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Andrew Wiggins To Kansas And A Top 25 Update

With the #1 high school recruit Andrew Wiggins in the fold, Kansas is once again the Big 12 favorite. Just look at the high school recruiting ranks of Kansas’ potential starting lineup:

PG Naadir Tharpe (RSCI #91 player in 2011)

SG Wayne Selden (ESPNU #14 in 2013)

SF Andrew Wiggins (ESPNU #1 in 2013)

PF Perry Ellis (RSCI #31 in 2012)

C Joel Embiid (up to #6 in ESPNU Top 100, though lower in other rankings).

Bench: Brannen Greene (ESPNU #47 in 2013), Conner Frankamp (ESPNU #46 in 2013), and Andrew White (RSCI #52 in 2012)

That’s a pretty special group of talent. But we need to be cautious before we label Kansas a Final Four favorite. This team is exceptionally young. None of these players have ever played more than 15 minutes per game at the college level.

And unlike Kentucky (where the recruiting class is filled with Top 10 recruits), many of these guys are more likely to produce down the road. Guys at Greene and Frankamp’s level of the rankings are more likely to become stars as sophomores or juniors than as freshmen. Embiid would appear to be a “sure thing” as a Top 10 recruit, but even the people who are raving about Embiid have described him as a raw talent. They expect him to blossom in 2014-2015, not dominate right away. When you add in the fact that PG Naadir Tharpe struggled with his shot last season, it is clear that Kansas doesn’t have the perfect lineup.

But it might be the perfect lineup for Andrew Wiggins. With so many young players, he will be the clear leader. Much like Texas with Kevin Durant, Kansas players will realize that the team can only achieve its lofty goals by getting Wiggins the ball. And he should be able to carry the team to another Big 12 title.

Of course, Kevin Durant lost in the second round of the NCAA tournament in 2007. And with its physical play, college basketball is not a sport that always showcases transcendent players. And after crunching the numbers, my model projects Kansas as the 8th best team in the nation.

Vegas will likely give Kansas better odds than what I have below. But Vegas is calculating the odds of winning a title. I am interested in measuring the quality over the full season, including November and December when Kansas’ young players will struggle with the adjustment to the college game. The model concludes that with Bill Self at the helm, Kansas will have an elite defense. He is the best in the business at getting new players to commit on that end of the court. But with so many young players, there will be offensive mistakes. Players will take bad shots. Players will commit silly turnovers. And the model projects Kansas’s offensive efficiency to be worse than some of the other elite teams.

My model’s revised Top 25 Standings look like this:

Pred Off, PredDef, PredPythag: The predicted points scored and allowed per 100 possessions, and predicted winning percentage against an average D1 team on a neutral floor.

Returning Minutes, Possessions: The loss of high possession players can be a larger detriment to the offense, thus I list percentage of returning possessions in addition to returning minutes.

T100: Number of players who were Top 100 recruits out of high school. People focus on Top 100 freshmen, but Top 100 players are also more likely to become breakout stars later in their career.

Last Pythag: Last year’s Pythagorean winning percentage according to Kenpom.com. This is essentially a measure of each team’s margin-of-victory in 2012-13.

Rank

Team

Conf

Pred Off

Pred Def

Pred Pyth

Ret Min

Ret Poss

T100

Last Pyth

1

Kentucky

SEC

123.6

92.5

0.9512

44%

42%

9

0.8157

2

Michigan St.

B10

117.0

87.6

0.9507

83%

83%

8

0.9361

3

Florida

SEC

115.7

87.2

0.9479

54%

51%

7

0.9700

4

Louisville

AAC

115.4

87.4

0.9451

72%

72%

8

0.9752

5

Arizona

P12

116.2

91.2

0.9231

44%

42%

7

0.9089

6

Duke

ACC

115.4

90.6

0.9228

58%

50%

10

0.9438

7

Michigan

B10

117.4

92.2

0.9226

62%

53%

6

0.9483

8

Kansas

B12

113.6

89.2

0.9225

23%

23%

8

0.9385

9

Oklahoma St.

