IS DARKO MILICIC GETTING BETTER?

As I watched in disbelief as Darko Milicic hit his fourth bucket in the first quarter I thought to myself, "Self, Darko looks better this year. I don't want to stab myself in the eye every time he touches the ball." And since I am a very firm believer that one should almost never believe ones' self in these situations without checking the numbers, I did just that. Caveat: Sample sizes Yadda Yadda Yadda.

Did someone knock some sense into Darko?

Here's Darko so far this year:

Raw Stats
  Min WP48 Wins PTS REB AST TO BLK STL PF
Milicic 143 .071 0.2 17.1 12.8 0.7 2.7 1.3 1.0 5.0
Milicic 2010 1685 -.052 -1.8 17.3 10.3 3.0 4.3 4.0 1.5 6.5
Milicic 2009 685 .022 0.3 15.1 10.6 3.3 2.5 2.4 1.5 5.7
 
Average C (2010) 1372 .099 2.8 18.2 12.8 2.4 2.6 2.0 1.2 5.4

 

Shooting Efficiency
  FG% 2FG% 3FG% FT% eFG% TS% FGA PPS FTA
Milicic 51.3% 51.3% 0.0% 50.0% 51.3% 52.4% 13.1 1.31 7.4
Milicic 2010 46.9% 46.9% 0.0% 55.7% 46.9% 48.2% 16.5 1.05 3.3
Milicic 2009 49.0% 49.3% 0.0% 53.6% 49.0% 49.7% 14.3 1.05 2.0
 
Average C (2010) 50.7% 51.1% 31.4% 67.9% 51.0% 54.8% 14.3 1.28 5.4

 

Well, it looks like relative to the prior two seasons, darko is rebounding more, assisting less, turning the ball over less, blocking less and fouling less.  His shooting has improved a bit and his field goal attempts are down.

One of the things about bad players is that they are almost by definition inconsistent; if a guy was consistently terrible he'd be out of the NBA quickly -- most terrible players are bad a lot of the time, but then show occasional flashes of brilliance that convince their coaches to keep playing them and general managers to keep paying them. "If only he would always..." and "Why doesn't he always..." are my favorite phrase that's attached to bad players. Turns out the reason they don't always do those things is that they just aren't good enough.

And that's why this seven-game stretch actually has me a teeny, tiny, itsy bitsy bit more encouraged than I should be from a random sample: he isn't so much better because of some massively improved statistic. He's better because he's doing some things less. Here are some basketball things that Darko gets better by doing less of:

  • Shooting
  • Assisting/Passing (well, truly, handling the ball in general)
  • Blocking

You might think the latter two make no sense but I'll explain in a minute.

Shooting should be obvious. Darko has quite simply never been very good at it. Therefore he should only do it when he absolutley has to. This is the thing that made Dennis Rodman one of the best power forwards of all time: he was a terrible shot, but it never hurt his team because all his shots were assisted layups, putback dunks, or desperate heaves when the shot clock is going off so he had no choice (and in those cases, the blame lies squarely on whoever passed him the ball in that situation). By shooting less, Darko hurts his team less. As a bonus, the shots he does take are higher-percentage shots.

In 2010, Darko had career highs in FGA/48 (ignoring his 159-minute rookie year) and Turnover/48 and his 2nd-highest AST/48 numbers. The upshot is that Darko, who had always been a bad player who didn't generate many wins, became a terrible player who actually produced losses with a -0.052 WP48 (yes, negative).

And this, as any Wolves fan worth his salt should know, squarely the fault of Mr. Kurt Rambis.

Here's a scenario that I remember vividly from the first quarter of nearly every Wolves' game last year: For the first 10-15 possessions, the Wolves would make an effort to "establish Darko in the post" or "get Darko going in the offense" and consistently, purposefully pound the ball into Darko in the low post, where he'd make a couple of embarassingly small pivots for a man with the legs of a 7'+ person, then completely ignore the wide open pivot over his left shoulder that his defender is conceding him, and settle on a contested hook or baby-hook turning over his right shoulder (which the defender is more-or-less standing on top of). Which would hit about...oh...45% of the time. This is undoubtedly why he had so many FGA's: he was having plays run deliberately for him for the first time in his career, in the name of "establishing a low-post presence."

This leads me to the assist issue: when Darko was not posting up, his other duty in Rambis triangle offense (which, by the way, usually depends on having great, athletic wing players who make good decisions with the ball, which aren't words used to describe Beasley, Johnson, Ellington, or Webster, so yeah, good choice there, Mr. Rambis), as it is for any big man in the triangle, was to act as a high-post distributor; triangle offenses love having the big men flash to the strong-side high post corner, and when they get the ball, the wing cuts past him, causeing possible mismatches to happen depending on how the defense reacts to the ball-carrier-as-screener in the high post. This probably led Darko to having a near career-year for assists.

