Wednesday, November 18, 2009

The calculus of owning Allen Iverson

In every fantasy season, whether it's Fantasy Basketball, Football, Baseball, or even Darts, there usually comes a time in the season where you've got to take a calculated gamble. It can make the difference between being in the money or staring up at the leaders the rest of the season.

This year in Fantasy Basketball, that time is now.

There is increasing speculation that Allen Iverson is going to join the Knicks by the end of the week. In fact, some newspapers are reporting that AI will join the team by Friday and play against the Nets on Saturday. Is it certain? Nobody knows, but there are a number of reasons that the Knicks would like this to happen.

  1. The Knicks are terrible. I got a chance to see them play against the Warriors last Friday and it was atrocious. They have some decent complementary players like David Lee and Al Harrington, but they don't have a player that can break down the defense and score. Additionally, Chris Duhon can not make a shot. Over the last five games, he's averaging 2.8 points per game (PPG) on 3 of 30 shooting. Talk about a slump! Iverson can provide the scoring and floor leadership they need. Yes, he'll dominate the ball, but they need that at the moment as the "looks" that the current players are getting at the basket are not good.
  2. There were empty seats in the Garden. I've gone to a number of games over the years in the Garden and I've seen empty seats, but usually in February and March – not the middle on November. There's no buzz in New York about the Knicks and they've become a laughing stock. Yes people are buying into the 2010 summer free agent year logic, but the loss of revenue at the Garden is hurting. Allen Iverson can provide the draw that will put people into seats; at least temporarily.
  3. What's the downside for the Knicks? They are not making the playoffs and they are not going to make any move that will jeopardize their chances to land one or two elite free agents next year. Allen Iverson will be signed as a mid-level exception or a veteran league minimum, which both by definition will be expiring contracts.

If you buy the above logic, then the big question is should you take a flyer on Iverson even if there's a chance he doesn't join the Knicks? I think the answer is yes. Iverson will thrive in the D'Antoni run and gun style. In fact, it's perfect for him. His game is to take defenders off the dribble, penetrate, shoot or kick the ball out. That's the D'Antoni system!

Also, what's the downside risk? Players on the end of your bench are by definition average. The typical end of your bench player will provide the following fantasy per game contribution: 9.2 points, 4.1 boards, 1.9 assists, 0.5 steals and blocks, and shoot 45% from the field and 73% from the line. The likelihood of Iverson out performing this stat line is extremely high. If Iverson is not picked up by the Knicks, then you pick up another average player.

I've taken the plunge this afternoon and put Iverson on every team where he was available. Time for you to do the same!

Saturday, November 7, 2009

My Fantasy Basketball Team Stinks

We are now two weeks into the NBA season and some owners are smiling from ear-to-ear as they knew Chris Kaman would come back strong, Brandon Jennings would be this year's Devin Harris, or Channing Frye would develop a three point shot and become a seven-foot Peja Stojakovic. For the rest of us who are still blind squirrels who haven't found the proverbial nut, there is panic. Yes of course if you have Lebron James or Chris Paul, you're fine. However, if you've drafted Danny Granger or Kevin Durant in the first round or thought Shaq was going to turn the clock back ten years, you're feeling uneasy.

While the season is still very young and it's dangerous to draw too many conclusions after just two weeks, there are clearly buying and selling opportunities that need to explored. A shred owner can read these early tea-leaves and make deals that can win their leagues.

Under Performing First Rounders

Al Jefferson

Both the Timberwolves and fantasy owners alike expected Al Jefferson to get off to a slow start this year following mid-season knee surgery, but after the first six games …YUCK! His scoring is down 6.0 Points Per Game (PPG), he's shooting 40%, down from a career average of 50.3% and most discouraging, he's averaging only 6.0 Rebounds Per Game (RPG).

He's playing extremely tentatively, afraid to challenge players as is evidence with his 0.8 Blocks Per Game (BPG). He also seems content to take the 8-foot shot as opposed to driving to the hoop. He looks a lot like, dare I say, Elton Brand.

Rest assured, at 26, Al Jefferson is just entering his peak years and will return to the player we thought we drafted late in the first round. Unfortunately, it's going to take longer and we might not see the real "Big Al" until after the new year.

Outlook: Hold tight, play favorable match-ups until he turns the corner, and look to trade for him with owners who are loosing patience.

Danny Granger

One of the top six player drafted this year, Danny Granger has not returned first round value…yet. Owners expected across the board contribution in all categories including at least 26.0 PPG with good field goal percentages. After five games, Granger has shot a dismal 38% from the field while only scoring 22.8 PPG; which ranks 15th in the league; wedged between Ben Gordon and Chris Kaman.

Digging deeper into the stats, Granger has attempted an almost unbelievable 10.2 three-pointer per game. Fortunately for owners, he's connected on 30% of them so his three point contribution is high, but clearly he's not driving to the rim. The reason is probably the heel injury he suffered late in the pre-season. Hopefully this injury is truly a bone bruise and not masking as the more troubling plantar fascia tendinitis.

Assuming Granger can regain his health, and that's always a concern with Granger, he should be able to provide top five value to your team. His other stats are completely in-line with pre-season projections, if not better.

Outlook: Hold or try and buy from a worried owner

Kevin Durant

The budding NBA star, Kevin Durant has gotten off to a good, but not great start to the season. The problem is field-goal percentage – currently at 38.5%. That low percentage really hurts your team's field-goal category when you combine the low percentage with 21.8 shots attempted per game; which is fourth in the league. Every other category is in-line with pre-season projections.

Outlook: There's too much talent here to panic just yet. Sit tight.

Top-tier Players Under Performing

Elton Brand

Elton Brand is no longer a top-tier Basketball Player. There, I said it! Let's face it, he'll turn 31 in March and has had three major surgeries in the past two years. It's gotten so bad for Brand owners that he's being out-played by Mareese Speights, an unheralded second round draft pick in his second year.

How bad has Brand been over the first five games? He's averaging 11.0 PPG, 5.6 RPG, and 0.8 BPG. His field goal percentage is actually good; he's just not getting the touches (8.8 shots per game vs. 12.6 last year, and 15.0-18.0 during his peak years) and a career low 28.6 minutes per game. The basic problem is that Philadelphia plays a perimeter game with Andre Iguodala's and Lou Williams controlling the ball. They are not looking to push the ball inside and until they do, Elton Brand will be an average Fantasy contributor.

Outlook: Trade him if you can, but it'll be hard as most owners are onto him. Consider benching him until things change in Philadelphia.

Tim Duncan

A model of consistency for years, we might finally be seeing the inevitable production slide of Tim Duncan. The primary cause of that slide is minutes as Duncan is averaging a career low 29.1 minutes per game. Astute fantasy owners saw this playing time reduction occur during the last two months of last season and avoided paying a second round draft pick on Duncan.

