Welcome to Dabullz

Featured Post

John Paxson on Comcast Sportsnet Recap
John Paxson appeared on the Chicago Bulls pregame show on Comcast Sportsnet to talk about the state of the team and the possibility of trades. Here is what he had to say: Doesn’t want to...
Read More ...


Comment

Comment here if you like this plugin.

Member Login

Sign Up Now!

Math Required!
What is the sum of: 9 + 12    

Forgot Password !

New password will be e-mailed to you.

Powered by

Home

Power Rankings

Contests

About

Contact

Posts Tagged ‘statistical analysis’

Qualifying Offer: Good or Bad Idea?

Monday, September 1st, 2008

Many people have said that Ben Gordon would have to be an idiot not to take the Bulls offer and that he will never see that money again. Assuming the Bulls improve a bit, to around a .500 team, one would assume that if Gordon performs about the same as last year (18 PPG), he will get around the same offer. If he performs worse, he will get less, and if he performs better, he will get more.

There are two things that are big money makers in the NBA. Being a great all around big man and being a great scorer. There is something about the scoring average of a player, just the general PPG, that boosts their value so much in contract negotiations. 20 PPG seems to be the threshold that needs to be met to be a legit first option. When you begin getting in that 22-23 PPG territory, you begin looking like a lock for an allstar spot. When you start scoring over 25 PPG, people begin to look at you as one of the elite players in the game.

So this question should be posed, “Is Ben Gordon making a poor decision if he decides to take the qualifying offer?” If he has a real down year, and only scores something like 14 PPG, he will be looking at the MLE in a best case scenario.

If he scores 18 PPG again, he will probably looking at around the same. If he scores 20 PPG, he will begin getting paid around what Monta Ellis is making. If he scores 22 PPG, he should be looking at around the same amount that Iguodala just signed for. If he scores 25 PPG or more, he could very well be looking at a true max contract.

So the rewards of taking the qualifying offer are all there. If Gordon really thinks he is an all-star level player, and plans on bringing that type of game next year, he would be crazy not to take the qualifying offer. But if he is afraid that he is really the player that he showed up as last year, or fears that the Bulls coaching staff will cut his minutes, taking the qualifying offer no longer looks so good. So this seems at first look as a high risk, high reward situation.

Fortunately for Gordon, Vinny Del Negro said on the radio last week that Gordon would be welcomed with open arms and would be a big part of what the Bulls do. Vinny expects Gordon to want to prove himself next year, so Vinny will probably give him the minutes he deserves.

So based on this assumption that Gordon will get his playing time, how should we expect Ben Gordon to perform? Based on Ben Gordon’s statistical data from January of his 2nd season to April of his 4th season, I ran a simulation which simulates what Ben Gordon might score throughout the 2008-2009 NBA Season. I used from January of his 2nd season on, because in that January, Gordon clearly took his game up to another level. I ran the simulation 1,000 times.

Here are the raw results of what Ben Gordon averaged.

10 - 0.1%
11 - 0.5%
12 - 0.4%
13 - 0.3%
14 - 0.8%
15 - 2.2%
16 - 3.6%
17 - 4.8%
18 - 13.8%
19 - 33.0%
20 - 15.8%
21 - 14.4%
22 - 2.8%
23 - 4.5%
24 - 1.0%
25 - 0.3%
26 - 0.3%
27 - 0.1%
28 - 0.2%
29 - 0.4%
30 - 0.1%
31 - 0.2%
32 - 0.2%

Or in terms of likelihood Gordon achieves at least this PPG.

10 - 100%
11 - 99.9%
12 - 99.4%
13 - 99.0%
14 - 98.7%
15 - 97.9%
16 - 95.7%
17 - 92.1%
18 - 87.3%
19 - 73.5%
20 - 40.5%
21 - 24.7%
22 - 10.3%
23 - 7.5%
24 - 3.0%
25 - 2.0%
26 - 1.7%
27 - 1.4%
28 - 1.3%
29 - 1.1%
30 - 0.7%
31 - 0.6%
32 - 0.4%

So to simplify this a bit, lets look at the odds of Gordon decreasing, maintaining, or increasing his value.

Decreases (10-17 PPG) - 12.7%
Maintains (18-19 PPG) - 46.8%
Increases (20-32 PPG) - 40.3%

When looked at this way, it becomes clear that the qualifying offer is probably a good idea. Ben Gordon has a high chance of increasing his value, while a very low risk of decreasing his value.

Now let’s break these down into smaller categories.

Significantly Damages Value (10-15 PPG) - 4.3%

There is very little risk for Gordon to significantly damage his value. If he went down into this range of scoring, the MLE would be the absolute maximum that Ben Gordon would be able to get.

Slightly Damages Value (16-17 PPG) - 8.4%

Again, there is very little risk of Gordon even slightly damaging his value next season. This would drop him into that contract that is at the MLE as a minimum, but maybe a million or two million more.

Maintains Value (18-19 PPG) - 46.8%

This is the most likely scenario for Ben Gordon. This would put him in the range of what the Bulls are offering him at this time. So Gordon, if he maintains his value, should be looking at around $56-60 million.

