Net Points, etc. - Bryant | Syracusefan.com

Net Points, etc. - Bryant

SWC75

Bored Historian
Joined
Aug 26, 2011
Messages
33,873
Like
65,323
I will again be doing a report after each game this season and a summary report at the end of each month. (I’ve eliminated some stats from previous years to streamline this post.) This is limited to recruited scholarship players only.

Net Points
(points + rebounds + assists + steals + blocks minus missed field goals and free throws, turnovers and personal fouls)

Average net points/40 by position, (based on averaging 20+ minutes per game), since the 1980-81 season:
Centers 18.6; Power Forwards: 18.4; Small Forwards: 16.1, Shooting Guards: 13.3; Point Guards: 13.5

Jesse Edwards +23NP in 31 minutes = +127NP in 174 minutes = +29.2NP/40 for season
Justin Taylor +18NP in 26 minutes = +28NP in 78 minutes = +14.4NP/40 for season
Symir Torrence +9NP in 20 minutes = +31NP in 110 minutes = +11.3NP/40 for season
Chris Bell +6NP in 28 minutes = +20NP in 133 minutes = +6.0NP/40 for season
John Bol Ajak +5NP in 27 minutes = +7NP in 31 minutes = +9.0NP/40 for season
Maliq Brown +3NP in 4 minutes = +23NP in 46 minutes = +20.0NP/40 for season
Quadir Copeland 0NP in 1 minutes = +7NP in 45 minutes = +6.2NP/40 for season
Benny Williams 0NP in 9 minutes = +36NP in 180 minutes = +8.0NP/40 for season
Peter Carey -1NP in 9 minutes = -2NP in 20 minutes = -4.0NP/40 for season
Joe Girard -1NP in 38 minutes = +50NP in 203 minutes = +9.9NP/40 for season
Judah Mintz -2NP in 9 minutes = +66NP in 177 minutes = +14.9NP/40 for season

DNP coach’s decision
None

Injured or ill and couldn’t play
Mounir Hima 0NP in 0 minutes = +23NP in 57 minutes = +16.1NP/40 for season

Suspended
None

Redshirting
None

Out for the year
None

Left Team
None


Awards

Offensive Dude of the Game, (O-Dog)
(Points plus assists)
Justin Taylor 25 points and 0 assists = 25

Shooting Efficiency
(Points minus missed field goal and free throw attempts)
Justin Taylor 25 points – 3mfg – 3mft = +19

Scoring Efficiency
(Percentage of points scored divided by points they would have scored if they made every shot- minimum 10 possible points)
Justin Taylor 25 points of 37= 67.6%

My Man
(Who played the most minutes?)
Joe Girard 36 minutes

TEAM STATS

Possession

Rebounding
(Add each team’s offensive rebounds to their opponent’s defensive rebounds. Then figure the offensive rebounds as a percentage of that)
We rebounded 14 of our 39 misses = 35.9%
They rebounded 11 of their 40 misses = 27.5%

Unsettled Situations
[Second Chance Points+ Points off Turnovers] divided by [Offensive Rebounds + Opposition Turnovers)
We had 31 points in 25 unsettled situations = 1.240 points/situation
They had 25 points in 24 unsettled situations = 1.042 points/situation

Manufactured Possessions
(One teams rebounds + the other team’s turnovers)
We had 43 + 11 = 54
They had 38 + 13 = 49


Scoring

Shooting
(Shots made and attempted and the percentage for two point goal attempts, three point attempts and free throws)
We were 18 for 36 on twos, (50.0%), 6 for 24 on threes (25.0%) and 18 for 24 on frees (75.0%)
They were 17 for 32 on twos, (53.1%), 7 for 28 on threes (25.0%) and 18 for 23 on frees (78.3%)

Points
(PIP= points in the paint, “The Inner Sanctum”
POP = points outside the paint, which is total points – PIP -free throws made
OL= points from “The Outer Limits” (three point shots)
TZ= “Twilight Zone”, which is POP – TREY, (two point jumpers from outside the paint)
FT = Free Throws

We had 24 PIP, 30 POP, 18 OL, 12 TZ, 18 FT
They had 34 PIP, 21 POP, 21 OL, 0 TZ, 18 FT

Fast Break Percentage
(FBP/(defensive rebounds + blocks + steals)
We scored 10 FBP in 38 opportunities (26.3%)
They scored 15 FBP in 31 opportunities (48.4%)

First Chance/Second Chance
(FCP is First Chance Points, which is total points - second chance points – fast break points – free throws made. SCP is second chance points.)
We had 24 FCP and 20 SCP
They had 32 FCP and 8 SCP

Starters/Bench
(Total points – bench points = starters points)
Our starters scored 38 points and our bench scored 34 points.
Their starters scored 62 points and their bench scored 11 points.

