NBA
Breaking Down the New Orleans Pelicans Frontcourt: Which Combination Works Best?
Different combinations of Anthony Davis, Omer Asik, and Ryan Anderson have produced a variety of results. Let's break them down.

For a long time, nbawowy.com.

PPP=point per possession
PPS=point per shot
TS%=true shooting percentage

PPPPPSTS%Team PPPTeam TS%Opp PPPOpp TS%
Davis w/ Asik1.271.2160.6%1.09152.3%0.97051.2%
Davis w/out Asik1.291.2361.6%1.14557.3%1.14356.0%
Davis w/ Anderson1.261.2060.1%1.25455.3%1.13656.0%
Davis w/out Anderson1.291.2361.7%1.12154.1%0.97651.0%

As you can see, Davis has been incredible regardless of who's paired with him this season. However, some trends can be found on the defensive side of things.

The Davis/Asik pairing has been quite stingy on defense, allowing just 0.97 points per possession when those two share the court. That mark would be best in the league, ahead of the first-place Golden State Warriors. When Asik sits, however, the defense gives up a miserable 1.143 points per possession, which would be ahead of only the historically bad Los Angeles Lakers.

The Davis/Anderson pairing gives completely opposite results. They blow the league out of the water on offense together – the Pels score 1.254 points per possession and shoot 55.3% when they’re together (which would be easily the best in the league) – but are in bad Lakers territory on defense.

When Davis is by himself, the team defends at a rate of 1.042 points per possession, which is currently around league-average. So there is an obvious trade-off – putting Asik with Davis lets the Pels defend at a league-best rate, and putting Anderson with Davis lets them do the same on offense. It’s not a bad problem to have, really.

You probably know where this is going: how do the Pels play with all three on the court together?

Not very well.

PPPPPSTS%Team PPPTeam TS%Opp PPPOpp TS%
Davis w/ both1.171.0853.8%0.84641.5%0.96249.4%

The three have only played a combined 14 minutes together this season, which seems like an odd coaching decision by Williams. Those three are definitely three of their best five players, so it would seem like a useful exercise to at least find out if they can all co-exist together.

In their 14 minutes together, they have defended at an even better league-best rate. However, their offense has been very bad in that time together, scoring just 0.846 points per possession, much lower than even the league-worst 76ers' offense.

The Pelicans have all the pieces and have moments of brilliant defense and brilliant offense. The question will be whether they can put a lineup together that combines those two. Playing all three big men together might be the answer, if the coaching staff would let the experiment run its course. But Davis is going to be incredible all season on both ends of the floor, regardless of who he is playing with. Figuring out that combination, however, might mean the difference between playoffs and lottery for New Orleans this year.

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