Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls?

Moderators: Doctor MJ, trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier

drza
Analyst
Posts: 3,518
And1: 1,861
Joined: May 22, 2001

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#41 » by drza » Mon Feb 27, 2012 7:04 am

Rerisen wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:I suppose what one could conceivably argue is that Deng can have more impact than even Rose against middling teams, but that against tougher teams that would disappear without Rose. I don't know though. That would make some sense if Deng was offense-oriented, but Deng's impact primarily comes on defense.


I agree, Deng's primary impact is defense. Kind of has to be with him scoring 15.9 PPG at .504 TS% currently, and not being a great dribbler or playmaker either.

Yet if we are to believe just how much impact Deng is making on defense, this would have to be rewriting traditional limits as expected from the Small Forward position, right. As in up near dominant center level impact.


I'm not sure that the underlined is true, based on the long-term APM studies that are out there. There have been plenty of small forwards having the impact normally associated with big men, which is maybe an indication that we should re-look at our notion of whether small forwards should be included with the guards or the big men for defensive trends.

On the '04 - '09 Ilardi study, Artest (+5.1 on defense), right in a group with Ben Wallace (+5.2), Tim Duncan (+4.8) , Ratlif (+4.6), and Camby (+4.2). Battier (+3.9) and Kirileknko (+3.5) weren't far behind.

Similarly, in Englemann's '08 - '11 study LeBron (+3.7 on defense) was right there with Dwight Howard (+4.0), Duncan (+3.9), Josh Smith (+4.1) and Andrew Bogut (+4.2). And in that study Deng was +3.0 on defense, not far behind.

So I don't think Deng's results are out of whack with what the great defensive SFs have been able to do on defense for the last decade. There are certainly more high-impact defensive big men than small forwards, but the best of the defensive small forwards aren't far behind the upper-tier bigs on defense.
Creator of the Hoops Lab: tinyurl.com/mpo2brj
Contributor to NylonCalculusDOTcom
Contributor to TYTSports: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTbFEVCpx9shKEsZl7FcRHzpGO1dPoimk
Follow on Twitter: @ProfessorDrz
therealbig3
RealGM
Posts: 29,626
And1: 16,150
Joined: Jul 31, 2010

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#42 » by therealbig3 » Mon Feb 27, 2012 7:08 am

^Makes you wonder exactly where Pippen should rank as a defensive player, I'm pretty confident that he was better than all of those other SFs, but people seem to quickly and automatically rank him below the great defensive big men like Robinson or Hakeem or Duncan. Might not be the case.
drza
Analyst
Posts: 3,518
And1: 1,861
Joined: May 22, 2001

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#43 » by drza » Mon Feb 27, 2012 7:11 am

therealbig3 wrote:The 4-year RAPM from 08-11, Durant's entire career, and the last 2 years for Harden, has Harden at +4.0, and Durant at +1.1, which is why I included Harden in my post.


Durant showed up notoriously awful in APM his rookie season...which isn't really that shocking considering his physical limitations at the time and having to learn how to play in the NBA from a focal point position. He has gotten progressively better, up to a very high finish in RAPM last season. But in the 4-year study that includes his rookie year, I'd think that terrible rookie result would play a part in why he ranked so low there.

But as I said in the last post, in basketball-value's 2-year APM as well as the 2011 RAPM Durant shows up as clearly better than Harden. With both being so young and thus without a huge history in the APM studies, I think this is a reasonable indication that Durant has surpassed Harden in the impact stats but that Harden is still having his own good impact on the action.
Creator of the Hoops Lab: tinyurl.com/mpo2brj
Contributor to NylonCalculusDOTcom
Contributor to TYTSports: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTbFEVCpx9shKEsZl7FcRHzpGO1dPoimk
Follow on Twitter: @ProfessorDrz
Doctor MJ
Senior Mod
Senior Mod
Posts: 53,884
And1: 22,821
Joined: Mar 10, 2005
Location: Cali
     

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#44 » by Doctor MJ » Mon Feb 27, 2012 7:25 am

drza wrote:Durant showed up notoriously awful in APM his rookie season...which isn't really that shocking considering his physical limitations at the time and having to learn how to play in the NBA from a focal point position.


