Top JUCO prospect Jeff Nwankwo has committed to Cal, he tells @On3sports.
— Joe Tipton (@TiptonEdits) April 13, 2024
The 6-6 forward averaged 18.6 PPG, 7.6 RPG, and 2.1 APG this season. https://t.co/rzZr73gGuq pic.twitter.com/4x3rwOcjxi
Top JUCO prospect Jeff Nwankwo has committed to Cal, he tells @On3sports.
— Joe Tipton (@TiptonEdits) April 13, 2024
The 6-6 forward averaged 18.6 PPG, 7.6 RPG, and 2.1 APG this season. https://t.co/rzZr73gGuq pic.twitter.com/4x3rwOcjxi
Again, he has not played against major D1 talent, so we'll see. 2 steals is nice, but does not make a great defender. A good defender who starts usually plays 30-40 minutes and roughly half of that time is playing defense. 2 steals only takes a up a few seconds. What he does the rest of the 15-20 minutes playing defense is how I would evaluate a defender. The best Cal defenders aside from the bigs, since Al Buch or Bernie Simpson, the ones where we have their records, for me are Jorge Gutierrez and Jason Kidd. Jorge averaged about one steal, and Jason Kidd 3.5 steals per game. How you stop your man or help stop the other team from scoring is what is important, and stealing the ball is just frosting on the cake, IMO.Johnfox said:
Jeff Nwankwo is a great defender too. Averaged 2 steals per game this past year.
SFCityBear said:Again, he has not played against major D1 talent, so we'll see. 2 steals is nice, but does not make a great defender. A good defender who starts usually plays 30-40 minutes and roughly half of that time is playing defense. 2 steals only takes a up a few seconds. What he does the rest of the 15-20 minutes playing defense is how I would evaluate a defender. The best Cal defenders aside from the bigs, since Al Buch or Bernie Simpson, the ones where we have their records, for me are Jorge Gutierrez and Jason Kidd. Jorge averaged about one steal, and Jason Kidd 3.5 steals per game. How you stop your man or help stop the other team from scoring is what is important, and stealing the ball is just frosting on the cake, IMO.Johnfox said:
Jeff Nwankwo is a great defender too. Averaged 2 steals per game this past year.
SFCityBear said:Again, he has not played against major D1 talent, so we'll see. 2 steals is nice, but does not make a great defender. A good defender who starts usually plays 30-40 minutes and roughly half of that time is playing defense. 2 steals only takes a up a few seconds. What he does the rest of the 15-20 minutes playing defense is how I would evaluate a defender. The best Cal defenders aside from the bigs, since Al Buch or Bernie Simpson, the ones where we have their records, for me are Jorge Gutierrez and Jason Kidd. Jorge averaged about one steal, and Jason Kidd 3.5 steals per game. How you stop your man or help stop the other team from scoring is what is important, and stealing the ball is just frosting on the cake, IMO.Johnfox said:
Jeff Nwankwo is a great defender too. Averaged 2 steals per game this past year.
The bizarre thing about a player's defensive ability is that this is one aspect of the game in which usually the eye test is a much better way to evaluate than any kind of stat. Even the + - stat can be deceiving because that can be influenced by the rest of the team. It's interesting that all of these highlight clips that you see on these players are almost exclusively limited to offense. We'll be able to evaluate Jeff's defense more accurately after we watch him play a few games.GMP said:SFCityBear said:Again, he has not played against major D1 talent, so we'll see. 2 steals is nice, but does not make a great defender. A good defender who starts usually plays 30-40 minutes and roughly half of that time is playing defense. 2 steals only takes a up a few seconds. What he does the rest of the 15-20 minutes playing defense is how I would evaluate a defender. The best Cal defenders aside from the bigs, since Al Buch or Bernie Simpson, the ones where we have their records, for me are Jorge Gutierrez and Jason Kidd. Jorge averaged about one steal, and Jason Kidd 3.5 steals per game. How you stop your man or help stop the other team from scoring is what is important, and stealing the ball is just frosting on the cake, IMO.Johnfox said:
Jeff Nwankwo is a great defender too. Averaged 2 steals per game this past year.
