Wow! GREAT article!!!!
Anyone see this yet? This article is awesome!
http://www.poundingtherock.com/2013/...er-of-the-year
Tim Duncan is the Defensive Player of the Year: BlocksBy Cameron Archer on Mar 20 2013, 6:15p
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Soobum Im-USA TODAY Sports
At 36, an ageless Tim Duncan has once again rewritten the guidebook for effective defense using physical efficiency and sharp mental awareness. His play this year has been nothing short of stellar, and he is the front runner for the Defensive Player of the Year.
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I feel undeniably privileged to have carefully observed Tim Duncan's 2012-2013 season to date. In a season where the San Antonio Spurs have received numerous "bites" from the injury bug, Tim Duncan has been consistent, and dominant. He is a difference maker on the both sides of the court. While Duncan has remained effective offensively by retooling his game to include less 4-down post moves and more mid-range shooting, Tony Parker's emergence as the main offensive weapon for the Spurs has limited his offensive role in recent years.
His defense is a different story. The San Antonio Spurs have a refocused defense this year, and their return to the league's defensive elite has been anchored by a fresh Tim Duncan. He is having a career year in terms of defensive statistics. Read that again: Tim Duncan is having a career year. In terms of per minute numbers, a man who has made eight NBA All-Defensive 1st teams is posting career-bests in blocks, defensive rebounding, and steals. Are your eyebrows raised? They should be. Tim Duncan is the Defensive Player of the Year. I would like to show you why over a series of posts. In this first post, I'm going to focus on blocks.
Tim's blocking this year has been beyond exceptional. Did I mention that his per minute blocking numbers are the best of his career, a career lauded for its elite defense? How has he done this? It's a combination of footwork, positioning, overall awareness and basketball savvy. Keep an eye out for a future post from J Gomez which will break down how Duncan moves on the court to maximize his defensive efficiency. At 36, Duncan has schemed his way onto the shortlist of this year's blocks leaders. Currently he has 2.7 blocks per outing, good for 3rd in the league, behind Larry Sanders and Serge Ibaka, who are 24 and 23, respectively. Tim Duncan blocks more shots per game than Roy Hibbert, Dwight Howard, Joakim Noah, and Brook Lopez.
But the value of Tim's blocking isn't only defined by volume. Duncan achieves his blocking numbers while limiting personal fouls, ensuring blocked shots do not give opponents a second chance, and protecting near the rim. When combined, these three things make Duncan the best blocker in the league. You will never see his blocks on ESPN's Top Plays, but nonetheless Tim provides the most defensive value through blocking than any other blocker in the league.
Defining Defensive Value
Defensive value is measured simply: how many points did the other guy(s) score? When we look at blocking value, we want to assess how many points a blocker prevents per block.
According to Basketball-Reference.com, NBA teams average 1.046 points per possession. The immediate train of thought is, "Well a block turns that number into 0." This is true in a confined sense, but when analyzing the value of a block, we need to ask three questions:
1) How often do missed blocks result in personal fouls?
2) How often do blocked shots go out of bounds, resulting in a new possession for the opponent?
3) How often does a player block layups versus jumpers?
With these three questions in mind, let's break it down.
Personal Fouls
Players in the NBA make on average 75.3% of their free throws. This means that when a player is fouled on an attempted block, the opposing team will earn, on average, 1.506 points for that possession. This number increases for "and-1" situations. This is why players should, obviously, avoid fouling. Free throws earn the opponent a massive increase in points per possession over the expected average.
Tim Duncan excels at avoiding personal fouls, despite generating a high volume of blocks. Check out the table below comparing Duncan's blocks-to-fouls ratio to some of the league's elite blockers.
Tim Duncan, the best in the league in this area, is the only player on this list with a block to foul ratio significantly greater than 1. Dwight Howard's value of 0.63 is downright terrible, and even the second best Brook Lopez barely blocks more than he fouls. It is incredible that the increase in BLK/PF ratio from the worst to second best on this list (Howard to Lopez), is still less than the increase from Lopez to Duncan! Tim Duncan puts the league's other blockers to shame in terms of avoiding fouls when attempting blocks.
Player BPG PF/G BLK/PF Ratio Tim Duncan 2.7 1.8 1.50 Larry Sanders 3.1 3.5 0.89 Serge Ibaka 2.9 2.8 1.04 Roy Hibbert 2.7 3.5 0.77 Dwight Howard 2.4 3.8 0.63 Joakim Noah 2.3 2.9 0.79 Brook Lopez 2.1 2.0 1.05
Blocking Out of Bounds or to Opponents
Let's face it, out-of-bounds blocks are sexy. When an athletic player loads his spring-like legs and soars to confront an incoming scorer, swatting the ball into the stands atludicrious speed, we love it. It is precisely this brand of athleticism for which most people enjoy watching the NBA. Statistically, though, these blocks, and blocks which are recovered by the opposing team, have the same value as an opponent offensive rebound. They allow the opponent a new possession, a new chance to score, and even the chance to set up a go-to inbound play. They are much less valuable than blocks which are recovered by the blocker or his teammates.