B12

113.6

89.3

0.9224

89%

93%

5

0.8815

10

N. Carolina

ACC

114.3

89.8

0.9223

69%

73%

10

0.8676

11

Wisconsin

B10

112.8

88.7

0.9216

57%

54%

3

0.9308

12

Virginia

ACC

112.9

89.6

0.9145

74%

82%

5

0.8591

13

Ohio St.

B10

108.6

86.3

0.9138

74%

68%

6

0.9445

14

Iowa

B10

114.7

91.1

0.9133

88%

92%

2

0.8811

15

Pittsburgh

ACC

114.7

91.7

0.9085

59%

58%

4

0.9334

16

Connecticut

AAC

114.8

92.0

0.9067

93%

95%

5

0.8098

17

Georgetown

BE

109.8

88.3

0.9028

83%

80%

6

0.9151

18

Syracuse

ACC

110.3

89.2

0.8982

52%

45%

8

0.9421

19

Marquette

BE

114.4

92.6

0.8966

47%

46%

5

0.8721

20

UCLA

P12

114.0

92.5

0.8946

67%

64%

7

0.8202

21

VCU

A10

112.1

91.7

0.8867

66%

71%

1

0.9028

22

New Mexico

MWC

108.1

88.5

0.8866

63%

65%

1

0.8745

23

Gonzaga

WCC

114.6

93.9

0.8853

61%

56%

2

0.9498

24

Memphis

AAC

110.6

91.3

0.8770

55%

59%

6

0.8399

25

Baylor

B12

114.4

95.0

0.8709

63%

57%

8

0.8744

The addition of Andrew Wiggins isn’t the only thing to shake up my model’s Top 25 since the end of April. Yesterday I documented how the addition of Eli Carter moves Florida up to the Top 3 in my model. And I wrote about how the loss of Trae Golden dropped Tennessee out of the Top 25. But here are some details on some other teams that have changed since my late April update.

Into the Top 25

Memphis continues to be one of the bigger movers in the rankings. When I first ran the projections model in early April, I assumed Memphis would have Tarik Black, Shaq Goodwin, and Top 40 recruits Austin Nichols and Kuran Iverson in the front-court. And the model projected Memphis at 16th nationally. But then Tarik Black transferred, and that had multiple consequences. First, Nichols and Iverson had slightly lower expectations than Black, who was an efficient player for three years with the Tigers. With Black gone, Nichols and Iverson would each have to play more minutes. And second, it became more likely that Memphis would have to give some backup front-court minutes to a player like HippolyteTsafack. Tsafack was not a Top 100 recruit out of high school and has had multiple knee injuries limiting him to less than 20 total games in his career. Both these factors lowered the projected offense and defense for the Tigers.

When I re-ran my model (without Black and Antonio Barton who also transferred,) Memphis fell to 29th. But when Memphis added George Washington forward and graduate school transfer David Pellom, the Tigers immediately upgraded their front-court depth and the model moved Memphis back up to 24th.

Meanwhile, guard Allerik Freeman was one of the only uncommitted Top 100 high school recruits at the end of April. He recently committed to Baylor. Baylor guard Deuce Bello (who struggled mightily last season posting an ORtg of 86) saw the writing on the wall with Freeman coming in, and elected to transfer. The upgrade from Bello to Freeman moved Baylor from 28th to 25th in my model. Even though the model remains skeptical of Baylor head coach Scott Drew, the Bears have reached the point where even an inconsistent coach should have Top 25 expectations.

In my initial Top 25 and post NBA early entry Top 25, I have profiled all of the other Top 25 teams, but I haven’t discussed Baylor yet, so allow me to do that here:

Baylor’s front court remains one of the strongest in the nation with Isaiah Austin and Cory Jefferson. But the team also welcomes back rising sophomore Ricardo Gathers who was seriously under-utilized last year and could easily become a star in his own right. And prized forward recruit Dominic Woodson should also provide solid post minutes off the bench.

