Dave wrote: ↑Mon Jul 12, 2021 10:40 am
Hey Spiff,
Did you ever run metrics on Akinjo? We all know he scored a decent amount of points, but how efficient was he?
CBB reference is a great site for stuff like that.
https://www.sports-reference.com/cbb/pl ... njo-1.html
So the first stat of note under the Advanced tab is PER. No clue your familiarity with PER, so I'll give a short summary. It's developed so that average efficiency should be a 15.0. A criticism is that it weights rebounding too heavily, so post players who rebound and shoot dunks/layups are disproportionately rated, where guards can falter.
Akinjo was 18.2 last year and has trended upwards all 3 years. Not unreal, but not bad, and if he continues to add about 2.0 per year, being in the 20 range would be good for a guard.
His TSP and EFG %'s are not bad, but an area for improvement. Neither sucks, but to be a big time guy, both should improve by about 5-10%.
His ast% of 31 is fine, although not an obvious strength. His 13.4 TO% is ok for a main creator, although you hope as a senior he pulls to 10% or lower, which would be excellent.
Across the board, I'd say his efficiency was satisfactory to good, but no one category was great. The biggest upside for me is he's seemed to improve incrementally year to year, so you would hope as a senior, his best is still to come.
Just my take, apologies if the PER explanation is basic, just wanted to try to give a good answer.
Edit: And this tends to back up what I thought about Akinjo. He had a 4 game stretch from UCSB to Montana where he shot 17-69, a tick under 25%. He just had a few stinkers in losses like 0-9 in the SC loss at home and 2-9 in the ugly Utah road loss.
If he could even out those sort of games, that alone would help a lot. When he shot ok, he was a solidly efficient guard, IMO, just those outlier games dragged him down.