Tim Duncan also excels at blocking the ball to himself or his teammates. Below is a table with how each players blocks are recovered, courtesy of Evan Zamir of nbawowy.com. %Own is the percentage the player himself rebounds his block, %Team is the percentage a teammate rebounds his block, and %Opp is the percentage the other team recovers the block.
Duncan's Opp% is 3rd lowest in this list, and his %Own is tremendous. Duncan recovers nearly a third of his blocks. When you consider how talented he is as an outlet passer, this is no insignificant feat.
Player %Own %Team %Opp Tim Duncan 29.6 34.5 35.9 Larry Sanders 19.3 36.0 44.7 Serge Ibaka 10.1 54.7 35.2 Roy Hibbert 17.8 48.5 33.7 Dwight Howard 16.7 42.7 40.6 Joakim Noah 15.0 47.4 37.6 Brook Lopez 11.6 47.1 41.3
Layups vs. Jumpers
Tom Haberstroh wrote a shining article about Duncan's defensive prowess earlier this year. In it he discusses the value of blocking layups versus jumpers. According to Hoopdata, NBA players make 64.4% of their shots at the rim, while converting only 39.0% on all other two point attempts. In terms of points per possession, possessions which end in layups gain more than 0.5 points over other two point shots. As a shot blocker, therefore, it is more important to block layups than jumpers. The chart below indicates the percentage of shots blocked which are layup attempts, defined as a shot less than 3 feet from the rim.
When it comes to cleaning up shop near the rim, Tim Duncan is, again, best among the league's elite blockers. Haberstroh also mentions that Tim Duncan's average blocked shot distance is 2.9 ft while the average of the top blockers is 4.8 ft. By staying close to home, Duncan chooses to engage shots which have a higher chance of falling and get set to rebound on those which don't. Brilliant.
Player %Layups Tim Duncan 72 Larry Sanders 61 Serge Ibaka 58 Roy Hibbert 50 Dwight Howard 45 Joakim Noah 54 Brook Lopez 53
Marginal Blocking Value
So how much value does Tim Duncan add through his blocking as compared to the rest of the league's best blockers? Lets define a statistic, Marginal Blocking Value (MBV), which will tell us on a per game basis how many points a player's block attempts add or subtract. We will define this by looking at expected point values from our different outcomes.
At its most basic form, the block has an expected point outcome of 0, however we have to consider recovery, the possibility of a personal foul, and the expected point value of a shot not blocked.
The formula I derived for MBV is as follows:
MBV = BPG*[(1.288*%LU)+(0.78*%2P)]-[0.460*0.67*PFG+0.523*%Opp]
BPG is blocks/game; 1.288 signifies the expected point value of a layup attempt (league layup FG% * 2 pts); %LU is the percentage of blocked shots that are layup attempts; 0.78 is the expected point value of a non-layup 2pt shot; %2P is the percentage of blocked shots that are layup attempts, 0.460 is the expected point value of two free throw attempts over a regular possession; 0.67 is a weighting which assumes that 2/3rds of a big's foul attempts come when contesting shots; PFG is personal fouls per game; 0.523 is the expected point value of a recovered block (equal to one half of the league average expected points per possession; 1.046, since a possession is added); and %Opp is the percent of block shots recovered by the opponent.
It's a little complicated, but it roughly indicates the added point value per game that a player's shot blocking contributes. Here are the MBV numbers for the 7 top shot-blockers in the league.
Tim Duncan, far and away, adds the most value to his defense, almost two and a half points per game due to his blocking. For those of you keeping track, that is the difference between 3rd and 9th in DRtg. He has proven himself to be the best blocker in the NBA in terms of value added to the defense, and his defensive presence in the post this season has significantly impacted the Spurs defensive rating.
Player BPG %LU %2P PFG %Opp MBV Tim Duncan 2.7 72 28 1.8 35.9 2.35 Larry Sanders 3.1 61 39 3.5 44.7 2.07 Serge Ibaka 2.9 58 42 2.8 35.2 2.07 Roy Hibbert 2.7 50 50 3.5 33.7 1.54 Dwight Howard 2.4 45 55 3.8 40.6 1.04 Joakim Noah 2.3 54 46 2.9 37.6 1.33 Brook Lopez 2.1 53 47 2.0 41.3 1.37
Conclusions
Blocking is but one of several ways in which Duncan displays his sharp defensive acuity. In a year where the Spurs have rekindled the defensive fires which once fueled them, the future Hall-of-Famer has continually fanned the flame with his fundamentals and brilliant floor knowledge. Parker may now be the go-to offensive weapon for the Spurs, but Duncan is, and will always be, the backbone of the Spurs defense. Cool, calm, and masterful, Tim Duncan keeps reminding us why he is the greatest power forward of all time, and this year's Defensive Player of the Year.
