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Cal Basketball

My Apologies, Mark Fox

March 24, 2020
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Let me start by saying, I was never a critic — publicly or privately — about Cal Athletic Director Jim Knowlton’s hiring of Mark Fox. The main reason? It was a luke-warm hire. And that’s not meant to be a critique of Knowlton or Fox. There just isn’t much else to feel for a coach that went to the NCAA Tournament twice in nine seasons at the University of Georgia and never won a game in said tournament. Fox had also been out of the job for a year when Cal came calling.

And for that lack of confidence or excitement, I officially apologize to Coach Fox.

Now let’s not get ahead of ourselves. A 14-18 season is nothing to be excited about. But let’s also not forget where Cal had been — a combined 16-47 over the previous two seasons including 5-31 in the Pac-12. Even the most optimistic fans probably didn’t predict much of an improvement considering the hodge-podge roster Fox slung together after many transfers. But Fox has done exactly what you hope a veteran coach would do immediately to a program that hit rock-bottom — he raised the floor in his own way. 

I didn’t think Cal would win much more than eight to 10 games this year and definitely not seven wins in a Pac-12 conference filled with more athletic and talented rosters than Cal’s. And for that lack of confidence in Fox, I again apologize. Despite some heinous losses in conference play, Fox had his guys ready to go the next game. Even after getting swept by a combined 52 points in the state of Oregon, Cal came out in the opening round of the Pac-12 Tournament and planted an uppercut on Stanford’s dwindling NCAA Tournament hopes.

Yes, there are still massive improvements to make. Cal fans expect to be in the NCAA Tournament year-after-year. Yes, some of the questions surrounding Fox (like strong recruiting and offense) haven’t been answered. 

But after Year One of the Fox coaching regime, it’s clear his coaching philosophies have been instilled on the young roster. Let’s take a look at what the data tells us.

2019 Offense versus 2020 Offense

Offensive Category 2019 2020 Difference
Adj. Efficiency 103.5 (192) 101.5 (195) -2.0
Adj. Tempo 66.6 (234) 65.2 (315) -1.4
Avg. Poss. Length 18.6 (298) 19.4 (334) 0.8
Effective FG% 48.6% (272) 46.9% (295) -1.7%
Turnover % 16.4% (48) 19.2% (271) 2.80%
Off. Rebound % 23.3% (317) 25.1% (271) 1.80%
FTA/FGA 34.8 (126) 36.0 (83) 1.2
3P% 35.0% (140) 33.5% (161) -1.50%
2P% 46.5% (301) 45.5% (320) -1.00%
FT% 72.3% (120) 73.8% (85) 1.50%
Block % 8.7% (127) 9.6% (251) 0.90%
Steal % 7.2% (20) 7.4% (24) 0.20%
Non-Stl TO% 9.2% (132) 11.9% (322) 2.70%
3PA/FGA 34.1 (294) 28.4 (339) -5.7
A/FGM 45.7 (314) 41.5 (345) -4.2
3-Pointers (Pt. Dist.) 29.3% (250) 23.7% (318) -5.60%
2-Pointers (Pt. Dist.) 50.2% (145) 54.2% (71) 4.00%
Free-Throws (Pt. Dist.) 20.6% (79) 22.1% (37) 1.50%

First, the bad. Cal’s offense actually digressed slightly this year compared to last year, according to KenPom’s metrics. The adjusted offensive efficiency slipped two full points from 103.5 to 101.5, meaning in 100 possessions, Cal would score 101.5 points. For the third straight year, Cal had the least efficient offense in the Pac-12.

Cal slowed the pace — but not by much at just a little over a possession per game. It shot almost two percentage points worse in effective field goals and turned it over almost three percentage points more per game. The Bears did get to the free-throw line at a slightly higher rate and made a higher percentage of shots once it got there.

But the main issue was one that most fans could see — Cal’s only consistent scoring threat was sophomore wing Matt Bradley. Other players had their moments. Andre Kelly had a few solid games and overall progressed throughout the year. Paris Austin threw together a strong second-half to his senior campaign. Kareem South was good early in the season. And Grant Anticevich had some solid games.

None of them were consistent enough, however, for opponents to take focus away from Bradley. To take a step forward next season, Fox needs to either find an impact scorer in the transfer market or a couple of players on the current roster are going to have to take some steps forward. It could happen. Anticevich isn’t the quickest or most athletic, but he can knock down shots. Kelly could continue to improve. A healthy Kuany Kuany could also help.

The other glaring hole that should be addressed is who backs up Joel Brown at the lead guard position. Fox offered junior college transfer Malik Zachery last week. That could be an option. But it’s something to monitor once recruiting picks back up (assuming it does) after coronavirus restrictions are lifted.

UGA Offensive Averages versus 2020 Cal Offensive Averages

Year AdjT AdjO eFG% TO% OR% FTR 2P% 3P% FT% 3PA% A% APL
2020 Cal Avg. 65.2 101.5 46.90% 19.20% 25.10% 36.0 45.50% 33.50% 73.80% 28.40% 41.50% 19.4
UGA Average 64.0 107.5 48.09% 19.90% 32.94% 41.8 46.71% 34.13% 70.40% 30.34% 53.32% 18.9

The good news is, Cal's offense should improve as a system. In his nine seasons at Georgia, Fox teams averaged an adjusted offensive efficiency of 107.5. Looking at the two charts above, you can see the offense is slowly moving towards the Fox system of getting to the foul line and crashing the offensive glass. Both of those categories ticked up compared to 2019 but both have a ways to go to meet the averages Fox teams maintained at Georgia.

When Fox teams were at their best at Georgia, they were getting to the foul line at very high rates (47.7 in 2015 and 54.1 in 2014). 

2019 Cal Defense versus 2020 Cal Defense

Defensive Category 2019 2020 Difference
Adj. Efficiency 110.3 (286) 100.4 (130) -9.9
Adj. Tempo 66.6 (234) 65.2 (315) -1.4
Avg. Poss. Length 16.8 (44) 17.5 (184) 0.07
Effective FG% 56.9% (348) 49.9% (200) -7.00%
Turnover % 20.5% (62) 17.3% (275) -3.20%
Off. Rebound % 31.4% (289) 26.3% (102) -5.10%
FTA/FGA 36.1 (260) 37.0 (278) 0.9
3P% 38.1% (331) 36.3% (310) -1.80%
2P% 56.7% (344) 47.0% (81) -9.70%
FT% 71.8% (246) 73.6% (309) 1.80%
Block % 10.0% (141) 7.4% (242) -2.60%
Steal % 10.7% (42) 6.1% (349) -4.60%
Non-Stl TO% 9.8% (149) 11.2% (56) 1.40%
3PA/FGA 41.8 (281) 38.0 (190) -3.8
A/FGM 55.3 (271) 51.7 (192) -3.6
3-Pointers (Pt. Dist.) 34.2% (98) 32.6% (109) -1.60%
2-Pointers (Pt. Dist.) 47.3% (262) 46.0% (309) -1.30%
Free-Throws (Pt. Dist.) 18.6% (175) 21.4% (67) 2.80%

Here’s where the name of this article really applies. Cal’s offense was bad last year. And I didn’t expect it to improve much. But it absolutely did. And Fox gets credit for that. It wouldn’t have happened without player buy-in. But player buy-in doesn’t happen without some coaching. In one season, Cal’s adjusted defensive efficiency went from 110.3 to 100.4. Opponents were averaging 10 points less per 100 possessions. 