The shame of it all is on a per minute basis, Tim Duncan's contribution is as good as ever. Extrapolating his number to 36 minutes of playing time, he's averaging 18.1 PPG, 14.6 RPG, and 2.0 BPG. What is disappointing is his free throw percentage; currently at a career low 56.5%. He looks the same at the charity stripe; taking his typical long deep breath and exaggerated mechanics, he's just missing. Expect his free throw percentage to normalize at 65%-70% as we go through the year.

Outlook: Expect fifth round value and hope for third or fourth round value. If you can trade on his name and upgrade, do it.

Jose Calderon

Remember last year when Jose Calderon went 87 straight attempts without missing a free-throw? This year, he missed two free throw attempts in the first game. A career 50% shooter from the field, over the first five games, Calderon is shooting 42% and an unbelievable low 73% from the line. However, if that wasn't bad enough, the most discouraging statistic is Calderon's measly 5.8 Assists Per Game (APG). Last year he averaged 8.9 APG and the previous year, 8.3 APG.

It's not playing time as Calderon is averaging a healthy 32.2 minutes per game, so what is it? Toronto has gotten away from the motion offense made popular under Sam Mitchell and is playing more isolation schemes. Chris Bosh is thriving, but Calderon is struggling. For Calderon owner's sake, let's hope he can adjust.

Outlook: Hold tight for a few more weeks and if things haven't improved, try selling on his name.

Caron Butler

Gilbert Arenas looks great and has become entrenched as the general, captain, and sergeant in Washington. That doesn't leave a lot of plum roles for the others, and players like Caron Butler are suffering. You don't have to look any further than rebounds and assists – rebounding is up by 2.0 RPG from last year while his assists are down from 4.3 APG to .6 APG. Excellent contribution in steals, which is one of the biggest reasons that you draft Butler in the second or third round are off 1.0 per game. Finally, Butler is shooting under 40% from the field including 23% from behind the arc.

It's clear that Butler's role as a point-forward is over and he'll have to learn how to play off Arenas. Adding to the concern for owners is the eventual return of Antwan Jamison. That combination spells trouble for Butler owners.

Outlook: Sell before it's too late

John Salmons

A career 36% three-point shooter, after five games, John Salmons is shooting 19% from behind the arc. He's not doing much better from inside the arc as well as his overall field-goal percentage is below 30% and he's launching shots at a career best 14.2. Put it all together and you've got one ugly stat line of 11.2 PPG and 1.0 three-pointers a game from a player who was suppose to provide your team 17.0-19.0 PPG.

Much of Salmons slow start can be attributed to facing four of the best defenses in the NBA in his first five games (San Antonio, Boston, Cleveland, and Miami). All four teams are in the top 10 for defending the three-point shot. Some owners have already given up on him and he's wound up on waiver wires in 10 team leagues. Salmons is a pickup and someone to trade for while this buying opportunity exists.

Outlook: Buy Low

We Expected More

Manu Ginobili

The NBA's resident bat catcher is making the highlight reels, but as a "Ripley's Believe it or Not" act and not a premier NBA player.

Another player who is coming back slowly from surgery, Ginobili looks quick on the court, but his shot is not there yet. A career 45% shooter, he's currently averaging 39% from the field and 79% from the charity strip. Furthermore, his steals are down and he has yet to block a shot; both of which should normalize once the rust wears off. San Antonio is getting old and Ginobili is no exception. However, over the years, he has taken less of a pounding than Tony Parker or Tim Duncan and therefore he should have more left in the tank.

Outlook: Don't loose faith, Ginobili is poised for a nice year.


Anthony Randolph

Anthony Randolph was the worst kept sleeper during this year's fantasy draft season. Everybody had heard about him tearing up the summer leagues and therefore, Randolph went in the seventh and eighth round instead of a flyer in the last two rounds. So far, it hasn't panned out for owners as Randolph has averaged 9.3 PPG, 7.0 RPG, 34.5% shooting from the field while averaging a paltry 17.8 minutes per game.

A once Mecca for fantasy goodness, Golden State has become a nightmare for fantasy owners. The rotations are inconsistent and Don Nelson seems to prefer match-up lineups as opposed to sticking with a single starting line-up for each game. You are seeing the results play out with young Anthony Randolph. He has the talent, he just needs the opportunity.

Outlook: Too much uncertainty in Golden State. Sell on the name.

Shaq


 

Nobody expected a repeated of last year, but clearly the Cavs as well as fantasy owners expected more than the production to-date. Few plays are being called for Shaq in the Lebron James dominated offense, so don't expected his points to return and with another option in Zydrunas Ilgauskas, continue to see Shaq's minutes average around 25.0-26.0.

Outlook: Only rosterable in deep leagues.

Derrick Rose

A pre-season ankle Injury has hampered the progression of Derrick Rose into the elite scoring point guard that many predicted. Rose's game is all about slashing to the rim and when your ankle is weak and you don't have the confidence to make the quick cut, production is going to fall. Throw in a reduction in minutes and it's pretty obvious to see why his overall play is off - 12.2 PPG while shooting 40% from the field versus 16.8 PPG and 47.5% from the field last year. The encouraging news is that his assists per minute is showing growth over last year.

Patience is a virtue in this case. Once Rose's ankle fully heals, and it still could take a couple more weeks, owners will be rewarded – 20.0 PPG and 7.5 APG is not out of the question.

Outlook: Buy Low

Andre Miller

Why is Steve Blake starting in Portland?

Andre Miller has never been an elite point guard in the NBA, but he's a superior player to Blake in all aspects except for three-point shooting. Portland is a very good team and as Denver found out last year, a mature floor leader can take the team to the next level. Jered Bayless could be the future in Portland, but Miller should be leading now.

Miller looks lost and his fantasy contributions are reflecting the situation – 8.5 PPG, 4.8 APG, 30% FG% while playing 26.3 minutes per game. In comparison, Miller's line last year was 16.3 PPG, 6.5 APG, 47% FG% while playing 36.3 minutes. This situation has led to owners dumping Andre Miller and that's a mistake. Digging deeper into the statistics shows that Miller's assists and shots per minute are at his career average and once his minutes stabilize, Miller should rebound.

Outlook: Buy Low

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Winning a Fantasy League with Dwight Howard

The 2009-2010 season marks my ninth year playing Fantasy Basketball.

When I started, I was like everyone who starts a new Fantasy Sport – I came to the draft completely unprepared. I picked players I'd seen on TV or remembered from their college days. My #1 pick that year…Michael Jordan. Great, right? Well…that was his first year playing for the Wizards and to be kind, it was not pretty. An old and out-of-shape Jordan scored 21.5 PPG, but shot 41.2% from the field and a whopping 22.6 shots per game. Ouch!

It was during that very long season, that I learned the importance of the percentage categories in a 4x4 rotisserie league and developed a draft strategy axiom of always protecting my percentages. I realized that you can always find points and rebounds; even steals, blocks, and assists on the waiver wire. However, the problem with waiver wire players is that they rarely play enough, or shoot enough to recover from a shot-happy poor shooter.