The biggest question is the point guard position. And while no single player can replace Pierre Jackson, Baylor does have three fairly nice options. First, even though Gary Franklin hasn’t been efficient throughout his career, he was a Top 100 recruit out of high school and remains a high potential player. Second, JUCO transfer Kenny Chery should be steady, even if he doesn’t dominate. And third, Brady Heslip may be able to provide some minutes at the position. Heslip may not be able to create much, but paired with a player like Freeman in the back-court, he could certainly be counted on for basic ball-handling duties. Throw in prized recruit Ishmail Wainwright and the possible late development of LJ Rose (a highly ranked high school player who still has high potential), and the model can no longer keep Baylor out of the Top 25.

Moving Up

Recently VCU added Florida St. graduate transfer Terrance Shannon. Shannon was not super-efficient at FSU, but the step down in completion should help some. And he makes a difference for VCU because Jarred Guest and Justin Tuoyo were not impressive last year and may not be ready for expanded roles this season. Shannon can help stem the tide until those players improve offensively. In net, VCU improves from 24th to 21st with the addition of Shannon.

Pittsburgh also jumped up from 19th to 15th with the addition of Marshall graduate school transfer DeAndre Kane. Most college basketball experts have Pittsburgh much lower. In fact, I’ve seen experts write how Kane’s addition “could” make Pittsburgh an NCAA tournament team, suggesting they are closer to 45th in the nation than 15th. But the tempo free numbers love James Robinson, Lamar Patterson, JJ Moore, Top 100 recruit Mike Young, and Talib Zanna. And Kane’s efficiency should improve now that he will need to shoot less.

That said, I believe you can make a case that the tempo free numbers are wrong here. Kenpom.com may have had Pittsburgh 11th last season, but they only received an 8-seed in the NCAA tournament. And even though Pitt finished 12-6 in the Big East last year which made all of their numbers look good, they didn’t really beat quality teams late in the year to justify a strong seed.  For example, Pitt’s big win at Georgetown which helped inflate their margin-of-victory numbers came early in the conference season before Georgetown figured out its offense. I understand why the numbers like Pitt at #14, but I also understandwhy most experts are skeptical of that rank.

The team that should have “could” make the tournament attached to it is Oregon. While adding graduate school transfer Mike Moser improves the Ducks expectations substantially, they still seem to be missing the pieces they need to be a winning team in the Pac-12. I will have more to say about Oregon and the Pac-12 in a future week.

2012 Colonial Athletic Association Power Rankings

Drexel finished ahead of VCU, George Mason and Old Dominion to win the 2012 CAA regular season championship. While George Mason was ranked a distant fifth despite finishing 14-4, Drexel, VCU and ODU were virtually identical statistically.

In order to determine our team rankings, we calculate the difference between a team's own FIC per game and their opponents' FIC for the entire conference season.

The FIC is a single statistical measurement that encompasses things such as scoring efficiency, rebounding, blocked shots, etc. Its purpose is to combine the box score into one statistic, both on a team level and for players.

1. Old Dominion: 19.10  
2. Virginia Commonwealth: 19.03  
3. Drexel: 18.44  
4. Georgia State: 9.25  
5. George Mason: 8.26  
6. Delaware: 3.81  
7. Northeastern: -5.19  
8. Hofstra: -7.95  
9. North Carolina-Wilmington: -11.52  
10. James Madison: -12.08  
11. William & Mary: -14.88  
12. Towson: -26.29

Top NCAA Coaches Of Past Five Years

There are a lot of complicated ways to evaluate coaches. (If you want a more complicated measure, here is something I wrote about this back in the Fall.) But sometimes the simplest measure is the best measure. Who has the most NCAA titles? Who has the most wins? And using the Pomeroy Rankings we can break it down to an even simpler level. Who wins the most possessions? If you outscore your opponent on more trips down the floor, eventually good things will happen. 

