Real Player Ratings for the 2011 East Conference Final Game Two Miami Heat 85 Chicago Bulls 75
2011 EAST CONFERENCE FINAL CHICAGO BULLS VS MIAMI HEAT GAME TWO REAL PLAYER RATINGS
MAY 18 2011
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
MIAMI HEAT 85 CHICAGO BULLS 75
BEST OF SEVEN SERIES TIED 1-1
KEY PLAYERS WHO DID NOT PLAY
--These are the above average players who would have or should have played but did not.
--The reason is shown after the player if and only if it is known with at least 85% certainty.
--Usually the reason is known with almost 100% certainty.
--If the reason is not known with at least 85% certainty, the reason "unknown" is given.
--Injuries are NEVER perfectly reported and information about them is archived nowhere on the Internet. Therefore, it is possible that when Quest for the Ring identifies "coaching error" or "unknown" as the reason, the real reason may have been an injury.
--If the reason "traded" is shown then in many cases a player who was obtained in that trade played instead.
BULLS
--C.J. Watson played only 6 minutes due to the coach following the one point guard on the court at a time guideline and due to PG Derek Rose being an historical superstar justifying 42 minutes playing time for him.
--Kurt Thomas did not play due to apparent coaching error.
HEAT
--Eddie House did not play due to apparent coaching error.
--Mario Chalmers played only 5 minutes due to apparent coaching error.
REAL PLAYER RATINGS FOR THIS GAME
--Real Player Rating shows you the real basketball quality of players quickly and accurately.
--Players who played at least 7 minutes in the game are included.
--Each player's hidden defending rating from the regular season is used as the Hidden Defending Adjustment (HDA). Obviously, players in any individual game including this one were not exactly as good defenders as they were on the average during the regular season. But since there is no way to provide HDA for individual games and since it is better to have some reasonable HDA than none at all, we use the season HDA as a reasonable substitute.
--Beginning in 2011 we show just the combined listing; in prior years we separately showed the rank lists by team but this is now considered to be unnecessary.
Ronnie Brewer, SG 1.491 BULLS
Udonis Haslem, PF 1.112 HEAT
Dwyane Wade, SG 1.051 HEAT
LeBron James, SF 1.035 HEAT
Derrick Rose, PG 0.805 BULLS
Carlos Boozer, PF 0.792 BULLS
Taj Gibson, PF 0.792 BULLS
Mike Miller, SG 0.712 HEAT
Joakim Noah, C 0.675 BULLS
Chris Bosh, PF 0.659 HEAT
Luol Deng, SF 0.422 BULLS
Mike Bibby, PG 0.375 HEAT
Joel Anthony, C 0.233 HEAT
Keith Bogans, SG 0.218 BULLS
Omer Asik, C 0.212 BULLS
Kyle Korver, SG 0.150 BULLS
SCALE FOR REGULAR SEASON REAL PLAYER RATINGS FOR A SINGLE GAME
Perfect Player for all Practical Purposes / Major Historic Super Star 1.200 and more
Historic Super Star 1.080 1.199
Super Star 0.960 1.079
A Star Player / A well above normal starter 0.860 0.959
Very Good Player / A solid starter 0.780 0.859
Major Role Player / Good enough to start 0.700 0.779
Good Role Player / Often a good 6th man, can possibly start 0.620 0.699
Satisfactory Role Player / Generally should not start 0.540 0.619
Marginal Role Player / Should not start except in an emergency 0.460 0.539
Poor Player / Should never start 0.380 0.459
Very Poor Player 0.300 0.379
Extremely Poor Player 0.299 and less
AVERAGE RATINGS BY POSITION
Not all positions are created equal. In pro basketball, point guard and center are the most important positions, power forward is in the middle, and small forward and shooting guard are the least important. (Some teams will have a different pattern.) The following are good estimates for average ratings by position among all NBA players who play 300 minutes or more. There are very few small forwards and shooting guards who don't fit at other positions who are superstars. Most superstars are players who can play point guard, power forward, or center.
Point Guard .750
Shooting Guard .635
Small Forward .645
Power Forward .715
Center .755
All Positions / All Players (NBA Overall Average) .700
To quickly and fairly compare two players who play different positions, convert their Ratings as follows:
Point Guards: Subtract .050; for example, .700 becomes .650
Shooting Guards: Add .065; for example, .700 becomes .765
Small Forwards: Add .055; for example, .700 becomes .755
Power Forwards: Subtract .015; for example, .700 becomes .685
Centers: Subtract .055; for example, .700 becomes .645
REAL PLAYER PRODUCTION FOR THIS GAME
--Shows the real basketball production (or quantity) of players.
--Players who played at least 7 minutes in the game are included.
--An estimate of the value of hidden defending production is included in the total production for all players shown; as described above hidden defending ratings from the regular season are used.
--Beginning in 2011 we show just the combined listing; in prior years we separately showed the rank lists by team but this is now considered to be unnecessary.
LeBron James, SF 47.60 HEAT
Dwyane Wade, SG 42.05 HEAT
Derrick Rose, PG 33.83 BULLS
Chris Bosh, PF 27.68 HEAT
Udonis Haslem, PF 25.57 HEAT
Ronnie Brewer, SG 23.86 BULLS
Joakim Noah, C 21.61 BULLS
Carlos Boozer, PF 21.39 BULLS
Luol Deng, SF 19.42 BULLS
Taj Gibson, PF 16.63 BULLS
Mike Bibby, PG 13.13 HEAT
Mike Miller, SG 12.81 HEAT
Joel Anthony, C 5.12 HEAT
Omer Asik, C 3.60 BULLS
Keith Bogans, SG 3.48 BULLS
Kyle Korver, SG 2.70 BULLS
=============== OFFENSIVE AND DEFENSIVE SUB RATINGS FOR THIS GAME ===============
OFFENSIVE SUB RATINGS FOR THIS GAME
--Shows the real quality of players' offense.
