Showing posts with label Austin Freeman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Austin Freeman. Show all posts

Friday, February 22, 2013

Ottomatic

Just how good has Otto Porter been in conference play?

Player           ORating    Usage %    DRating   Net Points
Porter '12-13      117        25%         80        +13
Freeman '10-11     109        26%        100         +5
Freeman '09-10     127        21%          -         +5
Monroe '09-10      106        26%          -         +9
Hibbert '07-08     120        26%          -          -
  
Unfortunately, I can't get good conference stats on Jeff Green's 06-07 run, but Porter is likely having the best in conference season for a Hoya since Roy Hibbert's dominant 2007-08.

His offensive game has been wildly efficient despite increasing his shot attempts. But Otto doesn't nearly get enough credit for being the lynchpin of a defense that has not really taken a step back since Greg Whittington's suspension.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Random Thoughts after Mizzou

Some random thoughts:
  • Where's the national Austin Freeman is Awesome articles? We've had plenty of Kemba Walker articles, but Austin is doing this over 7 games: 21.7 ppg while shooting 57% from 3 and committing only eight turnovers. Brian is waiting on the PBP from the Mizzou game to update the stats, but his ORating is probably sitting at about 140-150 after playing some darn good competition, mostly away from home. If Jon Wallace was a 180 shooter, Austin is a 201 shooter right now (60%+57%+84%).
  • Henry Sims' emergence is something we fans can learn from. I'm not a believer in not criticizing players' play -- or this would be a poor analytical blog -- but there's a huge difference in "player X is not playing well right now" and "player X will never be any good." Many fans bailed on Henry over the course of two years despite some fairly obvious signs of potential (height, a nice stroke, good athleticism for his size). All college players are early in their careers and unlike a 26-year old NBA player, they generally improve. It's just not always a linear path. So when we look at someone like Aaron Bowen (who generally doesn't look ready yet), it's important to see that he seems to have good shooting fundamentals, a guard-level handle, and great size and athleticism. There's real potential there.
  • In the whole Vee Sanford debate, I've settled into a fairly lame but reasonable position -- the "Vee is awesome but we're crowded at guard so what do you do?" Well, here's a couple ideas. One is, I think all three of the guards could have benefited from more rest in the Mizzou game (though it's important to not have Jason Clark as the ball handler when Chris is out -- Markel and Vee should be in then). But in a more fun vein, how about Vee for Power Forward? If we are going to go four guard, a la Nova in 2006, Vee should be the guy playing PF. Nate, Hollis, Julian and Henry only played 83 of a possible 90 minutes for bigs -- Jerelle got the rest. But Vee is the best rebounding guard we have, and while he'd be a really short PF, he's quick and pesky and could force a lot of steals. On the other end, unlike Jerelle, he's an offensive mismatch against a four, as he can hit the three and drive. If nothing else, he should play the three when Hollis is PF -- but I'd love to see him at PF for five minutes a game when the bigs can't play all 80.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Midseason MVP and Review

It's mid-season, or at least mid-conference season, and so now's as good a time as any to take a look at the year to date.

Especially since it is more fun to do so when we're coming off a beat down of Duke. The casually funny folks at Casual Hoya threw down the gauntlet and so it's high noon for the affections of the Hoya fan base as we tackle the most important questions of this era (this era being this week), blog against blog.

(In other words, they'll have a post on this, too.)

So, without further ado, we'll take the rational look at...


Who is the Hoyas' MVP so far?

I don't really like MVP discussions. Before you even get to the intended discussion, you need to decide what "Most Valuable" means. For some, it is "best player on the best team" or "most fun to watch" or "X-factor" or "veteran who taught his team how to win."

For me, it's either one of two things, depending on the situation: the player who, if you removed them from their team, the team who would suffer the most and lose more games; or, the player who, if you removed them from any (or the average) team, the team who would suffer the most and lose more games.

The game is about winning and losing. So the player that changes that the most is the MVP. In our case, if we looked at the Hoyas, the answer to the first definition is clearly Greg Monroe. It isn't close. If Chris Wright or Austin Freeman were to leave the team, the team would be worse but would slide Hollis right into the three and still have a strong guard rotation.

If Monroe left, Vaughn and his 26 minutes would be the front-court star. Henry Sims and Jerelle Benimon would be getting 50+ combined minutes a game or we'd be playing really small.

Since I'm not in favor of easy answers here, we'll go with the second definition. Ignoring the fact that the Hoyas' bench is weak and especially thin up front, what player contributes most to wins and losses?

With all apologies to Spare Change, there's really only three options. And at first I thought it was just two. But while the offense doesn't seem to collapse when he isn't out there, Austin Freeman is having just too good a season to leave him out of this discussion.

Offensive Stats (Only versus KenPom Top 100 Teams)

Player    Usage  ORating  Shot%  TS%  ARate
Austin     23%     116     26%   66%   17%
Chris      22%     112     24%   60%   26%
Greg       25%     100     25%   53%   17%

There's no doubt that Chris and Greg play a more central role to the offense in terms of ball movement and flow. It's just observational and not particularly quantifiable this year. It's not quantifiable because, from the Washington game through the Rutgers game, Chris Wright had been out of the game for 30 non-garbage time offensive possessions, Austin Freeman 60 and Greg Monroe 12. That's right. 12. Not exactly a stunning sample size.

So we're just going to have to trust our eyes that Greg and Chris are more vital to the team running.

Here's the thing: Austin seems to be the most vital element of the offense running really good.

He's taking more shots than anyone on the floor in our tougher games. And he's our most efficient player. Those offensive numbers are Roy Hibbert as a senior or Jeff Green as a junior-style numbers.

If you haven't watched the team recently, Austin's a guard. And he's posting low-post style efficiency and shooting numbers.

Austin's not thought of as much of a creator -- and he's not Chris in that respect -- but in our tougher games he's assisting on the same percent of teammate's FGs as Greg. For a guy who really hasn't been an assist man for much of his career, that element of his game seems to be blossoming.

Chris also has an impressive resume, with less shooting and more passing than Austin. Add in observational items and the fact that we can't win when he's off (though that's more of an X-factor thing than an MVP) and offensively, he's got to be right there with Austin. Still, a lot of Chris' value comes on the break, and while his speed is a skill, I think some of that benefit should go to the players with the steals (which is often Chris, to be fair).

Numbers-wise, Greg doesn't measure up quite as well offensively. His inability to finish strong down low and his mediocre free throw stroke makes him less efficient than Chris and Austin, both of whom have been great at finishing in the lane, outside the arc and from the line.

That should be mitigated by how the team seems to perform without him in the lineup (not well) and by the fact that opposing coaches definitely seem to game plan for Greg. He's the only player on the team that sees double teams, for example. Still, I'd leave the offensive edge to the guards.

Defensive Stats (or where Greg comes storming back)

Player     DReb%  Stl/Blk%  DRating
Austin      10%     2%/1%     100
Chris        7%     3%/2%      98
Greg        24%     3%/5%      88

The stats are somewhat redundant because Brian's Def. Rating is partially based on the first three stats, but it just demonstrates the split here. I have a certain defensive bias to big men, but when your big is a very strong defensive rebounder, generates more steals than either of your guards and also blocks shots, well, I have to give Monroe the edge.

Chris is a stronger defensive player than Austin, but the gap is really between Greg and the guards.

One last pair of stats:
Conference Play Only

.           Net +/-          Net Points
Player     per 40 min       per 100 poss
Austin        +7                 +7
Chris        +20                 +5 
Greg         +11                 +7

So, umm, do I need to come up with a conclusion here? Really? I don't trust +/-/40 enough to make that a tie-breaker, frankly, and everything else boils down to a really, really lame cop out.

This Big 3 is really a Big 3. There's no clear cut MVP. You could pick any and I'd be okay with it.

So I'm going to have to go all subjective on you. Each has their own "intangible" -- Greg is the player you game plan for and the center of the defense; Austin is the efficient killer who may have saved the season with his incredible second half against Connecticut.

Wright has created our fast break out of nothing; he is a one man press break; and he can most often be seen directing traffic on offense and defense.

He's also my mid-season MVP.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Season Preview: Austin Freeman

Edited: [10-26, 10pm] Crap. Well, apparently it's preseason for the bloggers, too.

I had a typo in one of my spreadsheet formulas, which was screwing up the possession usage data in the Georgetown players' skill curves. I've corrected the figures and accompanying text - the story has changed a bit now, especially as it relates to Austin Freeman and the other returning players, so if you've already read this article, you might want to re-read the last section.


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For better or for worse, the media, the fans and even the Georgetown Athletic Department have embraced the notion that this season's Hoya team will be led by it's three McDonald's All-Americans: Greg Monroe (soph), Chris Wright (junior) and Austin Freeman (junior).

These are the only three returning players that we credit with positive net points (created more points than they allowed) from last season, so it seems natural that they would become the core of the team.

A trio of players leading the team is not new. During the JTIII era, there have been typically three players who use ≥22% of available possessions each season. If all players shared the ball equally, we'd expect a possession usage of 20%, so in effect the offense is usually dominated by three guys.
.       Player         %Poss    %Min    ORat
2004-5  Bowman          24.2    82.7    112.4
.       Green           23.8    84.0    111.5
.       Hibbert         25.3    39.3     89.2
.       Cook            20.3    80.1    102.3

2005-6  Green           25.4    80.7    102.7
.       Hibbert         25.6    59.6    120.9
.       Bowman          24.6    70.7    101.0
.       Cook            18.1    76.8    113.0

2006-7  Green           24.9    83.0    114.4
.       Hibbert         22.8    65.7    130.8
.       Summers         22.0    65.7    101.8
.       Wallace         18.9    80.2    119.7

2007-8  Hibbert         25.9    66.0    120.5
.       Summers         23.8    67.5    104.0
.       Sapp            22.7    66.4    105.5
.       Wright          21.9    42.4     97.7*
.       Freeman         18.1    63.9    115.9

2008-9  Summers         24.4    72.0    104.0
.       Monroe          22.9    76.0    110.9
.       Wright          21.3    81.5    107.2
.       Freeman         19.4    74.3    115.6

*Wright missed 18 games his freshman year, so his usage stats aren't easily compared to his teammates.

Usually, the next man in line for possessions is much more efficient offensively than at least one of his more aggressive teammates. Last season the "next man in line" was more efficient than all three players who were ahead of him.

That man was Austin Freeman. It's also worth noting that he was able to keep a high offensive rating despite having his 3FG shooting accuracy drop from 40% to 31% from his freshman to sophomore season. One could reasonably hope that he will be even more proficient this year.