Right, one of the fascinating trends to come out of +/- is that it's not just that veterans do a bit better (and young players a little worse) than their box score numbers suggest, but that young proto-superstars tend to look somewhere between useless and destructive. And then, those same players end up dominating the league in +/- once they hit their prime.

I've always read this as a kind of "We're not handing you the team because we think you can help now, we're doing it because this is the role you have to learn how to play, so there's no point in giving you some other easier assignment we're not going to be using you in in the future."
Getting ready for the RealGM 100 on the PC Board

Come join the WNBA Board if you're a fan!
mysticbb
Banned User
Posts: 8,205
And1: 713
Joined: May 28, 2007
Contact:
   

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#45 » by mysticbb » Mon Feb 27, 2012 7:34 am

therealbig3 wrote:The 4-year RAPM from 08-11, Durant's entire career, and the last 2 years for Harden, has Harden at +4.0, and Durant at +1.1, which is why I included Harden in my post.


Where can I find that 4yr RAPM study?
therealbig3
RealGM
Posts: 29,626
And1: 16,150
Joined: Jul 31, 2010

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#46 » by therealbig3 » Mon Feb 27, 2012 7:40 am

mysticbb wrote:
therealbig3 wrote:The 4-year RAPM from 08-11, Durant's entire career, and the last 2 years for Harden, has Harden at +4.0, and Durant at +1.1, which is why I included Harden in my post.


Where can I find that 4yr RAPM study?


http://stats-for-the-nba.appspot.com/4-year-ranking

I usually get to it from going through Doctor MJ's blog actually. He links it in his entries about Kobe's and KG's defense.
mysticbb
Banned User
Posts: 8,205
And1: 713
Joined: May 28, 2007
Contact:
   

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#47 » by mysticbb » Mon Feb 27, 2012 8:20 am

Thanks, I knew it was there and I have seen it before, it was just no link to it anymore.
tsherkin
Forum Mod - Raptors
Forum Mod - Raptors
Posts: 93,293
And1: 32,740
Joined: Oct 14, 2003
 

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#48 » by tsherkin » Mon Feb 27, 2012 3:08 pm

It should be pointed out that the Bulls clearly win on the basis of their defense, to which Deng contributes more than does Rose. That's probably a large part of why the numbers indicate Deng's efficacy the way they do.

Last year, the Bulls were 11th in team ORTG, which is unremarkable; Rose wasn't driving an elite offense, though given the teammates he had and that he isn't Steve Nash, I don't think anyone is surprised. They were at 108.3 ORTG (though that's with Boozer and Noah injured and Boozer's jumper not there at all last year, compared to this season). This year, they're at 108.2, but because league offense sucks this season as a result of the compressed schedule, they're actually 3rd in the league in team ORTG. So it's tangibly identical in terms of their offensive production, and they're still winning on the basis of their defense, but by default, their offense is much more potent because few teams are scoring as effectively as they did in the last non-lockout season.

The flip side of this is that the Bulls really suck on offense without Rose. If they didn't have him shouldering the load, they'd be worse offensively and it would impact the team a lot over a lengthy period of time.

Which is more important?

Over the balance of the season, I bet we'd find a net slight weight in favor of offense. You can't win if you can't score and when you take Rose off of this team, they cannot drive offense against strong, coordinated defenses because basically no one else can dribble or create in HCO. That needs to be considered; he's their best playmaker, their best at generating shots against set defense and their top volume scorer. He's not mega-hyper efficient, so his overall impact isn't the same as someone like James or Durant or whomever and he isn't the same caliber playmaker of a player like Paul or Nash, but Rose's importance to Chicago's offense cannot be understated because of the quality, or lack thereof, inherent to Chicago's offensive lineup.

They ALL rely on other people to set them up and of the other players, only Rip really does anything to generate shots for himself. Deng has been straight-up terrible on offense this season, as have Brewer and Richard Hamilton. It's really only Boozer and Noah who are scoring competently, and we know well enough where their offense is coming from: Rose and offensive rebounds.

So we consider the record without Rose. The Bulls are 27-8 overall, 20-5 with Rose. With Derrick, they're on pace for almost 66 wins in a regular season (.800). Without him, they're on pace for about 57 (0.700), and that's after facing the Wizards, Grizzlies, Suns, Cavs, Bobcats twice, Celtics twice, Kings and Nets. Not exactly the most stirring competition, and noticeably less successful than with Derrick in the lineup.

