Tuesday, October 30, 2007

The More Things Change

Now that the Wolves have processed their final preseason trade, they finally have settled on a 15 man roster for the year. And unless we see a major drop in a young player's market value (or an in-his-prime star, like Kirilenko), I imagine this 15 man squad is going to remain static for the rest of the season. The only 4 players that aren't young or expiring are Greg Buckner, Marko Jaric, Mark Madsen, and Antoine Walker. I expect Jaric to be the only one to draw interest from other teams, but I doubt they would offer anything for beyond expiring contracts, which the Wolves might not even need at this point.

So I went back and adjust my numbers for the 2007-2008 season, adding in Walker and Doleac's performances, and so my prediction has now dropped from 35 to 32 wins.

Player

PS

GP

Min

PTS

Corey Brewer

SF

82

2050

654

Greg Buckner

SG

31

652

145

Michael Doleac

C

60

1112

318

Randy Foye

PG

82

1640

727

Ryan Gomes

PF

82

1932

749

Gerald Green

SF

82

1476

699

Marko Jaric

SG

82

1264

295

Al Jefferson

PF

76

3060

1460

Mark Madsen

PF

20

270

35

Rashad McCants

SG

76

2020

853

Theo Ratliff

C

70

1050

270

Craig Smith

PF

82

1510

598

Sebastian Telfair

PG

82

1066

323

Antoine Walker

PF

51

578

20


So with that we're right back to last year, which would be considered an accomplishment by most. But one thing to consider is whether there is relationship between a team's possession percentages from year to year. The short answer: no. The long answer: depends on the team. Going back five years, there is a definite relationship for some teams (Houston, Washington, and New Jersey), and not for others (Minnesota). Having a possession percentage of 50% would give the Timberwolves between 28 and 35 wins. An average number of points surrendered per possession would give the Timberwolves a Pythagorean Win number of 32 wins.

Just for fun, I decided to use the +/- numbers for the Wolves to get an alternative win projection. I used the +/- from last year for all of the players except for Ratliff and McCants, where I used their preseason numbers. I also didn’t count any +/- for Brewer. Using this system, the Wolves should be expected to win 26 games next season. Not a successful season, certainly, but not a historically bad season like some are predicting. Now, Brewer’s preseason +/- is -14.7 per 48 minutes. When combined with the 2050 minutes I expect him to receive, that comes out to a +/- total of -628 points for Brewer and a +/- of 988 for the Wolves. That changes the expected Wolves wins to 9 for the season. Either the +/- for the preseason is off (which is most likely) or else Brewer is going to be dreadful. If it’s the latter, I doubt they’ll be playing him 2000 minutes.

1 comment:

wwd said...

kevin, i really like your stats stuff. will you shoot me an email? wd@canishoopus.com