There are two fundamental hurdles that he - and any player looking to step into a bigger role - must overcome. We'll call them inertia and marginalism. Each of these concepts is fundamental to a pair of questions we'll ask about Austin Freeman coming into this season:
  1. Can Austin Freeman increase the rate at which he uses possessions, to become a go-to offensive player rather than just a complementary one?
  2. Will there be a cost in his offensive efficiency if he does use more possessions?

Inertia

A couple of years ago, Ken Pomeroy posted an article on Basketball Prospectus noting that
[o]nce a player demonstrates himself to be a role player, it's unlikely he'll ever be a go-to guy and, therefore, a superstar. It's not quite a law in college basketball, but players who are not very involved in the offense tend to stay that way. Any major changes in a player's usage are usually the result of filling the hole left by a departing possession eater.
I found this point compelling, so much so that I wrote about this each of the past two pre-seasons, and here I am doing it again.

As an aside, an important point to keep in mind during this discussion is that we are discussing usage rate (a percentage), not possessions used (a counting stat). As players receive more minutes of playing time, their counting stats will naturally increase. But here we are concerned with how their rate statistics change, which should better indicate a change in behavior or ability.

Greg Monroe and Chris Wright appear naturally predisposed toward using possessions - Wright has used ~22% of available possessions each of the first two seasons, and Monroe was using more than 23% last year. This was a good thing last season, as both were more efficient than the team overall, especially when looking at performance versus Top 100 opponents. In fact, they were the second and third best option on offense in those games. The most efficient offensive player, whether you look at vs. Top 100 teams, conference games or even all games, was Austin Freeman.

Can we expect that Freeman will use significantly more possessions this year? First, let's see if we learned anything from his freshman to sophomore growth.

From the table above, we see that the Hoyas went into last year with only one possession-eater lost (Hibbert) and three returning (Summers, Sapp and Wright). So possessions were available, but there wasn't a wholesale change at the top.

To understand the year-to-year change in possession usage a typical Big East player experiences, we can take a look at all Big East players from 2005-2008 and fit a line through their possession usage rates from one year to the next. I've attached a figure from last year's article - you'll need to go back and read that post to understand all of what's going on in it, but for now all we care about is the solid black line that is fitted to the circles (click on the figure to enlarge).




The typical Big East player will increase his usage from one year to the next, so long as he used less than 22% of possessions in the previous year. Players who used more than 22% of possessions the previous season tend to use less. Moreover, we can use that fitted black line to actually estimate how many more possessions a player would be expected to use the next season.

Austin Freeman went into last season having used 18.1% of possessions as a freshman. Based on historical Big East growth rates, we expected him - on average - to use 18.9% of possessions as a sophomore. He actually exceeded that by a bit (19.4%). So it looks like Freeman is fairly well-described by our little model, or perhaps we're being a bit conservative.

This season, the Hoyas again have lost one possession eater (Summers) and return two (Wright and Monroe), so we'd expect about the same change or increase in usage from the returning players.

If we apply the model towards next season, we'd only expect Freeman to use 20.0% of available possessions, which would frankly be a bit disappointing in light of his offensive ability. Let's take this a bit further. Because we are über-geeks here, we can actually predict what his usage rates would be under favorable (75th percentile) and extraordinary (95th percentile) conditions, just as Pomeroy did.
.                       Year 2
Year 1: 19.5%         Expectation
.  Average               20.0
75th percentile          22.0
95th percentile          25.5
Assuming the model is good for Freeman, an increased usage to the magical 22% rate - both the seeming natural usage rate for players and the top tier for players in the Georgetown offense - has about a 1 in 4 chance of happening this season. It's tempting to say that he'll likely take more than 20% of possessions, since he used more than predicted last year (or to say that there is better than a 1 in 4 chance he'll get to 22%), but I'm a bit hesitant to draw this conclusion from one data point (his change from freshman to sophomore year).


Marginalism

Throughout the above discussion, we were only concerned with the percentage of possessions Austin Freeman might use this year, with the hope that he might increase his usage rate more than expected. The assumption is that a sharp increase in possession usage by Freeman would help the team because he is the team's most efficient scorer. Taking some of Summers' and Sapp's possessions and scoring on them at Freeman's rate will help the offense.

But if Freeman takes more possessions and shots, would he remain as efficient a scorer? As a player takes more and more possessions from his teammates, does his efficiency decrease, and by how much?

The law of marginal utility (i.e. "diminishing returns") should be familiar to anyone who's had to suffer through an economics class. Simply, as a resource is increasingly available or used, the utility of each quanta of the resource decreases. In plainer English, the more abundant an item, the less its value. Think crop prices, or water rates.

To my best knowledge, this idea of marginal return was first applied to basketball by Dean Oliver, who wondered if players were more offensively efficient when they used fewer possessions. He discusses this in his book Basketball on Paper, and, to this end, he looked at three NBA players: Jerry Stackhouse, Michael Jordan and Georgetown's very own Allen Iverson via what he calls "skill curves" (I've reproduced his plot here):




To my way of thinking, he's got the axes backwards (usage rate is the independent variable and therefore should be on the X-axis) but the conclusions from the data are still clear. I'll flip the axes to make my point, though (and ignore that red line for a moment):



As players increase their usage - the percentage of possessions they use - they become less efficient.

However, it's not a smooth curve, but rather a sigmoidal fit (an S-curve), so that there is a big jump between efficient usage and inefficient usage. That notch varies from player to player, and Jordan's greatness shows up by where his notch is: he can produce a 120 offensive rating (1.2 pts. per poss. used) even while using more than 30% of available possessions.

There is a common criticism of Oliver's work, summarized recently by Kevin Pelton over at Basketball Prospectus:
Most past efforts [to understand efficiency vs. usage in the NBA] were tripped up by the problem of looking at usage on a game-by-game basis. Naturally, players will use more possessions on nights where they have a more favorable matchup, so it is not surprising that these studies actually found that players' efficiency rose as their usage increased.
More recently, Eli Witus expanded greatly upon this pioneering work by comparing high-usage and low-usage lineups for the 2007-8 NBA season, to find a relationship between player usage rates and efficiency without the confounding effect described by Pelton. I won't go into much detail here - the article may be a bit advanced for non-geeks - but the upshot was that he found that, if a player increases his usage rate by 1%, his efficiency will decrease by 1.25 points. This result is that red line added to the graph above. While it doesn't apply to Jordan, this new analysis actually shows good agreement with Oliver's work with "normal" NBA superstars.


This is all well and good, but is this information applicable to Austin Freeman, or the Hoyas more generally?

To find out, I compiled efficiency vs. usage stats for the past three seasons for Georgetown, much like Oliver did. I don't have the energy, and probably not the skills either, to redo Witus' work. Here, I simply compiled offensive rating vs. poss. usage rate for each player in each game, using my HD Box Score program, which should be more accurate than using the traditional box score calculations.

The data tends to be quite a bit more noisy than Oliver's plots, mainly because there aren't nearly as many games to sort through. Oliver looked at 2 NBA seasons (164 games), while I have data for 88 Georgetown games over the last three years. I've also used relatively narrow "bins" or ranges of possession usage to average - I'm using increments of 2.5% (e.g. averaging games with 15% - 17.5% poss. used). I've done this so each player's skill curve will have at least 8 points. I've included standard deviations for each bin to help indicate that noise - a point with no error bars is from a single game.

We'll start with Roy Hibbert and Jon Wallace, combining their junior and senior seasons. Here, Witus' expected decline rate is now indicated by the dashed gray line.



We don't see the notch - the big and sudden drop in efficiency at high usage rates - but there also aren't the extremely high usage rates that the NBA stars can reach. What we do see is that the decline looks very different for the two players.

Hibbert - a high usage player - was incredibly efficient at virtually every usage rate (and I have no idea why he has that drop when he used less than 10%), good for about a 130 Off. rating when using between 12% and 33% of possessions. His efficiency finally starts to drop at extremely high usage rates (>35%), but even this part of the curve is being drive by a single game (against Michigan, Nov. 2007).

Wallace - a low usage player - has a very different skill curve. There's a lot more noise in his data, which I believe is attributable to his high dependence on 3pt shooting. He also suffered from a much steeper drop in efficiency as he used a higher percentage of possessions. If we fit a line to his curve (not shown) we'd see that his expected offensive rating drops below 100 around 25% of possessions used. And since he was surrounded by other skilled offensive players, it makes intuitive sense that we'd not want him to use much more that 20% of possessions, which was his natural behavior.


Next up are Sapp and Summers, for whom I have the last three seasons. I've left the Witus line at the same location as for the Hibbert/Wallace plot, to allow for easy comparison.




While Summers was a forward and Sapp a guard, the slopes of their efficiency curves are quite similar. They both shot about half of their shots from outside (Sapp: 428/811 3FGA/FGA = 52.8%, Summers: 411/838 = 49%) at about equal proficiency (Sapp: 34.5% 3FG, Summers: 35.1%) over their careers, so this may not be entirely surprising. Once again, we see no notch in their curves, but a decline in efficiency at increasing usage not as steep as for Wallace. Sapp, especially, showed a steady drop paralleling the Witus line, although he seems to have an upward notch at the 25% usage rate. I wonder if this is the effect Pelton discussed; Sapp - who I think was always under-appreciated for his basketball sense - may have been more adept at recognizing and exploiting a favorable matchup.

At even moderate usage (>15%), neither player showed an area of high efficiency (>120 off. rating), but Summers did post some very high off. ratings at the lowest usage bins (although those were highly variable). This is not to say that these were poor offensive players - a 120 off. rating is very good - but neither looked to be a consistently great offensive player, even when not required to carry the load.


Now that we've got some context, let's take a look at how Austin Freeman has performed over the last two seasons.



Freeman's curve is a bit harder to make sense of, as he's got that big drop in efficiency when using 17.5-20% of possessions. In a bit of a statistical fluke, most (7 of 9) of the games that make up this bin are from his freshman year, and that dip seems to be due to his freshman games (his two sophomore games in the bin are amongst the three best of the bin). More on year-to-year improvement below.

Ignoring that dip, we see that Freeman can be an elite offensive player when he's using less than ~22% of possessions, operating at the level of Hibbert and Wallace rather than Summers and Sapp. Also, it's apparent that Freeman does not do well when he takes on a higher load - above 22% of possessions used his off. rating drops below 100, i.e. to a mediocre level.

So here we are faced with a conundrum - Freeman has been anointed to be one of the big 3 players for the Hoyas this season, but his offensive game suffers greatly when he steps into the high usage (>22%) role.

I'll now add Wright and Monroe to Freeman's graph:



As you can see, Monroe also has the drop in his skill curve, although his looks to drop below a 100 off. rating somewhere around 27% of possessions used.

