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Yesterday in the Vassell thread I posted some data about how he went from making virtually every lineup combination worse last year to making virtually every lineup combination better. This inspired me to build a matrix for every two-man combination among our top 11 players (sorry DJG and CB fans... this is actually quite a bit of work to put together so I cut it off at these 11 guys).
I plan on updating this throughout the season, maybe in 15 game increments. There are notes on how to red these charts on the left but I'll explain a little more below.
One thing to note is that these numbers *exclude* low leverage situations, which are possessions where the outcome of the possession has very little impact on the outcome of the game (you can read more about this here) in an effort make the data more meaningful. So if you try to match these numbers up with on/off numbers that include low leverage possessions, you'll get a different result. As an example of the impact this has, when Wemby is on the court we have a 9.6 NetRtg in All Leverage situations, but only a 7.4 NetRtg when we exclude Low Leverage situations.
This data is from databallr.com, which I highly recommend. They have a lot of great tools available, and the WOWY Lineups explorer is a lot of fun.
How to read these matrixes:
I definitely encourage everyone to play around in databallr, as you can dive in well beyond just NetRtg. Here's a sample image of what you can see (and you don't have to limit combos to just 2 players either)
I plan on updating this throughout the season, maybe in 15 game increments. There are notes on how to red these charts on the left but I'll explain a little more below.
One thing to note is that these numbers *exclude* low leverage situations, which are possessions where the outcome of the possession has very little impact on the outcome of the game (you can read more about this here) in an effort make the data more meaningful. So if you try to match these numbers up with on/off numbers that include low leverage possessions, you'll get a different result. As an example of the impact this has, when Wemby is on the court we have a 9.6 NetRtg in All Leverage situations, but only a 7.4 NetRtg when we exclude Low Leverage situations.
This data is from databallr.com, which I highly recommend. They have a lot of great tools available, and the WOWY Lineups explorer is a lot of fun.
- The Matrix on the top tells you how the player on the Top Improves the NetRtg of the team with the player on the left on the court.
- This is calculated by: [Net Rating When Both Players are On] - [Net Rating When Player on the Left is On but the Player on the Top is Off]
- A practical interpretation would be: take a look at Barnes on the left intersected with Castle on Top. This means that Lineups with Barnes and Castle on the court are +9.9 versus lineups with only Barnes on the court.
- The cells where a player intersects with himself is the player's On/Off (Net Rating when On minus Net Rating when Off)
- The Matrix on the bottom is the NetRating when the two players on the court together.
- The cell where the player intersects with himself is the team's NetRtg when the player is On.
- He's only played 6 games (5.5 really) but Dylan's impact is HUGE. Can't wait to see him back
- As previously noted, Devin is making lineups better!
- Champ and Barnes have similar consistently positive impacts and to me those three guys highlight what we all already know: that spacing is extremely important and makes our team better
- Despite everyone being please with Keldon's play this year, the team isn't as good in his lineups. With that said, I don't blame that on Keldon... I think that's a function of Keldon primarily playing with bench lineups
- Fox's impact is definitely a bit shakier to start, but he's also played half his games this season without Wemby, Castle and Harper
- Ignore that huge negative number for Korndog and Olynyk... that's only 1 minute of action. Seems like Mitch is wisely avoiding playing them together
- Sochan's numbers match the eye test.
I definitely encourage everyone to play around in databallr, as you can dive in well beyond just NetRtg. Here's a sample image of what you can see (and you don't have to limit combos to just 2 players either)
