+ Reke, Omri, Brock, Sergio, May.
- Ike, McCants, Bobby, Booth, Simmons.
Talent increased.
Ummm, I'm not making any assertions about talent level relative to last year, only risk of A/TO problems. But let me point out that you forgot a few people who definitely contributed to last year's stat line. Aside from Drew Gooden's one game, we had...
- Brad Miller, John Salmons, Bobby Jackson, Mikki Moore, Will Solomon, Quincy Douby, and Shelden Williams.
Miller, Salmons, Jackson, Solomon and Douby had better assist and A/TO numbers than any of our current roster except for Udrih and Rodriguez, and that's important WRT the topic under discussion.
Since I've already dissected the stats in a couple of ways, let's see how the personnel changes already impacted our stat line. The results probably won't be what you expected.
For the first 20 games of the season, we averaged 21.0 assists per game and 15.2 TO, for an A/TO ratio of 1.374. For the last 20, assists dropped to 19.6, but TOs dropped even more, to 13.6, for an A/TO ratio of 1.450. Considering we'd gotten rid of some decent passers (Miller and Salmons being the most obvious), how did our A/TO ratio improve?
Having statistically analyzed junk for the last 2 or 3 hours, the answers seem to be:
1) Udrih played better as the season went on, although his minutes decreased some due to minor injuries. In the first 20 games, he averaged 5.25 assists and 2.9 TO for an A/TO ratio of 1.81, in 31.4 minutes. In the last 20 (of which he missed 4), he averaged 4.95 assists and 1.7 TO, for an A/TO ratio of 2.91, in 28.35 minutes. That's easily the most dramatic improvement in A/TO ratio on the team.
2) Bobby Jackson rescued us in several late season games. While his numbers (minutes, assists, turnovers) were fairly steady through the year, it was distributed unevenly during the late season -- he played in 20 out of 20 during the early season, but only 13/20 of the last ones. But without him, and year end performances like 12 assists and 2 TO in 38 minutes (last 20 games A/TO ratio: 3.14), the team's ratio might not have improved at all.
3) Hawes improved over the course of the year, too. He started off with only 1.7 assists per game, and an A/TO ratio of 0.85, but by year's end he was doing 2.45 assists with an A/TO ratio of 1.25. In the early season, Miller was maintaining an A/TO ratio of 2.19, and 3.4 assists a game. Obviously, Hawes has a long way to go to catch up to Brad, but his improvement is still worthy of mention, as he's gone from a definite negative to being almost neutral.
The remaining questions:
A) Garcia. He was missing from our first 17 games, and it may have hurt us. In the first 20 games, he made 5 assists and 2 TO in 62 minutes. In the last 20, he got 59 A and 44 TO (ratio: 1.34) in 720 minutes. Although his A/TO ratio was still below the team average, and theoretically drags the average down, in practice he may have been making assists that would otherwise have been attempted by worse players. I can't say anything conclusive, but his absence was
probably a negative.
B) Salmons: despite his non-awful A/TO ratio, he didn't help us much, if at all, in the early season. In the first 20 games, he averaged 2.9 assists and 2.25 TO (A/TO ratio: 1.29) in 36.2 minutes. This is not impressive, rather than improve things, it dragged the team A/TO ratio down a tiny bit. Losing him and the TOs he picked up playing iso, made our ratio a tad better, and dropped our overall TO/game.
C) Martin: Our delicate SG missed 12 out of the first 20 games, and 9 of the last 20.His A/TO ratio hovers around 1, so that probably wouldn't matter, except that he might have been a recipient for more passes if he weren't gimpy. Consider him an unknown in the whole equation.
D) Coaching: probably had some impact too, but hard to say what it was.
As for a forecast for the upcoming season, I see a huge range of possibilities, depending on injuries and coaching decisions. We could easily drop to being the first team in 30+ years to pull off a collective A/TO ratio of below 1.0, but that doesn't have to happen. Assuming BJax is done, I'd say it mostly hinges on the minutes given to Rodriguez and Udrih as the only players who do much better than 1.0. Garcia and Hawes can chip in too, but their ratios are slightly below our ('08-'09) team average, so if they contribute TOO much they will drag the average down.
I'll guess that Westphal figures this out, and avoids the worst of it. If he does, I'm thinking that we'll average somewhere around 19-20 assists and 16 TO per game. This will put us somewhere around the bottom of the NBA, as we are now, but avoid setting any NBA records for badness. If he pursues this approach, I also expect the ratio to improve a bit as the season progresses.
If Beno and Rodriguez ride the pine all the time, I couldn't rule out 17 and 17.