November 27, 2008 9:35 am  |  36 Comments

Russell Westbrook: Playing Like The ROY?

Why he’s been the most valuable rookie.

by Joey Whelan

Well, about one-fifth of the NBA regular season has been played. At this point there is already early talk of who will be taking home end of the year honors. Will LeBron finally get that elusive MVP? Will Kobe garner another one? How about the Rookie of the Year award? Is Derrick Rose the top dog in Celebrate about this guythat category, or will better scoring numbers spell victory for O.J. Mayo? Can Michael Beasley register enough double-doubles to throw his name in the ring?

Certainly this is one of the more heralded rookie classes in the last couple of years, but while the ROY may go to someone like Rose or Mayo, neither has proven to be the most valuable newcomer to their new team. That distinction goes to a member of the worst franchise in the NBA, the Oklahoma City Thunder; that player is Russell Westbrook.

You may find yourself questioning how a point guard posting averages of 12.1 points, 3.2 rebounds and 3.7 assists can be having the most positive impact of any first year player. Heck, Westbrook struggled to finish around the rim and still hasn’t completely developed the ability to be a perimeter shooting threat. Of course, analyzing a player strictly from a basic statistical standpoint hasn’t always proven to be the best means of determining an individual’s value. To do so, there is a need for greater and more detailed analysis.

According to numbers compiled by the brilliant statistical minds at 82games.com, not only is Westbrook having the most impact of any rookie on his team’s production, he ranks fourth in the entire League. Allow me to explain this with a little more detail.

Through his first 14 games (this excludes the Thunder most recent game vs. Phoenix), Westbrook has been on the floor for 52 percent of the total minutes Oklahoma City has played. When comparing the team’s production per 100 possessions when the rookie is on the floor as opposed to when he is off the floor, the Thunder scored 10 more points and allowed 16 less points. That means for everyone 100 possessions that Westbrook was on the floor for those games the Thunder were at +25.9 when compared to the time that he was on the bench.

Now, there may be some confusion with these numbers because of the fact that Oklahoma City is the proud owner of exactly one win on the season. Even with Westbrook on the floor, this team is easily overmatched by most other teams, but just not as much when the former UCLA Bruin in running things in the backcourt. When Westbrook is on the floor, his team is outscored by an average of 1.3 points per 100 possessions, with that differential escalating to 27.2 points when he is out of the game.

Defensively, it makes sense that Oklahoma City performs better when Westbrook is prowling the perimeter; even by a number as high as 16 points. As a sophomore in college Westbrook was one of the elite backcourt defenders in the country. He has fantastic lateral quickness, good length and great defensive instincts. His presence is felt most often by his ability to create fast breaks going the other way thanks to intercepted passes or deflections. Not to be overlooked is his 1.6 steals per game which ranks him second amongst all rookies.

Offensively, Westbrook’s presence isn’t as easy to ascertain. For one, he isn’t shooting a particularly high percentage from the field this season. He does a good Continuing to improvejob of distributing to teammates, but 3.7 assists per game at 25 minutes of playing time isn’t going to put him near the top of the League. What Westbrook does do well though is play smart basketball. He doesn’t try to go above and beyond what he is capable of with a basketball in his hand. Westbrook’s most dangerous features as a player right now are his quickness and athleticism; it makes perfect sense then that nearly one-third of all of his shots this year have come in transition.

In scenarios where he is relegated to playing in the half court set, Westbrook has shown pretty good shot selection. No, he hasn’t hit his shots on a consistent basis, but by not forcing tough shots, it results in more offensive rebounding opportunities for his teammates. While no missed shot is a good thing, some misses are less detrimental than others if they are taken when one’s team has an advantage inside.

Of course, the most obvious reason why Westbrook’s presence results in more points is the simple fact that he commands more defensive attention than the alternative option: Earl Watson. Let’s face it, Watson is not the same kind of explosive threat that Westbrook is with the basketball in his hands. That extra half step of cushion would be defenders have to grant Westbrook can be the difference between an open look or additional space to create off the dribble.