These are all good points, however I read a lot of NBA writers who have shown that steals in college correlate very strongly with being a good defender in the NBA. For every steal, there's a near steal. For every near steal, there is usually a lot of good defense being played to get you in position to make those plays.
SFCityBear said:Again, he has not played against major D1 talent, so we'll see. 2 steals is nice, but does not make a great defender. A good defender who starts usually plays 30-40 minutes and roughly half of that time is playing defense. 2 steals only takes a up a few seconds. What he does the rest of the 15-20 minutes playing defense is how I would evaluate a defender. The best Cal defenders aside from the bigs, since Al Buch or Bernie Simpson, the ones where we have their records, for me are Jorge Gutierrez and Jason Kidd. Jorge averaged about one steal, and Jason Kidd 3.5 steals per game. How you stop your man or help stop the other team from scoring is what is important, and stealing the ball is just frosting on the cake, IMO.Johnfox said:
Jeff Nwankwo is a great defender too. Averaged 2 steals per game this past year.
Tulane shows Nwankwo on the football roster for 2021 signing day but not on any of their basketball rosters.Pittstop said:SFCityBear said:Again, he has not played against major D1 talent, so we'll see. 2 steals is nice, but does not make a great defender. A good defender who starts usually plays 30-40 minutes and roughly half of that time is playing defense. 2 steals only takes a up a few seconds. What he does the rest of the 15-20 minutes playing defense is how I would evaluate a defender. The best Cal defenders aside from the bigs, since Al Buch or Bernie Simpson, the ones where we have their records, for me are Jorge Gutierrez and Jason Kidd. Jorge averaged about one steal, and Jason Kidd 3.5 steals per game. How you stop your man or help stop the other team from scoring is what is important, and stealing the ball is just frosting on the cake, IMO.Johnfox said:
Jeff Nwankwo is a great defender too. Averaged 2 steals per game this past year.
I mean, in his one season at Tulane ('22-'23), they played [then] 15th ranked Houston twice, in addition to Wichita St., Memphis, SMU, Florida St., Cincinnati, and South Florida, multiple times each. Not exactly dogmatic. And he averaged double figures against that particular D1 schedule.
Then why try to quantify defense with statistics or metrics? I doubt that coaches use those when looking for a good defender prospect.01Bear said:SFCityBear said:Again, he has not played against major D1 talent, so we'll see. 2 steals is nice, but does not make a great defender. A good defender who starts usually plays 30-40 minutes and roughly half of that time is playing defense. 2 steals only takes a up a few seconds. What he does the rest of the 15-20 minutes playing defense is how I would evaluate a defender. The best Cal defenders aside from the bigs, since Al Buch or Bernie Simpson, the ones where we have their records, for me are Jorge Gutierrez and Jason Kidd. Jorge averaged about one steal, and Jason Kidd 3.5 steals per game. How you stop your man or help stop the other team from scoring is what is important, and stealing the ball is just frosting on the cake, IMO.Johnfox said:
Jeff Nwankwo is a great defender too. Averaged 2 steals per game this past year.
Agreed, but it's hard to quantify defense than by pointing to steals.
Of course, there's comparing the points the defender's man scores when he's being guarded by the defender versus his average. That requires a greater body of data than can be gleaned quickly from a single game.
Another quantitative metric could be turnovers by the offensive player when guarded by the defender, but that really only has value when compared to the number of turnovers the offensive player has in other games (or when or when not guarded by the defender). That, again, leads to the same issue of needing more data than can be gleaned in one game.
I think this may be why so many basketball players are so offensive minded, now: there are very few quantitative metrics for evaluating a player's defensive skills that really solely on the data available from one game. Contrast that with how points a player scores, which is much can be limited to just one game's data.