Over the past couple of years, I've written and spoken about how Dwight Howard will destroy your free throw percentage and ultimately doom your team. To emphasize the point, last year, I played in seven rotisserie leagues and the highest a Dwight Howard team finished was seventh. The highest point value for the free-throw category was…drum roll…three!

Being a math junkie and always looking for a challenge, I decided to draft a team with Dwight Howard as my anchor players and see if I could at least finish in the money or even win a league. I determine the best chance of realizing my goal was to attempt this strategy in an auction draft format, where I could control the type of players I had on my team. I targeted this experimental draft last Tuesday in one of our Fantasy Basketball Basics leagues.

The Strategy

I came up with two approaches to solve the Dwight Howard led Fantasy Team conundrum:

  1. Concentrate on high FT% players such as Paul Pierce, Mo Williams, and Kevin Martin to cover the hole that Howard creates; or
  2. Embrace the poor FT% and essentially punt the category and try to blow-out at least six of the remaining eight categories.

I spent hours modeling the projections of players to try and cover the poor free-throw percentage of Howard, but in the end, it proved to be a riddle I could not solve. The basic problem is Howard doesn't provide enough rebounds and blocks alone to win those categories and the players that do help in those categories, also have well below league average FT% (Emeka Okafor, Tim Duncan, Andris Biedrins, etc…). The players that help in free-throw percentages don't get enough rebounds and especially blocks to help. In the end, the contrasting players cancel each other out and you wind up with a middle-of-the-pack team.

Winning the league by punting the category proved equally difficult. In order to win a 4x4 rotisserie league, you need at least 72-75 points. If you punt a category, the maximum points you can get is 85 (96 maximum minus 11 points you give up). That means you must average 10.5 points over the remaining categories to win the league. You might be able to do that in a free public league, but in a highly competitive league like our Fantasy Basketball Basics league, it's very difficult. Also, since I was playing in an auction league, Howard would cost me 25% of my budget, leaving $150 to spread across 13 other players. To think I could get another stud player like Lebron James or Dirk Nowitzki and still fill out my roster with enough quality to average 10.5 point per category was not possible.

So what did I do? I compromised and followed a little of both strategies in constructing a team that would finish in the bottom third of FT%, win rebounds, blocks, FG%, and three-points, and finish strong in points, assists, and steals. The goal was to accumulate 72 points coming out of the draft and have bench strength across the board.

The Team

For blocks and rebounding, I selected Andrew Bogut for $5, and Shawn Marion for $20, a little pricey, but Marion should have a bounce back year and contribute strong across all the categories. In addition, I also drafted Wilson Chandler, Stephen Jackson and Carmelo Anthony that will provide decent rebounding, but not many blocks. However, Howard's projected 235.0 blocks provides 40% of the total needed to win the block category and therefore, I feel comfortable exiting the draft with only Howard and Bogut as my primary shot blockers.

For three-point shooting, I decided to focus on several players who could provide 100.0-150.0 three-pointers instead of picking three-point specialists such as Jason Richardson or Rashard Lewis. These somewhat one-dimensional players will not provide enough contribution in other categories to win the league. Instead, I picked Stephen Jackson, Steve Nash, T.J. Ford, Manu Ginobili, Kelenna Azubuike, and Wilson Chandler who provide both threes and something else such as assist, steals, or points. Beside Nash, everyone else cost me less than $15.

To win the assist category, I needed a stud point guard and therefore spent $40 for Steve Nash. I also got Stephen Jackson and T.J Ford who can provide a combined 12.0 APG. Is it enough to win the category? Probably not, but this is where Howard's price tag of $55 prohibited me from drafting another top-tier point-guard.

Every player on my squad should provide over 0.7 steals per game, but nobody will contribute elite contribution. I wanted Chauncey Billups or Jason Kidd, but finances would not permit. I hope to finish in the top third in the steal category.

I was criticized during the draft for spending $39 on Carmelo Anthony. A fair criticism in most drafts, however, most of the players I selected provided contribution in multiple categories but are not elite scorers. This is very typical in the NBA. Also, scorers in an auction draft demand a premium as most owners believe you have to win that category to win the league. This is a fallacy as points are the most plentiful asset on the waiver wire. You can easily win a rotisserie league by finishing in the middle of the pack in points, unless of course you draft Howard and decimate your FT%. I needed a scorer and targeted Anthony and his 25.0+ PPG. I would have liked Antwan Jamison as well, but injuries scared me off and that led me to Stephen Jackson.

As I prepped for the draft, I realized that the key to winning with Dwight Howard was to draft an all-around stud that was less than $15. The player best fitting that description was Stephen Jackson, which I generally avoid for the same reason I avoid Howard, he'll destroy your FG%. As it turns out, he's actually a nice complement to Howard and in the end, I have a team anchored by two players I truly despise…pretty cool!

What are my chances?

While I overspent for Howard and probably paid too much for Nash and Anthony, I came close to achieving the goal based on a number of pre-season projections. In running the numbers, my team finished in the top three of a number of prognosticators pre-seasons projections, including mine. In fact, one of the projections had me finishing with four points in the FT% category.

Do the projections mean I'll win the league or even finish in the money? No, but it does mean that barring injuries or Stephen Jackson blowing a gasket, my team should compete. Plus there is word out of Orlando that Dwight Howard will shoot 75% from the line this year; even coach Stan Van Gundy confirmed the projection. If that happens, it's game, set and match. However, I won't clear the space on my mantle just yet for the trophy; maybe by Christmas though…

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Fantasy Basketball Basics Auction Draft Results

On Tuesday, October 20th, I was involved in an Auction Draft along with eleven other hard-core Fantasy Basketball Players. The competition was stiff and we're all anxious to get the season started.


 

I've posted a terrific write-up from one of our owners, Dan O'Neill. Dan goes through in detail the strategy of each of the participants, who he felt were the best picks and worst picks. He kind-of liked my team, but basically indicated I would be an also-ran. Hmmm, did I tell you that I hate Dan.


 

Enjoy everyone and thanks Dan for a great piece of work.


 


 

Rich Wilson


 

His strategy was to get a few top-notch players and fill the rest of his roster with cheap players. This strategy worked well for Rich because he made the most out of his under $10 picks.


 

The Two Highest Priced Players


 

We all know Rich hates Superman (#6 on the 2009 player rater) but he took him anyway just to what would happen. $55 is a lot of money to spend on him but he will be a monster in blocks, rebounds, points, and FG percentage. He will be Rich's kryptonite in FT percentage. Steve Nash (#8 on the 2009 player rater) is a great source of FT percentage, three pointers, and of course assists. Nash was overpaid for a little bit but not much and should prove to be a nice pick.


 

Best picks


 

TJ Ford (#88 on the 2009 player rater) at $9

87% from the line and 5.3 assists per game is not bad for $9


 

Andres Nocioni (#122 on the 2009 player rater) $1

Francisco Garcia is hurt…That translates into more minutes for Nocioni


 

Andrew Bogut (#248 on the 2009 player rater) $5

For the 60 games he will play this year he will get a double-double, shoot 57% from the floor and get a block per game. But he will kill the FT%.


