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REPORTS--#21 THROUGH #40


Saturday, December 22, 2007

The Trailblazers Defeat the Nuggets, 99-96, Despite Huge Carmelo Anthony and Allen Iverson Games

The night before, versus the Rockets, was a game that the Nuggets should have won easily, but it was as difficult a win as you will see. In this game, you had the same context, as it should have been an easy win for the Portland Trailblazers, but they made life overly difficult for themselves just as the Nuggets did to themselves the night before. But Portland did eventually beat the Nuggets, 99-96. Four injuries to two power forwards and two centers left the Nuggets with just one power forward and one center available. Plus, the Nuggets were playing on back to back nights on the road, whereas the Trailblazers were rested. But the Nuggets, with some great Iverson shooting, led 52-50 at the half. And they led 76-69 after 3 quarters, as the Trailblazers failed to take full advantage of the devastation to the Nuggets front court, by not taking it into the paint enough.

Trailblazers coach Nate McMillan, whose team has now won 10 straight and turned a poor start completely around, gets high marks for player development and rotation, but low marks in this game for guiding his team in shot selection in particular and offense in general. The Trailblazers over relied on jump shooting and chose not to go to the hoop as much as they could and should have. Had they played all their cards right, they could have just about routed the Nuggets in this game. Aside from Melo, who was spectacular, and A.I., who was outstanding, the Nuggets had no one playing very well in this game.

In case you can’t believe how so many front court players could be out at once, here is the run down of them. Denver center Marcus Camby did not play because of a mid-back bruise he suffered against the Rockets. The Nuggets started Jelani McCoy at center instead. McCoy, resigned with the Nuggets on Friday. He played in five games this season before he was waived just two days earlier, on Wednesday. Starting PF Kenyon Martin was inactive due to a right hamstring strain he suffered in the 2nd quarter of the Rockets game the night before this game. The second string power forward Nene remained out. He has begun to participate in full practices after missing the past six weeks due to a torn ulnar collateral ligament in his left thumb suffered at Boston on November 7. Finally, reserve Denver center Steven Hunter remained sidelined while recovering from successful November 16 arthroscopic surgery on his right knee.

The Nuggets quickly lost their 7 point lead as the 4th quarter got underway. Travis Outlaw hit two jump shots and PG Steve Blake scored his only points of the game, a 3-pointer, in the first 1:15 of the quarter, while Iverson missed a short jumper and PG Chucky Atkins, back from a 7-weeks start of the season injury layoff for his second game, missed a long 2-pointer. So now it was 76-76.

For Denver, the next few minutes were dominated by Chucky Atkins misses and Bobby Jones fouls, while Travis Outlaw and James Jones were knocking down a few shots for Portland. With 8:13 left, the Trailblazers were leading in the quarter 16-2 and leading in the game 85-78. Then the Trailblazers got really carried away with the jump shooting, as James Jones, Jarrett Jack, and Travis Outlaw all missed long range jumpers on three straight plays. Carmelo Anthony used this opportunity to hit a couple short jumpers and get the Nuggets right back into contention for the upset special. It was 85-84 with 6:13 left.

Channing Frye then made a layup, while Chucky Atkins missed yet another jumper. Then Carmelo Anthony and Allen Iverson answered LaMarcus Aldridge and Brandon Roy, so it was 92-90 Trailblazers with 3:16 to go. Following a Portland turnover, Najera tipped in a little Iverson floater to tie the score. Then Brandon Roy missed a very short jumper, but Carmelo Anthony had his short jumper blocked by SF Travis Outlaw, in what was the first of 3 super key Trailblazer blocks. It was 92-92 with 2:06 left.

Then Outlaw made a very short jumper, but Anthony responded with a layup for 94-94 with 1:27 left. Then, with the game on the line, neither Brandon Roy nor Allen Iverson could make clutch shots. Carmelo Anthony was then whistled for a foul on James Jones, who sunk 1 of 2 free throws for 95-94 Trailblazers with 36 seconds left. Following a full Denver timeout, Brandon Roy blocked Carmelo Anthony’s 11-footer, which was the second of the three crucial late in the game blocks.

Kleiza intentionally fouled Travis Outlaw with 16 seconds left, and Outlaw made both free throws, for 97-94 Trailblazers. Iverson laid it in with 6 seconds left. so now it was 97-96 Trailblazers. The Nuggets should definitely have insisted on a 3-point attempt in that situation, so you had bad tactics there. Jarrett Jack made both free throws off the ensuing intentional foul. With less than a second left, Travis Outlaw made the third of three late clutch blocks for the Trailblazers, as he disrupted the Linas Kleiza 3-pointer attempt for the tie. So the final score was 99-96 Trailblazers, and it was very nice of them not to hand the Nuggets another rout, or at least a thrashing, similar to the 116-105 thumping they put on the Nuggets in Denver just 5 days earlier.

Iverson and Carmelo Anthony certainly put the Nuggets in position for the upset win, but as is so often the case when the Nuggets lose, there was almost no one to supplement their great offensive games. J.R. Smith, who is roughly half in and half out of the huge George Karl doghouse these days, was held to just 9 minutes, and made 1/3 threes during this limited time. SF Bobby Jones showed tremendous offensive potential in early games to go along with his known defensive quickness and cover skills. But he inevitably landed in the doghouse when his youthful exuberance produced a few too many unwise shots and blown covers for the fragile Nuggets’ Coach, whose nerves are apparently made of flimsy tissue paper.

The 4 front court injuries were the equivalent of putting a gun to Karl’s head and forcing him to play Jones. But in typical Karl fashion, he played Jones for relatively limited time under the extreme circumstances, 14 minutes. Jones, who like all doghouse players was not going to automatically get the ball from Iverson, Melo, or Anthony Carter even when open, used his limited minutes to try to reestablish his core defensive credentials, which he was not able to do. Jones’ play had bench rust all over it, as he was called for 4 personal fouls and committed 2 turnovers while getting only 2 rebounds.

One thing you have to understand about cheating reserves out of playing time when they are producing is that they will come back to cheat you later when you have no choice but to go to them. You reap what you sow. Just like last season when Karl sowed discord and bad vibes into J.R. Smith, and ended up reaping almost nothing from him when the fate of the team for the season was being decided, Karl this season is sowing lack of confidence and lack of real game experience for Bobby Jones, and you can already see that Jones’ performance is sinking into the muck, compared with what it was in the first few weeks of the season, which was promising to say the least. Or, to put it another way, George Karl is the ultimate self-fulfilling prophesy coach. He way too quickly loses confidence in many a reserve player, benches them, and then is stuck with players who themselves have lost confidence and, even more to the point, have lost the quick defensive instincts and expert shooting touch under pressure that can come only from adequate playing time in real games.

At the very least, an NBA coach must “keep up with the Jones’s,” the Coaches of the top teams, with respect to keeping the reserves as ready to perform as possible, by giving them critical playing time on a regular basis. Instead of keeping up with the Jones’s, Karl is busy limiting the potential of the Jones he has on his team.

ALERT STATUS PROBLEMS
As of December 22, 2007

The Nuggets are under an unusually dangerous and damaging alert status, so the following update is provided.

INJURIES & SUSPENSIONS
1. Marcus Camby injury 19 points
2. Kenyon Martin injury 13 Points
1. Nene injury 9 Points
2. Steven Hunter injury 2 Points

UNEXPECTED STAR PLAYER PERFORMANCE PROBLEMS
None

BAD OR INADEQUATE COACHING
1. George Karl over relies on his starters and won’t play the non-starters enough: 5-20 Points. The severity varies depending on the circumstances, mainly Karl’s beliefs and moods, and whether the other team is playing well enough to take advantage of the Nuggets playing with not enough breathers, with too many fouls, and so forth. Karl will normally be in the 5-15 range, but it could spike to as much as 20 in the event of the benching of a major player such as Kenyon Martin. The current points reported are for the use, or should I say the misuse, of the reserves for the most recent games, with the most weight being given to the game being reported on here. The bad use of reserves score for this game is 12 points.

2. Lack of adequate offensive schemes: 8 Points. This would be up to 18 points, except that Iverson reduces the damage. Another way of describing this is that the team has failed to decide whether it wants Melo alone, Iverson alone, Melo and Iverson together, or neither of them to be firstly responsible for scoring enough points to keep the Nuggets in the game. If it were neither, I call the name of that strategy the "share the wealth" strategy.

INTENSITY, HUSTLE, AND HEART
1. The Nugget’s intensity, hustle and heart is lacking: 0 Points. It’s not anywhere near bad as some fans think it is.

TOTAL PROBLEM POINTS: 63, which constitutes ORANGE ALERT.

ORANGE ALERT (55-74): Moderate damage is occurring to the season. The entire season is under serious threat, and you can just about forget about beating quality teams. About 3/4 of all wins against good teams will now be losses. Beating mid-level teams is much more difficult ORANGE ALERT. About 1/2 of games against mid-level teams that would have been won will be lost under this alert. Even poor teams can often beat an otherwise good team that is under this alert. Close to 1/4 of games against low level teams that would have been won will be lost under this alert. A good team has been reduced to being a mid-level team, at best, when it is under this alert.

RESERVE WATCH

Number of Players Who Played at Least 6 Minutes: Trailblazers 9 Nuggets 9
Number of Players Who Played at Least 10 Minutes: Trailblazers 9 Nuggets 8

This feature is under development, and it will be expanded. The complications involved explain why (a) there are no formal statistics anywhere on the internet on the subject of how much non-starters contribute to different teams and (b) why coaches are not compared statistically the way players are. There are a lot of variables that come into the use of reserves that interfere with the objective of judging their use. Statisticians call this “statistical noise,” and if you have a substantial amount of it, then what you are trying to do with your statistics becomes very difficult or next to impossible.

GEORGE KARL CONFIDENCE IN HIS TEAM RATING (Scale of 0 to 10)
1.0 He has absconded to Mexico with Najera’s wife.

ESPN PLAYER RATINGS FOR THIS GAME:
You can tell how well they played at a glance. Of the advanced statistics I have seen on the internet, this one seems to have the best balance between offense and defense. Many other advanced statistics are biased in favor of good defenders, and do not reflect the heavy importance of offense in basketball. Here is the formula for the ESPN rating of a player:

Points + Rebounds + 1.4*Assists + Steals + 1.4*Blocks - .7*Turnovers + # of Field Goals Made +1/2*# of 3-pointers Made - .8*# of Missed Field Goals - .8*# of Missed Free Throws + .25 *# of Free Throws Made

All players on each team who played at least 5 minutes are shown. The number after “game,” is how well the player did in this game, whereas the number after “season” is that player’s overall average for the entire season.

NUGGETS
Carmelo Anthony: Game 51.9 Season 37.5
Allen Iverson: Game 44.3 Season 41.3
Anthony Carter: Game 22.9 Season 19.4
Linas Kleiza: Game 16.9 Season 17.0
Eduardo Najera: Game 11.9 Season 14.3
Jelani McCoy: Game 7.0 Season 2.4
J.R. Smith: Game 5.6 Season 15.1
Chucky Atkins: Game 1.7 Season 8.7
Bobby Jones: Game -0.2 Season 5.6

Yakhouba Diawara: Did Not Play-Coach’s Decision:
Von Wafer: Did Not Play-Coach's Decision

Marcus Camby: Did Not Play-Injury
Kenyon Martin: Did Not Play-Injury
Nene: Did Not Play-Injury
Steven Hunter: Did Not Play-Injury

TRAILBLAZERS
LaMarcus Aldridge: Game 32.8 Season 29.3
Martell Webster: Game 31.0 Season 18.6
Brandon Roy: Game 24.1 Season 31.8
Channing Frye: Game 23.2 Season 13.4
Travis Outlaw: Game 22.1 Season 20.1
James Jones: Game 18.4 Season 15.5
Steve Blake: Game 16.5 Season 16.8
Jarrett Jack: Game 9.0 Season 16.4
Joel Przybilla: Game 7.6 Season 14.4

NOTE: these stats do not correct for the big differences in playing times. Players with small minutes would get a higher rating if they had more minutes.

OBSERVATIONS ON RATINGS:
The injuries to Camby, Kenyon Martin, and Nene have led to a game like this, with Allen Iverson and Carmelo Anthony having to perform even better than usual for the Nuggets to even have a chance to win. And when there are this many injuries, you can also clearly see George Karl’s inability to develop and play reserve players in stark relief. Both J.R. Smith and Bobby Jones, the two players Karl has cheated the most for playing time, were miserable in this game, unable to create or buy confidence for themselves, when their Coach has none for them, out of thin air, and unable to shake off the bench rust in the instincts and the shooting touch.
Steve Blake remains one of the most overrated players in pro basketball. Anthony Carter has outplayed Blake this season, even though Blake is the multi-millionaire starter, whereas Carter was supposed to be a stop gap measure until Atkins returned for the Nuggets. But in this game, Atkins was a no show, so Karl will now undoubtedly continue to start and give more minutes to Carter over Atkins.

