Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Big Ten Player Development

I started this series to try to show the uniqueness of players like Colorado's George King and TCU's Vladamir Brodziansky. I look at the box scores every week and continue to be surprised to see a three-star bench-warmer (King) become a breakout star and to see a JUCO transfer who was not highly publicized (Brodziansky) lead his team. 

I also started this series to check in on our impact freshmen and breakout scorers lists from SI.com. For that reason, I wish I had time to show all the high major leagues we previewed at SI. But due to time constraints, I am going to wrap this up with the Big Ten. Part 6 of the series looks at every player in the Big Ten playing roughly 20% of is team's minutes when active.

Big Ten Freshmen
PPG, Min%, Poss%, ORtg, Player, Team

15.9, 82%, 27%, 98.8, *Corey Sanders, Rutgers

12.9, 54%, 29%, 115.9, *+Diamond Stone, Maryland

12.3, 70%, 24%, 108.1, +Ethan Happ, Wisconsin

12.1, 56%, 22%, 125.1, *+Thomas Bryant, Indiana

10.7, 59%, 24%, 105.5, Jordan Murphy, Minnesota

9.9, 70%, 25%, 94.6, *+JaQuan Lyle, Ohio St.

9.8, 66%, 24%, 94.1, *+Caleb Swanigan, Purdue

9.8, 59%, 19%, 103.7, *+Jalen Coleman, Illinois

9.1, 50%, 19%, 127.4, Dererk Pardon, Northwestern

9.0, 61%, 17%, 116.7, Aaron Falzon, Northwestern

8.8, 55%, 20%, 113.7, Michael Finke, Illinois

8.6, 56%, 22%, 104.5, *+Glynn Watson, Nebraska

7.8, 45%, 19%, 117.6, *+Deyonta Davis, Michigan St.

Players marked with a * were consensus Top 100 recruits. Players marked with a + were players we picked as instant impact freshmen at SI.com.

I am still kicking myself about our SI Corey Sanders projection. The stats model loved Sanders to be a major scorer in the preseason. He was Rutgers best player by far. But our SI scouting said that Sanders was attempting to be a pass-first PG. And that might have been true at first. But there is only so many times you can pass someone the ball and watch them miss a wide open shot. At some point in the season, the team just decided to give Sanders the ball and get out of the way, as seen by his team freshman record 39 points in a recent game.

And even if the scouting led us astray on Sanders, scouting has substantially improved the projections. Despite the fact that he was just a 3-star prospect, Luke Winn's personal scouting said that Ethan Happ was going to be a star. And my limited scouting moved Minnesota's Jordan Murphy up in the preseason. Murphy's recruiting rank suggested he would barely play, but I at least moved him up into Minnesota's Top 7. So even though the scouting caused us to miss on Sanders, if you look across the board at all the teams, 95% of the time scouting made our projection better. A few other notes:

-The big question for Indiana's Thomas Bryant wasn't whether or not he would score. The question was whether or not he could improve Indiana's defense. And he has delivered as Indiana's two point defense has improved from 283rd nationally to 137th. Overall, Indiana's defense has improved from 214th to 49th.

-A lot of people thought this might be the year that Northwestern finally made the NCAA tournament, but in a down year in the Big Ten, their performance isn't quite good enough. And distressingly, a lot of points will likely graduate along with Tre Demps and Alex Olah. But that's why Dererk Pardon's story is so awesome. His 28 point, 12 rebound performance soon after debuting mid-season bring a lot of hope for next year.

-Illinois' Michael Finke was a 3-star red-shirt player, the kind you might not expect that much from. In fact, among Illinois forwards he had the 6th best statistical expectation when I first ran the team's numbers this summer. But as three other big men left the team or were injured, he moved up. Finke's development is one of the only things that has gone right for Illinois this year.
 

PPG, Min%, Poss%, ORtg, Player, Team

6.7, 54%, 17%, 96.3, Jonathan Jean Laurent, Rutgers

6.7, 45%, 25%, 85.9, Kevin Dorsey, Minnesota

5.7, 56%, 20%, 84.6, Josh Reaves, Penn St.

5.1, 37%, 15%, 124.9, Nicholas Baer, Iowa

4.9, 53%, 19%, 83.8, Dupree McBrayer, Minnesota

4.9, 41%, 17%, 106.7, Jack McVeigh, Nebraska

4.5, 41%, 14%, 121.2, Michael Jacobson, Nebraska

4.2, 29%, 17%, 118.1, Ogugua Anunoby, Indiana

4.1, 46%, 16%, 86.4, *Daniel Giddens, Ohio St.

4.0, 31%, 16%, 106.5, Aaron Jordan, Illinois

3.9, 41%, 14%, 113.2, *Matt McQuaid, Michigan St.

3.8, 34%, 15%, 113.4, Ryan Cline, Purdue

3.8, 34%, 17%, 98.9, *Ed Morrow, Nebraska

3.5, 35%, 15%, 104.6, Deividas Zemgulis, Penn St.

3.1, 28%, 18%, 93.4, Charlie Thomas, Wisconsin

3.0, 35%, 15%, 90.9, Khalil Iverson, Wisconsin

2.9, 33%, 17%, 88.5, *A.J. Harris, Ohio St.

2.9, 22%, 19%, 100.4, *Victor Wagner, Michigan

2.8, 24%, 13%, 128.2, Ahmad Wagner, Iowa

2.8, 27%, 14%, 118.1, Alex Illikainen, Wisconsin

2.0, 37%, 9%, 96.3, Justin Goode, Rutgers

1.9, 25%, 12%, 111.3, Kenny Goins, Michigan St.

