Showing posts with label russell westbrook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label russell westbrook. Show all posts

Friday, July 5, 2013

Ironmen in the NBA for 2012-13

In a game where giant athletes are constantly moving, changing directions, and jumping, injuries are commonplace, and even in a league where players use private jets back-to-back games or four games in five nights cause a lot of distress on a body. Few players are able to play every single game consistently, season after season. A.C. Green famously played 1192 consecutive games (1336 including playoffs, which are strangely ignored), creating an impossible standard of durability. Consecutive game leaderboards are hard to find for the NBA, so I made one of my own.

A year removed from a compressed lockout season and a 2013 season where many ironmen like Tayshaun Prince, Brook Lopez, and Westbrook had injuries, few are left standing without a missed game in two years.


Consecutive games
With playoffs
Last season of missed game
Andre Miller
843
895
2003 (1)
Tyler Hansbrough
186
220
2011
OJ Mayo
174
194
2011
DeAndre Jordan
158
175
2011
Omer Asik
230
160
2011/Never (3)
Klay Thompson
148
160
Never
Luis Scola
148
148
2011
Kemba Walker
148
148
Never
Russell Westbrook
394
0
2013/Never (2)
1) Technically missed a game in 2011, but this was a suspension, not an injury. If you count the suspension, then it's 228 in a row with playoffs and 209 without.
2) Received an injury in the 2013 playoffs and had never missed a game before that.
3) Missed a playoff game in 2011 after breaking his hand, but has never missed a regular season game.

Unfortunately, there's no clear-cut ironman. I don't think Andre Miller's suspension should count because in the spirit of the title it doesn't matter if the league decides to suspend you one game for knocking over Blake Griffin; you're still an ironman. In fact, Andre Miller played through a separated shoulder just so he didn't miss another game. If you count Andre Miller, he blows everyone out of the water.

Russell Westbrook was the heir apparent to Miller and reportedly hadn't missed a game since junior high, but after running into Patrick Beverley he suffered a torn meniscus. If you only count the regular season, he's still king, while Omer Asik has also never missed a regular season game (he had a fractured tibia in the 2011 playoffs.) And as yet another sidenote, Scola has never missed a game except for the 2011 season. He's one ironman people rarely think of, and like Andre Miller his ground-based game probably protects him from sustaining injuries.

Otherwise the official ironman of the NBA after the 2013 season is ... Tyler Hansbrough with 220 in a row.

Rookies who didn't miss a game:
Damian Lillard
Kyle Singler

Full list of players who didn't miss a regular season game:
Brandon Bass (1)
Andray Blatche
Corey Brewer
Jimmy Butler
DeMar DeRozan
Monta Ellis
Randy Foye
Alonzo Gee
Jeff Green (1)
Tyler Hansbrough (1)
Spencer Hawes
DeAndre Jordan
Damian Lillard
Jeremy Lin (2)
Robin Lopez
O.J. Mayo
Andre Miller
Markieff Morris
Lamar Odom
Tayshaun Prince
Luke Ridnour
Nate Robinson
Luis Scola
Kyle Singler
Jason Thompson
Klay Thompson
Tristan Thompson
Evan Turner
Kemba Walker
Russell Westbrook (2)

(1) Played only 81 games in the regular season, but one game was canceled due to the fallout of the Boston marathon shooting.
(2) Missed playoff game(s).

Friday, April 26, 2013

How Westbrook Changes the 2013 Playoffs

The problem with predictions is that the future will not be like the past. Random events occur, throwing off everything to come. Westbrook allegedly hasn't missed a game since junior high, but after tearing his meniscus he's out for weeks, where he may not even make it back in time for the start of the NBA finals. As many NBA analysts have discussed, it was looking like a rematch of Thunder-Heat, especially when one considers the historically strong point differential of the Thunder. With Westbrook out, however, suddenly the west is wide open, and we may see an intriguing, veteran Spurs team in the finals or, as strange as it sounds, the Clippers.

Since Westbrook hasn't missed an NBA game before (439 including the playoffs consecutively), this is a fantastic challenge to the NBA statistics community on predicting the Thunder's performance without him. There are extremely few minutes with backup point guard Reggie Jackson with the other starters, much less ancient veteran Fisher. Lineup analysis is difficult, as the Thunder have never had to deal with extended stretches without Westbrook. It will take careful, precise predictions of how the team performs.

Additionally, here are also two schools of thought on Westbrook -- he shoots way too much, considering Durant is on the same team, damaging his team in the process; or his aggressive style is overall a tremendous positive, even overriding the bad shots. The debate will be armed with new information, but I think the latter has a stronger case. The Thunder's offense was arguably the best during the 2013 season, especially adjusting for strength of schedule, after coming in second in 2012 and Westbrook was the point guard orchestrating the affairs and the player who shot the most. Although Durant is an amazing shooter, Westbrook often receives the short end of the stick at the end of shot clocks, responsible for creating offense out of thin air. But now low usage players well be replacing his minutes, and if he is indeed a monkey wrench in a well-oiled machine the Thunder should hardly miss a beat.