In the worst case scenario, this will get another self-fulfilling prophesy going, with Karl thinking Carter is better for the Nuggets than Atkins. The more Atkins is kept out of the starting lineup and out of the heart of the Denver offense, the more he might indeed appear to be inferior to Carter, who is now at the heart of the Denver offense, and so the more Atkins, as a kind of outsider, might end up with disaster games like this one. Then, when the Nuggets venture into the playoffs, they will have a no name PG like Anthony Carter, with no playoff experience at all, who is supposed to play the point against teams like the Mavericks and the Spurs. Those teams will utterly destroy Carter, resulting in the almost complete shutdown of the Nugget’s offense for long stretches. Such is the fate that awaits the Nuggets unless Karl comes to his senses.

NUGGETS REAL PLAYER RATINGS--EXPLANATION
A Great New Feature from Nuggets 1

The straight up player rankings are obviously heavily affected by how many playing minutes the various players get. With many teams, you can rely on the coach to give his various players roughly the playing time that makes the most sense for his team. Unfortunately, you can not rely on George Karl to award playing time in just about the best way possible. He brings other factors besides actual performance into his rotation decisions. Therefore, it makes good sense to introduce a new and very important statistic that Nuggets 1 will call the Real Per Minute Player Rating which, as the name implies, is the gross ESPN player rating divided by the number of minutes. The statistic is called Real Player Rating for short.

This statistic allows everyone to see whether or not players who play only a small number of minutes are doing better than their low gross rating will indicate. At the same time, it will allow everyone to see whether players with a lot of minutes are playing worse than, as well as, or better than their gross rating shows. This is another big improvement in the Nuggets 1 never ending quest to give readers total information about the Nuggets. This statistic allows the reader, at a glance, to see exactly how well each player is doing without regard to playing time. So it gives you pure knowledge not available anywhere else..

SCALE FOR THE REAL PLAYER RATINGS
1.60 More Superstar Performance beyond the Michael Jordan Level
1.40 1.60 Superstar Performance-Michael Jordan Level
1.20 1.40 Superstar Performance
1.00 1.20 Star Performance
0.90 1.00 Outstanding Game
0.80 0.90 Very Good Game
0.70 0.80 Good Game
0.60 0.70 Alright Game
0.50 0.60 Mediocre Game
0.40 0.50 Poor Game
0.30 0.40 Very Poor Game
0.20 0.30 Near Disaster
Less 0.20 Total Disaster

NUGGETS-TRAILBLAZERS REAL PLAYER RATINGS
All players who played 5 minutes or more are included. Any player who played only 5-9 minutes is noted.

1. Carmelo Anthony, Den 1.298
2. Channing Frye, Por 1.160
3. Martell Webster, Por 1.148
4. LaMarcus Aldridge, Por 0.994
5. Allen Iverson, Den 0.984
6. Travis Outlaw, Por 0.921
7. James Jones, Por 0.681
8. Anthony Carter, Den 0.654
9. Steve Blake, Por 0.635
10. Brandon Roy, Por 0.634
11. J.R. Smith, Den 0.622 Note: Smith played only 9 minutes.
12. Joel Przybilla, Por 0.585
13. Linas Kleiza, Den 0.497
14. Eduardo Najera, Den 0.496
15. Jelani McCoy, Den 0.389
16. Jarrett Jack, Por 0.321
17. Chucky Atkins, Den 0.081
18. Bobby Jones, Den -0.014

OBSERVATIONS ON THE NUGGETS-TRAILBLAZERS REAL PLAYER RATINGS
You can see from this that J.R. Smith actually was half way decent in limited playing time. You can also see that Chucky Atkins had the kind of game that will have Anthony Carter starting for a long time to come, which starts to get one thinking of a nightmare scenario of Carter starting against Tony Parker or Steve Nash in the playoffs. That would not be a very good result for the Nuggets, I can assure you.

C-F Channing Frye, F-G Martell Webster, and C-F LaMarcus Aldridge all took advantage of the too young Kleiza, the too out of practice Jelani McCoy, and the too overrated Eduardo Najera. In a game like this, you can clearly see the limitations of Eduardo Najera at the power forward position in a high pressure situation. Najera might be alright in conjunction with a Marcus Camby or a Kenyon Martin, but when he is supposed to be the main man defensively, he is not good enough to slow down the primary power forwards and centers of the other team. On the other hand, Najera has added value to his generous playing time this year by becoming a scoring weapon for the Nuggets from beyond the arc. But it is way to early to say whether he will be able to hit threes in the playoffs, or whether he will just be another playoff shooting bust, similar to Linas Kleiza and J.R. Smith in the Spurs playoff series.

NUGGET’S PLUS—MINUS
This tells you how the score changed while a player was on the court. All Nuggets who played at least 6 minutes are shown.

Anthony Carter: +13
Carmelo Anthony: +4
J.R. Smith: +2
Eduardo Najera: +0
Jelani McCoy: -1
Linas Kleiza: -5
Allen Iverson: -5
Bobby Jones: -11
Chucky Atkins: -12

OBSERVATIONS ON PLUS—MINUS
Bobby Jones and Chucky Atkins were eaten alive. Najera was unable to produce a net benefit for the Nuggets, though it would have made more sense to start him at the 4-spot rather than Kleiza. Against the relatively soft Portland defense, Anthony Carter became the real point guard, over Allen Iverson, instead of the point guard on paper only, which he frequently is.

NUGGETS MADE WHAT?
All Nuggets who played at least 6 minutes are shown.

Jelani McCoy played 18 minutes and was 1/1 for 2 points, and he made 4 rebounds and 1 block.

Bobby Jones played 14 minutes and was 0/1 for 0 points, and he made 2 rebounds.

Eduardo Najera played 24 minutes and was 2/3 and 0/1 on 3’s for 4 points, and he made 5 rebounds, 1 assist, and 1 steal.

Anthony Carter played 35 minutes and was 2/3 and 1/1 on 3’s for 5 points, and he made 9 assists, and 5 rebounds.

Chucky Atkins played 21 minutes and was 1/8 and 1/5 on 3’s for 3 points, and he made 2 assists.

Linas Kleiza played 34 minutes and was 4/8, 1/4 on 3’s, and 2/4 from the line for 11 points, and he made 5 rebounds and 1 assist.

J.R. Smith played 9 minutes and was 1/3 on 3’s for 3 points, and he made 2 rebounds and 1 assist. Smith didn’t produce much, but since he played only 9 minutes, his real player game rating came out in the “alright” range.

Carmelo Anthony played for most of the game, 40 minutes, and he was 14/26, 0/1 on 3’s, and 6/9 from the line for 34 points, and he made 12 rebounds, 1 assist, and 1 steal.

Allen Iverson played for virtually the whole game, 45 minutes, and was 11/26, 1/5 on 3’s, and 11/12 from the line for 34 points, and he made 4 rebounds, 3 assists, and 2 steals.

NEXT UP
The next game will be Sunday, December 23 in Sacramento to play the Kings at 7 pm mountain time. Neither the Nuggets nor the Kings will be playing on back to back nights.

Friday, December 21, 2007

Carmelo Anthony and Allen Iverson Lead the Nuggets to a Double Overtime Win Over the Rockets 112-111

In a struggle of a game that should have been an easy win for the Nuggets, it was instead an extremely difficult win and almost a loss. In double overtime, the Nuggets defeated the Houston Rockets 112-111. The Nuggets had the home court advantage. Also, the Rockets were playing on back to back nights, while the Nuggets were playing after an unusually long break of 3 nights off. And Houston was playing without their top scorer, Tracy McGrady. Finally, the Rockets just could not hit a lot of shots in this game. They ended up with a total of 40/102 made shots, or .402, which is generally not good enough to get a win or an overtime.

It could have been a truly classic game had the Rockets superstar tandem of Yao Ming and McGrady been in to battle the Nugget’s superstar tandem of Allen Iverson and Carmelo Anthony. But with McGrady out, the Rockets playing on the road, playing without rest, and missing too many shots, it should have been an easy victory for the Nuggets.

Why was it so difficult? This time, it was not all George Karl’s fault, though, as usual, he is to blame for not allowing the Nuggets 5th or 6th best player, J.R. Smith, to play at all. And since both Eduardo Najera and especially Linas Kleiza played poorly, this was another game tailor made for Bobby Jones to contribute to, but once George Karl has a player in bench mode, it simply doesn’t matter to what degree that player might be able to improve on someone else’s poor play in a particular game. If you’re benched under George Karl, you are not going to play unless hell freezes over.

But it wasn’t all Karl’s fault. The Nuggets were as dependent on two players to score as you can get in professional basketball. The entire Denver front court besides Melo was either injured, benched, or mostly unable to score. Keep in mind that this was a double overtime game when you consider the following small scoring outputs. Eduardo Najera scored just 7 points on 2/10 shooting. Linas Kleiza scored just 3 points on 1/3 shooting. Kenyon Martin scored just 8 points on 2/11 shooting. And Marcus Camby scored just 2 points on 1/7 shooting. Combined, every Nuggets power forward and center other than Anthony scored only 20 points on miserable 6/31 shooting.

So to win, both Iverson and Melo had to have big games, meaning that Melo would have to come out of his shooting and scoring slump. But Melo’s slump only got worse in the first half. He was just 2/17 from the field and just 4/9 from the line in the 1st half, although he did make 9 rebounds. But in the second half, he stormed back to be even better than the Carmelo Anthony all Nuggets fans have come to rely on for scoring in general and especially jump shot scoring when the paint is clogged. In the third quarter alone, Anthony was 8/8 for 15 points, and he made 2 steals, an assist, and a block. After coming back down to Earth in the 4th quarter, with a comparatively small 8 points on 2/6 shooting and 4/4 from the line, Melo was largely out of the offensive picture again. He took only 1 shot from the field in the 10 minutes of overtime and made it. When you add 3 of 4 made free throws, he scored 5 points in the 10 minutes of overtime.

Also needed for the Nuggets to even just barely beat the Rockets would be more than just Anthony Carter at the point. Just in time to the rescue was Chucky Atkins, who was making his first appearance as a Nugget. Atkins had been out with a groin injury since just before the season started. Although Carter has played relatively well for the Nuggets this year, and better than most expected, it remains true that Atkins is the better player. But naturally, as I predicted, Karl refused to start the returning Atkins. In regulation time, Carter played 33 ½ minutes, while Atkins played 16 minutes. This is roughly opposite what the allocation should have been. It seems to me that George Karl right now is one of only a very few people who believe that Anthony Carter is a better player than Chucky Atkins. Although ironically it was an Anthony Carter floater that won it for the Nuggets at the end of the second overtime, Chucky Atkins led the Nuggets in scoring during the overtimes, and made two clutch shots in the second overtime, one of which was a three.

Meanwhile, the Rockets, even without Tracy McGrady, were able to fight the Nuggets into two overtimes due to the giant Yao Ming, who scored 26 points and made 19 rebounds, which is just another day at the office for him, and to 3 other players who came up with mammoth games: Luther Head, Rafer Alston, and Bonzi Wells. Luther Head played so well in place of Tracy McGrady that it was practically like having McGrady himself out there. Head is a 3rd year SG and is not having a particularly great year. It’s just that the Nuggets in general and Iverson in particular did not guard him very well and he made 5 of 10 threes on the perimeter. Head must have had his best game of the season in this one. Veteran starting PG Rafer Alston, in his 9th year, made his mark by making 10 assists, 3 steals, and 7 rebounds, to go along with his 18 points on 7/18 shooting. 7 rebounds are huge for a point guard. Reserve G-F Bonzi Wells is playing just a little bit better than last year, and he’s average at best, but he made several fantastic cuts toward the basket that allowed a teammate, usually Yao Ming, to give him a pass inside for the easy score. Wells ended up with 8 rebounds, 2 steals, 1 assist, and 1 block to go along with his 17 points on 7/15 shooting. Wells productivity per minute was astounding.

So these four Rockets, Ming, Head, Alston, and Wells, all played brilliantly, but Allen Iverson and Carmelo Anthony are so good at what they do that they were able to carry the Nuggets to the win mostly by themselves, despite the usual poor coaching and the unusual collapse of inside scoring. The Nuggets ended up with just 30 points in the paint, whereas the Rockets scored 42 in the paint. Overall shooting was .402 to .366 in favor of the Rockets. The Rockets made 12/34 threes, or 35.5% of them, whereas the Nuggets made just 5/20 of theirs, or 25.0%. The Nuggets won the rebounding by just a little, and the assisting was roughly equivalent.

So the good news here is that Anthony emerged from his shooting slump, made a career high 16 rebounds, and, even more importantly, broke free from enough double teams and moved around and got Iverson’s attention enough to get the ball enough times to be able to be Iverson’s full partner in the task of beating the Rockets. Despite how ridiculously difficult the win was, there was a very good feeling about how Melo and Iverson both had huge games for a change.