1.8, 22%, 18%, 82.5, Mickey Mitchell, Ohio St.

1.7, 22%, 17%, 70.5, *D.J. Williams, Illinois

1.5, 20%, 11%, 102.5, Juwan Morgan, Indiana

Four names I am not listing above: Wisconsin's Brevin Pritzl, a Top 100 recruit forced to redshirt due to injury; Ohio St.'s Austin Grandstaff, a Top 100 recruit who is transferring; Penn St.'s Mike Watkins, a 4-star prospect who was not eligible, and Rutger's Ibrahima Diallo, who played quite a bit early, but was injured.


Big Ten D3 Transfer

PPG, Min%, Poss%, ORtg, Player, Team

12.1, 70%, 18%, 132.0, Duncan Robinson, Michigan

There are not many players that transition from D3 to D1, so I can't really show you comps to explain how special Duncan Robinson's season has been. But there is no question he is very unique. The experts were right that he is a lights out three point shooter. But I'm not quite sure they were right about his ability to play in the paint. Michigan's interior defense has been pretty poor this year and teams expose Robinson inside when they can. I think Michigan views him as a stretch-four, but I think he would be better off as a true-wing. Or perhaps he will be a better interior defender and rebounder with another year of bulking up in the weight room.


Big Ten JUCO

PPG, Min%, Poss%, ORtg, Player, Team

2.1, 19%, 15%, 114.4, Jaylen Brantley, Maryland

No debuting JUCOs have played a big role in the Big Ten this year. Rutger's DeShawn Freeman and Iowa's Dale Jones might have made a bigger impact but they both got hurt.


Big Ten D1 Transfers

PPG, Min%, Poss%, ORtg, Player, Team, LastPPG, LastTeam

17.2, 72%, 24%, 123.3, Andrew White, Nebraska, 2.6, Kansas

13.1, 65%, 24%, 116.7, Robert Carter, Jr., Maryland, 11.4, Georgia Tech

10.9, 80%, 18%, 114.1, Rasheed Sulaimon, Maryland, 7.5, Duke

9.7, 51%, 25%, 110.6, Eron Harris, Michigan St., 17.2, West Virginia

7.9, 43%, 20%, 123.7, Max Bielfeldt, Indiana, 5.1, Michigan

7.9, 52%, 18%, 107.4, Omari Grier, Rutgers, 7.9, Bradley

6.5, 42%, 19%, 113.0, Trevor Thompson, Ohio St., 5.0, Virginia Tech

5.3, 45%, 18%, 114.9, Johnny Hill, Purdue, 9.6, UT Arlington

4.1, 33%, 20%, 96.3, Joey van Zegeren, Northwestern, 9.8, Virginia Tech

3.5, 56%, 14%, 88.9, Khalid Lewis, Illinois, 5.8, La Salle

1.8, 29%, 10%, 100.4, Alex Austin, Illinois, 7.0, Eastern Illinois

Andrew White was expected to be a major scorer for Nebraska, but he has done more than that. He has become the efficient superstar Nebraska needed to have a top flight offense again. (According to Kenpom.com, this is the best Nebraska offense since 2004.) Unfortunately for Cornhusker fans the defense has fallen off. The best news I can give is that Nebraska's two point defense has been better than its three point defense and free throw defense. And two point defense tends to have more predictive power going forward. (FYI: the same 2Pt/3Pt/FT defense split holds true for Wisconsin, Ohio St., and Penn St.)
I saw people in the preseason saying that Rasheed Sulaimon could average 15 to 20 PPG. And of course he could if he was the only good player on his team. The problem is that on a good team, shots are at a premium. That is why my model tries to account for the number of possessions available to each player. Sulaimon has not been a statistical disappointment; he is just one part of an offense with a lot of good players.

I am not listing Mike Thorne from Illinois due to his injury, but the play of Illinois' two guard transfers makes me think the team really does miss Tracy Abrams. Khalid Lewis and Alex Austin are just not as versatile. The losses at forward and point-guard have clearly caused Illinois to drop from a bubble team to a team that is just hanging on.

Finally Playing
This group of players were technically on the roster last year, but they didn't play meaningful minutes.

PPG, Min%, Poss%, ORtg, Player, Team

10.2, 71%, 22%, 99.2, Payton Banks, Penn St.

8.6, 57%, 22%, 102.1, Vitto Brown, Wisconsin

7.5, 79%, 13%, 115.8, Zak Showalter, Wisconsin

5.0, 50%, 14%, 102.9, Bakary Konate, Minnesota

4.8, 44%, 16%, 104.6, Julian Moore, Penn St.

4.3, 51%, 13%, 103.2, Devin Foster, Penn St.

3.7, 34%, 17%, 106.1, Javon Bess, Michigan St.

3.5, 19%, 24%, 105.2, D.J. Wilson, Michigan

3.3, 26%, 14%, 112.4, Brady Ellingson, Iowa

3.0, 27%, 17%, 107.1, Gavin Skelly, Northwestern

3.0, 36%, 13%, 101.3, Jordan Hill, Wisconsin

2.6, 18%, 20%, 111.1, Alvin Ellis III, Michigan St.

2.4, 20%, 18%, 102.2, Nick Fuller, Nebraska

2.3, 27%, 16%, 94.7, Jake Hammond, Nebraska

1.9, 23%, 19%, 69.9, Isaiah Washington, Penn St.