SFCityBear said:Then why try to quantify defense with statistics or metrics? I doubt that coaches use those when looking for a good defender prospect.01Bear said:SFCityBear said:Again, he has not played against major D1 talent, so we'll see. 2 steals is nice, but does not make a great defender. A good defender who starts usually plays 30-40 minutes and roughly half of that time is playing defense. 2 steals only takes a up a few seconds. What he does the rest of the 15-20 minutes playing defense is how I would evaluate a defender. The best Cal defenders aside from the bigs, since Al Buch or Bernie Simpson, the ones where we have their records, for me are Jorge Gutierrez and Jason Kidd. Jorge averaged about one steal, and Jason Kidd 3.5 steals per game. How you stop your man or help stop the other team from scoring is what is important, and stealing the ball is just frosting on the cake, IMO.Johnfox said:
Jeff Nwankwo is a great defender too. Averaged 2 steals per game this past year.
Agreed, but it's hard to quantify defense than by pointing to steals.
Of course, there's comparing the points the defender's man scores when he's being guarded by the defender versus his average. That requires a greater body of data than can be gleaned quickly from a single game.
Another quantitative metric could be turnovers by the offensive player when guarded by the defender, but that really only has value when compared to the number of turnovers the offensive player has in other games (or when or when not guarded by the defender). That, again, leads to the same issue of needing more data than can be gleaned in one game.
I think this may be why so many basketball players are so offensive minded, now: there are very few quantitative metrics for evaluating a player's defensive skills that really solely on the data available from one game. Contrast that with how points a player scores, which is much can be limited to just one game's data.
One reason why players are more offensive minded now is that the modern rules greatly favor the offensive player.
And most players have always been offensive minded, because there is much
more glory in becoming a great offensive player. If you can score, you will get playing time.
Pete Maravich was more idolized than KC Jones, but KC led Boston teams to NBA Championship Rings.
Steph Curry and Lebron are idolized today, but not Jaren jackson, Rudy Gobert, or Jrue Holiday.
Offense sells tickets, Defense not as many.
SFCityBear said:Then why try to quantify defense with statistics or metrics? I doubt that coaches use those when looking for a good defender prospect.01Bear said:SFCityBear said:Again, he has not played against major D1 talent, so we'll see. 2 steals is nice, but does not make a great defender. A good defender who starts usually plays 30-40 minutes and roughly half of that time is playing defense. 2 steals only takes a up a few seconds. What he does the rest of the 15-20 minutes playing defense is how I would evaluate a defender. The best Cal defenders aside from the bigs, since Al Buch or Bernie Simpson, the ones where we have their records, for me are Jorge Gutierrez and Jason Kidd. Jorge averaged about one steal, and Jason Kidd 3.5 steals per game. How you stop your man or help stop the other team from scoring is what is important, and stealing the ball is just frosting on the cake, IMO.Johnfox said:
Jeff Nwankwo is a great defender too. Averaged 2 steals per game this past year.
Agreed, but it's hard to quantify defense than by pointing to steals.
Of course, there's comparing the points the defender's man scores when he's being guarded by the defender versus his average. That requires a greater body of data than can be gleaned quickly from a single game.
Another quantitative metric could be turnovers by the offensive player when guarded by the defender, but that really only has value when compared to the number of turnovers the offensive player has in other games (or when or when not guarded by the defender). That, again, leads to the same issue of needing more data than can be gleaned in one game.
I think this may be why so many basketball players are so offensive minded, now: there are very few quantitative metrics for evaluating a player's defensive skills that really solely on the data available from one game. Contrast that with how points a player scores, which is much can be limited to just one game's data.
One reason why players are more offensive minded now is that the modern rules greatly favor the offensive player.
And most players have always been offensive minded, because there is much
more glory in becoming a great offensive player. If you can score, you will get playing time.
Pete Maravich was more idolized than KC Jones, but KC led Boston teams to NBA Championship Rings.
Steph Curry and Lebron are idolized today, but not Jaren jackson, Rudy Gobert, or Jrue Holiday.
Offense sells tickets, Defense not as many.