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Ohio State Preview

Or: Tim’s foray into tempo-free statistics.

Tonight, for the second time in 10 days, Michigan will take on Illinois in Big Ten basketball action. The game is a 8:30 PM Eastern  tonight in Urbana-Champaign, and can be seen live on Big Ten Network.

Tempo-Free and efficiency comparison (if you need an explanation of what any of these things mean, head to KenPom’s website):

Michigan v. Ohio State: National Ranks
Category Michigan Ohio State Advantage
Mich eFG% v. OSU eFG% D 106 63 O
Mich eFG% D v. OSU eFG% 113 71 O
Mich TO% v. OSU Def TO% 3(!) 99 M
Mich Def TO% v. OSU TO% 151 65 O
Mich OReb% v. OSU DReb% 248 157 O
Mich DReb% v. OSU OReb% 196 265 M
Mich FTR v. OSU Opp FTR 302 7 OO
Mich Opp FTR v. OSU FTR 14 85 M
Mich AdjO v. OSU AdjD 24 33
Mich AdjD v. OSU AdjO 120 69 O

Differences of more than 100 places in the rankings garner two-letter advantages, differences of more than 200 get a third.

Ohio State is a pretty good team, despite not getting a ton of love from the polls right now. Their offense depends on hitting their shots, and the defense is reliant on forcing opponents to miss their shots, as well as getting them to turn it over. Surprisingly, they don’t have a huge rebounding advantage over the Wolverines like I would have expected. Ken Pomeroy predicts a 66-64 Michigan win in a 62-possession game. He gives the Wolverines a 59% chance of winning the game.

Ohio State has had a rash of injuries and player defections this year, making them somewhat thin (depth-wise) outside the paint. Inside the paint, they have 7-1 freshman BJ Mullens. If the Illinois game is any indication, Michigan should have plenty of trouble matching up with Ohio State’s men inside. Fortunately, the Buckeyes don’t have nearly the depth in big men (the next tallest player is 6-9, and Kyle Madsen gets very little playing time). The most-used players for Ohio State are Evan Turner and Jon Diebler, two sophomores who play nearly the entire game for OSU each time out.

The Wolverines face another tough battle, and hopefully the home-court advantage can propel them to a win.

Posted under Analysis, Basketball

Upon Further Review: Illinois

The raw data is available in .xls format here. On individual player charts, the time played is now from the boxscore, rather than adding up to the second each player’s time played.

Half 1

1st half differential
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 7:10 15-12 +3
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Lee, Sims 2:08 0-2 -2
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Novak, Gibson 2:24 4-4 0
Merritt, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson :43 0-2 -2
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson 3:00 5-3 +2
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 4:31 7-7 0
Total 20:00 31-30 +1

Half 2

2nd half differential
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 1:46 3-2 +1
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Sims 4:01 3-7 -4
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 1:24 4-4 0
Merritt, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson 1:52 0-3 -3
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Harris, Gibson :34 0-2 -2
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Harris, Sims 2:24 1-2 -1
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 1:46 3-2 +1
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Sims 3:03 2-8 -6
Grady, Lee, Harris, Novak, Sims :23 0-1 -1
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims :16 0-0 0
Grady, Lee, Harris, Novak, Sims :40 3-2 +1
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims :51 0-1 -1
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Harris, Gibson :08 1-0 +1
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Harris, Gibson :26 0-2 -2
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Shepherd, Gibson :26 0-0 0
Total 20:00 20-36 -16

Game totals

Lineup Totals
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 16:20 28-24 +4
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Lee, Sims 2:08 0-2 -2
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 1:24 4-4 0
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson 3:00 5-3 +2
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Sims 3:03 2-8 -6
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Novak, Gibson 2:24 4-4 0
Merritt, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson 1:35 0-5 -5
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Harris, Gibson 1:00 0-4 -4
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Shepherd, Gibson :26 0-0 0
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Sims 4:01 3-7 -4
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Harris, Sims 2:24 1-2 -1
Grady, Lee, Harris, Novak, Sims 1:03 3-3 0
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Harris, Gibson :08 1-0 +1
Total 60:00 51-66 -15

Individual players:
(First 6 minutes of game action not charted)

Manny Harris 34min -12
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 0/1 1/1 1
Midrange 1 0/2 2**
3-point 1/2 1/2

Manny had what can only be described as the least shitty day of anyone on the team.