 

Worst Pick


 

Carmelo Anthony (#37 on the 2009 player rater) $39

Let's begin by saying Carmelo is a better real life player than fantasy player. Carmelo scores a lot of points but it is a steep price to pay for a player not even ranked in the top 25 last year. This was his worst pick because he could have had a much better player or combination of players for $39.


 

He has a contending team but might not be enough for the championship


 

Team Cincotta


 

Toni's strategy was to go for proven players with upside. He saw value in Gilbert at $21, Marcus Camby at $16, and David Lee at $22.


 

The Two Highest Priced Players


 

Toni loved him some Deron Williams (#19 on the 2009 player rater) for $64 but he was worth the big bucks. This guy is going to have a huge season and even though he had to pay for him he got a great player in return. Tim Duncan (#34 on the 2009 player rater) at $35 is a nice value pick. He will average his usual double-double and he will help in FG percentage and blocks. He will not help the good old' FT percentage.


 

Best Picks

David Lee (#22 on the 2009 player rater) $22

He is center eligible and is a double-double machine. He will shoot over 50% from the floor and will give you 75% from the line. The only thing this guy does not do is block shots.


 

Jermaine O'Neal (#133 on the 2009 player rater) $2

2 .0 blocks per game and good percentages with the potential of him returning to the player he used to be is a nice bargain at $2.


 

Worst Picks

All of his $1 picks

I know what you are saying they are only $1 bench players but this is not the case. There was nice value at the end of the draft and Toni missed out on it big time. For $1 Mr. Cincotta could have had T-Mac, Brewer, Warrick, Nocioni, Azubuke, Harden, Frye, Yi, Courtney Lee, and Hinrich are all great options at $1.


 

He has a lot of question marks on his team and will need everything to go right for him to finish top 5


 

Wicked Blend


 

Gary's strategy was to go after one superstar and fill his roster out with young solid players that have the potential to have a breakout season.


 

The Two Highest Priced Players


 

Kevin Durant (#15 on the 2009 player rater) is a great young talent and Grant paid the price for him at $69. Durant will have a great season and should be a great all around player for Grant. It is questionable however, to pay $69 for a player that was ranked 15 on the player rater last year. Durant is going to have to step up his level of play a lot to gain ground on players like LeBron, CP3, Wade, and Kobe, all of which were almost a full 3 to 7 points ahead of Durant on the player rater. Devin Harris (#28 on the 2009 player rater) at $28 is an excellent value pick. He is on a bad team that lost Vince Carter so he should see some more points his way and will be a focal point in the offense.


 

Best Picks


 

Andrew Bynum (#135 on the 2009 player rater) $15

This guy is tearing it up in the preseason and the past 2 years has gotten off to very hot starts. His big problem is he gets injured all the time! If he stays healthy this year forget about it.


 

JR Smith (#54 on the 2009 player rater) $9

He is a bargain at $9 and can single handedly win Grant three pointers in any given week. His shooting percentage is not going to help but he shoot well from the line and adds the occasional steal.


 

Worst Pick


 

None! Grant executed every pick he had great. He had a nice mixture of young and old players and did not take many risks but at the same time chose great upside picks. The only pick that can be critiqued is paying $69 for Kevin Durant but even that is splitting hairs.


 

Dare I say? Championship Contender…


 

Gary's Players


 

Gary did not spend more than $38 on any player in this draft and the strategy worked well for him. He cleaned up in the middle of the draft and got a couple of nice steals.


 

The Two Highest Priced Players


 

His most expensive player was KG at $38 (#50 on the 2009 player rater), which is the price most owners expected him to go for. KG is coming off an injury but is showing in the preseason he is healthy. KG will be solid in percentages will aver 15 ppg and 10 rebounds and will get some blocks and steals. Al Jefferson (#98 on the 2009 player rater) is also coming off a major injury from last year but has not shown this preseason that he is healthy and ready to play. He might start off the season slow but should pick it up about a month into the season and average around 20 ppg with 10 rebounds. Jefferson will also contribute in percentages and blocks.


 

Best Picks


 

Paul Millsap (#80 on the 2009 player rater) $3

Millsap had a great season last year filling in for Boozer and even though Boozer is back Millsap is still going to see a lot of minutes on the court.


 

Vince Carter (#14 on the 2009 player rater) $16

VC was a top 15 player on the player rater last year. His numbers will decline this year because he is not in NJ but he will still be a top 30 player. He could take Hedo's role and run with it and $16 is not a bad price to pay for this.


 

Worst Pick


 

Kevin Love (#104 on the 2009 player rater) $3

This pick would make sense if it was a keeper league but it is not. Kevin Love is a great player but he is having wrist surgery and will miss some time. You cannot wait on an injured player if you want to win the championship unless it is someone like LeBron or CP3.


 

He has solid players but no stud in his lineup. He will need someone to have a breakout season for him to make some noise.


 

Buffalo Braves


 

This was a very interesting strategy by Jason. He drafted two of the top five most expensive players in the draft with LeBron and Kobe spending a whopping $145 on these two players. He had $55 for his remaining 12 roster spots. Which translates into about $5 per spot for the rest of his draft. Jason did a pretty good job of filling out the rest of his roster and it will be interesting to see how his season turns out.


 

The 2 Highest Priced Players


 

His most expensive player was LeBron at $79 (#3 on the 2009 player rater) who was actually the most expensive player in the draft. LeBron James is a freak of nature and will help in every category for Jason. Kobe Bryant (#4 on the 2009 player rater) cost a measly $66 and will also help Jason in every category much like LeBron will. These two players aren't a bad start to building a team.


 

Best Picks


 

Hakim Warrick (#152 on the 2009 player rater) $1

This might be the year Warrick finally gets a starting for the full season. We have seen what he did in his chance to start last season and he averaged around 15 ppg and 8 rebounds during this opportunity.


 

Marc Gasol (#67 on the 2009 player rater) $2

Pau's brother joined him as a nice fantasy option last year. Thabeet is not an immediate threat so Gasol should enjoy another good season for Memphis.


 

Worst Picks


 

Spending all his money on LeBron and Kobe. Unlike real basketball, two players will not win you a championship in fantasy basketball. This is a great example of why not to spend all your money on two players in a draft because the rest of your team is a bunch of question mark third and fourth tier players.


 

He has two really good players, but the rest of his lineup looks like the Clippers…


 

Ginger Ankle Snapz


 

Dan's strategy was to go for one high priced great player and then focus their money on some two-tier players with the potential to be a number one player. After they ran low on cap space they went after good young players that get playing time.


