FanPost

TPM™ 2022-'23 Game #16 vs Dallas

Nuggets vs Mavs:

"Omicron marches on; the sequel"

Pregame thoughts:

I don't even know where to begin. Denver travels to Dallas for a B2b set in the OTHER D-town, to square off with top-three player in the whole of the NBA, Luka Dončić, and his supporting cast of Spencer Dinwiddie, Tim Hardaway Jr, Christian Wood and the Mavericks.

The Nuggets will be without three of their core-four (Jokic/Murray out with COVID / AG out with some illness which is seemingly worse) and are coming off a second half meltdown at home, which allowed the rudderless Knicks to win in Denver for the first time in 16 years.

The starting unit for Denver will be all bench + MPJ, but nobody on the team has shown any proficiency in finding him on offense apart from Jokic/Murray, so his lack of on-ball creation mitigates most of his sizeable offensive threat, in their absence.

The most likely five that Moach will go with are Brown/KCP/MPJ/Unc/DJ, with Bones/Braun/Cancar/Zeke backing them up.

There is no way in hell I'd predict anything but a massive loss for each of the next two games for the good guys, so at least I won't likely have to bother with a pregame thoughts section for the latter of the two. I do expect Denver to put forth effort in the first half tonight, only to succumb to the talent discrepancy in the second half. From there, game two should be a cakewalk for the Mavs.

Luka is the league's best 1st quarter player so if Denver has any delusions of grandeur, they must start with curtailing the Doncic-damage from the get-go.

Tonight, Denver comes up short, 111-127.

The Good Guys

Their Adversaries

*Red boxes above indicate one notable number (or numbers) to catch my eye for each team

(Open images in a new tab for a closer look. Charts courtesy of ESPN.COM.)

__________________________________________________________________________________________

Data:

TPM™ Game 15 DAL

Ish Smith: N/A

__________________________________________________________________________________________

Total TPM™

Nikola Jokić: 13 games +448
Jamal Murray: 13 games +226
Michael Porter Jr: 15 games +151
Aaron Gordon: 13 games +186
Kentavious Caldwell-Pope: 15 games +154
Bones Hyland: 12 games +158
Bruce Brown: 16 games +166
Jeff Green: 16 games +24
Davon Reed: 10 games -11
DeAndre Jordan: 14 games +39
Zeke Nnaji: 11 games +9
Christian Braun: 15 games +21
Ish Smith: 5 games -1
Vlatko Cancar: 9 games +16
Peyton Watson: 5 games +6
Jack White: 3 games -7
Collin Gillespie: 0 games +0

_________________________________________________________________________________________

Avg. TPM™ Per Game

Nikola Jokić: +34.46
Jamal Murray: +17.38
Aaron Gordon: +14.31
Bones Hyland: +13.17
Bruce Brown: +10.38
Jeff Green: +1.50
Davon Reed: -1.10
Zeke Nnaji: +0.82
Ish Smith: -0.20
Jack White: -2.33

__________________________________________________________________________________________

Final Thoughts:

  • Denver wins by a final score of 98-97, and in so doing improves to 10-6 on the season.

_____________________________________________________________________________________________

For context pertaining to the statistical aspects of this piece, please open this link: TPM™

A brief statement with regard to this piece on whole: As a means to avoid repeating myself I will include this descriptive diatribe in all TPM posts going forward.

Sure I like statistics; ever since I was a child collecting sports cards and later a pre-teen who ran pre-internet fantasy sports leagues on ink/paper/spreadsheet for the four major US pro-leagues, I've been fascinated by box-score stats, but I'm by no means an expert.

I created TPM, which has been around longer than RPM incidentally and unlike them, I fully disclose my non-proprietary system and I contextualize the action rather than being a boring, mysterious, predictive metric, because it does add immediate and accessible context to what we see and what the numbers indicate, which I like.

While the data is meticulously tracked and demonstrably sound, I'm a creative type, not an engineer. Algorithm is the bane of my existence in fact. I'd far rather approach life with the intrigue of expected surprise than attempt to get to the bottom of why things are the way they are. There are many engineers in my family, so I totally understand that joy can be derived from finding solutions to problems, I just can't relate. It's not fun for me. THIS is for the most part, not fun for me.

Now I'm a 45-year-old man who was born during the season in which the team I love joined the NBA. I happen to have a lifetime of experience with this sport in several capacities, including playing (highly underrated within the writing community) so I understand basketball theory in a way most (by no means all) pundits do not.

I was, in this case, interested in a data-driven approach.


If you are averse to colorful language, this is not the place for you. I have no way of knowing how many people even read this, so I'll not be affected even remotely if you choose not to indulge. For those of you who do, I greatly appreciate your support.

I can be found at @prmorphine on Twitter.

Also, my DIY music production and videos can be heard/seen here if you don't value your ear-balls & eye-drums.

And as always, act like a good person privately and especially in public; even if you are not, and most importantly, fuck the Lakers.


#DoNotBeABranchCovidian
#DoNotBeAnAmmosexual
#FuckTheLakersOneMoreTimeJustForGoodMeasure
#TLDRHashtagsAndSiglines

giphy.0.gif

59701167_10157121819387530_6974247927665393664_n.0.0.jpg

Write respectfully of your SB Nation community and yourself.