But here's the thing: you do not want a player like Darko having lots of assists because this means you have him handling the ball a lot. And, seriously, watch the guy play: he has awful hands. He's a complete butterfingers. He's the second coming of Bill Cartwright, a player for whom Phil Jackson famously told Michael Jordan "not to pass it so hard". If Darko's getting more assists and more field goal attempts, then I guarantee you he's also causing more turnovers. I refuse to believe it is a coincidence that he had so many turnovers last year.

Lastly, there are blocks. You might think blocks are a good thing, and you are somewhat correct, but it turns out blocks just don't correlate nearly as highly with wins as any of the other box score stats, probably because they often do not cause a possession change. In other words, blocking a shot isn't as good at preventing field goals as stealing the ball. If Darko is getting lots of blocks, he's also getting lots of fouls, and given his proximity to the basket, this means he's giving the opponent a lot of free throws. Furthermore, if you get a lot of blocks, you usually are trying to get a lot of blocks, which means when you fail to block the shot, you usually have a terrible rebounding position because you are too busy landing from being in the popcorn-machine.

The first two areas are why I am optimistic: Adelman's offense is nothing like the triangle. Adelman prefers an offense where a couple of primary ballhandlers dominate the ball, while the other players take lots of Princeton-style backcuts and move/react to the pick-and-roll. This means that Darko rarely touches the ball (because he's not a primary ball handler) and does not post up a lot because Adelman prefers to post up Love or Beasley (ok, ok, one problem at a time, please). And when Milicic does catch the ball, it's usually in a good position to make a decent shot (you know, because..."Ruuuuuuubioooooo!") and rarely in a spot where he is expected to do any play-making. This leads to fewer shots (good), and fewer ball-handling opportunities (good), which lead to assists (whatever, I'll happily take the trade-off).

As for why his blocks are down, I have no great analysis (I'd have made a terrible defensive coordinator) as to why he seems less eager but I'm just going to put on rose-colored glasses and assume that Adelman has been telling bigs to stay on their damn feet.

Of course, Darko is just as likely to rip off a seven-game streak shooting 33% and make me look like a fool for searching for stories behind the numbers. But trying to find the stories behind the numbers is what makes basketball analysis more fun, so I'll just continue to happily delude myself.

Categories: Darko Milicic, Ricky Rubio, Minnesota Timberwolves, Rubioops

PUT ME IN, COACH!

Believe it or not, one of the reasons I wrote the software for this site is because I'm super curious about the data, and I love sorting/filtering/searching through data to find things to write about.* There are tons of sites out there, but Basketball Reference is the only one that comes remotely close to offering the kinds of sorting/filtering that I want, and of course, until my site and the one that Andres built at The Wages of Wins, most of them didn't have wins produced, or only had it for their favorite teams. I used to get downright itchy waiting for David Berri to profile a team or player I liked. Finally I got fed up and decided the only way to always get the answers I wanted was to write a tool myself.

Why u no like to win?

*If you are the GM of an NBA Basketball, team, yes, this is indeed a not-very-subtle hint that I should work for you.

Today I'm going to use that tool to evaluate the rookies that, in my mind, are getting a mystifying lack of burn from their coaches. Take a look at the entire rookie class on the player page. Feel free to mess around with the sorting. Here are the top ten sorted by minutes played at the time of this writing (before games on Jan 5th):

NAME TEAM POS GP MIN PTS REB AST WP48 Wins
Fredette, Jimmer SAC PG 7 178 18.3 3.0 4.9 -.075 -.3
Rubio, Ricky MIN PG 6 166 16.2 6.7 12.1 .263 .9
Brooks, Marshon NJN SG 7 163 29.2 7.1 1.5 .168 .6
Cole, Norris MIA PG 7 159 24.2 3.6 7.2 .021 .1
Irving, Kyrie CLE PG 6 155 26.3 6.8 9.9 .123 .4
Pargo, Jeremy MEM PG 6 137 16.5 4.6 7.0 -.031 -.1
Knight, Brandon DET G 6 137 21.0 3.5 5.6 -.044 -.1
Morris, Markieff PHO PF 6 118 20.7 13.0 2.8 .260 .6
Thompson, Tristan CLE PF 6 116 21.5 12.0 0.8 .085 .2
Singleton, Chris WAS SF 6 116 9.5 5.8 0.0 .067 .2
Walker, Kemba CHA PG 6 110 24.0 6.1 8.3 -.045 -.1

 

And here are the top ten sorted by WP48 (I ignored players with < 50 minutes):

