CoreyGallagher wrote:Offensively, Prokafors are generally weighing individual performance more heavily than the team with him. For instance - in line-ups with Okafor, Noel, and Ish - the team scored 0.965 ppp. In line-ups with Ish and Noel, without Okafor - the team scored 1.057 ppp. So, we'd blame Okafor for that. However, delve deeper and look at their individual numbers in those line-ups.
With trio, 0.965 ppp
Okafor - 67.4 TS%, 11.6 TO% - 1.28 ppp.
Ish - 44.9 TS%, 11.6 TO% - 0.86 ppp.
Noel - 52.7 TS%, 20.5 TO%, 0.88 ppp.
Duo w/o Okafor, 1.057 ppp
Ish - 46.9 TS%, 9.6 TO% - 0.93 ppp
Noel - 59.9 TS%, 13.5 TO% - 1.10 ppp
The issue seems to be Noel, and Ish - to a lesser extent - suffering from the lack of spacing and not so much Okafor himself. So, I wouldn't necessarily blame him for not fitting, he seemed to do well enough, but he was just a bad fit with that roster. Prokafors are hoping that there are better fits that could actually be productive with him, that perhaps aren't as affected as much by him. Perhaps Okafor could even expand his range and open things up for others, as well (more confident in Okafor being able to than Noel).
Why are you only looking at Ish/Noel? Here is how the entire team plays with Okafor vs Noel:

http://www.phillymag.com/news/2016/08/27/jahlil-okafor-lineups/
As you can see, pretty much everyone was significantly better with Noel. So either everyone on the entire roster is a poor fit with Okafor, or Okafor's style of game is just not conducive to winning (team) basketball. He's going to have to make some incredibly dramatic improvements to his game before he becomes a net positive on the court.