Last season, Cal was good at forcing turnovers and not good at basically everything else. This season Cal wasn’t forcing turnovers at the same rate, but they were creating tougher shots for opponents — especially inside the three-point arc, where teams shot almost 10% worse than they did against the Bears last season.

The perimeter was a big issue early but stabilized. But the pack-line defense Fox instilled worked. Cal’s best games were ones when it bogged down other teams and made the game a rock fight. That comes from solid interior defense.

UGA Average Defenses versus 2020 Cal Average Defense

Year AdjD eFG% TO% OR% FTR 2P% 3P% Blk% 3PA% A% APL 2FP%
2020 Cal Avg. 100.4 49.90% 17.30% 26.30% 37.0 47.00% 36.30% 7.40% 38.00% 51.70% 17.5 22.90%
UGA Average 97.3 46.07% 16.99% 29.54% 36.3 44.39% 32.70% 12.33% 35.63% 46.42% 17.8 7.10%

There are also some improvements to be made on defense to hit Fox's Georgia averages. In nine seasons at Georgia, the Bulldogs averages an adjusted defensive efficiency rate of 97.3 — about three points better than this year’s Bears squad. Fox’s last team at Georgia was probably his best defensively. That year the Bulldogs were very bad at forcing teams into turnovers but incredibly good at making them miss. That’s something that will likely continue to be a trend in Fox-coached teams.

Cal’s improvements on defense were what helped this team over-achieve. It was a very flawed offensive team. But when it played solid defense, the Bears could keep themselves close. I didn’t expect Fox to get that sort of buy-in this quickly. And I didn’t expect 14 wins. I didn’t expect Cal to finish ahead of Mike Hopkins and the Washington Huskies or Kyle Smith and the Washington State Cougars — both of which are coaches I think many Cal fans (myself included) would’ve picked over Fox. And for all of that, once again, my apologies, Mark Fox.

Discussion from...

My Apologies, Mark Fox

59,747 Views | 168 Replies | Last: 4 yr ago by HoopDreams
Jeff82
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OaktownBear said:

Jeff82 said:

socaltownie said:

Jeff82 said:

The brother I never knew.


And my "solution" is even a bit tighter - it is that Cal should be positioned - and cal coaches evaluated - on their ability to recruit the one and dones (or 2 and dones) from NorCal that can deal with the academics at Cal. Losing them, consistently, is grounds for a talk with the AD unless the W-Ls are showing otherwise.

Again, I return to 2 recent players:
There is no way Aaron Gordon should have gone to Zona and his decision to do so should have caused serious post-mortum discussions at the university
There is also no way that Cal should not have found a way to bury the hatchet with the Payton family. One wonder if we had whether GPJ would have sniffed Cal after his stint at CC.

The fact that we do NOT consistently retain bay area and sacto talent seems like the first step toward rebuilding the program. And yes - that means being an attractive location to kids that can make money at the show and may not be at the institution for more than a season or 2.

SCT, you may be right here, but you also can't just say that player X "should have gone to Cal," without evaluating the circumstances. I'll refer back to my comment in the other thread regarding Jaylen Brown, who clearly came to Cal for his year because he wanted a year of intellectual experience, and wasn't going to spend his free time in the gym developing his jumper. By the same token, the fact that Gordon went to U of A strongly suggests that he was only going to college to play basketball, not to go to class at all. And as much as I admire Jason Kidd as a player, my understanding is that he also dumped on academics in year 2, when he knew he was leaving regardless. Brown has been a great ambassador for the program, and I hope we get more kids like him, who are talented and want a college experience. But as I said in the other thread, you have to take kids for the skill levels and desire they bring with them, and not criticize that they're not gym rats.
Gordon has a brother who works at Google and has CONSISTENTLY spoken about his desire to get into tech/VC when his playing days are over. I only use him as an example. And I would note - we beat Zona for Rabb once we had a coach (Martin) that put in what it takes (and yes, it is humiliating) to recruit 18 year olds that are placed on a pedestal (look at Haase writing a letter a day for a year)
Sorry, don't buy it. He did go to an academic high school, but if he was really that concerned about his post-hoop prospects, he would not have gone to Arizona. To compare, Brown's logic was that he was going high in the draft, no matter where he went to school, so he might as well go somewhere where he would enjoy it. Gordon also could have done that. Also, by your implied logic, we should never have had Monty, because he didn't like recruiting. Well, it's pure speculation whether a coach other than Monty, who was a superior recruiter would have been more successful over his tenure. You guys are both making a binary argument--only talent matters versus only coaching matters. The reality is, we've never had both at the same time. All the coaches were either recruiters who couldn't coach (Padgett, Braun, arguably Martin, also Campanelli, who recruited Lamond Murray and Jason Kidd, then couldn't figure out how to get along with them), coaches who couldn't recruit (Monty), or couldn't do either (Edwards, Kuchen, Jones). I don't which category Bozeman goes in, because he got us on probation and wrecked his career cheating to a player (Jelani Gardner) who had a mediocre college career.
You may not realize this but a lot of people go to University of Arizona and actually get jobs. What do you think makes a bigger impact on Gordon's life, economically and otherwise, his basketball training or his academic training? Gordon had plenty of opportunity to engage in intellectual curiosity at Arizona and his post basketball life is probably not different based on being at UA instead of Cal vs. what he did with his time in college. I have no idea whether Gordon is inclined toward studies or not, but choosing Arizona as a student who plays basketball and has a significant opportunity at a long career whether in the NBA or overseas is does not mean they aren't concerned with academics. And yes, basically any basketball player who has a chance at the NBA cares more about what a school can provide them in terms of basketball rather than academics, but it doesn't mean they don't care about academics.
Yes, U of A graduates get jobs. Two of them were my sister and my brother-in-law. They met there. It's fine that he went to Arizona. But you're implication is that there is something magical that the Monty could have said to Gordon to convince him to go to Cal instead. I don't think so. I also would have rather had the Monty at Stanford, but he has also acknowledged that after a certain point, he didn't have to do much recruiting to get players there, they recruited themselves. He thought it would be the same at Cal, but it wasn't, partly I think because Cal doesn't coddle students in general the same way Stanford does. You want Monty to have been different, and Cal to be different. I just don't expect that to happen, so my response, as I told you elsewhere, is to lower my expectations, and my level of program support. I hope that Fox or some future coach will catch lightning in a bottle, and we'll somehow get on a different path. But that's probably what is is, lightning in a bottle
BearlyCareAnymore
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IssyBear said:

OaktownBear said:

IssyBear said:

On the one-and-done issue, the Seattle Times had an interesting article on the subject today. Here is the link"

https://www.seattletimes.com/sports/uw-husky-basketball/one-and-none-why-washington-has-struggled-to-make-the-ncaa-tournament-with-star-freshmen/?