NAME TEAM POS GP MIN PTS REB AST WP48 Wins
Leuer, Jon MIL PF 5 66 18.9 11.6 1.5 .320 .4
Stiemsma, Greg BOS C 5 82 12.9 12.9 2.3 .280 .5
Rubio, Ricky MIN PG 6 166 16.2 6.7 12.1 .263 .9
Morris, Markieff PHO PF 6 118 20.7 13.0 2.8 .260 .6
Leonard, Kawhi SAS SF 6 99 15.0 14.1 1.5 .225 .5
Kanter, Enes UTH C 6 89 15.6 17.8 1.1 .194 .4
Burks, Alec UTH SG 5 56 28.3 5.1 6.9 .193 .2
Brooks, Marshon NJN SG 7 163 29.2 7.1 1.5 .168 .6
Williams, Derrick MIN F 6 106 19.5 11.3 1.4 .142 .3
Irving, Kyrie CLE PG 6 155 26.3 6.8 9.9 .123 .4

 

Notice any glaring differences? 6 of the top 10 per-minute performers aren't in the top 10 minutes played. And half of the players getting the most minutes are playing terrible basketball. I realize we are still in the realm of small sample sizes. But here's two things: 1)the sample sizes aren't going to get big very fast if you are allocating minutes in nibble-size chunks instead of hearty meals, and 2) it's not like some of these guys have all-stars in front of them getting minutes.

The one that confuses me the most is Greg Stiemsma. I mean, look at that Celtics team. This is a team that has had reporters all pre-season long saying that their center position is weak. Their options are:

  • Kevin Garnett playing out of position (and let it be noted that Rivers wants to rest Garnett a lot, so this option has limits)
  • Jermaine O'Neal, who's old and hasn't played good basketball for a decade. Relying on him to return to 2002 form seems like a fool's mission to me.
  • Chris Wilcox, who's always been average/above average, but is getting old

Then, along comes a rookie who seems to be answering all of the Celtics' prayers:

Raw Stats
  Min WP48 Wins PTS REB AST TO BLK STL PF
Stiemsma 82 .280 0.5 12.9 12.9 2.3 1.8 7.6 0.6 9.4
 
Average C 139 .099 0.3 17.6 13.0 2.0 2.7 2.1 1.3 5.1

 

Shooting Efficiency
  FG% 2FG% 3FG% FT% eFG% TS% FGA PPS FTA
Stiemsma 61.5% 61.5% 0.0% 75.0% 61.5% 66.6% 7.6 1.69 4.7
 
Average C 49.8% 50.5% 32.0% 66.7% 50.4% 54.1% 13.9 1.27 5.4

 

The kid's basically doing what he's supposed to on a team full of veterans: rebound, block shots, don't turn the ball over, don't take bad shots, hit free throws. He's just what the doctor ordered. Unless you are Doctor Rivers, who has parked him on the bench. Look, I don't know, maybe he's just on a hot-shooting streak. Maybe he'll foul out every game if you gave him 25 minutes. But again, you've got Jermaine O'Neal on the floor. Isn't it worth giving him some minutes to, you know, see what happens? How much worse than O'Neal can he possibly be?

And how about Enes Kanter and Alec Burks? These two have really got me confused and #SMH.

Raw Stats
  Min WP48 Wins PTS REB AST TO BLK STL PF
Kanter 89 .194 0.4 15.6 17.8 1.1 1.1 1.6 1.1 3.8
Burks 56 .193 0.2 28.3 5.1 6.9 4.3 0.9 1.7 3.4
 
Average C 139 .099 0.3 17.6 13.0 2.0 2.7 2.1 1.3 5.1
Average SG 142 .099 0.3 20.3 5.5 4.4 2.9 0.5 1.6 3.6

 

Shooting Efficiency
  FG% 2FG% 3FG% FT% eFG% TS% FGA PPS FTA
Kanter 41.7% 41.7% 0.0% 64.3% 41.7% 48.1% 12.9 1.21 7.6
Burks 47.8% 52.6% 25.0% 76.9% 50.0% 57.5% 19.7 1.43 11.1
 
Average C 49.8% 50.5% 32.0% 66.7% 50.4% 54.1% 13.9 1.27 5.4
Average SG 41.2% 45.3% 32.9% 78.8% 46.6% 51.0% 17.8 1.14 4.7

 

 

Here's a shooting guard who's shooting the ball well (that is what the shooting guard is supposed to do, right?), passing well, and getting to the line like he's Dwyane Wade. And a center whose shooting woes are made up for by several positives: 1) he rebounds like Kevin Love, 2) he apparently has a grip of steel because he's rarely turning the ball over, and 3) he's not chucking lots of shots so his shooting percentage isn't really hurting much. And this is a team that clearly is going all-out on youth anyway. They traded away Okur. They aren't going to make the playoffs with these veterans. What is Utah worried about!? Why is Raja Bell playing even one minute instead of Burks? More importantly why is Raja Bell still in the NBA!?

