Horizon League Hoops

Horizon League men's basketball with a tempo-free tilt.

The Horizon League’s most efficient scorers

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Green Bay junior Kam Cerroni

Back in June I toyed around with a new metric that I called points per player possession (PPPP) on Run the Floor. Basically what this stat does is apply offensive efficiency on a player-by-player basis instead of a whole team basis. It’s what I believe tempo-free stats lack for the average basketball fan, a more useful and equitable metric that could actually compete with the much-abhorred (by tempo-free freaks) but widely-used (by laymen and media) points per game metric. PPG just is a bad way for comparing players for a lot of reasons that won’t fit here.

PPPP shows us on an even field how many points a given player scores on average when possessions end with him. Now, there are a lot of alternatives to scoring points, such as dishing assists, turning the ball over and otherwise not scoring points (namely a missed shot or a missed free throw). It’s simple equation that is not simply attained, because numbers like possessions are hard to come. The equation is this: PPPP = points scored/possessions.

While in the linked post above I applied this metric to a range of D-I players, in this post I’m applying it to only returning Horizon League players as well as D-I transfers that will be playing in the Horizon League this season (using their last useful season’s figures). Only players with at least 30 possessions were profiled.

Green Bay’s Kam Cerroni (1.40 points/possession) leads the way. As a sophomore the two-guard scored more points than any other Horizon League player, on average, when Green Bay possessions ended in his hands. Seem like an unlikely leader? Cerroni logged the second-best eFG% in the Horizon League last season (63.7 percent) behind Tim Kamczyc that ranked 12th nationally. He also launched a lot of three-pointers (129) while dishing out relatively few assists to go with few turnovers.

The League’s undisputed favorite, Valparaiso houses three of the most efficient scorers in the top ten. Ryan Broekhoff (1.27), Kevin Van Wijk (1.22) and Will Bogan (1.21) are all there.

Only Loyola doesn’t have a player in the top ten. The full list is below.

Rank Player Team Points Poss. Pts./Poss.
1 Kam Cerroni UWGB 238 170 1.40
2 Tim Kamczyz Cleve. St. 301 231 1.30
3 James Haarsma Milwaukee 358 282 1.27
4 Ryan Broekhoff Valparaiso 508 401 1.27
5 Kevin Van Wijk Valparaiso 437 357 1.22
6 Blake Allen YSU 397 329 1.21
7 Will Bogan Valparaiso 246 204 1.21
8 Hayden Humes UIC 247 209 1.18
9 Kendrick Perry YSU 521 441 1.18
10 Doug Anderson Detroit 332 282 1.18
11 Evan Bruinsma Detroit 148 127 1.17
12 Jason Calliste Detroit 366 320 1.14
13 Ray McCallum Jr. Detroit 555 498 1.11
14 Paris Gulley Milwaukee 288 259 1.11
15 Anton Grady Cleve. St. 282 256 1.10
16 Kyle Kelm Milwaukee 244 224 1.09
17 Alec Brown UWGB 413 383 1.08
18 Ben Averkamp Loyola 430 413 1.04
19 Brennan Cougill UWGB 275 266 1.03
20 Daniel Barnes UIC 311 301 1.03
21 Marlin Mason Cleve. St. 67 67 1.00
22 Jordan Hicks Loyola 168 169 0.99
23 Kiefer Sykes UWGB 335 340 0.99
24 Nick Minnerath Detroit 60 61 0.98
25 Josh Crittle** UIC 145 150 0.97
26 Damian Eargle YSU 344 358 0.96
27 Joey Miller** UIC 301 318 0.95
28 Ryan Haggerty Milwaukee 53 56 0.95
29 Christian Thomas Loyola 149 158 0.94
30 Matt Kenney Valparaiso 241 256 0.94
31 Gary Talton UIC 349 372 0.94
32 Cole Darling Wright St. 190 206 0.92
33 Joe Crisman Loyola 222 244 0.91
34 Evan Richard Milwaukee 66 73 0.90
35 Greg Mays Green Bay 71 79 0.90
36 A.J. Pacher Wright St. 173 198 0.87
37 Sebastian Douglas Cleve. St. 44 51 0.86
38 Luda Ndaye Cleve. St. 38 46 0.83
39 Josh Chojnacki YSU 42 52 0.81
40 Reggie Arceneaux Wright St. 272 337 0.81
41 Matt Vest Wright St. 42 53 0.79
42 Cully Payne*** Loyola 277 352 0.79
43 Shawn Amiker YSU 50 64 0.78
44 Demetrius Harris Milwaukee 39 53 0.74
45 Tavares Sledge Wright St. 96 132 0.73
46 Bobby Capobianco* Valparaiso 26 36 0.72
47 Kendall Griffin Wright St. 49 70 0.70
48 Charlie Lee Cleve. St. 135 194 0.70
49 Daniel Turner Green Bay 64 92 0.70
50 Erik Buggs Valparaiso 148 230 0.64
51 Marc Brown UIC 200 372 0.54
52 Will Simonton UIC 16 33 0.48
53 P.J. Boutte Detroit 28 65 0.43
*D-I transfer with stats from 2010-2011 season
**D-I transfer with stats from 2011-2012 season
***D-I transfer with stats from 2009-2010 season
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10 thoughts on “The Horizon League’s most efficient scorers

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  5. Pingback: Tempo-free countdown: No. 6 UIC « Horizon League Hoops

  6. Pingback: Tempo-free countdown: No. 5 Cleveland St. « Horizon League Hoops

  7. Pingback: Tempo-free countdown: No. 4 Detroit « Horizon League Hoops

  8. Pingback: Tempo-free countdown: No. 3 Youngstown State « Horizon League Hoops

  9. Pingback: Tempo-free countdown: No. 2 Green Bay « Horizon League Hoops

  10. Pingback: Tempo-free countdown: No. 1 Valparaiso « Horizon League Hoops

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