TheGP Basketball Hall of Fame
110112montaellis Brandon Roy
Brandon Roy, man crush
by (April 27, 2009)
110613shaq
Featured on TheGP Basketball
120430bigthree 120416 Hawks at Raptors 059 120416 Hawks at Raptors 112

April 29, 2012

NBA Playoff Preview: Round 1

April 23, 2012

Boy Meets World: Why everything you think you know about Josh Smith is wrong

April 17, 2012

The Tank that Lost the Battle

April 16, 2012

Further Notes on Sacramento and Seattle

April 11, 2012

Kevin Love for MVP… Or not

March 19, 2012

Linsanity vs Carmadness

March 5, 2012

Durant and Westbrook: Exceeding the requirements for NBA MVP

February 20, 2012

The Sonics: There and back again

February 17, 2012

The Yi-nsanity Continues

February 6, 2012

Andrea Bargnani: The NBA’s most improved player?

December 7, 2011

Game Time in Canada: An Inside Look at the NBL

December 1, 2011

Welcoming home the NBA

November 24, 2011

From Anger to Apathy: How the NBA lost sight of big picture

October 18, 2011

The Morning After the Madness

October 13, 2011

Even in NBA 2K12, fans hosed by lockout

Your mother needs a Monta Ellis lesson

by
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
110112montaellis

Monta Ellis is amongst the NBA’s top five scorers this season and yet isn’t even on pace to top his own personal best. If ever a sentence summarized the most underrated player in the NBA, it was that one.

Or this one: Monta Ellis is averaging just as many points per game as Kobe Bryant this year, while shooting a higher percentage and recording more assists.

Statistics may lie, but numbers technically don’t. So why your mother can hold a respectable conversation about one of the California-based shooting guards but not the other is beyond me.

Although players like Bryant and Dwyane Wade are undoubtedly more valuable to their teams, how come Ellis’ ability to put basketballs in basketball nets doesn’t help his team out more than it does?

It’s a basic question – it’s one you might even take offense to – but think about it.

The Golden State Warriors aren’t a dominant NBA team, they haven’t been in recent years and aren’t likely to be in the next little while. They run and they shoot and score and stuff but they’ve never been able to stop their opponents from doing all of the above back to them, even better.

In a world of sabermetrics and advanced mathematical formulas derived to accurately quantify player production, it’s no secret that we haven’t found a way to measure which players thrive on defense and which ones don’t.

It’s easy, however, to see when one of their teams allows 105.9 points per game and loses more often than not. Kobe Bryant’s team, for comparison’s sake, allows just 96.9. As far as Ellis is concerned, the Warriors aren’t about to contend for a championship anytime soon, but it’s hard to assume that he alone is responsible for those nine additional points his team surrenders every game.

If the Warriors could suddenly match the Lakers defensively and win games as regularly, would Ellis get similar recognition to Bryant? Maybe not amongst casual fans, but what about the diehards?

It’s hard to believe, given Golden State’s penchant for run and gun basketball, that we’ll ever find out.

Ellis plays 40.9 minutes per game, or roughly 17% of the 240 minutes available to Golden State Warriors during a typical regulation game. Until a fair way of measuring defensive incompetence is discovered, isn’t the responsible way of distributing blame to simply just give him 17% of the fault?

Never mind the fact that, theoretically, Ellis’ contributions on defense may not be part of the problem at all, or that with his size and speed he’s better served gambling in the passing lanes than trying to serve as a fundamental lockdown defender in the mold of Shane Battier or Ron Artest anyway, Ellis isn’t costing his team anything they’re not already costing themselves.

At 25 years old and one of the final players ever drafted to the league straight out of high school, Ellis is a scorer through and through, and he has been for a while. After averaging 25.5 points per game in 2009-10, he’s back at it once again. With a career field goal percentage of .474 and a 2010-11 assist total that currently ranks in the league’s top 25, it’s hard to find a fault in his ability to generate points.

He may not have the experience and success of a Kobe Bryant or the charisma of even a post-Shaq/pre-LeBron Dwyane Wade, but he is their equal when it comes to satisfying the sole objective of basketball; scoring points.

You’d think that would be enough for people outside of the Bay Area to start including his name in their suppertime conversation.

 
 
Austin Kent
is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of TheGoodPoint.com
Austin has written 95 stories at The Good Point.
Here are the most recent:

May 14: Progress Report: Chase Headley hits stride in San Diego
Apr 23: Boy Meets World: Why everything you think you know about Josh Smith is wrong
Apr 17: The Tank that Lost the Battle
Feb 17: The Yi-nsanity Continues
Feb 03: The God Who Couldn’t Rely on God

Masthead
The Good Point Staff
The Good Point Contributors

Launched in 2008, The Good Point is a feature-based digital magazine that prides itself on long-form, essay-style journalism. With a primary focus on the North American market and over 50 writers across the continent, the publication’s central theme ranges from sports medicine to sports humor and everywhere in between. By emphasizing creative story telling and a tiered-editorial process, TheGP marries behind the scenes access at the professional level with the passion and enthusiasm of the fans that fuel the industry. With an archive growing deeper by the day and a reputation of compelling content sweeping the sports media landscape, once you’ve said The Good Point, you’ve said it all.

Austin Kent
Editor-in-Chief

Rob Boudreau
Associate Editor

Jared Macdonald
Associate Editor

Andrew Bucholtz
Associate Editor