Chris Wright's curve is a complete mess. That huge drop at low usage rate is the average of two games against Pitt, including the 2008 BET when he put up 0 points created in 30 possessions played. But even ignoring that point, his skill curve just doesn't seem to obey the rules of efficiency vs. usage. I don't know if this is a result of the 18 games he missed during his freshman year or his inconsistent outside shooting, but I'll refrain from further comment until we get another season to add to the database.


Am I underselling Freeman's potential for this year?

There is one critical point that I've been ignoring here: year-to-year improvement. Unlike Oliver and Witus, we aren't discussing mature NBA players, but college kids who are still developing their skill sets and learning a complicated offensive scheme.

To address this, I've come up with a simplistic plot. I've taken all Big East players for the 2005-2008 seasons who played at least 10% of available minutes, and found the difference between their current and previous year's poss. usage and off. rating. For example, looking at Austin Freeman:
Season Poss % ORat 2007-8 18.1 115.9 2008-9 19.4 115.6 Diff. +1.3 -0.3
I've compiled all available player-seasons (n=274) in this graph:



The markers are color-coded by Year-2 offensive rating and sized by Year-2 percent minutes played. The fitted line (with the fit weighted by % min) is the black line, with the 75% and 95% prediction bands in blue and gray, respectively.

The evidence is not promising. That line has a negative slope, just as Witus saw for NBA players. Ours has a gentler slope, but still shows that a 1 percent increase in possession usage from one season to the next will cost an average Big East player about 0.78 points in off. rating.

All I can offer is that the correlation is extremely weak: the 1σ uncertainty of that slope is 0.73, which is to say that it is just barely significant. To put it another way, of the 274 player-seasons we're looking at here, 80 showed an improvement in offensive rating while increasing possession usage. Or take a look at Chris Wright, who improved his offensive rating 9.5 points (97.7 to 107.2) with a drop of only 0.6 points in usage (21.9 to 21.3).

Could inherent talent (using, e.g. RSCI ranking as a metric) help some players to improve offensively in spite of increased usage? That study will have to wait for another day.

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Recap: Georgetown 75, UMCP 48

In a long awaited match-up of local rivals, the good guys won in a landslide. I hate to bump SFHoya's great post on rebounding off the top of the page, but progress waits for no man.

Let's run the numbers:

TEMPO-FREE BOX SCORE

. Visitor Home
. GU Maryland
. 1st Half 2nd Half Total 1st Half 2nd Half Total
Pace 30 33 63

Effic. 126.2 111.4 118.4 66.4 84.3 75.8

eFG% 60.0 60.4 60.2 36.0 32.8 34.2
TO% 19.9 30.1 25.3 26.6 15.1 20.5
OR% 46.2 45.5 45.8 22.2 39.1 31.7
FT Rate 40.0 50.0 44.9 12.0 28.1 21.1

Assist Rate 69.2 38.5 53.8 37.5 30.0 33.3
Block Rate 11.1 9.5 10.3 25.0 0.0 13.8
Steal Rate 3.3 6.0 4.7 0.0 3.0 1.6

2FG% 56.2 76.9 65.5 33.3 42.9 38.5
3FG% 44.4 27.3 35.0 28.6 9.1 16.7
FT% 80.0 66.7 72.7 66.7 77.8 75.0

The game was certainly played at the Hoyas' pace - this was the slowest game of the year for Georgetown, 2 possessions slower than the slog against WSU.

The first half was a defensive clinic for Georgetown. The Terrapins struggled greatly on 2-pt shots (33.3%) and couldn't corral many of their misses (4 OR's on 18 available misses). The Terps also turned the ball over on more than 1 in 4 possessions, although the low Hoya steal rate (3.3%) indicates that many of Maryland's TOs were self-inflicted.

Meanwhile, the Hoyas made 4-9 3FGs in the half, led by J. Sapp's 2/3 3FG shooting, crashed the offensive glass (6/13 available missed shots) and finally kept their turnover rate below 20% for the first time in a half since Drexel.

Now to be fair, Maryland came into the game well-regarded on defense, but not particularly strong offensively, except for a low TO Rate and good FT shooting. The Terps managed only 3 FTA in the 1st half, so even extraordinary marksmanship from the stripe would have been no help.

The 2nd half was more of the same, as the Hoyas eventually stretched the lead out to 73-38 at the under-8:00 media timeout before the game devolved into garbage time. The end of the bench managed to turn the ball over in 7 out of the last 12 possessions, which will certainly give JTIII something to work on before next weekend's game against American.

One further point - something that I will continue to point out so long as G'town keeps it up - the Hoyas made 2/3 2-pt jumpers in the game, while the Terps made only 6/24 2-pt jumpers.

INDIVIDUAL NET POINTS STATS

GU Off Poss Individ Def Individ
Player Poss Used ORtg Pts Prod Poss DRtg Pts Allow Net Pts
Summers, DaJuan 26 8.2 135.7 11.1 26 50.6 2.6 +8.4
Freeman, Austin 46 9.4 178.1 16.7 45 73.8 6.6 +10.1
Monroe, Greg 43 8.4 133.3 11.2 42 74.5 6.3 +4.9
Wright, Chris 50 7.6 126.5 9.6 48 72.5 7.0 +2.7
Sapp, Jessie 35 9.0 106.9 9.6 37 51.6 3.8 +5.8
Mescheriakov, Nikita 19 4.2 9.3 0.4 19 69.4 2.6 -2.2
Jansen, Bryon 2 0.0 - 0.0 1 400.0 0.8 -0.8
Clark, Jason 38 5.3 102.0 5.4 39 78.8 6.1 -0.8
Vaughn, Julian 20 5.0 115.9 5.8 21 89.7 3.8 +2.1
Sims, Henry 16 1.0 200.0 1.9 16 95.0 3.0 -1.1
Wattad, Omar 20 3.0 0.0 0.0 21 88.9 3.7 -3.7
TOTALS 63 61.0 117.6 71.7 63 76.2 46.4 +25.3

Maryland Off Poss Individ Def Individ
Player Poss Used ORtg Pts Prod Poss DRtg Pts Allow Net Pts
MILBOURNE, Landon 39 8.7 55.0 4.8 40 118.9 9.5 -4.7
MOSLEY, Sean 42 4.9 83.7 4.1 43 137.2 11.8 -7.7
DUPREE, Braxton 33 6.0 69.1 4.1 33 125.6 8.3 -4.1
HAYES, Eric 48 7.0 118.4 8.2 48 99.9 9.6 -1.3
VASQUEZ, Greivis 41 9.8 41.6 4.1 40 151.2 12.1 -8.0
KIM, Jin-Soo 16 4.8 94.5 4.6 16 64.0 2.0 +2.5
BOWIE, Adrian 39 12.4 73.8 9.1 38 112.9 8.6 +0.6
PEARMAN, David 2 0.0 - 0.0 2 0.0 0.0 +0.0
TUCKER, Cliff 5 0.0 - 0.0 5 140.0 1.4 -1.4
BURNEY, Jerome 13 3.3 84.4 2.8 13 86.0 2.2 +0.5
GREGORY, Dino 15 4.0 58.2 2.3 15 90.7 2.7 -0.4
NEAL, Dave 22 1.0 243.8 2.5 22 103.8 4.6 -2.1
TOTALS 63 61.9 75.4 46.7 63 119.0 72.8 -26.2

J. Sapp had a nice 1st half offensively, but was quiet in the 2nd half, with only two missed FTs (thanks to Gary Williams' technical foul). However, his main assignment for the evening was to harrass G. Vasquez (1/3 2FG, 0/4 3FG), and the stats appear to have captured this, as he ended up with an excellent D. Rating for the game.

C. Wright played strong offensively through most of game, perfect on 2FGs (with some nice drives) and FTs, and only missing on his 2 3FG attempts. His stats are a bit suppressed by some sloppy play during garbage time, where he missed a 2FG and a committed a turnover. He'll need to practice his blowout-win offense this week.

D. Summers sat a bit with foul concerns in the 1st half, and was the first started to the bench as the game got out of hand in the 2nd half, so his possessions were limited. He was able to ride a hot outside shooting hand (3/5 3FG) to a nice offensive day, although at least one shot from inside the arc would have been nice. It will be interesting to see if Summers can return to his aggressive play from earlier in the tournament, or if his recent success from deep will encourage him to stay on the outside in the offense.

G. Monroe kept up his steady play for the fifth game in a row. His FT shooting will be something to keep an eye on (5/9 against Tennessee, 2/4 tonight). Yeah, that's about all I could come up with for a criticism.

And, the player of the game goes to . . . Austin Freeman, who was his usual ultra-efficient self on the offensive end. In addition to missing only 3 of 10 shots from the field, he also had 2 assists and 2 ORebs. He appears to be comfortably moving into the possession usage range of 20+% without any apparent drop-off in production.

Other players of note:
  • J. Clark had the most possessions of the bench players tonight - he rebounded strongly, but was a bit careless with the ball (2 TOs / 5.3 poss used).
  • J. Vaughn had a quietly nice offensive game
  • O. Wattad came back down to earth after Friday's hot shooting
  • H. Sims finally had a 100+ ORating game (made a lay-up, missed a 3FG, got an offensive rebound)
  • N. Mescheriakov is still in search of his shooting touch, but I thought he looked more comfortable out there (that's something).