Today, I look at the coaches with the best per possession numbers over the last five years. If you’ve followed my writing for the last few years, you’ve seen this table frequently. But I thought it was time to update the table with the data from the 2011-12 season. I’ve also decided to focus on the last five years to allow some of the recent success stories to climb the list. (I include the 10-year table at the end for the curious.)

The following table shows the

AAO = Average Adjusted Offense

AAD = Average Adjusted Defense

AEM = Average Efficiency Margin (Offense – Defense)

Here are the coaches with the top efficiency margins over the last five years:

AEM

Rank

Coach

AAO

Rank

AAD

Rank

Teams

33.0

1

Bill Self

119.2

2

86.1

1

Kansas

31.2

2

John Calipari

117.3

3

86.1

2

Kentucky, Memphis

30.4

3

Mike Krzyzewski

120.1

1

89.7

9

Duke

28.6

4

Thad Matta

116.7

5

88.1

5

Ohio St.

27.3

5

Bo Ryan

115.8

9

88.5

6

Wisconsin

27.0

6

Roy Williams

116.5

6

89.5

8

North Carolina

25.8

7

Jim Boeheim

116.5

7

90.6

15

Syracuse

24.7

8

Rick Barnes

115.4

11

90.6

14

Texas

24.4

9

Tom Izzo

114.3

15

89.9

11

Michigan St.

24.4

10

Bob Huggins

115.1

13

90.7

16

West Virginia

23.4

11

Rick Pitino

111.2

31

87.8

4

Louisville

23.1

12

Jim Calhoun

113.9

16

90.9

19

Connecticut

23.0

13

John Thompson III

113.8

17

90.8

17

Georgetown

22.6

14

Jamie Dixon

116.5

8

93.9

41

Pittsburgh

22.5

15

Matt Painter

111.4

30

88.9

7

Purdue

22.1

16

Frank Martin

112.9

19

90.8

18

Kansas St.

21.6

17

Dave Rose

113.0

18

91.4

20

BYU

21.2

18

Billy Donovan

116.9

4

95.6

56

Florida

20.6

19

Mark Few

112.9

20

92.3

23

Gonzaga

20.5

20

Scott Drew

115.3

12

94.7

49

Baylor

19.8

21

Frank Haith

114.7

14

94.9

52

Missouri, Miami (FL)

19.4

22

Mike Brey

115.7

10

96.2

58

Notre Dame

19.4

23

Mike Anderson

111.9

27

92.6

26

Arkansas, Missouri

19.3

24

Ben Howland

112.7

22

93.4

35

UCLA

19.2

25

Jay Wright

112.8

21

93.6

36

Villanova

18.8

26

Lorenzo Romar

112.0

25

93.1

28

Washington

18.4

27

Sean Miller

111.7

29

93.2

30

Arizona, Xavier

18.3

28

Bruce Weber

108.4

47

90.0

12

Illinois

18.1

29

Steve Alford

111.9

26

93.9

40

New Mexico

18.0

30

Leonard Hamilton

105.6

75

87.6

3

Florida St.

17.2

31

Randy Bennett

112.7

23

95.5

54

St. Mary's

17.0

32

Kevin Stallings

112.2

24

95.2

53

Vanderbilt

17.0

33

Tony Bennett

106.8

65

89.8

10

Virginia, Washington St.

16.9

34

Seth Greenberg

108.5

44

91.6

21

Virginia Tech

16.7

35

Steve Fisher

108.4

45

91.7

22

San Diego St.

16.6

36

Fran Dunphy

109.9

35

93.3

31

Temple

16.5

37

Brad Stevens

109.0

40

92.5

25

Butler

16.3

38

Mark Turgeon

110.4

34

94.2

45

Maryland, Texas A&M

16.3

39

Tubby Smith

109.4

38

93.1

29

Minnesota

15.6

40

Anthony Grant

106.0

72

90.4

13

Alabama, VCU 

For the first time since I’ve been tracking these stats, Bill Self has taken over the top spot in the coach rankings. And this season might be Self’s finest performance. Thomas Robinson has always been an explosive player. But Self has groomed him from an inconsistent freshman into the national player-of-the-year favorite. Tyshawn Taylor’s emergence as a polished player is equally remarkable. But it is Self’s consistent commitment to defense that has allowed his team to win conference titles year after year.

