Taking Care of the Ball: There are huge differences between the league's elite and the league's also-rans when it comes to each team's assist:turnover ratio and also when it comes to the assist:turnover ratio they allow their opponents. In fact, looking at all of the various statistical measurements for the 2005-06 PL season, these two assist to turnover categories had perhaps the biggest separation between the good teams and the bad.
First, here are the assist to turnover ratios for each PL team for last year:
Holy Cross / .99
Bucknell / .96
Lehigh / .94
American / .86
Lafayette / .75
Colgate / .71
Navy / .69
Army / .63
Looks a lot like the league standings, doesn't it? As a matter of fact, except for the Crusaders and the Bison being flip-flopped, it exactly mirrors last year's order of finish.
The top teams also created a lot of turnovers relative to the assists that they allowed. Take a look at the defensive assist:turnover ratio stats: (low is good)
Bucknell / .51
Holy Cross / .66
Colgate / .81
Lehigh / .85
Navy / .86
American / .90
Lafayette / .91
Army / 1.09
The two top teams from last year absolutely dominated this category. Bucknell, with its tough man-to-man and match-up zone, allowed only about a half an assist for every turnover they created - a very impressive performance. Holy Cross, with a similar defensive philosophy, gave up less than two-thirds of an assist for each turnover. Colgate was third but a long way back. Army badly trailed the field.
Finally, if we put these two categories together, by calculating the difference between each team's assist:turnover ratio and what they allowed, here are the PL leaders:
Bucknell / .45
Holy Cross / .33
Lehigh / .09
American / -.04
Colgate / -.10
Lafayette / -.16
Navy / -.17
Army / -.46
Again, with one exception this stat exactly tracks the league standings. Bucknell has a big edge and Holy Cross is way ahead of everyone else. I think this not only is a reflection of the Bison and Crusader personnel but also a reflection of the coaching ability and philosophy of their respective coaches: Pat Flannery and Ralph Willard. Both teams take care of the basketball and move it around offensively, and both teams play strong, hard-to-attack defenses that give up few easy baskets and also don't allow a lot of easy passes. With Charles Lee and Kevin Hamilton gone, I think it will be interesting to see what the BU and HC defenses look like in 2006-07. My guess is that both will continue to be the league's toughest.
Note: At the suggestion of a Holy Cross fan, I also took a look at the same stats for the 2004-05 PL season for that year's two dominant teams - Holy Cross and Bucknell. These numbers confirm how important the ratios are. (Can't prove whether it's causal or not, but in any event, the correlation to winning is quite high.) Here are the offensive and defensive ratios for HC and BU:
Holy Cross:
Assist to Turnover Ratio (on offense) = 1.21
Assist to Turnover Ratio (on defense) = 0.68 (low is good)
Difference = 0.53
Bucknell:
Assist to Turnover Ratio (on offense) = 0.76
Assist to Turnover Ratio (on defense) = 0.60 (low is good)
Difference = 0.16
Once again, the two top teams had the two biggest differences, with Holy Cross way ahead (as they were in the final standings that season). Looking back through a couple of seasons, the HC ratio of 1.21 was far ahead of that for any other team or season. In fact, no-one else was better than 1.0. The great ratio was largely attributable to a tremendous job byTorey Thomas and a good one from KHam.
Bucknell was extremely good on the defensive side, but I was surprised to see the mediocre ratio on offense. Although Badmus did well in this area and Bettencourt was OK, Charles Lee's ratio was not good and the ratio for McNaughton and Brown was awful. (Note: Lee improved a lot in this area in 2006.) Although it is way too small a sample to be statistically significant, the Bison assist to turnover ratio for the three games when Flannery took his medical leave was awful:
With Flannery = 0.82
Without Flannery = 0.57
Don't know whether there was a lack of focus during this time or if it was just a statistical anomaly.
When the Bison and the Crusaders match up with each other, it's normally the defense that wins. Looking back at the last nine meetings, both sides have poor ratios - the Bucknell assist to turnover ratio is 0.633 and the HC ratio is 0.695. HC had a huge edge in 2004 (0.80 to 0.48) but Bucknell had the advantage last year ( 0.84 to 0.62). The leader in this category has won seven of the nine meetings.
One side note: It's amazing to me that Bucknell won the 2004 playoff game against HC in the horse barn despite having only 8 assists and a whopping 28 turnovers. To offset the turnovers, the Bison had to outshoot the Crusaders 62% to 41% from the field and by 73% to 33% from the line and had to outrebound them 33-22. Even with these huge advantages, they still just barely won due to the importance of all the turnovers. Must have been an ugly game.