Methods: Win Shares, PER, and IPV (TalkingPractice)

As a limited dataset of lineups featuring non-Westbrook point guards inhibits 5-man analysis, and the fact that there are no missed games to analyze how the Thunder fare without him, the effect of losing Westbrook has to be estimated through individual player stats. I'll present three different methods and a handful of estimates through guessing the players whose minutes will increase without him. I'll also judge the Thunder's strength with and without him through SRS (point differential adjusted for strength of schedule.)

(The next part explains how I calculated the new team strength, so you may skip that if you want.)


The first metric I used is the popular all-in-one player metric: Win Shares. This is easy to work with because Win Shares are in a system where it's easy to convert player changes into team level win percentage changes. For the win percentage of the Thunder before the injury, I used the projected regular season win percentage based on adjusted point differential because it's generally more predictive than plain ol' win percentage. From there, it's a quick back calculation to the new Westbrook-less point differential using the Pythagorean win formula (Points^14/(Points^14 + Opposing points^14)).


The next all-in-one metric is PER, the flagship of the ESPN empire. Frankly, I'm using this out of curiosity, as I don't think it will perform well and due to its heavy bias to high usage players like Westbrook, and the low PER's from the bench guys, it'll be interesting to see the pessimistic outlook. For estimating the loss in SRS, I converted his EWA (estimated wins added through PER) to EWA per game and then subtracted that from the Thunder's win percentage. PER assumes Westbrook was displacing a replacement level player, but this isn't entirely accurate so I added in the estimated boost in win percentage from a set of replacement minutes heavy in crappy backups (i.e. Fisher) and another set with more minutes devoted to better players (i.e. increasing the workload for Durant and Ibaka.) I did the same boost with the other metrics. ESPN gives the full details on Estimated Wins Added on the advanced stats page, if one is curious.


VA: Value Added - the estimated number of points a player adds to a team’s season total above what a 'replacement player' (for instance, the 12th man on the roster) would produce. Value Added = ([Minutes * (PER - PRL)] / 67). PRL (Position Replacement Level) = 11.5 for power forwards, 11.0 for point guards, 10.6 for centers, 10.5 for shooting guards and small forwards
EWA: Estimated Wins Added - Value Added divided by 30, giving the estimated number of wins a player adds to a team’s season total above what a 'replacement player' would produce.

The last metric used is a form of regularized adjusted +/- from TalkingPractice. Plus/minus is just looking at the point differential when a player is on the court, adjusted means regression is used to find the best fit, and regularized is basically a fancy mathematical way to reduce wildly high/low estimates for players with low minutes. The site calls their metric IPV (individual player value), and due to the NBA statistical analyst exodus (they're being hired by teams) it's the best, and one of the few, publicly available +/- stats. A few box score stats are also used to help shape IPV, so it's also not a complete departure from conventional stats.

For player minutes, I have two different situations. One is called the "pessimistic" model: no other player minutes will increase except point guard backups Reggie Jackson by 18 minutes, Fisher by 12 minutes, and shooting guard Sefolosha by 5 minutes. Note that the total minutes displaced here is 35, which is roughly Westbrook's average for the regular season. I'm calculating an adjusted point differential based on the regular season stats instead of a minutes distribution you'd see in the playoffs (Westbrook played 38 a game last year in the playoffs.) Since I've used regular season point differential in playoff predictions, this is fine, as I'll be comparing alike-things. The other minutes distribution, the "optimal model," gives more time to their better players, and suggests the Thunder play less smallball because they lost one of their best small players: Reggie Jackson 13 minutes, Fisher 8 minutes, Sefolosha 6 minutes, Durant 2 minutes, and Ibaka 6 minutes.

Oklahoma City's new team strength

Based on a few different player metrics, there's a range of estimated team strengths in point differential for the Thunder without Westbrook. Win Shares doesn't love Westbrook because it's built on efficiency, and as I've discussed before it gives a lot of unearned credit just for simply being on a great defensive team. In replacing him, they'd still be an elite team, even with the pessimistic minutes distribution. PER, however, views his high usage play as extremely valuable, and finds the backup options as the flotsam of the league -- even Sefolosha doesn't have a good PER. IPV, however, finds an estimate in between the two metrics, and sees the dropoff as significant but not debilitating.

Metric
OKC pre-injury SRS
Westbrook per game
OKC post-injury SRS, pess. mins
OKC post-injury SRS, opt. mins
Win Shares
9.15
5.1
6.5
7.2
PER
9.15
7.2
2.2
2.7
IPV
9.15
3.4
5.3
6.3

I don't believe Win Shares or PER are up to this task, and IPV nicely finds a middle ground between the total collapse of not having a creator and the underrated contributions of their other players. Given our limited information on Reggie Jackson and Fisher, as well the future minutes distribution in the playoffs, any estimate will be a rough guess at best, but the magnitude is important to note. A point differential from 5.1 to 6.5 (IPV's range with a little leeway) is in the same range as the Nuggets (+5.4) and the Clippers (+6.4.) PER and Win Shares also tend to clump all the player value at the very top, evident from Westbrook's estimated +/- per game.

