Monday 2 February 2015

The Curious Case of Jonas Valanciunas

Courtesy: http://www.zimbio.com/Jonas+Valanciunas+Dwane+Casey/pictures/pro
Jonas Valanciunas - The media buzzword for anyone looking to get the attention of Raptors fans. Terrible 4th quarter play, coupled with questionable substitution patterns however, have all culminated to make this an intriguing topic for discussion.  

At this point it’s common knowledge that Dwayne Casey loves small ball.  He probably still uses flip phones for the versatility and spacing they offer over traditional handsets.  Does this always work however? (Small ball, not flip phones).  Does Dwayne Casey have a method to his madness, or is he simply a mad scientist who’s lost focus?

Showing disappointment, it can be argued, is unjustified given such an unexpected record.  I whole heartedly disagree with this logic.  Of course we can argue.  Just because the bar’s low, doesn’t mean that expectations can’t evolve.  The desire to achieve something greater shouldn’t be subdued by past expectations.  It should mold to fit the current state, and the current state is pretty badass. 

By the Numbers

Numbers don’t lie; they drop truth bombs - tune out now if you don’t like numbers…or truth bombs.  Defensively Jonas isn’t the greatest, he’s okay, right in the meaty part of the bell curve.   Sure Jonas’s numbers don’t scream Marc Gasol, but limiting play in crucial stretches doesn’t get him closer to that level.  To give an idea of where he stacks I’ve broken the analysis into two parts.  An external assessment – comparing Jonas to his peers, and an internal assessment – comparing “4th Quarter” Jonas to “First 3 Quarters” Jonas. 

External Analysis  

Usage

Among Starting Center’s with more than 25 games played, Jonas ranks 3rd from the bottom in “Average 4th Quarter minutes played,” at 5.4.  That’s 10 spots behind Kendrick I- grab-rebounds-through-the-power-of-my-anger Perkins.  His 4th quarter usage isn’t stellar either.  At 14.6% Jonas ranks 17th out of 26 Starting Centers.  However, given that the Raptors feature a guard heavy lineup, one that often falls in love with the midrange, that’s not bad.  This usage may ignite some frustration, but it’s generally in line with comparable peers in guard focused lineups (ie Marcin Gortat, Joakin Noah).  In the exact same sample size however, his minutes are 3rd from the bottom. 

Defense

From a defensive standpoint I’ll focus on Opponent FG percentage at the Rim, and Defensive Efficiency. As a team the Raptors hold opponents to 50.9% on shots at the rim, good enough for 10th in the league - surprisingly good.  Individually Jonas’s opponents shoot 48.1%, which is just a hair behind Andre Drummond at 47.9%.   This is around league average for a center.  It’s his team defense, measured by his DefRtg, which is atrocious.  Among his peers Jonas ranks dead last in the 4th Quarter with a NetRtg of -16.5, which gives cadence to Casey’s crunch time preference in deferring to a more mobile big (ie. PPAT).

From an external standpoint it’s obvious that his 4th quarter team defense is terrible.  His minutes are near the bottom, but his defensive flaws have a large effect on that.  Based on this external comparison, Casey does have a point. If that’s the case however, then how is Jonas earning minutes throughout other portions of the game?

Internal Analysis

Overall
GP
MIN
OffRtg
DefRtg
NetRtg
OREB%
DREB%
TS%
USG%
Quarters1-3
47
7.6
106.4
105.5
0.93
11.5
25.6
62.6
20.16
4th Quarter
33
5.4
101.9
118.3
-16.5
8.4
20.4
62.6
14.7

When we actually dig into the numbers it’s pretty glaring the disparity between Jonas’s stats in the first three quarters vs. his numbers in the 4th.  The most noticeable difference is his defensive efficiency - 118.3 in the 4th quarter vs. 105.5 in the first three.  The Raptors as a team have a 4th Quarter DefRtg of 106.5 – good enough for 23rd in the league.  For a team that preaches defense, and makes decisions predicated on this philosophy, their execution is terrible.   The greatest unknown however, is how the team DefRtg would be affected if Jonas received consistent 4th quarter minutes.  Would the law of averages begin to skew his 4th quarter numbers towards the mean?

Sure, compared to his peers, Dwayne Casey’s got a point.  His big is near the bottom of the league in nearly all defensive categories, but not throughout the game.  The issue only surfaces in the fourth quarter, which leads to a larger psychological question.  How much has the inconsistent usage of his Center affected Jonas’s confidence in the fourth quarter?  It’s clear that Jonas is league average in the first three quarters, but near the bottom in the fourth.  No other starting Center in the league has such a dramatic swing between the two segments.  It’s obvious that by sitting Jonas for long stretches of the fourth, Casey’s fiddling with a fragile confidence.  It’s like that time on Seinfeld when Elaine’s ex tells her that she’s got a big head, causing her to question everything she’d known about the size of her perfectly normal head.  What seemed acceptable before now suddenly became troubling.  By way of inconsistent minutes, and benching, Dwayne Casey is the ex who keeps telling Jonas he’s got a big head.  Suddenly all the goodwill built during his first three quarters no longer matters.      

It’s obvious the Raptors are better defensively when Jonas hits the bench, but to develop talent requires investing both frustration and hope.  Yea they might feel the weight of some growing pains; they might even loose on account of Jonas missing a blatant assignment.  But these are the growing pains associated with developing youth, especially at the 5.  The Raptors aren’t great right now, they’re good.  Why not use a “good” season to develop a piece that can help you become great. 


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