Laval Lucas-Perry 27min -2
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1
Midrange 0/1 1/2 1
3-point 0/1 0/2

Had a poor day from beyond the arc, but did some other things that worked.

Zack Novak 33min -9
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1/1
Midrange
3-point 1/2

Had a good day rebounding the ball.

DeShawn Sims 31min -9
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1 0/1 0/2 1
Midrange 0/1 0/2
3-point 0/2 0/1

Awful, awful day. All of the shots he made were in the first 6 minutes.

Kelvin Grady 30min -4
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 0/1
Midrange 1/1
3-point 0/1 0/3

Poor effort from three, but did a lot of setting other guys up.

Zack Gibson 9min -6
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1/1
Midrange 1/2 0/1
3-point

Showed that he is almost entirely ineffective when the other team has some good bigs to go against.

Stu Douglass 12min -13
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange 0/1
3-point 0/1 0/1 1/2

Blerg.

CJ Lee 14min -8
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 0/1
Midrange
3-point 0/1

Bad day shooting, but did the standard CJ Lee other things to be a steady presence.

David Merritt 10min -11
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 0/1
Midrange 0/1
3-point

Mediocre to bad day.

What This Says…

DeShawn Sims struggled against a lineup with actual size. When he struggles, Michigan has major trouble getting anything going offensively for any consistent period of time. Kelvin Grady and Laval Lucas-Perry had by far the best performances in terms of differential.

Posted under Analysis, Basketball

Illinois Preview

Or: Tim’s foray into tempo-free statistics.

Tonight, for the second time in 10 days, Michigan will take on Illinois in Big Ten basketball action. The game is a 8:30 PM Eastern  tonight in Urbana-Champaign, and can be seen live on Big Ten Network.

Tempo-Free and efficiency comparison (if you need an explanation of what any of these things mean, head to KenPom’s website):

Michigan v. Illinois: National Ranks
Category Michigan Illinois Advantage
Mich eFG% v. Illinois eFG% D 53 38 I
Mich eFG% D v. Illinois eFG% 98 35 I
Mich TO% v. Illinois Def TO% 3(!) 34 M
Mich Def TO% v. Illinois TO% 146 72 I
Mich OReb% v. Illinois DReb% 261 157 II
Mich DReb% v. Illinois OReb% 188 216 M
Mich FTR v. Illinois Opp FTR 289 23 III
Mich Opp FTR v. Illinois FTR 8 343 MMMM
Mich AdjO v. Illinois AdjD 21 16
Mich AdjD v. Illinois AdjO 131 33 I

Differences of more than 100 places in the rankings garner two-letter advantages, differences of more than 200 get a third. In free throw rate, Michigan has earned the as-yet-unprecedented 4th letter.

Illinois is a good basketball team. Of course, Michigan somehow managed to knock them off less than two weeks ago, so this game certainly isn’t unwinnable. Still, home court advantage is huge in the Big Ten, and from the looks of things, Michigan may have just gotten lucky in Crisler last time. The key when Illinois has the ball is limiting the number of god shots the Illini get. Michigan must keep the Illinois effective field goal percentage down if they want a chance to win. The Illini have a slight advantage in this area, but that includes ridiculous shooting nights by the likes of Savannah State and Indiana, where the shots weren’t really open, they just happened to fall. On the other end of the court, Michigan must get some good shots of their own. The offense works best when DeShawn Sims is able to shoot not only inside the lane, but also from midrange to open up the arc for the likes of Laval Lucas-Perry and Zack Novak. Manny Harris must continue trying to get to the line, and not get frustrated if he doesn’t get the calls early in the game. When that happened in the Wisconsin game, he unwisely kept trying what wasn’t working instead of dishing to more open teammates. Turnover margin should also play a role in this game. Michigan was forcing turnovers out of the 1-3-1 and man looks against the Hawkeyes, though I think the 1-3-1 is a better turnover-producing set. Of course, playing the 1-3-1 is heavily contingent on making shots (as pointed out after the Indiana game by commenter Mr. Ostrander), so again eFG% is important. Ken Pomeroy predicts a 70-61 Illinois win in a 60-possession game. He gives the Wolverines a 16% chance of winning the game.