However, Fisher's IPV value is strangely decent, near 0 instead of the typical negative value you'd see from an end of the bench type. This is where knowledge of the metrics you use can come in handy -- IPV uses a prior value that heavily influences the final number, and Fisher has had consistently strong +/- values in the past. Since he's played few minutes recently, there is not enough information to downgrade Fisher's IPV any further (for example, Granger's +/- is very similar to the one he had last year because he had very few possessions to convince the model his value was different.) That type of adjustment may bring down their point differential incrementally, and you can make another one due to hitherto unused lineups being rusty as players try to adapt to each other.

I'd estimate this Thunder team is now somewhere around the +5.5 SRS level, depending on who they play and how Fisher looks. This should be enough to finish off the Rockets, but don't be surprised if they drop a couple games. It looks like the Clippers will meet them in the next round, and they're more likely the stronger team. With homecourt advantage, the series based on my estimates is nearly a coin flip. I'd take the Clippers in seven, maybe even less -- they have a slight edge in adjusted point differential even adjusting for homecourt, and the Thunder have to go against Chris Paul without their all-star point guard. The Clippers often use a lot of players on offense you can hide weaker defenders like Fisher, but it's not enough to overcome the loss of Westbrook. Against a healthy Spurs team? They'd have little chance.

It's time to see what Westbrook's value really is.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Minnesota Timberwolves Deny Love Max Extension: Racism?

An all-star last year, the 23 year-old power forward, Kevin Love, has again improved. His offseason was apparently productive as he dropped a large amount of weight and increased his per game scoring average from 20.2 to 25.3 while leading the league in minutes a game. In fact, he has considerably improved every season he's been in the NBA, and he's a hard worker off the court, well spoken, and one of the best young stars. The likely western all-star starter, Blake Griffin, has regressed from his rookie year and his numbers pale in comparison to his young power forward counterpart. No other player in the NBA, actually, can be compared since he has the rare combination of three-point shooting prowess with over five attempts a game at a conversion of over 40% and elite rebounding collecting 13 per contest. The only similar player in the league's history is Troy Murphy, who never scored at the rate Love is. Having already had the first 30 point, 30 rebound game since Moses Malone, Love could become the first player to average 25 points and 13 rebounds since Moses himself in 1981-82.

So why didn't Kevin Love earn a max extension from his team? He's set to receive the maximum amount of money per year, but he didn't get the full five years. A new rule in the NBA says that each team gets a "designated player," for whom a five year extension can be granted after the rookie contract, but a team can have just one designated player at a time.Only the home team can offer this, helping out small-market clubs. If a young, hard-working power forward who's averaging 25-13 can't get the max deal, then who would?

Earlier, Russell Westbrook received a five year deal with his team Oklahoma City. There's no denying he has talent and could considerably improve his game, but it's hard to argue that Love isn't having the better season. Westbrook is a point guard without a reliable outside shot who relies on his athleticism, while Love is a phenomenal rebounder who's turned himself into a great outside shooter. Who will age better? There's no logical reason to assume the Thunder point guard will be the better player going forward when he hasn't shown it.

Westbrook takes more shots a game than Love, but he averages both less points per game and less on a per minute basis. He's always had problems with his shooting percentages, and even when he's bricking he'll hoist up shots. Love's scoring more because his shooting percentages are once again much better. These two western conference stars are inextricably linked as they both played together at UCLA, and their contracts hint at something the media feels uneasy discussing.

Kevin Love is a white American basketball player, and as such he's had to deal with people assuming he can't play. Said to be a bust out of college by many because the league was too athletic for him, he had a stellar rookie season with outstanding rebounding and great offensive potential. Fans regularly make jokes about white American ballplayers, and some like Scalabrine are a confused merging of disrespect for white players and glee whenever he makes a positive play like he's a dog who's learned fancy tricks, an oddity. There's no denying racial assumptions exist in basketball. Kevin did everything he could to better himself as a ball player, and maybe because of what he looks like management didn't see him as their designated player, the face of the franchise.

Minnesota is probably saving their max extension for Rubio, and as an international player he's faced with a different set of prejudices. With the success of foreign stars in winning championships from Dirk Nowitzki to Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker, and the MVPs given to Dirk and Nash, white foreign players are allowed to be superstars. In fact, the different culture may help these players develop because they're not as obsessed as race as we are. In places like Lithuania and Serbia with few Africans no one assumes how good someone is based on skin color; you just pick up the ball and prove yourself. There's no self-selection with the young athletes with regards to race.

Maybe Minnesota really does believe they need to save the 5 year max for Rubio or another lottery star. Love, however, is doing everything a designated player should do, averaging 25-13 a game. It's unclear why they chose to do this, including a fourth year option where Love can decide if he wants to leave or not. But you have to consider how they perceive Kevin Love's value and if any of that is tied to his skin color.