HD BOX SCORE

GU vs Maryland
11/30/08 5:30 p.m. at Lake Buena Vista, Fla. -- The Milk House
Final score: GU 75, Maryland 48

GU Min +/- Pts 2PM-A 3PM-A FTM-A FGA A Stl TO Blk OR DR PF
Summers, DaJuan 16:18 +26 14/43 0- 0 3- 5 5- 6 5/19 2/11 1/26 2/26 0/18 0/ 5 3/19 2
Freeman, Austin 28:58 +27 18/61 6- 8 1- 2 3- 3 10/38 2/14 0/45 1/46 0/27 2/19 4/25 2
Monroe, Greg 27:27 +29 12/59 5- 8 0- 0 2- 4 8/35 2/15 0/42 1/43 1/29 1/16 5/27 1
Wright, Chris 31:14 +23 8/62 3- 4 0- 2 2- 2 6/42 5/20 1/48 1/50 0/29 0/21 3/29 4
Sapp, Jessie 23:20 +35 10/57 1- 2 2- 3 2- 4 5/26 1/15 1/37 3/35 0/23 1/ 8 3/25 3
Mescheriakov, Nikita 11:45 - 4 0/11 0- 1 0- 1 0- 0 2/12 0/ 4 0/19 2/19 0/12 1/ 9 2/14 1
Jansen, Bryon 00:53 - 4 0/ 0 0- 0 0- 0 0- 0 0/ 0 0/ 0 0/ 1 0/ 2 0/ 1 0/ 0 0/ 1 0
Clark, Jason 23:59 + 6 5/36 1- 2 1- 3 0- 0 5/31 1/11 0/39 2/38 1/25 2/20 4/28 2
Vaughn, Julian 12:33 - 2 6/16 2- 3 0- 1 2- 3 4/14 1/ 4 0/21 1/20 1/10 1/ 9 1/14 2
Sims, Henry 09:58 - 5 2/10 1- 1 0- 1 0- 0 2/14 0/ 2 0/16 0/16 1/ 8 1/11 1/ 7 0
Wattad, Omar 13:35 + 4 0/20 0- 0 0- 2 0- 0 2/14 0/ 8 0/21 2/20 0/13 0/ 7 0/16 4
TOTALS 40:00 75 19-29 7-20 16-22 49 14/26 3/63 16/63 4/39 11/24 28/41 21
. 0.655 0.350 0.727 0.538 0.048 0.254 0.103 0.458 0.683

Maryland Min +/- Pts 2PM-A 3PM-A FTM-A FGA A Stl TO Blk OR DR PF
MILBOURNE, Landon 25:52 -18 3/32 1- 5 0- 2 1- 3 7/30 2/12 0/40 0/39 1/16 1/18 2/15 2
MOSLEY, Sean 28:31 -28 4/29 2- 5 0- 1 0- 0 6/35 0/10 0/43 1/42 1/19 1/24 0/16 2
DUPREE, Braxton 21:18 -18 6/24 3- 6 0- 0 0- 0 6/27 0/ 8 0/33 1/33 0/14 0/17 0/10 2
HAYES, Eric 29:28 -22 11/31 2- 3 1- 3 4- 4 6/43 0/ 8 1/48 3/48 0/26 0/34 3/23 0
VASQUEZ, Greivis 25:18 -30 2/31 1- 3 0- 4 0- 0 7/36 4/12 0/40 4/41 0/17 1/25 1/11 1
KIM, Jin-Soo 09:54 + 2 5/12 2- 2 0- 2 1- 1 4/15 0/ 2 0/16 1/16 0/ 8 1/11 0/ 7 1
BOWIE, Adrian 24:02 -10 11/34 3- 8 1- 4 2- 2 12/38 0/ 8 0/38 2/39 0/18 1/27 2/17 1
PEARMAN, David 01:31 + 4 0/ 4 0- 0 0- 1 0- 0 1/ 3 0/ 1 0/ 2 0/ 2 0/ 0 0/ 2 0/ 0 0
TUCKER, Cliff 03:57 - 2 0/ 5 0- 1 0- 0 0- 0 1/ 5 0/ 2 0/ 5 0/ 5 0/ 1 0/ 3 0/ 1 0
BURNEY, Jerome 08:02 - 2 2/12 1- 3 0- 0 0- 0 3/11 0/ 3 0/13 1/13 2/ 9 2/ 7 2/10 1
GREGORY, Dino 08:09 - 5 1/ 9 0- 2 0- 0 1- 2 2/17 0/ 2 0/15 0/15 0/ 8 3/16 1/ 6 2
NEAL, Dave 13:58 - 6 3/17 0- 1 1- 1 0- 0 2/25 0/ 4 0/22 0/22 0/ 9 2/21 1/ 9 3
TOTALS 40:00 48 15-39 3-18 9-12 57 6/18 1/63 14/63 4/29 13/41 13/24 15
. 0.385 0.167 0.750 0.333 0.016 0.222 0.138 0.317 0.542

Efficiency: GU 1.190, Maryland 0.762
eFG%: GU 0.602, Maryland 0.342
Substitutions: GU 23, Maryland 23

2-pt Shot Selection:
Dunks: GU 2-3, Maryland 1-1
Layups/Tips: GU 15-23, Maryland 8-14
Jumpers: GU 2-3, Maryland 6-24

I haven't gotten around to the team and individual stats pages yet after all, but I will get them running soon.

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Recap: Georgetown 58, Wichita State 50

Happy Thanksgiving.

Hopefully you've recovered from the tryptophan-induced (Hoya-induced?) coma and have now come to find out if there were any bright spots from today's grueling 8 point win over the Shockers.

Let's run the numbers:
TEMPO-FREE BOX SCORE

. Home Visitor
. Georgetown Wichita State
. 1st Half 2nd Half Total 1st Half 2nd Half Total
Pace 31 33 65

Effic. 81.9 96.1 89.2 69.3 84.1 76.9

eFG% 42.5 50.0 46.2 32.3 31.7 32.0
TO% 25.2 27.0 26.1 25.2 21.0 23.1
OR% 20.0 25.0 22.2 34.8 39.1 37.0
FT Rate 65.0 70.0 67.5 9.7 40.0 24.6

Assist Rate 75.0 44.4 58.8 75.0 44.4 58.8
Block Rate 13.6 15.0 14.3 9.1 18.2 13.6
Steal Rate 15.8 12.0 13.8 6.3 15.0 10.8

2FG% 63.6 63.6 63.6 18.2 40.0 28.6
3FG% 11.1 22.2 16.7 44.4 10.0 26.3
FT% 69.2 85.7 77.8 66.7 75.0 73.3
It wasn't an exceptionally slow pace that kept the score so low, it was two offenses that struggled to score points. The last time Georgetown struggled this much offensively in the non-conf. portion of the schedule were the back-to-back losses vs. Oregon and at Duke in the 2006-7 season.

What are the major problems on offense? Turnovers and 3-pt. shooting.
  • Turnovers: The main culprits today were C. Wright (5 TOs / 10 possessions used = 50% TO Rate) and J. Clark (4 / 5.9 = 68% TO Rate). D. Summers committed 3 TOs, but did so while using 13.3 possessions, for a pedestrian 23% TO Rate. The fault here is with the young guards.
  • 3-pt shooting: Wright (0/4) and A. Freeman (0/3) combined for 7 misses without a make today. In three games against mediocre competition, Georgetown has shot 5/23, 6/21 and now 3/18 on 3FGs. That's a net of 14/62, or 22.6%. These three teams were not especially proficient guarding 3's last season (def 3FG% = 33.9, 33.1, 38.9 respectively for Jacksonville, Drexel and WSU), so there's no evidence that the Hoyas have run up against a series of teams that focus on stopping outside shooting. Outside shooting was critical to last year's team; G'town shot 40.0% on 3FGs in wins, but 27.6% in losses. So long as Summers (2/10 this season) and Freeman (3/11) miss from outside, this team will struggle against anyone willing to play a packed-in zone and dare the Hoyas to beat them from outside.
Defensive rebounding continues to be a problem for the Hoyas, although rebounding is clearly the Shocker's great strength - coming into the game, WSU was the best defensive rebounding team in the country (OReb% allowed = 16.5%) and a very good offensive rebounding team (OReb% = 42.5, 25th).

A positive? Georgetown continues to make their opponents miserable on 2pt-shooting. The Hoyas allowed no fast-break baskets today (if my compiler is working correctly).

INDIVIDUAL NET POINTS STATS

Georgetown Off Poss Individ Def Individ
Player Poss Used ORtg Pts Prod Poss DRtg Pts Allow Net Pts
Summers, DaJuan 59 13.3 91.9 12.2 60 75.4 9.0 +3.2
Freeman, Austin 57 13.0 123.8 16.1 59 72.2 8.5 +7.5
Monroe, Greg 47 7.5 133.2 10.0 48 65.4 6.3 +3.7
Wright, Chris 56 10.0 62.9 6.3 57 65.4 7.5 -1.2
Sapp, Jessie 55 8.0 111.5 9.0 57 72.9 8.3 +0.6
Clark, Jason 17 5.9 29.4 1.7 16 99.5 3.2 -1.5
Vaughn, Julian 15 3.3 22.5 0.8 15 87.5 2.6 -1.9
Sims, Henry 4 1.0 0.0 0.0 4 25.4 0.2 -0.2
Wattad, Omar 10 1.3 44.2 0.6 9 138.3 2.5 -1.9
TOTALS 64 63.4 89.4 56.6 65 76.9 48.1 +8.5

Wichita State Off Poss Individ Def Individ
Player Poss Used ORtg Pts Prod Poss DRtg Pts Allow Net Pts
CLEMENTE, Ramon 43 9.6 98.8 9.5 43 107.6 9.3 +0.2
HAWKINS, A.J 38 5.6 56.1 3.1 38 96.7 7.4 -4.2
STUTZ, Garrett 32 6.0 33.2 2.0 32 95.7 6.1 -4.1
HANNAH, Clevin 41 8.0 69.9 5.6 39 100.9 7.9 -2.3
MURRY, Toure 19 6.1 36.4 2.2 20 122.3 4.9 -2.7
ELLIS, Aaron 26 4.4 115.3 5.1 25 43.4 2.2 +2.9
HATCH, Graham 26 3.8 43.3 1.6 24 44.7 2.1 -0.5
CHAMBERLAIN, Reggie 24 5.8 81.9 4.8 23 54.0 2.5 +2.3
KYLES, David 38 6.4 145.7 9.3 39 86.1 6.7 +2.6
DURLEY, J.T 33 8.2 46.4 3.8 33 91.3 6.0 -2.2
GRISKENAS, Mantas 5 0.0 - 0.0 4 120.0 1.0 -1.0
TOTALS 65 63.8 73.6 47.0 64 90.6 56.0 -9.0

There were only 4 positive contributors today for the Georgetown. G. Monroe was dominant in the 1st half (11 pts. 3 reb., 2 blk., 2 st.) but struggled in the 2nd (0 pts., 1 reb., 1 blk., 0 st.). Conversely, Summers came alive in the 2nd half after little contribution in the 1st (and getting called out by Jay Williams on the half-time show).

The player-of-the-game goes to . . . Austin Freeman. Despite his 0/3 on 3FGs, Freeman made 6/7 2FGs and committed no turnovers.