Efficiency

Assists
(The percentage of a team’s baskets that were assisted)
We assisted 13 of our 24 field goals = 54.1%
They assisted 12 of their 24 field goals = 50.0%

Team Offensive Possession Efficiency
(Possessions: Field goals attempted - offensive rebounds + turnovers + 47.5% of free throws attempted. Efficiency is total points divided by possessions)
We scored 72 points in 70 possessions = 1.029 points/ possession
They scored 73 points in 71 possessions = 1.028 points/possession
It was a 141-possession game.

If we just use FGA + (47.5% FTA) and thus count an offensive rebound as an additional possession and a turnover as a lost possession:
We scored 72 points in 71 possessions = 1.014 points/ possession
They scored 73 points in 71 possessions = 1.028 points/possession

Team Shooting Efficiency

(Points minus missed field goals and free throws)

We scored 72 points, missed 36 field goals and missed 6 free throws = net +30
They scored 73 points, missed 36 field goals and missed 5 free throws = net +32

(Points scored divided by potential points scored if we’d made every shot)

We scored 72 on 36 two-point attempts, 24 three-point attempts and 24 free throw attempts = 72 of a possible 168 points = 42.9% of possible points scored.
They scored 73 on 32 two-point attempts, 28 three-point attempts and 23 free throw attempts = 73 of a possible 171 points = 42.7% of possible points scored.


Fouls

(Most fouls are called on two point shot attempts.)
We attempted 36 two-point shots and were fouled 18 times = 2.00
They attempted 32 two-point shots and were fouled 23 times = 1.39


Comments:

- It seems to me that out best player is not Judah Mintz but rather Jesse Edwards. We had 20 second chance points to 8 for Bryant. That’s Jesse.

- Joe Girard has finally achieved consistency: he’s had -1 net points in 38 minutes for two games in a row. When he scored 31 points he was 8 for 13 inside the arc, 4 for 11 outside of it. In these last two games he’s 2/9 inside, 1 for 12 outside.

- In a game where we had to play a lot of people, the player who got the least minutes was Quadir Copeland: 1. Part of that was that we needed Justin Taylor and Chris Bell to hit shots. But I wonder if JB wants Quadir to get a bit less fancy and more into the flow of the game. Just wondering.

- Both teams were 24 for 60 from the field. Both teams hit 25% of their three pointers and 18 free throws. Bryant won by 1 because one more of their field goals was a three pointer.

- Bryant, much the shorter team, out-scored us in the paint 34-24 and out-shot us inside the arc 53% to 50%.

- We had more Pop, 30-21 and won the Twilight Zone 12-0, due to Chris bell moving to the top of the key and Justin Taylor talking open shots whether they were threes or not. Those two were 5 for 13 from outside the arc but 7 for 9 inside of it. Two pointers that go in are worth more than three pointers who don’t.

- In 70 possessions we had just 24 first chance points. Thank God for Jesse.

- Amazingly, we won the bench scoring battle, 34-8, thanks to JT. Unfortunately, our starters got outscored 34-62 and we lost the game. You won’t see another split like that again.

- It was a rare game in other ways, too. We had more assists and a higher percentage of assisted baskets, (and lost, as often happens). Using the traditional possession formula, we were microscopically more efficient, 1.029-1.028. (The actual game winner wins that stat 99+% of the time.)

- The refs have called more fouls on us, per 2 point field goal attempts for five games in a row now. This was actually the most fouls called on the other team per our two point attempts of the year, (36/18 = 2.00) but Bryant got calls even more than that, (32/23 = 1.39, the lowest number of the season). There were likely more fouls called in this gamer than prior ones because of the impact of the early brawl: they wanted to get and keep command of the game. For the year, we’ve attempted 258 two pointers and been fouled 91 times = 2.84 while our opposition has attempted 186 twos and drawn 96 fouls = 1.94. Of course that doesn’t mean the calls aren’t legit: we have a young team with a lot of new players that haven’t played on this level, this much or together before. But 258/196 x 96 = 126 – 91 = 35. If we’d gotten 35 more calls – or been called 35 fewer times, our record might be a lot different. (I use two point attempts because it’s the one start that would more relate to the number of fouls called: they produce more calls than frees or other events.)
 

Forum statistics

Threads
170,192
Messages
4,876,504
Members
5,989
Latest member
OttosShoes

Online statistics

Members online
20
Guests online
1,668
Total visitors
1,688


...
Top Bottom