As Carmelo Anthony’s slump was at its worse at the end of the 1st half of this game, he kept smiling with each missed shot. The cable broadcast commentator, Doug Collins, said that good players do this to try to hide how frustrated they are. I don’t think Melo was smiling to hide how frustrated he was, I think he was smiling because he loves basketball and smiles often during games. He was smiling more than usual because he knew that his slump was just a temporary thing and not worth getting all upset about. And he was smiling because he was thinking about how much fun it was going to be to be to eventually catch up with Allen Iverson and be again, at the least, the co-leader of the Nugget’s offense. Had he been smiling to hide something, he would not have exploded in the 2nd half.

Smiling when things are bad is much better than getting upset. Carmelo Anthony is mostly a simple player who doesn’t understand how, why, and to what extent some strategies, tactics, and coaches are better than others. But any great player who can, unlike most other players, smile at the darkest hour, when the bad stuff has accumulated to it’s highest level, is a player I would want on my team more than somebody who gets all upset and starts pointing fingers and spreading blame around. We Nuggets fans are pitiful as we keep following an extremely talented team that logic, however, tells us can not possibly win in the playoffs. Maybe we should do what Carmelo Anthony does when times are tough: just smile and think about how, win or lose, slump or no slump, we really are one of the very best teams in basketball. Smiling enough will make us just about as happy as we would be if we won our true fair share.

ALERT STATUS PROBLEMS
As of December 21, 2007

The Nuggets are under an unusually dangerous and damaging alert status, so the following update is provided.

INJURIES & SUSPENSIONS
1. Nene injury 9 Points
2. Steven Hunter injury 3 Points
3. Kenyon Martin during the game injury 8 Points

UNEXPECTED STAR PLAYER PERFORMANCE PROBLEMS
1. Carmelo Anthony’s jump shooting is a little off from recent years and he is still inconsistent in rebounding. Making matters worse, George Karl and Allen Iverson have decided that it is acceptable that Melo be removed from the heart of the Nugget’s offense, and that he frequently be little more than a decoy, so that the rest of the Nuggets on the court can run a 4 on 3 offense and hope that Iverson can keep them in the game. The combination of Melo’s accuracy drop off from last year, together with his partial marginalization, makes for a very substantial and worsening star player performance problem. 2 Points.

2. Inability of Nuggets forwards to consistently give Camby enough rebounding and defending support inside: 2 Points

BAD OR INADEQUATE COACHING
1. George Karl over relies on his starters and won’t play the non-starters enough: 5-20 Points. The severity varies depending on the circumstances, mainly Karl’s beliefs and moods, and whether the other team is playing well enough to take advantage of the Nuggets playing with not enough breathers, with too many fouls, and so forth. Karl will normally be in the 5-15 range, but it could spike to as much as 20 in the event of the benching of a major player such as Kenyon Martin. The current points reported are for the use, or should I say the misuse, of the reserves for the most recent games, with the most weight being given to the game being reported on here. The bad use of reserves score for this game is 12 points.

2. Lack of adequate offensive schemes: 8 Points. This would be up to 18 points, except that Iverson reduces the damage. Another way of describing this is that the team has failed to decide whether it wants Melo alone, Iverson alone, Melo and Iverson together, or neither of them to be firstly responsible for scoring enough points to keep the Nuggets in the game. If it were neither, I call the name of that strategy the "share the wealth" strategy.

INTENSITY, HUSTLE, AND HEART
1. The Nugget’s intensity, hustle and heart is lacking: 0 Points. It’s not anywhere near bad as some fans think it is.

TOTAL PROBLEM POINTS: 44, which constitutes YELLOW ALERT.

YELLOW ALERT (40-54): Minor damage is occurring to the season. The entire season is under medium threat. Beating quality teams is much more difficult and will be pretty rare. About 1/2 of all wins against good teams will now be losses. Beating mid-level teams is a little more difficult. About 1/4 of games that would be wins against mid-level teams will now be losses. Beating low level teams is still relatively easy, but no longer almost a sure bet. A good team like the Nuggets has become in between a good team and a mid-level team when it is under this alert.

RESERVE WATCH

Number of Players Who Played at Least 6 Minutes: Rockets 9 Nuggets 8
Number of Players Who Played at Least 10 Minutes: Rockets 8 Nuggets 8

This feature is under development, and it will be expanded. The complications involved explain why (a) there are no formal statistics anywhere on the internet on the subject of how much non-starters contribute to different teams and (b) why coaches are not compared statistically the way players are. There are a lot of variables that come into the use of reserves that interfere with the objective of judging their use. Statisticians call this “statistical noise,” and if you have a substantial amount of it, then what you are trying to do with your statistics becomes very difficult or next to impossible.

GEORGE KARL CONFIDENCE IN HIS TEAM RATING (Scale of 0 to 10)
1.0 He has absconded to Mexico with Najera’s wife.

ESPN PLAYER RATINGS FOR THIS GAME:
You can tell how well they played at a glance. Of the advanced statistics I have seen on the internet, this one seems to have the best balance between offense and defense. Many other advanced statistics are biased in favor of good defenders, and do not reflect the heavy importance of offense in basketball. Here is the formula for the ESPN rating of a player:

Points + Rebounds + 1.4*Assists + Steals + 1.4*Blocks - .7*Turnovers + # of Field Goals Made +1/2*# of 3-pointers Made - .8*# of Missed Field Goals - .8*# of Missed Free Throws + .25 *# of Free Throws Made

All players on each team who played at least 5 minutes are shown. The number after “game,” is how well the player did in this game, whereas the number after “season” is that player’s overall average for the entire season.

NUGGETS
Allen Iverson: Game 58.1 Season 40.8
Carmelo Anthony: Game 53.9 Season 35.8
Marcus Camby: Game 27.7 Season 32.0
Kenyon Martin: Game 17.8 Season 20.5
Chucky Atkins: Game 17.1 Season 17.1
Anthony Carter: Game 15.8 Season 20.3
Eduardo Najera: Game 11.2 Season 14.4
Linas Kleiza: Game 5.3 Season 17.0

J.R. Smith: Did Not Play-Coach’s Decision
Bobby Jones: Did Not Play-Coach’s Decision
Yakhouba Diawara: Did Not Play-Coach’s Decision:
Von Wafer: Did Not Play-Coach's Decision

Nene: Did Not Play-Injury
Steven Hunter: Did Not Play-Injury

ROCKETS
Yao Ming: Game 52.1 Season 39.2
Rafer Alston: Game 37.7 Season 18.6
Luther Head: Game 34.0 Season 7.7
Bonzi Wells: Game 29.9 Season 16.2
Shane Battier: Game 24.1 Season 16.5
Chuck Hayes: Game 14.2 Season 12.3
Aaron Brooks: Game 7.3 Season 2.3
Luis Scola: Game 5.3 Season 13.0
Mike James: Game 1.5 Season 12.4

NOTE: these stats do not correct for the big differences in playing times. Players with small minutes would get a higher rating if they had more minutes.

OBSERVATIONS ON RATINGS:
You can see that it was very touch and go for the Nuggets here. Iverson and Carmelo were huge, but no one else played particularly well and Kleiza was bad. Melo came out of his slump for at least this game, while Marcus Camby remained stuck in a shooting slump of his own. Nuggets PF Kenyon Martin left the game in the second half with a knee aggravation and did not return. He is questionable for Friday's game in Portland.

NUGGETS REAL PLAYER RATINGS--EXPLANATION
A Great New Feature from Nuggets 1

The straight up player rankings are obviously heavily affected by how many playing minutes the various players get. With many teams, you can rely on the coach to give his various players roughly the playing time that makes the most sense for his team. Unfortunately, you can not rely on George Karl to award playing time in just about the best way possible. He brings other factors besides actual performance into his rotation decisions. Therefore, it makes good sense to introduce a new and very important statistic that Nuggets 1 will call the Real Per Minute Player Rating which, as the name implies, is the gross ESPN player rating divided by the number of minutes. The statistic is called Real Player Rating for short.

This statistic allows everyone to see whether or not players who play only a small number of minutes are doing better than their low gross rating will indicate. At the same time, it will allow everyone to see whether players with a lot of minutes are playing worse than, as well as, or better than their gross ranking shows. This is another big improvement in the Nuggets 1 never ending quest to give readers total information about the Nuggets. This statistic allows the reader, at a glance, to see exactly how well each player is doing without regard to playing time. So it gives you pure knowledge not available anywhere else.

NUGGETS-ROCKETS REAL PLAYER RATINGS
All players who played 5 minutes or more are included. Any player who played only 5-9 minutes is noted.

Allen Iverson, Den 1.096
Carmelo Anthony, D 1.078
Bonzi Wells, Hou 1.068
Yao Ming, Hou 1.022
Chuck Hayes, Hou 0.888
Luther Head, Hou 0.829
Rafer Alston, Hou 0.769
Chucky Atkins, Den 0.713
Marcus Camby, Den 0.660
Kenyon Martin, Den 0.574
Shane Battier, Hou 0.536
Aaron Brooks, Hou 0.521
Linas Kleiza, Den 0.482
Anthony Carter, Den 0.479
Luis Scola, Hou 0.331
Eduardo Najera, Den 0.329
Mike James, Hou 0.250 Played only 6 minutes

OBSERVATIONS ON THE NUGGETS REAL PLAYER RATINGS
You can see here what I have been saying, that Chucky Atkins is a good point guard, better than Anthony Carter and about equal to Andre Miller. There is no excuse for George Karl if he refuses to start Chucky Atkins and give him more playing time than Anthony Carter starting with the next game. Atkins is completely recovered from his injury, and he played much better than Carter in his first game back, so if he does not start and play more than Carter, it is just plain stupidity on Karl’s part.

As you can see, there were four star performances in this game, by Iverson, Anthony, Yao Ming, and Bonzi Wells. The Rockets had the next three best players. Despite having 5 of the best 7 players on the court, the Rockets could not quite escape Denver with the win.

NUGGET’S PLUS—MINUS
This tells you how the score changed while a player was on the court. All Nuggets who played at least 6 minutes are shown.

Linas Kleiza: +12
Allen Iverson: +6
Chucky Atkins: +4
Kenyon Martin: +2
Eduardo Najera: +2
Anthony Carter: -5
Marcus Camby: -6
Carmelo Anthony: -10

OBSERVATIONS ON PLUS—MINUS
Kleiza was just plain lucky here, because he did not play well himself. It was very nice to see Chucky Atkins come out with a + in his first game for the Nuggets. Carmelo Anthony was, strangely enough, the biggest minus. I don’t think there is much more than bad luck involved there.

NUGGETS MADE WHAT?
All Nuggets who played at least 6 minutes are shown. This game was a double overtime game, 58 minutes long.

Eduardo Najera played 36 minutes and was 2/10, 2/6 on 3’s, and 1/2 from the line for 7 points, and he made 6 rebounds and 2 blocks.

Anthony Carter played 36 minutes and was 3/8 for 6 points, and he made 8 assists and 4 rebounds.

Linas Kleiza played 13 minutes and was 1/3, 0/1 on 3’s, and 1/1 from the line for 3 points, and he made 3 rebounds and 1 steal.

Chucky Atkins played 24 minutes and was 5/11 and 3/9 on 3’s for 13 points, and he made 2 assists and 1 rebound.

Kenyon Martin played 31 minutes and was 2/11 and 4/6 from the line for 8 points, and he made 10 rebounds, 3 blocks, and 2 assists.

Marcus Camby played 42 minutes and was 1/7 for 2 points, and he made 18 rebounds, 6 blocks, 2 assists, and 1 steal.

Carmelo Anthony played most of the game, 51 minutes, and was 13/32 and 11/17 from the line for 37 points, and he made 16 rebounds, 3 steals, 2 blocks, and 2 assists.

Allen Iverson played for virtually the whole game, 57 minutes, and was 14/30, 0/4 on 3’s, and 8/8 from the line for 36 points, and he made 9 assists, 5 rebounds, and 2 steals. .

NEXT UP
The next game will be Friday, December 21 in Portland to play the Trailblazers at 8 pm mountain time. The Nuggets will be playing on back to back nights, while the Trailblazers will not be. Therefore, the Trailblazers will have both the home court and the rest advantages.

Monday, December 17, 2007

Coach Nate McMillan, Channing Frye, and Brandon Roy Lead the Trailblazers Over the Nuggets in Denver, 116-105

The Trailblazers won their 7th straight game by defeating the shorthanded Nuggets 116-105. The game was not as close as the final score suggests, because the score at the end of 3 quarters was 92-73, so the 4th quarter was largely though not totally garbage time. I say the Nuggets were shorthanded because they have their starting point guard, their backup power forward, and their backup center still out with injuries, and because George Karl made this bad situation worse by refusing to play qualified reserves. In this game, J.R. Smith, who is the fifth best player on the Nuggets if you look at the season to date Real Player Ratings, was benched and he will remain so for an indefinite period of time, until Karl becomes less upset about whatever he is upset about.