They looked at the question nationwide and noted the following:

"The allure of one-and-done players remains because the prevailing theory seems to be that teams need to have them to be successful. But is that true? We tested the theory by looking at every one-and-done player who has been taken in the first round of the NBA draft since the start of 2007 and examined how those players' college teams did. We also examined the 52 teams that have been in the Final Four in that time, researching the makeup of those teams by looking at what year in school the top five scorers were. What the data shows is that in most cases, experience trumps youth. The vast majority of teams (35 of 52) who made it to the Final Four were experienced teams (more than half their top scorers being upperclassmen)."

There have been 121 one-and-done players selected in the first round of the NBA draft starting in 2007. Twenty-five of them (including the five Huskies) never reached the NCAA tournament, and another 42 never reached the Sweet 16.

Just eight teams have gone to a Final Four with a one-and-done player, and only Kentucky has gotten that far more than once. Only two teams with a one-and-done starter have won an NCAA title, Kentucky in 2012 and Duke in 2015.

Six times in the past 10 years, Kentucky has failed to reach the Final Four when it had multiple one-and-done first-round picks. In 2014, the Wildcats had four of them and were still stopped short.

Why? Because experience matters. There have been 52 teams in the Final Four in the past 13 years. With the exception of four Kentucky teams and the 2015 Duke team, almost all have something in common: a lot of experience among their top players."

Don MacLean noted the following:

"Most of these one-and-dones just dominate in high school with their physical tools and don't really learn how to play and don't really need to learn how to play because they are just so physically dominant. But when you get to the college level, now you have to understand defensive schemes, screen-roll coverage and all kinds of stuff you never had to deal with. So, does it happen for you in 30 games before you get to the NCAA tournament? For some it probably does and some it probably doesn't."





It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

Well, it is equally stupid to say there are 121 one and done players selected in the first round over 13 years, or less than 10 per year, some being on the same team so let's say 9 teams per year, and boy howdy they went to the final four a lot fewer times overall than the teams that were lead by upperclassmen in scoring. I don't know where to find stats on that without hours of research, but I'd bet we are talking 200+ teams a year that fall into that category. I don't know why everyone who wants to prove "stars don't matter" make this same stupid argument of using overall numbers instead of rate.

In the past 13 NBA seasons, teams with Lebron James have won the championship 3 times. Teams without Lebron James have won the championship 10 times. Clearly teams without Lebron James are better. Why sign Lebron James?

Adding to this. Let me state their numbers differently. If instead of saying 25 of the 121 didn't make the tournament and 42 didn't make the Sweet Sixteen, I said, 96 of 121 made the tournament and 54 of 121 made the Sweet Sixteen, now what do you think?

So if you don't have a one and done, your odds are less than 1 in 5 of making the tournament. If you have a one and done, your odds are 80%. If you don't have a one and done, your odds are 1 in 29 of getting to the Sweet Sixteen. If you have one it is 45%.

Which do you think is better?
Well, let's look at our only one-and-done during this period. How did Jaylen Brown, who is a very special NBA player, perform when he was at Cal? He averaged 28 minutes/game. Why? He was in foul trouble a lot of the time. He had a field goal % of .431. He had a 3 pt. % of .294. He had a free throw % of .654. And, he lead the team in fouls at 108 and in turnovers at 105. It was obvious to all that he was the most talented player on the the team, but he made a lot of mistakes as a freshmen. A junior or senior Jayen Brown would have been all-world, but . . .
Brown was All Pac12 first team. Do you want me to start listing all the players who Cal has recruited over the last 10 years who are/were not as good as Freshman Brown? I'll start with being million times better than every guy on the current team not named Bradley. You know they all cost the same right?

This is so hilarious. Every coach in Cal history would have signed Kidd, Brown, Rabb, Powe, or Shareef. Every one.
oskidunker
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Brown was not very good the year he was here. Bull in a china shop. No coaching. No idea how to play under Pac12 rules. Yeah we went 18-0 at home . That was nice.
BearlyCareAnymore
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Jeff82 said:

OaktownBear said:

Jeff82 said:

socaltownie said:

Jeff82 said:

The brother I never knew.


And my "solution" is even a bit tighter - it is that Cal should be positioned - and cal coaches evaluated - on their ability to recruit the one and dones (or 2 and dones) from NorCal that can deal with the academics at Cal. Losing them, consistently, is grounds for a talk with the AD unless the W-Ls are showing otherwise.

Again, I return to 2 recent players:
There is no way Aaron Gordon should have gone to Zona and his decision to do so should have caused serious post-mortum discussions at the university
There is also no way that Cal should not have found a way to bury the hatchet with the Payton family. One wonder if we had whether GPJ would have sniffed Cal after his stint at CC.

The fact that we do NOT consistently retain bay area and sacto talent seems like the first step toward rebuilding the program. And yes - that means being an attractive location to kids that can make money at the show and may not be at the institution for more than a season or 2.

SCT, you may be right here, but you also can't just say that player X "should have gone to Cal," without evaluating the circumstances. I'll refer back to my comment in the other thread regarding Jaylen Brown, who clearly came to Cal for his year because he wanted a year of intellectual experience, and wasn't going to spend his free time in the gym developing his jumper. By the same token, the fact that Gordon went to U of A strongly suggests that he was only going to college to play basketball, not to go to class at all. And as much as I admire Jason Kidd as a player, my understanding is that he also dumped on academics in year 2, when he knew he was leaving regardless. Brown has been a great ambassador for the program, and I hope we get more kids like him, who are talented and want a college experience. But as I said in the other thread, you have to take kids for the skill levels and desire they bring with them, and not criticize that they're not gym rats.
Gordon has a brother who works at Google and has CONSISTENTLY spoken about his desire to get into tech/VC when his playing days are over. I only use him as an example. And I would note - we beat Zona for Rabb once we had a coach (Martin) that put in what it takes (and yes, it is humiliating) to recruit 18 year olds that are placed on a pedestal (look at Haase writing a letter a day for a year)
Sorry, don't buy it. He did go to an academic high school, but if he was really that concerned about his post-hoop prospects, he would not have gone to Arizona. To compare, Brown's logic was that he was going high in the draft, no matter where he went to school, so he might as well go somewhere where he would enjoy it. Gordon also could have done that. Also, by your implied logic, we should never have had Monty, because he didn't like recruiting. Well, it's pure speculation whether a coach other than Monty, who was a superior recruiter would have been more successful over his tenure. You guys are both making a binary argument--only talent matters versus only coaching matters. The reality is, we've never had both at the same time. All the coaches were either recruiters who couldn't coach (Padgett, Braun, arguably Martin, also Campanelli, who recruited Lamond Murray and Jason Kidd, then couldn't figure out how to get along with them), coaches who couldn't recruit (Monty), or couldn't do either (Edwards, Kuchen, Jones). I don't which category Bozeman goes in, because he got us on probation and wrecked his career cheating to a player (Jelani Gardner) who had a mediocre college career.
You may not realize this but a lot of people go to University of Arizona and actually get jobs. What do you think makes a bigger impact on Gordon's life, economically and otherwise, his basketball training or his academic training? Gordon had plenty of opportunity to engage in intellectual curiosity at Arizona and his post basketball life is probably not different based on being at UA instead of Cal vs. what he did with his time in college. I have no idea whether Gordon is inclined toward studies or not, but choosing Arizona as a student who plays basketball and has a significant opportunity at a long career whether in the NBA or overseas is does not mean they aren't concerned with academics. And yes, basically any basketball player who has a chance at the NBA cares more about what a school can provide them in terms of basketball rather than academics, but it doesn't mean they don't care about academics.
Yes, U of A graduates get jobs. Two of them were my sister and my brother-in-law. They met there. It's fine that he went to Arizona. But you're implication is that there is something magical that the Monty could have said to Gordon to convince him to go to Cal instead. I don't think so. I also would have rather had the Monty at Stanford, but he has also acknowledged that after a certain point, he didn't have to do much recruiting to get players there, they recruited themselves. He thought it would be the same at Cal, but it wasn't, partly I think because Cal doesn't coddle students in general the same way Stanford does. You want Monty to have been different, and Cal to be different. I just don't expect that to happen, so my response, as I told you elsewhere, is to lower my expectations, and my level of program support. I hope that Fox or some future coach will catch lightning in a bottle, and we'll somehow get on a different path. But that's probably what is is, lightning in a bottle
1. Don't confuse me with socaltownie. I did not say that Monty should have gotten Gordon. I said I don't know. It is well known he didn't like Monty, but who knows if he would have gone to Cal anyway. I am purely arguing here that you are being unfair to Gordon saying that going to Arizona means he didn't care about academics.