Thanks for the suggestion SOS.
First, here are the assist to turnover ratios for each PL team for last year:
Holy Cross / .99
Bucknell / .96
Lehigh / .94
American / .86
Lafayette / .75
Colgate / .71
Navy / .69
Army / .63
Looks a lot like the league standings, doesn't it? As a matter of fact, except for the Crusaders and the Bison being flip-flopped, it exactly mirrors last year's order of finish.
The top teams also created a lot of turnovers relative to the assists that they allowed. Take a look at the defensive assist:turnover ratio stats: (low is good)
Bucknell / .51
Holy Cross / .66
Colgate / .81
Lehigh / .85
Navy / .86
American / .90
Lafayette / .91
Army / 1.09
The two top teams from last year absolutely dominated this category. Bucknell, with its tough man-to-man and match-up zone, allowed only about a half an assist for every turnover they created - a very impressive performance. Holy Cross, with a similar defensive philosophy, gave up less than two-thirds of an assist for each turnover. Colgate was third but a long way back. Army badly trailed the field.
Finally, if we put these two categories together, by calculating the difference between each team's assist:turnover ratio and what they allowed, here are the PL leaders:
Bucknell / .45
Holy Cross / .33
Lehigh / .09
American / -.04
Colgate / -.10
Lafayette / -.16
Navy / -.17
Army / -.46
Again, with one exception this stat exactly tracks the league standings. Bucknell has a big edge and Holy Cross is way ahead of everyone else. I think this not only is a reflection of the Bison and Crusader personnel but also a reflection of the coaching ability and philosophy of their respective coaches: Pat Flannery and Ralph Willard. Both teams take care of the basketball and move it around offensively, and both teams play strong, hard-to-attack defenses that give up few easy baskets and also don't allow a lot of easy passes. With Charles Lee and Kevin Hamilton gone, I think it will be interesting to see what the BU and HC defenses look like in 2006-07. My guess is that both will continue to be the league's toughest.
Note: At the suggestion of a Holy Cross fan, I also took a look at the same stats for the 2004-05 PL season for that year's two dominant teams - Holy Cross and Bucknell. These numbers confirm how important the ratios are. (Can't prove whether it's causal or not, but in any event, the correlation to winning is quite high.) Here are the offensive and defensive ratios for HC and BU:
Holy Cross:
Assist to Turnover Ratio (on offense) = 1.21
Assist to Turnover Ratio (on defense) = 0.68 (low is good)
Difference = 0.53
Bucknell:
Assist to Turnover Ratio (on offense) = 0.76
Assist to Turnover Ratio (on defense) = 0.60 (low is good)
Difference = 0.16
Once again, the two top teams had the two biggest differences, with Holy Cross way ahead (as they were in the final standings that season). Looking back through a couple of seasons, the HC ratio of 1.21 was far ahead of that for any other team or season. In fact, no-one else was better than 1.0. The great ratio was largely attributable to a tremendous job byTorey Thomas and a good one from KHam.
Bucknell was extremely good on the defensive side, but I was surprised to see the mediocre ratio on offense. Although Badmus did well in this area and Bettencourt was OK, Charles Lee's ratio was not good and the ratio for McNaughton and Brown was awful. (Note: Lee improved a lot in this area in 2006.) Although it is way too small a sample to be statistically significant, the Bison assist to turnover ratio for the three games when Flannery took his medical leave was awful:
With Flannery = 0.82
Without Flannery = 0.57
Don't know whether there was a lack of focus during this time or if it was just a statistical anomaly.
When the Bison and the Crusaders match up with each other, it's normally the defense that wins. Looking back at the last nine meetings, both sides have poor ratios - the Bucknell assist to turnover ratio is 0.633 and the HC ratio is 0.695. HC had a huge edge in 2004 (0.80 to 0.48) but Bucknell had the advantage last year ( 0.84 to 0.62). The leader in this category has won seven of the nine meetings.
One side note: It's amazing to me that Bucknell won the 2004 playoff game against HC in the horse barn despite having only 8 assists and a whopping 28 turnovers. To offset the turnovers, the Bison had to outshoot the Crusaders 62% to 41% from the field and by 73% to 33% from the line and had to outrebound them 33-22. Even with these huge advantages, they still just barely won due to the importance of all the turnovers. Must have been an ugly game.
Thanks for the suggestion SOS.