Banks and Brown are the leading scorers in this group, but I'm not convinced either is playing well. Banks misses way too many threes and Brown is neither the outside shooter nor defensive rebounder that Wisconsin could really use.

Returning Players
Once again, when interpreting changes in PPG, you should keep in mind the changes in pace and opponent defense. Indiana's schedule has been easier defensively this year than it was on the whole season last year. Meanwhile, Rutgers games have had over 6 more possessions than their games had on the full year last year. Obviously that is going to inflate scoring totals.
 

ChOppDef, Team, ChRawPace

3.4, Indiana, 3.2

2.6, Rutgers, 6.4

2.5, Michigan, 5.7

2.5, Minnesota, 0.2

2.4, Northwestern, 4.8

2.2, Wisconsin, 5.1

1.8, Michigan St., 4.5

1.8, Nebraska, 4.3

1.5, Purdue, 4.4

1.4, Iowa, 5.4

1.3, Illinois, 4.8

0.9, Penn St., 0.6

0.7, Ohio St., 2.2

0.6, Maryland, 2.5


Here are the biggest changes in PPG:

ChPPG, ChMin, ChPoss, ChORtg, Player, Team, Class, CurrentPPG

8.4, 15%, 4%, 19.8, Peter Jok, Iowa, Jr, 15.5

7.9, 52%, 1%, -6.4, +Keita Bates-Diop, Ohio St., So, 11.7

7.5, 17%, 8%, 10.7, +Brandon Taylor, Penn St., Sr, 16.6

6.0, 23%, 3%, 19.3, Tai Webster, Nebraska, Jr, 10.0

6.0, -1%, 5%, 6.6, Jarrod Uthoff, Iowa, Sr, 18.4

5.7, 17%, 5%, 7.0, Mike Williams, Rutgers, So, 12.1

5.7, 3%, 4%, 12.2, Bryn Forbes, Michigan St., Sr, 14.3

5.6, 11%, 3%, -0.1, Kendrick Nunn, Illinois, Jr, 16.7

5.2, 22%, 3%, 31.2, Dominique Uhl, Iowa, So, 7.3

4.7, 8%, 7%, -13.6, Nigel Hayes, Wisconsin, Jr, 17.1

4.7, 14%, 3%, -11.4, +Bronson Koenig, Wisconsin, Jr, 13.4

4.5, 11%, 3%, -3.1, Malcolm Hill, Illinois, Jr, 18.9

4.4, 15%, 4%, -1.1, +Shep Garner, Penn St., So, 13.6

4.4, 22%, 1%, 1.3, Maverick Morgan, Illinois, Jr, 7.0

4.1, 22%, 2%, 6.9, Anthony Clemmons, Iowa, Sr, 8.9

4.1, -2%, 4%, 9.6, Denzel Valentine, Michigan St., Sr, 18.6

Players marked with a + are players we projected as breakout scorers at SI.com. With DJ Newbill graduating, Brandon Taylor seemed like a good bet to increase his workload and he has. Taylor has increased his usage rate more than any other player in the Big Ten. Nigel Hayes has the next biggest increase in usage, but unlike Taylor, Hayes has seen his efficiency plummet now that he has a larger role in the offense.

There are not a ton of players in the Big Ten who have seen big improvements in efficiency (at least relative to the other top 5 conferences). But most of the big improvements are on Iowa. Dominique Uhl has had the biggest jump in efficiency in the Big Ten, Adam Woodbury (next table) has had the third biggest jump in efficiency in the Big Ten, Peter Jok has had the fifth biggest jump in efficiency in the Big Ten along with a big jump in usage, and Jarrod Uthoff has seen his efficiency improve slightly despite the third biggest jump in usage in the Big Ten. Even Anthony Clemmons is passing better and finishing better around the rim.

Don't let anyone tell you we should have seen this coming with the Hawkeyes because they have a veteran team. Iowa had a veteran team last year and they didn't become elite. The difference this year is that Iowa's players have put in the work and improved across the board.

I am a little nervous about Iowa's defense going forward. Their three point and free throw defense looks a little unsustainable given that they are not a dominant team at defending two point shots. But that is just my way of saying I am not sure Iowa is the #1 team in the country (the current Kenpom.com rank). Because of massive offensive improvements by multiple players, Iowa is miles better than their preseason bubble status.

 
ChPPG, ChMin, ChPoss, ChORtg, Player, Team, Class, CurrentPPG
 
3.7, 26%, 0%, 4.5, D.J. Foreman, Rutgers, So, 7.5

3.6, 16%, 4%, -4.8, +Nate Mason, Minnesota, So, 13.4

3.5, 20%, 3%, -1.1, Mark Donnal, Michigan, So, 7.0

3.5, 28%, 4%, -19.8, Marc Loving, Ohio St., Jr, 13.0

3.4, 5%, 2%, 8.9, Bryant McIntosh, Northwestern, So, 14.8

3.4, 26%, 0%, 40.9, P.J. Thompson, Purdue, So, 5.8

2.8, 5%, 4%, 2.8, Matt Costello, Michigan St., Sr, 9.8

2.6, -1%, 0%, 9.9, A.J. Hammons, Purdue, Sr, 14.5

2.6, 1%, -1%, 19.9, Isaac Haas, Purdue, So, 10.2

2.5, 26%, -1%, -8.8, Charles Buggs, Minnesota, Jr, 6.1

2.4, 14%, 1%, -2.2, +Kam Williams, Ohio St., So, 7.8

2.4, 16%, 1%, -6.3, +Jae'sean Tate, Ohio St., So, 11.2

2.2, 10%, 0%, 0.6, Tre Demps, Northwestern, Sr, 14.8

2.0, 11%, 0%, 12.3, Scottie Lindsey, Northwestern, So, 6.4

2.0, 17%, -2%, 19.0, Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman, Michigan, So, 6.5