Portland ended a stretch of futility in Denver. The Blazers got their first win in Denver since Feb. 26, 2003, and snapped the Nuggets' nine-game home winning streak against them. The Nuggets had won 15 of the last 17 meetings at home dating back to the 1999-2000 season

C-F 3rd year man Channing Frye, who is having his best year yet on limited minutes, exploded against the Nuggets, who, like it or not, need Nene’s post presence to balance out the defensive skills of Camby and Kenyon Martin. Brandon Roy, who was a no show in the earlier Trailblazer appearance in the Mile High City, played just about as well as Allen Iverson. But it was the Portland playing roster as a whole that made the Nuggets look bad. 9 of 10 Trailblazers played better than their season to date averages, whereas the Nuggets had only 3 of 7 of their players playing better than their season to date averages, namely Iverson, Kenyon Martin, and Eduardo Najera.

Coach Nate McMillan has apparently done a spectacular job with the Trailblazers. This game by the Trailblazers was a coaching work of art.

Carmelo Anthony is now considered to be and known by everyone to be in a major scoring slump, and Camby has not been hitting any jumpers lately to speak of, and major scoring threat J.R. Smith has been benched for reasons that don’t make any sense. And Bobby Jones has been benched for several weeks now. And Chucky Atkins and Nene remain out with injuries. And there is no offensive structure to coordinate and optimize the NBA’s leading scoring tandem, A.I. and Melo. I swear, when you watch a Nuggets game, it sometimes seems that there are three teams on the court: one with Melo as the leading scorer, one with Iverson as the leading scorer, and the team that the Nuggets are playing.

So in this game, it was therefore, by default, essentially all Iverson all the time on offense, but there are years and years of evidence from when A.I. played for the 76’ers to prove the futility of that approach to winning games. Not to mention that it failed against the Spurs last Spring. Sure, you can score a lot of points, but all Iverson all the time on offense not only makes you totally dependent on one player, which is stupid, but it also tends to reduce morale to the point where the defensive hustle and intensity is compromised. Even players who don’t actually score a lot want and need to at the least think of themselves as part of the flow of the offense. They want to and need to receive and make passes from time to time, even if they don’t score squat.

The only good news in the Iverson takeover of the offense lock stock and barrel situation is that, amazingly, George Karl has already recognized this to be a developing major problem, not only for Carmelo Anthony himself, but for the team as a whole. He has announced to the Denver press that he and his assistants are going to set about trying to “free up” Melo from what has him tied down, which would be the endless double teams specifically and Iverson having total control of the offense generally.

This is the second time this year I have been pleasantly surprised by a Karl development, the first time being when he was using 9 players for a stretch of about 4 games rather than his usual 7-8. And although I was brutally frustrated when he went back to the scrooge rotations, I am going to be an eternal optimist and hope that Melo can be brought back into the heart of the offense before the all-star break, even if it’s done with little or no adding of offensive structure to the mix. Failure to achieve this will mean that the Nuggets have adopted the failed 76’ers strategy of all Iverson all the time, and it will mean another quick exit from the playoffs, or no appearance at all in the playoffs.

I’m not a professional psychologist, but I had a brainstorm the other day about exactly how Karl falls into the trap of benching good players time and time again. Karl punishes players by reducing their minutes, by benching them, or by making negative comments to reporters about them, if he thinks they are not doing as well as they could, and/or how well he thinks they should be doing. He partly ignores or distorts how well they actually are doing in the process. In other words, Karl has these images, actually movies, running in his head about how and how well a player should play. If the player departs substantially from that movie in his head, he gets upset. If he gets too upset, he takes action against that player. Just between last year and this year, I have seen him do that with J.R. Smith, Carmelo Anthony, Linas Kleiza, Yakhouba Diawara, Bobby Jones, and, Reggie Evans

But this doesn't make any sense, because how does Karl know in advance how or how well a player should play? He can't know. And Karl ignores or distorts how well the player actually is doing when he takes action against that player. So he hurts the team when he, for example, keeps J.R. Smith's minutes overly restricted because J.R. Smith does not live up to the image Karl has of Smith.

Furthermore, Karl uses subjective evaluations of player’s personalities, especially the relatively vague aspect of a personality that he calls “mental toughness,” when he is making a decision as to whether to partially bench or completely bench a player. To put it simply, if you are playing for him and he does not like your personality, or if he thinks you are not mentally tough, you will be partially and completely benched from time to time, and there is almost nothing you can do about it, because it is essentially or actually impossible for someone to change their personality.

Mental toughness is almost never explained by those who use the term, least of all Karl, so let me offer up a definition. Let’s say that mental toughness is the ability to not lose focus and concentration on the tasks at hand during a high pressure game against a good team. If a player keeps his mental focus, he continues to play to his ability or better no matter how much the pressure rises in a game. And that player avoids symptoms of getting carried away by pressure, such as taking unbalanced or heavily defended shots, blowing layups, blowing rebounds, making a lot of turnovers, and so forth.

As I have said before, it sounds nice and it is to some degree necessary for a team and for individual players to have mental toughness. But it is not the most important thing that determines who wins basketball games. The most important factors are the abilities of the players, which come from what they were born with, from what they have physically developed into, from their experience in games, and from how hard they work when they are off the court. The next most important factors that determine winning or losing are the strategies and tactics that are used to coordinate the various players on the team into a unified whole, so that both the offense and the defense of the team are optimized as much as possible. Mental toughness and other personality factors would fall in behind both abilities of players and strategies and tactics in importance.

You could have the most mentally tough team in the NBA, but if your players are not very athletic, or if your strategies or tactics are no good, you are definitely not going to go very far in the playoffs. The Nuggets have the abilities, but are lacking the strategies and tactics right now to be a major winning team, or to be able to go far in the playoffs. And I would say, for what it’s worth, that the Nuggets are below average but by no means one of the worst teams in the League with respect to the mental toughness factor. The Nuggets just about lead the NBA in turnovers, which is an important clue that they are below average in mental toughness. But I know for a fact that the way Karl overreacts to the mental toughness factor with his rotation and benching decisions hurts the Nuggets even more than the turnovers do.

ALERT STATUS PROBLEMS
As of December 17, 2007

The Nuggets are under an unusually dangerous and damaging alert status, so the following update is provided.

INJURIES & SUSPENSIONS
1. Nene injury 9 Points
2. Chucky Atkins injury 7 Points
3. Steven Hunter injury 3 Points

UNEXPECTED STAR PLAYER PERFORMANCE PROBLEMS
1. Carmelo Anthony’s jump shooting is a little off from recent years and he is still inconsistent in rebounding. Making matters worse, George Karl and Allen Iverson have decided that it is acceptable that Melo be removed from the heart of the Nugget’s offense, and that he frequently be little more than a decoy, so that the rest of the Nuggets on the court can run a 4 on 3 offense and hope that Iverson can keep them in the game. The combination of Melo’s accuracy drop off from last year, together with his partial marginalization, makes for a very substantial and worsening star player performance problem. 9 Points.

2. Inability of Nuggets forwards to consistently give Camby enough rebounding and defending support inside: 3 Points

BAD OR INADEQUATE COACHING
1. George Karl over relies on his starters and won’t play the non-starters enough: 5-20 Points. The severity varies depending on the circumstances, mainly Karl’s beliefs and moods, and whether the other team is playing well enough to take advantage of the Nuggets playing with not enough breathers, with too many fouls, and so forth. Karl will normally be in the 5-15 range, but it could spike to as much as 20 in the event of the benching of a major player such as Kenyon Martin. The current points reported are for the use, or should I say the misuse, of the reserves for the most recent games, with the most weight being given to the game being reported on here. The bad use of reserves score for this game is 13 points.

2. Lack of adequate offensive schemes: 8 Points. This would be up to 18 points, except that Iverson reduces the damage. Another way of describing this is that the team has failed to decide whether it wants Melo alone, Iverson alone, Melo and Iverson together, or neither of them to be firstly responsible for scoring enough points to keep the Nuggets in the game. If it were neither, I call the name of that strategy the "share the wealth" strategy.

INTENSITY, HUSTLE, AND HEART
1. The Nugget’s intensity, hustle and heart is lacking: 0 Points. It’s not anywhere near bad as some fans think it is.

TOTAL PROBLEM POINTS: 52, which constitutes YELLOW ALERT.

YELLOW ALERT (40-54): Minor damage is occurring to the season. The entire season is under medium threat. Beating quality teams is much more difficult and will be pretty rare. About 1/2 of all wins against good teams will now be losses. Beating mid-level teams is a little more difficult. About 1/4 of games that would be wins against mid-level teams will now be losses. Beating low level teams is still relatively easy, but no longer almost a sure bet. A good team like the Nuggets has become in between a good team and a mid-level team when it is under this alert.

RESERVE WATCH

Number of Players Who Played at Least 6 Minutes: Trailblazers 10 Nuggets 7
Number of Players Who Played at Least 10 Minutes: Trailblazers 9 Nuggets 7

You can see from this simple observation that either (a) the Nuggets have a grossly inferior bench to the Trailblazers or (b) the Nuggets have a coach who is unable or unwilling to play a substantial and competitive number of reserves. The correct one is (b) of course.

This feature is under development, and it will be expanded. The complications involved explain why (a) there are no formal statistics anywhere on the internet on the subject of how much non-starters contribute to different teams and (b) why coaches are not compared statistically the way players are. There are a lot of variables that come into the use of reserves that interfere with the objective of judging their use. Statisticians call this “statistical noise,” and if you have a substantial amount of it, then what you are trying to do with your statistics becomes very difficult or next to impossible.

GEORGE KARL CONFIDENCE IN HIS TEAM RATING (Scale of 0 to 10)
1.0 He has absconded to Mexico with Najera’s wife.

ESPN PLAYER RATINGS FOR THIS GAME:
You can tell how well they played at a glance. Of the advanced statistics I have seen on the internet, this one seems to have the best balance between offense and defense. Many other advanced statistics are biased in favor of good defenders, and do not reflect the heavy importance of offense in basketball. Here is the formula for the ESPN rating of a player:

Points + Rebounds + 1.4*Assists + Steals + 1.4*Blocks - .7*Turnovers + # of Field Goals Made +1/2*# of 3-pointers Made - .8*# of Missed Field Goals - .8*# of Missed Free Throws + .25 *# of Free Throws Made

All players on each team who played at least 5 minutes are shown. The number after “game,” is how well the player did in this game, whereas the number after “season” is that player’s overall average for the entire season.

NUGGETS
Allen Iverson: Game 54.7 Season 41.6
Kenyon Martin: Game 31.9 Season 20.3
Carmelo Anthony: Game 24.2 Season 36.6
Marcus Camby: Game 23.7 Season 31.8
Eduardo Najera: Game 19.8 Season 14.2
Linas Kleiza: Game 16.6 Season 16.5
Anthony Carter: Game 16.2 Season 20.2

J.R. Smith: Did Not Play-Coach’s Decision
Bobby Jones: Did Not Play-Coach’s Decision
Yakhouba Diawara: Did Not Play-Coach’s Decision:
Von Wafer: Did Not Play-Coach's Decision

Nene: Did Not Play-Injury
Chucky Atkins: Did Not Play-Injury
Steven Hunter: Did Not Play-Injury

TRAILBLAZERS
Brandon Roy: Game 44.6 Season 32.3
Channing Frye: Game 38.0 Season 12.4
Travis Outlaw: Game 27.4 Season 20.4
James Jones: Game 26.4 Season 15.0
Joel Przybilla: Game 21.8 Season 14.3
Steve Blake: Game 18.0 Season 16.6
Jarrett Jack: Game 17.1 Season 16.2
Sergio Rodriguez: Game 11.6 Season 6.3
Raef LaFrentz: Game 5.6 Season 5.5
Martell Webster: Game 4.4 Season 18.6

NOTE: these stats do not correct for the big differences in playing times. Players with small minutes would get a higher rating if they had more minutes.

OBSERVATIONS ON RATINGS:
This one very clearly shows the partial marginalization and the slump of Melo, and the flipside of that, the appearance of the all Iverson all the time 76’ers strategy in Denver. Camby, who was upstaged by Channing Frye, had his second below normal game in a row. Najera and Kenyon Martin played well, but Linas Kleiza and Anthony Carter were just average.

The Trailblazers played lights out, as you can clearly see. They had 9 of their 10 players who played at least 5 minutes have above normal games. This is something you will very rarely see. All I can say is wow, and congratulations to Coach Nate McMillan and the Trailblazers for all of a sudden becoming a truly good team, and for doing so in a very smart way.

