More Than a Number: Steals Stinging Gophers

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More Than a Number: Steals Stinging Gophers
Minnesota Struggling to Protect the Ball Again in 2012-13

A look inside the turnover numbers reveals that conference opponents are stealing the ball from Minnesota on more than 13% of the Gophers' possessions.

By J.B. Bauer

http://www.gopherhole.com/news_article/show/223773?referrer_id=388419



More Than a Number: Steals Stinging Gophers

Minnesota turned the ball over 12 times in their 61-50 loss to Michigan State this week. The Spartans were credited with a steal on nine of those turnovers.

The Gophers had the ball stolen away on 16% of their possessions. That means approximately once every six trips down the court, Michigan State stole the ball from Minnesota.

Most college basketball fans understand that turnovers are a bad thing, but are some worse than others?

Absolutely.

By spending hours viewing and charting a particular team, enormous amounts of important information can be obtained, understood and acted upon.

With far less effort (in this case using play-by-play data and statsheet.com) we can breakdown turnover numbers a bit more. Specifically, it’s simple to split turnover rates between steals and non-steal turnovers.

First, a few things to keep in mind:

There is not significant correlation between steals and non-steal turnovers. If all you know about Team A is that they have an offensive steal percentage of 10%, you don’t have a great way to estimate (with a decent degree of precision) what their non-steal turnover rate is.

Steals and non-steal turnovers are not the same as forced and unforced turnovers.

Most steals, but not all, result in a live ball change of possession, whereas non-steal turnovers often result in a dead ball change of possession.

The last bullet point is very important. When a team gains possession and the ball remains live, their ability to score significantly benefits from the quick transition from defense to offense.

Example: Team A and Team B both have an offensive turnover rate of 20%. Team A has the ball stolen away 12% of the time (8% non-steal turnover rate) and Team B has the ball stolen away 10% of the time (10% non-steal turnover rate).

On average and speaking very generally, Team B’s turnovers are less costly than Team A’s.

How has Minnesota compared to the rest of the Big Ten?
The diagram below plots out the conference performance of each team’s offense over the past five completed seasons. The vertical axis represents steal percentage and the horizontal axis indicates the non-steal percentage.

Ideally, a team would be closer to the bottom (low steal%) left (low non-steal%). Further, since steals tend to be more costly, you’d prefer to be more toward the right than to the top.

A gold ‘M’ represents each of Minnesota’s past five seasons. None of the performances are good, but the 2008-09 season stands out the most (12.8 steal, 11.5% non-steal). (In case you’re wondering, the two ugly markers to the right of the highest M are 2007-08 Iowa (6-12 record) and 2008-09 Indiana (1-17).)


For charts and more analysis click here: http://www.gopherhole.com/news_article/show/223773?referrer_id=388419
 

It's not a steal if they give it to you freely. :) (I'm pretty sure that's what Welch and Andre Hollins did in the last game against MSU)
 

Syani Chambers! Or any other true PG. Imagine how good they would be if they had: true PG at 1, Hollins' at 2 and 3, Williams and Mbakwe. Coleman off the bench. They just need a guy to not turn the ball over, get them into their sets, and be able to knock down the occasional J (Lewis Jackson).

That is for the dynamic of the current team. Things obviously change if a certain local PG decides to come here.
 

Al Nolen on this team would be awesome. He wouldn't need to be a scorer. Lock down defender and great handles.
 




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