I'd say the numbers don't necessarily line up and we're seeing an anomaly here that may be rooted in the fact that the team primarily dominates with defense, which is an area where Deng has a lot of impact in pushing the team into elite territory, whereas Rose drives an otherwise unremarkable offense despite a fair number of underperforming slackers, so he's not getting quite as much statistical credit for moving the team towards victory.
drza
Analyst
Posts: 3,518
And1: 1,861
Joined: May 22, 2001

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#49 » by drza » Mon Feb 27, 2012 4:14 pm

tsherkin wrote:It should be pointed out that the Bulls clearly win on the basis of their defense, to which Deng contributes more than does Rose. That's probably a large part of why the numbers indicate Deng's efficacy the way they do.

Last year, the Bulls were 11th in team ORTG, which is unremarkable; Rose wasn't driving an elite offense, though given the teammates he had and that he isn't Steve Nash, I don't think anyone is surprised. They were at 108.3 ORTG (though that's with Boozer and Noah injured and Boozer's jumper not there at all last year, compared to this season). This year, they're at 108.2, but because league offense sucks this season as a result of the compressed schedule, they're actually 3rd in the league in team ORTG. So it's tangibly identical in terms of their offensive production, and they're still winning on the basis of their defense, but by default, their offense is much more potent because few teams are scoring as effectively as they did in the last non-lockout season.

The flip side of this is that the Bulls really suck on offense without Rose. If they didn't have him shouldering the load, they'd be worse offensively and it would impact the team a lot over a lengthy period of time.

Which is more important?

Over the balance of the season, I bet we'd find a net slight weight in favor of offense. You can't win if you can't score and when you take Rose off of this team, they cannot drive offense against strong, coordinated defenses because basically no one else can dribble or create in HCO. That needs to be considered; he's their best playmaker, their best at generating shots against set defense and their top volume scorer. He's not mega-hyper efficient, so his overall impact isn't the same as someone like James or Durant or whomever and he isn't the same caliber playmaker of a player like Paul or Nash, but Rose's importance to Chicago's offense cannot be understated because of the quality, or lack thereof, inherent to Chicago's offensive lineup.

They ALL rely on other people to set them up and of the other players, only Rip really does anything to generate shots for himself. Deng has been straight-up terrible on offense this season, as have Brewer and Richard Hamilton. It's really only Boozer and Noah who are scoring competently, and we know well enough where their offense is coming from: Rose and offensive rebounds.

So we consider the record without Rose. The Bulls are 27-8 overall, 20-5 with Rose. With Derrick, they're on pace for almost 66 wins in a regular season (.800). Without him, they're on pace for about 57 (0.700), and that's after facing the Wizards, Grizzlies, Suns, Cavs, Bobcats twice, Celtics twice, Kings and Nets. Not exactly the most stirring competition, and noticeably less successful than with Derrick in the lineup.

I'd say the numbers don't necessarily line up and we're seeing an anomaly here that may be rooted in the fact that the team primarily dominates with defense, which is an area where Deng has a lot of impact in pushing the team into elite territory, whereas Rose drives an otherwise unremarkable offense despite a fair number of underperforming slackers, so he's not getting quite as much statistical credit for moving the team towards victory.


This post is actually a perfect example for what I like about the development of the APM family of stats. Because the first half of the post (up until "Which is more important?") is an example of a knowledgable basketball mind visually scouting a situation and making informed observations. An "eye test", if you will, of someone who's basketball opinion I value. Then, the second half of the post (after "Which is more important") is the informed speculation of that person, based on what they observed. Essentially, making interpretations based off the eye test. Before the APM family of stats, interpretation of the informed observer was all that we had access to outside of the box scores. The problem is, even among good basketball minds, everyone's analysis will be different. There's no way to do it objectively. Whereas with APM, we don't have to rely on changes in subjective point of view. If the rules of statistics are followed, APM gives us an objective way to answer the "which is more important?" question without relying purely on speculation.

But here's where it gets interesting to me: outside of the 4 words underlined above, APM and our intelligent observer say THE EXACT SAME THING. The only difference, then, is in the interpretation...not the observation.

