Breaking Down Offense Further

There are multiple ways a player can add value to his team in a basketball game. Attempting to capture these different ways quantitatively can be difficult. If you look at an advanced season box score, you’ll notice that most of the stats are listed in rates instead of totals or per game.

College Basketball Reference, 2022 Kansas Jayhawks through 30 games

So let’s take two players and compare them, Ochai Agbaji and Christian Braun. They have similar minutes played, PER, and TS%. As we continue to move left to right, we see that Och’s 3-pt. attempt rate is much higher, although CB gets to the line more (FT rate). Agbaji is credited with more points produced, CB is a better rebounder on both ends, a better assister, and also gets a higher proportion of steals and blocks. Ochai has a lower turnover percentage, and a higher usage.

These numbers are all wonderful to have, and do tell us quite a bit. They are also a mess to organize and make sense of. For instance, PER (Player Efficiency Rating) rates how efficient players are, with higher been better. It takes into account all offensive stats.

Notice we see that David McCormack is leading in this category. This may be surprising, but remember he shoots FT’s quite well and also grabs a ton of offensive rebounds. His turnover rate is also fairly low. Still, we see he is shooting worse than players like Agbaji and Braun, and has a far lower assist rate than the guards.

What if we wanted to compare D-Mac’s offensive rebounding rate (which is very high) to a guard’s assist rate? In other words, is he adding more or less value through his rebounds than Dejuan Harris is through his assist? You can’t look at the raw numbers, because they are measuring two different skills. But certainly there is a way to see this.

Represented below is the attempt to do just that. Breaking down offense, we’ve organized all offensive plays into one of three categories: Finishing, Handling, and Boarding.

  • Finishing – This measures how well and frequently a player scores. It takes into account his shooting percentage and volume, as well as if the play was assisted or not. It includes measurements of both production and efficiency.
  • Handling – This measures how well a player takes care of the ball and distributes it. It uses assists and turnovers to drive the result.
  • Boarding – This looks primarily at offensive rebounding, the main driver in a team getting second-chance opportunities. It also includes the occasional “save” which rescues a team’s offensive possession following a teammate’s poor pass that should have resulted in a turnover.

This chart is represented in Points Above Bubble, the value currency most frequently used on this website. This chart is showing PAB per 100 possessions, so it ignores any value related to endurance/stamina/etc. and purely rates each player on the same possession basis. There are a few interesting results:

  • The best offensive skill set for KU this season has been Agbaji’s ability to score (Finishing). He is shooting 42.2% from 3, and also has a 61.3% TS% (using Sports Reference’s calculations). In all, he is adding 7.29 Points above bubble over the course of 100 possessions (PAB/100) due to his ability to score.
  • The second-best offensive skill set for KU this season is David McCormack’s offensive rebounding. He is adding 5.17 PAB/100 just from his ability to get second and third-chance opportunities. And while some may wish to discount his rebounding ability by claiming it is due to poor shooting (“he just gets his own misses”), this doesn’t look to be too true as he has a Finishing score of +1.59. When D-Mac is out there, he is the team’s second-best offensive weapon.
  • The best at “Handling,” which is basically maximizing assists and minimizing turnovers, is Dejuan Harris. At +3.06, is far better at the true point guard skills than other guards. But notice even despite his strong Handling score, his lack of Finishing and Boarding makes his offensive value below bubble-player level on offense.
  • These numbers are not position-adjusted. So we expect to see the guards with positive Handling numbers but negative Boarding numbers, and the posts to have negative Handling numbers but positive Boarding numbers. But take a look at K.J. Adams. A solid offensive rebounder, K.J. has also done a decent job handling the ball for a 4/5 man. It is his scoring (Finishing) which has made his score so low.

In summary, different players will bring different things to the table. For KU’s offense in 2022, they are getting great scoring marks from Agbaji, Braun, and even Coleman-Lands. Harris is the best ball-handler, although the other point guards add some value here. And inside, David McCormack and K.J. Adams are beasts at winning additional opportunities. Jalen Wilson is positive in all features, being balanced at finishing, handling, and boarding.

Why Charting Defense Is Important

Since beginning to chart KU games during the 2019 season, it’s become clear that without seeing the full picture that the defensive stats (such as points allowed) provide, it becomes difficult to truly see the impact of particular players.