2. Since you are bringing up the other points, I also said, no you don't expect to get every guy. It would not have concerned me that Monty did not get Gordon. It would have concerned me that he went 0-fer on Gordon, Rabb and Lee. He did have something magical to say to bring Rabb and Lee to Cal. It was "I'm retiring". Lee's family response to Monty is legendary. It was well known Rabb wouldn't play for Monty. They both ended up at Cal after Monty left. As I said, at this point, given the success Monty did have at Cal and comparing it to everything else Cal has done, unlike socaltownie, I said I'd probably take him back knowing his floor, but accepting his ceiling. But in some ways it is like watching Brown's freshman season. Yeah, it's really good, but you can see how great it could be. Monty could have been great at Cal if he wasn't monumentally bad at selling himself to recruits and it is hard to justify why he couldn't suck it up and do that. Rabb was a really good kid. He wasn't a guy with a posse and a lot of trouble hanging around him. He wanted to go to Cal. He is exactly the kind of guy we need to get. Why Monty couldn't figure out how to recruit him is extremely confounding. Frankly it seemed like Rabb would have gone to Cal if the coach were anyone but Monty.
BearlyCareAnymore
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oskidunker said:

Brown was not very good the year he was here. Bull in a china shop. No coaching. No idea how to play under Pac12 rules. Yeah we went 18-0 at home . That was nice.
So he was All Pac12 why?

Was he not very good or not as good as you'd hoped he would be? There is a difference. Would you look at any guy on the current team averaging 14.5/5.5 a night and describe them as "not very good"?
IssyBear
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OaktownBear said:

IssyBear said:

OaktownBear said:

IssyBear said:

On the one-and-done issue, the Seattle Times had an interesting article on the subject today. Here is the link"

https://www.seattletimes.com/sports/uw-husky-basketball/one-and-none-why-washington-has-struggled-to-make-the-ncaa-tournament-with-star-freshmen/?

They looked at the question nationwide and noted the following:

"The allure of one-and-done players remains because the prevailing theory seems to be that teams need to have them to be successful. But is that true? We tested the theory by looking at every one-and-done player who has been taken in the first round of the NBA draft since the start of 2007 and examined how those players' college teams did. We also examined the 52 teams that have been in the Final Four in that time, researching the makeup of those teams by looking at what year in school the top five scorers were. What the data shows is that in most cases, experience trumps youth. The vast majority of teams (35 of 52) who made it to the Final Four were experienced teams (more than half their top scorers being upperclassmen)."

There have been 121 one-and-done players selected in the first round of the NBA draft starting in 2007. Twenty-five of them (including the five Huskies) never reached the NCAA tournament, and another 42 never reached the Sweet 16.

Just eight teams have gone to a Final Four with a one-and-done player, and only Kentucky has gotten that far more than once. Only two teams with a one-and-done starter have won an NCAA title, Kentucky in 2012 and Duke in 2015.

Six times in the past 10 years, Kentucky has failed to reach the Final Four when it had multiple one-and-done first-round picks. In 2014, the Wildcats had four of them and were still stopped short.

Why? Because experience matters. There have been 52 teams in the Final Four in the past 13 years. With the exception of four Kentucky teams and the 2015 Duke team, almost all have something in common: a lot of experience among their top players."

Don MacLean noted the following:

"Most of these one-and-dones just dominate in high school with their physical tools and don't really learn how to play and don't really need to learn how to play because they are just so physically dominant. But when you get to the college level, now you have to understand defensive schemes, screen-roll coverage and all kinds of stuff you never had to deal with. So, does it happen for you in 30 games before you get to the NCAA tournament? For some it probably does and some it probably doesn't."





It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

Well, it is equally stupid to say there are 121 one and done players selected in the first round over 13 years, or less than 10 per year, some being on the same team so let's say 9 teams per year, and boy howdy they went to the final four a lot fewer times overall than the teams that were lead by upperclassmen in scoring. I don't know where to find stats on that without hours of research, but I'd bet we are talking 200+ teams a year that fall into that category. I don't know why everyone who wants to prove "stars don't matter" make this same stupid argument of using overall numbers instead of rate.

In the past 13 NBA seasons, teams with Lebron James have won the championship 3 times. Teams without Lebron James have won the championship 10 times. Clearly teams without Lebron James are better. Why sign Lebron James?

Adding to this. Let me state their numbers differently. If instead of saying 25 of the 121 didn't make the tournament and 42 didn't make the Sweet Sixteen, I said, 96 of 121 made the tournament and 54 of 121 made the Sweet Sixteen, now what do you think?

So if you don't have a one and done, your odds are less than 1 in 5 of making the tournament. If you have a one and done, your odds are 80%. If you don't have a one and done, your odds are 1 in 29 of getting to the Sweet Sixteen. If you have one it is 45%.

Which do you think is better?
Well, let's look at our only one-and-done during this period. How did Jaylen Brown, who is a very special NBA player, perform when he was at Cal? He averaged 28 minutes/game. Why? He was in foul trouble a lot of the time. He had a field goal % of .431. He had a 3 pt. % of .294. He had a free throw % of .654. And, he lead the team in fouls at 108 and in turnovers at 105. It was obvious to all that he was the most talented player on the the team, but he made a lot of mistakes as a freshmen. A junior or senior Jayen Brown would have been all-world, but . . .
Brown was All Pac12 first team. Do you want me to start listing all the players who Cal has recruited over the last 10 years who are/were not as good as Freshman Brown? I'll start with being million times better than every guy on the current team not named Bradley. You know they all cost the same right?

