AEnigma wrote:trex_8063 wrote:AEnigma wrote:That is true of basically all these players over extended stretches — but with Jokic, the teams’s results when he misses games notably outpaces the team’s “off” when he goes to the bench, and it is odd how often that is overlooked or glossed over.
A fair point. What is at play there, do you think? Like,
why should the difference be so notable? It's not like the NBA's schedule really allows for them to get a ton of time to game-plan and practice without Jokic when he misses a game here or there (which is basically all he's really missed; been fairly durable).
Just allows them a little more time to find their rhythm without him??
I think it is just a change in lineup approach. Take Aaron Gordon: since he has arrived in Denver, when he and Jokic both play,
90% of Gordon’s minutes are with Jokic. So inherently every “off” sample involves lineups with minimal contribution from Gordon. For MPJ, it is around 85%, so there is another starter down. Add on that the Nuggets bench has generally been thin and/or bad, and you are going to see a lot of dismal lineups. That is why I was so irked when I saw narratives extrapolating Jokic’s “off” rating into a full season: yeah, if you lose Jokic, and 90% of Gordon, and 85% of MPJ, and ~70-75% of Murray, and you do not have much in the way of bench support, we
should expect the ensuing result to look awful, but instead people were pretending like those “off” results were with the rest of the core playing usual minute shares.
That would explain a lot (certainly at least in the playoffs).
He doesn't get quite the amount of time with with the other starters as you indicate in the rs, though (where he's still +19.0). Your figures are close enough for the playoffs, when all the starters are playing more.
e.g. 94.4% with Christian Braun in playoffs so far, 88.3% with Murray, 84.0% with Gordon, though only 64.6% with MPJ (and 41.8% with Westbrook); apparently hasn't played with anyone else in ps, though they do only go a 7-man rotation in ps (except garbage time).
In the rs, however, there's only one guy >80% (no where near 90), and only three >60%.......
With Aaron Gordon this year, given it was an injury year for him (his minutes down a bit in general, too): only 43.5% of Jokic's minutes were on the court with Gordon.
The guy he plays the most with in the rs this year is again Christian Braun, at 81.4%.
With MPJ it's 71.9%.
With Jamal Murray it's only 63.0%.
52.2% with Westbrook.
(again, Gordon is next at 43.5%)
35.0% with Peyton Watson.
25.5% with Julian Strawther (that one is definitely no prize).
12.9% with Jalen Pickett.
No one else as high as 10%.
fwiw, last year also wasn't 70-90% with each starter; in fact he didn't have as much as 80% with
anyone (and the highest was a role-player [a good one, but role player nonetheless]).....
79.5% with KCP
77.4% with MPJ
72.7% with Gordon
51.4% with Murray
37.6% with Reggie Jackson
28.5% with Braun
23.3% with Peyton Watson
15.5% with the last legs of Justin Holiday
Still +20.
In '23 rs......
81.8% with KCP
72.7% with Gordon
65.5% with Murray
60.0% with MPJ
53.0% with Bruce Brown [6th man]
15.2% with Braun (who I believe was a rookie that year)
14.9% with Vlatko Cancar
12.3% with the near last legs of Jeff Green
12.0% with Bones Hyland
Still +21.9.
None of this disproves or nullifies your concept, mind you; merely pointing out he's not
quite as married to the other four starters as you've implied, while he puts out these ~+20 or better on/off's year after year.
And I also note that if most of his minutes are with teammates X, Y, and Z......then most of the minutes for X, Y, and Z must also be with Jokic. Yet we only ever see one or
maybe two teammates whose on/off is even
remotely close to Jokic's (the highest ALWAYS being the guy Jokic has the highest proportion of his minutes with [e.g. KCP, KCP, Braun for the last three years].
AEnigma wrote:By contrast, when Jokic is out of the game entirely, guys like Gordon and MPJ are still going to be playing the majority of the game, and although their Jokic-less results are nothing impressive, they are a lot better than “historically terrible”. A part of me would like to see more extended runs with Jokic + bench lineups, a little like what was common with Kyle Lowry on the Raptors before VanVleet came into his own, but I can believe that the synergy among the starters is worth more than staggering them to better prop up the bench.
Or Stockton with the Jazz. All through the late 90s, anyway, he was the one tasked with playing with the 2nd unit (which was often pretty thin on talent). His on/off frequently looks unremarkable as a result (though his RAPM still fantastic).
I've kinda lost track of where Jokic has ranked league-wide in RAPM the last few years. I assume it's very high, though I don't know if it's like top 5-6 high or best-in-the-league high.
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