There are a few axioms for charting basketball stats that this website follows, including:

  • Offense and defense are equally valuable. Teams will have an equal number of offensive and defensive possessions.
  • Offensive and defensive rebounds are of equal value, because getting a defensive rebound is merely preventing your opponent from grabbing an offensive rebound themselves.
  • An offensive rebound neutralizes a missed shot. If someone rebounds his own miss, and puts it back in, it neither adds nor takes away value than if he’d made the initial shot.
  • Similarly a turnover and forced turnover are equally inverse. If a player has 3 turnovers on offense but forces 3 turnovers on defense, he’s had a neutral game in this regard.
  • Similarly all misses are equal. Whether or not an offensive rebound occurs is up to the hustle of the players on the court (including the shooter).
  • There are three aspects to scoring: setting up the score, positioning the score, and finishing the score. To relate this to an assisted basket, the assist man sets up the basket with a nice pass, the man who scores must get himself ready to catch the pass, and in turn that same player must have the ability to score by making the shot. With an unassisted basket, the first part of the score (the set up) is not done through a pass but through some type of agile move by the scorer.

The whole point is that there is a systematic way of assessing player value here that avoids bias and selective memory. Now this system also discounts clutchness, or the ability to play well in high-leverage situations. Unlike many in advanced statistics, Charting the Hawks doesn’t disagree that clutchness exists. It almost certainly does. But there are other reasons to discount it for our purposes that we don’t need to get into.

Having said that, and this isn’t to pick on anyone else, but it’s tough not to notice how bias and selective memory pervades the minds of fans and pundits alike. After each game, this website rates the game performance of each Jayhawk (using Adj. PPG +/-). It doesn’t just rank each player, but actually tells you how well or poorly a Jayhawk did in that game as compared to a hypothetical KU-level replacement player (i.e. “bubble” player).

Of course, there are other sites that do the same, albeit without any system. This ends up getting them into trouble. Matt Tait of the Lawrence Journal World took over the Keegan Ratings after longtime LJW Sports Editor Tom Keegan left the paper. It is now called the Kusports.com ratings, although the rankings are based the same as Keegan’s were before. The rater makes his subjective analysis of who played well and who didn’t, then ranks them from best to worst for each game. These ratings are then accumulated for the total season.

Last night’s loss to TCU was ugly to be sure, but rating Zach Clemence as KU’s most effective Jayhawk was a bit far-fetched. Tait’s rankings are represented below, so that we can compare to what a more objective rating system would show. Here’s how Tait ranks them.

  1. Zach Clemence
  2. Jalen Wilson
  3. Ochai Agbaji
  4. Joe Yesufu
  5. Christian Braun
  6. Dejuan Harris, Jr.
  7. Mitch Lightfoot
  8. Jalen Coleman-Lands
  9. Remy Martin
  10. David McCormack
  11. K.J. Adams

We won’t go through each player’s write-up, but considering that KU lost by 10 points (which isn’t great, but not the worst ever) and not 30+, it’s odd to think that each of the other 10 players who played more than 7 minutes had less of a positive effect than Clemence’s block and defensive rebound did in 26 seconds.

We will go through a few of the outrageous differences, however. Let’s start with CtH’s most valuable player in this game, David McCormack, who Tait ranks at #10!

CtH’s ranking of the 3/1 TCU game

McCormack had a score of +8.22, meaning that after factoring each made shot, missed shot, free throws, rebounds, steals, turnovers, forced turnovers, defensive possessions that did or did not lead to points, as well as minutes played; he was 8.22 points better than the average KU-level replacement 5-man would likely be. This may seem surprising on a night where he was 2-6 from the field; then again by selecting the stat 2-6 on FG’s, we’ve already biased the entirety of McCormack’s performance.

McCormack also went 7-9 on FT’s, to finish with 11 points. Given that he had 6 official offensive rebounds against 1 turnover, his offensive rating was 118.9 on Torvik with 32.2 usage. This is a very solid offensive outing. Note that this also ignores something the video shows, that McCormack hustled to recovery two loose balls on offense that would have been turnovers on bad passes from his teammates (at about the 18:06 mark and 6:52 mark of the 2H). All said, his activity winning possessions and FT shooting outdid the few missed layups he had in close.

