Posted by kmasonbx on 10/6/2011 2:44:00 PM (view original):
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The jump hook by Robert Shutts is blocked by Howard Roth |
In of itself it doesn't seem like too big of a deal but when you consider Robert Shutts is 7'2 with 98 athleticism and Roth is 6'8 with 92ath and you think about how hard jump hooks are to block to begin with, a guy at a 6 inch height disadvantage and a slightly worse athlete probably shouldn't be able to block a jump hook. This is the equivalent to Dwyane Wade blocking a jump hook from Dwight Howard.
There are other situations where I think height+weight should be a multiplier. In this same situation if Roth was defending Shutts 1 on1 he should do a decent jump because of his 92ath/55sp/99D/A IQ to Shutts' 98ath/62sp/99lp/69per/54bh/A- IQ. Purelly off of ath/sp/D/IQ Roth is a great guy to guard Shutts but that doesn't consider that he's giving away 6 inches in height and 44 pounds in weight. Even being a great athlete and having great defensive fundamentals there is just no way you can make up the difference of the physical edge.
But it is NOT the same at all.
A person's height and weight are taken into account in the "generation" of the numbers.
They are already a multiplier.
A guy who is 7'2" is getting a better rebounding score than a guy who is 5'10". If their "natural ability" to rebound is the same, then the 7'2" guy gets a higher rating precisely because he is 7'2" already. Same thing for shot blocking, etc.
To take the same thing into account twice is not going to help anything, IMHO.
So, they could take it out of the initial numbers generation and add it in later as a multiplier ... in which case, you would then need to add it in yourself to see it ... or they can leave it like it is.
This means, for example, if a 5'10" guy has a 99 for rebounding, then his "natural ability" to rebound is MUCH GREATER than a 7"2' guy who has the same 99 rebounding rating. The 5'10" guy is ALWAYS in the correct rebounding position, can read the ball off the glass much better than most, has an uncanny ability to know where the rebound is going, etc. The 7'2" is not as good in many of those skills ... but he is 7'2" ... so that fact alone allows him to many times out rebound guys who are much better with their "natural rebounding" ability.
10/8/2011 7:35 AM (edited)