Then there's Derrick Williams. Speaking strictly as a Timberwolves fan, I'll be the first to say that Williams has not been amazing. He's made his share of bone-headed plays. But he should be playing more. A lot more. And the primary reason is that for all his rookie faults, he's still having a decent season. And, far more importantly, he is so much better than Michael Beasley that...well, I have no words:

Raw Stats
  Min WP48 Wins PTS REB AST TO BLK STL PF
Beasley 194 -.114 -0.5 20.0 9.2 1.7 4.2 0.5 0.7 4.5
Williams 106 .142 0.3 19.5 11.3 1.4 4.1 0.0 2.3 5.0
 
Average SF 146 .099 0.3 19.1 7.3 3.2 2.4 0.8 1.5 3.7
Average F 144 .099 0.3 19.4 9.4 2.8 2.4 1.0 1.5 4.2

 

Shooting Efficiency
  FG% 2FG% 3FG% FT% eFG% TS% FGA PPS FTA
Beasley 40.2% 40.3% 40.0% 41.2% 42.5% 42.9% 21.5 0.93 4.2
Williams 51.5% 61.9% 33.3% 41.7% 57.6% 56.2% 14.9 1.30 5.4
 
Average SF 42.6% 45.1% 36.7% 77.6% 48.1% 52.4% 16.3 1.17 4.4
Average F 44.9% 47.7% 35.1% 73.9% 48.8% 52.7% 16.4 1.19 4.7

 

 

Note that I am comparing Beasley to SFs and Williams to a combinations of the average SF/PF; Williams WP48 would be higher if we treated him as an SF and Beasley's would be even lower if we treated him as a PF (see Calculating Wins Produced for the section on how we adjust for position).

Basiically, if you gave all of Beasley's minutes to Williams, the Wolves could easily have won 4-5 games by now. No, I'm not joking. Beasley is truly earth-shatteringly bad. To put in perspective what a selfish chucker Beasley is, he ranks 8th among small forwards the NBA in FGA per 48 minutes (50 minutes minimum), but fifty-first in true shooting. No, not 51st in the NBA, 51st among small forwards. That means that essentially all of the starting SFs and two-thirds of the back-up SFs in the league are shooting better than he is, but he's shooting 22 shots per 48. And I don't keep stats for "contested 22-footers per 48" but having watched every Timberwolves game I'm going to guess he leads the league by a fat margin, ahead of even Kobe (I'm guessing that's the reason that he's 25th among small forwards at getting to the line, despite all those shots). Oh, yeah, and he turns the ball over a shitton. In short, Beasley is the very definition of a player that shoots you out of games. Every single time they choose to iso Beasley instead of just letting Ridnour or Rubio create off the dribble / pick-n-roll, a Timberwolf pup dies in the wild.

Williams is as turnover prone as Beasley, but I can chalk Williams' TOs up to rookie mistakes and a general rookie "over-eager" attitude, which he may learn from. Most of his TOs come from ill-advised passes. Beasley, however, is a third-year player; the vast majority of his turnovers come from him trying to "create a shot" (a phrase that I guarantee I'll be ranting about in a future article) and I don't expect him to change anytime soon.

Last but definitely not least is Jon Leuer:

Raw Stats
  Min WP48 Wins PTS REB AST TO BLK STL PF
Leuer 66 .320 0.4 18.9 11.6 1.5 0.7 2.2 2.9 5.8
 
Average PF 142 .099 0.3 19.8 11.6 2.4 2.4 1.2 1.4 4.7

 

Shooting Efficiency
  FG% 2FG% 3FG% FT% eFG% TS% FGA PPS FTA
Leuer 55.0% 57.9% 0.0% 100.0% 55.0% 59.7% 14.5 1.30 2.9
 
Average PF 47.1% 49.5% 31.8% 71.1% 49.2% 53.0% 16.5 1.20 5.1

As I wrote on Monday in my Geeks of the Week post, Leuer has been amazing so far. He's shoting efficiently, has a a bunch of steals and blocks and almost no turnovers. But he hasn't played many minutes. He could just be playing well over a small stretch, but why on earth wouldn't Scott Skiles want to play him more and find out? Does he have Kevin Love and Blake Griffin ahead of Leuer on the depth chart? What on earth is going on? I find this exceptionally puzzling since Mbah a Moute appears to have been struggling with injuries.

It's particularly odd that teams seem so reluctant to dole out minutes to rookies because they seem equally reluctant to let go of 2nd- and 3rd-year players on their rookie contracts who are truly terrible. Minnesota's examples include Wes Johnson and previously Jonny Flynn and Corey Brewer -- there's simply no reason to hang on to these players (or give them minutes). It's times like these when I start to think that minute allocation by most coaches may as well be arbitrary.