Illinois is led by Trent Meachem, Demitri McCamey, Chester Frazier, and Mike Davis. Each of those four guys plays 70% or more of the team’s minutes, so getting them in foul trouble – which again leads me to believe Michigan should try to score in the lane in this game – would be helpful. Meachem is the team’s biggest three-point threat, while the 6-10 Davis is primarily an inside scorer. Newly-eligible (following his transfer from Kentucky) is Alex Legion, who has gotten plenty of playing time in Big Ten games. He also forced Zack Novak to get 6 stitches last time these teams squared off.

Call me crazy, but I think with Illinois’s size (3 players over 6-10, and another at 6-7), I think Jevohn Shepherd may get a bit of playing time in this game, if only for his athleticism on defense and to absorb a few fouls to keep DeShawn Sims and Zack Gibson out of trouble. Michigan should also be able to get by on their quickness against a bigger Illinois team.

The Wolverines are the underdog yet again, and this game isn’t a must-win, but it certainly would be nice to get the first 2-game season sweep of the year.

Posted under Analysis, Basketball

Upon Further Review: Iowa

The raw data is available in .xls format here. On individual player charts, the time played is now from the boxscore, rather than adding up to the second each player’s time played.

Half 1

1st half differential
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 8:03 12-4 +8
Merritt, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson 3:19 7-8 -1
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Gibson 1:36 0-2 -2
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Gibson, Sims :25 1-0 +1
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Harris, Sims 3:34 5-0 +5
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 3:03 7-2 +5
Total 20:00 32-16 +16

Half 2

2nd half differential
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 4:10 9-8 +1
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Gibson 1:32 3-3 0
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson 1:18 0-2 -2
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims :52 4-0 +4
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims :12 0-0 0
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Sims 1:40 4-0 +4
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Harris, Sims 1:26 4-2 +2
Merritt, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Sims 3:36 5-4 +1
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Gibson 1:45 0-4 -4
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Gibson 1:31 0-5 -5
Grady, Lee, Wright, Shepherd, Puls 1:11 0-2 -2
Grady, Douglass, Wright, Shepherd, Puls :47 3-3 0
Total 20:00 32-33 -1

Game totals

Lineup Totals
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 16:08 32-14 +18
Merritt, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Sims 3:36 5-4 +1
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Harris, Sims 3:34 5-0 +5
Merritt, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson 3:19 7-8 -1
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Gibson 3:17 3-7 -4
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Sims 1:40 4-0 +4
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Gibson 1:36 0-2 -2
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Gibson 1:31 0-5 -5
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Harris, Sims 1:26 4-2 +2
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson 1:18 0-2 -2
Grady, Lee, Wright, Shepherd, Puls 1:11 0-2 -2
Grady, Douglass, Wright, Shepherd, Puls :47 3-3 0
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Gibson, Sims :25 1-0 +1
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims :12 0-0 0
Total 60:00 64-49 +15

Individual players:

Manny Harris 32min +14
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 0/1 0/1 3/4 3*
Midrange 0/1
3-point 0/1 2/3

He got an and-1 on one of those fouls in the lane. Manny did what he needs to do for the team, though his hesitation in putting up 3s has really started to annoy me.

Laval Lucas-Perry 29min +17
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1/1 1
Midrange 0/2
3-point 1/2

Showed some flashes of being able to get to the hoop and draw contact. That will be important down the stretch.

Zack Novak 33min +9
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange 0/1
3-point 0/1 0/1 1/2

Didn’t shoot the ball much, but he made some defensive plays (along the lines of CJ Lee), and did a good job rebounding, considering he’s 6-5 and playing power forward.

DeShawn Sims 27min +31(!)
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 0/2 1/2 4/4 1*
Midrange 0/1 1/3 1/1
3-point 1 0/1

It seemed ike he took (and made) a ton more midrange shots than he actually apparently did. Pretty good day, though he didn’t pull in double-digit boards.