HD BOX SCORE

Wichita State vs Georgetown
11/27/08 2:25 p.m. at Lake Buena Vista, Fla. -- The Milk House
Final score: Georgetown 58, Wichita State 50

Wichita State Min +/- Pts 2PM-A 3PM-A FTM-A FGA A Stl TO Blk OR DR PF
CLEMENTE, Ramon 26:36 -15 10/31 4- 9 0- 0 2- 2 9/40 1/ 7 0/43 1/43 0/14 4/30 6/17 2
HAWKINS, A.J 23:11 -21 2/20 1- 4 0- 0 0- 2 4/37 1/ 6 2/38 2/38 1/11 3/32 2/15 3
STUTZ, Garrett 19:00 -17 2/12 1- 3 0- 0 0- 0 3/29 1/ 4 0/32 3/32 0/13 1/25 2/10 0
HANNAH, Clevin 24:30 -12 6/31 0- 4 1- 5 3- 3 9/38 3/ 9 1/39 2/41 0/13 0/29 2/16 3
MURRY, Toure 12:12 -19 2/ 6 1- 5 0- 3 0- 0 8/18 0/ 2 0/20 0/19 1/ 9 2/15 1/ 6 4
ELLIS, Aaron 16:02 +10 4/27 0- 2 1- 1 1- 2 3/25 0/ 8 2/25 1/26 0/10 3/17 4/12 2
HATCH, Graham 16:34 +14 2/24 1- 3 0- 2 0- 0 5/27 1/ 7 1/24 1/26 0/ 7 0/19 0/15 0
CHAMBERLAIN, Reggie 15:16 + 6 8/19 0- 2 2- 4 2- 2 6/23 0/ 5 1/23 1/24 0/ 9 0/17 1/11 1
KYLES, David 23:04 + 9 11/42 3- 6 1- 1 2- 2 7/33 2/ 9 0/39 2/38 0/13 1/22 1/16 2
DURLEY, J.T 21:09 + 9 3/38 1- 4 0- 3 1- 2 7/32 1/11 0/33 2/33 1/ 9 1/21 2/17 2
GRISKENAS, Mantas 02:26 - 4 0/ 0 0- 0 0- 0 0- 0 0/ 3 0/ 0 0/ 4 0/ 5 0/ 2 0/ 3 0/ 0 0
TOTALS 40:00 50 12-42 5-19 11-15 61 10/17 7/64 15/65 3/22 17/46 21/27 19
. 0.286 0.263 0.733 0.588 0.109 0.231 0.136 0.370 0.778

Georgetown Min +/- Pts 2PM-A 3PM-A FTM-A FGA A Stl TO Blk OR DR PF
Summers, DaJuan 36:37 +11 14/56 3- 6 2- 5 2- 2 11/38 1/12 2/60 3/59 0/36 1/24 2/41 2
Freeman, Austin 35:17 +12 18/54 6- 7 0- 3 6- 9 10/37 0/10 2/59 0/57 0/37 2/25 2/40 0
Monroe, Greg 29:15 +10 11/46 3- 6 0- 0 5- 6 6/30 1/12 2/48 1/47 3/31 0/17 4/31 5
Wright, Chris 34:54 +14 4/54 1- 1 0- 4 2- 2 5/37 5/15 1/57 5/56 1/36 0/24 6/40 1
Sapp, Jessie 34:09 + 7 9/52 1- 1 1- 4 4- 4 5/34 2/15 2/57 2/55 0/34 0/21 4/36 1
Clark, Jason 10:57 - 5 2/10 0- 0 0- 1 2- 2 1/ 9 0/ 1 0/16 4/17 0/14 0/ 9 1/16 3
Vaughn, Julian 10:13 - 5 0/ 8 0- 1 0- 0 0- 2 1/10 1/ 2 0/15 1/15 1/11 1/10 2/12 1
Sims, Henry 02:41 + 0 0/ 2 0- 0 0- 1 0- 0 1/ 2 0/ 0 0/ 4 0/ 4 1/ 5 0/ 2 1/ 5 0
Wattad, Omar 05:57 - 4 0/ 8 0- 0 0- 0 0- 0 0/ 3 0/ 1 0/ 9 1/10 0/ 6 1/ 3 0/ 9 2
TOTALS 40:00 58 14-22 3-18 21-27 40 10/17 9/65 17/64 6/42 6/27 29/46 15
. 0.636 0.167 0.778 0.588 0.138 0.266 0.143 0.222 0.630


Efficiency: Georgetown 0.906, Wichita State 0.769
eFG%: Georgetown 0.463, Wichita State 0.320
Substitutions: Georgetown 24, Wichita State 43

2-pt Shot Selection:
Dunks: Georgetown 3-3, Wichita State 0-0
Layups/Tips: Georgetown 10-16, Wichita State 8-26
Jumpers: Georgetown 1-3, Wichita State 4-16
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Tomorrow, Georgetown continues their inexorable march towards a Sunday game against the Maryland Terrapins with a 1pm meeting against the Tennessee Volunteers. A nice resource for all things Vol is the BruceBall Blog. If the game pace gets above 70 possessions, expect a painful afternoon.


I'll try to get this year's team and individual stats pages up and running this weekend, as long as I can find some time.

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Recap: Georgetown 81, Drexel 53

The Drexel Dragons were no match for the Hoyas today at the Verizon Center, succumbing to efficient shooting in the 1st half and a strong defensive effort all game.

Let's run the numbers:

TEMPO-FREE BOX SCORE

. Home Visitor
. Georgetown DREXEL
. 1st Half 2nd Half Total 1st Half 2nd Half Total
Pace 32 37 69

Effic. 127.8 105.3 115.9 76.1 75.6 75.8

eFG% 67.3 50.0 58.5 38.6 25.8 31.1
TO% 18.3 13.5 15.7 33.5 16.2 24.3
OR% 20.0 12.5 15.4 26.7 26.9 26.8
FT Rate 26.9 55.6 41.5 36.4 48.4 43.4

Assist Rate 68.8 58.3 64.3 57.1 66.7 61.5
Block Rate 14.3 9.5 11.4 0.0 0.0 0.0
Steal Rate 21.3 16.2 18.6 3.0 8.1 5.7

2FG% 76.5 60.0 68.8 28.6 9.5 17.1
3FG% 33.3 25.0 28.6 37.5 40.0 38.9
FT% 100.0 80.0 86.4 100.0 80.0 87.0

I've bolded and highlighted key numbers from the tempo-free box:
  • Just a solid defensive effort by the Hoyas, across both halves.
  • Georgetown took good care of the ball today, while Drexel was exceptionally generous in the 1st half.
  • Georgetown was very efficient shooting from the floor in the 1st half, by shooting 12 layups or tip-ins and making 11. Drexel had a miserable 2nd half shooting the ball from 2-pt range (2-8 on layups didn't help, but 0-11 on 2-pt jumpers was the killer).
  • After 2 games, it looks like rebounding will be a big issue for the Hoyas. They've been outrebounded twice now, by teams that are unarguably inferior athletically.


INDIVIDUAL NET POINTS STATS

Georgetown Off Poss Individ Def Individ
Player Poss Used ORtg Pts Prod Poss DRtg Pts Allow Net Pts

Summers, DaJuan 43 10.5 107.1 11.3 45 75.8 6.8 +4.5
Wright, Chris 52 10.8 119.3 12.9 51 62.3 6.4 +6.5
Monroe, Greg 54 12.8 172.7 22.1 56 61.3 6.9 +15.2
Freeman, Austin 36 7.8 194.9 15.1 37 69.4 5.1 +10.0
Sapp, Jessie 41 5.1 103.0 5.2 40 47.2 3.8 +1.5
Mescheriakov, Nikita 20 5.0 19.2 1.0 19 88.2 3.4 -2.4
Jansen, Bryon 4 0.0 - 0.0 4 0.0 0.0 +0.0
Clark, Jason 44 6.1 112.4 6.8 47 83.1 7.8 -1.0
Sims, Henry 35 5.9 29.1 1.7 35 77.3 5.4 -3.7
Wattad, Omar 26 6.8 52.2 3.5 26 77.2 4.0 -0.5
TOTALS 71 70.6 112.8 79.6 72 73.6 49.5 +30.1

DREXEL Off Poss Individ Def Individ
Player Poss Used ORtg Pts Prod Poss DRtg Pts Allow Net Pts

Rodgers, Scott 63 11.5 84.7 9.8 63 119.4 15.0 -5.3
Colds. Gerald 35 11.4 82.7 9.5 34 141.6 9.6 -0.2
Harris, Jamie 66 10.9 105.0 11.4 65 120.7 15.7 -4.3
Neisler, Evan 33 10.9 28.2 3.1 33 123.2 8.1 -5.0
Tribbett, Kenny 16 2.0 0.0 0.0 14 168.8 4.7 -4.7
Hawthorne, Tramayne 45 7.8 120.5 9.4 43 77.3 6.7 +2.8
Spencer, Leon 32 8.6 27.0 2.3 33 115.7 7.6 -5.3
Formbor, Yannick 13 2.1 16.0 0.3 13 103.3 2.7 -2.3
Phillip, Kevin 15 2.3 35.9 0.8 15 39.1 1.2 -0.3
Givens, Samme 42 4.0 138.4 5.5 42 89.3 7.5 -2.0
TOTALS 72 71.6 72.8 52.1 71 114.1 82.3 -30.2
Comments:
  • Anyone know where Julian Vaughn was today? Edited to add: The crack staff over at Hoya Hoops got the story:
    Coach said that Vaughn had a minor leg injury above the Achilles and below the calf (he couldn’t remember the medical term or which leg) but he said it wasn’t serious. He said Vaughn suffered the injury before the Jacksonville game but played through it and you could notice him limping a bit in that game. Vaughn hasn’t practiced since then but Coach didn’t seem like it was anything major.
  • Greg Monroe is slipping (he had a Off. Rtg. of 174 last game).
  • Chris Wright didn't miss a FT today.
  • Austin Freeman recovered nicely from his 1-10 shooting performance against Jacksonville with a 4-4 2FG, 2-3 3FG game today. I'm going to go ahead and chalk up last game's problems to the obvious leg cramps he was having.
  • Henry Sims and Nikita Mescheriakov continued to struggle offensively with a bit more burn than last game. Meshcharakou (alternative spelling!) missed on two 3FGAs today - he'll need to start making those to stay in the rotation. Sims was 0-3 on 3FGAs today - he'll need to stop taking those, but he'll likely stay in the rotation either way.
  • Again in this game, Sapp lead the team with his defensive play (5 steals!). I'd suggest that he's doing a great job leading the team right now, by deferring on offense to players who need to get touches as they grow into the offense (Wright & Monroe, especially), but still bringing maximum effort on the other end.
  • Player of the game is . . . Greg Monroe. He used about 5 more possessions than last game on offense with virtually no drop in efficiency, while playing a better defensive game (3 steals, 3 blocks, 6 def. rebounds). His most important stat is probably his 4 assists, second today behind Wright (7).