Remembering missed layups is the perfect example of selective memory. Here’s Tait’s write-up that tells us more about Tait’s ability to rate players than McCormack’s actual performance on Tuesday:

McCormack never got going in this one, missing so many close-range shots and struggling to gain control of himself throughout. He finished with decent numbers — 13 points and 8 rebounds — but he played just 21 minutes and got so many of those rebounds by badly missing in close.

According to the official stats, McCormack missed 2 lay-ups in the game, one at the 17:57 mark and one at the 16:16 mark of the 2H. It’s tough to agree that D-Mac missed “so many” close-range shots. Now he did miss 2 jumpers inside 8 feet as well, but these were contested. Either way, that is what stuck in Tait’s mind the most, so that is why McCormack was seen as KU’s 10th best player out of 11.

Yet after discounting McCormack’s night, Tait realizes that 13 (actually 11) & 8 aren’t actually terrible. This is the first sign he is starting to come to terms with his own bias. Unfortunately, he doubles down and provides a few more throw away lines that attempt to justify his ranking but only show us his ignorance. Yes, McCormack’s 21 minutes were not as many as he’s had in prior games, but it’s tough to say that limited minutes should discount a player’s performance in your rankings when your top player is someone who played in 1 total possession the entire game.

Another canard is that McCormack’s high offensive rebounding rate is due to him missing close shots. I read/hear this so often, that I might go back through the game logs to see how frequently this actually occurs. For starters, it’s a way to discount the fact that David McCormack is leading the nation in offensive rebounding percentage (OR%), at 20.4%. In other words, he rebounds 1/5 of his team’s misses while he’s on the court.

Tait is appealing to this bit of conventional wisdom, however of his 6 offensive rebounds Tuesday night, only 1 was off his own miss. The other 5 were off a Jalen Wilson missed jumper (5:15 1H), a Dejuan Harris missed 3-pointer (17:58, 2H), a Jalen Wilson missed jumper after a block (15:06 2H), an Ochai Agbaji missed jumper (6:55 2H), and a Christian Braun missed layup that was blocked (5:58, 2H). The only rebound off his own miss came at the 5:06 mark of the 2H, and it was a miss on a post-up jumper. This rebound would lead to Jalen Wilson driving and getting fouled, proving further it added value to the possession.

Tait isn’t close to correct in what he’s saying. But even if he were, remember the axiom that an offensive rebound neutralizes the mal-value of a miss. Even if McCormack were blowing layups out of proportion, in getting back his misses he is not harming his team one bit since KU retains possession. His 112.2 ORtg (and 117.8 Conf ORtg) on KenPom agree here.

Another axiom is that all misses are equal, namely that it doesn’t matter if a possession ends in a missed layup or missed deep 3, the value of the possession is still 0 points. Let’s explain why that is. In basketball, teams are attempting to get the most efficient shot, which occurs closer to the rim than further from it. McCormack is the best on the team at getting close shots, using his size, length, and skill set to get a bulk of shots in close. Yes, him missing these shots is frustrating. But it is quantitatively no different than when some other Jayhawk misses a deep shot late in the possession because he isn’t large or skilled enough to get a close one in 30 seconds of the shot clock. Selective memory only recalls the missed bunnies he has; it discounts his ability to get so many close shots. And he still makes enough of them (while also shooting well from the line) to be a solid offensive contributor.

Tait also had this to say about McCormack:

Give him credit for fighting to get them back, but had it not been for a 7-of-9 night at the free throw line, McCormack’s numbers would’ve matched the way he looked in this one. It’s going to be real interesting to see how he looks against that big, athletic TCU front line in the rematch.

Tait does finally realize the value of winning offensive rebounds back, yet he unfortunately discounts the skill of shooting well from the line. 7/9 is 78%, which isn’t astronomically higher than his season percentage (70.8%) and his below his percentage from last season (79.8%). McCormack’s energy and hustle got him to the line, where he converted.

But it was interesting to see the last bit, the one praising TCU’s front line. TCU certainly dominated the Hawks on the glass, 47-35. McCormack’s countpart, Eddie Lampkin, had 9 rebounds (4 offensive). This would make it seem like McCormack was giving up more than he was scoring. However this was not the case at all.