#DuncanDPOY
*Keep an eye out for the next article on Tim's rebounding prowess.
Wow! GREAT article!!!!
Very nice read indeed insightful
It would be absolutely awesome that Tim win a dpoty absolutely awesome but I have not a lot of hope it happens. Agree with Harlem saying spurs should market him for the trophy !
The Greatest PF to ever lace em' up. Tim winning would definitely be deserving but the league is more about promoting young players to get people to buy jerseys. They'll probably give it to Ibaka I mean the dude can punch someone and not get suspended, it's just good D.
That article raised the bar. Nicely done.
My goodness, that was well done. It's like basketball stat porn for a Spurs/Duncan fan.
The only thing I wonder is why he used per-game statistics as opposed to per-36 min or per-100 possessions in order to control for pace. Both of those just involve simple multipliers.
I think per game is fair. If we are doing this in order to establish/separate DPOY candidates, it should account for their impact throughout a game. Somebody that plays brilliant defense for 15 minutes but doesn't produce over the course of a game (but has ridiculous per minute stats) shouldn't be in the same class as a guy who plays steady defense over the course of 30-40 minutes and whose imapct is felt throughout. I know I'm exaggerating here, but just to make a point. Its only fair
He won't win the award.. Maybe another thing they can hand Lebron..
Old Man Riverwalk is getting more and more media support for his DPOY campaign. It'd be awesome to see him get it, but he'll probably have to remain healthy and effective for the rest of the season to have a chance.
Duncan = GOAT shotblocker and best interior defender....and thank the basketball gods that he doesn't have to help Blair or Bonner in the starting lineup
I'd love to see him get it. But somehow I have this horrible feeling the media will give it to Ibaka or even Sanders or Lopez. Hope to God I'm wrong.
By the way. Great analysis in that article. Well done.
Sanders supposedly got it in the bag.
I don't even know who this scrub plays for![]()
Would be great if someone from ESPN picked up this meme and ran with it.
Great analysis by PtR, but I don't know how much exposure the blog gets.
EDIT: Come to think of it, Skip Bayless might be a perfect vector for this story to gain steam in the public consciousness. Skip always backs up the spurs, Tim, Tony, Manu, (Also Splitter, even in the face of Stephen A's disrespect).
Last edited by Juggity; 03-21-2013 at 10:55 PM.
I bet Tim gives the trophy to Bruce Bowen if he wins it.
If DPOY awards were determined by careful, thoughtful analysis, then Tim would already have multiple trophies. Bruce would have at least one as well.
Mel_13's point is good. The person named defensive player of the year is often not the person with the biggest defensive impact. Some of that is because the data on play by play/ events after blocks weren't easily available(NBAWOWY.com, where that block event data comes from, started about 2 months ago, So post block data wasn't easily available for past races) and a lot of media members look at simple per game rebound/block numbers(Sean Elliott saying Serge Ibaka should've won last year is amongst the dumbest things he's said on air, and it's a low bar.) It'll probably become better as the relatively stats intense bloggers become part of the voting panel, but that'll be after TD has hung them up.
I think TD-Sanders-Noah-Gasol are probably the frontrunners, and all are good defenders who actually make the defense better. I want TD to win, but one of those group winning would not be the travesty that Ibaka winning would be.
DPOY then Russell trophy, sweet![]()
rookie of the year, all-star MVP, 2-time season MVP,3-time finals MVP, now DPOY frontrunner...![]()
![]()
Ibaka?
I want to watch that Duncan dunk o Ibaka againthat was awesome
So much hokum. Dwight Howard's the best defender. Didn't you see him in the dunk contest? Dumbasses.
Yeah I agree Tim is one of three player (imo Noah is out) that can win it but the article actually came off as pretty desperate, shouldn't be that complicated to see that someone is a great defensive anchor, certainly wouldn't need to use something like that :
The formula I derived for MBV is as follows:
MBV = BPG*[(1.288*%LU)+(0.78*%2P)]-[0.460*0.67*PFG+0.523*%Opp]
The metrics confirm that Sanders has a great defensive impact and isn't just a pinball machine shotblocker that just pads numbers. AND he leads the league in blocks. He's probably the stiffest compe ion, but I think Tim is starting to draw nationwide attention
Any chance Timmy gets First Team All-NBA and DPOY award at age 37?
It all depends what position he's voted as. I'm sure for the All-NBA team LeBron and Durant are locks at forward. If they view Tim as a Center he'd have a shot, but writers would obviously vote for Dwight. If he's viewed as a forward, he'll probably be all-nba second team and all defensive first team.
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