Kelvin Grady 28min +11
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1/1
Midrange 0/1
3-point 0/1 1/1 1/2

Did what he needs to do. Actually nailed a layup.

Zack Gibson 11min -13(!)
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 0/2 1/1
Midrange 0/1
3-point 0/1

Struggled mightily If this is how he plays with almost no post presence on the other team, how will he compete against Goran Suton? BJ Mullens?

Eric Puls 2min -2
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange
3-point 1/1

WOOO PULS!

Stu Douglass 12min -2
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1/1
Midrange
3-point 0/1 0/1

Didn’t nail his 3-balls, and his only make was an easy layup on a good cut.

CJ Lee 11 min +5
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1/1
Midrange
3-point 0/1 0/1

Scrappy, former walk-on, etc. Did a lot more than shoot.

What This Says…

Douglass and Gibson are the only guys who played actual minutes (i.e. not garbage time) who logged negative differentials. I think this surprises nobody. Gibson really struggled today, and Douglass is the lesser of the two freshmen.

This team has so much more success when they don’t take all their shots from three. DeShawn Sims is a major weapon from midrange, and both Manny (obviously) and LLP are able to get to the hoop and draw contact, if not just get their score on. CJ Lee was the team’s MVP, though, despite an unspectacular differential. He made hustle plays left and right, most of which won’t show up in the boxscore.

The story of the day was not the offense (rendering this little exercise at least partially moot), but the stellar defense that the team played. The 1-3-1 forced myriad turnovers, and the team was able to get a few in man as well. They were really playing tenaciously, and I think when they have some success on the offensive side of the court, it inspires them to play better defense (in addition to allowing them to play more 1-3-1).

Posted under Analysis, Basketball

Michigan a lot, Iowa a lot fewer.

Nice, dominating perofrmance by the Wolverines today in Crisler Arena. After struggling on the road against bottom-dweller Indiana, it was nice to see this team get its feet back under and finally dominate from start to finish in a way that they hadn’t in quite some time.

Manny Harris and DeShawn Sims were their usual sleves, for better or for worse. This time, Manny was hitting the 3-ball after his hesitation “move,” though he did brick a dunk in the first half (oops). DeShawn was money from inside the arc for most of the day (as usual), and had a few awesome rebounds (including a one-hander as he was getting fouled on the other arm). These guys are clearly the most talented guys on the team, and they showed that they can get it done in the Big Ten.

Zack Novak and CJ Lee are entirely different types of players, but each should be singled out for his effort on this day. CJ was constantly getting in passing lanes and disrupting the Iowa offense, he had a few steals, and even got a little offense of his own. Novak nails big shots left and right, but it’s the little things that really help. He puts in some of the best effort on the team, making deflections and getting rebounds despite playing the power forward position at only 6-5.

Kelvin Grayd made a layup, Eric Puls nailed a long bomb, and even Anthony Wright and Jevohn Shepherd got a bit of playing time. It was a good day. However, it is important to keep in mind that this Iowa team is not expected to finish near the top of the conference standings, and they were without one of their best players (and by far their best rebounder) today. Optimism is good, but a dominating win over a mediocre Iowa team on this day is no reason to let said optimism run wild.

Posted under Basketball

Iowa Preview

Or: Tim’s foray into tempo-free statistics.

Michigan takes on conference foe Iowa tomorrow morning at 11:30 in Crisler Arena (10:30AM in Iowa City – how’s that for an advantage?). The game can be seen on Big Ten Network.

Tempo-Free and efficiency comparison (if you need an explanation of what any of these things mean, head to KenPom’s website):

Michigan v. Iowa: National Ranks
Category Michigan Iowa Advantage
Mich eFG% v. Iowa eFG% D 80 84
Mich eFG% D v. Iowa eFG% 98 4(!) I
Mich TO% v. Iowa Def TO% 3(!) 197 MM
Mich Def TO% v. Iowa TO% 181 132 I
Mich OReb% v. Iowa DReb% 261 128 II
Mich DReb% v. Iowa OReb% 199 282 M
Mich FTR v. Iowa Opp FTR 179 185
Mich Opp FTR v. Iowa FTR 10 96 M
Mich AdjO v. Iowa AdjD 33 88 M
Mich AdjD v. Iowa AdjO 177 40 II

Differences of more than 100 places in the rankings garner two-letter advantages, differences of more than 200 get a third.