Lampkin finished with only 2 points. Other interior players, including Xavier Cork (8 points), did have solid games. But this is where charting defensive plays helps. Without seeing how KU’s defensive possessions went, we are only left guessing as to how each player performed on defense. Let’s look back at Lampkin’s only bucket. It was early in the game, when he hit an elbow-jumper with 17:39 in the 1H. It occurred not when D-Mac was in the game, but when Mitch Lightfoot was. Lightfoot was clearly out of position, over-hedging the ball screen and allowing his man to slip and have an uncontested look.

After charting each possession, we see that McCormack’s defensive contributions only led TCU scoring on two different plays, first when he overhelped in the first half and forced Christian Braun to block out his man at the rim (leaving CB’s man uncontested for a put-back) and second when he goaltended a contested layup that didn’t appear to be going in (on a play where CB fouled the driver for an and-1). In 21 minutes, that was it. Needless to conclude, this was a good performance on defense by D-Mac. (As a comparison, Mitch Lightfoot and K.J. Adams combined for 13 points allowed in 19 minutes of play, far more than McCormack gave up in slightly more minutes).

Now for the season, McCormack’s defensive efforts have been rather poor. He is allowing 15.6 points per 60 possessions, which is second-worst on the team behind Mitch Lightfoot (of players playing at least 10% of possible minutes). After accounting for his rebounding, blocks, steals, and forced turnovers; he grades out as a -0.63 per game defender. He’s struggled on this end his whole career, and this season is no different. But he does have solid games from time-to-time.

On the other hand, Ochai Agbaji gave up 23 points in his worst defensive outing of the season. This wouldn’t be known if not for charting the game. While Agbaji will likely bounce back on Thursday, defensive performances tend to fluctuate more than offensive ones, there’s no possible universe in which Ochai was the third-best Jayhawk and McCormack the 10th-best Jayhawk on Tuesday. None.

The last thing I’d like to talk about is the season standings that accumulate each game and appear at the bottom of each Kusports.com Ratings write-up. For one, I’m not sure how the totals are arrived at. It seems, although this could be wrong, that each player receives points in inverse to the number of players that game. So if KU plays 10 players in a game, the #1 player of that game gets 10 points, the #2 player of that game gets 9 points, and so on. But this would only work as a sensible system if every game saw the same number of players play. For instance in games where only 8 players play, the #1 player is only getting 8 points, not 10.

A second problem is that there have been a number of missed games due to injury, illness, suspension, or coaching decision. So while the season standings are an accumulation, it isn’t true that each player has played an equal amount of games.

To his credit, Tait attempts to control for this by putting superscripts to indicate that a certain player his missed one or more games for some reason. But the effect is to make it look clunky. There are six Jayhawk regulars who have missed action because of non-coaching decision reasons, and each has a different symbol or letter to reflect this. For instance Wilson has a bullet-point to indicate he missed three games due to suspension, Agbaji has a + sign (although in the notes it has become a bullet-point as well), and other players have a letter, either x, y, z, or b.

Either way, this leads to the question of how to account for player value (which is what the KUsports.com ratings are trying to do) when players play different numbers of games. As an example, Jalen Wilson didn’t provide any value for the team when he was sitting the bench serving his suspension. So in some sense he should see his value diminished. On the other hand, a per game rating allows us to project his value better (since presumably he won’t be serving any more suspensions).

Charting the Hawks does provide both numbers against a hypothetical bubble player…per game and total. See 2022 here. In addition, I’ll add a third category below, or points above average. The average college basketball player is quite a bit worse (remember there are 358 teams) than your typical KU reserve.

Total Pts +/-

This chart shows the difference in rating, depending on how you define a “replacement player.” For instance, Dajuan Harris has been worse than the bubble-player that KU would expect to be able to recruit and develop. But he has been better than the average D-1 rotation player. So a team of Dajuan Harris-level players would likely be above .500 (depending on strength of schedule, of course), but would not likely be a tournament-level team.

This chart also shows that, even despite playing far more minutes, Harris still grades out worse than Remy Martin no matter how you compare the two. Harris has played the third-most minutes on the team, so his Pts AA is a larger increase to Pts AB than Martin’s change is. Yet when we compare Harris and Yesufu in Pts AA, we see that Harris’s additional minutes make him the better performer over Yesufu. So it is probably good to look at both numbers. Per game or per possession ratings can also help clarify value.

