February 6, 2010
Cavs-Knicks Bazooka Point

Typical Saturday night Brief Bazooka point. Tonight’s focus will be on David Lee.

Lee has very excellent individual stats. Last season his WP48 was .240 and he was responsible for about 14.1 of the Knicks 32 wins. This year, at the halfway point, Lee had a WP48 of .247 with 7.8 total wins produced.

As a barometer, .100 is average.

Lee’s PER was 19.0 last year and is 22.0 this season. 15.0 is average.

By advanced aggregate statistical measures David Lee is by far the best player on the Knicks.

How is it possible then that he was out of the game tonight when the Knicks made their run?

This is where defense matters.

Lee had a -12 tonight. Of course, he was on the floor for much of LeBron’s unconsciousness, so it makes sense that this number would be low. But when you look at Lee’s overall +/- numbers, you see a similar story.

Lee’s Adjusted +/- this year is -1.53

Using three years of data, his Regularized Adjusted +/- number is -1.624

On defense, he’s actually a +3.850 - meaning the Knicks give up an additional 3.850 points with him on the floor - or second worst on the entire team.

By contrast, a player like Al Harrington, who was on the floor while the Knicks made their run has a -2.105 defensive number … and a rating of -.014 when it comes to WP48.

In other words, defense matters.

But I will give David a lot of credit for what he yelled to Shaq during tonight’s game —

“J.J. Hickson has the easiest job in the world.”

Amen, David. Amen.

Nets on Tuesday.

February 5, 2010
The NBA Attempts To Increase Glitch’s Trade Value

January 13, 2010
Trade Report: Second Edition

As I did when I wrote Trade Report: Edition 1 on David West, I intend to give you a logical portrait of the current trade picture. I don’t have access, obviously, to the infamous “league sources,” nor will I ever try and tell you that I know more about basketball than Cavs executives … this is simply an accurate representation of the lay of the land.

Let’s start by concentrating on what all of the rumors and reporting about the Cavs revolve around - the team’s desire to get a so-called “Stretch 4.” The logic behind this pursuit, as it’s been described to us in the media, is that it’s the one piece the team is missing, in that they have no power forwards who can stretch the floor while Shaq is at the center position or guard tall, athletic 4’s on opposing teams like the Lakers (Lamar Odom) and the Magic (Rashard Lewis).

Some of this makes sense to me and some of it doesn’t. I agree that the Cavs don’t have a natural PF who is also a good jump shooter (Andy is at 29%, JJ is at 32%, and Powe was at 26% last year). I’m not sure I agree that Moon, Powe, and Andy can’t guard Odom or Lewis. When the Cavs played the Lakers on Christmas Day, Odom was a non-factor. Lewis was suspended when the Cavs beat Orlando by 9 points and Ryan Anderson, a comparably skilled player, was injured, so we’ll have to analyze the next game against the Magic to get a sense of whether or not last year’s playoff woes were a result of the Cavs not being able to guard Butterscotch one-on-one, not being able to handle the Hedo/Lewis combo, or simply not being able to stop Lewis.

The other thing is that the Cavs do have two Stretch 4’s on the roster - LeBron James and Zydrunas Ilgauskas. And since we saw Shaq-Z line-ups being effective against Orlando and Los Angeles already this year, there’s reason to believe these two options can certainly temper the issue.

Given all of that, as well as the fact that the Cavs won 66 games last year and are currently 30-10 and first in the Eastern Conference standings, I think it’s fair to ask whether or not they really need a Stretch 4 at all in order to win a championship. We’ve watched this team now for 40 games; they’re winning at a 75% clip and on pace for a 62 win season without taking into consideration strength of schedule. Their efficiency differential, as of Monday, was 8.1 (at the end of last year it was 8.9).

In other words, winning games in the regular season is not the Cavs problems - even with a subpar starting power forward by the name of Glitch, who averages 18.7 minutes per game.

Any trade that will have a disruptive impact on the current rotation then, has to be about potential playoff match-ups. This means Boston, Orlando, L.A., Denver, San Antonio, Dallas, and Atlanta … if we’re going to be generous in discussing possibly dangerous opponents.

A more precise portrait of how the Cavs match-up against all of these teams will be realized as the season progresses, but right now it’s hard to argue that they don’t look pretty good, aside from an opening day loss against the Celtics (before most of their players checked into a nursing home) and two “we’re kind of bored losses” against Dallas and Denver without Dirk and Melo/Lawson respectively.

My point, ultimately, is this: everyone talks about the Cavs making a deal to get a Stretch 4, how this move could put them over the top, but everyone also refuses to consider what that means to the players who are already here, who have helped the team to a winning percentage of .750 and road wins at Atlanta, L.A., and Orlando.