NUGGETS REAL PLAYER RATINGS--EXPLANATION
A Great New Feature from Nuggets 1

The straight up player rankings are obviously heavily affected by how many playing minutes the various players get. With many teams, you can rely on the coach to give his various players roughly the playing time that makes the most sense for his team. Unfortunately, you can not rely on George Karl to award playing time in just about the best way possible. He brings other factors besides actual performance into his rotation decisions. Therefore, it makes good sense to introduce a new and very important statistic that Nuggets 1 will call the Real Per Minute Player Rating which, as the name implies, is the gross ESPN player rating divided by the number of minutes. The statistic is called Real Player Rating for short.

This statistic allows everyone to see whether or not players who play only a small number of minutes are doing better than their low gross rating will indicate. At the same time, it will allow everyone to see whether players with a lot of minutes are playing worse than, as well as, or better than their gross ranking shows. This is another big improvement in the Nuggets 1 never ending quest to give readers total information about the Nuggets. This statistic allows the reader, at a glance, to see exactly how well each player is doing without regard to playing time. So it gives you pure knowledge not available anywhere else.

NUGGETS-TRAILBLAZERS REAL PLAYER RATINGS
All players who played 5 minutes or more are included. Any player who played only 5-9 minutes is noted.

Channing Frye, Por 1.462
Sergio Rodriguez, Por 1.450 Played only 8 minutes
Allen Iverson, Den 1.189
Brandon Roy, Por 1.115
Travis Outlaw, Por 0.979
Kenyon Martin, Den 0.886
James Jones, Por 0.880
Eduardo Najera, Den 0.861
Jarrett Jack, Por 0.777
Joel Przybilla, Por 0.703
Marcus Camby, Den 0.697
Steve Blake, Por 0.667
Linas Kleiza, Den 0.615
Carmelo Anthony, D 0.576
Raef LaFrentz, Por 0.560
Anthony Carter, Den 0.559
Martell Webster, Por 0.244


OBSERVATIONS ON THE NUGGETS REAL PLAYER RATINGS
Channing Frye had the kind of huge game that will be remembered in Portland for a long time. Najera and Martin played well, but Camby being off made it inevitable that the Nuggets were going to suffer from the Frye explosion. Brandon Roy just about matched Iverson. More broadly, and amazingly, the Trailblazers who played well simply grossly outnumbered the Nuggets who played at all. We’ll never know whether J.R. Smith or Bobby Jones might have matched Travis Outlaw or Jarrett Jack, because they were tied down to the bench by Coach Scrooge.

NUGGET’S PLUS—MINUS
This tells you how the score changed while a player was on the court. All Nuggets who played at least 6 minutes are shown.

Linas Kleiza: +2
Eduardo Najera: +2
Marcus Camby: -11
Allen Iverson: -12
Carmelo Anthony: -13
Anthony Carter: -13
Kenyon Martin: -19

OBSERVATIONS ON PLUS—MINUS
Kleiza and Najera seem to be commonly in the plus in losing games. They are hustling and playing well. Kenyon Martin, Marcus Camby, and Eduardo Najera were beaten up front by Channing Frye, Joel Przybilla, and James Jones, regarded as one of the weakest front court trios in the NBA. Who would have predicted that?

NUGGETS MADE WHAT?
All Nuggets who played at least 6 minutes are shown.

Eduardo Najera played 23 minutes and was 4/5 and 1/2 on 3’s for 9 points, and he made 4 rebounds, 2 assists, and 1 steal.

Anthony Carter played 29 minutes and was 4/6 and 0/1 on 3’s for 8 points, and he made 2 assists, 2 rebounds, and 1 steal.

Linas Kleiza played 27 minutes and was 4/11, 2/5 on 3’s, and 1/2 from the line for 11 points, and he made 6 rebounds, 1 assist, and 1 block.

Kenyon Martin played 36 minutes and was 7/11 for 14 points, and he made 5 rebounds, 4 blocks, and 3 assists.

Marcus Camby played 34 minutes and was 2/7 for 4 points, and he made 9 assists, 7 rebounds, and 2 blocks.

Carmelo Anthony played for most of the game, 42 minutes, and was 6/17, 2/6 on 3’s, and 5/8 from the line for 19 points, and he made 4 rebounds, 3 assists, 2 steals, and 1 block.

Allen Iverson played for virtually the whole game, 46 minutes, and was 11/22, 3/6 on 3’s, and 13/15 from the line for 38 points, and he made 6 assists, 3 steals, and 2 rebounds. .

NEXT UP
The next game will be Thursday, December 20 in Denver to play the Rockets at 8:30 pm mountain time. The Rockets will be playing on back to back nights, while the Nuggets will not be. Therefore, the Nuggets will have both the rest and the home court advantages.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

The Nuggets Can't Deal With a 1-Game Kenyon Martin Suspension and Get Blown Out at San Antonio 102-91

The San Antonio Spurs defeated the Denver Nuggets 102-91, but the game was essentially over after 3 quarters, when the score was 92-68. Starting power forward Kenyon Martin’s 1 game flagrant foul suspension, along with an off rebounding night from Marcus Camby, who had way too much to handle from C Fabricio Oberto, who was huge, and PF Tim Duncan, destroyed the Nuggets rebounding and made a Spurs victory all but certain. Kenyon Martin was removed from the squad at exactly the worst possible time, right after Camby and company had started to trust K-Mart to be a big factor on the boards. Just when Camby was accustomed to finally getting some real help on rebounding, that help was taken away by David Stern who, after waiting until the cows came home, finally announced Kenyon’s 1 game suspension on the day of the Spurs game, Saturday, even though the game in which the flagrant foul happened was Wednesday evening.

Martin was assessed a flagrant foul against Melvin Ely of the Hornets, for striking Ely in the head with an elbow in the 2nd quarter of the Nuggets' 105-99 win. Ely has a fractured left eye socket and missed the Hornets' 89-80 loss at Dallas on Friday night. In a written statement released by the Nuggets, Martin said he was disappointed to miss the game against the Spurs. "What happened with Melvin in Wednesday's game was inadvertent. I apologized to him on the court and again after the game. He told me he knew it was an accident."

Nuggets Coach George Karl said the timing of the suspension was disappointing. "We had a couple days of practice, if they (the league) would have made the edict two days ago, we'd have been able to say 'OK, We probably now have to double Duncan more,"' Karl said. "It seemed to be a lot of space there. I think Kenyon talked to the league office two or three days ago. And it seemed like we were out of the woods.”

Way to go, Mr. Karl, nice criticism. After this, no one had better claim that I never ever report anything good about him. Don’t forget that I quickly commended him a few weeks ago when for a short time he had decent player rotations during the Nuggets series of routs at home. Then I was made to look kind of silly for commending him, though, when he went back to the same old scrooge policies for the reserves.

Unfortunately for Coach Karl, I am now using a very effective tool from the internet to monitor who has played, for how long, and when during the game each player played. It is a bar graph diagram that clearly shows exactly when and for how long each player played. This is especially useful when there is garbage time, as there was in this game. I can look at the diagram to determine whether the Nuggets starters had enough potential help from the reserves or not during the game time before the garbage time.

When I did that for this game, it was revealed that George Karl once again half surrendered to the Spurs before the start of the game tip-off. Karl played only 7 players for 6 minutes or more during the first 3 quarters, whereas Coach Greg Popovich has developed his bench, his offense, and his defense to where he could profit from playing 10 players during the first 3 quarters. Bobby Jones played two 2 minute stints for the Nuggets, but even if you count him, the Spurs still had 10 players ready to contribute toward their win, whereas the Nuggets put out only 8. I contend that Jones’ minutes were too small for him to get anything going at all, so that the real players used margin should be 10 to 7 in favor of the Spurs. A compromise view would be 10 to 7 ½. Anyway you slice it, the Nugget’s Coach simply didn’t provide the Nuggets with enough opportunities for a surprise big game from somebody off the bench.

The fact that Bobby Jones, a forward, played only two 2-minute stints is actually absurd, given the fact that Kenyon Martin was out and the Nuggets were getting destroyed on the boards. Jones and/or Yakhouba Diawara were desperately needed for defending and rebounding, but neither one of them played a substantial amount of time. Meanwhile, Coach Greg Popovich of the Spurs was managing his team like the expert he is. He employed 5 players other than the starters, with each one of those 5 having a well defined role, and each one of them being given minutes in proportion to their potential contributions. When Coaches like Popovich and Lakers Coach Phil Jackson coach, it is like a work of art. When George Karl coaches, the resulting who played when flow chart looks like the team simply doesn’t have enough players on the roster. The more you analyze who was on the court and when for the Nuggets, the more you realize it made little if any sense.

In a rare development caused by the suspension, Carmelo Anthony led the Nuggets in rebounding with 9, while Camby made 6 rebounds, Linas Kleiza made just 4 in 32 minutes, and five other Nuggets made 3 rebounds or less.

Although Camby didn’t get his usual rebounds, he made more than his usual number of blocks, as he made 5 of those. In fact, the Nuggets defeated the Spurs in blocks 8-2 and in steals 11-4. Despite Manu Ginobili flops resulting in Denver offensive fouls, and despite both Carmelo Anthony and especially Allen Iverson committing more turnovers than usual, the Nuggets amazingly ended up with fewer total turnovers than the Spurs, 17 versus 20. Not only was it the first time in anyone’s memory that the Nuggets had fewer turnovers than the Spurs did in a head to head, but it came while the Nuggets are cruising the very bottom of the NBA barrel in the turnover category. The Supersonics are, for the moment, very slightly worse than the Nuggets in blowing possessions without getting a shot off.

The huge rebounding advantage was not enough for the Spurs, who made their win even more certain by going on a massive three point rampage that they seem to save up for the upstart Nuggets. The Spurs buried an almost incredible 11 of 22 of the long rangers, with the usual suspects, SG Michael Finley, who made 4/5 threes, and SF Brent Barry, who made 3/6 of them, leading the way. It often seems that Finley, Barry, and defensive specialist Bruce Bowen, who aside from his good defending made 2/3 threes himself, have been put on Earth, sent from hell itself, for just one reason: to make absolutely certain that the Denver Nuggets never win the Western Conference. Combined, Finley, Barry, and Bowen were 9/14 from downtown. As a Nuggets fan, I would like to ask if these three are not the three faces of the apocalypse, than what else could they possibly be?

Aside from the almost bizarre onslaught of threes, Manu Ginobili, who has a knack for getting more respect from referees than almost anyone, engineered a bunch of offensive foul calls against the Nuggets by flopping on the ground after small amounts of forward motion contact. All told, the Nuggets, who seemingly have never finished with fewer fouls than the Spurs in a head to head game with them in all of history, were called for 20 fouls, while the Spurs were called for just 15. At one point, in the 1st quarter, George Karl got a rare technical foul because the fouls being called against the Nuggets were too much for even him to stomach sitting down.

So far this season, there is only 1 team that gets called for fewer personal fouls per game than the Spurs, the Phoenix Suns, interestingly enough. The Spurs average 19 personal fouls per game, while the Nuggets, who are about in the middle of the 30 team pack, are averaging about 22 personal fouls per game. But whenever the Nuggets play the Spurs head to head, it seems that whatever normal advantage in personal fouls the Spurs have is always increased, to the point where Nuggets fans are certain that favoritism is being shown by the referees toward the Spurs. Carmelo Anthony, in particular, was the victim of at least a couple of bad calls. Melo ended up with 4 fouls in total, and narrowly avoided having his playing time substantially reduced by all of the extracurricular activity of the refs.

The Spurs had no trouble routing the Nuggets even though PF Tim Duncan played just 20 minutes and PG Tony Parker didn't play at all due to a sprain. This would just about offset the unavailablity of PF Kenyon Martin, PF Nene, and PG Chucky Atkins for the Nuggets. So the only thing you can logically conclude is that the Nuggets have no chance if they meet the Spurs again in the playoffs, unless the way the Nuggets are managed radically changes. I guess we'll have to hope that the Suns knock off the Spurs before the Nuggets ever have to play them. How's that for optimism in the face of disaster?

ALERT STATUS PROBLEMS
As of December 16, 2007

The Nuggets are under an unusually dangerous and damaging alert status, so the following update is provided.

INJURIES & SUSPENSIONS
1. Nene injury 9 Points
2. Chucky Atkins injury 7 Points
3. Steven Hunter injury 3 Points
4. Kenyon Martin suspension 15 Points

UNEXPECTED STAR PLAYER PERFORMANCE PROBLEMS
1. Carmelo Anthony’s jump shooting is a little off from recent years and he is still inconsistent in rebounding. Making matters worse, George Karl and Allen Iverson have decided that it is acceptable that Melo be removed from the heart of the Nugget’s offense, and that he frequently be little more than a decoy, so that the rest of the Nuggets on the court can run a 4 on 3 offense and hope that Iverson can keep them in the game. The combination of Melo’s accuracy drop off from last year, together with his partial marginalization, makes for a very substantial and worsening star player performance problem. 8 Points.

