Mr. Mojo Risin |
03-16-2007 11:57 PM |
Hollinger Stats = Player Efficiency
RNK Player GP Min FG% FT% TS% Ast TO Usg ORR DRR Reb PER
1 Dwyane Wade, MIA 46 38.9 .494 .816 .589 21.6 11.5 32.6 3.2 11.1 7.2 29.96
2 Dirk Nowitzki, DAL 62 36.9 .499 .900 .605 13.4 8.2 26.8 5.7 25.3 15.6 28.48
3 Yao Ming, HOU 33 33.6 .512 .861 .594 8.1 14.1 30.5 7.3 24.3 15.8 26.23
4 Tim Duncan, SAS 65 34.5 .535 .647 .570 14.2 12.1 25.6 9.9 27.0 18.7 25.43
5 Kevin Garnett, MIN 62 39.6 .482 .833 .552 15.4 9.3 25.5 8.0 29.7 19.2 25.40
6 Kobe Bryant, LAL 60 39.9 .458 .863 .580 16.5 10.1 30.2 2.8 14.0 8.5 25.10
7 LeBron James, CLE 62 40.8 .484 .682 .558 17.4 9.6 29.5 2.9 16.4 9.5 25.01
8 Manu Ginobili, SAS 60 27.7 .467 .855 .611 17.7 11.2 25.8 4.0 14.9 9.6 24.68
9 Carlos Boozer, UTH 56 35.1 .564 .688 .591 12.7 10.9 24.4 11.1 28.9 20.1 24.25
10 Steve Nash, PHO 58 35.7 .529 .888 .653 38.7 12.5 24.1 1.5 9.1 5.5 24.20
11 Gilbert Arenas, WAS 63 40.5 .419 .848 .565 16.7 9.8 29.7 2.5 11.3 6.8 23.82
12 Amare Stoudemire, PHO 64 33.1 .584 .795 .650 4.9 14.1 22.2 10.9 22.8 17.1
The Player Efficiency Rating (PER) is a rating of a player's per-minute productivity.
To generate it, I created formulas -- which I've outlined in tortuous detail in "Pro Basketball Forecast" -- that return a value for each of a player's accomplishments. That includes positive accomplishments, such as field goals, free throws, 3-pointers, assists, rebounds, blocks and steals, and negative ones, such as missed shots, turnovers and personal fouls.
Two important things to remember about PER is that it's per-minute and pace-adjusted. It's a per-minute measure because that allows us to compare, say, Drew Gooden to Donyell Marshall, even though there is a wide disparity in the minutes they played. I also adjust each player's rating for his team's pace, so that players on a slow-paced team like Indiana aren't penalized just because their team's games have fewer possessions than those of a fast-paced team such as Phoenix.
Bear in mind that this rating is not the final, once-and-for-all answer for a player's accomplishments during the season. This is especially true for players such as Bruce Bowen and Trenton Hassell who are defensive specialists but don't get many blocks or steals. What PER can do, however, is summarize a player's statistical accomplishments in a single number. That allows us to unify the disparate data on each player that we try to track in our heads (e.g., Danny Fortson: great rebounder, high-percentage shooter, turnover machine, fouls like crazy, etc.) so that we can move on to evaluating what might be missing from the stats.
I set the league average in PER to 15.00 every season.
Among players who played at least 500 minutes in 2005-06, the highest rating was Dirk Nowitzki's 28.20. The lowest was Jim Jackson's 3.01.
"PER" RANKINGS 2005-06 (minimum: 500 min.)
Top 10 PER Bottom 10 PER
Dirk Nowitzki 28.20 Jim Jackson 3.01
LeBron James 28.17 Ryan Bowen 3.97
Kobe Bryant 28.11 Rafael Araujo 4.51
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