I probably shouldn’t be asking these questions of a new Dad. From what I have seen you will probably spend hours looking up stats and parents with new babies need to sleep.
I think you need to go one step further and let us know the relative winning percentages of the teams are when their star is missing 25% of the season. Let’s, for ease of math, assume a 100 game schedule and that star player misses 25 games. If they go 75-0 when he is playing and 0-25 when he misses, I am still thinking he is an MVP candidate. I doubt there is any reality quite that stark, but before I buy your argument, I would like to know.
I probably shouldn’t be asking these questions of a new Dad. From what I have seen you will probably spend hours looking up stats and parents with new babies need to sleep.
HA, no the questions keep my mind working!
I think you need to go one step further and let us know the relative winning percentages of the teams are when their star is missing 25% of the season. Let’s, for ease of math, assume a 100 game schedule and that star player misses 25 games. If they go 75-0 when he is playing and 0-25 when he misses, I am still thinking he is an MVP candidate. I doubt there is any reality quite that stark, but before I buy your argument, I would like to know.
That's a fair point. I think the on/off stats tell a similar story but this is a good point.