Ultimate Game Breakdown: Players For Nuggets 77 Suns 72 in Arizona, Preseason Game
This is much of what an Ultimate Game Breakdown: Players (UGB:P) is going to look like for the new season. It's a "just the important facts please, and give them to me quick" type of report.
I will in many cases do a little commentary at the bottom of the UGB:Ps, but most of the game and team commentary will be in the separate "Game and Team Reports." Game and Team articles are, with any luck, going to be produced for 26 Nuggets and for 26 Raptors games this season. Ultimate Game Breakdowns: Players reports, such as the one here, will be done for the 26 key games, and for other games as well, but not necessarily for all 82 games. I don't really know how all this new editing is going to play out time wise yet!
The games that get the full treatment of three separate reports (Ultimate Game Breakdown: Players, Ultimate Game Breakdown: Coaching and the Game and Team Report) have been very carefully chosen to be the most important games, which are generally the games against the best teams. Games chosen for maximum coverage have been chosen only from among games where neither team is at a disadvantage due to playing on back to back nights. Other internet basketball "experts" are really wasting their time to some extent when they report on a game where one team was playing on back to back nights and the other team was not, because the great majority of those games are almost automatically won by the team that has more rest, unless the team with less rest is much better than the team with more rest. I used to do those stupid games, but I'm not doing them anymore, because I keep trying to get better and better at understanding and teaching basketball, so I make changes such as this.
With an Ultimate Game Breakdown-Players report, you can see very rapidly who was most responsible for the winning or the losing of the game. Then someone like me can easily write a separate game report which explains how things might have worked out better for a team, or why things worked out just about as well as possible, as the case may be.
The Real Player Ratings formula has been very carefully and accurately tweaked again and is currently as follows:
POSITIVE FACTORS
Points 1.00 (at par)
Number of 3-Pt FGs Made 1.00
Number of 2-Pt FGs Made 0.60
Number of FTs Made 0.00
Assists 1.75
Offensive Rebounds 1.15
Defensive Rebounds 1.25
Blocks 1.60
Steals 2.10
NEGATIVE FACTORS
3-Pt FGs Missed -1.00
2-Pt FGs Missed -0.85
FTs Missed -0.85
Turnovers -2.00
Personal Fouls -0.80
ACTUAL COMBINED AWARD OR PENALTY BY TYPE OF SHOT
3-Pointer Made 4.00
2-Pointer Made 2.60
Free Throw Made 1.00
3-Pointer Missed -1.00
2-Pointer Missed -0.85
Free Throw Missed -0.85
ZERO POINTS: PERCENTAGES BELOW WHICH THERE IS A NEGATIVE NET RESULT
3-Pointer 0 score % 0.200
2-Pointer 0 score % 0.246
1-Pointer 0 score % 0.459
ASSISTS VERSUS TURNOVERS ZERO POINT
Assist/Turnover Ratio That Yields 0 Net Points: 1.143
NOTES ON HOW TO USE ULTIMATE GAME BREAKDOWN RPR/RPP REPORTS
RPR game reports show for each player the RPR (Real Player Rating) which tells you how good a player did (the good things minus the bad things) out on the court per unit of time. The RPP (Real Player Production) report tells you how much in total (the sum of the of the good things minus the sum of the bad things) a player did out on the court.
Many and maybe most sports watchers and an unknown but probably disturbingly large number of sports managers make the mistakes of exaggerating the importance of quantity and overlooking to some extent quality. These reports allow you to expand your horizons. These reports put quantity and quality side by side, which is extremely valuable, because both are roughly equally important in explaining accurately why and how the game turned out the way it did.
Players who over many games consistently have higher RPR (quality) but lower RPP (quantity) results are in many cases not getting enough playing time. Players that over many games consistently have lower RPR (quality) but higher RPP (quantity) results are in many cases getting too much playing time.
The exceptional cases are very often going to be players who are either truly outstanding defenders or truly bad defenders. This is because the one and only thing that is not counted, because it is impossible to calculate it, is the number of shots that a player prevents from being scores. Investigation has to date revealed that, apparently, no one has even attempted, for the NBA, rough estimates of the actual value of each player's defending, in terms of number or percentage of scores prevented, or in terms of number or percentage of possessions made worthless.
Another exception. where it is really alright when it looks like a player is playing too much, will be if a team has a point guard who has many more turnovers than the average point guard has. Because the point guard is so important, a good coach has to play his best guard who can make plays at the position for a full set of minutes every game, pretty much regardless of how many turnovers that player makes. If you take out your designated point guard due to "too many turnovers," it's most often going to be sort of like cutting your foot off because you have a bad case of athletes foot!
Over the coming year, I am going to be working to see if it is possible to use some combination of advanced statistics that are tracked on certain internet sites as an accurate proxy for the number of shots and/or for the number of possessions ruined by a defender.