This is so hilarious. Every coach in Cal history would have signed Kidd, Brown, Rabb, Powe, or Shareef. Every one.
Of course you land players with great talent. No argument. Even if you only have them for one year. No argument. My point is what does it buy you? And BTW, of the 5 players you listed, only 2 were one and dones, and of Brown and Shareef, only Shareef really dominated - even if Brown was All Pac-12 (with those numbers). My point (and the Seattle Times' point) is simply that basing your team on one and dones is not a panacea.
HoopDreams
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OaktownBear said:


It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there
HoopDreams
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suggestion:

let's sign a Jaylen Brown, Shareef Abdur-Rahim, and Ivan Rabb and test our hypothesis
IssyBear
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HoopDreams said:

suggestion:

let's sign a Jaylen Brown, Shareef Abdur-Rahim, and Ivan Rabb and test our hypothesis
Well we did have Brown and Rabb on the same team as freshman. Now if Shareef was also on that team, (in addition to Wallace, Bird and Mathews), I'm not sure we would have enough balls to go around, but I bet we would have been pretty good.
BearlyCareAnymore
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HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:


It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there


I'm not a math major but I think if I roll 60000 dice they should come up 6, 10,000 times. I think you should switch to my casino
HoopDreams
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OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:


It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there


I'm not a math major but I think if I roll 60000 dice they should come up 6, 10,000 times. I think you should switch to my casino

really, how but we wager on it...

You roll the dice 60000 time and if you get 10,000 6s, then I'll buy you a top dog

or if that takes too long, you can roll the dice 600 times and if you get 100 6s, then I'll still buy you a top dog

BearlyCareAnymore
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HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:


It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there


I'm not a math major but I think if I roll 60000 dice they should come up 6, 10,000 times. I think you should switch to my casino

really, how but we wager on it...

You roll the dice 60000 time and if you get 10,000 6s, then I'll buy you a top dog

or if that takes too long, you can roll the dice 600 times and if you get 100 6s, then I'll still buy you a top dog




I'm thinking you are thinking I'm talking about rolling 2 dice 600 times when I'm talking about rolling one.
HoopDreams
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OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:


It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there


I'm not a math major but I think if I roll 60000 dice they should come up 6, 10,000 times. I think you should switch to my casino

really, how but we wager on it...

You roll the dice 60000 time and if you get 10,000 6s, then I'll buy you a top dog

or if that takes too long, you can roll the dice 600 times and if you get 100 6s, then I'll still buy you a top dog




I'm thinking you are thinking I'm talking about rolling 2 dice 600 times when I'm talking about rolling one.

If you flip a coin 10 times will it always end up 5 heads and 5 tails every time?
socaltownie
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I likely wasn't clear about why I mentioned Gordon because, honestly, I can't really easily follow prep hoops in NorCal as easily as I can follow it in the Southland.

Ultimately except for probably 5 schools in the entire country (Kansas, Duke, Kentucky (kinda), North Carolina) EVERYONE is regionally focused in their recruiting. Makes sense. I could bore you about trends in college admissions but even compared to a decade ago more and more Frosh as staying relatively close to home compared to the percentage that travel more than a day car trip away.

And if you look HISTORICALLY at good west coast programs IN CALIFORNIA they have built the core of their teams around in state kids. Zona has built ITS best teams on West Coast Talent. Ditto Oregon. They have to because Tuscon/Phoenix don't have a big enough population to produce talent every year at sufficient volume and ditto Portland. Variations year to year but essentially none of the winning programs in the Pac12 are stuffed with a starting 5 all from east of the Mississippi.

This is PARTICULARLY true of good UCLA teams. We (i?) get frustrated with the Bruins record of greater Post-Wooden success but a big part of that is that they "own" the LA recruiting basin. The best talent that can make it academically (and lets face it, sometime not - phone call for Mr. Lonzo Ball) in the SOuthland list UCLA as "top 5". This is also true of a lot of the decent SDSU teams - who even more at home recruit well in the inland empire.

For whatever reasons Cal has not been able to do this. Honestly Monty's problem wasn't, I think, with the kids. rather I am guessing he simply was unwilling to supplicate himself to the AAU coaches who he probably was pretty damm dismissive of. I can tell you, that probably did NOT play well. Ditto the lack of a practice facility to invite, for example, the Soldiers over to practice in or to scrimmage against the Bears.

Now here is the thing - I am SURE the above is distasteful to some on this board. I am NOT saying you have to HIRE AAU coaches on a wink wink twofer deal but you do have to "play the game". My concern, already, is that Fox does not strike me as that guy. But that is the modern game. Now while I am guessing that Altman, Miller and Enfeld are dirty beyond belief they "get it" and are willing to put their ego aside and play the modern game. If we are not then we should stop taking people's money for season tickets.

And the result of a strategy executing on the above would be to "get" a higher percentage of "one and dones" that are generated from the Bay Area -Sacto talent pool. It is a greater metro of more than 10 million. It produces enough talent every year to be very very good if you own that market and then reach south as your secondary region to recruit from.
SFCityBear
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IssyBear said:

HoopDreams said:

suggestion:

let's sign a Jaylen Brown, Shareef Abdur-Rahim, and Ivan Rabb and test our hypothesis
Well we did have Brown and Rabb on the same team as freshman. Now if Shareef was also on that team, (in addition to Wallace, Bird and Mathews), I'm not sure we would have enough balls to go around, but I bet we would have been pretty good.
With all due respect to Tyrone, that team still doesn't have a good point guard, so you better add Jason Kidd. Then you are ready to roll.
BearlyCareAnymore
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HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:


It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there


I'm not a math major but I think if I roll 60000 dice they should come up 6, 10,000 times. I think you should switch to my casino

really, how but we wager on it...

You roll the dice 60000 time and if you get 10,000 6s, then I'll buy you a top dog

or if that takes too long, you can roll the dice 600 times and if you get 100 6s, then I'll still buy you a top dog




I'm thinking you are thinking I'm talking about rolling 2 dice 600 times when I'm talking about rolling one.

If you flip a coin 10 times will it always end up 5 heads and 5 tails every time?
No, but if it did would you ask what casino I got the coin and not go there? It is the most likely result. It isn't an abnormal result. I guess we just aren't understanding each other. I really don't understand your original comment. No, I wouldn't bet on getting 10,000 6's on 60,000 rolls, but if you made me bet on one outcome, that would be my bet. The number is going to hover around 10,000 and if it doesn't that is when you should wonder about it.

