Not the typical fare for us, but there is a nice video on the New York Times website right now discussing the art of the crossover.
It features Dwyane Wade, Allen Iverson, Tim Hardaway and Pearl Washington. And Dean Berry.
Yes, that Dean Berry.
Enjoy.
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Sunday, May 22, 2011
Season review: Lineup stats
Hola amigos,
It's been a while since I've rapped with you all, but things have been pretty hairy here at Chez HP, what with another depressing end of the season for the Hoyas and real life and all.
But, I've dusted off the Cray II in my mom's basement and fired it up for the first time in a couple of months to take a look at last season, because those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
For today's episode, we'll take a look at lineup stats from last season. I'm going to break the stats out two ways: for all games played against Top 100 teams, and looking at the last ten games played (all games in Feb and March, as the Hoyas went 4-6).
Here we go:
For the season as a whole, Coach Thompson had two preferred lineups, with his four upperclassmen (Clark, Freeman, Vaughn and Wright) and either Hollis Thompson or Nate Lubick playing the "4". These represent the main two starting lineups used, where Lubick replaced Thompson as a starter for the second St. John's game forward.
The immediate takeaway from the top two lines is that JT3's move to insert Lubick into a more prominent role by making him a starter didn't work. I'm unaware of a direct quote as to why Coach Thompson swapped the two midway through conference play, although it was likely to improve a struggling defense. However, the stats reveal that the team was equally efficient defensively with either player on the floor, but gave up a huge amount on the offensive end without Hollis on the floor. In fact, effective offensive lineups for the Hoyas last season [120+ OEff] had only one constant: Hollis Thompson.
More interestingly, of those lineups with at least 20 possessions played on both ends of the court, the two most effective last season had Lubick and Thompson on the court together [Freeman-Lubick-Thompson-Vaughn-Wright: +32 net efficiency; Clark-Lubick-Thompson-Vaughn-Wright: +45]. It's expected that Hollis will move to the "3" spot next season, so this bodes well. Of course, neither Chris Wright nor Julian Vaughn will be around to help.
A look at the last ten games of the season after the jump
It's been a while since I've rapped with you all, but things have been pretty hairy here at Chez HP, what with another depressing end of the season for the Hoyas and real life and all.
But, I've dusted off the Cray II in my mom's basement and fired it up for the first time in a couple of months to take a look at last season, because those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
For today's episode, we'll take a look at lineup stats from last season. I'm going to break the stats out two ways: for all games played against Top 100 teams, and looking at the last ten games played (all games in Feb and March, as the Hoyas went 4-6).
Here we go:
vs. Top 100 Opponents (min. 15 poss both off and def) . Offense Defense Lineup # poss OEff Time # poss DEff Time Clark-Freeman-Thompson-Vaughn-Wright 288 126 17.4 277 103 19.5 Clark-Freeman-Lubick-Vaughn-Wright 221 103 17.1 221 103 18.6 Clark-Freeman-Lubick-Sims-Wright 88 101 18.2 90 121 19.3 Clark-Freeman-Sims-Thompson-Wright 88 123 17.0 86 107 17.3 Benimon-Clark-Freeman-Vaughn-Wright 63 114 17.7 64 123 19.7 Clark-Freeman-Lubick-Thompson-Vaughn 57 83 18.9 58 109 20.1 Freeman-Lubick-Thompson-Vaughn-Wright 47 132 18.5 44 100 20.5 Benimon-Clark-Freeman-Sims-Wright 38 111 16.4 42 88 18.3 Freeman-Lubick-Sims-Thompson-Wright 30 83 19.9 34 74 17.6 Clark-Lubick-Thompson-Vaughn-Wright 28 125 17.4 30 80 17.1 Clark-Freeman-Lubick-Starks-Thompson 22 100 16.6 17 100 16.1 Benimon-Clark-Freeman-Sims-Thompson 19 126 22.3 18 117 15.9 Freeman-Lubick-Starks-Thompson-Vaughn 18 61 23.5 16 138 15.7 Clark-Freeman-Lubick-Sims-Starks 16 100 20.4 18 56 22.3 Benimon-Freeman-Sims-Thompson-Wright 18 106 16.6 16 38 18.8 Benimon-Clark-Thompson-Vaughn-Wright 17 71 19.8 17 106 20.6 Freeman-Lubick-Sanford-Sims-Wright 18 100 20.3 16 163 18.1
For the season as a whole, Coach Thompson had two preferred lineups, with his four upperclassmen (Clark, Freeman, Vaughn and Wright) and either Hollis Thompson or Nate Lubick playing the "4". These represent the main two starting lineups used, where Lubick replaced Thompson as a starter for the second St. John's game forward.
The immediate takeaway from the top two lines is that JT3's move to insert Lubick into a more prominent role by making him a starter didn't work. I'm unaware of a direct quote as to why Coach Thompson swapped the two midway through conference play, although it was likely to improve a struggling defense. However, the stats reveal that the team was equally efficient defensively with either player on the floor, but gave up a huge amount on the offensive end without Hollis on the floor. In fact, effective offensive lineups for the Hoyas last season [120+ OEff] had only one constant: Hollis Thompson.
More interestingly, of those lineups with at least 20 possessions played on both ends of the court, the two most effective last season had Lubick and Thompson on the court together [Freeman-Lubick-Thompson-Vaughn-Wright: +32 net efficiency; Clark-Lubick-Thompson-Vaughn-Wright: +45]. It's expected that Hollis will move to the "3" spot next season, so this bodes well. Of course, neither Chris Wright nor Julian Vaughn will be around to help.
A look at the last ten games of the season after the jump
Labels:
Hollis Thompson,
lineup,
Nate Lubick,
season review
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