Percentage of Team Shot Attempts “Created” While On the Floor
Posted by Neil Paine on February 23, 2011
With noted shot-creator Carmelo Anthony on the move, I was wondering which players have a hand in "creating" the highest percentage of their team's shot attempts when on the floor.
If we're just looking at a player's own shooting attempts, this is pretty easy. You can look at the percentage of team FGA a player takes when on the court (all leaders minimum 1,366 minutes):
Player | Pos | Tm | G | Min | FGA | FTA | %FGA |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kobe Bryant | SG | LAL | 58 | 1959 | 1121 | 415 | 33.6% |
Carmelo Anthony | SF | DEN | 50 | 1774 | 967 | 417 | 32.7% |
Derrick Rose | PG | CHI | 53 | 2012 | 1068 | 328 | 31.8% |
Kevin Durant | SF | OKC | 51 | 2011 | 1037 | 457 | 31.3% |
LeBron James | SF | MIA | 55 | 2100 | 1034 | 479 | 30.7% |
Dwyane Wade | SG | MIA | 53 | 1964 | 957 | 467 | 30.4% |
Amare Stoudemire | C/PF | NYK | 53 | 1949 | 1028 | 422 | 30.3% |
Andrea Bargnani | PF/C | TOR | 51 | 1828 | 935 | 254 | 29.7% |
Michael Beasley | SF/PF | MIN | 48 | 1566 | 828 | 196 | 29.7% |
Russell Westbrook | PG | OKC | 55 | 1953 | 932 | 446 | 29.0% |
Monta Ellis | SG | GSW | 56 | 2298 | 1156 | 336 | 28.6% |
Joe Johnson | SG/SF | ATL | 47 | 1688 | 788 | 182 | 28.5% |
Dirk Nowitzki | PF | DAL | 47 | 1611 | 737 | 274 | 28.1% |
Antawn Jamison | PF/SF | CLE | 53 | 1737 | 822 | 214 | 28.0% |
Kevin Martin | SG | HOU | 56 | 1745 | 848 | 476 | 27.8% |
Eric Gordon | SG | LAC | 41 | 1550 | 712 | 296 | 27.6% |
Brook Lopez | C | NJN | 57 | 1959 | 870 | 351 | 27.4% |
Stephen Jackson | SG/SF | CHA | 55 | 2025 | 884 | 260 | 27.3% |
Luis Scola | PF | HOU | 58 | 1939 | 920 | 251 | 27.2% |
Blake Griffin | PF | LAC | 57 | 2156 | 971 | 492 | 27.1% |
You could also take it a step further and factor in free throws as well, calculating the percentage of each team's True Shooting Attempts (FGA + .44 * FTA) each player takes while on the floor:
Player | Pos | Tm | G | Min | FGA | FTA | TSA | %TSA |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kobe Bryant | SG | LAL | 58 | 1959 | 1121 | 415 | 1303.6 | 34.5% |
Carmelo Anthony | SF | DEN | 50 | 1774 | 967 | 417 | 1150.5 | 33.3% |
Kevin Durant | SF | OKC | 51 | 2011 | 1037 | 457 | 1238.1 | 32.1% |
Derrick Rose | PG | CHI | 53 | 2012 | 1068 | 328 | 1212.3 | 31.9% |
LeBron James | SF | MIA | 55 | 2100 | 1034 | 479 | 1244.8 | 31.9% |
Dwyane Wade | SG | MIA | 53 | 1964 | 957 | 467 | 1162.5 | 31.8% |
Amare Stoudemire | C/PF | NYK | 53 | 1949 | 1028 | 422 | 1213.7 | 31.7% |
Kevin Martin | SG | HOU | 56 | 1745 | 848 | 476 | 1057.4 | 30.6% |
Russell Westbrook | PG | OKC | 55 | 1953 | 932 | 446 | 1128.2 | 30.1% |
Andrea Bargnani | PF/C | TOR | 51 | 1828 | 935 | 254 | 1046.8 | 29.6% |
Monta Ellis | SG | GSW | 56 | 2298 | 1156 | 336 | 1303.8 | 29.1% |
Michael Beasley | PF | MIN | 48 | 1566 | 828 | 196 | 914.2 | 29.1% |
Dirk Nowitzki | PF | DAL | 47 | 1611 | 737 | 274 | 857.6 | 29.1% |
Blake Griffin | PF | LAC | 57 | 2156 | 971 | 492 | 1187.5 | 28.8% |
Brook Lopez | C | NJN | 57 | 1959 | 870 | 351 | 1024.4 | 28.5% |
Eric Gordon | SG | LAC | 41 | 1550 | 712 | 296 | 842.2 | 28.4% |
Joe Johnson | SG/SF | ATL | 47 | 1688 | 788 | 182 | 868.1 | 28.0% |
Antawn Jamison | PF/SF | CLE | 53 | 1737 | 822 | 214 | 916.2 | 27.5% |
LaMarcus Aldridge | PF/C | POR | 56 | 2206 | 989 | 332 | 1135.1 | 27.3% |
DeMarcus Cousins | C | SAC | 53 | 1443 | 662 | 248 | 771.1 | 27.2% |
But I think you need to take assists into account as well.
