What we've learned this season

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Carlos Danger
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Re: What we've learned this season

Post by Carlos Danger »

Q-is-here wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2024 12:04 pm I'll let Kek roll out more numbers Carlos, but just use the eye test. I know last night was just one game, but did you see it? The issue wasn't just how many points AD scored, but how often he extended Laker possessions with his offensive rebounding. He had 10 offensive rebounds! That's the most O-boards he's had all year. That doesn't happen if KAT is at Center.

Naz just gets overwhelmed in the paint, even though he really isn't at that much of a disadvantage physically, which is why I'm frustrated - it's not like we're taking a guy like McDaniels and saying "go play Center". Naz is a big, strong dude with good enough size to play Center in the modern NBA. For whatever reason, he just can't handle other players physically without getting bullied or fouling.
I would agree with all of that. I don't think they want Naz to be a traditional center. Just like they don't want Kat to be one anymore. Rudy is that guy. And that's what I keep coming back to...whether it's Kat next to Rudy or Naz, I think either combo can be equally effective. Not because Kat or Naz are super defenders. But because Rudy is.

I'm not a stat expert, but I tried to pull some head to head.

Anthony Davis vs. Kat. 18 games. Davis averaged 30.3 points and 9.7 rebounds
https://stathead.com/basketball/versus- ... =davisan02

Anthony Davis vs. Naz. 7 games. Davis averaged 30.0 points and 10.1 rebounds.
https://stathead.com/basketball/versus- ... =davisan02

Now, I can't tell is that is truly "head to head" as in both on the court at the same time or "head to head" both were on the teams playing each other. But again - Davis is a bad man. He's going to get his whether it's Kat or Naz.
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Carlos Danger
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Re: What we've learned this season

Post by Carlos Danger »

Kek, I just saw your last long post. I'll dive into it later. Can you post a link to your query? I tried looking at cleaningtheglass after our last exchange and failed miserably. I don't like that site - mainly because I assumed I needed to pay to get what I needed. But if you are able to show me how to get free stuff, I might change my mind.

Also - just wanted to say I appreciate the respectful back and forth. I know you are leading the charge on the Naz stuff and I just have held a different opinion so I wanted to bat it around. It's interesting for me to see where/how people are forming their opinions. I'm easy - for overall performance - just look at VORP :lol: But measuring defense specifically...I think is generally more difficult. That's why I'm so curious what people are using. It might help me gain a better appreciation of guys like McDaniels and NAW too.
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Q-is-here
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Re: What we've learned this season

Post by Q-is-here »

Carlos Danger wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2024 1:01 pm
Q-is-here wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2024 12:04 pm I'll let Kek roll out more numbers Carlos, but just use the eye test. I know last night was just one game, but did you see it? The issue wasn't just how many points AD scored, but how often he extended Laker possessions with his offensive rebounding. He had 10 offensive rebounds! That's the most O-boards he's had all year. That doesn't happen if KAT is at Center.

Naz just gets overwhelmed in the paint, even though he really isn't at that much of a disadvantage physically, which is why I'm frustrated - it's not like we're taking a guy like McDaniels and saying "go play Center". Naz is a big, strong dude with good enough size to play Center in the modern NBA. For whatever reason, he just can't handle other players physically without getting bullied or fouling.
I would agree with all of that. I don't think they want Naz to be a traditional center. Just like they don't want Kat to be one anymore. Rudy is that guy. And that's what I keep coming back to...whether it's Kat next to Rudy or Naz, I think either combo can be equally effective. Not because Kat or Naz are super defenders. But because Rudy is.

I'm not a stat expert, but I tried to pull some head to head.