1.9, 8%, -3%, 21.2, Adam Woodbury, Iowa, Sr, 8.5

1.9, 13%, 2%, 16.7, Tum Tum Nairn, Jr., Michigan St., So, 4.1

Other than Iowa, the other big jumps in efficiency are concentrated on the Purdue Boilermakers. PJ Thompson has seen the biggest jump in efficiency in the Big Ten. Thompson still isn't consistent and he and Johnny Hill have split starts this year, but Thompson's huge drop in turnover rate and improved shooting have been a great asset for the team. And Isaac Haas has improved his free throw percentage from 55% to 69% allowing him to become an efficient player.

Meanwhile Ohio St.'s Marc Loving has had the biggest drop in efficiency in the Big Ten. Loving has had to take on a larger role in his team's offense and he has struggled.


ChPPG, ChMin, ChPoss, ChORtg, Player, Team, Class, CurrentPPG 

1.7, 2%, 1%, 10.6, Joey King, Minnesota, Sr, 11.4

1.6, 0%, 3%, -0.1, Vince Edwards, Purdue, So, 10.4

1.2, -4%, 2%, 10.4, Aubrey Dawkins, Michigan, So, 8.1

1.0, 10%, -1%, 9.5, Mike Gesell, Iowa, Sr, 8.4

0.9, 3%, 0%, 10.2, Derrick Walton, Jr., Michigan, Jr, 11.7

0.9, -2%, 2%, 0.6, Yogi Ferrell, Indiana, Sr, 17.3

0.5, -7%, 1%, 12.1, Benny Parker, Nebraska, Sr, 4.7

0.5, 0%, 2%, -8.9, Donovon Jack, Penn St., Sr, 4.0

0.4, 8%, 2%, -8.4, Nathan Taphorn, Northwestern, Jr, 4.5

0.4, 1%, 0%, 8.3, Jordan Dickerson, Penn St., Sr, 3.0

0.3, -2%, 0%, 16.5, Dakota Mathias, Purdue, So, 5.1

0.3, 10%, -1%, 1.1, Bishop Daniels, Rutgers, Sr, 8.7

0.2, -12%, 1%, 7.5, Shavon Shields, Nebraska, Sr, 15.7

0.0, 4%, 0%, -0.2, Sanjay Lumpkin, Northwestern, Jr, 4.4

0.0, -1%, 1%, -9.7, Nick Zeisloft, Indiana, Sr, 6.6

These tables do not include Michigan's Caris LeVert, Indiana's James Blackmon, Illinois' Leron Black, and Michigan's Spike Albrecht. Injuries have kept all of these players out of a significant number of games. LeVert and Blackmon were projected to be stars and Black was one of our projected breakout players at SI.com, meaning all three injuries were critical. The injury to Albrecht has been tempered by Derrick Walton's big improvement in efficiency this year. Walton was really hampered by injuries last year but he is back to being an efficient and effective PG this season.

I really thought heading into the season that Penn St.'s front-court would be an asset, but it hasn't been. First super-frosh Mike Watkins was declared ineligible. Meawnhile Donovan Jack stopped making his free throws and started turning the ball over more leading to the 9 point drop in efficiency you see here. But my biggest disappointment is Penn St. senior Jordan Dickerson. A lot of big men are late bloomers and the 7 footer seemed like he was making strides last year. It seemed quite possible he would anchor the defense and provide some surprising offense in his final season. The best I can say is that he has remained a solid rim-protector and shot-blocker. But he has been too foul prone and he hasn't been able to stay on the floor and take that next step.

 
ChPPG, ChMin, ChPoss, ChORtg, Player, Team, Class, CurrentPPG

-0.1, 6%, 1%, -12.3, Collin Hartman, Indiana, Jr, 4.8

-0.3, -3%, 2%, -5.4, Michal Cekovsky, Maryland, So, 2.3

-0.3, -2%, 1%, -5.9, Troy Williams, Indiana, Jr, 12.8

-0.6, -2%, -2%, -10.0, Damonte Dodd, Maryland, Jr, 3.4

-0.7, 4%, -2%, -6.9, Jared Nickens, Maryland, So, 5.4

-0.8, 1%, 0%, -11.6, Carlos Morris, Minnesota, Sr, 10.3

-0.9, -11%, 2%, -4.8, Gavin Schilling, Michigan St., Jr, 4.2

-1.0, -7%, 0%, 3.9, Marvin Clark Jr., Michigan St., So, 3.5

-1.1, -7%, 1%, -14.9, Greg Lewis, Rutgers, Sr, 4.2

-1.1, -17%, -2%, 8.2, Alexandru Olah, Northwestern, Sr, 10.6

-1.1, -6%, -1%, 9.0, Robert Johnson, Indiana, So, 7.8

-1.3, 0%, -4%, -3.0, Jaylon Tate, Illinois, Jr, 2.3

-1.5, -4%, 0%, 2.0, Melo Trimble, Maryland, So, 14.8

-1.6, -16%, 0%, 3.6, Kendall Stephens, Purdue, Jr, 7.2

-1.6, -9%, -3%, 1.0, Rapheal Davis, Purdue, Sr, 9.1

-2.0, 2%, -6%, 2.3, Jake Layman, Maryland, Sr, 10.5

-2.2, -12%, -1%, -11.3, Ricky Doyle, Michigan, So, 4.0

-3.1, -10%, -2%, 3.5, Zak Irvin, Michigan, Jr, 11.2

Maryland's Jake Layman has had to sacrifice a lot of shots with the additions of Robert Carter and Rasheed Sulaimon. Layman has seen the biggest drop in usage rate in the Big Ten.