Westbrook may not be the most talented rookie in the League this year—in fact there is no doubt he isn’t—but his presence helps his team the most. Derrick Rose shows tremendous flashes, but Chicago only scores 0.5 more points per 100 possessions with him on the floor, while his defensive presence is woeful enough to result in a 15-point deficit with him on the court. The same can be said for O.J. Mayo. What he brings in scoring he lacks in defense and results in an eight-point deficit with his presence. In fact the only other rookie who has a significant impact on his team’s total production is Anthony Morrow whose presence is worth 13 more points for the Warriors when he is on the floor.

The Thunder will likely find themselves picking in the Top 5 of next June’s draft again and there are at least a handful of players who will likely end up as better players than Westbrook in the long run. The results that he brings when he steps onto the court though are worth thinking about, not only for who should be starting at point guard in Oklahoma City, but when discussing which rookie has made the biggest impact thus far in this young NBA season.

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  • jay Posted: Nov.27 at 9:45 am
    westbrook for ROY. case closed.

  • Fresh Posted: Nov.27 at 10:39 am
    This isa really good article that highlights Westbrooke great attributes, but lets face it rookie of the year i mean really. Oklahama City only won one game if he was so effective why wouldnt he b starting I know they are trying to win. It’s just not logical Rose has not shown flashes he has been consistent scorin in double digits first ten games or so and OJ mayo defense is underrated because he is such a good offensive player

  • rikson Posted: Nov.27 at 10:44 am
    Cant win ROY while playing for a team like that. Sorry, but thats the way it works.

  • Bruno Posted: Nov.27 at 10:50 am
    I’ll go out on a limb and say that he’s playing a lot of garbage time minutes.
    Statistics mean nothing if you don’t know how to interpret them.

  • WhaHuh Posted: Nov.27 at 11:04 am
    rikson-coughDurantcoughSonicscough. He should really be starting, that 07 class is starting to look weaker and weaker though- there are at least 3 (Rose,Westbrook,Augustine)rookie point guards better than the highest drafted PG sophmore (Conley). I wont even mention Acie Law… ooops

  • WhaHuh Posted: Nov.27 at 11:07 am
    OJ Mayo is averaging 40+mins per game so any statistical defensive information is pretty irrelevant.

  • rikson Posted: Nov.27 at 11:12 am
    WhaHuh: Yeah you´re right (my mistake). But this years class is much better…

  • rikson Posted: Nov.27 at 11:12 am
    WhaHuh: Yeah you´re right (my mistake). But this years class is much better… I mean last year (with odens injury) it was basically durant alone…

  • Charles Posted: Nov.27 at 12:09 pm
    CROWN HIS A$$!

  • Boing Dynasty Posted: Nov.27 at 12:18 pm
    The Thunder have 1 win, iam not even going to read this.

  • Bruno Posted: Nov.27 at 2:01 pm
    very good piece and nice stats, actually, very interesting stats but its impossible to take away the ROY from rose or mayo.
    of course beasley can explode into a beast or oden can finally click and be a monster, and i even like westbrook a lot, but Rose and Mayo are putting on a show, night after night.
    plus, OKC can’t win anything… not even ROY honors.
    they have to pay for quite some time for taking away the sonics franchise, for such a dumb logo/uniform and they (being sonics) alwready got undeserved ROY last year.
    sorry westbrook.

  • Gerard Himself Posted: Nov.27 at 2:04 pm
    Brook Lopez seems to get better every game, but if I had to guess right now, they would probably hand it to Derrick Rose.

  • Joey Whelan Posted: Nov.27 at 2:27 pm
    I agree with those of you who think that ROY is going to Rose or Mayo, they will be hard to beat. My point here was to show that in terms of +/- ratio to this point so far, Westbrook has had the most positive impact, meaning you could say he has been the most valuable rookie, not necessarily the best. It’s just another way to look at a player statistically and create some debate.

  • Joel O's Posted: Nov.27 at 3:24 pm
    Good points here. But I’m wondering how skewed the data actually is, since OKC sucks horrendously right now. What I’m saying, is that the +25.9 would carry more weight if the OKC were a .500 team; then it would really mean a lot. All that said though, a compelling piece on how good Westbrook could be… gotta pay attention to this kid in the future, for sure.

  • awesomepossum Posted: Nov.27 at 3:49 pm
    either that or beasley and rose are just not that dominant..