HD BOX SCORE

DREXEL vs Georgetown
11/22/08 1:00 at
Final score: Georgetown 81, DREXEL 53

DREXEL Min +/- Pts 2PM-A 3PM-A FTM-A FGA A Stl TO Blk OR DR PF
Rodgers, Scott 35:14 -29 13/45 3- 8 1- 2 4- 4 10/49 0/ 7 0/63 3/63 0/28 0/39 2/22 4
Colds. Gerald 18:21 -23 11/25 1- 5 2- 5 3- 3 10/24 0/ 3 0/34 2/35 0/16 0/18 0/13 3
Harris, Jamie 36:15 -29 12/49 1- 3 2- 3 4- 4 6/48 2/ 9 0/65 5/66 0/32 3/37 3/25 3
Neisler, Evan 18:40 -23 3/18 0- 6 0- 0 3- 4 6/27 0/ 4 0/33 3/33 0/16 1/23 2/13 3
Tribbett, Kenny 09:10 -18 0/ 6 0- 1 0- 0 0- 0 1/10 0/ 1 0/14 1/16 0/11 0/ 9 0/ 4 1
Hawthorne, Tramayne 25:07 - 1 10/38 1- 2 2- 8 2- 2 10/31 2/ 6 2/43 0/45 0/17 1/23 2/18 1
Spencer, Leon 18:24 -11 1/29 0- 4 0- 0 1- 2 4/23 0/ 7 1/33 4/32 0/12 2/17 2/ 7 3
Formbor, Yannick 08:03 - 6 0/ 7 0- 1 0- 0 0- 0 1/ 9 1/ 2 0/13 1/13 0/ 5 0/ 7 0/ 3 1
Phillip, Kevin 08:31 + 5 0/13 0- 3 0- 0 0- 0 3/16 0/ 4 0/15 0/15 0/ 7 1/12 4/13 1
Givens, Samme 22:15 - 5 3/35 0- 2 0- 0 3- 4 2/28 3/ 9 1/42 0/42 0/16 2/20 2/17 1
TOTALS 40:00 53 6-35 7-18 20-23 53 8/13 4/71 19/72 0/32 11/41 22/26 21
. 0.171 0.389 0.870 0.615 0.056 0.264 0.000 0.268 0.846

Georgetown Min +/- Pts 2PM-A 3PM-A FTM-A FGA A Stl TO Blk OR DR PF
Summers, DaJuan 25:18 +16 10/54 2- 3 0- 4 6- 6 7/28 2/15 2/45 1/43 0/22 0/13 4/24 5
Wright, Chris 29:49 +22 11/57 4- 8 1- 2 0- 0 10/39 7/15 2/51 1/52 0/24 0/21 5/28 1
Monroe, Greg 30:30 +36 20/76 7- 9 0- 0 6- 6 9/42 4/21 3/56 1/54 3/25 2/14 6/28 2
Freeman, Austin 21:01 +31 16/53 4- 4 2- 3 2- 3 7/29 3/15 0/37 1/36 0/22 2/ 8 3/25 2
Sapp, Jessie 23:31 +23 8/49 1- 1 2- 2 0- 0 3/31 2/15 5/40 3/41 1/18 0/13 2/22 2
Mescheriakov, Nikita 09:39 + 1 1/17 0- 1 0- 2 1- 2 3/16 0/ 5 0/19 1/20 0/ 5 0/12 1/ 8 2
Jansen, Bryon 01:52 + 0 0/ 0 0- 0 0- 0 0- 0 0/ 4 0/ 0 0/ 4 0/ 4 0/ 2 0/ 4 0/ 4 0
Clark, Jason 24:47 + 5 9/46 2- 2 1- 4 2- 2 6/31 0/11 1/47 1/44 0/23 0/19 3/27 1
Sims, Henry 18:31 + 3 2/29 1- 2 0- 3 0- 0 5/25 0/ 8 0/35 1/35 0/20 0/17 2/22 2
Wattad, Omar 15:02 + 3 4/24 1- 2 0- 1 2- 3 3/20 0/ 7 0/26 2/26 0/14 0/14 2/17 2
TOTALS 40:00 81 22-32 6-21 19-22 53 18/28 13/72 12/71 4/35 4/26 30/41 19
. 0.688 0.286 0.864 0.643 0.181 0.169 0.114 0.154 0.732

Efficiency: Georgetown 1.141, DREXEL 0.736
eFG%: Georgetown 0.585, DREXEL 0.311
Substitutions: Georgetown 29, DREXEL 28

2-pt Shot Selection:
Dunks: Georgetown 3-3, DREXEL 0-2
Layups/Tips: Georgetown 16-20, DREXEL 3-11
Jumpers: Georgetown 3-9, DREXEL 3-22

Monday, November 17, 2008

Recap: Georgetown 71, Jacksonville 62

And so begins another season of Georgetown basketball, with a closer-than-you'd-like win over a pesky Jacksonville Dolphins team.

Let's run the numbers.

TEMPO-FREE BOX SCORE

. Home Visitor
. Georgetown Jacksonville
. 1st Half 2nd Half Total 1st Half 2nd Half Total
Pace 39 30 69

Effic. 94.7 110.0 101.5 64.0 119.7 88.7

eFG% 51.6 35.7 45.2 29.7 45.5 37.7
TO% 20.5 9.7 15.7 25.6 9.7 18.6
OR% 26.3 21.4 24.2 30.8 50.0 39.6
FT Rate 35.5 104.8 63.5 28.1 30.3 29.2

Assist Rate 57.1 42.9 52.4 33.3 14.3 21.7
Block Rate 19.0 8.3 13.3 0.0 0.0 0.0
Steal Rate 17.9 6.5 12.9 12.8 3.2 8.6

2FG% 58.8 50.0 55.2 38.1 50.0 44.4
3FG% 28.6 11.1 21.7 9.1 22.2 15.0
FT% 45.5 86.4 72.7 66.7 70.0 68.4

Comments:
  • The 69 possessions from tonight's game is quite a bit faster than last year's team average (62.1). A sign of things to come? Not so fast, my friend; last season's game against Jacksonville had a total of . . . 69 possessions.
  • Much like last year's game, the Hoyas jumped out to a comfortable 1st half lead with good offense and excellent defense. This time, the Dolphins actually out-played G'town in the 2nd half to keep the game close.
  • For all of the moaning about FT shooting in the 1st half (C. Wright shot 1-6 FTs during the first half), the team ended the game with a perfectly acceptable 73 %FT.
  • The OReb% allowed, especially in the 2nd half, was not good. Over the years, it is becoming apparent that JTIII is willing to give up offensive rebounds for the sake of keeping eFG% down. Unfortunately, J'ville shot better in the 2nd half while getting fully half of their own missed shots.
  • That 13.3% block rate is comparable to last year's average thanks to G. Monroe and J. Vaughn, but the big men will need to watch their fouls until H. Sims is able to play more minutes.


INDIVIDUAL NET POINTS STATS

Georgetown Off Poss Individ Def Individ
Player Poss Used ORtg Pts Prod Poss DRtg Pts Allow Net Pts
Summers, DaJuan 46 10.1 112.0 11.3 46 103.8 9.5 +1.8
Wright, Chris 63 10.9 118.3 12.9 62 93.1 11.5 +1.4
Monroe, Greg 51 7.4 173.8 12.9 50 90.7 9.1 +3.8
Freeman, Austin 57 15.7 54.1 8.5 56 87.6 9.8 -1.3
Sapp, Jessie 60 10.2 131.8 13.5 59 79.6 9.4 +4.1
Mescheriakov, Nikita 7 2.0 0.0 0.0 6 56.1 0.7 -0.7
Clark, Jason 23 3.3 135.2 4.4 23 100.0 4.6 -0.2
Vaughn, Julian 17 2.3 116.2 2.7 18 114.6 4.1 -1.4
Sims, Henry 4 0.0 - 0.0 4 60.0 0.5 -0.5
Wattad, Omar 22 6.8 24.6 1.7 21 80.9 3.4 -1.7
TOTALS 70 68.8 98.7 67.9 69 89.9 62.6 +5.3

Jacksonville Off Poss Individ Def Individ
Player Poss Used ORtg Pts Prod Poss DRtg Pts Allow Net Pts
SMITH,Ben 53 15.2 86.7 13.2 54 97.5 10.5 +2.6
HARDY,Ayron 46 13.8 65.8 9.1 44 110.8 9.7 -0.7
JEFFERSON,Evan 24 4.3 74.6 3.2 22 98.0 4.3 -1.1
COLBERT,Lehmon 53 9.5 82.7 7.9 53 100.2 10.6 -2.8
ALLEN,Marcus 53 10.8 144.5 15.6 52 98.2 10.2 +5.3
COHN, Travis 24 1.4 66.0 1.0 25 116.5 5.8 -4.9
GILBERT,Brian 16 0.0 - 0.0 16 112.8 3.6 -3.6
EDWARDS,Chris 16 0.9 203.0 1.8 16 102.3 3.3 -1.5
BROOKS,Aric 20 6.6 36.2 2.4 25 76.6 3.8 -1.4
GALVIN,Tevin 24 1.4 205.3 2.9 25 85.6 4.3 -1.4
LUKASIAK,Szymon 12 5.8 115.4 6.7 12 111.8 2.7 +4.0
ALSTON,Will 4 0.0 - 0.0 6 102.1 1.2 -1.2
TOTALS 69 69.7 91.2 63.6 70 101.4 69.8 -6.2

Comments
  • Most of the Hoyas had good to excellent offensive games. Exceptions were A. Freeman, who made only 1-10 shots from the field, and O. Wattad, who missed all five of his 3FGAs. I'll let N. Mescheriakov slide, as he only played seven offensive possessions.
  • A big question coming into this season was who would take over the possessions used by R. Hibbert, J. Wallace and P. Ewing? Freeman certainly took a healthy share today (15.7/57 = 27.5%), and Wattad wasn't bashful either. Too bad they weren't very efficient with their possessions.
  • There was much grumbling in the chat room about why Wattad was playing so many minutes (or about 30% of all possessions), but a couple of the lucky few who could actually watch the game pointed out that his defense looked good. The numbers bear this out, as he and Jessie Sapp had the strongest defensive numbers of those with >10 defensive possessions played. Unfortunately, his defense couldn't make up for his poor shooting. Have we found a drop-in replacement for J. Rivers?
  • The player of the game is . . . Jessie Sapp, who just nosed out G. Monroe, playing his first game. Let me take a moment to point out just how efficient Monroe was in his ~50 possessions played: 6-8 2FG, 2-3 FT, 2 OReb (only player with more than 1), 1 A, 3 Bl. He flirted with foul trouble most of the 2nd half, but this is to be expected for a freshman center. He looks very good after 1 game.