Kentucky 80 Kansas 62

Game Summary:

Kentucky used a hot-shooting first half to cruise to an 18-point win. Kansas could never recover from the large first-half deficit it found itself in. It lost the battle of the boards (41-29) and second chance points (17-6); other than that the game was a more respectable margin.

Mitch Lightfoot earned his first game MVP of the season, battling on the boards and winning three additional defensive possessions by forcing a non-steal turnover. He did a far better job of guarding Kentucky’s center than David McCormack did. Bobby Pettiford played solid defense and even added a late basket in his 10 minutes of work. Dejuan Harris was also respectable. Remy Martin and Jalen Coleman-Lands finished slightly positive in limited minutes off the bench.

On the other side of the value ledger, starting wings Christian Braun and Ochai Agbaji had slightly negative value games Saturday night. Neither shot great. K.J. Adams had a tough defensive game at times, but did finish two assisted baskets. Joseph Yesufu had a couple missed shots, a turnover, and a rebound in his few minutes of play.

These players combined were about -2 points unadjusted, meaning that these players cumulatively played well enough to only be down 2 points to Kentucky. Thus the reason for the blowout was largely due to the poor play of the next two players, Jalen Wilson and especially David McCormack.

Wilson had a poor shooting game, whereas his counterpart 4 man (Brooks) had a career-high 27. Wilson did grab 8 rebounds, but it was his second-worst game of the season once adjusted for opponent. David McCormack was outplayed by Kentucky’s center (Tshiebwe), as he gave up 16 points in only 15 minutes of court time. It was McCormack’s second-worst game of the season, and his second very poor game in a row.

In closing, no one played great for Kansas, but the reason for the blowout loss was primarily due to the 4 and 5 positions. Both were constantly out of position on defense, and didn’t make enough plays to recover.

Mitch Lightfoot competed well against Kentucky, earning him team-MVP honors.

Kansas 62 Iowa State 61

No. 9 Jayhawks Win on a Last-Second Shot against No. 15 Iowa State
Dejuan Harris earned his first career team MVP against Iowa State

Game Summary:

Not only did he hit the game-winner with 7 seconds left; Dejuan Harris was solid on both ends to earn team MVP honors. Ochai Agbaji was poised to win this distinction due to a solid 22-point outing, but his defense down the stretch lowered his value score significantly. K.J. Adams got the start and had yet another positive outing (10 of his 13 game appearances have netted positive value). Despite being benched for most of the game and only scoring 1 point, David McCormack was good on the defensive end and glass. Christian Braun had his first negative-value performance of the season, and Bobby Pettiford returned from injury but looked very rusty.

The team is missing Remy Martin, and frankly David McCormack although the latter is on the coach and not due to injury. Playing worse players at these positions (such as Pettiford/Yesufu or Lightfoot) has unsurprisingly made this team worse. The team is loaded at wing, so giving K.J. Adams a look at the 5 can provide a small bit of value most nights.

Texas Tech 73 Kansas 65

Kansas v Texas Tech : News Photo
Ochai Agbaji had his 5th MVP of the season, tying him for the team lead with Braun

Game Recap:

KU got solid performances from four of its wings: Ochai Agbaji, Jalen Wilson, Christian Braun, and even K.J. Adams. These four accounted for over 71% of the team’s points in only about 52% of the team minutes. On defense, these four only have up 40% of the 75 points the Jayhawks allowed Texas Tech. Ochai Agbaji was the team MVP, scoring 24 points and ending with a 1.34 offensive efficiency rate.

Once again, it was KU’s guard and post positions which were a let-down on both ends of the floor. David McCormack failed to follow up his Oklahoma State performance with a good game, as did Dejuan Harris. Remy Martin 12:25 of game play were the fewest in a game this season (aside from the George Mason DNP-injury), making one wonder if he is fully recovered.

The team score of 0.19 was the fourth-worst on the season.

Kansas 76 George Mason 67

Kansas defeats George Mason 76-67
Jalen Coleman-Lands lit it up for 20 points on 5-7 3-point shooting. He earned team MVP honors.

In terms of value produced, here are summaries for each player:

Jalen Coleman-Lands +11.82. Not only did he have an incredible shooting game, JCL also played solid defense, only giving up 7 points while grabbing a few rebounds. His first team MVP as a Jayhawk was also the fourth-best individual performance of any KU player this season.