It was an analogy anyway.
bearmanpg
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SFCityBear said:

IssyBear said:

HoopDreams said:

suggestion:

let's sign a Jaylen Brown, Shareef Abdur-Rahim, and Ivan Rabb and test our hypothesis
Well we did have Brown and Rabb on the same team as freshman. Now if Shareef was also on that team, (in addition to Wallace, Bird and Mathews), I'm not sure we would have enough balls to go around, but I bet we would have been pretty good.
With all due respect to Tyrone, that team still doesn't have a good point guard, so you better add Jason Kidd. Then you are ready to roll.
With all due respect, Tyrone played point guard in the NBA....I guess he must have been a decent point guard...
IssyBear
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SFCityBear said:

IssyBear said:

HoopDreams said:

suggestion:

let's sign a Jaylen Brown, Shareef Abdur-Rahim, and Ivan Rabb and test our hypothesis
Well we did have Brown and Rabb on the same team as freshman. Now if Shareef was also on that team, (in addition to Wallace, Bird and Mathews), I'm not sure we would have enough balls to go around, but I bet we would have been pretty good.
With all due respect to Tyrone, that team still doesn't have a good point guard, so you better add Jason Kidd. Then you are ready to roll.
I agree, that's why I said they would only be "pretty" good. Kidd, who was a pass first guy, would have been perfect for a team like this.
HoopDreams
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OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:


It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there


I'm not a math major but I think if I roll 60000 dice they should come up 6, 10,000 times. I think you should switch to my casino

really, how but we wager on it...

You roll the dice 60000 time and if you get 10,000 6s, then I'll buy you a top dog

or if that takes too long, you can roll the dice 600 times and if you get 100 6s, then I'll still buy you a top dog




I'm thinking you are thinking I'm talking about rolling 2 dice 600 times when I'm talking about rolling one.

If you flip a coin 10 times will it always end up 5 heads and 5 tails every time?
No, but if it did would you ask what casino I got the coin and not go there? It is the most likely result. It isn't an abnormal result. I guess we just aren't understanding each other. I really don't understand your original comment. No, I wouldn't bet on getting 10,000 6's on 60,000 rolls, but if you made me bet on one outcome, that would be my bet. The number is going to hover around 10,000 and if it doesn't that is when you should wonder about it.

It was an analogy anyway.

I know it was an analogy, and my comment was not a big deal either.

There is a range where it would be a safe bet using statistics. Variance (e.g. 10%) at a % confidence level. I learned the formula in school, but don't recall it off the top of my head.



socaltownie
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HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:


It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there


I'm not a math major but I think if I roll 60000 dice they should come up 6, 10,000 times. I think you should switch to my casino

really, how but we wager on it...

You roll the dice 60000 time and if you get 10,000 6s, then I'll buy you a top dog

or if that takes too long, you can roll the dice 600 times and if you get 100 6s, then I'll still buy you a top dog




I'm thinking you are thinking I'm talking about rolling 2 dice 600 times when I'm talking about rolling one.

If you flip a coin 10 times will it always end up 5 heads and 5 tails every time?
No, but if it did would you ask what casino I got the coin and not go there? It is the most likely result. It isn't an abnormal result. I guess we just aren't understanding each other. I really don't understand your original comment. No, I wouldn't bet on getting 10,000 6's on 60,000 rolls, but if you made me bet on one outcome, that would be my bet. The number is going to hover around 10,000 and if it doesn't that is when you should wonder about it.

It was an analogy anyway.

I know it was an analogy, and my comment was not a big deal either.

There is a range where it would be a safe bet using statistics. Variance (e.g. 10%) at a % confidence level. I learned the formula in school, but don't recall it off the top of my head.




+ or minus one standard deviation. I will have to look it up later for calculating 1/6 distribution.
HoopDreams
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This isn't the right example for the dice question, but it was the first thing that came up in my search

The confidence interval (also called margin of error) is the plus-or-minus figure usually reported in newspaper or television opinion poll results. For example, if you use a confidence interval of 4 and 47% percent of your sample picks an answer you can be "sure" that if you had asked the question of the entire relevant population between 43% (47-4) and 51% (47+4) would have picked that answer.

The confidence level tells you how sure you can be. It is expressed as a percentage and represents how often the true percentage of the population who would pick an answer lies within the confidence interval. The 95% confidence level means you can be 95% certain; the 99% confidence level means you can be 99% certain. Most researchers use the 95% confidence level.

When you put the confidence level and the confidence interval together, you can say that you are 95% sure that the true percentage of the population is between 43% and 51%. The wider the confidence interval you are willing to accept, the more certain you can be that the whole population answers would be within that range.
Civil Bear
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HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:


It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there


I'm not a math major but I think if I roll 60000 dice they should come up 6, 10,000 times. I think you should switch to my casino

really, how but we wager on it...

You roll the dice 60000 time and if you get 10,000 6s, then I'll buy you a top dog

or if that takes too long, you can roll the dice 600 times and if you get 100 6s, then I'll still buy you a top dog




I'm thinking you are thinking I'm talking about rolling 2 dice 600 times when I'm talking about rolling one.

If you flip a coin 10 times will it always end up 5 heads and 5 tails every time?
No, but if it did would you ask what casino I got the coin and not go there? It is the most likely result. It isn't an abnormal result. I guess we just aren't understanding each other. I really don't understand your original comment. No, I wouldn't bet on getting 10,000 6's on 60,000 rolls, but if you made me bet on one outcome, that would be my bet. The number is going to hover around 10,000 and if it doesn't that is when you should wonder about it.

It was an analogy anyway.

I know it was an analogy, and my comment was not a big deal either.

There is a range where it would be a safe bet using statistics. Variance (e.g. 10%) at a % confidence level. I learned the formula in school, but don't recall it off the top of my head.





HoopDreams
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Civil Bear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:


It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there


I'm not a math major but I think if I roll 60000 dice they should come up 6, 10,000 times. I think you should switch to my casino

really, how but we wager on it...

You roll the dice 60000 time and if you get 10,000 6s, then I'll buy you a top dog

or if that takes too long, you can roll the dice 600 times and if you get 100 6s, then I'll still buy you a top dog




I'm thinking you are thinking I'm talking about rolling 2 dice 600 times when I'm talking about rolling one.

If you flip a coin 10 times will it always end up 5 heads and 5 tails every time?
No, but if it did would you ask what casino I got the coin and not go there? It is the most likely result. It isn't an abnormal result. I guess we just aren't understanding each other. I really don't understand your original comment. No, I wouldn't bet on getting 10,000 6's on 60,000 rolls, but if you made me bet on one outcome, that would be my bet. The number is going to hover around 10,000 and if it doesn't that is when you should wonder about it.

It was an analogy anyway.

I know it was an analogy, and my comment was not a big deal either.

There is a range where it would be a safe bet using statistics. Variance (e.g. 10%) at a % confidence level. I learned the formula in school, but don't recall it off the top of my head.






we seem to have a failure to communicate

roll the dice 6000 times

you take 1000 6s

I'll take the range 900-999 and 1001-1100

Let's see who wins
BearlyCareAnymore
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HoopDreams said:

Civil Bear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:


It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there


I'm not a math major but I think if I roll 60000 dice they should come up 6, 10,000 times. I think you should switch to my casino

really, how but we wager on it...

You roll the dice 60000 time and if you get 10,000 6s, then I'll buy you a top dog

or if that takes too long, you can roll the dice 600 times and if you get 100 6s, then I'll still buy you a top dog




I'm thinking you are thinking I'm talking about rolling 2 dice 600 times when I'm talking about rolling one.