Categories: Rubioops, rookies

THE TIMBERWOLF TURNOVER

Last night, the Minnesota Timberwolves rolled over the San Antonio Spurs 106-96, in a game that wasn't really even that close. According to the Spurs' announcing team, It was their first victory over the Spurs since the Garnett era, and certainly not a potential victory that I would have pencilled in on the Schedule.

Here's the Timberwolves' box-score from basketball-reference.com:

  Basic Box Score Statistics
Starters MP FG FGA FG% 3P 3PA 3P% FT FTA FT% ORB DRB TRB AST STL BLK TOV PF PTS
Kevin Love 43:32 8 15 .533 4 9 .444 4 5 .800 3 12 15 1 3 2 6 2 24
Michael Beasley 43:06 8 15 .533 2 2 1.000 1 2 .500 1 4 5 3 0 1 3 3 19
Luke Ridnour 36:00 7 10 .700 2 3 .667 3 4 .750 0 1 1 9 0 1 3 3 19
Wesley Johnson 29:34 6 6 1.000 2 2 1.000 0 0   0 2 2 1 1 1 2 1 14
Darko Milicic 21:59 5 9 .556 0 0   0 0   1 5 6 1 0 1 0 2 10
Reserves MP FG FGA FG% 3P 3PA 3P% FT FTA FT% ORB DRB TRB AST STL BLK TOV PF PTS
Ricky Rubio 23:41 3 8 .375 0 2 .000 0 0   0 2 2 3 0 1 2 1 6
Anthony Tolliver 23:39 1 3 .333 1 2 .500 2 2 1.000 2 4 6 0 0 0 1 1 5
Derrick Williams 11:44 3 3 1.000 1 1 1.000 0 0   0 1 1 0 0 0 1 3 7
Wayne Ellington 6:45 0 2 .000 0 0   2 2 1.000 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 2
Team Totals 240 41 71 .577 12 21 .571 12 15 .800 7 31 38 18 4 7 19 18 106

Interesting, to say the least. I'd never have believed that the Wolves would even be in a game where they committed 19 turnovers and forced 9, and had 11 fewer FGAs and 5 fewer FTs than the Spurs, but this one is a statistical outlier for the ages: Wes Johnson shooting 6-for-6? Darko Milicic and Michael Beasley both above 50%? I feel like I'm in an Inception sequel.

Enjoy this shooting spree while it lasts, folks, because it won't. If the Wolves are going to shock everybody and flirt with .500 ball this season, they will have to take better care of the ball, and that starts with Kevin Love, who had a couple of careless ones, and ends with...well, it probably only ends with reducing the minutes of Darko, Johnson, and Beasley; at this point in their careers, I don't really expect Darko to get new hands, Johnson to develop an ability to dribble against the defense, or Beasley to gain decision-making insight, no matter how much of a genius everyone thinks that Adelman is.

What truly worries me is a trend I see developing with Kevin Love: he bitches with referees in the middle of the play a lot. I counted at least 3 possessions where he didn't get a call, and he looked over at a ref for the call instead of fighting for the loose ball.  Once when he was under the basket and thought he was fouled on a shot, he looked to the ref while Toliver fought for the offensive board that was still live. And twice at the top of the key DeJaun Blair slapped the ball out of his hands, and instead of fighting to get it back while the ball was still loose, he looked at the ref and slapped his own hands in frustration.

These are the habits of a frustrated player that's grown accustomed to losing. And they also tend to be the things that only the best player on the team can get away with. Kevin Love is monumentally talented, and by far the best player on the Timberwolves. But he's only 23 and he's certainly prone to doing the same stupid shit that most kids that age do (yes, I'm old enough to call him a kid. Get off my lawn). And it worries me that the Wolves have neither the culture nor the type of veteran player that Love would respect who can get in his face and yell at him and tell him to shut the hell up and play ball.

Because in a sense he's right, he is getting fouled a lot. And he's not getting calls that he should. I joked on twitter that coming into the Mavs game, the refs must have seen that Love led the NBA in FTAs and said "Well, that can't be right!" and decided they were going to put him into his place, because he got hacked a hell of a lot that night and shot two whole free throws. The Mavs only fouled the Timberwolves best player once in 37 minutes? Yeah, right. I'm sure the Mavs were so busy peeing themselves with fear and making sure Wes Johnson and Darko Milicic weren't scoring that they had no energy left over to foul Kevin Love when he caught the ball under the basket.

But in the end that doesn't mean squat. Because bitching at refs during the game is going to accomplish precisely two very counter-productive goals: 1) making the refs think you are a soft whiner, and 2) giving the opponent a free five-on-four for a few seconds. At the end of the day, basketball isn't fair, so get over it. Hustle up and get the ball back. Grip the ball a little harder so you don't lose it when the defender bumps you or slaps your wrist. And you might probably discover that this will get you the calls. Because a ref might not see the first bump, or might not think it's worthy of a call, but defenders tend to push too far; when the ref doesn't call that wrist slap, they get too eager, they push too hard, they commit fouls -- but you've got to be tenacious enough with the ball to make them do it. If you just give up the ball after that first slap, the defender won't have to foul you.

