SEA POS Min WP48 PoP48 WP PTS DRB ORB REB AST TO BLK STL PF
12-13 PHO
953 -.048 -4.6 -1.0 20.1 5.1 1.1 6.2 1.7 2.4 0.9 1.1 2.8
11-12 MIN SF 1469 .018 -2.5 0.5 12.8 5.0 0.8 5.8 1.9 2.0 1.6 1.1 3.8
10-11 MIN SF 2068 .018 -2.5 0.8 16.5 4.4 1.2 5.6 3.5 2.2 1.3 1.3 3.8
Career Avg SF 1496 .004 0.0 0.1 16.0 4.7 1.0 5.8 2.6 2.2 1.3 1.2 3.6
Average SF SF 1737 .099 0.0 3.6 20.3 5.7 1.9 7.6 3.5 2.6 0.8 1.6 3.8
  FG% 2FG% 3FG% FT% eFG% TS% FGA 3FGA PPS FTA
Johnson 12-13 40.7% 46.1% 32.3% 77.1% 47.0% 48.5% 19.9 7.8 1.01 1.8
Johnson 11-12 39.8% 46.1% 31.4% 70.6% 46.5% 47.7% 13.0 5.5 0.99 1.1
Johnson 10-11 39.7% 42.7% 35.6% 69.6% 47.3% 49.1% 15.8 6.7 1.04 2.1
Johnson (career) 40.0% 44.5% 33.6% 71.4% 47.0% 48.5% 15.8 6.6 1.02 1.7
Average SF 44.7% 47.7% 36.1% 78.1% 49.4% 54.0% 16.6 4.3 1.22 5.0
Team GP MIN WP PTS REB AST BLK STL TO PF
12-13 PHO 50 953 -1.0 399 123 34 18 22 48 56
11-12 MIN 65 1469 .5 393 177 59 48 35 60 115
10-11 MIN 79 2068 .8 709 240 149 54 58 95 163
Career 194 1496 .1 1501 540 242 120 115 203 334

Articles featuring Wesley Johnson

You're Gonna Be Surprised: The Suns

Well, maybe. I'm continuing my series of NBA Previews, but focusing on teams that I think will surprise people. This one is actually a reader request:

Whom has Wes Johnson Bribed?

The Minnesota Timberwolves have improved quite a bit this season compared to last year. Much of that can be attributed to Ricky Rubio, some of it to the improved play of Nikola Pekovic, and surely a great portion of the credit belongs to Rick Adelman, mostly through virtue of the fact that he's allocating minutes differently. But the very fact that Adelman is willing to reduce the playing time of underperforming players with large contracts (NO_SUCH_PLAYER(Darko Milicic, Michael Beasley) has me mystified about one thing: why does Weley Johnson ever play, much less start?

When Bad is an Upgrade

It's easy to get more excited about the Timberwolves than a rational person would; they have what looks like an easy pick for rookie of the year in Rubio (actually Leonard is just about as good but I'll wager a lot of money that he's not going to even be in the top 5 in votes), and arguably the game's best power forward in Kevin Love (if he'd only stop whining).

NBA managers need to learn how to quit!

No, I'm not talking about their employment.  We've all grown up with the idea that "quitting" or "giving up" is something bad that only losers do.  But I think we could all learn from some basic economic principles that quitting is often the smartest thing you can do.