BGrantFan
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The interesting thing with usage, if you combine it with assist %, you can see how often that player is truly involved in the team's plays. As Idog pointed out, usage is sometimes tough to judge a player on, because finishing a possession with a jumper after running off of a screen and catching a pass counts the same as pounding the ball for 22 seconds and hoisting up a jumper. No real way to see how much that player has the ball in their hands. Still, you watch enough games, and get used to a guy with a high usage because of having the ball(Roy, Ellis, etc.), or finishing possessions(Rip Hamilton).
Assist % is the amount of possessions finishing with an assist from that player. Combining that with usage is basically how many possesions involve that player in some fashion or another.
Ellis had a 29% usage. And an assist % of 21. So he was basically involved in the finish, good or bad, of 50% of his team's possesions.
Roy had a 27% usage. And an assist % of 23. Also around 50% of the team's possesions.
Darren Collison had a 23% usage. And an assist % of 33. He was involved in 56% of his team's possesions.
Looking at N.O., Collison was only assisted on 32% of his baskets. Which was less than Roy's 34%, and, surprisingly, Ellis' 36%. So while Collison looks to be the better fit than Ellis, he actually had the ball in his hands more often for N.O. than Ellis did for GS. Yet Ellis isn't afit because he'd need the ball in his hands too much?
Per/36, though, Collison had 7.4 assists, while Ellis only had 4.6 assists. Collison is much more willing (and better) at getting teammates baskets.

- so be it.