Saturday, February 6, 2016

ACC Player Development


Part 5 of the series looks at every player in the ACC playing roughly 20% of his team's minutes when active.

ACC Freshmen

PPG, Min%, Poss%, ORtg, Player, Team

17.4, 73%, 24%, 121.6, *Malik Beasley, Florida St.

17.0, 81%, 24%, 119.1, *+Brandon Ingram, Duke

16.4, 72%, 28%, 102.8, *+Dwayne Bacon, Florida St.

13.5, 76%, 26%, 97.1, *Bryant Crawford, Wake Forest

13.4, 83%, 22%, 102.6, *+Malachi Richardson, Syracuse

12.6, 83%, 19%, 105.7, *Maverick Rowan, North Carolina St.

11.9, 62%, 21%, 125.9, *Luke Kennard, Duke

11.6, 82%, 23%, 90.2, Jerome Robinson, Boston College

8.9, 74%, 15%, 121.3, *Tyler Lydon, Syracuse

8.5, 63%, 20%, 104.3, *+Derryck Thornton, Duke

7.6, 50%, 19%, 119.3, *+Donovan Mitchell, Louisville

7.2, 35%, 23%, 117.1, John Collins, Wake Forest

6.8, 48%, 18%, 106.4, Kerry Blackshear, Jr., Virginia Tech

5.9, 69%, 14%, 90.9, +A.J. Turner, Boston College

Players marked with a * were consensus Top 100 recruits. Players marked with a + were players we picked as instant impact freshmen at SI.com.

A few notable players are missing from this list. Virginia Tech's Chris Clarke was off to a nice start before he fractured his foot, but since he played so few games, I am not listing his stats. Two consensus Top 100 recruits are barely playing and didn't meet my minutes cut-off, Wake Forest's Doral Moore and North Carolina's Kenny Williams.

Let's start off by noting that Malik Beasley is putting up numbers very similar to Duke's Brandon Ingram. This is extremely impressive because unlike Ingram, Beasley didn't enroll at Florida St. with the expectation that he would be the go-to-player. The team brought in Dwayne Bacon, who was more highly rated, and the team brought back nearly all its starters from last year. Beasley had to practice hard to earn his large role, and he has not only delivered in practice, he has delivered on the court.

The second thing I want to discuss is how critical the injury was to transfer Terry Henderson for NC State. With Henderson out, Anthony Barber and Maverick Rowan have had to log huge minutes. Cat Barber has been phenomenal, but Maverick Rowan has been the typical quality freshman. Rowan has a great game and then he has a bad game. In a normal season if Rowan wasn't playing well, Mark Gottfried could put him on the bench. But this season he doesn't really have a choice; he has to keep Rowan on the floor.

Syracuse's Franklin Howard and Kaleb Johnson have scored 26 points and 16 points respectively on the season. I find this pretty shocking, but even with Howard playing a little bit more in a few games, Michael Gbinije has pretty much become the full-time PG. I thought he might be the part-time PG, but as the full-time PG that has opened the door for Malachi Richardson to play a ton at the wing and he has made the most of his opportunity.

Duke has been on an incredible roll with freshmen point-guards that are highly ranked out of high school. Tyus Jones, Austin Rivers, and Kyrie Irving were all highly ranked recruits that received major playing time when healthy and were eventually selected in the first round of the NBA draft after their freshman season. But this time Derryck Thornton has to count as a mild disappointment. Thornton was the RSCI #13 recruit, and despite the team having an open slot at point-guard, he is only starting sporadically. He is also Duke's least efficient regular rotation player. He isn't bad by any normal standard, but by elite prospect Duke standards, he isn't great. And Chase Jeter has been even worse. In the preseason at SI we projected Duke's Chase Jeter to be the 40th most impactful freshman, despite the fact that he was the RSCI #14 recruit, but even that seemingly pessimistic projection was way too optimistic:
 

PPG, Min%, Poss%, ORtg, Player, Team

5.8, 53%, 18%, 98.1, *Justin Robinson, Virginia Tech

5.7, 42%, 15%, 124.4, Matt Ryan, Notre Dame

5.6, 43%, 18%, 109.4, *Raymond Spalding, Louisville

4.6, 28%, 18%, 133.7, Anthony Lawrence Jr., Miami FL

4.5, 40%, 16%, 104.4, Terance Mann, Florida St.

4.5, 36%, 14%, 116.7, Matt Milon, Boston College

4.3, 28%, 21%, 88.9, Sammy Barnes-Thompkins, Boston College

4.0, 28%, 20%, 108.1, Damon Wilson, Pittsburgh

3.5, 48%, 13%, 88.0, Ervins Meznieks, Boston College

3.0, 22%, 24%, 86.4, *+Deng Adel, Louisville

2.5, 30%, 10%, 142.5, Rex Pflueger, Notre Dame

2.3, 26%, 15%, 82.1, Idy Diallo, Boston College

1.9, 19%, 19%, 91.9, Jack Salt, Virginia

1.7, 19%, 17%, 85.6, *+Chase Jeter, Duke

1.4, 23%, 18%, 82.9, *Franklin Howard, Syracuse

Boston College has played a lot of freshman, but only Matt Milon (over 50% of his threes) has been efficient and Milon is a role player who rarely plays or shoots. Don't knock Deng Adel for his low production; he is recovering from an injury. Notre Dame plays its starters a lot of minutes, but Matt Ryan has somehow earned his way into the rotation with some great shooting.