2. Inability of Melo to give Camby enough rebounding and defending support inside: 3 Points

BAD OR INADEQUATE COACHING
1. George Karl over relies on his starters and won’t play the non-starters enough: 5-20 Points. The severity varies depending on the circumstances, mainly Karl’s beliefs and moods, and whether the other team is playing well enough to take advantage of the Nuggets playing with not enough breathers. Karl will normally be in the 5-13 range, but it could spike to as much as 20 in the event of the benching of a major player such as Kenyon Martin. The current points reported are for the use, or should I say the misuse, of the reserves for the most recent games, with the most weight being given to the game being reported on here. The bad use of reserves score for this game is 12 points.

2. Lack of adequate offensive schemes: 8 Points. This would be up to 18 points, except that Iverson reduces the damage. Another way of describing this is that the team has failed to decide whether it wants Melo alone, Iverson alone, Melo and Iverson together, or neither of them to be firstly responsible for scoring enough points to keep the Nuggets in the game. If it were neither, I call the name of that strategy the "share the wealth" strategy.

INTENSITY, HUSTLE, AND HEART
1. The Nugget’s intensity, hustle and heart is lacking: 0 Points. It’s not anywhere near bad as some fans who are panicking think it is. This is a relatively small problem.

TOTAL PROBLEM POINTS: 50, which constitutes YELLOW ALERT.

YELLOW ALERT (40-54): Minor damage is occurring to the season. The entire season is under medium threat. Beating quality teams is much more difficult and will be pretty rare. About 1/2 of all wins against good teams will now be losses. Beating mid-level teams is a little more difficult. About 1/4 of games that would be wins against mid-level teams will now be losses. Beating low level teams is still relatively easy, but no longer almost a sure bet. A good team like the Nuggets has become in between a good team and a mid-level team when it is under this alert.

Note: The Kenyon Martin suspension was a 1 game suspension, so the problem points for that are not included in the current alert point count. During the Spurs game, the problem point count spiked up to about 65, constituting an ORANGE ALERT. With an orange alert status, it is extremely unlikely that the Nuggets will win over an outstanding team such as the Spurs. Sure enough, they had little if any chance in the game. (The alert system seems to have worked very nicely here.)

RESERVE WATCH
It’s under development. The complications involved explain why (a) there are no formal statistics anywhere on the internet on the subject of how much non-starters contribute to different teams and (b) why coaches are not compared statistically the way players are. There are a lot of variables that come into the use of reserves that interfere with the objective of judging their use. Statisticians call this “statistical noise,” and if you have a substantial amount of it, then what you are trying to do with your statistics becomes very difficult or next to impossible.

GEORGE KARL CONFIDENCE IN HIS TEAM RATING (Scale of 0 to 10)
2.0 He’s making a run for the exits.

ESPN PLAYER RATINGS FOR THIS GAME:
You can tell how well they played at a glance. Of the advanced statistics I have seen on the internet, this one seems to have the best balance between offense and defense. Many other advanced statistics are biased in favor of good defenders, and do not reflect the heavy importance of offense in basketball. Here is the formula for the ESPN rating of a player:

Points + Rebounds + 1.4*Assists + Steals + 1.4*Blocks - .7*Turnovers + # of Field Goals Made +1/2*# of 3-pointers Made - .8*# of Missed Field Goals - .8*# of Missed Free Throws + .25 *# of Free Throws Made

All players on each team who played at least 6 minutes are shown. The number after “game,” is how well the player did in this game, whereas the number after “season” is that player’s overall average for the entire season.

NUGGETS
Allen Iverson: Game 39.7 Season 40.3
Carmelo Anthony: Game 29.6 Season 36.6
Linas Kleiza: Game 28.8 Season 17.0
Marcus Camby: Game 22.4 Season 32.3
Anthony Carter: Game 16.5 Season 20.7
Eduardo Najera: Game 14.6 Season 14.1
J.R. Smith: Game 12.7 Season 15.4
Bobby Jones: Game 8.7 Season 6.0
Yakhouba Diawara: Game -0.8 Season 7.0

Jelani McCoy: Did Not Play-Coach’s Decision
Von Wafer: Did Not Play-Coach's Decision

Kenyon Martin: Did Not Play-Suspension
Nene: Did Not Play-Injury
Chucky Atkins: Did Not Play-Injury
Steven Hunter: Did Not Play-Injury

SPURS
Fabricio Oberto: Game 51.1 Season 17.7
Michael Finley: Game 36.7 Season 14.5
Brent Barry: Game 22.8 Season 14.7
Manu Ginobili: Game 22.7 Season 33.2
Jacque Vaughn: Game 20.5 Season 7.2
Tim Duncan: Game 13.9 Season 32.9
Bruce Bowen: Game 12.5 Season 12.5
Francisco Elson: Game 9.8 Season 10.0
Darius Washington: Game 4.8 Season 4.9
Ime Udoka: Game 0.9 Season 5.0
Robert Horry: Game -2.4 Season 5.7

NOTE: these stats do not correct for the big differences in playing times. Players with small minutes would get a higher rating if they had more minutes.

OBSERVATIONS ON RATINGS:
The starting Spurs center, Fabriciao Oberto, more than made up for the partial absence of Tim Duncan, the starting power forward. .

NUGGETS REAL PLAYER RATINGS--EXPLANATION
A Great New Feature From Nuggets 1
The straight up player rankings are obviously heavily affected by how many playing minutes the various players get. With many teams, you can rely on the coach to give his various players roughly the playing time that makes the most sense for his team. Unfortunately, you can not rely on George Karl to award playing time in just about the best way possible. Therefore, it makes good sense to introduce a new and very important statistic that Nuggets 1 will call the Real Per Minute Player Rating which, as the name implies, is the gross ESPN player rating divided by the number of minutes.

This statistic allows everyone to see whether or not players who play only a small number of minutes are doing better than their low gross rating will indicate. At the same time, it will allow everyone to see whether players with a lot of minutes are playing worse than, as well as, or better than their gross ranking shows. This is another big improvement in the Nuggets 1 never ending quest to give readers total information about the Nuggets. This statistic allows the reader, at a glance, to see exactly how well each player is doing without regard to playing time. So it gives you pure knowledge not available anywhere else.

NUGGETS REAL PLAYER RATINGS—SPURS GAME
All players who played 3 minutes or more are included.

J.R. Smith 977
Allen Iverson 902
Linas Kleiza 900
Carmelo Anthony 822
Marcus Camby 772
Bobby Jones 544
Eduardo Najera 521
Anthony Carter 516
Yakhouba Diawara -114

OBSERVATIONS ON THE NUGGETS REAL PLAYER RATINGS
This new Nuggets 1 report is the best thing that could have happened for J.R. Smith, and any other player cheated for playing time by George Karl, here at Nuggets 1. Smith often, but not always, crams a lot of performance into his small minutes. Everyone knows that J.R. Smith has too many turnovers. But keep in mind that the rating includes the turnovers as a negative factor. The bottom line is that this statistic does not in any way cheat or favor any player, since all aspects of the game are included in it, and all of the aspects are combined and then shown adjusted for playing time by dividing by the minutes played.

If you wondered who really and truly played better against the Spurs, Melo or A.I., you now have your answer: it was The Answer. Notice too that although Kleiza finished slightly behind Melo in the gross rating, he actually played a little better than Melo on a per minute basis. I would sum up this first Nuggets Real Player Ratings report by saying that J.R. Smith, Allen Iverson, and Linas Kleiza played very well against the Spurs, while Carmelo Anthony and Marcus Camby played well. Jones, Najera, and Carter were mediocre at best, while Diawara didn’t do much of anything during his 6 1/2 minutes, all of which was in garbage time.

Of course, Nuggets 1 will be able to evaluate these numbers better and better as more and more games are reported out.

NUGGET’S PLUS—MINUS
This tells you how the score changed while a player was on the court. All Nuggets who played at least 6 minutes are shown.

Yakhouba Diawara: +7
Linas Kleiza: +5
J.R. Smith: +4
Bobby Jones: +2
Carmelo Anthony: -11
Anthony Carter: -12
Marcus Camby: -15
Allen Iverson: -13
Eduardo Najera: -20

OBSERVATIONS ON PLUS—MINUS
The + numbers you see for Diawara, Kleiza, Smith, and Jones are from the 4th quarter, which was essentially all garbage time. But these numbers are not totally meaningless. They are more evidence that Karl should have given Diawara and Jones some burn before the game was decided in the Spurs favor, which he did not. During the 1st 3 quarters, while the game was being decided, Diawara did not appear at all, and Bobby Jones made 2 token appearances lasting less than 4 minutes in total.

The theory that Najera’s hustle, defending, and occasional 3-point shooting offsets his weak overall scoring and weak rebounding obviously takes a hit when you see his -20 number here. Najera seems to be particularly ineffective against the best teams, just when it is most important that he be effective.

NUGGETS MADE WHAT?
All Nuggets who played at least 6 minutes are shown.

Bobby Jones played 16 minutes and was 1/3 and 1/2 on 3’s for 3 points, and he made 2 rebounds, 1 assist, 1 steal, and 1 block.

Yakhouba Diawara played 7 minutes and was 0/1 for 0 points.

Eduardo Najera played 28 minutes and was 3/5 and 0/2 on 3’s for 6 points, and he made 3 assists, 2 rebounds, and a steal.

Linas Kleiza played 32 minutes and was 7/12 and 2/3 on 3’s for 16 points, and he made 4 rebounds, 3 assists, and 2 steals.

J.R. Smith played 13 minutes and was 2/5, 1/2 on 3’s, and 2/2 from the line for 7 points, and he made 2 rebounds, 2 assists, and 1 steal.

Anthony Carter played 32 minutes and was 4/8 and 2/2 from the line for 10 points, and he made 4 assists and 1 rebound.

Marcus Camby played 29 minutes and was 2/2 for 4 points, and he made 6 rebounds, 5 blocks, 2 steals, and 1 assist.

Carmelo Anthony played 36 minutes and was 7/15 and 1/2 on 3’s for 15 points, and he made 9 rebounds, 4 assists, 1 block, and 1 steal.

Allen Iverson played for virtually the whole game, 44 minutes, and was 10/22, ½ on 3’s, and 9/11 from the line for 30 points, and he made 5 assists, 3 steals, and 3 rebounds.

NEXT UP
The next game will be Sunday, December 16 in Denver to play the Trailblazers at 6 pm mountain time. The Nuggets will be playing on back to back nights, while the Trailblazers will not be. The Trailblazer’s rest advantage will roughly offset the Nugget’s home court advantage.

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A SMALL SAMPLE OF CURRENT AND SOON TO COME QUEST FOR THE RING REAL ZONE TOPICS
--How and Why the 2010 Los Angeles Lakers, the 2010 Cleveland Cavaliers, and the 2010 Boston Celtics Win or Lose in the 2010 Playoffs
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--How players we know deserve to win a first or second Ring can get one, highly talented players such as Chris Paul, Chris Bosh, Rajon Rondo, and Dwyane Wade.
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--How and why Carmelo Anthony has been downsized due to a quest for "well-roundedness," and why this is really bad
--How and why the owner of the Nuggets shortchanged and cheated his team out of a possible Championship
--How and why being physical alone can not win you a Championship
--How and why the Nuggets' high fouling defense will take them only so far
--How and why George Karl is doing more harm than good with respect to J.R. Smith
--How and why George Karl's obsession with personalities is wrong and bad for any team
--How and why George Karl and the Nuggets can not win in the playoffs (2007, 2008) or a West final (2009). If Quest commits a foul, we own up to it, as we do right here: we thought the Nuggets could not win in the playoffs in 2009. They did win 10 games before being eliminated by the Lakers in the West final, so in response we corrected our evaluation of what you can do with the Nuggets' unique 2009 approach to basketball without, however, going overboard.
--How and why George Karl cheats the fans and the franchise out of performance and development of "reserve" players
--How and why playmaking is so important, probably more than you think, and how you manage playmakers correctly.
--How and why you have probably been fooled regarding the Nuggets' 2008 off-season and their 2008-09 defense

UNIQUE SITE DESIGN
The Quest is organized in a completely different way from what you are used to on the internet. We have combined the best features of the blog and the conventional web site formats, the latter being the norm for large organizations. However, since we do not like the idea of using flash to "wow" visitors, we do not use flash except within video and other discrete components. So we are state of the art in terms of expanding the power of visitors to get exactly what they want very quickly, but we do not have the latest flash gadgetry just to "keep up with the Joneses". More broadly, you will find that Quest for the Ring never seeks to keep up with the Joneses, simply because the Joneses never had the nerve and the intelligence to do what we do.

2009: A PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATION COMES TO QUEST
Just before the 2009-10 season tipped, the very large number of features and links to important resources were strategically reorganized and placed within an easy to use and clearly labelled section system. So ended the era of the rapidly developed, sprawling and slightly disorganized Quest, and so began the era of the big but under careful control and extremely well organized and professional Quest for the Ring.