Anthony Davis vs. Kat. 18 games. Davis averaged 30.3 points and 9.7 rebounds
https://stathead.com/basketball/versus- ... =davisan02

Anthony Davis vs. Naz. 7 games. Davis averaged 30.0 points and 10.1 rebounds.
https://stathead.com/basketball/versus- ... =davisan02

Now, I can't tell is that is truly "head to head" as in both on the court at the same time or "head to head" both were on the teams playing each other. But again - Davis is a bad man. He's going to get his whether it's Kat or Naz.
Right, Naz is fine next to Rudy, no one is arguing otherwise. The issue is when Rudy sits on the bench and we're without KAT (either due to KAT being hurt or potentially being traded this offseason). Naz cannot simply be penciled in as the "KAT replacement" without serious consequences on defense. And heaven help us if Rudy gets hurt too and Naz is now the starting Center like last night. Sorry, but AD isn't getting 25 rebounds with KAT starting at Center.
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KiwiMatt
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Re: What we've learned this season

Post by KiwiMatt »

Every team has holes and these holes are exasperated when key players are injured.

Our three headed big man monster is a real asset and the best three man big rotation in the league. They are starting to compliment each other really well and all various lineups are well and truly a net positive as Q outlined. But you would expect that when you are about to have 100 mil of cap tied up in those three players. Maybe we need to accept the obvious, that Naz is a PF not a C.

Agree with Q that Gobert has been this teams MVP this season. He is just so consistent and how good is it to finally have an elite low post defender on this team. What a difference 6 months make. We were all saying we would have trouble 'dumping' Rudy's contract in the off season. Now he is playing up to the package we sent out to acquire him in the first place, if not better. Some would argue this has been one of his best seasons. And he's still only 31, which isn't old by any means especially for a guy who takes good care of his body and isn't completely reliant on athleticism.

McDaniel's development really is what's going to take this franchise to the next level. Defensively he's already elite, but we need him to become more of a consistent threat offensively. In my opinion the key is for him to become a high volume knock down 3 point shooter at around the 40% rate. He actually has a fairly decent dribble drive game. He has the talent to become the best 3 & D player in the league. I'm not too worried about the rebounding numbers as he is the point defender game in, game out defending the best opposition wing player out on the perimeter. It's not often you get rebounds out there.

Ant just needs to keep on the same upward trajectory. As pointed out it by other posters it is the mental and knowledge parts of his game that need to be the key focus. This will be the difference between him being a good All Star player or being a great HOF player. When he's locked in like he was against Indiana, he looks like a young MJ. The key is staying locked in.
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kekgeek
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Re: What we've learned this season

Post by kekgeek »

Carlos Danger wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2024 1:09 pm Kek, I just saw your last long post. I'll dive into it later. Can you post a link to your query? I tried looking at cleaningtheglass after our last exchange and failed miserably. I don't like that site - mainly because I assumed I needed to pay to get what I needed. But if you are able to show me how to get free stuff, I might change my mind.

Also - just wanted to say I appreciate the respectful back and forth. I know you are leading the charge on the Naz stuff and I just have held a different opinion so I wanted to bat it around. It's interesting for me to see where/how people are forming their opinions. I'm easy - for overall performance - just look at VORP :lol: But measuring defense specifically...I think is generally more difficult. That's why I'm so curious what people are using. It might help me gain a better appreciation of guys like McDaniels and NAW too.
https://cleaningtheglass.com/stats/play ... ur_factors
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Carlos Danger
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Re: What we've learned this season

Post by Carlos Danger »

Q-is-here wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2024 2:29 pm Sorry, but AD isn't getting 25 rebounds with KAT starting at Center.
I'm not as confident about that as you. Davis has had two 17 rebound games against the Wolves in the past year. Both of the games below had BOTH Rudy and Kat. That's Kat playing with Rudy (aka 3 time All Star and DPOY). I don't think it would be outrageous to think Kat would fare worse if he was put in Naz's shoes (no Rudy OR SloMo to help out). Would it be 25? IDK. But it would probably be more than 17.