There's probably nothing wrong with some occasional and selective bitching at the refs. Kobe and Wade, who get way more than their fair share of calls, are masters of the "Are you kidding me!?" look when they aren't getting calls. But you know when that is? It's after the ball is dead. I'm fairly certain if Wade gave up on a play early, James would let him have it (and vice versa), and I find it sad that the Timberwolves don't currently have the kind of player who will tell Kevin Love to man up right now.

Categories: Kevin Love, Ricky Rubio, Minnesota Timberwolves, Rubioops

RASH CONCLUSIONS ON THE TIMBERWOLVES

Ok, I'm really hard at work adding a ton of new features to the site and trying to improve the player comparison engine (which I really need to brand somehow). But in the meantime I'd like to join in the general ridiculous media frenzy of drawing insane conclusions from miniature sample sizes. Yes, I'm talking about that trend that's causing Celtic bloggers to examine lottery picks after starting 0-2, and has the Knicks media inquiring about players' ring sizes after their home opener win. So I'll look at the Timberwolves and draw some ridiculous conclusions.

Ladies & Gents, this year's Rookie of the Year!

Let's look at the per-48 numbers so far:

NAME GP MIN WP48 PTS REB AST TO BLK STL PF
Jose Barea 2 46 .124 24.0 5.2 6.3 1.0 0.0 1.0 4.2
Michael Beasley 2 62 -.191 30.2 9.3 0.8 3.9 0.8 0.8 4.6
Wesley Johnson 2 56 -.055 11.1 4.3 2.6 3.4 0.0 0.0 2.6
Kevin Love 2 81 .405 31.4 19.0 4.1 3.6 0.0 0.6 2.4
Ricky Rubio 2 54 .324 10.7 7.1 8.9 2.7 0.0 2.7 6.2
Darko Milicic 2 44 -.055 17.5 13.1 0.0 6.5 0.0 1.1 8.7
Anthony Randolph 1 3 -.641 32.0 16.0 0.0 16.0 0.0 0.0 16.0
Luke Ridnour 2 52 .188 17.5 2.8 6.5 3.7 0.0 1.8 5.5
Anthony Tolliver 2 40 -.125 2.4 6.0 0.0 1.2 1.2 0.0 4.8
Derrick Williams 2 42 -.146 18.3 12.6 2.3 6.9 0.0 1.1 5.7
 

As you can see, much of what I was talking about in the season preview is true so far: Darko Milicic is terrible, but Michael Beasley is by far the worst Timberwolf. I've honestly not seen a player so spectacularly combine chucking frequency with terrible efficiency since Rashad McCants:

 

Per48 Comparison of raw stats

  WP48 PTS REB AST TO BLK STL PF
Beasley -.191 30.2 9.3 0.8 3.9 0.8 0.8 4.6
 
Average F .099 18.2 9.1 2.6 1.3 0.0 1.3 3.9

 

Shooting comparison

  FG% 2FG% 3FG% FT% eFG% TS% FGA PPS FTA
Beasley 42.5% 45.7% 20.0% 44.4% 43.8% 44.4% 31.0 0.97 7.0
 
Average F 44.0% 50.0% 30.7% 70.7% 41.7% 50.9% 15.6 1.17 5.2

 

What's really amazing to me is that he shot about twice as many shots from the field than the average forward, but barely got to the line more often. All while being a turnover machine!  It's become truly uncomfortable to watch how selfish he's become; the Bucks commenters on the game last night were literally laughing at how eager he was to call his own number on every play. He's truly awful, and unfortunately the league's managers seem to be catching on -- I agree with Stop-n-Pop over on Canis Hoopus that nobody is going to give up a working part for Beasley at this point.  And I am fairly confident that THIS is not a sample-size issue:  These were exactly Beasley's problems all of last year.  The home-opener loss is fairly squarely the fault of Beasley getting so much burn.

In better news, #RubioFever is looking like it might trend.  The guy's been amazing!

 

Per48 Comparison of raw stats

  WP48 PTS REB AST TO BLK STL PF
Rubio .324 10.7 7.1 8.9 2.7 0.0 2.7 6.2
 
Average G .099 20.9 3.7 6.2 3.7 0.0 1.2 3.7

 

Shooting comparison

  FG% 2FG% 3FG% FT% eFG% TS% FGA PPS FTA
Rubio 66.7% 80.0% 0.0% 80.0% 66.7% 73.2% 5.3 2.00 4.4
 
Average G 41.9% 50.0% 34.4% 82.5% 46.4% 53.9% 17.2 1.21 4.9

 

Mostly, of course, this is do to his shooting efficiency, which is off the charts in this incredibly large sample.  But still, he also obvious rebounds well, can pass the rock, and most importantly he's remarkably "safe" with the ball.  He didn't turn it over at all in game 1, despite the fact that Russell Westbrook was clearly trying hard to show him up.

