bolded part = exactly
Not at all. It has nothing to do with flash vs. efffectiveness - it has everything to do with skill vs. no skill.
Which is entirely subjective...because at the end of the day the most points wins a game, not the most skill.
The problem with looking at field goal percentage is that it ends up ignoring the massive difference between players who can create offense, and those who can just pick up the trash.
2pts = 2pts
a pretty 2pts is worth the exact same amount as an ugly 2pts...and a player who picks up 20 ugly points a night is a better offensive contributor than a player who picks up 17 pretty points a night
There are many players who cannot create shots, and cannot even shoot the ball, and therefore do not shoot the ball....efficiency numbers literally end up claiming that unskilled offensive players who don't even try to shoot the ball are better offensively than skill players who do.
It's a basketball game, not a skills competition douche bag
Score more points than you let your opposition score. That's the entire point of the game. There are no style points awarded.
This is especially detrimental when evaluating a "centre" with incredible range and skill like Bargnani.
All it boils down to is how monstrously you overvalue this subjective measure of "skill", specifically at the centre position.
Rafer Alston in his youth was as skilled a point guard as their was in the world...period. He used to **** NBA point guards up at Ruckers every summer...good NBA point guards, and a lot of guys would skip Ruckers and just duck playing him to avoid getting hurt.
It took him years to get into the NBA though, despite having a higher "skill" level than almost every PG in the show.
Effectiveness is all that matters, not how pretty you look doing it.
And, unfortunately, rebounds and blocks do not equal defense.
They're large components of defence.
They, are in fact, entirely secondary to defense, although admittedly they are important in their own right.
Without strong defensive habits, you don't become a strong defensive rebounder or shot blocker. Defensive rebounding specifically is based on the principle of staying between your check and the rim at all times. It shows strong defensive positioning, which is a large component of team defence.
I think you're taking "man on man" defence to be the meaning of the word "defence" when there is much more to it than that.