Choker wrote:yosemiteben wrote:For all this talk about how dominant a defender Biz is and how terrible Al is, I was surprised to learn that Biz was only a -2.8 per 100 possessions on D and Al was only +1.3.
I'm curious what his advanced stats and splits look like during the stretch you guys went 9-4 with him as a starter. I remember reading an article about how Biyombo made Charlotte one of the best defensive teams in the league during the span.
Not counting the game he got injured and played 7 minutes.
25.8 mpg, 7.3 ppg, 8.6 rpg, 1.7 bpg
I went back and found some interesting stuff from around this time.
JDM3
"On the season we have given up 99.5 ppg and over the last five with Biz we are at 94.4 ppg. The 99.5 number includes these last 5 as well."
catch22
"For the season our offensive rating has been 103.9 with Biz on the floor and 97.1 with Al on the floor."
BizGilWalker
Paraphrasing here. He posted a chart that showed individual +/- for everyone on the team up until mid-January. Biz had the best at +52. MKG was second at +21. Everyone else on the team was negative. Al was at -150, which came in last by a big margin. Also, at the time, Biz was 2nd in block percentage (behind Rudy Gobert), 7th in rebounding percentage (behind Andre Drummond, DeAndre Jordan, Tyson Chandler, Omer Asik, DeMarcus Cousins and Zach Randolph), and 11th in field-goal percentage (behind Brandan Wright, DeAndre Jordan, Tyson Chandler, Rudy Gobert, Ed Davis, James Johnson, Tyler Zeller, Mason Plumlee, Dwight Howard and Amir Johnson).
I'll end on a quote from Popovich from after the game where we almost beat them and Biz put up 12, 15, and 5, in 29 minutes.
“I thought he was a monster,” Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich said. “He’s so strong, so athletic, so young. We just didn’t have anybody. We were talking about gang rebounding — it didn’t matter. He was too much of an athlete for us.”