 

ACC Guys Who Sat Out 2 Years Due to Injury

PPG, Min%, Poss%, ORtg, Player, Team

4.0, 34%, 18%, 90.8, Darryl Hicks, Boston College

It is brutal to be injured for two years and then get healthy in time to play for such a depleted team.


ACC JUCOs

PPG, Min%, Poss%, ORtg, Player, Team

3.5, 25%, 18%, 102.1, Benji Bell, Florida St.

2.2, 20%, 17%, 105.7, Johnny Hamilton, Virginia Tech

Benji Bell picked the wrong year to join Florida St. The guard and wing positions are just too loaded for him to earn playing time.

ACC D1 Transfers

PPG, Min%, Poss%, ORtg, Player, Team, LastPPG, LastTeam

17.0, 81%, 21%, 128.4, Damion Lee, Louisville, 21.4, Drexel

16.8, 82%, 33%, 92.0, Eli Carter, Boston College, 8.8, Florida

15.8, 76%, 25%, 117.1, Zach LeDay, Virginia Tech, 3.5, South Florida

14.6, 70%, 29%, 96.0, Seth Allen, Virginia Tech, 13.4, Maryland

14.5, 72%, 21%, 120.8, Adam Smith, Georgia Tech, 13.4, Virginia Tech

12.1, 70%, 21%, 116.5, Trey Lewis, Louisville, 16.3, Cleveland St.

11.5, 56%, 25%, 108.1, Nick Jacobs, Georgia Tech, 8.4, Alabama

9.8, 76%, 19%, 107.9, Avry Holmes, Clemson, 12.5, San Francisco

6.6, 55%, 13%, 124.2, Sterling Smith, Pittsburgh, 14.1, Coppin St.

5.9, 57%, 15%, 102.7, Kamari Murphy, Miami FL, 6.1, Oklahoma

5.7, 54%, 15%, 114.7, Darius Thompson, Virginia, 2.5, Tennessee

3.9, 36%, 17%, 105.3, James White, Georgia Tech, 11.9, Arkansas Little Rock

2.5, 34%, 13%, 111.8, Rafael Maia, Pittsburgh, 9.9, Brown

1.9, 24%, 13%, 100.9, Alonzo Nelson-Ododa, Pittsburgh, 6.6, Richmond

Damion Lee was pushed pretty hard by Deng Adel in the preseason and when Adel went down, Lee was more than ready to be one of the nation's best wing-players. Eli Carter has had to score by default for Boston College, as expected. Thus the transfer that has probably surprised the most is Virginia Tech's Zach LeDay. My model thought he might get the most playing time in Virginia Tech's front-court, but he wasn't a very physical player at South Florida, and it wasn't clear he could be this good. Instead he's raised his rebounding rates substantially, he's increased his block rate, and he is shooting better across the board to boot.
The Pittsburgh frontcourt transfers have been a bit of a bust. After the team struggled to defend the paint last year they were supposed to fill the gap, but instead the team has looked in-house at players like Sheldon Jeter and Ryan Luther.

Finally Playing
The following players were not rotation players last year and have finally cracked the lineup:

PPG, Min%, Poss%, ORtg, Player, Team

6.3, 60%, 16%, 108.9, Cody Martin, North Carolina St.

5.4, 49%, 19%, 89.5, Gabe DeVoe, Clemson

5.2, 42%, 18%, 108.4, Jaylen Johnson, Louisville

5.0, 41%, 18%, 106.3, DaJuan Coleman, Syracuse

4.8, 24%, 21%, 122.6, Cameron Johnson, Pittsburgh

3.8, 37%, 12%, 130.2, Ben Lammers, Georgia Tech

3.7, 27%, 17%, 111.6, Ryan Luther, Pittsburgh

3.5, 33%, 18%, 96.9, Anas Mahmoud, Louisville

3.1, 37%, 13%, 95.5, Rondale Watson, Wake Forest

2.2, 29%, 13%, 108.7, Matt Farrell, Notre Dame

1.8, 38%, 9%, 80.1, Trent VanHorn, Wake Forest

Players who have barely played don’t typically become high scorers. Jumping back to the Pac-12 column, that is why what George King is doing at Colorado is so impressive.
Syracuse's DaJuan Coleman isn’t a major scorer, but his defense seems pretty critical to me at this point. There are a lot of times when he is on the bench that Syracuse looks over-matched in the paint.

Returning Players
Once again, when interpreting changes in PPG, you should keep in mind the changes in pace and opponent defense. Louisville's schedule has been significantly easier defensively this year than it was on the whole season last year. Meanwhile, Florida St.’s games have had almost 8 more possessions per game than their games had on the full year last year. Obviously that is going to inflate scoring totals.
 