On paper, this looks to be a very tough game for Michigan. Each team shoots a lot of threes, though Iowa makes many more of them. After a horrific outing at Indiana, most of the Wolverines’ offensive stats have gotten slightly worse. Surprisingly given the first half against the Hoosiers, the defensive rankings have actually gotten better. Looking at the gameplans, Michigan’s offensive performance will be reliant on their ability to make shots. Given their struggles against Indiana, this may be no easy feat. However, the Hawkeyes, like the Wolverines, field a very short team – and that was before Cyrus Tate hurt himself playing against Minnesota on Thursday. Perhaps the Manny Harris method of getting to the basket will be a little more effective, and he’ll be able to draw a foul or two (and actually get them called, for once). Iowa’s lack of size (and 3-point-heavy style) is evidenced by the fact that Michigan actually has a fairly sizeable advantage in rebounding the Hawkeyes’ misses. Iowa will make plenty of those shots though, and Michigan will have to take care of the ball (something they’ve certainly shown they can do) in order to get a win. The right column of the ledger above doesn’t tell the whole story: Michigan was close to getting a third “M” in the turnover column, a second in defensive rebounding(!!), while the Hawkeyes just missed getting a second in their advantage shooting the ball. Ken Pomeroy predicts a 63-60 win in a slow (56 possession) game.

Iowa’s key players are guard Jeff Peterson, who leads the team in assists and getting to the free throw line, freshman forward Matt Gatens, who leads the team in offensive rating and three-point shooting, and forward Cyrus Tate, the team’s lone senior. The 6-8 Tate is by far the team’s best rebounder on both ends of the floor, and he suffered an ankle injury in the first half against the Golden Gophers Thursday. He didn’t return to that game, and even if he does play tomorrow, it’s unclear exactly how effective he’ll be. If he’s limited, Michigan actually has a shot to outrebound their opponent for one of the few times this year – which would go a long way towards helping win.

Posted under Analysis, Basketball

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Upon Further Review: Indiana

In my infinite hubris, I thought “ain’t no way this game is going to overtime,” and only set the DVR for 2 hours. The shot charting, therefore, only includes regulation. The differentials do include overtime, however. The raw data is available in .xls format here. Newly added: shot clock info for each shot.

NOTE: The total differentials don’t quite add up correctly. If you want to go through and check all my work, please feel free (I’m coming up with Michigan as having 3 points to many, and Indiana having 3 points too few).

Half 1

1st half differential
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 6:50 8-17 -9
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson 1:59 0-4 -4
Merritt, Douglass, Harris, Gibson, Sims 1:37 0-2 -2
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Gibson, Sims 1:14 1-0 +1
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Gibson, Sims :10 0-0 0
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Gibson, Sims :22 0-0 0
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Sims 1:46 2-2 0
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Sims 1:04 3-4 -1
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 1:56 4-3 +1
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Gibson 2:17 7-4 +3
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Gibson :45 0-0 0
Total 20:00 22-39 -17

Half 2

2nd half differential
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 6:29 13-9 +4
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Sims 4:29 6-5 +1
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims :28 0-0 0
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Sims 2:36 5-2 +3
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Sims 4:21 5-2 +3
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims :15 2-0 +2
Grady, Lee, Harris, Novak, Sims 1:15 6-2 +4
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims :07 0-0 0
Total 20:00 37-20 +17

Overtime

Overtime differential
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 4:19 8-4 +4
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Gibson :01 2-0 +2
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Gibson :07 0-0 0
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Gibson :05 1-0 +1
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Douglass :14 0-3 -3
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson :07 2-0 +2
Lucas-Perry, Lee, Harris, Novak, Wright :07 0-0 0
Total 5:00 13-7 +6