The Quest Home Page consists of numerous types of content, organized carefully into the new sections as of November 2009. Features can be any educational and / or entertaining thing you can think of, including everything from music players to videos to photos to breaking NBA news readers to top teams performance breakdown pages.

Quest for the Ring has a world class link system for those who know what they are looking for and wish to find and engage the appropriate link, But the Quest visitor does not HAVE to hunt for links to have an intelligent and entertaining experience. The Quest home page is big enough and chock loaded enough that link hunting is not absolutely necessary the way it normally is at many other basketball sites.

THERE MUST BE TEN WAYS TO READ REPORTS [PAUL SIMON LOL]
There are close to ten ways to find out about, select, and read Quest Reports! The standard, traditional blog presentation is available as one of the many ways to choose, access, and read reports. On the Home Page, only one report loads in the traditional format in order to keep this page as quick loading as possible.
See the "Total Freedom of Navigation" section for complete details about how to find, choose, and read reports.

One key place to find Older Reports is on sequentially numbered url's thequestforthering2.blogspot.com, thequestforthering3.blogspot.com, and so forth.

THE QUEST USER GUIDE VERSUS an about page
Other sites most often have undeveloped and limited in scope "about pages" which is usually all they have for what we call a "User Guide". Our User Guide material is a vast improvement, quantitatively and qualitatively, over a mere "about page" While many other sites don't help their visitors to make the best use of the content, we do. Also, the User Guide is chock loaded with invitations to visitors to participate in all kinds of ways, including for example advertising for free, link exchange, and getting a team site supported by Quest.

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QUEST REPORTS #81 TO #100 GOING BACK IN TIME

RECOMMENDED SCHOOL--CLICK FOR DETAILS


VIDEOS

QUEST FOR THE RING VIDEOS--The primary Quest video page with video juke boxes for all 30 teams

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MOST RECENT LEAGUE WIDE REAL PLAYER RATINGS

Note: This is generally a once a year, end of season Report. For many teams and players, more recent ratings are often available.

NBA REAL PLAYER RATINGS
2009-10 REGULAR SEASON

POSITION AND TEAM CODES
In the Real Player and related ratings shown for the League, two codes follow each players' name (and before his rating). The first code tells you the players' team and the second one tells you his position.

TEAM CODES
ATLA Atlanta Hawks
BOST Boston Celtics
CHAR Charlotte Bobcats
CHIC Chicago Bulls
CLEV Cleveland Cavaliers
DALL Dallas Mavericks
DENV Denver Nuggets
DETR Detroit Pistons
GOLS Golden State Warriors
HOUS Houston Rockets
INDI Indiana Pacers
LACL Los Angeles Clippers
LALK Los Angeles Lakers
MEMP Memphis Grizzlies
MIAM Miami Heat
MILW Milwaukee Bucks
MINN Minnesota Timberwolves
NJRS New Jersey Nets
NORL New Orleans Hornets
NWYR New York Knicks
OKLA Oklahoma Thunder
ORLA Orlando Magic
PHIL Philadelphia 76'ers
PHNX Phoenix Suns
PORT Portland Trailblazers
SACR Sacramento Kings
SANA San Antonio Spurs
TORO Toronto Raptors
UTAH Utah Jazz
WASH Washington Wizards

POSITION CODES
PG Point Guard
SG Shooting Guard
SF Small Forward
PF Power Forward
C Center

SCALE FOR REGULAR SEASON REAL PLAYER RATINGS
Perfect for all Practical Purposes / Major Historic Super Star 1.100 and more
Historic Super Star 1.000 1.099
Super Star 0.900 0.999
A Star Player / A well above normal starter 0.820 0.899
Very Good Player / A solid starter 0.760 0.819
Major Role Player / Good enough to start 0.700 0.759
Good Role Player / Often a good 6th man 0.640 0.699
Satisfactory Role Player / Preferably should not start 0.580 0.639
Marginal Role Player / Generally should not start 0.520 0.579
Poor Player / Should never start 0.460 0.519
Very Poor Player 0.400 0.459
Extremely Poor Player .399 and less

NBA REAL PLAYER RATINGS
2009-10 REGULAR SEASON

--Shows the real quality of players
--Includes all tracked actions and also includes untracked or hidden defending
--The average Real Player Rating for all players who play 300 minutes or more is about .700.
--All players who have played at least 300 minutes are included here and in all other ratings to follow in coming days

MAJOR HISTORIC SUPERSTARS
1 LeBron James CLEV SF 1.382
2 Tim Duncan SANA PF 1.254
3 Chris Paul NORL PG 1.202
4 Dwight Howard ORLA C 1.121
5 Andrew Bogut MILW C 1.112

HISTORIC SUPERSTARS
6 Steve Nash PHNX PG 1.095
7 Jason Kidd DALL PG 1.092
8 Rajon Rondo BOST PG 1.084
9 Deron Williams UTAH PG 1.076
10 Dwyane Wade MIAM SG 1.075
11 Marcus Camby LACL C 1.071
12 Pau Gasol LALK PF 1.065
13 Greg Oden PORT C 1.060
14 Kevin Durant OKLA SF 1.051
15 Dirk Nowitzki DALL PF 1.034
16 Josh Smith ATLA SF 1.033
17 Kevin Garnett BOST PF 1.033
18 Manu Ginobili SANA SG 1.023
19 Kobe Bryant LALK SG 1.005

SUPERSTARS
20 Carlos Boozer UTAH PF 0.994
21 Lamar Odom LALK PF 0.982
22 Andrei Kirilenko UTAH SF 0.976
23 Chris Bosh TORO PF 0.972
24 David Lee NWYR C 0.971
25 Al Horford ATLA C 0.970
26 Marcus Camby PORT C 0.967
27 Jameer Nelson ORLA PG 0.959
28 Joakim Noah CHIC C 0.955
29 John Salmons MILW SF 0.937
30 Andrew Bynum LALK C 0.936
31 Troy Murphy INDI PF 0.934
32 Kevin Love MINN PF 0.934
33 Anderson Varejao CLEV C 0.933
34 Brendan Haywood DALL C 0.929
35 Vince Carter ORLA SG 0.928
36 Gerald Wallace CHAR SF 0.918
37 Sergio Rodriguez SACR PG 0.908
38 Tyrus Thomas CHIC PF 0.904
39 Derrick Rose CHIC PG 0.903

STARS
40 Baron Davis LACL PG 0.899
41 Russell Westbrook OKLA PG 0.897
42 Zach Randolph MEMP PF 0.885
43 Danny Granger INDI SF 0.885
44 Marc Gasol MEMP C 0.885
45 Joe Johnson ATLA SG 0.883
46 Chauncey Billups DENV PG 0.883
47 Roy Hibbert INDI C 0.880
48 Ben Wallace DETR C 0.877
49 Andre Miller PORT PG 0.874
50 Carmelo Anthony DENV SF 0.874
51 Brandon Jennings MILW PG 0.870
52 Tyrus Thomas CHAR PF 0.870
53 A.J. Price INDI PG 0.868
54 Paul Millsap UTAH PF 0.866
55 Craig Smith LACL PF 0.865
56 Samuel Dalembert PHIL C 0.864
57 Andre Iguodala PHIL SG 0.858
58 Raymond Felton CHAR PG 0.857
59 Delonte West CLEV SG 0.856
60 Al Jefferson MINN C 0.856
61 Eric Maynor OKLA PG 0.856
62 Serge Ibaka OKLA PF 0.855
63 Nene Hilario DENV C 0.852
64 Chris Andersen DENV PF 0.849
65 Shaquille O'Neal CLEV C 0.842
66 Brandon Roy PORT SG 0.842
67 Ryan Anderson ORLA PF 0.840
68 Antonio McDyess SANA PF 0.839
69 Tony Parker SANA PG 0.837
70 Paul Pierce BOST SF 0.836
71 Mo Williams CLEV PG 0.835
72 Kyle Lowry HOUS PG 0.835
73 Ersan Ilyasova MILW SF 0.828
74 Amare Stoudemire PHNX PF 0.828
75 Luke Ridnour MILW PG 0.827
76 Erick Dampier DALL C 0.826
77 Tyreke Evans SACR PG 0.825
78 Andris Biedrins GOLS C 0.825
79 Kyle Korver UTAH SG 0.824
80 Anthony Randolph GOLS PF 0.820

VERY GOOD PLAYERS / SOLID STARTERS
81 Eric Maynor UTAH PG 0.819
82 Carlos Arroyo MIAM PG 0.819
83 Antawn Jamison CLEV PF 0.819
84 Nazr Mohammed CHAR C 0.818
85 Luol Deng CHIC SF 0.817
86 Dorell Wright MIAM SG 0.817
87 LaMarcus Aldridge PORT PF 0.817
88 Carl Landry HOUS PF 0.816
89 Luis Scola HOUS PF 0.816
90 Nick Collison OKLA PF 0.812
91 Carlos Delfino MILW SG 0.809
92 Kendrick Perkins BOST C 0.807
93 Jermaine O'Neal MIAM C 0.805
94 Nate Robinson NWYR PG 0.804
95 Goran Dragic PHNX PG 0.803
96 Mike Bibby ATLA PG 0.803
97 Stephen Curry GOLS PG 0.803
98 Mehmet Okur UTAH C 0.800
99 Jose Calderon TORO PG 0.797
100 Jason Terry DALL SG 0.791
101 Ronnie Price UTAH PG 0.784
102 DeJuan Blair SANA PF 0.784
103 Chris Kaman LACL C 0.783
104 Shaun Livingston WASH PG 0.783
105 Joel Przybilla PORT C 0.782
106 David West NORL PF 0.781
107 John Salmons CHIC SF 0.776
108 Matt Barnes ORLA SF 0.775
109 Darren Collison NORL PG 0.775
110 Ronny Turiaf GOLS C 0.774
111 Udonis Haslem MIAM PF 0.774
112 Shawn Marion DALL SF 0.772
113 Jason Williams ORLA PG 0.771
114 Keyon Dooling NJRS PG 0.771
115 Andray Blatche WASH C 0.770
116 James Harden OKLA SG 0.770
117 Brook Lopez NJRS C 0.770
118 Ray Allen BOST SG 0.770
119 Amir Johnson TORO SF 0.769
120 Ty Lawson DENV PG 0.768
121 Beno Udrih SACR PG 0.768
122 Chuck Hayes HOUS PF 0.765
123 Matt Bonner SANA PF 0.763
124 Reggie Evans TORO PF 0.763
125 Gilbert Arenas WASH PG 0.760

MAJOR ROLE PLAYERS / GOOD ENOUGH TO START
126 Zydrunas Ilgauskas CLEV C 0.758
127 Rasheed Wallace BOST PF 0.757
128 Lou Williams PHIL SG 0.756
129 Stephen Jackson CHAR SF 0.754
130 Dan Gadzuric MILW C 0.754
131 Jamario Moon CLEV SF 0.754
132 Ron Artest LALK SF 0.752
133 Rodney Stuckey DETR PG 0.749
134 Shelden Williams BOST PF 0.748
135 Oleksiy Pecherov MINN C 0.748
136 Aaron Brooks HOUS PG 0.747
137 Boris Diaw CHAR PF 0.746
138 C.J. Watson GOLS PG 0.746
139 Brendan Haywood WASH C 0.744
140 Emeka Okafor NORL C 0.742
141 Taj Gibson CHIC PF 0.741
142 J.R. Smith DENV SG 0.738
143 Mike Miller WASH SF 0.732
144 Channing Frye PHNX C 0.731
145 Louis Amundson PHNX PF 0.731
146 Elton Brand PHIL PF 0.726
147 D.J. Mbenga LALK C 0.725
148 Tayshaun Prince DETR SF 0.724
149 Francisco Garcia SACR SG 0.724
150 Tyler Hansbrough INDI PF 0.724
151 Trevor Ariza HOUS SG 0.723
152 Allen Iverson PHIL SG 0.722
153 Rashard Lewis ORLA PF 0.721
154 Richard Jefferson SANA SF 0.721
155 Luc Richard Mbah a Moute MILW SF 0.721
156 Jamal Crawford ATLA SG 0.721
157 Brad Miller CHIC C 0.720
158 Josh Boone NJRS C 0.718
159 Jason Richardson PHNX SG 0.718
160 Sebastian Telfair LACL PG 0.717
161 Marvin Williams ATLA PF 0.716
162 David Andersen HOUS C 0.715
163 Caron Butler DALL SF 0.715
164 Michael Beasley MIAM PF 0.714
165 George Hill SANA PG 0.713
166 Ronnie Brewer UTAH SG 0.712
167 D.J. Augustin CHAR PG 0.712
168 Monta Ellis GOLS PG 0.711
169 Sean May SACR PF 0.710
170 Anthony Tolliver GOLS PF 0.709
171 Kenyon Martin DENV PF 0.709
172 Tyson Chandler CHAR C 0.709
173 Rodrigue Beaubois DALL PG 0.707
174 Stephen Jackson GOLS SF 0.704
175 Shane Battier HOUS SF 0.703
176 Stephen Graham CHAR SF 0.702
177 Mike Conley MEMP PG 0.702
178 Earl Watson INDI PG 0.701
179 T.J. Ford INDI PG 0.700

