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Making Lauri better

jazznik

Well-Known Member
It is apparent that the Jazz want to move forward with Lauri being one of the core players to build around. And we know that the impact that Lauri has on the game is highly dependent on what kind of players he is surrounded with. So I dived in the last season lineups to see who Lauri thrived with and which players were a bad fit. That's what I found:

1. Pretty much all of his best 2 and 3-players lineups included Olynyk or Dunn. A few where it was not the case where the ones when Lauri played with Fontecchio.
2. The lineups where Lauri played with Collins, Kessler or (especially!) Hendricks were really bad. Sure, playing with Kessler or Hendricks improved the defense but the offensive rating simply plummeted.
3. Markkanen played markedly better with Clarkson than with Sexton or Keyonte. For example, the Markkanen - Sexton pairing, while being very good on offense gave up an ungodly amount of points defensively. Also, his pairing with THT was surprisingly better than with any other guard not named Dunn.

The takeaways: it looks that Lauri really thrives playing with players who are big, mobile, good passers and playmakers and, preferably, have a reliable 3-pont shot creating spacing for Lauri's drives. His efficiency plummets when he has to play with good defensive players who are not great passers and not moving a lot on offense (Kessler, Hendricks). Also, Lauri is much, much more effective when he plays with veterans (although, to be fair, everybody struggled playing with Brice last season). The Jazz do not need more defense around Lauri: they just need experienced, mobile passers with size.

Going forward, ideal players to surround Lauri with would be someone like Sabonis, Draymond, LeBron, Ben Simmons... or, even, Ingram. For guards it would be someone like Haliburton, Booker, Giddey. Unfortunately, it looks like Kessler, Hendricks, Collins and Sexton do not fit that well with Markkanen. Intriguingly, another player who could theoretically fit with Lauri like a glove would be Filipowski. The Jazz should REALLY try playing him alongside Lauri this season to see if there is a lot of potential in there.

On the bright note for tankers, Lauri almost certainly would be way less impactful this season: all of his best pairings are gone so he will be forced to play either with non-passing bigs or inexperienced young players, and he has struggled mightily with both. Also, it would really benefit the tank if Clarkson is stuck on the bench: he is the only guard who will make Lauri better.
 
Just to clarify, are you looking at Lauri's actual personal stats in those lineups or the ratings of those lineups?
 
Just to clarify, are you looking at Lauri's actual personal stats in those lineups or the ratings of those lineups?
I was looking mostly at the net rating, as well as offensive and defensive ratings. But I think that his personal stats would correlate really highly with them. For example, Kessler and Hendricks make the offense really stagnant and Lauri struggles in it. He also struggles without the spacing that was previously created by Olynyk and Simone: Collins and Kessler cannot create it as well, while the shot of Hendricks is not being respected yet (and he moves way, way less than Fontecchio).

It is kind of wild how much Olynyk, Fontecchio and Dunn complemented not just Lauri but pretty much every teammate and that the Jazz got rid of them all. Nine out of ten best 2-players lineups by the net rating (mins>100) included one of them. We have zero glue guys on this team now (besides, maybe, Juzang). Filipowski can became the one but he will make a lot of mistakes next season.
 
Just to throw in some numbers. Here are the 2-player lineups with Lauri by net ratings from the nba.com.

Lauri-Olynyk +6.5
Lauri-Dunn +6.1
Lauri-Fontecchio +4.6

Lauri-THT +2.2
Lauri-Agbaji +1.4
Lauri-Clarkson +1.0

Lauri-George -0.4
Lauri-Sexton -0.6
Lauri-Kessler -0.7
Lauri-Collins -3.2
Lauri-Hendricks -5.9
 
If you are just looking for the types of players then I would look at 2022/2023 vs 2023/2024. Last season was such a mess, I'm not sure that there's much to take away from it.

One pattern that I would expect is that Lauri is much better with a competent passer. I'm guessing that is part of the effect you see with Olynyk.
 
If you are just looking for the types of players then I would look at 2022/2023 vs 2023/2024. Last season was such a mess, I'm not sure that there's much to take away from it.

One pattern that I would expect is that Lauri is much better with a competent passer. I'm guessing that is part of the effect you see with Olynyk.
...and Dunn. Interestingly, then when Olynyk and Fontecchio were gone, the net ratings of all pairings became worse (which is totally understandable, since the Jazz were losing a lot of games), but the efficiency of Lauri-Sexton and Lauri-Kessler plummeted in the depths of hell, with -8.4 and -20.9 (!), respectively. And Sexton and Kessler are, supposedly, two best players on the team aside from Lauri. I just don't think they are a good long-term fit with him.

The player who played the best with Lauri post All Star break was Collins, which makes total sense he is not great but at least experienced and has some offensive game, size and a little bit of passing and 3-point ability. He is the best of the worst.
 