And then there's Kevin Love.  My only question is this:  if he keeps playing like this, are NBA beat writers still going to ignore him when MVP voting starts?  Because this shit is crazy:

 

Per 48 Minutes

  WP48 PTS REB AST TO BLK STL PF
Love .405 31.4 19.0 4.1 3.6 0.0 0.6 2.4
 
Average F .099 17.5 8.7 2.2 2.2 0.0 0.0 4.4

 

Shooting

  FG% 2FG% 3FG% FT% eFG% TS% FGA PPS FTA
Love 37.5% 44.0% 14.3% 77.8% 39.1% 55.4% 19.0 1.66 21.3
 
Average F 44.0% 50.0% 30.7% 70.7% 42.9% 50.8% 15.3 1.14 4.4

 

And the scary thing?  I think Kevin Love actually had bad games by his standards. His three-point shooting is meh (he's trying very hard to get fouled, which is understandable because defenses are really biting) and he's missed quite a few gimmes, and his free-throw shooting has been bad (he shot 85% last year!).  If he were playing his usual game, my oh my.

Still, it's been insane how much he's getting to the line. And it's not favoritism from the refs. It's a combination of the fact that he's a smart player who has always been good at drawing fouls (he drew twice as many as the average PF last year, without putting up significantly more FGAs) and the fact he's a lot quicker this year thanks to the 25 pionds he shed (note to NBA coaches:  last year's strategy of guarding Love with your plodding center to keep him off the boards, and assuming he's not quick enough to exploit the mismatch? Yeah, you might want to re-think that one this year).  And what's truly incredible is that he's doing it all without taking a zillion shots (I'm fairly certain Beasley would never let him get away with that).

Finally, I'll wrap up by saying what Ben Gulker has already said about the Pistons, and what Stop-n-Pop alludes to in his article:  So far, Adelman appears to be trying the same lineups that Rambis tried for 2 years, in which he piled up a shitton of lost basketball games and very few wins.  And "doing the same thing over and over again and expecting the result to change" sounds like a pretty moronic strategy to me. It's time to take away Beasley's, Johnson's and Darko's minutes, and see if the results change. 

Categories: Darko Milicic, Kevin Love, Michael Beasley, Ricky Rubio, Minnesota Timberwolves, Rubioops

The NBA Season is ready to start on Christmas Day, the last couple of preseason games are being played as I write this up, and it's time for me to cater to every serious NBA fans love of season previews!  The 2011 Geektastic Preview is going to be way too large for one article, so I'm dividing it up into divisions (and even so, it's going to be long, so get a cup of coffee!).  In this article I'm going to tackle my hometown team, the Minnesota Timberwolves.

Note that this article is using the new formula for calculating Wins Produced. If you don't understand the WP metric, see the FAQ.

The 2011-12 Minnesota Timberwolves

Players Gone: Corey Brewer, Johnny Flynn, Lazar Hayward, Kosta Koufos

Players Added: Ricky Rubio (R), Derrick Williams (R), Malcom Lee (R), Bonzi Wells (FA), JJ Barea (FA), Brad Miller (FA)

Predicted Finish: Last in the Northwest

Outlook:  Lottery team.  Some potential, and there are pieces to build from if they dump some of the bad players, but well...you know....KAAAAAAAAAAAAHN!

2010 - 2011 PER-48 stats

NAME GP MIN WP48 PTS REB AST TO BLK STL PF
Wayne Ellington 62 1182 -.030 16.6 4.4 2.9 0.1 1.1 2.2 3.5
Wesley Johnson 79 2068 .018 16.5 5.6 3.5 1.3 1.3 2.2 3.8
Kevin Love 73 2614 .342 27.1 20.4 3.4 0.5 0.8 2.8 2.7
Darko Milicic 69 1685 -.052 17.3 10.3 3.0 4.0 1.5 4.3 6.5
Nikola Pekovic 65 888 -.080 19.4 10.4 1.5 1.9 1.0 4.9 9.8
Anthony Randolph 23 461 .050 28.1 12.5 2.8 1.7 1.9 4.5 4.9
Luke Ridnour 71 2161 .134 18.7 4.4 8.6 0.2 2.0 3.5 3.2
Anthony Tolliver 65 1360 .091 15.3 10.4 2.9 1.0 1.0 1.7 5.1
Martell Webster 46 1095 .071 19.9 6.4 2.3 0.4 1.2 2.5 4.4
Michael Beasley 73 2365 -.100 28.4 8.3 3.2 1.1 1.1 4.0 4.5
Brad Miller 60 1019 .109 18.0 10.5 6.8 1.0 1.3 2.5 4.6
Jose juan Barea 81 1655 .033 22.3 4.6 9.2 0.1 0.9 3.9 3.9