 

The Two Highest Priced Players


 

His most expensive player was Chris Bosh at $50 (#12 on the 2009 player rater). Bosh is a great player in a contract year and is valuable in this league because he is center eligible. Bosh will help with percentages, points and rebounds. Rajon Rondo (#39 on the 2009 player rater) was definitely overpriced but he will be a solid contributor in steals, assists, rebounds, and FG %. He will be a killer in FT% and does not get many 3 pointers.


 

Best Picks


 

Joe Johnson (#20 on the 2009 player rater) $30

Johnson was a top 20 player last season and is the focal point of his offense. He will score, hit threes, dish assists, and sink free throws.


 

Charlie Villanueva (#76 on the 2009 player rater) $6

This guy is injury prone but when he plays he puts up number. Detroit paid him a lot of money and he will get some serious minutes. With those minutes he could have a breakout season.


 

Worst Pick


 

Threw a category away (3-pointers) and will have to make it up through free agency and trades.


 

There team is solid but they do not show any regard for three pointers which could come back to haunt them.


 

This team is a contender


 

Jerome James


 

Dan's strategy was to spend between $15 and $30 for most of his players. He would not get any superstars but he built a deep solid team that was not weak in any category.


 

The Two Highest Priced Players


 

His most expensive player was Brook Lopez (#64 on the 2009 player rater) at $31. Brook Lopez had a great rookie season and looks like he is going to develop into a player similar to Tim Duncan with a better FT%. Lopez is going to be a huge part of the Nets offense this year and can become an elite center in fantasy basketball. Paul Pierce (#18 on the 2009 player rater) was a steal at $25 and should put up the stats we are use to seeing. Pierce will bring value to all categories and could be the steal of the draft at $25.


 

Best Picks


 

Paul Pierce (#18 on the 2009 player rater) $25

Pierce is a top 20 player and was dirt-cheap. He will contribute with over 20.0 ppg, around 1.0 or 2.0 threes per game, and good percentages from the line and field.


 

Michael Redd (#181 on the 2009 player rater) $9

Redd is coming off an injury but he scores 20 ppg when healthy and will drain a ton of threes. The Bucks do not have any other real scorers and Redd will be the main guy when he is on the court.


 

Worst Pick


 

Not spending more than $31 on any player. You have to spend money to get the best players and this team has good players but not any top players.


 

They have a lot of good players but they do not have any great players. It will be difficult for a good team to dominate in any categories and it will probably put them right in the middle of the pack.


 

This is a solid lineup but it's not a championship lineup


 

St. Louis Clark


 

Bill's strategy was similar to Rich's strategy and this was to get 3 star players and fill the rest of his roster out with cheap pretty good players. This strategy will work if Bill has a few of his cheap players outperform their cost.


 

The Two Highest Priced Players


 

His most expensive player was Danny Granger at $69 (#10 on the 2009 player rater) and is a top 5 fantasy player. Granger does it all and is a great addition to his team. Amare Stoudemire (#23 on the 2009 player rater) was $49 and he could also be a top 5 player if he could just stay on the floor. Last year he was poked in the eye and missed a lot of time which is good because it was not his surgically repaired knee.


 

Best Picks


 

Thaddeus Young $5 (#68 on the 2009 player rater)

This player is on the rise after he averaged 15.0 ppg 5.0 boards and had pretty good percentages from the floor. If Thaddeus takes a step forward this season STL will have a great player on his hands.


 

Jason Kidd $35 (#9 on the 2009 player rater)

He is no longer a kid but he does find himself in the top 10 players overall every year. He is on a great team and may not be able to shoot the ball anymore but he can still pass and rebound better than almost any PG.


 

Worst Picks


 

Bill didn't make any bad picks and got the best value he could out of this draft.


 

Contender…


 

Absolute Citron


 

Andrew had a strategy of spending a lot of money on one star and allocated the rest of his budget to a lot of players around $5 to $15 to build a solid all around lineup.


 

The Two Highest Priced Players


 

His most expensive player was Dwayne Wade (#1 on the 2009 player rater) who was the top fantasy player last year. Wade's talent is not the question; the question for Wade is his ability to stay on the court. If he stays on the court he will be a top 10 player but there is a good chance he misses around 15 games at least on any given year. The great white hope Troy Murphy (#29 on the 2009 player rater) went for $25. Murphy had career year last year and it will be tough for him to repeat. He might surprise everyone and repeat, if this happens he will be a steal at $25.


 

Best Picks


 

Zach Randolph (#141 on the 2009 player rater)

Randolph is a better fantasy player than real life player. He is a lock for 20.0 ppg and 10.0 rebounds when he gets his minutes. Hopefully he plays some defense to stay on the floor to put up his solid fantasy numbers.


 

Jason Richardson (#106 on the 2009 player rater) $12

Richardson has been bouncing around the past couple of season but may have found a home at Pheonix. J-Rich scores around 16-20 ppg and averages close to 2.0 threes per game. With the run and gun Suns those numbers could increase and his stock could rise.


 

Worst Picks


 

Too much Risk


 

Talk about injury risk. Dwayne Wade, Baron Davis, Manu Ginobili, Jason Richardson, and Troy Murphy will miss at least 10 games every year and this does not include the 10 game suspension Rashard Lewis is serving. There are way too many question marks on this team.


 

If everything falls in place watch out! But it probably won't


 

Team Lundeen


 

Gabriel had the strategy of spending his money on three second tier fantasy stars. The rest of his cap space went to proven players that were on the rise or due for a bounce back season.


 

The 2 Highest Priced Players


 

His most expensive player was Pau Gasol (#17 on the 2009 player rater) at $37. Gasol is a great player and is in a dynamic lineup with the Lakers. Gasol should average around 18.0 ppg and 9.0 rebounds with nice percentages at the center position. Chauncey Billups (#7 on the 2009 player rater) went for $35 and is a great buy. He is in an up-tempo offense and will contribute 16.0 PPG, 6.0 assists, 2.0 threes, and 90% from the line.


 

Best Picks


 

Ron Artest (#59 on the 2009 player rater) $5

He is a little crazy but he can play some ball. Artest is going to contribute a little bit in every category and might be the steal of the draft.


 

Kevin Martin (#60 on the 2009 player rater) $16

Martin can score over 20.0 ppg, hit 2.0 threes per game, and shoot around 90% from the line. If he can stay healthy he will have a fantastic season.


 

Worst Picks


 

None! Solid draft with great picks.


 

This team is not a pretender they are a contender easy


 


 

Team Gold


 

Andrew showed everyone an example of how not to do an auction draft. Andrew saved almost all of his money until the very end of the draft after all the good players were taken. He had an excess of $40 with 2 picks left and no one that good on the board.


 

The 2.0 Highest Priced Players


 

His most expensive player was Andre Iguodala (#16 on the 2009 player rater) at $36. Iggy is a very athletic player and will contribute to all categories. Gerlad Wallace (#51 on the 2009 player rater) cost him a whopping $22 and is very similar to Iguodala. Wallace is very athletic and fills the stat sheet when he is not injured.