GOOD ROLE PLAYERS / OFTEN GOOD 6TH MAN PLAYERS
180 Ramon Sessions MINN PG 0.699
181 Corey Maggette GOLS SF 0.699
182 Marcin Gortat ORLA PF 0.698
183 Terrence Williams NJRS SG 0.698
184 Jarrett Jack TORO PG 0.698
185 James Singleton WASH SF 0.696
186 JaVale McGee WASH C 0.694
187 Jose Juan Barea DALL PG 0.694
188 Marcus Thornton NORL SG 0.693
189 Daequan Cook MIAM SG 0.691
190 Jordan Farmar LALK PG 0.689
191 Kirk Hinrich CHIC PG 0.689
192 Carl Landry SACR PF 0.689
193 Shannon Brown LALK PG 0.687
194 Anthony Carter DENV PG 0.686
195 Jason Thompson SACR PF 0.686
196 Mike Dunleavy INDI SF 0.686
197 Robin Lopez PHNX C 0.684
198 Spencer Hawes SACR C 0.680
199 Rudy Fernandez PORT SG 0.678
200 Drew Gooden LACL PF 0.678
201 Steve Blake LACL PG 0.677
202 Bobby Simmons NJRS SF 0.676
203 Larry Hughes NWYR SG 0.675
204 Jerry Stackhouse MILW SF 0.675
205 Quentin Richardson MIAM SG 0.675
206 Rudy Gay MEMP SF 0.675
207 Darko Milicic MINN C 0.674
208 Drew Gooden DALL PF 0.674
209 Reggie Williams GOLS SF 0.673
210 Ronald Murray CHAR SG 0.671
211 Grant Hill PHNX SF 0.669
212 Nate Robinson BOST PG 0.668
213 Travis Outlaw LACL SF 0.668
214 Steve Blake PORT PG 0.667
215 Devin Harris NJRS PG 0.665
216 Antawn Jamison WASH PF 0.665
217 Danilo Gallinari NWYR SF 0.664
218 Wilson Chandler NWYR SF 0.664
219 Gerald Henderson CHAR SG 0.664
220 Tony Allen BOST SG 0.663
221 Kyrylo Fesenko UTAH C 0.662
222 Anthony Morrow GOLS SG 0.661
223 Jordan Hill HOUS PF 0.661
224 Jared Dudley PHNX SF 0.660
225 Daniel Gibson CLEV PG 0.660
226 Jeff Green OKLA PF 0.659
227 Josh McRoberts INDI PF 0.659
228 Anthony Johnson ORLA PG 0.658
229 J.J. Redick ORLA SG 0.658
230 Al Harrington NWYR PF 0.655
231 Luther Head INDI PG 0.654
232 Nicolas Batum PORT SF 0.653
233 Theo Ratliff CHAR C 0.650
234 Mario Chalmers MIAM PG 0.648
235 Brandon Bass ORLA PF 0.648
236 Kris Humphries NJRS PF 0.646
237 Chris Duhon NWYR PG 0.643
238 Nenad Krstic OKLA C 0.642
239 Kris Humphries DALL PF 0.642

SATISFACTORY ROLE PLAYERS / USUALLY DO NOT START
240 Rasho Nesterovic TORO C 0.637
241 Hedo Turkoglu TORO SF 0.635
242 Johan Petro DENV C 0.635
243 Randy Foye WASH PG 0.634
244 Jrue Holiday PHIL PG 0.633
245 Mickael Pietrus ORLA SG 0.631
246 Jared Jeffries NWYR PF 0.627
247 Leandro Barbosa PHNX SG 0.626
248 Joel Anthony MIAM C 0.624
249 O.J. Mayo MEMP SG 0.622
250 Chase Budinger HOUS SF 0.621
251 Roger Mason SANA SG 0.619
252 Caron Butler WASH SF 0.617
253 Peja Stojakovic NORL SF 0.615
254 Marreese Speights PHIL PF 0.613
255 Jamaal Tinsley MEMP PG 0.613
256 Bobby Brown NORL PG 0.611
257 Jonas Jerebko DETR SF 0.610
258 Omri Casspi SACR SF 0.609
259 Kurt Thomas MILW PF 0.608
260 Thaddeus Young PHIL SF 0.607
261 Brandon Rush INDI SG 0.606
262 Hasheem Thabeet MEMP C 0.605
263 Damien Wilkins MINN SG 0.601
264 Rodney Carney PHIL SF 0.601
265 Earl Boykins WASH PG 0.599
266 J.J. Hickson CLEV PF 0.599
267 Willie Green PHIL SG 0.598
268 Anthony Parker CLEV SG 0.596
269 Jamaal Magloire MIAM C 0.594
270 Wesley Matthews UTAH SG 0.592
271 Devean George GOLS SG 0.592
272 Richard Hamilton DETR SG 0.592
273 Kevin Martin SACR SG 0.591
274 Andrea Bargnani TORO C 0.591
275 Ryan Gomes MINN SF 0.589
276 Thabo Sefolosha OKLA SF 0.589
277 Rafer Alston NJRS PG 0.589
278 Tracy McGrady NWYR SG 0.588
279 Marco Belinelli TORO SG 0.587
280 Michael Finley BOST SF 0.585
281 Marcus Williams MEMP PG 0.583
282 Martell Webster PORT SG 0.583
283 Charlie Villanueva DETR PF 0.582

MARGINAL ROLE PLAYERS / RARELY START
284 Derek Fisher LALK PG 0.578
285 Jannero Pargo CHIC PG 0.577
286 Toney Douglas NWYR PG 0.577
287 Chris Hunter GOLS PF 0.576
288 Derrick Brown CHAR SF 0.575
289 Yi Jianlian NJRS PF 0.575
290 Nathan Jawai MINN PF 0.575
291 Ime Udoka SACR SG 0.574
292 Sergio Rodriguez NWYR PG 0.574
293 Arron Afflalo DENV SG 0.573
294 Kevin Martin HOUS SG 0.572
295 Hakim Warrick MILW PF 0.571
296 Al Thornton WASH SF 0.569
297 Will Bynum DETR PG 0.568
298 Jonny Flynn MINN PG 0.568
299 James Posey NORL SF 0.564
300 Mikki Moore GOLS C 0.561
301 Darius Songaila NORL PF 0.561
302 Jerryd Bayless PORT PG 0.556
303 Jon Brockman SACR PF 0.554
304 Sasha Vujacic LALK SG 0.554
305 Dante Cunningham PORT SF 0.551
306 Michael Redd MILW SG 0.551
307 Eric Gordon LACL SG 0.550
308 C.J. Miles UTAH SF 0.549
309 Al Thornton LACL SF 0.547
310 Julian Wright NORL SF 0.545
311 Jeff Teague ATLA PG 0.544
312 Marquis Daniels BOST SG 0.543
313 Dahntay Jones INDI SG 0.542
314 Chris Douglas-Roberts NJRS SG 0.541
315 Zaza Pachulia ATLA C 0.538
316 Etan Thomas OKLA C 0.538
317 Sonny Weems TORO SG 0.537
318 Devin Brown NORL SG 0.533
319 Jason Maxiell DETR PF 0.532
320 Bill Walker NWYR SG 0.532
321 Courtney Lee NJRS SG 0.528
322 James Jones MIAM SF 0.525
323 Donte Greene SACR SF 0.524
324 Kenny Thomas SACR PF 0.523
325 Wayne Ellington MINN SG 0.521
326 Juwan Howard PORT PF 0.520

POOR PLAYERS / SHOULD NEVER START
327 Charlie Bell MILW SG 0.518
328 Corey Brewer MINN SF 0.518
329 Hakim Warrick CHIC PF 0.514
330 DeAndre Jordan LACL C 0.512
331 Rasual Butler LACL SG 0.509
332 Glen Davis BOST PF 0.508
333 Sam Young MEMP SF 0.508
334 Austin Daye DETR SF 0.507
335 Ronald Murray CHIC SG 0.504
336 Vladimir Radmanovic GOLS SF 0.494
337 Solomon Jones INDI PF 0.493
338 Ben Gordon DETR SG 0.491
339 James Johnson CHIC PF 0.487
340 Rafer Alston MIAM PG 0.482
341 Eduardo Najera DALL PF 0.482
342 Chucky Atkins DETR PG 0.477
343 Earl Clark PHNX SF 0.474
344 Joey Graham DENV SF 0.473
345 Fabricio Oberto WASH C 0.468
346 Jason Smith PHIL PF 0.466
347 Andres Nocioni SACR SF 0.464
348 Jared Jeffries HOUS PF 0.462
349 Nick Young WASH SG 0.462
350 Maurice Evans ATLA SF 0.462
351 Keith Bogans SANA SG 0.462
352 Josh Howard DALL SF 0.460

VERY POOR PLAYERS
353 Eddie House NWYR SG 0.454
354 Joe Smith ATLA PF 0.453
355 Kwame Brown DETR C 0.452
356 Antoine Wright TORO SF 0.451
357 Darrell Arthur MEMP PF 0.443
358 Jarvis Hayes NJRS SF 0.438
359 Ricky Davis LACL SF 0.437
360 Mardy Collins LACL PG 0.436
361 Malik Hairston SANA SG 0.433
362 Jeff Pendergraph PORT PF 0.432
363 Jermaine Taylor HOUS SG 0.428
364 Chris Wilcox DETR C 0.417
365 DeMar DeRozan TORO SG 0.414
366 Jodie Meeks MILW SG 0.413
367 Quinton Ross DALL SF 0.406

EXTREMELY POOR PLAYERS
368 Morris Peterson NORL SG 0.394
369 Josh Powell LALK PF 0.386
370 Jason Kapono PHIL SG 0.383
371 Jawad Williams CLEV SF 0.369
372 DeMarre Carroll MEMP SF 0.357
373 Ryan Hollins MINN C 0.351
374 Steve Novak LACL SF 0.345
375 Trenton Hassell NJRS SF 0.342
376 Brian Scalabrine BOST C 0.329
377 Michael Finley SANA SF 0.321
378 Sasha Pavlovic MINN SG 0.314
379 DeShawn Stevenson WASH SG 0.287
380 Malik Allen DENV PF 0.282
381 DaJuan Summers DETR SF 0.266

SCALE FOR REGULAR SEASON REAL PLAYER RATINGS
Perfect for all Practical Purposes / Major Historic Super Star 1.100 and more
Historic Super Star 1.000 1.099
Super Star 0.900 0.999
A Star Player / A well above normal starter 0.820 0.899
Very Good Player / A solid starter 0.760 0.819
Major Role Player / Good enough to start 0.700 0.759
Good Role Player / Often a good 6th man 0.640 0.699
Satisfactory Role Player / Usually do not start 0.580 0.639
Marginal Role Player / Rarely start 0.520 0.579
Poor Player / Should never start 0.460 0.519
Very Poor Player 0.400 0.459
Extremely Poor Player .399 and less

AVERAGE RATINGS BY POSITION
Not all positions are created equal. These are the average ratings by position among all NBA players who play 300 minutes or more. There are very few small forwards and shooting guards who are superstars. Most (but definitely not all) superstars are players who can play point guard, power forward, or center.

Point Guard .750
Shooting Guard .640
Small Forward .640
Power Forward .720
Center .750
All Positions / All Players (NBA Overall Average) .700

PLAYOFF GRADE PLAYERS
Playoff Grade Players have ratings of .560 and higher. Players with ratings below .560 should not play in the playoffs unless the team is forced to play them so that they have two players at a position and/or so that the team has at least eight players playing in the playoffs and/or because the coach is absolutely certain the low rating player will play better in the playoffs than he did in the regular season.

REGULAR SEASON STARTING PLAYERS
All starters on all teams should have ratings of .575 and higher. If a team has no player at a postion with at least a .575 rating, then it is extremely deficient at that position due to injuries or due to management incompetence.

THE ALL IMPORTANT, AWARD WINNING REAL PLAYER RATINGS USER GUIDE
The above are a few hightlights from the User Guide for Real Player Ratings. For complete details regarding how the Real Player Ratings are designed, how and why they work, and how exactly you can use them, see the User Guide. The User Guide for Real Player Ratings is a necessary reference for anyone who wants to truly understand the value of, the validity of, and the ways you can use the Real Player Rating performance measures.

Also, you should become a regular visitor to Quest for the Ring if you want to get the full advantage of reading and using Real Player Ratings Series performance measures. The more you visit and check out ratings, the more quickly and easily you will be able to evaluate what you are seeing.

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