If you flip a coin 10 times will it always end up 5 heads and 5 tails every time?
No, but if it did would you ask what casino I got the coin and not go there? It is the most likely result. It isn't an abnormal result. I guess we just aren't understanding each other. I really don't understand your original comment. No, I wouldn't bet on getting 10,000 6's on 60,000 rolls, but if you made me bet on one outcome, that would be my bet. The number is going to hover around 10,000 and if it doesn't that is when you should wonder about it.

It was an analogy anyway.

I know it was an analogy, and my comment was not a big deal either.

There is a range where it would be a safe bet using statistics. Variance (e.g. 10%) at a % confidence level. I learned the formula in school, but don't recall it off the top of my head.






we seem to have a failure to communicate

roll the dice 6000 times

you take 1000 6s

I'll take the range 900-999 and 1001-1100

Let's see who wins
Look, Hoop. This is my issue. I used a simplistic analogy regarding rolling a die 60,000 times and having it come up 6, 10,000 times. You responded with:

Quote:


if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there
That made me think I made some sort of bonehead blunder on my analogy, maybe blowing my numbers or maybe thinking it was so simplistic that I missed something. So I actually thought about it and I came to the conclusion that, no, it is that simplistic. There is a 1 in 6 chance. That means the most likely of all outcomes is 10,000. So why would hoop not go to that casino?

Your initial comment did not make sense. If a casino had a 6 come up 10,000 times that would be a completely reasonable result. as would be 10,050. Or 9,900. Etc. In fact 10,000 would be the most reasonable result. I fully get that betting the field against any one result will most likely give you the win. But if you have to put your bet on only one possible result, 10,000 is the bet you want to place.

Everything you have said since the first comment is reasonable and I agree. But your first comment doesn't make sense. I don't get it. There is simply no reason to believe that a casino that has a 6 come up exactly 1 time out of 6 is problematic. The concept that it comes up 6 10,000 times out of 60,000 a plurality of the time instead of a majority doesn't make your questioning the casino any more valid.
Civil Bear
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HoopDreams said:

Civil Bear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:


It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there


I'm not a math major but I think if I roll 60000 dice they should come up 6, 10,000 times. I think you should switch to my casino

really, how but we wager on it...

You roll the dice 60000 time and if you get 10,000 6s, then I'll buy you a top dog

or if that takes too long, you can roll the dice 600 times and if you get 100 6s, then I'll still buy you a top dog




I'm thinking you are thinking I'm talking about rolling 2 dice 600 times when I'm talking about rolling one.

If you flip a coin 10 times will it always end up 5 heads and 5 tails every time?
No, but if it did would you ask what casino I got the coin and not go there? It is the most likely result. It isn't an abnormal result. I guess we just aren't understanding each other. I really don't understand your original comment. No, I wouldn't bet on getting 10,000 6's on 60,000 rolls, but if you made me bet on one outcome, that would be my bet. The number is going to hover around 10,000 and if it doesn't that is when you should wonder about it.

It was an analogy anyway.

I know it was an analogy, and my comment was not a big deal either.

There is a range where it would be a safe bet using statistics. Variance (e.g. 10%) at a % confidence level. I learned the formula in school, but don't recall it off the top of my head.






we seem to have a failure to communicate

roll the dice 6000 times

you take 1000 6s

I'll take the range 900-999 and 1001-1100

Let's see who wins
Yes, we do, but not for the reason you think (or so it seems). The only reason I linked the video was that I came across it and remembered your argument with OTB and the dice. If you watched it you would know there is only about a 30% chance of getting exactly 2 sixes in 12 rolls of a single die. Using the statical formula of (n!/(n-k)!k!)((1/6)^A2)((5/6)^(B2-A2)) where k = exactly how many sixes you want from n rolls, there is only about a 14% chance of getting exactly 10 sixes in 60 rolls. It's not possible to calculate for 1000 sixes with 6000 rolls due to the high yields of 1000! and 6000!, but you get the idea.

I think the failure to communicate comes from the fact that no one is suggesting the odds are 50:50 that sixes would come up exactly 1000 times in 6000 rolls, although it would be the most likely outcome over any other specific outcome (however how small). A more reasonable even bet would that sixes come up at least 1000 times.
HoopDreams
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OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

Civil Bear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:


It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there


I'm not a math major but I think if I roll 60000 dice they should come up 6, 10,000 times. I think you should switch to my casino

really, how but we wager on it...

You roll the dice 60000 time and if you get 10,000 6s, then I'll buy you a top dog

or if that takes too long, you can roll the dice 600 times and if you get 100 6s, then I'll still buy you a top dog




I'm thinking you are thinking I'm talking about rolling 2 dice 600 times when I'm talking about rolling one.

If you flip a coin 10 times will it always end up 5 heads and 5 tails every time?
No, but if it did would you ask what casino I got the coin and not go there? It is the most likely result. It isn't an abnormal result. I guess we just aren't understanding each other. I really don't understand your original comment. No, I wouldn't bet on getting 10,000 6's on 60,000 rolls, but if you made me bet on one outcome, that would be my bet. The number is going to hover around 10,000 and if it doesn't that is when you should wonder about it.

It was an analogy anyway.

I know it was an analogy, and my comment was not a big deal either.

There is a range where it would be a safe bet using statistics. Variance (e.g. 10%) at a % confidence level. I learned the formula in school, but don't recall it off the top of my head.






we seem to have a failure to communicate

roll the dice 6000 times

you take 1000 6s

I'll take the range 900-999 and 1001-1100

Let's see who wins
Look, Hoop. This is my issue. I used a simplistic analogy regarding rolling a die 60,000 times and having it come up 6, 10,000 times. You responded with:

Quote:


if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there
That made me think I made some sort of bonehead blunder on my analogy, maybe blowing my numbers or maybe thinking it was so simplistic that I missed something. So I actually thought about it and I came to the conclusion that, no, it is that simplistic. There is a 1 in 6 chance. That means the most likely of all outcomes is 10,000. So why would hoop not go to that casino?

Your initial comment did not make sense. If a casino had a 6 come up 10,000 times that would be a completely reasonable result. as would be 10,050. Or 9,900. Etc. In fact 10,000 would be the most reasonable result. I fully get that betting the field against any one result will most likely give you the win. But if you have to put your bet on only one possible result, 10,000 is the bet you want to place.

Everything you have said since the first comment is reasonable and I agree. But your first comment doesn't make sense. I don't get it. There is simply no reason to believe that a casino that has a 6 come up exactly 1 time out of 6 is problematic. The concept that it comes up 6 10,000 times out of 60,000 a plurality of the time instead of a majority doesn't make your questioning the casino any more valid.

Oaktown, this isn't personal. I made a quick unimportant comment to your post.
Quote:

OaktownBear said:

It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

Hoopdreams responded: if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there

-----

I was simply saying it's very improbable that you rolled the dice 60600 times and got exactly 10100 sixes. I responded to his literal statement. That is all. It was a throw away comment with very little point.

