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Kansas College Basketball Dashboard (thru vs Kansas State in Big 12T) Print E-mail

Current Projected Postseason

NCAA Tournament: #1 Seed (1st overall) - Actual seed

(As of 03/17/10.  Source: Bracket Matrix used throughout season)

 

 

Player Contributions - 2009-10 Season
Latest Game Data Included - vs Kansas State (Big XII Tournament)

Total Impact (ePSAN) - This represents the players with the greatest total impact on the team thus far.  It adjusts for quality of the opponent, and it gives more weight to recent performances.  It is broken down into offensive (ePSAN-O), defensive (ePSAN-D) and composite or overall (ePSAN-Comp).

Efficiency (ePSAN70) - Takes the "Total Impact" ratings and expresses them as "per-70-possessions," which is the number of possessions in a typical college basketball game.  Essentially adjusts for playing time.

Total Impact

 

PLAYER ePSAN-O ePSAN-D ePSAN-Comp
Cole Aldrich 87.59 -117.83 205.42
Marcus Morris 92.17 -37.18 129.36
Xavier Henry 52.08 -44.44 96.52
Sherron Collins 78.98 -16.79 95.77
Markieff Morris 47.06 -38.83 85.90
Tyrel Reed 53.79 -22.91 76.70
Brady Morningstar 35.02 -28.41 63.44
Tyshawn Taylor 31.14 -22.05 53.20
Jeff Withey* 3.30 -12.16 15.47
C.J. Henry* 8.52 -0.39 8.92
Elijah Johnson* 4.89 -3.27 8.16
Thomas Robinson* -4.23 -11.82 7.59
Conner Teahan* -2.05 -3.66 1.61
Chase Buford* -0.14 -0.36 0.22
Jordan Juenemann* 0.18 0.25 -0.07

 

   * Rating not based on enough data  

 

Efficiency

 

PLAYER ePSAN70-O ePSAN70-D ePSAN70-Comp
Jeff Withey* 2.15 -7.90 10.05
Cole Aldrich 3.89 -5.23 9.11
C.J. Henry* 6.70 -0.31 7.01
Marcus Morris 4.39 -1.77 6.16
Tyrel Reed 4.20 -1.79 5.99
Markieff Morris 3.13 -2.58 5.72
Xavier Henry 2.24 -1.91 4.16
Brady Morningstar 2.15 -1.74 3.89
Sherron Collins 2.83 -0.60 3.43
Elijah Johnson* 1.98 -1.32 3.30
Tyshawn Taylor 1.62 -1.15 2.77
Thomas Robinson* -0.88 -2.46 1.58
Conner Teahan* -1.62 -2.89 1.27
Chase Buford* -0.36 -0.94 0.58
Jordan Juenemann* 0.63 0.90 -0.26

 

   * Rating not based on enough data  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Key Player Analysis
Latest Game Data Included - vs Kansas State (Big XII Tournament)

One way to describe the key player on a team is to say that he is the player who contributes most positively, whose contributions make a difference and whose performance does not tend to get worse against better opponents.  That's what I'll attempt to ascertain with this ongoing analysis.

Note: This used to be called the "Most Valuable Player" analysis, but I have since come to feel that is misleading.  The most valuable player would be the one who has the highest impact rating, in theory.  This analysis finds a player who may or may not have the highest impact but whose impact appears to make a big difference in the team's performance.  Even a star player's off night can be compensated.  But the "key player" in this analysis will often be the guy whose bad night cannot be compensated for well.

Methodology: Using multiple regression analysis, calculate which players' impact ratings for each game (PSAN-Comp) best explain the variability in KU's team performance (using power ratings to adjust for opponent strength).  That is, which player(s) ups and downs best explain KU's ups and downs.  Remove players who tend to perform worse against better competition.  Among the remaining group, the player with the highest "Total Impact" rating for the season (see above, ePSAN-O/D/Comp) is designated "Key Player" for respective category.

1) Multiple regression currently shows these players' ratings to be significant in explaining KU's team performance variability:
Offense
Defense
Composite
88.2% Variability Explained 97.5% Variability Explained
63.1% Variability Explained
  • Sherron Collins
  • Xavier Henry
  • Brady Morningstar
  • Marcus Morris
  • Markieff Morris
  • Tyrel Reed
  • Tyshawn Taylor
  • Cole Aldrich
  • Sherron Collins
  • Xavier Henry
  • Brady Morningstar
  • Marcus Morris
  • Markieff Morris
  • Tyrel Reed
  • Tyshawn Taylor
  • Cole Aldrich
  • Sherron Collins
  • Xavier Henry
  • Marcus Morris
  • Markieff Morris
  • Tyrel Reed
  • Tyshawn Taylor

2) Eliminate those players whose PSAN-Comp game ratings have a correlation in the wrong direction with strength of opposition.  That is, a good key player should not play worse against better competition.