Game totals

Lineup Totals
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 18:00 31-30 +1
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson 2:06 2-4 -2
Merritt, Douglass, Harris, Gibson, Sims 1:37 0-2 -2
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Gibson, Sims 1:14 1-0 +1
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 2:24 4-3 +1
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Gibson 2:17 7-4 +3
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Sims 2:36 5-2 +3
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Gibson, Sims :10 0-0 0
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Gibson, Sims :22 0-0 0
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Sims 6:07 7-4 +3
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Sims 5:33 9-9 0
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Gibson :51 3-0 +3
Grady, Lee, Harris, Novak, Sims 1:15 6-2 +4
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Gibson :07 0-0 0
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Douglass :14 0-3 -3
Lucas-Perry, Lee, Harris, Novak, Wright :07 0-0 0
Total 60:00 72-66 +6

Individual players:

Manny Harris
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1 1/1 1/1 1
Midrange 0/1
3-point 0/4 2/4

Way too many inadvisable shots (especially from three) early in the shot clock. Manny wasn’t making a huge effort to slice into the lane.

Laval Lucas-Perry
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 0/1 2/2 1
Midrange
3-point 0/3 2/4

LLP was inconsistent from 3, and took nary a midrange jumper.

Zack Novak
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange
3-point 2/5 0/2

It seemed like Novak was doing a hell of a lot more than it looks like he did just by checking his shot chart. He made a ton of hustle plays (including getting a key deflection leading to a steal and fast-break bucket late in regulation, in addition to a whiteboy block) that really helped Michigan win.

DeShawn Sims
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 2/3 0/1
Midrange 5/7
3-point 0/3

DeShawn was money from midrange in the second half, when the team really needed something from inside to steady them.

Kelvin Grady
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 0/1 1
Midrange
3-point 0/1 1/3

Grady got much more time than he did in the previous game, and though he took a couple ill-advised shots, he was a catalyst for the rest of the offense (4 assists, 2 more assist opportunities missed). He also made the lane shot on which he was fouled.

Zack Gibson
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1/1
Midrange
3-point 0/1

Zack was pretty quiet, especially considering Indiana’s defense was locking down on the three-pointers. you’d think he would get some more looks inside.

David Merritt
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange
3-point 0/1

Quiet day for Merritt. More on how I think he should be used is below.

Stu Douglass
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 0/1 1
Midrange
3-point 0/1 1/3

Stu had a crappy day, but he did nail one big shot. I still think he’s the far inferior of the freshmen.

CJ Lee
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 0/1 1
Midrange
3-point 0/1 1/3

The timing of Lee’s shots means more than the shots themselves. He also came up with key defensive plays (including a steal with 40 seconds in regulation and Indiana up 3) and rebounds.

What This Says…

I re-watched the game (the first half, particularly) with a keen eye on how Indiana shot the lights out. In all honesty, I can’t figure it out. Offensive rebounding has something to do with it, and maybe momentum plays a role (though some might question that, I think in college basketball momentum is at least something of a factor). Maybe Michigan, frustrated on the offensive end, was letting their effort on the other end of the court suffer. However, looking at the actual shots themselves, rather than just the final number, there was no explanation for Devan Dumes and this Roth fella in particular having the first half that he did. He would airball a wide open three (which may something negative about Michigan’s defensive effort overall, but doesn’t explain the final stats), and then turn right around and nail one from 5 feet behind the line with Novak right in his face. It appears to me that the hot shooting (in this game, at least; I didn’t UFR the Savannah State or Eastern Michigan games) may be, in large part (or at least SOME part) a ridiculously unlikely statistical anomaly.

Even if you concede the defense was bad, which it may have been at some times, though not all, it was the offense that would have done the Wolverines in. If you allow the other team to score, the offensive output for your own team can’t absolutely sputter. That is what leads to huge runs like Indiana so frequently had in this game. Michigan can play poorly on one end of the court, but this team certainly isn’t good enough to struggle offensively AND defensively if they want to win games. To Indiana’s credit, they were at least playing very well on defense, and deserve some credit for Michigan’s players feeling they had to force things.