Let's return to the specifics of tsherkin's post. tsherkin says of Rose's offense "He's not mega-hyper efficient, so his overall impact isn't the same as someone like James or Durant or whomever and he isn't the same caliber playmaker of a player like Paul or Nash". Rose's 4-year APM and 2011 RAPM both have him about +2.0 on offense, a very good mark (~top 30 in the league) but not the super-elite compared to James (+ 4.1 offensive RAPM in 2011), Durant (+3.9), Nash (+6.2), and Paul (+4.1). So (and tsherkin, let me know if I overstep myself in making conclusions for you based on your writing) it'd seem that our informed observer and our informed impact stat are seeing the exact same thing.

The difference comes once tsherkin takes in his observations, and says "I bet this is what would happen" whereas the APM says "this is what actually did happen". And what did happen is that Deng has measured out as one of the better impact players in the game before Thibs or Rose even got there, he's held that impact for several years, and he held that impact all of last season with both Thibs and Rose on board as well. Yes, if someone were to try to base their analysis purely off of the 10 or 15 games that Rose missed this year you could get some crazy results because the sample size is just too small. But with years and years of consistent results in the bank, for Deng to then maintain his impact in the 15 games without Rose and maintain the exact same level of impact that the multi-year studies would tell us to expect...to me, that's a much stronger result.

It's just like Melo with Denver/NY last year...we had years of data pre-trade telling us that Melo wasn't the huge impact he was made out to be and that thus his going from Denver to NY shouldn't make a huge difference. So for it to play out exactly like that once the trade was made in-season, to me someone can't claim that the Nuggets getting better while the Knicks not post-trade is a sample-size anomoly. No, we had plenty of data with which to make our prediction, and it's okay then that the test period be a bit shorter since the results fit the prediction exactly.

Anyway, the point I'm making isn't that APM is a be-all/end-all. But I like having a quantitative approach that appreciates/values the complete package/team impact things that a trained observer would notice while remaining completely objective as to the relative importance of the different players/team roles/skill sets.
Creator of the Hoops Lab: tinyurl.com/mpo2brj
Contributor to NylonCalculusDOTcom
Contributor to TYTSports: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTbFEVCpx9shKEsZl7FcRHzpGO1dPoimk
Follow on Twitter: @ProfessorDrz
tsherkin
Forum Mod - Raptors
Forum Mod - Raptors
Posts: 93,293
And1: 32,740
Joined: Oct 14, 2003
 

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#50 » by tsherkin » Mon Feb 27, 2012 4:52 pm

drza wrote:
Let's return to the specifics of tsherkin's post. tsherkin says of Rose's offense "He's not mega-hyper efficient, so his overall impact isn't the same as someone like James or Durant or whomever and he isn't the same caliber playmaker of a player like Paul or Nash". Rose's 4-year APM and 2011 RAPM both have him about +2.0 on offense, a very good mark (~top 30 in the league) but not the super-elite compared to James (+ 4.1 offensive RAPM in 2011), Durant (+3.9), Nash (+6.2), and Paul (+4.1). So (and tsherkin, let me know if I overstep myself in making conclusions for you based on your writing) it'd seem that our informed observer and our informed impact stat are seeing the exact same thing.


I'm right with you so far, man. :) I've looked at the APM and RAPM studies and generally been pleased with what they indicate, given enough of a sample.

Anyway, the point I'm making isn't that APM is a be-all/end-all. But I like having a quantitative approach that appreciates/values the complete package/team impact things that a trained observer would notice while remaining completely objective as to the relative importance of the different players/team roles/skill sets.


I agree that it's a useful tool, so long as we feed it a sufficient amount of information.

One of the problems I already see with it, though, is that it is more useful for players in long-established roles. Rose has been evolving as a player and has looked very different from season to season, and consequently, the overall meaning of what RAPM is telling must necessarily be evolving as well.

If you look at his first two seasons, he's a 16/6 and 20/6 player. He was inefficient as a rookie and then around league-average in his second season, though he actually posted a LOWER ORTG as a second-year player (106 vs 108 as a rookie). Then in 2011, he busted out. Cranked out 25 ppg on 55% TS and busted his ORTG up to 113, had a much larger impact on the team's offense. This year, his scoring is down, his efficiency is up and he's at 115 ORTG. And watching him, you can see an improved approach in the PnR, where he's really worked on his timing and his overall approach to how he uses the different players around him.