For the sake of argument, let's say a player's teammates convert his "potential assists" into made field goals at a FG% rate of (team FG - player FG) / (team FGA - player FGA). Also, let's assume that the player's rate of potential assists per team FGA while on the floor also holds for TSA from free throw attempts (.44 * FTA). Given those assumptions, you can estimate how many shots a player had his hand in creating via potential assists as well as shooting attempts.
Take for instance Kobe Bryant... He's taken 1,121 FGA and 415 FTA for 1303.6 True Shooting Attempts. He also has 280 assists, and the Lakers are shooting (2223 - 516) / (4747 - 1121) = 47.1% from the field if you exclude his totals. From this we can infer that he has participated in (280 / 0.471) = 595 shots through his passing as well. Finally, if Kobe's potential assist rate of (595 / 3334) on FGA while in the game also holds for the Lakers' (1002 * 0.44) = 441 TSA from free throw attempts, we can estimate that Kobe had a hand in creating 179 teammate FTA via passing.
Adding it all up, that's 1121 + 0.44 * 415 + 595 + 0.44 * 179 = 1,977 shots which Kobe had a hand in creating, or 52.4% of the Lakers' TSA while he was on the court. Here's how that stacks up against the rest of the league leaders:
Rank | Player | Pos | Tm | G | Min | FGA | FTA | ast_FGA | ast_FTA | TSA_created | %Team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Steve Nash | PG | PHO | 52 | 1732 | 599 | 205 | 1269 | 373 | 2122 | 63.9% |
2 | Russell Westbrook | PG | OKC | 55 | 1953 | 932 | 446 | 1002 | 378 | 2297 | 61.3% |
3 | Derrick Rose | PG | CHI | 53 | 2012 | 1068 | 328 | 934 | 281 | 2270 | 59.7% |
4 | Deron Williams | PG | UTA | 53 | 2009 | 806 | 354 | 1108 | 351 | 2225 | 58.6% |
5 | Chris Paul | PG | NOH | 58 | 2070 | 649 | 297 | 1228 | 372 | 2171 | 57.5% |
6 | Rajon Rondo | PG | BOS | 44 | 1657 | 420 | 88 | 1094 | 325 | 1696 | 57.1% |
7 | Devin Harris | PG | NJN | 54 | 1724 | 612 | 307 | 933 | 281 | 1804 | 57.0% |
8 | LeBron James | SF | MIA | 55 | 2100 | 1034 | 479 | 841 | 305 | 2220 | 56.8% |
9 | John Wall | PG | WAS | 43 | 1588 | 567 | 212 | 853 | 242 | 1620 | 53.1% |
10 | Kobe Bryant | SG | LAL | 58 | 1959 | 1121 | 415 | 595 | 179 | 1977 | 52.4% |
11 | Jose Calderon | PG | TOR | 50 | 1550 | 443 | 75 | 965 | 274 | 1562 | 52.0% |
12 | Tony Parker | PG | SAS | 56 | 1826 | 757 | 211 | 811 | 245 | 1769 | 51.0% |
13 | Raymond Felton | PG | NYK | 54 | 2074 | 801 | 181 | 1044 | 310 | 2061 | 50.5% |
Rank | Player | Pos | Tm | G | Min | FGA | FTA | ast_FGA | ast_FTA | TSA_created | %Team |
14 | Ramon Sessions | PG | CLE | 55 | 1421 | 485 | 269 | 682 | 208 | 1376 | 50.5% |
15 | Andre Miller | PG | POR | 55 | 1803 | 592 | 206 | 917 | 257 | 1713 | 50.5% |
16 | Jameer Nelson | PG | ORL | 52 | 1539 | 543 | 108 | 699 | 222 | 1387 | 48.1% |
17 | Joe Johnson | SG/SF | ATL | 47 | 1688 | 788 | 182 | 545 | 150 | 1479 | 47.7% |