Mitch Lightfoot +5.61. It was a good game for veteran players, as KU’s second-best performer was the 6th year senior. Both efficient on offense and stingy on defense, Lightfoot’s score was only hampered by his poor defensive rebounding effort.

Christian Braun +2.46. CB overtook Agbaji as Kansas’ best overall player in this game, although the two are statistically even at this point. He didn’t have a great game, but still played well by knocking down late free throws.

Jalen Wilson +1.96. J-Wil rebounded very well to make up for a poor shooting game. He also defended well, in fact all of KU’s wings have played good defense this season.

Ochai Agbaji +0.95. Agbaji didn’t have a great game offensively, but still defended well and made a nice and-1 on a drive to finish with 11 points. He is a “quiet” defender, in that he doesn’t block shots, grab a ton of rebounds, get many steals, or force many opponent turnovers.

David McCormack -5.62. Bad Dave was back, starting the New Year with only 1 point and a poor value score. He grabbed five offensive rebounds, but never finished any of his put-backs. His defense on the perimeter and interior was worse than Lightfoot’s, which is why Coach Self went with the backup during most of the second half.

Joseph Yesufu – 6.00. With Remy Martin out due to injury, this was a great opportunity for Yesufu to have a break-through game. Unfortunately, it was more of the same. Yesufu’s main issue is on defense, where he gives up both outside shots and drives despite his quickness.

DeJuan Harris -12.62. As good as JCL’s game was, Harris’ outing was bad enough to wipe away enough value from what his teammate added. Harris had a typical offensive game for him, only scoring 4 points, but it was on defense where he struggled, allowing 19 points and multiple 3-pointers. It was a disappointing step-back after his solid performance against Nevada.

TEAM -1.20. KU was 1.20 points worse than a hypothetical bubble-team, who would have been expected to beat George Mason at home by about 10.20 points (for this season, think Creighton as a bubble-team). Looking at the performances, KU got more-than-enough from its super seniors Coleman-Lands and Lightfoot. But it was the three players who had terrible games that held them back. With conference play beginning Tuesday, these types of performances will result in losses.

Kansas 102 Missouri 65

No.8 Kansas Jayhawks Demolish the Missouri Tigers 102-65
Christian Braun throws down 2 on his way to his third team MVP game of the season

After nine seasons without the rivalry being played, Kansas destroyed Missouri with a balanced attack led by incredibly efficient offense. The win moved Kansas to 8-1 on the season.

Beating Missouri by 37 was the team’s best performance of the season thus far

Dejuan Harris, Joseph Yesufu, Jalen Coleman-Lands, and Chris Teahan had their best outings of the season against Missouri. Braun and Agbaji also produced solid value scores in keeping with the excellent basketball they have been playing. David McCormack played his fourth positive-value game in a row.

2011 Kansas Jayhawks

The 2011 Kansas Jayhawks finished 35-3 (14-2), winning the Big 12 Regular Season and Conference Tournament. The team earned a 1-seed in the NCAA Tournament and made the Elite 8 before losing. The team’s Sports Reference link is here.

OFFENSE

The 2011 offense was based heavily on the interior, with PF Marcus Morris producing the most value of anyone at +4.02. Markieff Morris and reserve Thomas Robinson were also efficient and productive, adding +2.78 and +1.29 points of value per game. The point production was fairly balanced among the main guards, although aside from Josh Selby it was clear that the role of the guards was to be facilitators first. The team’s true shooting was fairly balanced, again aside from Selby who took too many shots. This suggests the other players took shots at a sensible frequency that would best help the team win.

DEFENSE

The 2011 defense was an underrated group. Without a primary shot-blocker in the starting rotation; it relied on lateral quickness, communication, and rebounding. Junior PF Markieff Morris graded out as the best individual defender, winning 10.6 possessions per 60. His brother was also solid inside. On the perimeter Tyrel Reed, Josh Selby, and Travis Releford produced solid seasons. Brady Morningstar finished with positive value on this side (albeit not by much), and Tyshawn Taylor finished with the worst per game value score of any defender since 1997.

