Butler’s Transformation
Teams are usually pretty consistent stylistically from year
to year. You know you have to fear Michigan’s offense every season. They will
have some quick guards and some big men who can shoot and their perimeter-oriented
attack is lethal year-after-year. You know Louisville is going to let its
guards gamble for steals, rely on a solid back-line to protect the rim, and
play elite defense every year. You know Syracuse is going to play zone defense
and rely on forcing turnovers and getting out in transition. You know Duke is
going to deny threes and make a lot of threes.
Styles rarely change, but in the preseason our SI
projections thought Butler might change its spots from a defense-oriented team:
Butler Last Year, 82nd ranked offense, 7th
ranked defense
Butler SI Projection, 49th ranked offense, 35th
ranked defense
We thought the addition of NC State transfer Tyler Lewis
would help take the Butler offense to the next level, but that the loss of
Kameron Woods physicality and next-level rebounding would cause the defense to
drop off. So far, the effect has been even more dramatic than expected:
Butler KenPom Early, 12th ranked offense, 79th
ranked defense
Now preseason projections still factor heavily into KenPom’s
numbers, so you might question whether the swing has been this dramatic. But the
raw numbers also support this. Butler misses Woods’ defensive rebounding:
Butler Defensive Rebounding Rank
2015 9th2016 142nd
But on offense, things are much better. Last year Alex
Barlow was a passable ball-handler, but he wasn’t great. This year Tyler Lewis
is playing at a much higher level:
Butler Offensive Turnover Rate
2015 51st2016 4th
Butler Offensive eFG%
2015 201st2016 27th
Butler remains a fringe Top 25 team, but they are winning in
a completely different way than last season.
Over 1000 Words on Providence where I barely mention Kris Dunn
In the preseason, SI projected Providence as a fringe bubble
team. We didn’t have them in the field and we thought it would take some
unexpected player performance for them to get there.
There were a couple of reasons for this skeptical projection.
First, Providence did not have a great defensive team last season. And that was
with two 7-footers Carson Desrosiers and Paschal Chukwu, and another
experienced big man in Tyler Harris playing significant minutes. The Friars
have much less size this season and we expected the Providence defense to be
worse this year.
Second, as great as Kris Dunn is, a lot of Providence’s
returning players just didn’t have great individual projections. Kyron Cartwright,
Jalen Lindsey, and Junior Lomomba were all very passive players last season,
and they still weren’t that efficient given how rarely they shot. Throw in a
freshman Ryan Fazekas who wasn’t ranked high enough to expect an
instant-impact, and you had a group of players who was likely to drag Dunn down
quite a bit.
The key player in the preseason that was intriguing was
Rodney Bullock. CBS Sports.com wrote about how Bullock could score over 15 PPG.
But frankly, that seemed a little optimistic. Players that sit out don’t always
come in and play at a high level.
Here is a list of some of Bullocks peer-type players. These
are players who sat out most or all of last season and who do not have
significant D1 experience. I’m going to exclude intentional red-shirts since
that may suggest players who were not ready. This is a list of players who were
ineligible, injured, or on mission trips.
10.0 PPG, 95 ORtg, 76% of minutes, Ohio St.’s JaQuan Lyle,
#30 Recruit
3.1 PPG, 73 ORtg, 44% of minutes, Florida’s Brandone
Francis-Ramirez, #31 Recruit4.3 PPG, 104 ORtg, 40% of minutes, UCLA’s Jonah Bolden, #36 Recruit
9.8 PPG, 95 ORtg, 64% of minutes, Gonzaga’s Josh Perkins, #60 Recruit
14.7 PPG, 103 ORtg, 73% of minutes, BYU’s Nick Emery, #61 Recruit
8.3 PPG, 97 ORtg, 47% of minutes, San Diego St.’s Zylan Cheatem, #79 Recruit
These teams were all hoping that these players could all step
into a meaningful role this year. But even though they were a year older and
ranked highly out of high school, the results have been inconsistent at best.
I am not going to list all the similar players from 2014,
but here are a few of the stronger performances for players that sat out un-intentionally
in 2013 and debuted in 2014:
10.0 PPG, 101 ORtg, 84% of minutes, UCLA’s Isaac Hamilton,
#19 Recruit14.9 PPG, 97 ORtg, 84% of minutes, Florida St.’s Xavier Rathan Mayes, #43 Recruit
11.9 PPG, 99 ORtg, 70% of minutes, Marquette’s Duane Wilson, #59 Recruit
The key to me is that even though some of these players were
able to step in and play big roles, none was able to do so at a star-level of
efficiency. So when I read about Rodney Bullock being the key second piece to
take Providence to the NCAA tournament, I was skeptical. Bullock might play a
lot of minutes. And he might have to shoot a lot. But after not playing
basketball for two full seasons, could he really score and be efficient at the
same time? Here are the numbers so far:
13.1 PPG, 110 ORtg, 77% of minutes, Providence’s Rodney
Bullock
That’s not a bad start. Oh, but let me mention one more
thing. Bullock was NOT a Top 100 recruit like all the other players listed
above. He was not considered a can’t-miss prospect out of high school. His name
has been in the news a lot, but remember that when Brandon Austin and Rodney
Bullock were suspended, it was Austin who was the prized Top 100 recruit.
