Tim Moungey Wolverine Studios Community Manager
What Do Those Advanced Basketball
Stats Mean, Anyway?
Sports
metrics and measures of analysis have made dramatic improvements over the last
decade or so. We’re now able to better pinpoint from a statistical perspective
just how good a given player or team actually is. Here at Wolverine Studios, we
keep current on the latest models and advanced statistics and find ways to
integrate them into our games.
But that can often lead to confusion from people who aren’t as familiar with the latest trends. What’s Offensive Rating?, they ask, and what does that stat tell me about my team and players? Consequently, we thought it’d be a good idea to talk about some of the advanced stats for one of our flagship games, Draft Day Sports: Pro Basketball – specifically, explaining what they measure and how you can use them as a gauge.
Offensive Rating, Defensive Rating,
and Net Rating
The
brainchild of statistician Dean Oliver, Offensive Rating, Defensive Rating, and
Net Rating mark one of the biggest leaps forward in terms of understanding how
both players and teams perform on those respective sides of the ball.
Offensive Rating Team We won’t delve into the mathematical formulas here, as they can be rather eye-glazing and don’t address what you want to know. But simply put, a team’s Offensive Rating measures how many points a team scores per 100 possessions. Player As you might expect from the above, a player’s Offensive Rating measures how many points that individual scores per 100 possessions.
The
higher the offensive rating, the better the number, obviously. So what’s a good
offensive rating? That depends. For the last two seasons, the average NBA
offensive rating has been 110.4, according to Basketball Reference. In the
early 2000s – before today’s perimeter-oriented offense, it ranged from
103-106.
However,
take note of any time a player, team, or lineup has an Offensive Rating below
100. That means they’re scoring less than a point per possession. That’s not
very efficient usage at all.
Defensive Rating Team As you can probably guess, Defensive Rating looks at how many points a team gives up per 100 possessions – or the opposite of what Offensive Rating measures. Player Similar to what we’ve already seen, a player’s Defensive Rating tells us how many points a player surrenders per 100 possessions.
Completely
opposite to Offensive Rating, you want the Defensive Rating for both your team
and players to be as low as possible. Don’t be surprised if a player has an
average Defensive Rating over 100, though – only 30 people in NBA history have
ever achieved a Defensive Rating under 100.
Net Rating Simply, net rating is the difference between Offensive Rating and Defensive Rating. A positive number is good; a negative number bad. Let’s take a look at some of the lineup data from a save to see how this is displayed in DDS:PB.
Our in-game lineup tracking lets you easily see what the good (and bad) rotations areAs you
can see, the team’s most used lineup and third-most used lineup are playing
very well, and there’s a potential Death Lineup (h/t to the Golden State
Warriors for introducing this to our basketball vocabulary) at the bottom of
the screen. Excellent net ratings all around.
Where
there’s an issue? The second-most used lineup. That’s a horrible Net Rating.
And although we haven’t shown you the full screen, it’s clear from looking at
the aggregate lineup data that Mike Berry and Jason Minor on the court together
is the issue – every single lineup involving that pair has a negative Net
Rating, regardless of who else is with them.
Effective Field Goal %, True Shooting
%, and Usage Rate
The
days when Field Goal Percentage and 3 Point Percentage were the best measurements
of a player’s offensive efficiency have been dead since the 1990’s. We now have
Effective Field Goal %, True Shooting %, and Usage Rate, which paint a far more
clear picture of just how good a player is on the offensive end.
Effective Field Goal % The math here is simple enough – (Field Goals + 0.5* Three Pointers)/Field Goal Attempts. What EFG % has over plain FG% is that it takes into account the fact that three-pointers are worth more on the stat sheet than two-pointers.
So
you could, for example, have a player who attempts 10 field goals inside the
arc and makes 4 of them. You could have another player who attempts 10 field
goals behind the arc and makes 4 of those. On the stat sheet, the FG % will be
40% for both. But the EFG will be 40% for Player A, and 60% for Player B.
That’s a massive 20% difference.
What
qualifies as a good Effective Field Goal percentage will, like everything else,
depend on your league. In the early 2000s, the league average was around
47-48%. In today’s NBA, the average is 52.4%. Averaging them, you can use 50%
as a ballpark measure.
True Shooting % So what’s missing from Effective Field Goal %? That’s right – free throws. True Shooting % (TS %) rectifies that. The formula is Total Points Scored/(2*(Field Goal Attempts + 0.44 * Free Throw Attempts).
As a
rule of thumb, True Shooting of 50% is average, 55% is excellent, and above 60%
is world-class efficiency. To gain a complete measure of how good a shooter a
player is, it’s best to take into account both their Effective Field Goal % and
their True Shooting %.
Usage Rate The calculation is incredibly lengthy, so we’ll simplify it for you.Usage Rate establishes what percentage of a team’s plays a given player was involved in that resulted in one of the following: a field goal attempt, a free throw attempt, or a turnover.
An
average usage rate is around 20%, which is logical – 100% Usage available,
divided by five players on the court = 20% usage per player – everything be
equal.
Where this matters in DDS:PB terms: You want your most effective players, as measured by Effective Field Goal and True Shooting percentages, to have the highest Usage Rates to maximize your team’s offensive efficiency. Let’s look at the same team from earlier to see an example.
DDS: Pro Basketball 2020 is full of advanced stats to help you make decisionsGreat
news here from the team’s perspective – Kendall Dallas has the highest True Shooting and Effective
Field Goal percentage *and* the highest Usage Rate. No wonder this squad went
48-34 this season. Dennis Sanchez, on the other hand, looks terrible from those
metrics. But that’s why he’s only played in 3 games this season. The staff
knows he’s a poor performer in their setup.
As
you can see from that screen, there’s more advanced stats we could talk about,
but we’ll reserve those for another post. We hope you’ve found this information
helpful. To check out a free demo of Draft Day Sports: Pro Basketball or any of
other sports simulations, go here.
The post Understanding Advanced Stats appeared first on Wolverine Studios.
View the full article