Can you answer Tizzy response then? Surely nba FO’s have those advance numbers that you have
For those with curious minds and appreciate nuance, here’s Claude’s take on it…
VORP has some significant limitations that explain why NBA teams value Jackson more highly despite potentially lower VORP numbers.
Here’s why:
The Fundamental Problem: VORP Doesn’t Capture Elite Defense
The biggest problem with VORP is that it generally ignores the quality of a player’s man defense. Until the NBA adapts more defensive statistics, all we have are blocks and steals, which are clearly inadequate. Defensive specialists who do not generate many blocks and steals are always going to be dramatically underrated by the system. BPM (which feeds into VORP) is particularly an issue for elite defenders where it simply does not recognize them from their box score statistics. This is critical for Jackson vs. Sabonis - Jackson’s elite rim protection, help defense, and switchability don’t show up fully in VORP, while Sabonis’s offensive stats (points, rebounds, assists) are heavily rewarded.
Context Matters: Team Quality Skews VORP
Sabonis likely has higher VORP partly because he:
∙ Plays huge minutes on a bad team (more opportunities to accumulate stats)
∙ Gets more touches and usage when his team is desperate for offense
∙ Racks up assists and rebounds that boost box score metrics
VORP rewards volume and box score production, not necessarily winning impact. A player can have great VORP on a lottery team while an elite defender on a better team has lower VORP.
Here’s the real kicker - VORP measures regular season impact, but trade value is about championship potential. In the playoffs:
∙ Elite defenders become exponentially more valuable when games slow down
∙ Offensive-only centers get hunted in pick-and-roll and exposed
∙ Spacing and switchability become premium commodities
∙ Jackson’s ability to protect the rim AND stretch the floor is rare and crucial
Teams building for championships need two-way players who can survive playoff basketball, not regular season stat accumulators.
The Market Speaks Louder Than VORP
The trade market tells the real story:
∙ Jackson just netted three first-round picks
∙ Sabonis is barely drawing one first-round pick offers and struggling to find takers
NBA front offices have access to far more sophisticated metrics than VORP (player tracking data, lineup data, impact metrics) and they’re clearly telling us Jackson is more valuable.
Bottom line: VORP is useful for regular season evaluation, but it has well-documented blind spots around defense and playoff value. When building a championship contender, you need what Jackson provides - not what Sabonis accumulates in the regular season on losing teams.