Nice post!!...more
posted 05/09/12 at 7:48am
on Brief chat with Olympian and Trailblazer, Misty May-Treanor
posted by Swish Appeal
Tuesday, May 1, 2012 at 11:49am EDT
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Over the weekend I posted a look at each team's training camp rosters by SPI player styles as a framework for getting a sense of how both Eastern and Western Conference teams are structured and what their potential needs are.
Part of that process involved making WNBA style projections for rookies coming from NCAA basketball based on college statistics. The way those projections were made was by player similarity on the SPI player styles spectrum: looking at a draft prospect's college tendencies, finding past NCAA Division I prospects with similar tendencies, and then looking at what type of player those past players became in the WNBA. The next step, of course, is looking at how successful a player became, but first just a look at how those similarity ratings were constructed.
First, no two players are ever exactly alike - there are times when a stylistic resemblance might exist between two players but doesn't quite coincide with a similarity in production. This is when analysts resort to saying someone is a "poor man's" so-and-so.
The Poor Man's Theologian blog might describe this phenomenon best as a way to acknowledge the loftiness of the analogous player rather than saying one thing is an "inferior" product. At other times, it really is a matter of deeming the subject of comparison as inferior to the object.
Even if you don’t like Starbucks, you certainly understand that the caffeinated swill you pick up at the gas station is indeed "a poor man’s Starbucks.
These player comparisons around NBA draft time can get weird when you start making lofty claims about a player being, say, a poor man's Larry Bird or a poor man's Magic Johnson, in that it's difficult to live up to even that limited standard. Then there are times when you might wonder how successful a poor man's Jamal Crawford, for example, might be.
But sometimes, a lofty comparison works well when a defining feature of a player's game is analogous to that of another player; for example, comparing Kenneth Faried to a "poor man's" Dennis Rodman prior to the 2011 NBA Draft - suggesting that Faried might fill a similar rebounding role on the court as Rodman did - makes sense to describe the type of immediate contribution he'd make, without necessarily saying he'll become a Hall of Famer.
Even if some of the comparisons that end up being bandied about on draft day end up being ridiculous, the human mind has a natural tendency to make associations in this manner and so it's often easiest to understand what a draft-worthy college player might contribute at the next level by way of these associations.
That's sort of the thinking underlying these similarity ratings that I put together before the 2012 WNBA Draft and am sharing now.
Similarity ratings: Style, not quality
Sometimes it's helpful to figure out not only how productive a player might be, but also how well the combination of skills they displayed in college might transfer to the pros.
To carry out this task, I used the same SPI player style ratings that I've used in the past as follows:
What these similarities do is give us a sense of how similar styles of college play have transferred to the WNBA in the past, not provide a conclusive prediction about how productive a player might become at the next level; we can combine style and quality (e.g. shooting efficiency, offensive rebound rates, passing or steal numbers depending on position) to figure out whether a player might have a future as a rotation player, reserve, starter, or watching the games at home.
Originally, I was going to use this framework to do a more traditional "draft grades" post or at least look at which teams might have gotten the most value out of their picks. But without going into a lengthy explanation about why I chose not to do that, I decided to wait and see which players made rosters and then to fold the analysis of rookies into team previews; having an idea of how they fit within the structure of a roster is arguably more important than whether a) they'll succeed and b) a team drafted "well".
In the meantime, I'll be posting SPI similarity profiles of the following seven rookies during the course of WNBA training camp as examples of how this whole thing works:
LaSondra Barrett, LSU
Kelley Cain, Tennessee
Courtney Hurt, VCU
Glory Johnson, Tennessee
Natalie Novosel, Notre Dame
Riquna Williams, Miami
Julie Wojta, Wisconsin-Green Bay
All seven of these players had direct matches based on SPI style similarity in one of the previous four WNBA drafts and stood out either in response to other evaluations I've heard about them or because there's some measure of uncertainty about how much they might contribute as rookies.
Some might have obvious comparisons; some, not so much.
In the meantime, I'd love to hear your impressions about those particular players and who you think they might compare well to. Feel free to leave your thoughts in the comments.
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