As the “Anyone But J.J.” series attests, we at JMID have seen enough of Glitch to know that he’s not a championship caliber PF at this stage of his career. Replacing him should be a priority then. But here’s the catch - Glitch is only playing 19 minutes a game. If the Cavs were to trade for Antawn Jamison, do you think he’s only going to play 19 minutes a game?

Probably not.

So whose minutes does Jamison take? Andy’s? Powe’s? Does Andy play more at the 5, where Jamison would then take minutes from Shaq and Z? How would that help against the Lakers, the Celtics, and the Magic?

Powe, of course, is a bit of an uncertainty because of his injury history, but isn’t the simplest fix to the J.J. “problem” (again, the Cavs are playing really well overall) to give his minutes to Leon?

If the Stretch 4 is still a necessity, than the Cavs can play LeBron there more and/or potentially find themselves a specialist - a Robert Horry-type - who isn’t going to demand big minutes and won’t completely re-arrange the rotation and steal playing time from other really valuable players.

Antawn Jamison is a big name. I get it. So is David West. That doesn’t mean they’re any better than less famous players the Cavs already have. Or better than Troy Murphy, who may emerge as a more viable option than he is now - in Wednesday’s podcast, Brian Windhorst said that the Pacers are asking for a package that no one in any league, real or fantasy, would ever agree to.

As my snap stat analysis, and more extensive David West breakdown showed, Jamison and West are only slightly above average. Jamison hasn’t shown that he can play defense, which eliminates one of the two reasons the Cavs are supposedly looking for a Stretch 4. And any deal that would give up Z without a reassurance he’ll be bought out and brought back is a mistake - this off-season was all about size; Ferry can’t, and won’t, kill that now.

For all of these reasons, right now I expect one of two things to happen. Either the Cavs make no deal at all, or they make a minor deal that involves parting ways with a player like Daniel Gibson to get a solid to very good role player. This, of course, is where things get interesting because we could also make a pretty good argument that the Cavs are less secure at the 2 and 1 positions than they are at the 4 … but I’ll save that for another post.

January 2, 2010
Varejao Is A Beast ... Hickson Is A Dead Body

Included in this True Hoop post about Anderson Varejao taking the overall lead in unadjusted +/- away from Ron Artest is this rather revealing quote from Mike “Coldstone” Brown about Andy and J.J.:

“I play Hickson with Shaq because I want to play Andy the whole game, but I can’t play him the whole game. So I decided to start J.J. because in the first eight minutes of the game, we’re not going to win or lose it,” Brown said. “So if I play him 8 minutes in the first half and 8 in the second, that’s 16 minutes I don’t have to play Andy and it’s really not going to affect the game. A lot of times now, if you watch our games lately, when Andy goes in he ain’t coming out. I don’t care if Z is in or Shaq’s coming back in.

“It’s just at the start of the game it makes more sense for me and for the team to have someone else, and not play Andy 38-39 minutes a game. But his value to us with whoever’s on the floor is off the charts.”

December 29, 2009
J.J. Hickson College Scouting Report

A brief multi-functional post. I was talking to one of the best lawyers in Florida earlier about J.J. “Glitch” Hickson’s game, and I came upon this scouting report while doing some research:

Strengths: Strong finisher – can absorb contact and still score.  Nice hands.  Long wingspan.  Strong, thick frame.  Nice post moves.  Great shot-blocker.  Great rebounder – had 10 double-digit rebounding games his freshman year.  Very accurate from the field.  Was “the man” on a team that plays in one of college’s best conferences.   Athletic for a big man.

What’s interesting about this is that almost all of Glitch’s strengths have become weaknesses in the NBA (so far). Comparing J.J. to the league average, here’s what we see:

Offensive Rebounding Rate: 9.1 vs. 5.3

Defensive Rebounding Rate: 18.4 vs. 14.3

Total Rebounding Rate: 14.0 vs. 9.8

Blocks per 40 minutes: 1.7 vs. .5

You’ll notice two things about these stats. The first is that I’m citing Rebounding Rate as opposed to total rebounds. This, I’ve recently come to believe, is a more accurate representation of a player’s ability to rebound because it measures the percentage of available rebounds he gets.

The reason this is an important distinction is that just looking at defensive or offensive rebounding totals penalizes players whose teams shoot well, create turnovers, or allow their opponent to shoot a high percentage.

The second thing is that J.J. is above the league average in all of these categories … however, what we don’t know is whether or not he’s above the league average for Power Forwards. I’m sure that PG and SG drag the average down.

[I don’t (think) I have access to league average rebounding rate by position. If anyone knows where those averages are, please tell me.]

This is one case where I don’t believe we have to check the stats to know that Hickson is a piss poor rebounder. We also know that he routinely drops passes and flubs finishes around the rim (40% on tip-ins tells you that, as does 85.6% on dunks).

The overall point is that Hickson’s collegiate strengths have not been professional strengths yet … which reminds us that whenever you hear other PF mentioned in trade rumors, just about anybody is going to be a better PF than Hickson.