jesus. you really need to take a break.
(and I'm not going into this: you are the biggest &%$%&$§*(/ whatsover in the world contest. can't see you being very successful with this style with your academic peers)
so, back to my starting point and my position:
I deeply doubt Hollingers fomulas (either PER as well as his team ranking formular) and I'm absolutely convinced that it produces multiple wrong conclusions.
(to many to ever accept it as a reliable tool)
end of story.
did I pull this out of my ass?
well, a bit it's a gut feeling and another bit is what you call the "entire academic field dealing with this sort of thing"
(some might have noticed my position about the accuracy of Hollinger over the years and my critics. well maybe not. however)
assuming that whatever I use as an argument won't count much at this point of our "discussion", I can only try it this way:
the "academic field" (which I highly respect) is NOT accepting Hollingers theories and formulas without doubts. I don't even think that he has many fans in this department. (see for example the critics on PER from David Berri)
just a quote (if you've got the time, read the whole article. best would be to read the wages of wins at all):
let's put it in simple words.
Hollingers formula don't work. (they work sometimes, that's not enough to be labeled "accurate").
the major problems are the arbitrary weights he uses for several stats.
(obstructed asked how can scoring margin be that much overrated in the maths, that it produces obviously absurd results. O_V. you gave the answer to yourself, which is pretty much what I tried to tell: it's overrated and therefore the result of the Hollinger formula is damn wrong. as you see, as everyone else can see.)
if you guys like Hollingers maths. that's ok.
I don't. and I tell the reasons.
I hope that's ok with you.