12/30/23 he had 17 rebounds against Kat/Rudy
https://www.espn.com/nba/boxscore/_/gameId/401585071

03/31/23 he had 17 rebounds against Kat/Rudy
https://www.espn.com/nba/boxscore/_/gameId/401469312
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Carlos Danger
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Re: What we've learned this season

Post by Carlos Danger »

kekgeek wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2024 3:51 pm
Carlos Danger wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2024 1:09 pm Kek, I just saw your last long post. I'll dive into it later. Can you post a link to your query? I tried looking at cleaningtheglass after our last exchange and failed miserably. I don't like that site - mainly because I assumed I needed to pay to get what I needed. But if you are able to show me how to get free stuff, I might change my mind.

Also - just wanted to say I appreciate the respectful back and forth. I know you are leading the charge on the Naz stuff and I just have held a different opinion so I wanted to bat it around. It's interesting for me to see where/how people are forming their opinions. I'm easy - for overall performance - just look at VORP :lol: But measuring defense specifically...I think is generally more difficult. That's why I'm so curious what people are using. It might help me gain a better appreciation of guys like McDaniels and NAW too.
https://cleaningtheglass.com/stats/play ... ur_factors
So I've only taken a quick glance so far. It doesn't look like the link gives me the results you posted. You mentioned you filtered out some stuff in our other post. Do you do that in that site? Or are you exporting and doing it manually?
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kekgeek
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Re: What we've learned this season

Post by kekgeek »

Carlos Danger wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2024 7:00 pm
kekgeek wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2024 3:51 pm
Carlos Danger wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2024 1:09 pm Kek, I just saw your last long post. I'll dive into it later. Can you post a link to your query? I tried looking at cleaningtheglass after our last exchange and failed miserably. I don't like that site - mainly because I assumed I needed to pay to get what I needed. But if you are able to show me how to get free stuff, I might change my mind.

Also - just wanted to say I appreciate the respectful back and forth. I know you are leading the charge on the Naz stuff and I just have held a different opinion so I wanted to bat it around. It's interesting for me to see where/how people are forming their opinions. I'm easy - for overall performance - just look at VORP :lol: But measuring defense specifically...I think is generally more difficult. That's why I'm so curious what people are using. It might help me gain a better appreciation of guys like McDaniels and NAW too.
https://cleaningtheglass.com/stats/play ... ur_factors
So I've only taken a quick glance so far. It doesn't look like the link gives me the results you posted. You mentioned you filtered out some stuff in our other post. Do you do that in that site? Or are you exporting and doing it manually?
Click filter lineups
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Carlos Danger
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Re: What we've learned this season

Post by Carlos Danger »

kekgeek wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2024 12:50 pm So I use cleaningtheglass.com (this website eliminates garbage time) and I go to Naz Reid and filter out all lineups that do not have another center with him. So I have eliminated lineups with Rudy, Kat and Garza that have Naz Reid in them.

So Net rating is much we are getting out scored with Naz at center per 100 possessions. What is in the 8th percentile, so meaning the Wolves when Naz is at center is in the bottom 8 percent of all lineups in the NBA in terms of net rating. Offense and Defense of rating is our points per 100 possessions and offensively we are in the bottom 10 % of all lineups when Naz is at Center and the bottom 20% of all lineups in the NBA with Naz at center defensively.

Other defensive stats when Naz is at center. The Wolves give up an offensive rebound on 35.6% of possessions with Naz at Center, dead last in the NBA. They foul 25.8% of possesions what is in the bottom 5% of the NBA. Efg% defense is 55.8% what is in the bottom 38% of defensive lineups in the NBA. So pretty much when Naz plays center we are a bottom 3rd lineup in the NBA in eFG% but we are not ending possessions with a rebound or we are fouling what make our defensive numbers terrible with Naz at Center. Teams are also shooting 74.4% at the rim against Naz at center lineups what is in the bottom 2% of all lineups in the NBA. However we do defend the perimeter well with Naz at Center because all mid range percentages are in the 97 percentile or above and defending the 3 we are slightly below average. We are also in the 100th percentile on forcing turnovers. So when Naz plays center it is either a shot at the rim where the other team scores, we foul the opponent, or the opponent misses and we don't get the offensive rebound.