 

Best Pick


 

Trevor Ariza (#94 on the 2009 player rater) $4

Ariza got a fat contract and is going to get a lot of playing time this year. Ariza got under 25 minutes per game last year and he should see over 30 minutes per game this year. This rise in minutes means a rise in production.


 

Worst Picks


 

Rodney Stuckey (#110 on the 2009 player rater) $20

This $20 price tag on Stuckey shows the large amount of money Andrew had toward the end of the draft.


 

I think you got my point


 

Spliffin With Griffin


 

Jeff Wang does not deserve a breakdown because he did not attend the draft. He got auto drafted so good job computer you drafted a pretty good team. We do not want to hear any excuses Wang.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

It begins and ends with point guards

Fantasy Basketball , more than any other Fantasy Sport, is about the draft. Not only do you have mathematics working against you as most typical leagues play ten players, it's hard to find undrafted players that make a huge difference throughout the year.

In baseball, there's an extensive minor league organization in which each MLB team has hundreds of players that it is developing. In football, teams carry multiple skilled players that have historically played well when a top flight starter goes out. Look at Matt Cassel vs. Tom Brady last year. Yes, Brady owners saw a decrease in production once Cassel was given the job, but Cassel still managed to be a top ten QB last year. That just doesn't happen in the NBA. The D-League, the NBA's minor league system, has developed very few NBA players and no current players in the top 50.

Since the draft is so critical, who you draft in the first five rounds will set the tone for your season. While there are countless ways to create your team and draft position does play a role, selecting an elite point guard followed by a second tier point guard in the first five rounds will provide you a great base for your team. Otherwise, you'll be employing complicated schemes to make up for the lost of assists, steals, and possible three-point shooting.

To make the point, let's take a look at the data. In this year's projections, the top ten assist leaders will provide 20% of the assist total of the top 100 players. This compares to 15% in rebounding and 14% in scoring. The bell curve clearly gets flatter with the categories of rebounding and scoring as both are more plentiful per player than assists.

The steal category follows a similar statistical profile to assist. The top ten steal leaders provide 17% of the total steals out of the top 100 ranked NBA players; slightly less than assist, but more than rebounding and scoring. Punctuating the value of the point guard, five of the top ten leaders in steals during the 2008-2009 season were point guards.

The top tier point guards for the 2009-2010 season

If you believe the calculus behind choosing an elite point guard early in your draft, the next logical question is: "Which point guard out of the 30 NBA teams should I be drafting as my primary point guard?"

  1. Chris Paul – Clearly a no-brainer pick as Paul will provide double digit assists per game (APG), 2.5-3.0 steals per game (SPG), and nearly a three-pointer a game. Throw in elite FG% and FT% and 20+ points a game, and Paul is the best Fantasy Player in the league.
  2. Deron Williams – The second point guard off the board, Deron Williams will provide double digit APG but not elite steals or three-point shooting. However, the projected 11.1 APG is hard to pass up, but by selecting Williams, you'll need to cover steals by picking up a player like Trevor Ariza late in the draft.
  3. Steve Nash – Yes he had an off season last year, but the combination of double digit APG and nearly 2.0 three-pointers, still makes Steve Nash a PG in which you can build your team around. As with Williams, you'll need to pick up steals later in the draft.
  4. Jason Kidd – Year after year, Kidd provides the statistical base to anchor your team from the point. He'll get you 8.0-9.0 APG as well as 2.0 SPG and 1.5-1.8 three-pointers. Don't worry too much about his point contribution or below average FG%. You can make up the points elsewhere and his projected 7.2 shots per game are below league average and therefore won't kill your field goal category.
  5. Rajon Rondo – Is growing into the next Jason Kidd without the three-point shooting, but therefore, better FG%. Rondo will provide you 8.5.-9.0 APG and elite steal contribution at 2.0 SPG. The only knock on his game is this below league average FT%, which will improve over time.
  6. Jose Calderon – While Rajon Rondo is growing into the next Jason Kidd, Jose Calderon is growing into Steve Nash. Calderon will provide you elite APG at 9.0-9.5 while also providing 1.0 SPG and 1.5 three-pointers. The worry with Calderon is his ability to stay on the court.
  7. Chauncey Billups –Chauncey Billups has provided elite contribution from all three categories throughout his career. This year expect 6.8-7.0 APG, 1.5-1.8 SPG, and 2.0-2.2 three-pointers. While an aging superstar, Billups still has the profile to be your primary point guard.
  8. Devin Harris – Had his breakout season last year and should provide 6.8 to 7.0 APG combined with 1.6 SPG and 1.1 three-pointers. While you'd like to see more assists per game, Harris still has the statistical profile of a top 10 pure point guard, but with the side benefit of 22.0 to 24.0 points per game.
  9. Tony Parker – A similar player to Devin Harris, Parker will provide 6.8 APG and 1.0 SPG, but will chip in 22.0 points a game.
  10. Russell Westbrook – Westbrook breaks into the top 10 this year based on his nice rookie season. You can expect 7.0 APG and 1.5-1.8 SPG along with 15.0-16.0 points per game. Solid production across the board.

In reviewing the list, there is a clear advantage in assist contribution with the first six point guards. While Harris, Parker, Billups, and Westbrook will provide a nice base, one strategy to cover assists and steals is to go back-to-back with point guards in the third, fourth, or fifth round. Assuming you've picked points and rebounds in the first couple of rounds, that strategy should prove very beneficial.

If you're fortunate enough to get one of the top three point guards, drafting a second tier guard in round five is also a winning strategy. Imagine a team of Chris Paul and Andre Miller or Deron Williams and Mike Conley. Now that's a winning strategy!

Monday, March 23, 2009

Late Pickups

As we wind down the Fantasy Basketball season, injuries are becoming a problem for our Fantasy teams. Below is a list of players that might prove valuable…

These players need to be on your team

I have a lot of love for Chris Andersen of Denver. He's averaging over 7 rebounds per game and an impressive 3.1 blocks per game over the past 30 days. That's tops in the league by over .5 blocks. Owned in only 7% of leagues, owners are looking at his 7 points per game and missing out on the goodness.

With Biendris down, Ronny Turiaf is a must pickup. He'll contribute 2-3 blocks per game and decent rebounding as well, although to-date, the rebounds have not been as plentiful as I would have anticipated.

Antonio McDyess is playing like he did when he first came into the league, averaging 13.3 ppg, 11.7 rpg, 51% from the field, and 95% from the line over the past 30 days. Why he's only owned in 38% of leagues is beyond me. I do believe McDyess can keep it up the rest of the season as his legs should be relatively fresh given his playing time early in the season.

There's not much going on in Sacramento-land, but Jason Thompson doesn't know it. Averaging 10.7 ppg, 8.1 rpg, and almost a block per game, Thompson will make a nice addition to your squad down the stretch.

I don't know the reason, but Jarrett Jack is putting up monster numbers: 19.8 ppg, 1.3 three pointers per game, 3.6 asg, while shooting 51% from the field and 85% from the line over the past 30 days. Why is he only owned in 36% of leagues????