There's a pretty visible evolution in his mental approach to the game. Some of it is that he's been injured a bit and hasn't been as explosive as usual, but that's actually worked to his advantage because he's making better use out of Boozer, Noah, Deng and really everyone else in those sets. Consequently, the Bulls' offense has held up a lot better than almost any other team in the league compared to last season's performance and as a result, the Bulls are a top-3 offense in the league while basically just repeating their offensive performance from last season at just over 108 team ORTG.

That's the sort of thing that even a 4-year RAPM study cannot accommodate; it won't tell you that. It doesn't factor in which seasons of a player's career it is evaluating and the first half decade of a player's career tends to be filled with peaks and valleys as they struggle to adapt to the NBA and find their niche. Rose is blossoming right in front of us, more so this season than last despite the difference in his raw statistical averages, and I don't think that's being effectively represented.
RichardsRival3
Banned User
Posts: 7,250
And1: 1
Joined: Feb 23, 2010

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#51 » by RichardsRival3 » Mon Feb 27, 2012 5:42 pm

Simple, the Bulls offense breaks down when Rose isn't in there creating for himself or others.

Deng doesn't draw defensive attention like Rose and can't efficiently create a shot for himself nor others.

If you think the Bulls did fine without Rose, look at the competition....scrubs of the NBA.

Deng's biggest problem is he isn't able to get by his defender of the dribble. This inability to get to the rim causes him to shoot contested jump shots. Also, since he can't get to the rim, he doesn't draw an extra defender, thus no open shots for teammates.

Rose is the MVP, because the Bulls rely on him so much offensively and the tougher the defense the more they lean on Rose.

These stats like +/- don't factor in the competition.

If a player plays well against weak teams and racks up a high +/- that is very deceiving.

Another example is Kyle Korver. He has trouble getting open against good athletic defenses. However, he kills bad teams who play undisciplined defense because they lose him as he runs of screens.
therealbig3
RealGM
Posts: 29,626
And1: 16,150
Joined: Jul 31, 2010

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#52 » by therealbig3 » Mon Feb 27, 2012 6:06 pm

^It's been pointed out quite a few times that Deng has been impressive by +/- for a while now, not just in the small sample of games they've played this year without Rose.

But in support of Rose: In the 10 games that Rose has missed, the Bulls posted a 107.6 ORating vs an average DRating of 105.7 (+1.9). For the season, the Bulls have a 108.2 ORating, and the league average DRating is 103.2 (+5.0).

But tsherkin's point about how league offense in general is down (which means defenses look better, hence the lower league average DRating), and the reasons why the Bulls have been able to duplicate offensively what they did last year, is interesting, and it might be a big reason why the Bulls seem to have a big falloff without Rose. It could just be that the league average DRating is down in general, moreso than Rose having a huge impact on the offense...for example, last year, the average DRating was 107.3, if you applied that average to this year, the Bulls don't look special at all offensively on the season.
tsherkin
Forum Mod - Raptors
Forum Mod - Raptors
Posts: 93,293
And1: 32,740
Joined: Oct 14, 2003
 

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#53 » by tsherkin » Mon Feb 27, 2012 6:22 pm

As I said, apart from a tenth of a point, the Bulls' offense is the same as it was last year. That's actually a credit to Rose, given that league average ORTG has dropped from 107.3 to 103.2.

That means that this year, the Bulls are third in the league in offensive efficiency with a rating that put them 11th last year. That tells us a lot of about relative performance across the league, especially given that league average was 107.6 in 09-10, so the kind of drop we're seeing is really out of proportion to the usual year-to-year variance (and of course that's borne out further by looking back and seeing the general upward trend and the other year-to-year changes, not just from one season to the next).
RichardsRival3
Banned User
Posts: 7,250
And1: 1
Joined: Feb 23, 2010

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#54 » by RichardsRival3 » Mon Feb 27, 2012 6:28 pm

therealbig3 wrote:^It's been pointed out quite a few times that Deng has been impressive by +/- for a while now, not just in the small sample of games they've played this year without Rose.



