queridiculo wrote:There's going to be a time when Ben Simmons may be one of the very best players in the league, he isn't right now, and we would be having different conversations about his game if he was asked the shoulder the weight of leading a franchise.
Forgive me, & I mean this respectfully, but this graphic & the data behind it are irrelevant, as you will soon see. Lets compare Ben to other NBA PGs as a scorer this year:
1. his usage is almost exactly average, but
2. he scores @ 1.5 more points per 40 minutes than an average NBA PG, because
3. his TS% is 59.2% -- vs. the 53.7% of an average NBA PG.
Now, you may wish to complain that he doesn't score enough -- more than average but not enough more than average -- I'll counter that objection in a moment, but even if it were valid there's really no point talking about his shooting percentages. They're high overall, not low!
Now lets look at the rest of what he does. I've got per 48 minute numbers in front of me, rather than the more usual per 40 minute numbers. Rather than do the arithmetic to convert them in my head, I'll just use them:
He gets 10.3 defensive rebounds. An average NBA PG gets 4.9.
He gets 3.2 offensive rebounds. An average NBA PG gets 1.
He gets 1.9 steals. Average 1.8
He turns it over 4.9 times, however. An average NBA PG is better: 3.3.
So, in respect of offensive possessions (i.e. chances to score), an average NBA PG adds 4.4 of them. Ben Simmons adds 10.4.
If we feed those 4.4 extra possessions back into an average NBA team's offensive efficiency numbers, we find that per 48 minutes the average guy has added 4.9 points to his team's scoring that don't show up anywhere in his personal scoring statistics. Lets just call it 5 points he adds.
If we do it for Ben Simmons & his 10.4 extra possessions, we find that having Ben on the floor for 48 minutes gets his team an extra 11.93 points that don't show up anywhere in his personal scoring statistics. Lets just call it 12 points he adds.
Just for clarity: the two numbers that determine wins 100%, because they determine points 100%, are TS% & number of scoring chances (i.e. # of FGAs plus 1/2 # of FTAs [for the obvious reason that a FTA can only get you 1 point]).
What I mean by "100%" is that if Team A has more chances to score & a higher TS% than its opponent Team B, then Team A wins the game. Period. It can't lose that game. Conversely, if Team A has fewer chances to score than Team B, along with a lower TS% than Team B, then Team A loses the game: Team cannot win that game. Period.
In terms of "helping" stats rather than scoring stats, in those same 48 minutes, Ben:
gets 11.7 assists vs. an average NBA PG's 7.9
blocks 1.0 shots. Average = .5, and
commits 3.7 fouls vs. an average NBA PG's 3.6
No PG in the league posts numbers -- i.e. has a positive effect on his team's record -- anywhere close to what Ben Simmons does. Period. The 3 closest are Curry, Harden & Irving, & none of them are anywhere near him.
You may not like this. You may feel that your aesthetic sense is more valuable than numbers. But the numbers are real. I'm not making them up. There's no point in disputing numbers that are publicly available.
&, again respectfully, I'd say the numbers are more significant than your aesthetic sense or your opinion. I'm guessing you agree.
Oh, & btw, Ben is shouldering the weight of leading a franchise! He is by far the best player on the Sixers. Better than Embid, better than Butler. It isn't really close.

















