

Offline oldtype

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Honestly when I saw Jrue Holiday on the NOP side of the ledger I was expecting that LarBrd would suggest trading the Brooklyn pick for him. This is tame by comparison.


Great words from a great man

Re: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)
« Reply #68 on: January 12, 2016, 01:57:37 AM »

Offline oldtype

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The LarBrd obsession runs as deep as ever. You guys are all very good posters in your own right -- no need to trump or "one up" him in order to be recognized as such.

I don't think it's obsessive for reasonable people to be driven insane by unreasonable arguments being delivered over and over again with such bombast and aplomb.


Great words from a great man

Re: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)
« Reply #69 on: January 12, 2016, 01:59:05 AM »

Offline crimson_stallion

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The LarBrd obsession runs as deep as ever. You guys are all very good posters in your own right -- no need to trump or "one up" him in order to be recognized as such.

Not sure who you're referring to, but I'm certainly not doing what you suggested above.

Every post I've made here has simply been asking him to justify a claim he made early in the thread (that Holiday is a better offensive player than Thomas), which he has so far either danced around or just straight up ignored.

I'm perfectly happy for anybody to have their own opinion, but as I said if it is merely your personal opinion then just say so. 

If you insist it's a fact, then tell me why you believe that to be the case.

That is all I ask, and I really I don't think it's unreasonable.  It's nothing personal and has nothing to do with who is making the claim - I would ask (and have asked) the same of anybody making such a claim, no matter who it is.

The fact that countless other people have pulled him up on the exact same thing (passing off opinion as fact, without justification) countless times before only adds to the frustration, because it makes it seem like he is "trolling" and doing it on purpose just to get a rise out of people.

However I, personally, try to keep things objective and stay away from the personal arguments. 

Re: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)
« Reply #70 on: January 12, 2016, 02:46:44 AM »

Offline Who

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Bad trade for Boston. Good for NOP.

I like Jrue Holiday but his health is too big a concern at this point. Holiday cannot be relied upon to be the player he was a few years ago. Not anymore. I do think Jrue Holiday is a better talent than Isaiah but that is not worth anything if Jrue cannot stay healthy. Asik has declined and is no longer starter material. He is now a backup quality center who is signed to too long a contract. Ryan Anderson is too weak a defender / rebounder to be a starting PF. Another bench player.

Re: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)
« Reply #71 on: January 12, 2016, 02:48:51 AM »

Offline LarBrd33

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The LarBrd obsession runs as deep as ever. You guys are all very good posters in your own right -- no need to trump or "one up" him in order to be recognized as such.

I don't think it's obsessive for reasonable people to be driven insane by unreasonable arguments being delivered over and over again with such bombast and aplomb.
That's EXACTLY how I feel when I read the groupthink biased opinions on this forum echoed by multiple people.  Lol.


Re: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)
« Reply #72 on: January 12, 2016, 02:55:04 AM »

Offline LarBrd33

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Bad trade for Boston. Good for NOP.

I like Jrue Holiday but his health is too big a concern at this point. Holiday cannot be relied upon to be the player he was a few years ago. Not anymore. I do think Jrue Holiday is a better talent than Isaiah but that is not worth anything if Jrue cannot stay healthy. Asik has declined and is no longer starter material. He is now a backup quality center who is signed to too long a contract. Ryan Anderson is too weak a defender / rebounder to be a starting PF. Another bench player.
People really like Ryan Anderson as a fit on this team.

Curious... would you do Jrue Holiday and Ryan Anderson for Marcus Smart and David Lee's expiring? 

http://espn.go.com/nba/tradeMachine?tradeId=hm4rhsz

You'd be able to start Jrue at PG next to Bradley... he's got some decent size.   Bring Thomas off the bench. 

Re: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)
« Reply #73 on: January 12, 2016, 03:03:37 AM »

Offline Who

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Bad trade for Boston. Good for NOP.

I like Jrue Holiday but his health is too big a concern at this point. Holiday cannot be relied upon to be the player he was a few years ago. Not anymore. I do think Jrue Holiday is a better talent than Isaiah but that is not worth anything if Jrue cannot stay healthy. Asik has declined and is no longer starter material. He is now a backup quality center who is signed to too long a contract. Ryan Anderson is too weak a defender / rebounder to be a starting PF. Another bench player.
People really like Ryan Anderson as a fit on this team.

Curious... would you do Jrue Holiday and Ryan Anderson for Marcus Smart and David Lee's expiring? 

http://espn.go.com/nba/tradeMachine?tradeId=hm4rhsz

You'd be able to start Jrue at PG next to Bradley... he's got some decent size.   Bring Thomas off the bench.

No, no, no.

I rate Smart over Isaiah as a long term asset. I still think Smart is a valuable long term piece.

I am not giving up anything of value for Jrue Holiday with his health the way it has been over the last few years. Also, I am not high on Ryan Anderson. I think R.Anderson is an over-rated player due to his inability to defend & rebound his position. I don't think R.Anderson is worth trading for. Celtics have comparable options at PF already.

A late first is about as much as I would give up for Jrue Holiday. I don't like saying that because I have always been a big fan of his but health is too much of a problem. I am not taking that gamble (on his health) at this point (in the rebuild).

Re: Which team says no? (Pelicans trade idea)
« Reply #74 on: January 12, 2016, 08:32:44 AM »

Offline BudweiserCeltic

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Celtics hang-up the phone immediately.

Too much dead weight coming in, too much injury concerns, downgrades on expiring assets and tradeable  commodities, decrease in free-agency buying power, decrease in long-term assets, and huge injury concerns.

So, not a good trade for Boston.