Compare this to Kat numbers at center. (Took out lineups without Naz and Gobert *Hes played 0 possessions with Garza)
Net Rating: 7.2 (86th percentile), Offensive Rating 110.7 (22nd percentile) and Defensive Rating 103.5 (99th percentile). The Wolves have been elite still when Kat is on the floor at Center unlike with Naz. Opponents eFG% is 49.7% (99th percentile), Offensive Rebound Rate 22.9 (96th percentile), Foul Rate 28.4 (2nd percentile). Teams are shooting 61.5% at the rim against the Wolves with Kat at center (88th percentile) and we defend the 3 at a crazy rate teams are shooting 30.8% from 3 when Kat is alone at center what is in the 98th percentile.

When Kat is alone at center, the Wolves still foul a lot but we defend the rim at an elite rate, we defend the 3 point line at an elite rate and we rebound the ball at an elite rate, they do not turn teams over though. The only weakness this season when Kat is at Center is they foul a lot.

When Naz is at center, teams score at the rim with easy, if they don't score we foul, they defend the 3 at a league average clip but then we give up an offensive rebound. However we turn teams over a lot when Naz is at center. Pretty much if we don't get a turnover the other team scores when Naz is at Center. It's an all or nothing defense that has been more nothing this year. However Naz numbers are good defensively when he plays next to Rudy or Kat. I am just saying he is only effective when Naz gets to play the 4 where he is really really effective. I don't want these posts coming off that I think he is a bad player because I don't. I just think there is only a specific role Naz is good at and can thrive at and he has been amazing in that role!
OK. I started to dive into your website a little bit this morning. I've never used it before, so I'm not good at it. I was unable to re-create your filtering. Again, if you can just send me the link to your filtered data, I would be interested in how you did that. But on the surface, my first question would be...is looking at five man line ups the best way to determine how effective the center is? My concern would be that you have so many variables. Example, if I can re-create your data, I'm wondering if the Kat line ups are mostly: Kat, Edwards, McDaniels, Conley, SloMo and the Naz line ups are mostly: Naz, NAW, Shake, JMac, SloMo? Because clearly one of those line ups would produce better than the other - regardless of who was playing Center.

Also, I'm wondering why you don't just use the "positions" tab on that site (or team efficiency/four factors)? That appears to get me to what you were trying to filter. It breaks out each season and the positions he played. From that tab, I find Naz' net rating at center is 68th percentile. Your data showed he was only the 8th percentile. What is the discrepancy?
Here is the link to my data:
https://cleaningtheglass.com/stats/play ... efficiency

Once I understand your process better, I can look at Towns. But on the surface, I'm skeptical of any data that would show Towns as a 99th percentile defensive center. I need to see the data to believe it which is why I'm being such a pain in the ass.
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kekgeek
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Re: What we've learned this season

Post by kekgeek »

Carlos Danger wrote: Tue Mar 12, 2024 5:35 am
kekgeek wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2024 12:50 pm So I use cleaningtheglass.com (this website eliminates garbage time) and I go to Naz Reid and filter out all lineups that do not have another center with him. So I have eliminated lineups with Rudy, Kat and Garza that have Naz Reid in them.

So Net rating is much we are getting out scored with Naz at center per 100 possessions. What is in the 8th percentile, so meaning the Wolves when Naz is at center is in the bottom 8 percent of all lineups in the NBA in terms of net rating. Offense and Defense of rating is our points per 100 possessions and offensively we are in the bottom 10 % of all lineups when Naz is at Center and the bottom 20% of all lineups in the NBA with Naz at center defensively.

