Posted by seble on 8/25/2010 8:54:00 AM (view original):
The # percentages are normalized, which means they're adjusted based on the league average for that season. That helps some of the old guys, but it's not going to suddenly make a 40% shooter a 55% shooter. For example, 51-52 Al McGuire gets a boost from 47.3% actual 2 point percentage to 49.7% normalized 2 point percentage. The league average that season was 37.3%.
I don't understand the logic of this...
If a guy shot 125% better than the league average, how come you're only increasing him a couple of points? If your normalization point is 45%, which again, it should be around that, he should be shooting 57%!
That's where the issue lies... you say you're "normalizing" the older players, but you aren't. You're nerfing their rebounds but not boosting their fg% enough. If someone shoots 20% better than the league average, then their fg%# should be 20% better than the normalization point (across all eras - you know, the reason for normalization?). By the same token, someone like Charles Barkley, who's 133% fg+ should be against that same number. I've used guys from both eras. There's no way you're using the same number for 87-88 Charles Barkley and 59-60 Elgin Baylor.
If you say you are, you're either lying or didn't do something right, because it's broken.
So, again - what is the normalization point? My guess would be that you'd take the last five seasons (maybe ten) and take a league average over that span.
The league average for the last five years:
09-10 - .461
08-09 - .459
07-08 - .457
06-07 - .458
05-06 - .454
So, as you can see, your normalization fails.
The ultimate way would be to take the average fg% for the entire history of the nba and normalize to that... but since most people are more familiar with the modern game, I suggest the past five years. You'll still see guys like Barkley & McHale's fg% go down, while guys like Baylor & Cousy's go up.