To civil, my very point was it wasn't a fair bet. I even made the bet that I'd buy Oak a top dog if he won, yet he didn't need to do anything if I won the bet. Thanks for providing the actual odds for me winning the bet (although sorry, I didn't watch the video)







BearlyCareAnymore
How long do you want to ignore this user?
HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

Civil Bear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:


It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there


I'm not a math major but I think if I roll 60000 dice they should come up 6, 10,000 times. I think you should switch to my casino

really, how but we wager on it...

You roll the dice 60000 time and if you get 10,000 6s, then I'll buy you a top dog

or if that takes too long, you can roll the dice 600 times and if you get 100 6s, then I'll still buy you a top dog




I'm thinking you are thinking I'm talking about rolling 2 dice 600 times when I'm talking about rolling one.

If you flip a coin 10 times will it always end up 5 heads and 5 tails every time?
No, but if it did would you ask what casino I got the coin and not go there? It is the most likely result. It isn't an abnormal result. I guess we just aren't understanding each other. I really don't understand your original comment. No, I wouldn't bet on getting 10,000 6's on 60,000 rolls, but if you made me bet on one outcome, that would be my bet. The number is going to hover around 10,000 and if it doesn't that is when you should wonder about it.

It was an analogy anyway.

I know it was an analogy, and my comment was not a big deal either.

There is a range where it would be a safe bet using statistics. Variance (e.g. 10%) at a % confidence level. I learned the formula in school, but don't recall it off the top of my head.






we seem to have a failure to communicate

roll the dice 6000 times

you take 1000 6s

I'll take the range 900-999 and 1001-1100

Let's see who wins
Look, Hoop. This is my issue. I used a simplistic analogy regarding rolling a die 60,000 times and having it come up 6, 10,000 times. You responded with:

Quote:


if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there
That made me think I made some sort of bonehead blunder on my analogy, maybe blowing my numbers or maybe thinking it was so simplistic that I missed something. So I actually thought about it and I came to the conclusion that, no, it is that simplistic. There is a 1 in 6 chance. That means the most likely of all outcomes is 10,000. So why would hoop not go to that casino?

Your initial comment did not make sense. If a casino had a 6 come up 10,000 times that would be a completely reasonable result. as would be 10,050. Or 9,900. Etc. In fact 10,000 would be the most reasonable result. I fully get that betting the field against any one result will most likely give you the win. But if you have to put your bet on only one possible result, 10,000 is the bet you want to place.

Everything you have said since the first comment is reasonable and I agree. But your first comment doesn't make sense. I don't get it. There is simply no reason to believe that a casino that has a 6 come up exactly 1 time out of 6 is problematic. The concept that it comes up 6 10,000 times out of 60,000 a plurality of the time instead of a majority doesn't make your questioning the casino any more valid.

Oaktown, this isn't personal. I made a quick unimportant comment to your post.
Quote:

OaktownBear said:

It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

Hoopdreams responded: if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there

-----

I was simply saying it's very improbable that you rolled the dice 60600 times and got exactly 10100 sixes. I responded to his literal statement. That is all. It was a throw away comment with very little point.

To civil, my very point was it wasn't a fair bet. I even made the bet that I'd buy Oak a top dog if he won, yet he didn't need to do anything if I won the bet. Thanks for providing the actual odds for me winning the bet (although sorry, I didn't watch the video)








To be clear, Hoop. I didn't take it personally and I'm not arguing with you personally. I was just trying to figure out what the heck you were trying to say! It is like trying to remember the name of a song or solve a great mystery of the universe - I can't effing sleep until I figure this out!
HoopDreams
How long do you want to ignore this user?
OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

Civil Bear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:

HoopDreams said:

OaktownBear said:


It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there


I'm not a math major but I think if I roll 60000 dice they should come up 6, 10,000 times. I think you should switch to my casino

really, how but we wager on it...

You roll the dice 60000 time and if you get 10,000 6s, then I'll buy you a top dog

or if that takes too long, you can roll the dice 600 times and if you get 100 6s, then I'll still buy you a top dog




I'm thinking you are thinking I'm talking about rolling 2 dice 600 times when I'm talking about rolling one.

If you flip a coin 10 times will it always end up 5 heads and 5 tails every time?
No, but if it did would you ask what casino I got the coin and not go there? It is the most likely result. It isn't an abnormal result. I guess we just aren't understanding each other. I really don't understand your original comment. No, I wouldn't bet on getting 10,000 6's on 60,000 rolls, but if you made me bet on one outcome, that would be my bet. The number is going to hover around 10,000 and if it doesn't that is when you should wonder about it.

It was an analogy anyway.

I know it was an analogy, and my comment was not a big deal either.

There is a range where it would be a safe bet using statistics. Variance (e.g. 10%) at a % confidence level. I learned the formula in school, but don't recall it off the top of my head.






we seem to have a failure to communicate

roll the dice 6000 times

you take 1000 6s

I'll take the range 900-999 and 1001-1100

Let's see who wins
Look, Hoop. This is my issue. I used a simplistic analogy regarding rolling a die 60,000 times and having it come up 6, 10,000 times. You responded with:

Quote:


if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there
That made me think I made some sort of bonehead blunder on my analogy, maybe blowing my numbers or maybe thinking it was so simplistic that I missed something. So I actually thought about it and I came to the conclusion that, no, it is that simplistic. There is a 1 in 6 chance. That means the most likely of all outcomes is 10,000. So why would hoop not go to that casino?

Your initial comment did not make sense. If a casino had a 6 come up 10,000 times that would be a completely reasonable result. as would be 10,050. Or 9,900. Etc. In fact 10,000 would be the most reasonable result. I fully get that betting the field against any one result will most likely give you the win. But if you have to put your bet on only one possible result, 10,000 is the bet you want to place.

Everything you have said since the first comment is reasonable and I agree. But your first comment doesn't make sense. I don't get it. There is simply no reason to believe that a casino that has a 6 come up exactly 1 time out of 6 is problematic. The concept that it comes up 6 10,000 times out of 60,000 a plurality of the time instead of a majority doesn't make your questioning the casino any more valid.

Oaktown, this isn't personal. I made a quick unimportant comment to your post.
Quote:

OaktownBear said:

It's not interesting. It is stupid. If i were to tell you that I wanted to see whether red dice are more likely to roll a six than white dice so I rolled red dice 60,000 times and it came up six 10,000 times, and I rolled white dice 600 times and it came up six 100 times, therefore, red dice come up six more often than white dice, you'd call me stupid.

Hoopdreams responded: if you told me that, I'd ask what casino you got those dice and not go there

-----

I was simply saying it's very improbable that you rolled the dice 60600 times and got exactly 10100 sixes. I responded to his literal statement. That is all. It was a throw away comment with very little point.

To civil, my very point was it wasn't a fair bet. I even made the bet that I'd buy Oak a top dog if he won, yet he didn't need to do anything if I won the bet. Thanks for providing the actual odds for me winning the bet (although sorry, I didn't watch the video)








To be clear, Hoop. I didn't take it personally and I'm not arguing with you personally. I was just trying to figure out what the heck you were trying to say! It is like trying to remember the name of a song or solve a great mystery of the universe - I can't effing sleep until I figure this out!
it's all good Oak, thx
 
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