Stat geeks: I will use the correlation coefficient (r) and a significance test at the p=0.20 level.  This means eliminating a player whose correlation coefficient would be so significantly pointed in the wrong direction that there is only a 20% probability that it is bad due to chance.  Why do I use this level instead of the typical scientific 0.05 level?  It's basketball, not curing cancer ... and I like the "80/20" rule, as they say.  I calculate the p-value by using this formula  and using the one-tailed test, because I only care about whether the coefficient is pointing in the wrong direction.  The wrong direction for offense and defense is actually a positive correlation.  Why?  Example:  A lower offense against a lower defensive rating means a player does worse against stronger defenses, since for defense, negative numbers are better. Same is true for offense, in reverse.  For composite, however, a negative correlation is the wrong direction.

Offense
Defense
Composite
Player r Remove
 Sherron Collins
  0.01 
 Xavier Henry  0.10 
 Brady Morningstar
 -0.46 
 Marcus Morris  -0.25 
 Markieff Morris
 -0.02 
 Tyrel Reed
 -0.10 
 Tyshawn Taylor
 -0.12 
Player
r
Remove
 Cole Aldrich
  0.18 X
 Sherron Collins
  0.23  X
 Xavier Henry
  0.22 X
 Brady Morningstar
  0.07
 
 Marcus Morris
  0.18 X
 Markieff Morris
  0.19
 X
 Tyrel Reed   0.36 X
 Tyshawn Taylor
  0.21 X
 
Player
r
Remove
 Cole Aldrich   0.07
 
 Sherron Collins
 -0.07 
 Xavier Henry
 -0.29 X
 Marcus Morris
  0.09
 
 Markieff Morris
 -0.11 
 Tyrel Reed
 -0.11 
 Tyshawn Taylor   0.03
 

Remove players whose "r" is in wrong direction (+ for offense/defense, - for composite) and has a "p" value corresponding to the shown "r" that is lower than 0.20.  Note: This is equivalent to removing any players whose defense/offense/composite appears as a "Disappear" in the "Step Up Index" below.

 

3) Highest ePSAN-O, lowest ePSAN-D and highest ePSAN-Comp in list from #2 above is given designation of Key Player for category.

 

 Current "Key Players"

Offense

Marcus Morris

Defense

Brady Morningstar

Composite

Cole Aldrich

 *Due to his suspension, Morningstar's impact ratings are compared on a per game basis instead of the usual season cumulative stat in the last step if he is in the running for "key player."

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Team Performance Trends

Latest Game Data Included - vs Kansas State (Big XII Tournament)

 

This graph will show how the team is performing on offense, defense and overall as the season progresses.  The "Zero" value represents the NCAA average, so +40 for offense means 40 pts/100 possessions better than the average, while a -25 would mean 25 pts/100 possessions better on defense, since it is better to allow fewer points on defense.  The dotted lines represent the best-fitting line, representing either improvement or worsening.  Overall performance adjusts for the fact that negative is better for defense, so overall is better when higher.  NOTE: Discrepancies between this chart and the ones you see in game previews arise because the previews are based on KenPom's game plan numbers, which provide slightly different numbers for tempo and efficiency (not at all significant).

 

Click on chart to see full size version

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

ANALYSIS - After five straight games with overall ratings below the trendline, KU has now played better than the trendline in four of the last five, with the Texas Tech game in the tournament quarters being the lone exception.  The defense has been better than its trendline in the last four games.  Still, what's troublesome is that the season-long trend for both defense and overall is statistically signficantly downward.  Maybe it's not a terribly steep slope, but it's almost certainly there.  The offense looks like it is slightly upward, but it doesn't meet the criteria for statistical significance.  Thank goodness the team has put it together a bit in the last five games, otherwise it was clearly the picture of a worsening team before that.

 

 

Improvement Index

 

Indicates whether ratings (impact ratings for players, performance/efficiency for team) are trending better or worse.  Only listed if the trend is statistically significant (80% that it's not due to chance) and player has enough data.

Step Up Index

 

Indicates the correlation between ratings and the strength of the opponent.  "Step Up" means the player/team does better against stronger opponents.  "Disappear" means the player/team does worse against stronger opponents.  If player/team's offense is listed, it is correlated to opponents' defenses and vice versa.  Only listed if the correlation is statistically significant (80% that it's not due to chance) and player has enough data.

Improving

 

  • Tyrel Reed - offense
  • Tyshawn Taylor - offense

Step Up

 

  • Kansas - Offense
  • Cole Aldrich - offense
  • Brady Morningstar - offense, composite
  • Marcus Morris - offense

Worsening

 

  • Sherron Collins - defense, composite
  • Xavier Henry - defense, composite
  • Brady Morningstar - offense, defense, composite
  • Marcus Morris - defense
  • Markieff Morris - defense, composite
  • Tyrel Reed - defense
  • Tyshawn Taylor - defense

Disappear

 

  • Kansas - Overall, Defense
  • Cole Aldrich - defense
  • Sherron Collins - defense
  • Xavier Henry - defense, composite
  • Marcus Morris - defense
  • Markieff Morris - defense
  • Tyrel Reed - defense
  • Tyshawn Taylor - defense

 

Getting Better and Stepping Up

None

Getting Worse and Disappearing

  • Sherron Collins - defense
  • Xavier Henry - defense, composite
  • Marcus Morris - defense
  • Markieff Morris - defense
  • Tyrel Reed - defense
  • Tyshawn Taylor - defense

 

 

Last Updated ( Mar 17, 2010 )
 

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