Bullock was just expected to be another player. Scout, Rivals, and ESPN all
considered Bullock to be a 3-star recruit, which is pretty much the lowest
ranking major conference recruits typically get. ESPN gave him a 77 rating.
So while I give CBS Sports a ton of credit for going to
practice and raving about Bullock, I also have to say that for a non-elite
recruit to sit out for two seasons and then debut above most Top 100 players
who had to sit out, that’s pretty remarkable.
Of course teams are starting to scout Bullock, and he may
not be able to sustain this level of performance. Bullock was great in the
first four games of the season and he’s been below average in the most recent
four game stretch. But there aren’t very many comparable players who have done
what Bullock is doing. If he keeps it up, he deserves a lot of praise.
…
Of course I would be remiss if I didn’t mention Ben Bentil. We had him on our SI Breakout player list, and while he has exceeded even our expectations, his breakout is not that unusual for a sophomore. The shocker is that Bentil is playing 83% of the available minutes for his team. That’s extremely difficult to do, especially since Providence can rarely afford to let Bentil guard a less-physical big man. Since Ryan Fazekas and Jalen Lindsey have to play at the 4-spot whenever Bullock is out, Bentil is playing most of the game against the opposition’s strongest and most physical post player.
Providence’s two point defense has fallen off to 223rd
nationally, which is to be expected when you don’t have any true tall post
players defending the rim. But Bentil’s ability to avoid foul trouble has at
least kept opponent’s honest.
And most importantly, Providence has been forcing turnovers
at a very high rate. After ranking just 134th in turnovers forced
last year, Providence is up to 26th in turnovers forced this year.
And that has allowed the team to compensate for the weaker rim protection.
I can’t tell you how many coaches talk in the preseason
about forcing more turnovers and getting out in transition. Everyone says they
want to do that, but it is hard to force turnovers if players do not prepare
the right way.
I love UNLV’s roster this year. They have great size and
great athleticism across the board, and quality experience at the PG position.
UNLV looks like they would be an automatic tournament team. But their defense
is just a bad gambling defense. They take way too many chances, and when they
don’t get steals, they give up easy baskets.
Providence is just the opposite. They aren’t getting quite
as many steals. But by pressuring the ball-handler, hugging players off the ball,
and taking away passing lanes, they prevent teams from getting in easy scoring
position.
The difference between UNLV and Providence is that
Providence lets teams make mistakes. They play pressure defense while
maintaining good guarding position and wait for their opponents to make a bad
pass. That’s more effective than gambling.
…
Ben Bentil will get into foul trouble at some point. And
Dunn is playing on the edge. He might not be so lucky with calls when he goes
on the road in Big East play. So Providence’s lack of depth is going to cost
them in some games. But right now, Providence is playing like a team that can
win in the NCAA tournament.
And I think my biggest point is that while Kris Dunn will
get most of the credit, and he deserves most of it, this shouldn’t be all about
Dunn. Because of transfers and defections, Ed Cooley has pretty much had an
undermanned roster for several years now. But he continues to develop less-heralded
players into stars. And this year he has found the right buttons to push to
make the defense work. The coaching staff deserves a lot of credit for putting
these pieces together too. There are a lot of coaches that would have performed
worse with this mismatched roster, and we shouldn’t lose sight of that as our
jaws drop at what Dunn is doing.
Quick Thoughts
1) Our SI’s projections probably had San Diego St. too high
in the preseason, but I’m shocked at how much Malik Pope has regressed. Pope
was an elite prospect who was on a lot of NBA-watch lists. Last year he had a
5.7% block rate, a 106 ORtg, and he made 20% of his 3’s as a big man. As a sophomore
everything pointed to him becoming a breakout star. Instead his block rate has
fallen in half, his ORtg is down to 65, and that’s largely due to his eFG% of
23%. He just can’t make any jump shots right now.
The guard positions were supposed to be the weak spot for
San Diego St. And if you had told me that Jeremy Helmsley and Dakarai Allen
were going to play as well as they have, I would have expected San Diego St. to
be playing at a high level. I did not expect the forward spot to be such a
weakness.
2) We knew Vanderbilt’s offense was going to be good, but
the big surprise early on is that they are also shutting teams down
defensively. Kevin Stallings has never had a Top 30 defense in the previous 14
seasons Ken Pomeroy maintained the stats. The next few weeks should tell us a
lot more about whether they have found the right formula on defense or just run
into some cold teams early.
3) SI had Xavier at 21st in the preseason which
was higher than almost every expert. Our model saw a very deep team where even
players at the tail end of the rotation had a strong individual projection. And
Chris Mack is a quality coach who has taken Xavier to the NCAA tournament in 5
of the last 6 years.
It wasn’t that others hated Xavier. There seemed
to be a consensus that Xavier would finish in the Top 3 in the Big East. But
most people were skeptical of the team’s PG situation. Well guess what, even
though Edmond Sumner and Larry Austin have been turnover prone (a 26% and 32%
turnover rate respectively), the team’s overall depth has been able to overcome
that. Xavier is undefeated, has a number of Top 100 wins, and has been winning
convincingly. Point guard is probably the most important position on a college
basketball team, but this just goes to show that if you have quality players
throughout the lineup, having a great PG isn’t everything.