HD BOX SCORE

Jacksonville vs Georgetown
11/17/08 7:30 at Verizon Center
Final score: Georgetown 71, Jacksonville 62

Jacksonville Min +/- Pts 2PM-A 3PM-A FTM-A FGA A Stl TO Blk OR DR PF
SMITH,Ben 30:46 - 9 17/45 5- 8 1- 6 4- 4 14/52 1/11 1/54 2/53 0/22 0/38 4/25 1
HARDY,Ayron 27:00 -13 7/36 3- 8 0- 1 1- 2 9/45 0/11 0/44 4/46 0/18 6/34 3/18 4
JEFFERSON,Evan 14:05 - 4 5/18 1- 2 1- 4 0- 0 6/24 0/ 4 0/22 0/24 0/14 0/19 1/11 2
COLBERT,Lehmon 29:19 - 5 7/48 2- 6 1- 4 0- 1 10/48 1/15 1/53 2/53 0/20 3/35 2/23 2
ALLEN,Marcus 29:52 - 7 14/46 6-11 0- 2 2- 2 13/51 1/12 2/52 1/53 0/20 6/36 3/21 3
COHN, Travis 15:09 - 1 0/28 0- 2 0- 0 0- 0 2/26 0/10 0/25 1/24 0/ 9 1/19 2/12 2
GILBERT,Brian 10:38 - 4 0/14 0- 0 0- 1 0- 0 1/19 0/ 5 0/16 0/16 0/ 7 0/15 0/ 8 0
EDWARDS,Chris 09:14 + 0 2/17 0- 0 0- 0 2- 2 0/15 1/ 6 0/16 0/16 0/ 5 0/12 0/ 7 1
BROOKS,Aric 11:47 - 4 3/15 1- 3 0- 1 1- 3 4/16 0/ 4 0/25 3/20 0/ 8 0/13 2/12 1
GALVIN,Tevin 12:02 + 4 2/27 1- 1 0- 1 0- 0 2/23 1/10 2/25 0/24 0/ 5 1/15 4/12 0
LUKASIAK,Szymon 08:09 + 3 5/16 1- 5 0- 0 3- 5 5/13 0/ 4 0/12 0/12 0/ 5 3/11 0/ 7 5
ALSTON,Will 01:59 - 5 0/ 0 0- 1 0- 0 0- 0 1/ 3 0/ 0 0/ 6 0/ 4 0/ 2 0/ 3 0/ 4 1
TOTALS 40:00 62 20-47 3-20 13-19 67 5/23 6/70 13/69 0/27 20/50 24/31 22
. 0.426 0.150 0.684 0.217 0.086 0.188 0.000 0.400 0.774

Georgetown Min +/- Pts 2PM-A 3PM-A FTM-A FGA A Stl TO Blk OR DR PF
Summers, DaJuan 28:09 - 1 13/46 4- 5 0- 1 5- 6 6/31 1/ 9 1/46 2/46 1/33 0/19 4/36 3
Wright, Chris 35:56 + 8 16/66 2- 3 3- 5 3- 8 8/45 4/16 1/62 1/63 0/42 0/27 5/44 1
Monroe, Greg 28:16 +15 14/56 6- 8 0- 0 2- 3 8/36 1/10 0/50 1/51 3/28 2/23 5/35 4
Freeman, Austin 33:00 + 5 7/56 0- 5 1- 5 4- 6 10/43 2/19 3/56 2/57 0/38 1/25 6/41 3
Sapp, Jessie 33:45 +14 13/61 2- 3 1- 4 6- 6 7/42 3/14 2/59 2/60 0/40 1/28 5/44 1
Mescheriakov, Nikita 03:54 + 5 0/ 7 0- 1 0- 0 0- 0 1/ 5 0/ 2 0/ 6 1/ 7 0/ 8 0/ 3 0/ 7 1
Clark, Jason 12:25 - 1 4/23 1- 1 0- 1 2- 2 2/13 0/ 3 1/23 0/23 0/13 1/10 2/14 1
Vaughn, Julian 10:23 - 6 2/15 1- 1 0- 1 0- 0 2/13 0/ 4 1/18 0/17 2/16 1/ 8 0/12 1
Sims, Henry 02:23 + 3 0/ 5 0- 0 0- 1 0- 0 1/ 4 0/ 2 0/ 4 0/ 4 0/ 1 0/ 3 0/ 2 0
Wattad, Omar 11:49 + 3 2/20 0- 0 0- 5 2- 2 5/18 0/ 5 0/21 2/22 0/16 0/14 2/15 1
TOTALS 40:00 71 16-27 5-23 24-33 50 11/21 9/69 11/70 6/47 7/31 30/50 16
. 0.593 0.217 0.727 0.524 0.130 0.157 0.128 0.226 0.600


Efficiency: Georgetown 1.014, Jacksonville 0.899
eFG%: Georgetown 0.470, Jacksonville 0.366
Substitutions: Georgetown 30, Jacksonville 50

2-pt Shot Selection:
Dunks: Georgetown 3-3, Jacksonville 0-0
Layups/Tips: Georgetown 11-16, Jacksonville 11-24
Jumpers: Georgetown 2-8, Jacksonville 9-23

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Individual Offensive & Defensive Ratings - 2007-8 Review

General comment about the edits - I realized soon after originally posting this article that the underlying numbers just didn't look right. Sure enough, I tracked down at least 2 mistakes in my math. I think I've got everything correct now, but I make no warranty. I reserve the right to continue to make mistakes, but I will do my best to avoid them.


Before I get started, I just want to point out that the player +/- stats page has been updated, and now includes all available games for the last 2 seasons.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In my last few posts, I've be touting my new HD Box Score MakerTM, which uses game play-by-play data to extract a lot more info than a standard box score yields (all available HD boxes for the last 2 seasons now posted).

In my never-ending quest to keep you, my only reader, ahead of the curve when it comes to basketball knowledge, I thought I'd start a series of posts using the data generated by my HD Box Score MakerTM to learn a bit more about your Georgetown Hoyas.

To start, I thought I'd try to take on one of the questions that I raised at the end of my intro post to HD box scores:
2. Was J. Rivers really that great of a defender? I'll look at the team's offensive and defensive efficiencies with each player on or off the court, to see if I can learn a bit more about the defensive side of things.

Analogous to fielding defense in baseball, individual defense in basketball is not well-described by traditional basketball statistics. We can talk about team defensive stats (Def. Efficiency, DReb %, Def 2FG%, Def eFG%, Block %, etc.) with some confidence that we are able to describe what is actually taking place on the court, but the difficulty comes in attributing the individual defensive stops, rather than just taking a holistic view.

There are a few ways to tackle this problem:
  • Watch each game, and chart each defensive possession for who was responsible for stopping (or allowing) the defense from a score. This has been advocated by Dean Oliver, the father (mid-wife?) of advanced basketball statistics - but, as far as I know, simply isn't available for college basketball games.
  • Use the available box score data to estimate the number of stops each player makes, based on some rather large assumptions; one example of this metric is called Defensive Rating (also developed by Dean Oliver). This is similar to his Offensive Rating for individual players, which I, Ken Pomeroy and many others calculate, but uses less certain assumptions. Currently, I'm only aware of Henry Sugar at Cracked Sidewalks reporting Def. Ratings (example linked), although I'm sure there are others. I'll talk more about this stat below.
  • Use the available play-by-play data to estimate the importance of each player to total team defense. Your first thought might be that we could use the play-by-play data to determine actual defensive stops by player, but we can't. The play-by-play doesn't tell us who is guarding whom, so we'd be back to the same assumptions that Dean Oliver uses. However, there is a simple analytical tool that we now have available to us: we now know how many points each team scored when any player was on (or off) the court. That is to say, we can calculate a team's offensive and defensive efficiency (points per 100 possessions) as a function of whether any player is on the court, and thereby look at what impact each player has on team offensive or defense.

At this point, I will explain some basic terms as a refresher, and also cover what's new here. All of this is explained in much more detail at the web pages linked to the right under "Tempo-Free Stats 101." Feel free to skip ahead if this is all familiar.

Possession-based (tempo-free) statistics is a concept in basketball going back at least as far as Frank McGuire, and is useful for comparing players and teams who operate at different paces, or speeds of play. A possession ends either by a made basket (including some made FTs), a turnover or a defensive rebound - that's it, that's the list. Offensive rebounds don't create new possessions, only prolong the current one. If you use this definition, two teams will end up with either the same number (± 1) of possessions at the end of any game; since possessions go back-and-forth, it must be so. The equation for estimating total possessions per team per game is floating in various forms around the internet, but I will add to the clutter:

Possessions = FGA + 0.44 * FTA - OReb + TO

Since this formula is only an estimate of the actual number of possessions, I find that it is best to solve for each team, then take the average. Any team's (or player's) stats should be instantly comparable to any other with a per-possession system, since what is expressed is team (or player) efficiency rather than counting stats.

Offensive (and defensive) efficiency is a team statistic expressed in the units of points per 100 possessions (why per 100 possessions? so there aren't so many digits to the right of the decimal). This statistic is rather simple to calculate, once you've worked out how many possessions have been played with the equation above. Ken Pomeroy, one the populists of tempo-free stats, has an additional version of this stat, called adjusted off. (or def.) efficiency. Here, he attempts to weight points per possession based upon quality of opposition.

Offensive rating (as mentioned above) was created by Dean Oliver in an attempt to better rate individual basketball players on offense. The calculation of this stat is not simple - I've had people ask me in the past for the equation, but it's actually a bunch of equations (see this book for details). In simple terms, it is the ratio of points produced (not scored) by any player, divided by possessions used (not played), with both of these terms estimated from normal box score data. It is a tempo-free statistic, since it is expressed in points per (100) possession. Since players should be credited for assists and offensive rebounds as well as actual points scored, this rating is just an estimate of actual player worth, but the underlying assumptions are well thought out (you'll have to trust me, or read the book).

Defensive rating is an attempt to estimate the contribution of each player to the team's defensive efficiency. It is calculated as team defensive efficiency, plus one-fifth of the difference between team defensive efficiency and individual player stops per 100 possessions played. Player individual stops are estimated from the number of blocks, steals and defensive rebounds each player has, plus some team stats. Since it is not a simple ratio, it is more like being graded on a curve, such as that it is limited to the range of 80% - 120% of team defensive efficiency. So, a player who literally refused to play defense (e.g. Donte Greene) could score no worse than 80% of his team's efficiency. I would describe this stat as a very rough estimate of actual defensive worth . . .

