esqtvd wrote:Hit me up on your stats and links on that if you want us to discuss. It's key to your dispute with me.
lol how come it's only on me to back up everything I say with definitive stats but you just sit there waiting to be convinced?
Anyway, I'm not looking at anything obscure or anything like that, I use basketball-reference and nba.com like everyone else and nbawowy if I'm looking for something very specific. Not sure if you're familiar with those sites, in case you aren't I'll put a couple things up and you can work from there and search what you're looking for.
In the
nba.com links on the previous post you can see line up information, you can switch seasons, teams, and type of line ups in the tabs at the top of table, or you can go in the "advanced filters" tab to change stuff like which quarter do you want the information, which interval of the shot clock (start or end of possession), or which opponents you want the info for.
Another useful tool in nba.com is the on/off info when you click on a specific team's name, for instance if you go to the
4th quarters of the last season the team was together, you see there was only 6 players that had a positive NetRtg (that's the team +/- net result per 100 possessions when a guy is on the floor). One was Brice's 9 minutes played, just some small sample noise, and the other 5 are the "big 4" and Paul Pierce (lol not sure how to explain that). The rest of the roster had a negative influence in the score. You
go back one season and see that in 2016 only 3 rotation guys have a good NetRtg in the 4th, and those are Redick (best in the team), Paul and DJ, with Luc lurking some distance behind. Blake was injured most of that year. Go one more season back and while
the team's overall numbers are a bit better, the 5 starters are miles above everyone else, with JJ having more than double the NetRtg of the first bench guy in Jamal (not counting Cunningham cause he didn't play much).
Or if you wanna focus on JJ's scoring in the 4th quarter, you just click in his name, select "splits" and the season you want, "in game splits", and you already get his stats split by period. You can see there's not a significant difference in his scoring efficiency in the 4th quarter compared to other quarters. For instance,
for last season, his TS% was 64% in the 4th, better than his splits for the first three, where it hovered between 59% and 63%. In OT it was 74%.
In his last season as a Clipper,
his 4th quarter TS& was 59.3%, while for the previous three it was 59.8%, 66.3% and 55.6%
The season before that, the one with Blake's injuries,
he shot 67.8% in the 4th, while the previous three quarters it was slightly worse (although still great).
So his scoring efficiency in the 4th is equal or better than it is in the rest of the game.
What you see each season invariably is that his 1st quarter usage starts at about 25% every year, and it goes gradually down until about 15% in 4th quarters. Which watching the games, you can easily see that's attributed to Doc running less plays for him and focusing on a more usual spread P&R offense as the game goes along (which is a good strategy in my mind). But there's just no substantive evidence that JJ's play goes down as the game goes along. And if you focus on defensive numbers, it's the same story. He just shoots less and people go along with the narrative that he's worse, when he's not at all.
In nbawowy.com you can do broader searches with a lot more detailed stats, for instance if I want to know how the Clippers in 4th quarters and OT while DJ is on the floor, I select the Clippers as a team, select those periods in the filters section and put DJ in the "on" textbox, and the dates you want. The following link gives you a ton of information about what's happened with DJ on the court for the last 4 years of the 'big 4', and if you go the "team" tab, you see that he played 1831 4th quarter/OT possessions in those 4 years, and the Clippers scored 1.138 points per possession, which would be better than Golden State's league leading 1.123 overall last season:
http://nbawowy.com/8aq8zj32x0o#/8aq8zj32x0oYou can also see under the free throws tab that he shot 324 free throws in those possessions (most in the team by far, of course), and he shot 45.7% in those. While in the "scoring tab" you see that DJ's shots (taking FT's into account, you can see the formula hovering over the PPP column title) were an overall 1.19 points per possession, which is really good. So the free throws were hurting the offense, but his field scoring helped make up for it, and in the end the hacking was not enough for the offense to be bad overall.
Now you can do the same operation but putting DJ in the "off the court" textbox instead, and you see the Clippers scored 1.063 points per possession in the 2237 4th quarter/OT possessions since 2014 that DJ was on the bench, which would be equivalent to the Jazz' 8th best offense in the league last year:
http://nbawowy.com/fy8s5663yj4#/fy8s5663yj4So from that you get that, even if his FT shooting is abysmal, the Clippers offense is a lot better with him on the floor than with him out.
esqtvd wrote:Jamal was our 4th quarter leading scorer, yes?
On horrible efficiency. The story that tells you is that he was hurting the team tremendously by taking so many ill advised shots. Not that he was better than JJ or DJ. Not even close. Look at +/- splits and coincidentally, the team was always good with those guys on the floor, but some shade of horrible to worse with Jamal in it.
esqtvd wrote:JJ and DJ were statistically shadows of themselves in the 4th quarter, yes?
No, not at all, that's my point that I just spent half an hour illustrating (barely coherently probably, but still) while you just sit there putting the onus on me lol
I was bored at work today, but don't expect people to put this kind of effort while you're not matching it in a discussion like this.