18 | Dwyane Wade | SG | MIA | 53 | 1964 | 957 | 467 | 496 | 180 | 1737 | 47.6% |
19 | Gilbert Arenas | PG | TOT | 51 | 1376 | 585 | 118 | 518 | 156 | 1223 | 46.8% |
20 | D.J. Augustin | PG | CHA | 57 | 1907 | 637 | 199 | 774 | 259 | 1613 | 46.1% |
21 | Manu Ginobili | SG | SAS | 56 | 1738 | 726 | 306 | 567 | 171 | 1503 | 45.5% |
22 | Stephen Curry | PG/SG | GSW | 48 | 1605 | 669 | 158 | 618 | 153 | 1424 | 45.5% |
23 | Monta Ellis | SG | GSW | 56 | 2298 | 1156 | 336 | 654 | 162 | 2029 | 45.3% |
24 | Rodney Stuckey | PG | DET | 49 | 1473 | 572 | 275 | 479 | 136 | 1232 | 44.9% |
25 | Jason Kidd | PG | DAL | 56 | 1888 | 457 | 49 | 946 | 266 | 1542 | 44.6% |
26 | Eric Gordon | SG | LAC | 41 | 1550 | 712 | 296 | 410 | 140 | 1314 | 44.4% |
Rank | Player | Pos | Tm | G | Min | FGA | FTA | ast_FGA | ast_FTA | TSA_created | %Team |
27 | Tyreke Evans | SG/PG | SAC | 46 | 1740 | 781 | 215 | 561 | 161 | 1508 | 44.1% |
28 | Darren Collison | PG | IND | 52 | 1580 | 607 | 151 | 600 | 171 | 1349 | 44.0% |
29 | Carmelo Anthony | SF | DEN | 50 | 1774 | 967 | 417 | 292 | 111 | 1491 | 43.2% |
30 | Jason Terry | SG/PG | DAL | 56 | 1803 | 780 | 145 | 508 | 143 | 1414 | 42.8% |
31 | Jrue Holiday | PG | PHI | 56 | 1956 | 668 | 153 | 748 | 218 | 1580 | 42.7% |
32 | Blake Griffin | PF | LAC | 57 | 2156 | 971 | 492 | 463 | 158 | 1720 | 41.8% |
33 | Mike Conley | PG | MEM | 58 | 2075 | 669 | 181 | 816 | 243 | 1672 | 41.7% |
34 | Kevin Durant | SF/SG | OKC | 51 | 2011 | 1037 | 457 | 307 | 116 | 1596 | 41.4% |
35 | Kyle Lowry | PG | HOU | 54 | 1785 | 528 | 175 | 755 | 230 | 1461 | 41.3% |
36 | Chauncey Billups | PG | DEN | 51 | 1646 | 536 | 287 | 566 | 215 | 1323 | 41.3% |
37 | Amare Stoudemire | C/PF | NYK | 53 | 1949 | 1028 | 422 | 319 | 95 | 1574 | 41.1% |
38 | Stephen Jackson | SG/SF | CHA | 55 | 2025 | 884 | 260 | 454 | 152 | 1520 | 40.9% |
39 | Luke Ridnour | PG | MIN | 46 | 1373 | 432 | 94 | 580 | 167 | 1127 | 40.9% |
Rank | Player | Pos | Tm | G | Min | FGA | FTA | ast_FGA | ast_FTA | TSA_created | %Team |
40 | Andre Iguodala | SG/SF | PHI | 44 | 1631 | 497 | 212 | 580 | 169 | 1244 | 40.4% |
41 | Kevin Martin | SG | HOU | 56 | 1745 | 848 | 476 | 296 | 90 | 1393 | 40.3% |
42 | Dirk Nowitzki | PF | DAL | 47 | 1611 | 737 | 274 | 263 | 74 | 1153 | 39.1% |
43 | Jamal Crawford | SG/PG | ATL | 50 | 1532 | 595 | 205 | 363 | 100 | 1092 | 38.8% |
44 | Michael Beasley | PF | MIN | 48 | 1566 | 828 | 196 | 240 | 69 | 1185 | 37.7% |
45 | Josh Smith | PF/SF | ATL | 56 | 1954 | 755 | 230 | 418 | 115 | 1324 | 36.9% |
46 | Danny Granger | SF | IND | 54 | 1954 | 893 | 301 | 326 | 93 | 1393 | 36.8% |
47 | Paul Pierce | SF/SG | BOS | 55 | 1917 | 718 | 285 | 363 | 108 | 1254 | 36.5% |
48 | Tim Duncan | PF/C | SAS | 56 | 1609 | 642 | 178 | 348 | 105 | 1115 | 36.5% |
49 | Luis Scola | PF | HOU | 58 | 1939 | 920 | 251 | 322 | 98 | 1396 | 36.3% |
50 | Kirk Hinrich | PG/SG | WAS | 48 | 1471 | 438 | 105 | 474 | 134 | 1017 | 36.0% |