How does that matter? Did the Bulls not play scrub teams last year?

The only thing that is dependent on the small sample size is the Bulls record without Rose.

If Rose misses an extended amount of time where the Bulls have a much more average SOS then we will see how many wins Deng can carry the Bulls to.
tsherkin
Forum Mod - Raptors
Forum Mod - Raptors
Posts: 93,293
And1: 32,740
Joined: Oct 14, 2003
 

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#55 » by tsherkin » Mon Feb 27, 2012 7:10 pm

I should add this:

In 10-11, the Bulls posted a team DRTG of 100.3 against a league average of 107.3 (so -7.0 overall). This season, they're managing 97.7 against 103.2, or -5.5. So it's not as large an impact relative to league average, but it's still really good. More than anything, this year, their offense has actually been HUGE for them because of how poorly most of the rest of the teams are doing compared to last year.
User avatar
alucryts
Retired Mod
Retired Mod
Posts: 18,085
And1: 1,169
Joined: Apr 01, 2009
     

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#56 » by alucryts » Mon Feb 27, 2012 7:17 pm

I think this whole deabte comes down to whether you look at the result and apply context to the players or you take the players and apply context to the result.

Imagine for a second that there is a stat that, on a single number basis, can rank every player in the NBA in not only order, but how far apart they would be (i.e. player X gets a 12.5 while player Y gets a 3.5; shows order and magnitude). This is essentially what plus minus is trying to do. What should the perfect version of the stat include? Starting a running list:

1) individual efficiency
2) team mate efficiency
3) opponents efficiency
4) efficiency relative to league
5) individual volume
6) team mate volume
7) opponent volume
8) volume relative to league
9) synergies toward team mates (i.e. Player X is only good because of Player Y's passing)
10) synergy towards opponents (i.e. Player X is only good because of team Y's ignoring him on offense)
11) effort (i.e. is it garbage time and no one is trying?)

Each one of these categories can be broken down into a multitude of variables as well as affect one another in some way. How exactly do you define all of this? One way is to try and define every single possible variable, and find out a number that describes it, and normalize it all. This is the PER method. The other way is to measure an overall result of play, then manipulate it with as many variables as you can define. This is the plus minus method. What can plus minus define from my list with a realistic sample size? I would say it can define 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 in an absolute sense while 9 and 10 are the tricky ones. 9 and 10 ARE measured with plus minus, but only the result of synergies. What the big battle involes is trying to numerically describe the cause of the resulting synergy measured. This is where the error comes from. It is so darn difficult to objectively turn a resulting synergy into who and what caused it, and then assign a number to it.

To put that idea into something tangible that can be seen on any given play, lets say Steve Nash runs a pick and roll with Amare. To simplify things, assume all three "other" players on the suns are dead eye 3 point shooter. Nash and Amare run pick and roll; Nash passes to Amare for a dunk. Everyone on the offensive floor is awarded +2 in the plus minus stat. How do you take that and give player Z who stood outside the three point line his proper due? He had nothing to do with the play directly, but without his spacing they wouldn't get +2. While he shouldn't get +2 because he played a small role, he should get something for his role.

I think it is this underfined cause of synergy that leads to a stat saying that Deng is more impactful than Rose or other versions around the NBA. While it is probably true that Deng has a very high impact, some combination of offensive and defensive synergy that is not in Deng's direct control and player ability is causing these numbers.

I think a great stat would be to take play by play data and award a set percentage of credit depending on position, role, who took the shot, and etc etc. That is for someone getting paid to do this however.
ChiCitySPORTS#1
RealGM
Posts: 20,289
And1: 5,551
Joined: Jul 02, 2006
Location: West Loop

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#57 » by ChiCitySPORTS#1 » Mon Feb 27, 2012 8:15 pm

I think the gap between minutes is in part because of the Bulls lack of an adequate back up for Deng, and a great one for Rose.
User avatar
mopper8
Retired Mod
Retired Mod
Posts: 42,618
And1: 4,870
Joined: Jul 18, 2004
Location: Petting elephants with the coolest dude alive

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#58 » by mopper8 » Mon Feb 27, 2012 10:12 pm

tsherkin wrote:As I said, apart from a tenth of a point, the Bulls' offense is the same as it was last year. That's actually a credit to Rose, given that league average ORTG has dropped from 107.3 to 103.2.