ChOppDef, Team, ChRawPace

5.1, Louisville, 2.3

4.3, Boston College, 4.1

4.3, North Carolina, 3.5

3.7, North Carolina St., 3.9

3.7, Pittsburgh, 6.9

2.9, Virginia Tech, 7.1

2.8, Duke, 3.3

2.4, Miami FL, 5.5

2.3, Notre Dame, 2.0

2.2, Clemson, 1.2

2.0, Syracuse, -1.3

1.7, Georgia Tech, 4.7

1.2, Wake Forest, 3.5

0.6, Virginia, 3.4

0.3, Florida St., 7.7

 
Here are the biggest changes in PPG:

ChPPG, ChMin, ChPoss, ChORtg, Player, Team, Class, CurrentPPG

16.1, 66%, 3%, 11.6, +Grayson Allen, Duke, So, 20.6

11.3, 19%, 6%, 10.6, Anthony Barber, North Carolina St., Jr, 23.4

8.1, 50%, 3%, 4.3, Joel Berry, North Carolina, So, 12.3

7.9, 26%, 6%, 20.4, Ja'Quan Newton, Miami FL, So, 11.9

7.2, 14%, 10%, 16.7, Chinanu Onuaku, Louisville, So, 10.2

6.6, 40%, 0%, -1.2, +Bonzie Colson, Jr., Notre Dame, So, 12.2

6.4, 20%, 5%, 5.9, Abdul-Malik Abu, North Carolina St., So, 12.7

6.2, 38%, 1%, 0.7, Caleb Martin, North Carolina St., So, 11.1

6.1, 30%, 2%, 8.0, Matt Jones, Duke, Jr, 12.1

6.0, 49%, 3%, -8.8, Marshall Plumlee, Duke, Sr, 8.2

5.9, 45%, -2%, 7.7, +V.J. Beachem, Notre Dame, Jr, 11.8

5.5, 31%, 2%, 25.5, Quentin Snider, Louisville, So, 9.6

5.3, 22%, 3%, 10.3, +Amile Jefferson, Duke, Sr, 11.4

4.8, 2%, 4%, 17.0, London Perrantes, Virginia, Jr, 11.3

4.5, 3%, 8%, 19.8, Mangok Mathiang, Louisville, Jr, 7.1

Players marked with a + are players we projected as breakout players at SI.com. We were 4 for 4 in the ACC as Allen, Colson, Beachem, and Jefferson have all scored at a much higher level than last year when healthy.

As discussed earlier, Terry Henderson’s injury opened the door for Anthony Barber to be even more aggressive for North Carolina St. Joel Berry also benefited from Marcus Paige missing the start of the season. He’s become a confident polished player as a sophomore.

Louisville’s Chinanu Onuaku is the ACC player to show the biggest increase in aggressiveness. Onuaku used just 13% of his team’s possessions last year. This year he uses 23%. And he’s lowered his turnovers and improved slightly at his free throw shooting at the same time which is a great accomplishment. Mangok Mathiang was making similar progress though an injury interrupted that. Meanwhile Quentin Snider has become a much more efficient player this year. Rick Pitino is mostly winning because he is a dominant defensive coach, but he knows a thing or two about developing players too.

Ja’Quan Newton has an argument for the most improved player in the ACC as he is tied for third with a huge 6% jump in aggressiveness, and his efficiency has jumped by 20 points. Newton’s turnover rate, free throw shooting, and two point percentage are all much better than last year.
 

ChPPG, ChMin, ChPoss, ChORtg, Player, Team, Class, CurrentPPG

4.5, 10%, 4%, 6.1, Michael Gbinije, Syracuse, Sr, 17.2

4.2, 7%, 0%, 13.6, Devin Thomas, Wake Forest, Sr, 16.3

4.1, 6%, 1%, 11.7, Jaron Blossomgame, Clemson, Jr, 17.2

3.9, 12%, 4%, 16.0, Sheldon Jeter, Pittsburgh, Jr, 8.6

3.8, 5%, 0%, 14.4, Brice Johnson, North Carolina, Sr, 16.7

3.8, 2%, 2%, 8.7, Malcolm Brogdon, Virginia, Sr, 17.8

3.7, -8%, 6%, 2.9, Mike Young, Pittsburgh, Jr, 17.0

3.6, 1%, 6%, -0.4, Demetrius Jackson, Notre Dame, Jr, 16.0

3.1, 9%, -1%, 22.2, Isaiah Hicks, North Carolina, Jr, 9.8

3.0, 32%, -4%, 17.7, Jordan Roper, Clemson, Sr, 9.7

3.0, 9%, 0%, 1.3, Anthony Gill, Virginia, Sr, 14.6

3.0, 10%, 6%, 8.1, Sidy Djitte, Clemson, Jr, 5.1

2.6, 23%, 1%, 17.5, Devon Hall, Virginia, So, 4.4

2.6, 8%, 3%, -0.5, Steve Vasturia, Notre Dame, Jr, 12.6

2.5, 28%, -2%, 27.5, Isaiah Wilkins, Virginia, So, 4.2

2.5, 30%, 2%, 0.2, Theo Pinson, North Carolina, So, 5.4

Virginia's Isaiah Wilkins turnover rate has plummeted this year leading to the biggest jump in efficiency in the ACC, but he is such a low-usage role player that it matters less than you might think.