Total Adjusted PPG +/-

Marcus Morris and Markieff Morris performed a feat that has only been done one other time since 1997 (through the 2021 season), namely be a part of a duo that each produced over 5 points of per game value. Raef LaFrentz and Paul Pierce in 1998 also accomplished this. Beyond the Morris twins, KU had valuable bench forwards in Thomas Robinson and Mario Little. Tyrel Reed made a small contribution (+0.52) as a senior, as did Josh Selby in his only season (+0.20). The other rotation guards faired poorly. Travis Releford, who had a per game value score equal to Reed, could have made the argument that he warranted more time on the wing.

There was a lot of questions coming into the 2011 season for Kansas, but it soon became clear that Marcus and Markieff had improved enough to get Kansas to the heights it wanted to get. In their junior season, the Morris twins parlayed their starring roles at Kansas into mid-first round picks in the following summer’s NBA Draft. Each developed from inconsistent freshmen into lottery picks with similar but slightly different games that were good enough to stick around in the professional ranks. Like most players, their careers ended on a sour note. But without them, this team is nowhere near a 1 seed or Elite 8 caliber squad.

Kansas walk-on children's book 'Fieldhouse' - Sports Illustrated

2012 Kansas Jayhawks

The 2012 Kansas Jayhawks finished with a record of 32-7 (16-2), winning the Big 12 Regular Season. The team earned a 2-seed in the NCAA Tournament and finished National Runners-Up. The team’s Sports Reference link is here.

Offense

The 2012 Offense was led by Thomas Robinson (31.1% of shots while in game) and Tyshawn Taylor (26.4% shot frequency). With each player having such high volume, neither finished with high efficiency marks. But it was their overall productions, with Taylor producing 18.6 points a game and Robinson at 16.7, that drove their value scores.

The only other positive-value Jayhawk on offense was Jeff Withey, who was efficient thanks to a 57.5% true shooting and solid offensive rebounding marks.

Defense

The 2012 Defense was what carried the team, as it was the #3 ranked adjusted defense on KenPom that year. Jeff Withey was the Big 12’s Defensive Player of the Year thanks to his shot blocking prowess (led the nation in block rate), but it was Thomas Robinson who actually produced the highest value score thanks to his excellent defensive rebounding ability (in fact he led the nation in defensive rebounding rate). Elijah Johnson and Travis Releford also produced over a point of value per game on defense. Conner Teahan was the other Jayhawk rotation player to provide positive defensive value, as he only allowed 9.1 points per 60 possessions. His positioning and ability to move laterally were underrated.

Adj. PPG +/-

Thomas Robinson showed why he was the Big 12 Player of the Year and Consensus first-team All-American, producing over 6 points of value per game above that of a bubble-player at his position. Tyshawn Taylor edged out Jeff Withey for second place on the list, as each hovered around 3 points of value per game. Both Johnson and Releford rounded out the starting lineup with positive-value seasons thanks to solid defense.

The bench was another story. Both Kevin Young and Conner Teahan were able to keep their value scores respectable given that each was playing more minutes than expected (Young transferred from a mid-major; Teahan was a former walk-on), and they were certainly better than both Naadir Tharpe and Justin Wesley. Both Tharpe and Wesley had sub -1.00 scores despite playing relatively few minutes, if we looked at these value scores on a per possession basis they would look even lower for these two.

Per-100 Numbers:

  • Taylor +5.37
  • Johnson +2.22
  • Releford +0.91
  • Robinson +11.04
  • Withey +7.20
  • Young -2.61
  • Teahan -2.09
  • Tharpe -11.85
  • Wesley -9.04
  • Lindsay -4.13
  • Juenemann -3.46
  • Roberts -21.27
  • Garrett -30.46

This waterfall chart is a nice representation of KU’s strengths and weaknesses. Good point guard play, dependable wing play, excellent power forward play, alongside good center play from its starters. When the team went to its bench, it started losing value rapidly.

Jayhawk of the Year

T-Rob celebrating a Final Four berth

KU’s run to the national championship game was quite unexpected at the beginning of the year, and wouldn’t have been possible if not for the dominant play of junior forward Thomas Robinson. A bench guy his first two seasons, Robinson excelled as a starter and go-to offensive weapon. He played with a lot of heart as well, bringing energy and helping to elevate the play of his teammates.

The 2012 season was a memorable run and has a special place in the hearts of many KU fans. Self’s ability to get the most out of his starters (all returnees who had their best seasons to that point in 2012) earned him many coaching accolades.