. . . which leads me back to the point of this post (there really is a point). Now that I have access to the play-by-play of most G'town games, can I use this to better estimate the defensive contribution of each player, on a possession-basis? If so, we could finally talk about the overall value of a player to his team, rather than just his offensive contribution. The play-by-play shows who was on the court at any point during the game, so we can assign partial credit to each player for how well the team plays at both ends while he's in the game; likewise, we can see if the team plays better or worse when he leaves. This is really just applying the concept of plus-minus and Net/40 (or Roland rate), but rather using possession info to speak in tempo-free terms, rather than per-minute.

To explain explicitly here, I've taken each player, and added up the points that G'town scored and allowed while he was on the court. and how many were scored and allowed when he was off the court. In each case, I also know how many offensive or defensive possessions he participated in, so I can divide each point total by respective possessions (times 100) to find the team's offensive of defensive efficiency while he was on or off the court. Then, I find the difference between on- and off-court efficiency (either off. or def.) and add that to the team's efficiency.

For example, to calculate Jessie Sapp's Net Offensive Efficiency:

Jessie Sapp played 1171 offensive possessions, and the Hoyas scored 1298 points while he was on the court.
[1298 / 1171 x 100 = 110.8 Off. Eff. on-court]

He sat for 561 offensive possessions, and the Hoyas scored 585 points while he sat.
[585 / 561 x 100 = 104.3 Off. Eff. off-court]

So Jessie Sapp's Net Off. Eff. is equal to:
(Off. Eff. on-court - Off. Eff. off-court) + Team Off. Eff. =
(110.8 - 104.3) + 108.7 = +6.5 + 108.7 = 115.2 pts/100 possessions


Before I jump into the defensive analysis, I first want to see if my idea that player-based on-court / off-court net efficiency correlates to individual player rating holds water. To do this, I'll take a look at each player's net offensive efficiency versus individual offensive rating for last season.

One last point before I go on, the individual player ratings here won't match exactly with what either Pomeroy or I post for season totals. Since I don't have play-by-play data for all games, I re-ran the player ratings using box score data only for games that also had p-b-p data [to see which games are missing, go to the player +/- page].

Let's take a look (as always, click any image to enlarge):




This seems to work quite well! Players in the upper right of the graph are the best offensive players by either metric, while players in the lower left are not carrying their weight. The red line is a linear fit to all the data (r = 0.81), excluding Bryon Janson, who just doesn't have enough playing time to generate meaningful stats. The slope of the line is about 0.55, significantly less than 1, which is actually to be expected. The Net Team Efficiency stat doesn't completely isolate a player from his teammates in the way that Off. Rating attempts to do; since there is variability player-to-player, the range of the Net. Team Eff. stat gets compressed - a bad offensive player surrounded by good players will look better than he is.

The strong correlation indicates that the two statistics are highly coupled (co-variant). Individual offensive rating is a fairly well-accepted statistic, and it seems to do a good job of measuring how important a player is to team efficiency. Of course, the converse should also be true - team offensive efficiency as a function of each player on or off the court is a good measure of individual offensive value.

Moreover, and here's where I may be stretching the statistics a bit, the scatter plot can tell us a bit more: if a player is above the line, he makes the team more efficient than expected based upon Off. Rating (i.e. the player is underrated by Oliver/Pomeroy/etc.) while if he is below the line, he is overrated. Keep in mind that there are considerable uncertainties for the data on both axes that are not shown or even calculated, because that would make my life a lot harder. But it looks like Jessie Sapp and Roy Hibbert were underrated offensively last season, while Patrick Ewing Jr. and Vernon Macklin were overrated.


Now, let's now take a look at the defensive side. The math as the same as presented above, just looking at defensive possessions now.




Things here are not so clear-cut as for offense. There is poor correlation between the two data sets (r = 0.11), so I've just thrown a 1:1 line onto the chart. Note that both axes have their scaling reversed (they get smaller as you head away from the origin), since a lower defensive rating or efficiency is better. Again, players in the upper right corner are the best defenders, those in the lower left are the worst.

One thing that I notice immediately is that the scaling for the two statistics is much closer to 1:1 than for offense. We already expect that Net Def. Rating should be compressed since we can't isolate individual players, only their effect on the team while on the court. But here, the Def. Rating stat shows about the same scaling meaning either a) there isn't as large a difference between a good and bad defensive player as there is for an offensive player, or b) the Def. Rating stat isn't able to isolate individual defensive skills.

To take this a bit further, we demonstrated above that the Net. Efficiency methodology for offense seems to work quite well in correlating to a "good" measure of offensive prowess, albeit on a somewhat compressed scale. Since the method is identical for defense and offense, there's no reason to expect Net Efficiency to stop working for defense. Therefore, it could be argued (I just did) that Net. Def. Eff. is a better measure than Def. Rating.

If you've not read Basketball on Paper, you should probably just skip over the next paragraph.

Digression: Before I go on, I should point out that I'm using a slightly modified version of D. Oliver's Defensive Rating calculation. His formula estimates defensive stops in two parts, and the second has a necessary assumption that he, himself, acknowledges to be poor with regards to position-specific uncredited stops. Since centers get a disproportionate number of stops by way of blocks, they tend to be overweighted by his formula (for reasons far too obscure to explain here). I've added a simple weighting factor, based on Steals/(Steals+Blocks) to correct this. For this data set, the effect of this correction ranges from -2.7% for Roy Hibbert to +2.3% for Jonathan Wallace and Chris Wright. (n.b. - The weighting factor is based on Oliver's own data).

Returning to the scatter plot, once again we can find over- and underrated players by using the fitted line.

Now, Tyler Crawford and Chris Wright are the most overrated defenders, while Jonathan Wallace (!), Roy Hibbert and Jessie Sapp are underrated. Of course, that only looks at the comparison between two poorly correlated stats; the real take-home message is that Hibbert, Sapp, DaJuan Summers and Patrick Ewing anchored last year's excellent defense, just as Hibbert, Wallace and Austin Freeman were the most effective on offense.

And to answer the question that started this whole thing - yes, Rivers was a good defender, but not extraordinarily so, and not as important as Hibbert, Ewing or Summers. In fact his stats are not obviously better than either Sapp's or Wallace's(!). I will speculate that Rivers was the best on-ball defender as a guard, but Wallace and Sapp were more sound within the defensive schemes used last year (I just made that up). And I'm not sure why Omar Wattad looks like Gene Smith on this plot, but I'll guess it's just the result of a small sample size (n = 58 def. possessions).


Finally, we can combine the offensive and defensive metrics on a single plot, to get a rank of the overall value of each player. Here, I'm simply taking the average of Off. Rating & Net. Off. Eff. for the y-axis, and the average of Def. Rating & Net. Def. Eff. for the x-axis. Here, I'm hoping that the averages of two measures of the same variable come closer to describing its true character than either measure on its own.





This plot is a bit more complicated, as I'm trying to convey a lot of information.

Again, you'll need to re-jigger yourself to the axes. Offense is on the left-axis, with up equaling better performance; defense is on the bottom axis, but still with reversed scaling, so that right equals better performance. Players in the upper right are most valuable, players in the lower left are least valuable; those closer to the upper left have more value on offense, those down and to the right have more value on defense. This last bit looks to be well correlated with expectation, as the two players best know for offense rather than defense (Wallace & Freeman) show up right about where you'd think.

The size of the names are now scaled by possessions played, so Omar Wattad's newly-discovered value as an all-world defender is now tempered by the fact that he rarely plays. DaJuan Summers somewhat swallows up Patrick Ewing because of this, but I think you can still make them out.

Finally, the series of diagonal lines (isopleths) on the chart mark show contours of total player value (i.e. the difference between off. and defensive worth). For example, Jessie Sapp's off. worth = 108.9 and his def. worth = 89.8, so you'd expect that he'd provide +19.1 (= 108.9 - 89.8) pts./100 poss. to the team. Meanwhile, Austin Freeman's off. worth = 115.4 and his def. worth = 95.8, so you'd expect that he'd provide +19.6 pts./100 poss. That is, Sapp and Freeman were essential equally valuable to last year's team on a per possession basis, although they did it in different ways. Because they are rated at equal value, they both lie on about the same position relative to the diagonal lines.

Moreover, if you had a team of players all equally efficient overall as Sapp and Freeman, you'd expect the overall difference in team Off. Eff. and Def. Eff. to be around +19 pts/100 poss. FWIW, last year, G'town's efficiency difference was +18.8 (raw, not adjusted), good enough for a #2 seed in the NCAA tournament.

Here's a summary table of off., def. and total player worth for all the players:
                      Off.      Def.    Total
Hibbert, Roy 122.3 90.2 32.1
Wallace, Jonathan 118.7 94.0 24.7
Freeman, Austin 115.4 95.8 19.6
Sapp, Jessie 108.9 89.8 19.1
Ewing, Patrick 106.1 90.5 15.6
Summers, DaJuan 105.6 90.6 15.0
Wattad, Omar 103.3 88.3 14.9
Wright, Chris 100.8 93.2 7.6
Crawford, Tyler 95.6 95.4 0.1
Rivers, Jeremiah 90.1 94.4 -4.3
Macklin, Vernon 94.4 100.0 -5.6

We will miss Roy Hibbert. On a team that was ranked 7th by Ken Pomeroy after the NCAA tournament, Mr. Hibbert was the best Hoya player on the court by a large margin.

Next comes the gang of five (+1), who were the other important contributors to the Hoya's success; in very rough order of importance: Wallace, then Freeman and Sapp, then Summers and Ewing. Wattad sneaks in right behind this group, despite his few possessions (who knows, maybe the whole point of this article was to find a new player to champion; after all, the last time went so well).

By my reckoning, the two soon-to-be-transfers were not helping much last season. In the end, Rivers' defense just couldn't make up for his offensive woes, while Macklin struggled at both ends of the court. I never gave much thought to Macklin's defense, but he was easily the worst defender on the team by my numbers. Does that seem right? Tyler Crawford struggled with his outside shooting last year (3-22 3FGs), and wasn't able to make up for it with great defense.

There's one returning player that I haven't mentioned - Chris Wright. He missed the majority of the season with a foot injury, and ended up with a little more than half of Macklin's total time played. After struggling early in the season, he seemed to have a breakthrough in the 2nd half against Derrick Rose and Memphis, only to go down 2 games later. And while he played in 5 post-season games after getting healthy (3 in the BET, 2 in the NCAA), I only have the Pitt game in the BET finals in this analysis, since I don't have p-b-p for the other 4 games. From looking at the box scores, 3 of the 4 games I'm missing (Villanova, UMBC, Davidson) were among his best.

What I'm saying is that I think Wright is being undervalued here, not because there's anything wrong with the analysis, but because his underlying data doesn't do him justice. I hope I'm right.