NAME POS GP MIN WP48 PoP48 WINS PTS REB AST TO BLK STL PF
Tyson Chandler C 66 2164 .294 6.1 13.26 15.3 15.6 1.4 1.9 1.7 0.9 4.2
Amare Stoudemire FC 29 682 .108 0.3 1.53 29.1 10.2 0.9 3.5 1.5 0.7 6.3
Steve Novak SF 81 1641 .117 0.5 3.99 15.6 4.4 1.0 0.4 0.2 0.8 2.8
Pablo Prigioni SG 78 1263 .229 4.1 6.04 10.5 5.4 9.0 3.3 0.1 2.6 4.8
Chris Copeland C 56 862 -.045 -4.5 -0.80 27.1 6.6 1.5 2.8 0.7 0.9 5.8
Kenyon Martin PF 18 431 .145 1.4 1.30 14.4 10.6 0.9 1.8 1.9 1.8 7.1
Carmelo Anthony PF 67 2482 .044 -1.7 2.26 37.1 8.9 3.3 3.4 0.6 1.0 4.0
Kurt Thomas FC 39 392 .112 0.4 0.92 11.9 10.9 2.6 1.0 2.0 1.2 6.4
Jason Kidd PG 76 2043 .231 4.1 9.81 10.8 7.6 5.9 1.8 0.6 2.9 2.9
J.R. Smith SG 80 2678 .101 0.1 5.65 25.9 7.6 3.9 2.4 0.4 1.8 4.1
Iman Shumpert SF 45 996 .102 0.1 2.12 14.7 6.6 3.6 1.8 0.3 2.1 4.8
Raymond Felton PG 68 2313 .073 -0.8 3.52 19.7 4.0 7.7 3.2 0.3 2.0 2.7
James White GF 57 435 .025 -2.3 0.23 13.8 5.3 3.2 1.9 0.4 1.4 4.9
Rasheed Wallace FC 21 296 .003 -3.0 0.02 23.7 13.5 1.0 1.6 2.4 2.1 6.5
Ronnie Brewer GF 46 711 .113 0.4 1.67 11.2 6.8 2.7 0.9 0.4 2.3 1.8
Earl Barron FC 1 37 .175 2.4 0.13 14.3 23.4 2.6 1.3 1.3 0.0 1.3
Marcus Camby FC 24 250 .030 -2.2 0.15 8.1 15.4 2.7 2.9 2.7 1.3 5.4
Quentin Richardson GF 1 29 -.141 -7.5 -0.09 8.3 16.6 1.7 3.3 0.0 0.0 1.7
Solomon Jones FC 2 26 -.271 -11.5 -0.15 0.0 5.5 0.0 5.5 1.8 0.0 5.5
Name FG% 2FG% 3FG% FT% eFG% TS% FGA 3FGA FTA
Tyson Chandler 63.7% 63.7% 0.0% 69.4% 63.7% 67.1% 8.9 0.0 5.7
Amare Stoudemire 57.7% 57.7% 0.0% 80.8% 57.7% 63.7% 18.8 0.0 9.1
Steve Novak 41.4% 36.7% 42.5% 90.9% 58.7% 60.2% 12.6 10.3 1.0
Pablo Prigioni 45.5% 54.7% 39.6% 88.0% 57.5% 59.5% 8.4 5.1 1.0
Chris Copeland 47.9% 51.2% 42.1% 75.9% 55.7% 58.3% 21.2 7.8 4.6
Kenyon Martin 60.2% 60.2% 0.0% 42.5% 60.2% 58.3% 10.4 0.0 4.5
Carmelo Anthony 44.9% 47.6% 37.9% 83.0% 50.2% 56.0% 28.8 8.0 9.9
Kurt Thomas 54.2% 53.7% 100.0% 46.2% 54.8% 54.7% 10.2 0.1 1.6
Jason Kidd 37.2% 45.2% 35.1% 83.3% 51.1% 53.2% 9.6 7.6 1.1
J.R. Smith 42.2% 45.8% 35.6% 76.2% 48.4% 52.2% 22.4 7.8 5.6
Iman Shumpert 39.6% 39.2% 40.2% 76.6% 48.9% 51.6% 13.3 6.1 2.3
Raymond Felton 42.7% 45.5% 36.0% 78.9% 48.0% 50.5% 18.3 5.4 2.7
James White 43.1% 48.0% 34.1% 57.9% 49.1% 50.3% 12.8 4.5 2.1
Rasheed Wallace 38.7% 45.2% 31.9% 70.0% 46.5% 48.4% 23.0 11.2 3.2
Ronnie Brewer 36.6% 40.4% 31.0% 41.0% 42.9% 43.2% 11.8 4.8 2.6
Earl Barron 35.7% 35.7% 0.0% 50.0% 35.7% 37.0% 18.2 0.0 2.6
Marcus Camby 32.1% 32.1% 0.0% 42.1% 32.1% 34.2% 10.2 0.0 3.6
Quentin Richardson 9.1% 0.0% 25.0% 100.0% 13.6% 21.0% 18.2 6.6 3.3
Solomon Jones 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 1.8 0.0 0.0
  WP48 WINS PTS DRB ORB TRB AST TO BLK STL PF
NYK 0.781 51.6 100.0 29.7 10.9 40.6 19.3 12.0 3.6 8.2 20.1
AVG 0.500 41.0 98.1 31.0 11.2 42.1 22.1 14.6 5.1 7.8 19.8
OPP 0.219 30.4 95.7 31.6 10.0 41.6 19.3 15.1 4.0 6.4 19.2
AVGOPP 0.500 41.0 98.1 31.0 11.2 42.1 22.1 14.6 5.1 7.8 19.8
  FG% 2FG% 3FG% FT% eFG% TS% FGA 3FGA FTA
NYK 44.8% 48.7% 37.6% 75.9% 51.5% 55.0% 81.6 28.9 21.1
AVG 45.3% 48.3% 35.9% 75.3% 49.6% 53.5% 82.0 20.0 22.2

Wins Produced
Expected* Actual Forecast**
51.6-30.4 54-28 n/a

* The win-loss record that wins produced would have predicted based on players' WP48 so far (ignores previous seasons).

** future games only -- takes current record as given


Articles featuring the New York Knicks

The 10 Best 2012-13 Contracts

The other day I did the ten worst contracts of the season. It was a fairly big hit, and as usual, not everyone agreed with my picks. I expect more of the same today, as I pick the ten best.

The 10 Worst 2012-13 Contracts

The dust has (almost) settled on the 2012 offseason. I think it's time for us to look at the best and worst contracts of this season. It seems like every year, several teams are looking to unload "bad" contracts. We often forget that teams weren't just magically saddled with those bad contracts; somebody volunteered to pay them.

Framing Linsanity

Regulars readers of my blog, and the Wages of Wins, will know that I am a big proponent of data-driven analysis because the human mind is known to fall victim to lots of cognitive biases. Worse, the awareness of cognitive bias does not protect a person from falling victim to them. Two very common bias that I see running rampant the last couple of days are framing and anchoring. Framing is extremely common in political rhetoric precisely because it is extremely effective. And I use them all the time in my rhetoric. I can tell you this with no trepidation because I know that even though I am telling you this, the next time you read something that makes sense to you, the knowledge that I might just be abusing a cognitive bias will not protect you.

The NBA Geek's Amnesty Guesses, Part 2

As with part 1 (which you can read here), I'm calling them guesses, not predictions, because this way if I'm completely wrong, I won't look as stupid.  Will I do something as crazy as amnestying Kobe freaking Bryant again today?