That means that this year, the Bulls are third in the league in offensive efficiency with a rating that put them 11th last year. That tells us a lot of about relative performance across the league, especially given that league average was 107.6 in 09-10, so the kind of drop we're seeing is really out of proportion to the usual year-to-year variance (and of course that's borne out further by looking back and seeing the general upward trend and the other year-to-year changes, not just from one season to the next).


Worth nothing about the Bulls' Ortg --

Their eFG% is slightly down this season from last. They're drawing fewer fouls/fga this season as well, which shouldn't be too surprising seeing as how Rose has a lower usg% this season, in fewer minutes, and missing games, and nobody else on their roster can draw fouls like Rose does with consistency. They are also shooting worse when they get to the line, 72% down from 76%. Their TO% is basically identically/slightly improved.133 from .135.

So, how is their offense staying the same? Offensive rebounds. Orebs are UP, which is keeping them overall even when their scoring less efficiently on first shot opportunities this season than they did last. So I don't know that we should credit Rose too much for keeping them where they are.
DragicTime85 wrote:[Ric Bucher] has a tiny wiener and I can prove it.
User avatar
SideshowBob
General Manager
Posts: 9,064
And1: 6,272
Joined: Jul 16, 2010
Location: Washington DC
 

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#59 » by SideshowBob » Mon Feb 27, 2012 10:19 pm

Not only that, but the Bulls improve their offensive rebounding rate by .7% when Rose is off the court. Is that a significant difference? No, not really, but it does support the claim that Rose's presence doesn't really affect that aspect of their offense at all. We've seen other non-bigs improving their team's OREB% by just being on the floor, which is likely due to the kind of shots they take.

In fact, we even saw this with Rose last season. His relentless attacks at the rim led to his big guys having more opportunities to grab offensive boards. As has been mentioned in this thread, he's doing that a lot less often this season, and so far we're seeing that leading to a lack of impact on the team's OREB%

2012 http://www.82games.com/1112/11CHI3.HTM#onoff
2011 http://www.82games.com/1011/10CHI3.HTM#onoff
But in his home dwelling...the hi-top faded warrior is revered. *Smack!* The sound of his palm blocking the basketball... the sound of thousands rising, roaring... the sound of "get that sugar honey iced tea outta here!"
tsherkin
Forum Mod - Raptors
Forum Mod - Raptors
Posts: 93,293
And1: 32,740
Joined: Oct 14, 2003
 

Re: Talk Me Down: How is Deng not MVP of the Bulls? 

Post#60 » by tsherkin » Mon Feb 27, 2012 11:00 pm

mopper8 wrote:Their eFG% is slightly down this season from last. They're drawing fewer fouls/fga this season as well, which shouldn't be too surprising seeing as how Rose has a lower usg% this season, in fewer minutes, and missing games, and nobody else on their roster can draw fouls like Rose does with consistency. They are also shooting worse when they get to the line, 72% down from 76%. Their TO% is basically identically/slightly improved.133 from .135.

So, how is their offense staying the same? Offensive rebounds. Orebs are UP, which is keeping them overall even when their scoring less efficiently on first shot opportunities this season than they did last. So I don't know that we should credit Rose too much for keeping them where they are.


All good points, including the last. Rose isn't on an island where his bigs are concerned, they do a LOT of work for that team on the boards.

It does bear mention that they have improved from .294 to .315 in terms of team OREB% from last season, so that's definitely helping them out. But it should be pointed out that Rose has been posting a TS% almost 1% better than last year and has a minor decrease in TOV%, all of which is working towards him posting a career-high ORTG.

It's subtle things, but the Bulls' offense isn't predicated on really savvy sets or anything, it's always been founded upon Rose attacking in the PnR and then the bigs cleaning up when the shooters brick everything around Rose. Part of their success is Rose's play and the way he's maximizing his efficacy in the PnR, part of it is that the bigs have really been coming through because Boozer and Noah have stayed healthy so far, it's a lot of little things.

But at the end of the day, their offense is still predicated upon what Rose can do because he remains the only dynamic scoring threat they have.

Return to Player Comparisons