Chicago-Bull-E wrote:So, I decided to do some advanced statistical analysis of what I was seeing. My preconceived notion watching the offense was Lauri is spoon-fed his shots, and a laughable amount are wide open. He hasn't created for anyone else, and while he is a black hole, his great efficiency makes that okay (to a certain extent). But not someone worth a contract of 20+ million a year, even at this efficiency.
Step 1: Use Tracking stats to determine how many of Lauri's looks are wide open, compare to the rest of the starting unit as a reference.
Percentage of shots considered "Wide Open": Defender more than 6 feet away from the shooter
Coby White: 28%
Zach Lavine: 18%
Patrick Williams: 32%
Lauri Mark: 41%
Wendell Carter Jr: 20%
Ok, so this confirms it. Almost almost half of Lauri's looks are wide, wide, wide open. And we know that Lauri isn't breaking ankles and get 6 feet of space off the dribble, so the offensive system and other players are getting him wide open looks. And he's hitting them right now.
Step 2: Assist % (Percentage of a team's assists made by a player when he is on the floor)
Coby White: 24%
Zach Lavine: 24%
Patrick Williams: 6%
Lauri Mark: 5%
Wendell Carter Jr: 13%
This one is pretty damning. He essentially is a black hole, not really interested in getting teammates the ball. Once it gets to him, he shoots it, or passes it back out. He isn't creating for anyone else. Again, not sure how you can pay 20+ million for that.
Weird take. I can assure you that if Lauri passed up any of those WIDE open looks he got, he'd get an earful from Donovan. The team (including Lauri) works hard to get those looks, they're not to be wasted.
The Bulls have abandoned some of the more hard core analytics principles of last season ("no midrange shots"), but they're still playing in the NBA in 2021, and that means taking open threes without a second thought - especially when you're shooting 40%.
So when Lauri gets an obvious chance to score, he's gonna try to do it. That's literally his job. But as for him being a "black hole" overall, nothing could be further from the truth. He's been one of the players staying true to Donovan's "paint is great" principle - essentially, driving and kicking out to a perimeter shooter. He does it but often ends up getting the hockey assist. Nothing wrong with that - the Bulls score.