Other defensive stats when Naz is at center. The Wolves give up an offensive rebound on 35.6% of possessions with Naz at Center, dead last in the NBA. They foul 25.8% of possesions what is in the bottom 5% of the NBA. Efg% defense is 55.8% what is in the bottom 38% of defensive lineups in the NBA. So pretty much when Naz plays center we are a bottom 3rd lineup in the NBA in eFG% but we are not ending possessions with a rebound or we are fouling what make our defensive numbers terrible with Naz at Center. Teams are also shooting 74.4% at the rim against Naz at center lineups what is in the bottom 2% of all lineups in the NBA. However we do defend the perimeter well with Naz at Center because all mid range percentages are in the 97 percentile or above and defending the 3 we are slightly below average. We are also in the 100th percentile on forcing turnovers. So when Naz plays center it is either a shot at the rim where the other team scores, we foul the opponent, or the opponent misses and we don't get the offensive rebound.

Compare this to Kat numbers at center. (Took out lineups without Naz and Gobert *Hes played 0 possessions with Garza)
Net Rating: 7.2 (86th percentile), Offensive Rating 110.7 (22nd percentile) and Defensive Rating 103.5 (99th percentile). The Wolves have been elite still when Kat is on the floor at Center unlike with Naz. Opponents eFG% is 49.7% (99th percentile), Offensive Rebound Rate 22.9 (96th percentile), Foul Rate 28.4 (2nd percentile). Teams are shooting 61.5% at the rim against the Wolves with Kat at center (88th percentile) and we defend the 3 at a crazy rate teams are shooting 30.8% from 3 when Kat is alone at center what is in the 98th percentile.

When Kat is alone at center, the Wolves still foul a lot but we defend the rim at an elite rate, we defend the 3 point line at an elite rate and we rebound the ball at an elite rate, they do not turn teams over though. The only weakness this season when Kat is at Center is they foul a lot.

When Naz is at center, teams score at the rim with easy, if they don't score we foul, they defend the 3 at a league average clip but then we give up an offensive rebound. However we turn teams over a lot when Naz is at center. Pretty much if we don't get a turnover the other team scores when Naz is at Center. It's an all or nothing defense that has been more nothing this year. However Naz numbers are good defensively when he plays next to Rudy or Kat. I am just saying he is only effective when Naz gets to play the 4 where he is really really effective. I don't want these posts coming off that I think he is a bad player because I don't. I just think there is only a specific role Naz is good at and can thrive at and he has been amazing in that role!
OK. I started to dive into your website a little bit this morning. I've never used it before, so I'm not good at it. I was unable to re-create your filtering. Again, if you can just send me the link to your filtered data, I would be interested in how you did that. But on the surface, my first question would be...is looking at five man line ups the best way to determine how effective the center is? My concern would be that you have so many variables. Example, if I can re-create your data, I'm wondering if the Kat line ups are mostly: Kat, Edwards, McDaniels, Conley, SloMo and the Naz line ups are mostly: Naz, NAW, Shake, JMac, SloMo? Because clearly one of those line ups would produce better than the other - regardless of who was playing Center.

Also, I'm wondering why you don't just use the "positions" tab on that site (or team efficiency/four factors)? That appears to get me to what you were trying to filter. It breaks out each season and the positions he played. From that tab, I find Naz' net rating at center is 68th percentile. Your data showed he was only the 8th percentile. What is the discrepancy?
Here is the link to my data:
https://cleaningtheglass.com/stats/play ... efficiency

Once I understand your process better, I can look at Towns. But on the surface, I'm skeptical of any data that would show Towns as a 99th percentile defensive center. I need to see the data to believe it which is why I'm being such a pain in the ass.
Naz by himself
https://cleaningtheglass.com/stats/play ... ur_factors

Kat by himself
https://cleaningtheglass.com/stats/play ... ur_factors


The reason I do not use positions is because for whatever reasons when Kat and Naz share the floor together the Timberwolves list Naz as a center and Kat as a PF. So I need to filter Rudy and Kat off the floor when doing Naz lineups
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