REAL PLAYER RATINGS
RPR 2.0B NUGGETS 77 SUNS 72 (Preseason Game Oct 11 2008)
DENVER QUALITY
Kenyon Martin, PF 0.746
Nene Hilario, PF 0.676
Chris Andersen, PF 0.602
Juwan Howard, PF 0.480
Mateen Cleaves, PG 0.446
Dahntay Jones, SG 0.393
Renaldo Balkman, SF 0.388
Ruben Patterson, SF 0.294
Linas Kleiza, SF 0.163
J.R. Smith, SG 0.124
Anthony Carter, PG 0.025
PHOENIX QUALITY
Robin Lopez, C 0.986
Sean Singletary, PG 0.721
Louis Amundson, PF 0.546
Grant Hill, SF 0.498
Goran Dragic, PG 0.477
Alando Tucker, SF 0.385
Boris Diaw, PF 0.360
Raja Bell, SG 0.339
Steve Nash, PG 0.212
Shaquille O'Neal, C 0.088
Matt Barnes, SF -0.005
SCALE FOR RPR (QUALITY) RATINGS FOR A SINGLE GAME
Historic Superstar for this game 1.300 and more
Superstar 1.000 to 1.299
Star 0.800 0.999 to
Outstanding 0.625 to 0.799
Major Role Player 0.525 to 0.624
Role Player 0.450 to 0.524
Minor Role Player 0.400 to 0.449
Very Minor Role Player or Very Important Defender 0.350 to 0.399
Poor Game or Extremely Importand Defender 0.275 to 0.349
Very Poor Game Regardless of Defending 0.200 to 0.274
Disaster Game Regardless of Defending minus infinity to 0.199
****************************************************
REAL PLAYER PRODUCTION
DENVER QUANTITY
Chris Andersen, PF 16.25
Nene Hilario, PF 14.20
Juwan Howard, PF 11.05
Mateen Cleaves, PG 10.70
Kenyon Martin, PF 9.70
Dahntay Jones, SG 7.85
Ruben Patterson, SF 5.00
Renaldo Balkman, SF 4.65
Linas Kleiza, SF 4.55
J.R. Smith, SG 3.85
Anthony Carter, PG 0.60
PHOENIX QUANTITY
Robin Lopez, C 17.75
Boris Diaw, PF 12.60
Raja Bell, SG 11.85
Grant Hill, SF 9.95
Louis Amundson, PF 7.10
Steve Nash, PG 6.35
Goran Dragic, PG 5.25
Sean Singletary, PG 5.05
Alando Tucker, SF 5.00
Shaquille O'Neal, C 2.65
Matt Barnes, SF -0.10
SCALE FOR RPP (QUANTITY) RATINGS FOR A SINGLE GAME
FOR STARTING PLAYERS
Happens only a few times a year in the NBA 45.0 and more
Massive and Memorable Game 40.0 to 44.9
Huge Game 35.0 to 39.9
Very Big Game 30.0 to 34.9
Big Game 25.0 to 29.9
Typical Average Game 20.0 to 24.9
Somewhat Below Average Game 16.0 to 19.9
Way Below Average Game 12.0 to 15.9
Bad Game 9.0 to 11.9
Really Bad Game 5.0 to 8.9
Total Disaster minus infinity to 4.9
SCALE FOR RPP (QUANTITY) RATINGS FOR A SINGLE GAME
FOR NON-STARTING PLAYERS
Massive and Memorable Game 35.0 and more
Huge Game 30.0 to 34.9
Very Big Game 25.0 to 29.9
Big Game 20.0 to 24.9
Typical Non-Starter Game 14.0 to 19.9
Below Average Even For a Non-Starter 9.0 to 13.9
Way Below Average Even For a Non-Starter 5.0 to 8.9
Bad Game Even For a Non-Starter 2.0 to 4.9
Disaster: Nothing Much to Report minus infinity to 1.9
THE HIGH QUALITY PLAYERS IN THIS GAME
OUTSTANDING QUALITY GAMES FOR THE NUGGETS
Star During Minutes on the Court: Kenyon Martin
OUTSTANDING QUALITY GAMES FOR THE SUNS
Superstar During Minutes on the Court: Robin Lopez
POWER PERFORMERS OF THIS GAME
NUGGETS STARTERS POWER PERFORMERS
NONE, partly because this was a preseason game and minutes were limited.
NUGGETS NON-STARTERS POWER PERFORMERS
NONE, partly because this was a preseason game and minutes were limited.
SUNS STARTERS POWER PERFORMERS
NONE, partly because this was a preseason game and minutes were limited.
SUNS NON-STARTERS POWER PERFORMERS
NONE, partly because this was a preseason game and minutes were limited.
Note: For the rundown of the best players and the power performers, I bump up or bump down, by one category, certain players, due to adjustments for defending, wherever such adjustments are obvious.
COMMENTS
Ha ha, Smith finally gets a start and more than 30 minutes and he hardly does a thing. It's almost certainly just a fluke, but kind of funny considering how Karl swore as recently as a few months ago that Smith was years away from starting. So Smith starts, but then in real life plays out one of Karl's irrational nightmares about Smith not being qualified to start. It seems that the Nuggets in general, and Karl and Smith in particular, can not win no matter what they do. (Yes, I know it was just one game, but I could not resist that take given just how miserable Smith was.)
JR teammates Linas Kleiza and Anthony Carter also were terrible. But Nash and O'Neal did almost nothing for Phoenix, so the game was pathetic in general actually.