With point guards dominating this list, you could certainly argue that it's more difficult to create your own TSA than to create them for others with passes. But the take-home point is that any measure of "shot creation" should take into account not only the ability to hoist shots yourself, but also your passing tendencies. Someone like Carmelo Anthony is good at the former, but not the latter, perhaps overrating him in the public's perception when it comes to great shot-creators.
February 23rd, 2011 at 9:48 am
This is a very "dumbed-down" version of the FGA, FTA, & AST aspects in Dean Oliver's individual possession rates, btw. The point was easier to illustrate this way, but Dean's work is about a billion times more rigorous.
February 23rd, 2011 at 9:56 am
@Neil (RE: "Dumbed down" Oliver) --
I wouldn't call this "dumbed down," as much as a simple (in a non-pejorative sense) of gauging relative volume. It's a more in-your-face reflection of through whom offenses are run. Great post.
February 23rd, 2011 at 10:04 am
Thanks. Dean's is great because it actually attempts to weigh TSA creation via shooting vs passing, such that everything adds up to the team total. Here, I'm double counting every assisted TSA and giving the passer and shooter equal credit. But it's still useful to see how guys like Rose, Lebron, Kobe, etc. have a level of "creating" beyond what a one-dimensional pure scorer like Melo brings to the table.
February 23rd, 2011 at 10:22 am
Don't players hit a higher % of FGA that come off of passes? When the subject of clutch scoring stats came up awhile ago, the Kobe-lovers pointed to his low % of shots assisted to explain away his low shooting %. Kevin Martin, on the other hand, had a very high % of his FG assisted. So using team FG% less the players contribution might be overstating "potential" assists. Is there a way to quantify how much better players shoot off a pass, rather than creating on their own?
February 23rd, 2011 at 10:24 am
Neil, could you give some list using weights for assisted shots? I guess using 50-50 or even all for the passer (since we're talking about shot creation, not credit for scoring)? It is not deductible from the numbers you already put up, because you'll have to reduce some of the credits for actual shots.
February 23rd, 2011 at 10:40 am
A valiant effort. Of course, it's impossible to take into account possession that create shots but don't directly lead to a stat.
Example, the ball is sent down low to Howard. He makes a move and gets a double team, he kicks it out. Defense begins it's recovery rotations. Two perimeter swings later, Anderson hits a three. Is that possession more about responding to the double team correctly, or about those perimeter swing passes?
Example two, Kevin Garnett sets a (moving) screen on Allen's man allowing him to swing from one side to the other. Rondo hits Allen with the easy pass for a jumper. Credit goes to Allen and Rondo, Garnett's (moving) screen is lamentably lost.
