Again, the point is missed. First of all, the whole point of sabermetrics is to rid the world of fuzzy concepts like "the indomitable will to win." Remember the movie "Money Ball" (the movie, not the book). When the scout says "did you see his girlfriend? It shows he lacks confidence." That line results in laughter because it's laughable. Believers of this type of analysis of sports would tell you that the "will to win" is also laughable. I'm not saying it is or it isn't, but the point of the article is to QUANTIFY things. The "will to win" is not quantifiable.
Nobody is "going out of their way to say the team is underserving of their record." The article is offering food for thought. Obviously you partook in the meal, and so it was successful.
Henry is not an ******* and he is not bashing "us" for the hell of it. He's a serious writer and he's going to up there with guys like Wilbon some day.
Yea I actually agree with Doc here. The two supposed "camps" here are arguing two different things. This is going to be nerdy, but it's like one friend that we always used to make fun of for giving "orthogonal" responses. Meaning if you asked (paraphrasing) is it forward or is it back? The answer you'd get would be "well I think it's left". (Or taken to another level in 3-D, is it forward/back, or is it left/right... and the answer you get is up/down).
In any event, in this case the forward/back axis is wins and losses (arbitrary characterized as the "successful" axis), and the left right axis is the so called "effectiveness" axis (which he probably wrongly equates with good or bad). You guys are arguing with his arbitrary parameters in part and that's a fair criticism. But outside of disagreeing with how he defined his parameters, essentially he is saying "left or right"? And you are saying "no darn it, it's forward". And you're understandably annoyed at a few sentences that probably were intentionally phrased too starkly so as to incite debate. Perhaps the tone in certain areas also. But like Doc and some others here I certainly don't interpret this article as part of a concerted effort to denigrate the program at all.
In any event, I think Inside NU is a useful site in that it amalgamates lots of sources of information and provides another forum for discussion, one which is more easily accessed for the younger generation of NU fans. Particularly after the shutdown of LTP, which was a shame but understandable.
However, I do think their football analysis is pretty superficial. They are helpful in that they quote lots of other external stats that I might not take the time to find otherwise, and they produce a lot of content, but I think the actual amount of organic analysis they contribute themselves is fairly low and at times inaccurate in my judgment. Including grades, previews, postgame analysis. I do like the individual play breakdowns. And that doesn't mean I don't appreciate the work that they do - it takes a lot of time and effort to produce all that content, and it provides a useful starting point for discussion plus a venue in which to discuss it. Think of it like Turk's stuff- often its superficial and or things that are obvious, but he still takes them time to write his opinions and I appreciate reading his grades. Cause then I can see what I agree with and disagree with, and then watch everyone else comment on it as well. I won't agree with all of what anyone says, but it will help inform my own opinion. Plus, it's fun to read discussion about NU sports.
This is kind of a side tangent, but my personal interpretation is that the inside NU guys are meaningfully more knowledgeable at basketball and contribute better analysis there. They also care more about that sport and it shines through in their relative enthusiasm for it (and knowledge about it). Could be wrong, but that's just my read.
(Sorry this got so long)