With Devin Harris out, Keyon Dooling is the pickup, averaging 10.3 ppg and 5.8 asg over the past two weeks.

All the injuries in Washington are providing opportunities for Darius Songailia. Over the past two weeks, Songailia has averaged 11.1 ppg, 1.5 spg, while shooting 54% from the field and 93% from the line. If Caron Butler or dare we say it, Glibert Arenas ever play again this season, it will hurt Songailia's value, but I like the odds; get him into your lineups.

Thabo Sefolosha, a name that's hard to say, but he's shown the Oak City brain trust that he can play when Durant went out. Sefolosha has averaged 2.3 steals per game and 1.8 blocks per game over the past two weeks. Yes Durant is back, but something tells me that Sefolosha will continue to get minutes.

Kelenna Azubuike continues to excel in Golden State, but is only owned in 27% of leagues. Here's his line over the past two weeks: 15.4 ppg, 1.4 3PM, 5.7 rpg, shooting 50% from the field and 85% from the line. What's not to like???


Predictions coming true

Two months ago, I examined players on a per minute basis and compared them to their overall output and saw Fantasy gold surfacing. Well, for JR Smith and Brandon Wright, it's happening.

Over the past month, JR Smith has finally gotten his minutes and has rewarded his owners with 18 ppg, 2.3 three pointers, 3.9 rpg, and 3.1 apg, while shooting nice percentages. Owned in less than 50% of leagues, don't let JR slip by you.

Brandan Wright was hurt for two months with a shoulder injury, but he's back and getting playing time in Golden State. Since returning, Wright has averaged 10.2 ppg, 5.8 rpg, 1.5 bpg, and .8 spg and that's with only averaging 21 minutes per game. He's got a great pedigree from UNC and will be a player the rest of the season and an intriguing player for next year.


Pick up at your own risk

Three point specialist are the ultimate risk reward player. If they are shooting well, it's great, if not you've just killed your FG%. Three guys that are playing well over the past two weeks are Rasual Butler, Roger Mason, and Anthony Morrow.

Rasual Butler is averaging 2.0 three pointers and is the safest and most productive pick of the three.

Roger Mason is averaging 1.9 three pointers per game and is really streaky.

Anthony Morrow is really interesting. A pure jump shooter, he can go off at any time, but with Nellie at the helm, no telling what kind of playing time he'll get. Watch him carefully.


Digging deep

The remaining players should be considered for deep leagues only.

Ronald Murray – no idea what's happening here, but over the past two weeks, you have to like the line; 13.4 ppg, 1.1 spg, and 1.3 three pointers.

Renaldo Balkman – got a run when Kenyon Martin went down, but is now taking playing time from Chris Andersen. You can't ignore his double double over the past two weeks.

Steve Novak – It's dicey picking up Clippers, but Novak has hit 3.6 three pointers over the past two weeks.

Dominic McGuire – 5.5 rpg, 1.5 spg, and 0.9 bpg. Intriguing.

Nenad Kristic – He's the starting center for an NBA franchise and he's only owned in less than 3% of Fantasy clubs. I guess owners don't like the 6.5 rebounds per game and 1.1 blocks per game. 15 team leagues need to have Kristic on their team.

Friday, March 6, 2009

Analyzing Players through pure regression analysis

There are all types of methods to evaluate and compare basketball players in order to determine their relative value to a Fantasy team. One of the simplest and purest form is to group players by position and compare their output for each of the standard 8 fantasy categories. To accomplish, you need to understand two basic statistical principles:

MeanThe average value of a category when viewed over a number of players. For example: let's look at four player's rebound stats (4, 6, 7, 9). A simple calculation of 26/4 results in a 6.5 average.

Standard Deviation STDEVThe standard deviation measures the variability of the data set (in the above example – rebounds). Knowing this variability enables you to determine where the player ranks amongst his peers. Assuming normal distribution, which all the data we are exploring falls into, 68% of players will fall into 1 STDEV from the mean, 95% falls into 2 STDEV, and 99.7% falls into 3 STDEV. Therefore a player who contributes above 1 or better yet 2 STDEV from the mean in a category is providing clear domination and is exceptionally valuable.

Hopefully I haven't bored you to tears, but understanding the basic concepts will help you appreciate the underlying statistical reasons why players like Dwayne Wade are truly valuable. Yes, Wade scores lots of points, but his real value is blocks. Wade blocks 1.4 shots per game, which is 6 STDEV above the mean of .2 for shooting guards. For you math nerds, that puts Wade in the 99.9999998 percentile of players or basically, he stands alone. The next player in that category gets .4. Plus, Wade gets contribution in every category except for FT%, where he actually hurts you. Shooting guards provide the highest FT% of all groups at 81% efficiency. Wade shoots 77%, which is well within one STDEV, however, he attempts 9.4 shots per game and therefore his FT% does provide a drag on your overall percentage. He can't tank the category like Dwight Howard can, but he does hurt it. However, he more than makes up for it in all other categories and why he's ranks as the top SG in the league, by a wide margin.

Let's look at the top players around the league:


 

Point Guard

1

Chris Paul

240.28

2

Jason Kidd

158.31

3

Chauncey Billups

133.87

4

Jameer Nelson

93.69

5

Deron Williams

91.48

6

Devin Harris

85.25

7

Tony Parker

81.10

8

Mo Williams

68.66

9

Andre Miller

67.19

10

Mike Bibby

66.60

11

Nate Robinson

63.28

12

Derrick Rose

55.81

13

Jamal Crawford

52.15

14

Raymond Felton

50.35

15

Steve Nash

44.43

16

TJ Ford

34.92

17

Luke Ridnour

32.31

18

Chris Duhon

23.34

19

Kirk Hinrich

19.86

20

Rajon Rondo

16.55

Chris Paul continues to dominate point guards by being a six category contributor and only provides negative contribution in blocks and 3 point shooting, despite averaging nearly .8 per game in 3's. The problem is the average 3PM for the top 50 PG in the league is .973 per game with a standard deviation of .614. However, his total domination in steals and assist more than make up for his slightly less than average 3 point shooting. He's averaging 11 assist per game, which is 2.5 STDEV from the average among PG's in the league. Bottom line…Chris Paul is one of the three absolute Fantasy Studs playing the game today.

How are some of the young PG's doing in the league? Derrick Rose is having a great rookie campaign, led by outstanding shooting from the field. The average FG% for point guards is 43% with a total of 9.5 shots attempted per game. Rose is shooting 47% but is also taking almost 15 shots per game. From a fantasy perspective, this creates excellent FG% contribution from the PG position and can absolutely help a team. Why? You expect your PF and Centers to shoot well, but when you get high FG% contribution from a typical poor shooting position, it provides fantastic value.