February 23rd, 2011 at 10:54 am
#4 - You're right about that -- in fact, 82games studied the matter a few years ago. I might be able to estimate that someday.
#5 - I can try to take a look at that at some point.
#6 - You've just described every pro-plus/minus argument, like, ever.
February 23rd, 2011 at 11:31 am
I'd love to see an all-time breakdown. Particularly curious as to how high volume scorers like Jordan and Malone would be versus super-facilitators like Magic and Stock.
February 23rd, 2011 at 12:35 pm
Very cool Neil.
I especially like seeing that Blake Griffin is the highest rated forward on this list! Says a lot about his passing skills and ability to draw fouls. Can't wait to see what happens when the 17 foot bank shot is even more automatic and he adds another 3-4 feet to hit 3 pointers.
Will be linking to this later today over at QuakeGriffin.com
February 23rd, 2011 at 12:50 pm
Very cool Neil.
I took the information in this post along with the "Black Holes by Position" post and took it one step further and tried to answer the question of who generates the most shots (either for themselves of their teammates) per touch.
I took the Touches per Minutes statistic in the black hole thread and multiplied it by the minutes in this thread to get an estimate for the number of touches. I then took the TSA-Created and divided by the touches to get the final ratio.
The results are pretty interesting. I will leave it to you to quickly perform the same thing and post it here if you would like.
As always though... great stuff!!
February 23rd, 2011 at 1:01 pm
#7 - I did? That sucks. Because I kind of hate plus/minus.
February 23rd, 2011 at 1:17 pm
#11 - Yeah, maximizing how well your team does when you're on the court is stupid.
February 23rd, 2011 at 1:55 pm
Hi Neil - I actually hand-track something like this. LIterally, the goal is to see who is creating open shots for teammates:
http://elgee35.wordpress.com/2011/02/22/opportunities-created-oc-leaders-2010-playoffs/
February 23rd, 2011 at 2:05 pm
I'm surprised to see the Spurs' big three all in the top fifty of this list. I shouldn't be, they make it onto every list and usually hang out closer together.
Other teams with three players above 36% or more - Houston with Lowry, Martin and Scola. Dallas with Kidd, Terry and Nowitski. Atlanta with Crawford Smith and Johnson.
In Atlanta and Dallas, there's a sixth-man setup that helps explain how three players can be so involved in the team's offense. San Antonio used a scheme like that for Ginobili for years.
February 23rd, 2011 at 2:06 pm
#12 - He probably hates the 350% standard margin of error...
February 23rd, 2011 at 2:18 pm
Too many times I've gone to the boxscore for the game I just watched, and the +/- is garbage.
February 23rd, 2011 at 2:18 pm
This is what I've been arguing all along for Rose inclusion in the MVP conversation and all the efficiency geek. Thee's one name in the top five of both lists. That sounds like MVP to me.
February 23rd, 2011 at 2:32 pm
#15, 16 - Right, the margin of error between "true skill" and observed performance is huge:
http://www.basketball-reference.com/blog/?p=8772
But at the same time, raw on/off +/- tells you something that actually happened, that you could actually have seen with your own eyes. If a player was +9, his team was literally 9 points better when he was in the game than when he wasn't. People always say "scoreboard!"... well, this is that, in stat form. I would think it would appeal to old-school fans more than all of the advanced stats in the world.
February 23rd, 2011 at 2:34 pm
#13 - Great stuff. In fact, good work with your whole blog; I added a link to our sidebar.
February 23rd, 2011 at 3:07 pm
#18 - Actually when I first saw the adjusted +/- breakdowns on 82games years ago, I thought they'd given us the Ark of the Covenant of stats... My face melted! It was a let down when I realized that a guy like Ben Gordon can have top 5 defensive +/- at his position under coach Skiles and then fall off the map under Del Negro. Ironically I think +/- at times can be TOO all-inclusive to accurately describe what an individual does for his team. 5 man unit +/- which Mark Cuban swears by seems to me a better way to use the stat.
Raw +/- is something I look at in a box score, but it often just tells you that one team kicked the other's butt all night. I'm sure Judd Buechler and Bill Wennington had some terrific raw +/- nights playing for the '96 Bulls while scoring a combined 7 points with 4 rebounds and 4 fouls.