--Players who played at least 7 minutes in the game are included.
--The hidden defending component is not a part of the offensive sub rating.
--Beginning in 2011 we show just the combined listing; in prior years we separately showed the rank lists by team but this is now considered to be unnecessary.
Udonis Haslem, PF 0.759 HEAT
Ronnie Brewer, SG 0.569 BULLS
Dwyane Wade, SG 0.554 HEAT
Derrick Rose, PG 0.530 BULLS
LeBron James, SF 0.521 HEAT
Joakim Noah, C 0.333 BULLS
Taj Gibson, PF 0.315 BULLS
Mike Miller, SG 0.278 HEAT
Mike Bibby, PG 0.273 HEAT
Chris Bosh, PF 0.231 HEAT
Carlos Boozer, PF 0.151 BULLS
Kyle Korver, SG 0.150 BULLS
Luol Deng, SF 0.098 BULLS
Keith Bogans, SG -0.021 BULLS
Joel Anthony, C -0.106 HEAT
Omer Asik, C -0.251 BULLS
THE AVERAGE OFFENSIVE SUB RATING
for all NBA players who play 300 minutes or more is about .385
DEFENSIVE SUB RATINGS FOR THIS GAME
--Shows the real quality of players' defense.
--Players who played at least 7 minutes in the game are included.
--The hidden defending component is included as described above.
--Beginning in 2011 we show just the combined listing; in prior years we separately showed the rank lists by team but this is now considered to be unnecessary.
Ronnie Brewer, SG 0.922 BULLS
Carlos Boozer, PF 0.641 BULLS
LeBron James, SF 0.514 HEAT
Dwyane Wade, SG 0.497 HEAT
Taj Gibson, PF 0.477 BULLS
Omer Asik, C 0.463 BULLS
Mike Miller, SG 0.434 HEAT
Chris Bosh, PF 0.428 HEAT
Udonis Haslem, PF 0.353 HEAT
Joakim Noah, C 0.343 BULLS
Joel Anthony, C 0.338 HEAT
Luol Deng, SF 0.324 BULLS
Kyle Korver, SG 0.279 BULLS
Derrick Rose, PG 0.275 BULLS
Keith Bogans, SG 0.239 BULLS
Mike Bibby, PG 0.102 HEAT
THE AVERAGE DEFENSIVE SUB RATING
for all NBA players who play 300 minutes or more is about .315
The breakdown between hidden and unhidden defending is available on request.
THE ALL IMPORTANT, AWARD WINNING REAL PLAYER RATINGS USER GUIDE
For complete details regarding how the Real Player Ratings are designed, how and why they work, and how exactly you can use them, see the User Guide. The User Guide for Real Player Ratings is a necessary reference for anyone who wants to truly understand the value of, the validity of, and the ways you can use the Real Player Rating performance measures.
Also, you should become a regular visitor to Quest for the Ring if you want to get the full advantage of reading and using Real Player Ratings Series performance measures. The more you visit and check out ratings, the more quickly and easily you will be able to evaluate what you are seeing.
ABOUT REAL PLAYER RATINGS REPORTS
Of the several dozen types of Reports that Quest for the Ring (QFTR) produces, Team Real Player Rating Reports are among the most important. A Real Player Rating Report gives you four very important ratings for every player in the Report:
--Overall Real Player Rating
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--Offensive Sub Rating
--Defensive Sub Rating
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There are two things you can do to get the full value out of RPR Reports. First, you can read parts or all of the User Guide for them (the link to the Guide is below). Second, you can simply visit a lot and see a lot of Reports and then you will automatically become better at interpreting what you see.
During the regular season beginning in late January (when we can first validly calculate the hidden defending adjustments) QFTR posts Team Real Player Ratings for major contending teams and other selected teams as time permits. Between the end of the regular season and before the Conference Finals begin (in late April and in early May) QFTR posts the final ratings for approximately the ten best teams as of the beginning of the playoffs. If there is a major upset in round one and/or round two by a team whose ratings were not yet posted, QFTR will make sure to post those asap.
These final ratings can be used in team grids that are very important parts of any playoff series preview.
Unfortunately, production time limits that are caused partly by limited traffic mean that only a small number of playoff series previews can be produced. Remember, you can help QFTR get more production time by posting links to QFTR wherever you can, and then QFTR will link back to you on request (click the contact link under the banner).
Game Real Player Ratings Reports are produced for every NBA Championship game, every NBA Conference Final game, and for selected NBA semifinal games. For the semifinals, normally, the most interesting semifinal (round two) series will be selected (out of the four of them) and Real Player Ratings for every game in that series will be posted.
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If you ever spend quality time at QFTR you will discover that there are other types of Real Player Rating Reports. Many of these appear in the summer. Among the most important ones that come out in the summer are the League-Wide Real Player Ratings Reports. Also, don't miss the Real Player Ratings Reports by position if you are a serious basketball person.
This section was a limited and brief overview of Real Player Ratings Reports in general. What you need if you want to understand how the Ratings are constructed and why QFTR knows they are the best possible ratings is the User Guide for Real Player Ratings. This User Guide was last revised and updated in May 2010; a new revision is "on order" and is expected to be completed in May or June of 2011. The May 2010 edition is still very useful; the only section of it that is not completely accurate is the one where the specific factors are shown; the factors have been adjusted a little to reflect the latest information and understanding QFTR has about exactly how playoff games are won. There has also been a significant improvement in the calibration and validation of Real Player Ratings components.
So for complete details regarding how the Real Player Ratings are designed, how and why they work, and how exactly you can use them, see the User Guide.