 

The good news is, the Timberwolves have shipped off a lot of very bad players, together with arguably the worst coach in the league. Flynn, Brewer, Hayward, Telfair and Koufos produced a combined -1.9 wins.  Yes, if they just hadn't ever played, the Wolves would have probably won an extra couple of games. The bad news is that there are equally bad players left on the roster, and they haven't added any real win producers.  Furthermore, the new wins produced metric is showing us what I have long suspected: that Michael Beasley, not Darko Milicis, is the worst player on this team; the main reason for this is that the diminishing return effects of rebounds are now incorporated into the metric, which means that shooting efficiency, which was already the primary factor in WP, is an even bigger factor.  Basically:  if you are terrible at shooting and you shoot a lot, the WP metric is going to say that you are a very poor player.  And this is very true of Beasley:

 

  WP48 PTS REB AST TO BLK STL PF
Beasley -.100 28.4 8.3 3.2 4.0 1.1 1.1 4.5
 
Average SF .099 19.6 7.4 3.1 2.2 0.8 1.2 3.7

 

Shooting comparison

  FG% 2FG% 3FG% FT% eFG% TS% FGA PPS FTA
Beasley 45.0% 46.3% 36.6% 75.3% 47.4% 51.0% 25.3 1.12 5.9
 
Average SF 44.5% 49.1% 36.2% 78.2% 49.4% 54.4% 16.1 1.22 4.3

 

As you can see above, Beasley does not shoot as well as the average small forward, but he likes to shoot a lot.  This is compounded by the fact that the shots he likes to take are the ones he's bad at: long twos.  Only 3.3 of his 25.3 FGAs per 48 minutes are threes. This is also why he rarely gets to the line: an average SF would get to the line about 6.8 times per 48 if he took 25.3 shots!  Finally, Beasley is a turnover waiting to happen and commits a lot of fouls.  In short, although most Timberwolves fans have figured out that Beasley isn't a great player, I doubt that many have realized just how bad he is.  This is a big problem for the wolves because a) he plays a lot of minutes and b) unlike with Darko Milicic, where everyone has kind of figured out by now that he's terrible, management doesn't seem to realize how bad Beasley is.

The wolves are further plagued by the fact that all the centers on the roster are terrible; Love will probably play a lot out of position, and it's not likely that Miller will see any playing time given his injury.  It shouldn't surprise anyone that the Wolves were the team to overpay JJ Barea (an average shooting point guard who brings nothing else to the table).  

Then there is Rubio.  RUUUUUBIO!  RUBI-OOPS! I really want Ricky Rubio to be good, because he's a lot of fun to watch.  I suspect, however, on the spectrum from Jason Williams to Jason Kidd he's closer to the wrong Jason.   Meaning more like Rubi-oops-shit-I-didn't-mean-that than Rubi-alley-oops.

Derrick Williams is a further mystery. The man shot the hell out of the ball last year, and his stroke certainly passes the "eye test", but then, so does Beasley's.  The real question is: can he hit 40% from the NBA three? If he cannot, it's hard to see how he will produce; he doesn't appear to have a quick step to the basket and he's not a great rebounder.  There are only so many alley-oops Rubio can throw you before the defense catches on that this is all they have to worry about.

Still, I'd like to optimistically pencil in both rookies for a WP48 of 0.050 and about 1200 minutes each, then they'll combine to add 2.5 wins. The effect might be bigger because if Williams plays well, he might keep Beasley off the floor or (dare I hope) the Wolves might even trade him.

The other thing the Wolves have going for them is that Wes Johnson is likely to improve (from god-awful to just bad, but still), Pekovic might improve (again, from horrific to just pretty bad), and it's going to be hard for Love's teammates to put up a season as historically bad as they did last year. And no, Darko will not improve. You're kidding, right? It's been, what, 8 years you've been waiting on that? You're really going to stick with that argument? 

In the end, the Wolves will likely improve from a 17-win team to a 25-win team, which gives them about 19-20 wins in 66 games.  Of course, If Rubioops surprises us, they have more room for improvement, but if this team wins more than 25 this year I will be stupified (but hey, I'd love to be wrong).  What they really need to do is trade Beasley (he has $8m coming off the books, this has to interest someone), try to find buyers for Wes, amnesty Darko and sign a quality free agent next year.

In the meantime, even if he isn't producing tons of wins, I think it's going to be fun to watch Rubio play, right?

Categories: Kevin Love, Michael Beasley, Minnesota Timberwolves, Previews, Rubioops