February 23rd, 2011 at 5:47 pm
@Neil - thanks. Feeling is certainly mutual.
I like what you've done here attempting to estimate "shots created" in this manner, but I think the same problems with relying on assists for creation creep in to play here as well (eg Rondo). That said, I'd be interested in the data for past seasons. What does it look like in the 80s? What does 87 Magic look like? Jordan? Etc. I also wonder if it could be improved by incorporating percentage of FG's assisted on (82games has it).
February 23rd, 2011 at 6:01 pm
Interesting that LeBron & Kobe are the only non PGs in the top ten. Or maybe just expected. Thinking about them brings to mind something one hears frequently from commentators - the idea that their mere presence on the floor draws so much of the defense's attention that teammates get better shots/succeeed at a higher rate than when they are off the floor. I'm thinking of say, how does the threat of Kobe on the perimeter receiving a pass from Pau in the high post create more space for a diving Odom to catch a quick flip from Pau and finish at the rim? How about LeBron drawing so much attention cutting and moving that Bosh or Miller sees more daylight than normal and buries a jumper? It seems to be a really common observation (He makes the game so much easier teammates etc) and definitely part of the whole "observed performance" idea - is there a way to quantify it and factor it into this type of stat? It could be as crude as a measure of teammates' shooting % with and without said star on the floor being some sort of multiplier. (I.e. if LeBron's teammates shoot 10% better with him on the floor than without, multiply the shot creation percentage listed here by 1.10) If they shoot worse, wouldn't that also be a good indicator of whether or not a supposed "ball-hog" like Kobe causes his teammates to just stand-around watching him pick up stats (both points and assists) or if his overall impact on the floor offensively really does lead to more & better shots for his team.
February 23rd, 2011 at 11:23 pm
#13 - Great work. I added you to my Google Reader.
February 24th, 2011 at 4:22 am
Kobe for MVP!
February 24th, 2011 at 9:41 am
#22 - You're actually talking about what are called "skill curves":
http://www.basketball-reference.com/blog/?p=8522
http://www.basketballgeek.com/2009/02/17/basketball-on-papers-skill-curves/
http://www.48minutesofhell.com/spurs-stats-skill-curves-matt-bonner-usage-efficienc
It's sort of a fundamental debate in statgeekery:
http://sonicscentral.com/apbrmetrics/viewtopic.php?t=1070
February 24th, 2011 at 11:12 am
23 - DITTO!
February 24th, 2011 at 2:29 pm
Question:
In your explanation of how you got to your %Team, you used Kobe as an example. Where did you get the numbers 3334 and 1002 from? And how did you get to 179? Not sure if it is just me, but I am a little unclear on how you finally got to your %Team.
Thanks.
February 24th, 2011 at 2:50 pm
3334 was the number of FGA we estimate the Lakers taking while Kobe is on the floor. They took 4747 shots, he was on the floor for 70.2% of their minutes, so .702*4747 ~ 3334. Same with free throws -- 1426 attempts total, 70% of the available minutes, an estimated 1002 FTA while he was on the court.
179 assisted FTA is a little more complicated. I estimated that Kobe had potential assists on 595 of the Lakers' 3334 FGA when in the game. I assume this relationship also applies to potential assists on FTA. To make FTA and FGA equivalent I multiply FTA by 0.44 (so each is denominated in possessions). 1002*0.44 = 441. Using the relationship I found for FGA, I multiply (595/3334) * 441 to get roughly 79 free throw possessions being potentially assisted by Bryant. Then to get that back into FTA, I divide by 0.44, giving Kobe 179 potentially assisted FTA.
February 24th, 2011 at 4:35 pm
#20 - If I'm a coach, though, I'm encouraging my players (my role players, at the very least) to focus on that stat. Most stats become troublesome if the players are too self-aware, because they start to play to the stat at the expense of team performance. But when the stat is team performance, you want them to obsess over it as much as possible.
February 24th, 2011 at 4:55 pm
Obviously Carmelo's attempts will decrease now as he is moving to the Knicks. He will actually have to share the ball with Amare.