That said, I really like Kelvin Grady as a player. However, I think I’d prefer to see Merritt get the start over him, if only to be a calming force should a shellacking at the hands of the worst team in the conference just so happen to break out. Grady is a better player, Merritt is a better leader. Bringing Grady off the bench also can help spark the team with another offensive option (certainly in terms of drawing the defense and dishing it out). I prefer Merritt preventing damage with his leadership in the first place, rather than coming in as damage control later, when the momentum is out of reach. It just seems like those two roles should be reversed, no?

Gibson’s travel midway through the first half was a terrible call. His left foot is anchored, he pivots, pivots again, and suddenly a travel is called. This sounds like a ridiculously small refereeing point to get worked up over, but it happened to occur right at the moment Indiana really started taking off with all their momentum.

My apologies if you happened to see the draft of this that I accidentally published earlier today. It should be done now, sans the issue with the differentials.

Posted under Analysis, Basketball

Michigan 72, Indiana 66 (OT)

Wow. The only thing I want to do after that game is let out a sigh of relief. Michigan was down by 20 points early in the second half, but fought back against the Hoosiers for an overtime win, their first victory in Bloomington since 1995.

This game (along with Eastern Michigan and Savannah State wins) shows that, with poor enough shooting, Michigan can lose to anybody. Of course, the corollary to that is that Michigan can also beat anybody if the shots are falling (wins over UCLA and Duke). Of course, there is also a disturbing trend of letting bad teams play with them, and opposing offenses consistently shooting the lights out.

The shooting woes were attributable to several factors. Michigan hasn’t played away from home since December 20th, and haven’t played a true road game since the loss to Maryland in College Park. Several players, Manny Harris chief among them, were also settling for terrible looks early in the shot clock (I’m sure UFR will bear that out).

As far as the defense, I really don’t know enough about basketball to say “this is the reason opposing offenses can’t miss when they play Michigan.” I’m sure John Beilein does, and now it’s up to him to see if he can get that figured out and solved before it really bites this team. One of the few things I can really point to is the inability to corral defensive rebounds, which gives oponents way too many second looks.

In the end, though, it’s wins and losses that matter. Michigan was able to squeak one out today, and the NCAA tournament dream can live on.

Posted under Basketball

Preview: Indiana

Or: Tim’s foray into tempo-free statistics.

Michigan takes on conference foe Indiana tonight at 6:30 in Bloomington. The game can be seen on Big Ten Network.

Tempo-Free and efficiency comparison (if you need an explanation of what any of these things mean, head to KenPom’s website):

Michigan v. Indiana: National Ranks
Category Michigan Indiana Advantage
Mich eFG% v. IU eFG% D 75 263 MM
Mich eFG% D v. IU eFG% 100 240 MM
Mich TO% v. IU Def TO% 4(!) 33 M
Mich Def TO% v. IU TO% 186 341 MM
Mich OReb% v. IU DReb% 246 228 I
Mich DReb% v. IU OReb% 202 191 I
Mich FTR v. IU Opp FTR 166 116 I
Mich Opp FTR v. IU FTR 10 121 MM
Mich AdjO v. IU AdjD 13 98 M
Mich AdjD v. IU AdjO 185 290 MM

Differences of more than 100 places in the rankings garner two-letter advantages, differences of more than 200 get a third.

Indiana is really, really bad this year. I’ll allow Spartans Weblog to bring the visual aid:Tempo-Free Aerial

IU’s defensive efficiency is near the bottom of the conference, but the story for the Hoosiers this year has been their utter ineptitude on offense. This is understandable when you have no players, and that is certainly the case for Indiana. In this particular game, Michigan has 100+ ranking-place advantages in 5 categories, and Indiana only leads the Wolverines in those areas you’d expect Michigan, and perimeter-oriented team, to be weak. Each team’s effective field goal percentage should play a significant role in determining who wins this game. The Wolverines hold huge advantages in this area on each end of the floor. Ken Pomeroy predicts a 72-62 Michigan victory, with the Hoosiers only given a 17% chance to steal a win.