Slightly Increases Value (20-21 PPG) - 30.2%

Ben Gordon has a pretty good chance to slightly improve his value. This would essentially mean returning to 2006-2007 form for Gordon. In the 2007 offseason, John Paxson offered Ben Gordon a contract worth $10 million a year. John Paxson thinks with extensions, players should take a pay cut for longterm security, so in reality, Paxson probably truly valued Gordon at around $11-12 million. If Gordon reaches this level, he should be making anywhere from Monta Ellis money ($66 million / 6 years) to Luol Deng money ($71 million / 6 years)

Significantly Increases Value (22-24 PPG) - 8.3%

The chances that Ben Gordon significantly increases his value is about the same as the chance that he slightly decreases his value. When Ben Gordon enters this range, he begins to look like a lock for an all-star spot, and all-star’s generally get paid more money. This is the Ben Gordon that many Bulls fans expected to show up for the 2007-2008 season. If Gordon reaches this level, he should be looking at Iguodala money ($80 million / 6 years).

Becomes a Max Player (25+ PPG) - 1.8%

If Ben Gordon begins to average more than 25 points a game, he should be looking at a max or near max deal. This volume of scoring would make Gordon one of the elite scorers in the game. While the chances of this are small, they are hardly impossible. Ben Gordon has a better chance of achieving this than the Bulls had of getting Derrick Rose in the NBA Draft.

So based on the simulation, which was based on Ben Gordon’s statistical data, all signs point to the qualifying offer being Ben Gordon’s best possible decision if the Bulls do not increase their offer. The odds of Gordon decreasing his value are small while the odds of him increasing his value are large.

Verdict: Ben Gordon should take the qualifying offer.

How Much Should the Bulls Pay Gordon?

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

The Chicago Bulls are currently offering Ben Gordon a $59 million over 6 year deal. Ben Gordon has yet to accept the offer.

But how much is Ben Gordon actually worth? I have attempted here to determine his worth by comparing him to the other restricted free agents and would be restricted free agents who accepted extensions last summer, based on statistics, size, and winning. Statistics account for approximately 82% of determining the contract value, and size and winning account for approximately 9% each.

The statistics used in determining the players value are PPG, RPG, APG, TS%, SPG, BPG, FTA, O-Rtg, and D-Rtg. The players combined past 2 seasons were the numbers used.

The amount of a winner that a player is, is determined by total wins, playoff appearances, playoff wins, and playoff series wins. Devin Harris is first in winning, Ben Gordon second, Luol Deng third and Al Jefferson is 2nd to last, and Emeka Okafor is last.

In terms of size, the centers get the biggest benefit, followed by the power forwards, then small forwards, than normal sized shooting guards, then point guards, then small shooting guards. Dwight Howard is ranked first in size, while Ben Gordon is ranked last.

The players are ranked in each category, and then they each have an overall rank that is calculated from each individual category rank.

I have extrapolated the total contract value of guys on five years deal to what they would be worth on a six year deal. The guys ranked in terms of total contract value below. Ben Gordon has been assigned the average value below for the guys that have already signed their new deals.

1. Dwight Howard - $106 million
2. Al Jefferson - $82 million
3. Andre Iguodala - $80 million
4. Josh Smith - $73 million
5. Luol Deng - $71 million
6. Emeka Okafor - $70 million
7. Ben Gordon - $70 million
8. Kevin Martin - $69 million
9. Monta Ellis - $66 million
10. Andris Biedrins - $63 million
11. Devin Harris - $53 million
12. Jameer Nelson - $38 million

Now, the players are ranked in their determined order based on their stats, winning, and size.

1. Dwight Howard - 4.36
2. Andre Iguodala - 5.45
3. Luol Deng - 6.18
4. Josh Smith - 6.18
5. Kevin Martin - 6.18
6. Andris Biedrins - 6.55
7. Monta Ellis - 6.64
8. Devin Harris - 6.73
9. Emeka Okafor - 7
10. Al Jefferson - 7.27
11. Ben Gordon - 7.54
12. Jameer Nelson - 8.91

So if we are to put these numbers on a normal curve, these are the contract values of the players:

1. Dwight Howard - $106 million
2. Andre Iguodala - $88 million
3. Luol Deng - $76 million
4. Josh Smith - $76 million
5. Kevin Martin - $76 million
6. Andris Biedrins - $71 million
7. Monta Ellis - $69 million
8. Devin Harris - $68 million
9. Emeka Okafor - $64 million
10. Al Jefferson - $60 million
11. Ben Gordon - $56 million
12. Jameer Nelson - $38 million

So based on this, Ben Gordon is worth $56 million. However, people should not take this to mean that the Bulls are offering too much with the $59 million offer. If you account Ben Gordon being a legit first or second option, while players such as Andris Biedrins and Devin Harris cannot be categorized as such, one would think that Gordon should get a bit of a pay bump for that, while Biedrins and Harris should have their pay brought down a bit, as Gordon is more responsible for the Bulls success than Harris was for the Mavericks. Therefore, the Bulls $59 million offer for Ben Gordon seems fair based on what the players have done in their careers and their role.

Ben Gordon should absolutely continue holding out (hopefully only to the Great Britain deadline) to see if he can get a few more million from the Bulls. But at the end of the day (in this case, negotiating cycle), Gordon should accept the Bulls $59 million offer, as it is a fair offer.

However, Gordon wouldn’t be crazy if he took the qualifying offer. The Bulls new focus towards a faster paced offense and the addition of Derrick Rose, should help boost Gordon’s scoring and passing numbers. In addition, the free agent market will be favorable to Gordon next year.

Still, the Bulls are making a very fair offer to Gordon. Gordon’s best course of action is to continue to hold out and fight for more money to see how much more he can get out of the Bulls, with it already determined in his mind that he will take the Bulls $59 million offer if that is the highest they are willing to go.