  • MeloMan13 Posted: Nov.27 at 4:48 pm
    @rikson. u seem to be forgetting al thorton and Horford

  • MeloMan13 Posted: Nov.27 at 4:52 pm
    westbrook is good but thers no way he gona win witha record like dat

  • what Posted: Nov.27 at 7:23 pm
    Interesting take I guess… but I don’t see how the ROY voting won’t finish 1. Rose 2. Mayo 3. Lopez if things stay the same.

  • tealish Posted: Nov.27 at 9:13 pm
    No

  • enigmatik Posted: Nov.27 at 9:43 pm
    boring article.talk bout westbrook when OKC starts winning.until then nobody gives an ounce of care.

  • ddm112 Posted: Nov.27 at 9:53 pm
    how does this make any sense? The guy is detrimental on offense because he chucks a shot up anytime sees a glimpse at the rim. do ur homework and look at his field goal percentage and his high turnover rate and u can see wut im talking about. even john hollinger wrote a piece about how he HAS to stop shooting the ball so much cause his skills don’t match his shot attempts. i dont think no mayo or rose has to worry about that.

  • cmsen Posted: Nov.27 at 10:35 pm
    Good article. Unfortunately there are so few GMs (and professional sports writers) understand what are the most valuable traits of a player for the team winning; they often overemphasize the offensive stats.

  • D-Advocate Posted: Nov.27 at 11:01 pm
    D-Rose & Mayo are the favorites, but most people are sleeping on how good D.J. Augustin is playing the point guard position for the Bobcats, he’s a top 5 candidate for R.O.Y. in my opinion. In 28 minutes he averages 4.3 assists with 2.21 turnovers, while scoring 12.6 points and he’s like 5′11″ to 6′0″ feet.

  • Hursty Posted: Nov.28 at 3:12 am
    MeloMan13- they aren’t point guards dumb@ss. Thats why nobody is talking about them on the thread.

  • Dacre Posted: Nov.28 at 6:20 am
    But after all this rediculous statistical jargon…the one win….completely undoes ANY relevance to westbrook even sniffing at ROY when he wont even make all rookie 1st team.

  • jaywhy Posted: Nov.28 at 7:07 am
    thts cause he only plays during garbage time

  • LAN Posted: Nov.28 at 7:55 am
    ….greg oden

  • Stewie Griffin Posted: Nov.28 at 10:52 am
    He has as many chances to be R.O.Y. as Fast Eddie Johnson to run a successful babysitting business.

  • ML Posted: Nov.28 at 1:14 pm
    Westbrook doesn’t have a chance. He’ll be lucky to make the All-Rookie First Team.

  • Tarzan Cooper Posted: Nov.28 at 1:58 pm
    you can make numbers say anything. for instance, half the time russ is wrong, hes completely wrong. so hes 67.9 times more likely to be wrong than lang, its science

  • zrek Posted: Nov.28 at 3:46 pm
    mayo mvp. case closed

  • mike Posted: Nov.28 at 8:08 pm
    i miss the sonics

  • daniel Posted: Nov.28 at 10:02 pm
    you cant say hes the roy because of one +/- stat. watch some freaking games and see how rose is keeping the bulls afloat or stuff like that

  • wayne Posted: Nov.29 at 12:13 am
    Derrick Rose will be in the same tier as Chris Paul and Deron Williams in due time; he is the rookie of the year.

  • neeks Posted: Nov.29 at 11:57 am
    Wow, this is some messed up logic. Does Westbrook even start? I’d bet he’s always playing against the second unit when the game is almost decided. A simpler and saner way to make a comparison for ROY might be-If Rose and Westbrook switched places, how would that affect their teams. I bet the Bulls would have at least 3 more losses, and if they didn’t it would be because solid vet guards like Gordon, Hinrich, Hughes are playing while Westbrook is watching from the bench.

  • Cain Posted: Nov.30 at 11:28 pm
    Just for Rikson Durant won it on this team last year. No way he will get ROY but he playing better they got there 2nd win with him in the starting lineup all be it against Memphis. He has the potential be be a Devin Harris type PG but that took him a lot of time to do in his 5th season he taking off so give him time. Maybe M.I.Player in 3-4 years.

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