Nikolokolus
There's always next year
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Looking at some of the splits for various players on this team a couple of really interesting things started to jump out at me.
1). Players whos performances don't seem to change much in wins versus losses:
Brandon scores under 20 and assists more in (12) wins, and scores north of 25 per game and assists slightly less in (8) losses but his shooting percentages are close enough in either case that it isn't appreciably different. Greg differs in his shooting percentages (lower in losses, higher in wins) but the difference is between good and superb and his minutes and numbers and shot attempts are nearly identical. The same pretty much holds for LaMarcus except that he plays quite a bit fewer minutes in wins and rebounds better in wins.
Brandon Roy
Greg Oden
LaMarcus Aldridge
2). Miller and Webster are far more effective on offense when they start and are pretty horrible when they come off the bench (something we all sort of knew). But neither good or bad offensive performances seem completely correlated with winning and losing (though Miller's strong play has seemed to coincide more with starting and winning).
Andre Miller
Martell Webster
3) Players whose games seem to vary most with respect to playing well and the team winning or losing are Blake, Joel and Rudy. In wins both guards are shooting north of 43% from three and about 44% overall and in losses both players are sub 31% from behind the arc (Blake in particular shows a huge gap between playing well in wins and horribly in losses. For Joel his rebounding numbers in losses are terrible and he's an absolute non factor on offense
Rudy Fernandez
Steve Blake
Joel Przybilla
What does all of this mean? I don't know I just thought it would be an interesting exercise to see where wins and losses might be happening and if there was any correlation between certain players and what they are doing on the court. I know I left certain players out, but I wanted to focus on guys who've been the biggest minute getters and who've been in enough games to where the sample size would be more statistically significant.
Anybody else want to take a look and see if anything jumps out?
1). Players whos performances don't seem to change much in wins versus losses:
Brandon scores under 20 and assists more in (12) wins, and scores north of 25 per game and assists slightly less in (8) losses but his shooting percentages are close enough in either case that it isn't appreciably different. Greg differs in his shooting percentages (lower in losses, higher in wins) but the difference is between good and superb and his minutes and numbers and shot attempts are nearly identical. The same pretty much holds for LaMarcus except that he plays quite a bit fewer minutes in wins and rebounds better in wins.
Brandon Roy
Greg Oden
LaMarcus Aldridge
2). Miller and Webster are far more effective on offense when they start and are pretty horrible when they come off the bench (something we all sort of knew). But neither good or bad offensive performances seem completely correlated with winning and losing (though Miller's strong play has seemed to coincide more with starting and winning).
Andre Miller
Martell Webster
3) Players whose games seem to vary most with respect to playing well and the team winning or losing are Blake, Joel and Rudy. In wins both guards are shooting north of 43% from three and about 44% overall and in losses both players are sub 31% from behind the arc (Blake in particular shows a huge gap between playing well in wins and horribly in losses. For Joel his rebounding numbers in losses are terrible and he's an absolute non factor on offense
Rudy Fernandez
Steve Blake
Joel Przybilla
What does all of this mean? I don't know I just thought it would be an interesting exercise to see where wins and losses might be happening and if there was any correlation between certain players and what they are doing on the court. I know I left certain players out, but I wanted to focus on guys who've been the biggest minute getters and who've been in enough games to where the sample size would be more statistically significant.
Anybody else want to take a look and see if anything jumps out?
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