Let's contrast Rose with Rajon Rondo. Rondo's a great player and an excellent source of assist, rebounds, and steals. However, even though he is shooting 50% on the year, he is only taking 9 shots per game, which is slightly below the league average for point guards. In essence, his FG% doesn't hurt your team, but it really doesn't help it all that much either. Rondo also doesn't provide much 3 point shooting or point contribution. He is scoring 11 ppg which is league average for PG's, but he's only making .3's per game, which is over one standard deviation from average. Finally, Rondo is not a very good free throw shooter, averaging 63.5% from the line while attempting 3.4 shoots. That 3.4 shots is .5 STDEV from average and is really negatively affecting his value. As Rondo grows and learns to shoot better, he will likely grow into a Jason Kidd type player, which as you can see from the list, is stillproviding tremendous value for his owners. By the way, Kidd's biggest component is his blocks per shot, which is at .6 per game. Compared to Dwight Howard, it's miniscule, however for a point guard, it's 3 STDEV from average.


 


 

Shooting Guard

1

Dwyane Wade

327.71

2

Kobe Bryant

264.95

3

Brandon Roy

158.92

4

Manu Ginobili

125.43

5

Jason Terry

123.63

6

Kevin Martin

109.73

7

Ben Gordon

100.24

8

Ray Allen

80.36

9

OJ Mayo

77.93

10

Eric Gordon

77.93

Kobe might be considered the NBA's clutch champion, Dwayne Wade however, is the best shooting guard in the league; and it's not even close. Kevin Martin is quietly have a nice year and ranks #5. This actually surprised me. His value is coming from two main areas: 3's and FT%. He's average 2.3 3's per game, which is 3 STDEV from mean. However, his FT% is over the top. He's shooting 86% from the line, but he's taking 9.7 shots per game or 3 STDEV from average. He's basically a category stud. Oh yeah, he's also scoring 20.3 points per game, which is 1.5 STDEV from mean. All good stuff. OJ Mayo is the top rookie and what I like about Mayo is his consistency. Besides blocks, which only Wade contributes in the SG group, Mayo provides positive contribution in each category. Mayo is only going to get better and should be one of the top 5 shooting guards taken next year.


 

Forwards

1

LeBron James

225.88

2

Kevin Durant

205.78

3

Danny Granger

196.26

4

Amare Stoudemire

176.83

5

Dirk Nowitzki

170.25

6

Chris Bosh

138.87

7

David West

125.11

8

Kevin Garnett

118.40

9

Caron Butler

110.89

10

Gerald Wallace

110.41

No surprise here – Lebron is the King. What might be surprising is who's in #2 – Kevin Durant. Yes, Durant is eligible in most leagues at both SG and SF, but who are we kidding, he's 6'10'' – he's forward. Durant is having his breakout year with a stat line somewhat, stress the somewhat, comparable to Lebron (1.4 to 1.5 3PM's, 6.6 rebounds to 7.3, 1.3 to 1.7 steals, .8 to 1.2 blocks, and 26 to 28.3 points). It breaks down in assist where Lebron cleans up at 7.1 vs. 3.0. However, Durant's sneaky value over Lebron comes from his free throw percentage. Durant is shooting 86% to Lebron's 77%, both are over the Forward average of 76%, but Durant's 7.1 attempts per game is the accelerator, which is 2.5 STDEV above mean. Folks, Durant is here to stay and is likely a first round draft pick next year.

Danny Granger is also having an excellent season this year and ranks #3. The only blemish on his resume is a below average FG% (43.4 vs. a Forward average of 46.2). However, look at his blocks per game average of 1.5. That's 3 STDEV above mean for forwards. That's even 1 STDEV above mean for centers. Granger is one of the most valuable shoot blockers in the league and it's one of the reasons for his dramatically increased value. If your all about points, Granger also gets you 25 points per game. With Durant, I think Granger moves into the first round next year.


 

Centers

1

Yao Ming

180.52

2

Mehmet Okur

142.96

3

Pau Gasol

138.68

4

Dwight Howard

133.43

5

Tim Duncan

124.11

6

Nene

122.75

7

Marcus Camby

112.34

8

Troy Murphy

110.31

9

Al Jefferson

97.91

10

Andris Biedrins

92.07

I've saved the best for last and boy does this one have a surprise on it. Firstly, we must discuss the tremendous year that both Yao Ming and Paul Gasol are having.

Ming is averaging 19.8 ppg, 1.8 blocks, and 9.6 rebounds with outstanding percentages (55% from the field and 87% from the line). The 87% free throw percentage represents the 15 best season ever by a center, over the past 30 years. For you history buffs, the best FT% over the course of an 82 game season was turned in by Mike Giminski in 1987; an amazing 93.8%. That same year, Jack Sikma made 321 out of 348 attempts for a 92.2% accuracy. Compare this 87% with the league average of 63.7% and you can quickly see how Ming can provide domination of that category. At the draft table, you usually try and grab Chauncey Billups or Ray Allen to make up for the lousy percentage your center will contribute. With Ming, you don't need to do that; which is a huge advantage. Gasol is also having an outstanding year with 18.5 ppg, 9.5 rpg, and .9 bpg and terrific percentages. However, Gasol also adds nice assist at the center position; handing out 3.6 assist per game. That's second only to Tim Ducan's 3.8 and 3 STDEV's over mean.

Ok, let's go to Mr. #2, Mehmet Okur. I will admit that I've never had Okur on any fantasy team, particularly because I'm biased. I like my centers to pull down double digit points and rebounds, at least 1.5 blocks per game, and shoot well over 50% from the field and at least 70% from the line – guys like Yao Ming, Al Jefferson, Pau Gasol, and Tim Duncan (I do recognize that Duncan is shooting slightly below 70% and Gasol is off on his shot blocking). But, Okur and Troy Murphy are leading the way for a brand new type of centers, and the Fantasy Basketball community needs to take notice. Okur and Murphy are trading blocks for three point shooting and steals.

Let's take a look: Okur is averaging 18.2 ppg, 8.1 rpg, and .7 blocks per game. By the way, the .7 blocks per game is only slightly off the league average for centers (.957). His percentages are outstanding: 50% from the field and 84% from the line, while averaging 5 attempts a game. But look at his three point shooting and steals: 1.3 three pointers a game and .8 steals. The league average for centers is .116 for 3's and .449 for steals - Okur is over 3 STDEV for 3 point shooting and 2 STDEV for steals. Troy Murphy is over 5 STDEV for 3 point shooting! Still not convinced???? If we eliminate Okur's three point prowess, he does drop in the ratings to number 9; just ahead of Al Jefferson. That's Al Jefferson, considered the best young center in the league.

I will admit that if you have Okur or Murphy on your team, you do need to get blocks from somewhere. However, that somewhere can be a PF or a shot blocking specialist like Chris Andersen or Ronny Turiaf. Also, having these two guys on your team allows you to not worry as much during the draft landing the big traditional center and focus on PG or PF and grab Okur and Murphy later.

For a complete list of my updated rankings, send me an email and I'll be glad to send it out. As always your feedback is welcome.