There is no way to spin this game as anything other than a must-win for Michigan. Indiana is a sorry squad this year, and Tom Crean has some major rebuilding to do inside Assembly Hall. One key factor to keep in mind is the home-court advantage. The Wolverines have played only one true road game this year, a 5-point loss to Maryland. That was over a month ago, and Beilein’s crew will have to adjust to playing away from Crisler.

Posted under Analysis, Basketball

Upon Further Review: Illinois

After several suggestions, I’ve decided to scrap the play-by-play aspect of the UFR feature, and just include the final stats from the game. The raw data is available in .xls format here.

Half 1

1st half differential
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 8:09(!) 16-17 -1
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Gibson, Sims :58 0-3 -3
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson 3:17 7-7 0
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Sims 2:18 6-4 +2
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 3:23 4-4 0
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 1:55 5-4 +1
Total 20:00 38-39 -1

Half 2

2nd half differential
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 3:16 5-7 -2
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 3:10 7-2 +5
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Gibson, Sims 1:47 4-5 -1
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson :27 2-0 +2
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Gibson, Sims 2:56 1-4 -3
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Gibson, Sims :35 2-1 +1
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Gibson, Sims 1:09 3-2 +1
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Gibson, Sims 1:12 0-2 -2
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Gibson, Sims 4:22 8-2 +6
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims :11 2-0 +2
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Gibson, Sims :10 2-0 +2
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims :45 0-0 0
Total 20:00 36-25 +11

Game totals

Lineup Totals
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 6:01 14-6 +8
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 14:48 25-28 -3
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Gibson, Sims 3:54 1-7 -6
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson 3:44 9-7 +2
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Novak, Sims 2:18 6-4 +2
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Gibson, Sims :35 2-1 +1
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Gibson, Sims 6:19 14-7 +7
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Gibson, Sims 1:09 3-2 -5
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Gibson, Sims 1:12 0-2 -2
Total 40:00 74-64 +10

Individual players:

Manny Harris 15:58 (+12)
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1/4 2/2 2/2 2
Midrange 1/1
3-point 0/3 0/1

Much better than last game. He was looking to pass when he got into trouble. A couple of the misses in the lane (noted as a difficulty of 1) probably could have been called fouls.

Laval Lucas-Perry 7:38 (+14)
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 2 1/1 1
Midrange 0/1 0/1
3-point 0/1 0/3 3/3

LLP was hitting the open 3s on this day, but none of the covered ones. Most of his shots came from outside (as per usual).

Zack Novak 26:47 (+9)
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange 0/1 1
3-point 2/2 1/2

It seemed like Novak was doing a hell of a lot more than it looks like he did just by checking his shot chart. The importance of the baskets must have played a big role in that. He also made the midrange shot on which he was fouled.

DeShawn Sims 36:16 (+8)
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 2 1/1 0/1 0/1
Midrange 0/1
3-point 2/5 1/1

Sims, like Novak, seemed to be a lot more active than his chart would indicate. Both of the times he was blocked could have conceivably be called fouls.

Kelvin Grady 22:51 (+14)
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1/1 1
Midrange
3-point 0/2 1/2

Grady got much more time than he did in the previous game, and though he took a couple ill-advised shots, he was a catalyst for the rest of the offense (4 assists, 2 more assist opportunities missed). He also made the lane shot on which he was fouled.

Zack Gibson 16:53 (+3)
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 0/1 1/1 2/2 1
Midrange
3-point 1/1

He played a lot without much in the way of scoring, but a couple of the dunks he had were huge in terms of momentum. He also had an enormous block.

David Merritt 14:48 (-3)
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1/1
Midrange
3-point

Not much usage for Dave. Interestingly, he was ONLY on the court with the “A-Team” (Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims).

Lee and Douglass also played extensive minutes without charting a shot attempt (Douglass 9:59, -11; Lee 4:02, -2). It’s become quite clear that the best lineup consists of Grady-Lucas-Perry-Harris-Novak-Sims. Gibson is hit-or-miss, but is probably overall the next best player to insert in the lineup (removing Novak). Without Grady at the point, the team was -10 (-3 with Merritt, and -7 with Douglass). Standard caveats about sample size, but that’s certainly notable.

Posted under Analysis, Basketball