"A little note from a statistical perspective.
A quick rundown on the
Roy Hibbert | 0.804 |
Jeff Green | 0.699 |
DaJuan Summers | 0.517 |
Patrick Ewing | 0.482 |
Jonathan Wallace | 0.472 |
Jessie Sapp | 0.470 |
Vernon Macklin | 0.439 |
Jeremiah Rivers | 0.221 |
What do these numbers mean ? Linton set up a scale in his book. A quick breakdown:
1.000+ | Superstar |
.900 - .999 | Stars |
.800 - .899 | Very Good |
.600 - .799 | Good |
Under .600 | Average |
You can do these evaluations at halftime and for a game. My own opinion is Linton is a bit tough on the upper rankings. In doing these calculations for about a decade I found .900 or greater a tough mark to reach. Labeling Jeff Green as just ‘good’ is a stretch. Still, the formula is not a final say. It’s another tool of analysis that will hopefully broaden our insight."
My own comments
My usual mantra when presented a stat like this is that, since it based per minute rather than per possession, you end up punishing players in slow-tempo offenses (like Georgetown's). I think this what is causing the difference between the individual player stats and scaled rankings, which, I believe, are based on NBA players. A quick glance at some stats over at 82games.com indicates that NBA games averaged ~92 possessions in 2004-5. Since the Hoyas play about 60 possessions per game, you could reduce the scale to 2/3 (≈60/92) to make a comparison:
Edit - a reader (I have a reader!!) noted that I forgot to account for the difference in minutes played between college and the NBA (40 vs. 48), so I've adjusted the table accordingly
.782+ | Superstar |
.704 - .782 | Stars |
.626 - .704 | Very Good |
.469 - .626 | Good |
Under .469 | Average |
Now this looks reasonable:
- Roy and Jeff are the Superstars that Ray wants them to be (with the edit, Jeff slides down just under the division into "Very Good" category)
- Almost all of the remaining players are now coming in as "Good", with Dajuan threatening "Very Good" (now the next four are solid "Goods" - sorry Dajuan)
- J. Rivers is once again getting hammered, as it's an offensive metric
Having said all of that, I have to admit that this is a fun stat. Of course, by working in possessions, rather than minutes, it makes it a bit harder to work out on-the-fly.
For kicks, I thought I'd run Vanderbilt's 10+ minute players, but to make the two teams comparable, I've scaled their EF's by 60/68 (the ratio of avg. possessions for G'town and Vandy, respectively). Also note that I'm using full season stats here, as I don't have access to SEC-only, so these may be a bit inflated by cupcake games.
Byars, Derrick | 0.691 |
Foster, Shan | 0.615 |
Neltner, Ross | 0.600 |
Cage, Dan | 0.508 |
Gordon, Alex | 0.482 |
Skuchas, Ted | 0.421 |
Drake, George | 0.405 |
Brown, JeJuan | 0.401 |
Beal, Jermaine | 0.363 |
Other news
Following on the news of Joe Scott's departure from Princeton and the resulting rumors surrounding certain G'town assistant coaches, it appears that Coach Kevin Broadus has landed a head coaching job at Binghamton University. The Bearcats were previously coached by Al Walker, who resigned on March 5th.
Congratulations to Coach Broadus!