I was looking mostly at the net rating, as well as offensive and defensive ratings. But I think that his personal stats would correlate really highly with them. For example, Kessler and Hendricks make the offense really stagnant and Lauri struggles in it. He also struggles without the spacing that was previously created by Olynyk and Simone: Collins and Kessler cannot create it as well, while the shot of Hendricks is not being respected yet (and he moves way, way less than Fontecchio).

It is kind of wild how much Olynyk, Fontecchio and Dunn complemented not just Lauri but pretty much every teammate and that the Jazz got rid of them all. Nine out of ten best 2-players lineups by the net rating (mins>100) included one of them. We have zero glue guys on this team now (besides, maybe, Juzang). Filipowski can became the one but he will make a lot of mistakes next season.
Well I ran PBP search for any possessions that included only the key guys still in our roster, and it looks like Lauri played pretty well with a lineup consisting of those guys only. I mean its just little under 600 possessions, but its still somewhat decent sample. So these stats are from the possessions where the Jazz played any combination of Lauri, Kessler, Hendricks, Keyonte, Sexton, Collins and Clarkson.

1725036159275.png

That indicates that Lauri wasnt actually struggling without Dunn, KO and Tech on the floor.

However Lauri did struggle hitting his 3s when he and Kessler shared the court. In the 1391 possessions they played together Lauri took 179 threes (which is about the same as his usual rate) and hit "only" 36.31% of them. But the team actually scored 1614 points in those 1391 possesions... which gives a pretty decent PPP of 1.16 (not good really, but decent).
 
One thing that might also distract all of us a bit here (including my last stats), is that KO, Tech and Dunn all had pretty low usage rates. So they deferred more and/or touched the ball less. That increases the usage of everyone else, including Lauri's whenever he was on the court. Lauri stats with Ochai were also similar.

Now the interesting thing here is, that Lauri's usage was actually higher whenever he played with Keyonte or Clarkson than it was when he played Sexton. His efficiency on the other hand was best with Keyonte (and these are all from 1500++ possessions) and worst with Clarkson.

In fact when Sexton and Lauri were both on the court at the same time, Sexton had a usage rate of 27.56% which is at All-star player level. And he actually hit 42.13% of his 3s and had a TS of 62.77% in those 2274 possessions. So you could say Collin benefits from playing with Lauri... lol.
 
One thing that might also distract all of us a bit here (including my last stats), is that KO, Tech and Dunn all had pretty low usage rates. So they deferred more and/or touched the ball less. That increases the usage of everyone else, including Lauri's whenever he was on the court. Lauri stats with Ochai were also similar.
That's a really good observation. Collins, Sexton, Clarkson and Keyonte really like doing their own thing first. We would really, really benefit from having a good unselfish playmaker on the team. I know that most want Cody to become more aggressive and looking for his own shot first but he actually can mesh much better with Lauri if he focuses on getting everyone involved. The same is true for Flip.
 
That's a really good observation. Collins, Sexton, Clarkson and Keyonte really like doing their own thing first. We would really, really benefit from having a good unselfish playmaker on the team. I know that most want Cody to become more aggressive and looking for his own shot first but he actually can mesh much better with Lauri if he focuses on getting everyone involved. The same is true for Flip.
I do agree that unselfish playmaker type is the best, but I think Lauri will have a nice season even without adding such a guy.

But if you were to find him a star level floor general who would develop great chemistry with him, then he could reach whole new levels.
 
If you are just looking for the types of players then I would look at 2022/2023 vs 2023/2024. Last season was such a mess, I'm not sure that there's much to take away from it.
Well, the 2022/23 season was a mess too: lots of new players, a new coach, several players traded mid-season. I did look at it and it largely followed the same pattern: the most effective two-main lineups for Lauri were the ones were he was paired with Agbaji, Clarkson, Conley, Vanderbilt, Olynyk... Fontecchio was just getting used to the NBA then and was horrible, Olynyk and Dunn were also getting used to the new team and have not been as instrumental for playmaking playing beyond Conley. Two best 3-player lineups with Lauri were Lauri-Clarkson-THT and Lauri-Olynyk-THT, which again underscores that Markkanen is at his best when he is partnered with passers that have a good size for their position. The two worst ones were Lauri-Beasly-Sexton and Lauri-NAW_Kessler.

One thing that stood up to me that Lauri-Kessler pairing was much better on both offense and defense in 2022-23: not the best but not bad either. Which really underscores how much worse Kessler played last season. The same was true for Agbaji: he was a consistent feature on the very best 2-player and 3-players lineups. That makes me wonder if Kessler can bounce back and if the Jazz gave up on Agbaji a bit too early.
 
I appreciate the numbers discussion provided by @jazznik and @HermanG in this thread. Very interesting and worth some consideration.

I'd just caution a bit that numbers with other players are likely much more prone to variation/noise over different seasons than anybody's individual numbers. This is especially so when the sample sizes are relatively small and/or there hasn't been a lot of time for players to spend getting used to each other.
 
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