 

ChPPG, ChMin, ChPoss, ChORtg, Player, Team, Class, CurrentPPG

2.1, 13%, 3%, -9.4, Davon Reed, Miami FL, Jr, 10.3

2.0, 2%, 1%, 7.4, Marcus Georges-Hunt, Georgia Tech, Sr, 15.6

1.8, -8%, 3%, 2.4, Jamel Artis, Pittsburgh, Jr, 15.5

1.7, -2%, -1%, 11.1, Sheldon McClellan, Miami FL, Sr, 16.1

1.6, 13%, 2%, 4.2, Tyler Roberson, Syracuse, Jr, 9.8

1.5, 7%, -1%, 9.8, Donte Grantham, Clemson, So, 10.3

1.4, 10%, -4%, -2.8, Jalen Hudson, Virginia Tech, So, 8.3

1.3, 3%, 6%, -18.9, Dennis Clifford, Boston College, Sr, 8.2

1.2, 2%, 1%, -0.3, Justin Jackson, North Carolina, So, 12.0

1.2, 5%, 1%, -1.0, Nate Britt, North Carolina, Jr, 6.7

1.1, 9%, -3%, 8.3, Charles Mitchell, Georgia Tech, Sr, 10.9

1.1, 14%, 1%, -8.7, Zach Auguste, Notre Dame, Sr, 13.9

1.0, -10%, 0%, 12.6, James Robinson, Pittsburgh, Sr, 9.9

0.9, 3%, -2%, 20.2, Ivan Cruz Uceda, Miami FL, Sr, 6.1

0.9, -7%, 3%, 5.5, Landry Christ Nnoko, Clemson, Sr, 8.5

Dennis Clifford has had to take a larger role in the Boston College offense this year and he has seen the biggest drop in efficiency in the ACC. And certainly, the increase in shot volume explains his increase in turnover rate and lower shooting percentage. But what explains his drop in free throw percentage?

 

ChPPG, ChMin, ChPoss, ChORtg, Player, Team, Class, CurrentPPG

0.8, 4%, 0%, 0.1, Kostas Mitoglou, Wake Forest, So, 10.5

0.8, 11%, -8%, 27.5, Justin Bibbs, Virginia Tech, So, 12.2

0.7, 4%, 1%, -6.2, Boris Bojanovsky, Florida St., Sr, 5.8

0.6, 7%, 3%, -4.9, Garland Owens, Boston College, Jr, 4.0

0.4, 1%, 2%, 1.1, Joel James, North Carolina, Sr, 2.9

0.3, -8%, 1%, 13.0, Greg McClinton, Wake Forest, So, 3.7

0.3, 9%, -2%, 6.7, Lennard Freeman, North Carolina St., Jr, 3.9

0.2, -3%, -1%, 5.1, Mike Tobey, Virginia, Sr, 7.1

0.2, -1%, 1%, 2.8, Trevor Cooney, Syracuse, Sr, 13.5

0.1, 8%, 0%, 0.3, Mitchell Wilbekin, Wake Forest, So, 7.3

0.1, -1%, 0%, 5.5, Marial Shayok, Virginia, So, 3.9

0.1, -3%, 0%, 6.9, James Palmer, Miami FL, So, 3.8

0.1, 0%, -4%, 4.6, Shane Henry, Virginia Tech, Sr, 2.4

0.0, -1%, -1%, 4.1, Kennedy Meeks, North Carolina, Jr, 11.3

Justin Bibbs is tied with the biggest jump in efficiency in the ACC, but that is largely because he has become a more passive player. He is taking less bad two point jumpers this season.
 

ChPPG, ChMin, ChPoss, ChORtg, Player, Team, Class, CurrentPPG

-0.1, 9%, -1%, -9.3, BeeJay Anya, North Carolina St., Jr, 4.4

-0.3, 12%, -5%, 10.7, Angel Rodriguez, Miami FL, Sr, 11.7

-0.3, 0%, -4%, 9.5, Tadric Jackson, Georgia Tech, So, 5.1

-0.6, 1%, -3%, 3.1, Tonye Jekiri, Miami FL, Sr, 8.0

-0.7, 4%, 1%, -12.6, Cornelius Hudson, Wake Forest, So, 6.8

-0.8, -2%, -2%, -6.0, Josh Smith, Clemson, Sr, 1.6

-0.9, -12%, 0%, 14.2, Devon Bookert, Florida St., Sr, 9.1

-1.0, 3%, -4%, 13.3, Josh Heath, Georgia Tech, Jr, 3.3

-1.0, -13%, -3%, 23.5, Travis Jorgenson, Georgia Tech, Jr, 2.7

-1.1, -7%, -1%, 8.8, Quinton Stephens, Georgia Tech, Jr, 4.9

-1.6, -7%, -1%, 0.9, Marcus Paige, North Carolina, Sr, 12.4

-1.7, -22%, 3%, -17.8, Evan Nolte, Virginia, Sr, 1.4

-2.0, -9%, -1%, -13.4, Jarquez Smith, Florida St., Jr, 4.1

-2.7, -26%, 0%, 4.4, Chris Jones, Pittsburgh, Jr, 5.8

-3.1, -26%, -4%, 14.0, Phil Cofer, Florida St., So, 3.8

-3.2, -10%, -4%, 5.9, Xavier Rathan-Mayes, Florida St., So, 11.7

-4.1, -20%, -7%, -15.5, Devin Wilson, Virginia Tech, Jr, 2.4

-7.3, -4%, -8%, -14.3, Codi Miller-McIntyre, Wake Forest, Sr, 7.2

-8.1, -32%, -7%, -11.2, Montay Brandon, Florida St., Sr, 3.7

Several Florida St. players, most notably Montay Brandon, have seen their playing time and shot volume squeezed out by Florida St.’s elite recruiting class. Wake Forest’s Codi Miller-McIntyre hasn’t been the same player since returning from his injury. It is sad to see the senior go out like this.