Bo Ryan remains a bit of an enigma on this list due to a lack of postseason success, but other coaches have posted great regular season numbers without post-season success too. Rick Barnes teams are frequently viewed as NCAA tournament disappointments. And John Thompson III is an even more extreme example. This table includes data from 2007-08 to 2011-12, and JT3 is the 13th best coach in that span. But John Thompson III has one NCAA tournament win in that span.

Because the college basketball postseason is single-elimination, the best teams frequently do not advance. But you have to believe the coaches at the top of this list, by winning the possession battle consistently, won’t be disappointed in the postseason forever.

I decided to cut the list off at 40 coaches because the list was starting to look a lot less elite. Tubby Smith has been more of a compiler at Minnesota than a winner. His teams have been ranked in the 40s, 50s and 60s nationally in his five-year tenure with the Gophers. Because they’ve never been terrible (even beating North Carolina and Purdue before things went south last year), his average places him at 39th nationally over the five-year span. But he has yet to have a single dominant season. Coaches with single great years (think Tom Crean) have too many losing years dragging down their numbers. But the coaches listed above have been remarkably consistent over the last 5 years.

Who to Hire?

You might think this type of list would be a good roadmap to hiring a new coach. But the problem is that many of these coaches are not in a hurry to leave. Mark Few is quite happy at Gonzaga thank you very much. And Brad Stevens has almost certainly turned down some attractive opportunities to stay at Butler. 

Still, I think if I had a BCS opening, I would be running to offer BYU’s Dave Rose a huge contract. Not only has Rose posted great efficiency stats, his teams almost always play at a fun fast-pace. BYU’s trip across the country to beat Virginia Tech on Wednesday night might not mean a lot if Virginia Tech continues to struggle in the ACC, but it impressed me immensely.  How many coaches could take their team from coast-to-coast and win a game where they shot 33%?

Steve Alford might also deserve another shot at a BCS gig. It isn’t that he can’t win at New Mexico or that the Lobos don’t pay well enough, but given the unstable membership in the MWC, he might welcome another opportunity to show his stuff in a top league once again.

Offense or Defense

As I have noted in previous years, there are a number of one-dimensional coaches on the list. Leonard Hamilton, Tony Bennett and Bruce Weber have all succeeded almost entirely by teaching defense. Meanwhile Mike Brey and Scott Drew depend on their offenses to carry their teams. Jamie Dixon is also a bit of a one-dimensional offensive coach. But it is still surprising how bad Dixon’s defense has been this season. 

Here are the coaches with the top efficiency margins over the last 10 years:

AEM

Rank

Coach

AAO

Rank

AAD

Rank

Teams

31.2

1

Bill Self

117.4

4

86.3

1

Kansas, Illinois

30.5

2

Mike Krzyzewski

118.9

1

88.4

3

Duke

30.2

3

Roy Williams

118.6

2

88.5

5

North Carolina, Kansas

26.9

4

John Calipari

115.0

12

88.1

2

Kentucky, Memphis

26.7

5

Thad Matta

115.8

7

89.1

7

Ohio St., Xavier

26.5

6

Bo Ryan

115.2

8

88.7

6

Wisconsin

25.5

7

Billy Donovan

118.2

3

92.7

19

Florida

25.5

8

Rick Barnes

116.7

5

91.2

14

Texas

24.6

9

Jim Calhoun

114.0

13

89.4

8

Connecticut

24.1

10

Rick Pitino

112.6

18

88.4

4

Louisville

24.1

11

Tom Izzo

115.0

10

91.0

11

Michigan St.

24.0

12

Jim Boeheim

115.1

9

91.1

13

Syracuse

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