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2020-21 NBA Season Award Predictions

As we approach opening night, nine of our team members put together their award predictions for the upcoming season. Here’s how the Fansure team sees everything playing out:

Part One:

AwardMarcellus WileyTom HaberstrohVijayScottCole
MVPLuka DončićLuka DončićLuka DončićLuka DončićLuka Dončić
ROYLaMelo BallDeni AvdijaLaMelo BallLaMelo BallJames Wiseman
DPOYAnthony DavisBen SimmonsGiannis AntetokounmpoAnthony DavisBen Simmons
6MOYLou WilliamsShake MiltonSpencer DinwiddieCaris LeVertDennis Schröder
Most ImprovedMichael Porter JrCoby WhiteChristian WoodTyler HerroShai Gilgeous-Alexander
COYMonty WilliamsRick CarlisleRick CarlisleMonty WilliamsDoc Rivers
#1 East SeedBrooklynMilwaukeeMilwaukeeMilwaukeeMilwaukee
#1 West SeedLA LakersLA ClippersDallasDenverLA Lakers
East ChampsBrooklynMiamiMilwaukeeMilwaukeeMilwaukee
West ChampsLA ClippersLA LakersLA ClippersLA LakersLA Lakers
NBA ChampsLA ClippersLA LakersLA ClippersLA LakersLA Lakers
Finals MVPKawhi LeonardAnthony DavisKawhi LeonardAnthony DavisLeBron James

Part Two:

AwardJordanDanNikhilPatrick
MVPLuka DončićLuka DončićLuka DončićLuka Dončić
ROYObi ToppinJames WisemanLaMelo BallJames Wiseman
DPOYBam AdebayoBen SimmonsAnthony DavisGiannis Antetokounmpo
6MOYCaris LeVertJordan ClarksonJordan ClarksonLou Williams
Most ImprovedCoby WhiteChristian WoodChristian WoodTyler Herro
COYBrad StevensMonty WilliamsSteve NashErik Spoelstra
#1 East SeedMilwaukeeMilwaukeeMilwaukeeBrooklyn
#1 West SeedLA LakersLA LakersLA LakersLA Lakers
East ChampsBostonPhiladelphiaMilwaukeeMiami
West ChampsLA LakersLA LakersLA LakersLA Lakers
NBA ChampsLA LakersLA LakersLA LakersLA Lakers
Finals MVPAnthony DavisAnthony DavisLeBron JamesAnthony Davis

Analysis:

MVP: Despite this being the most contentiously debated title nearly every year, this is the only award that the team had a unanimous consensus on in terms of a prediction: Luka Dončić, who is a +400 to win the award, is our favorite to claim the Maurice Podoloff trophy. Dončić, a 21-year old Slovenian, is our pick to win his first MVP and would be the second-youngest player to ever win the title (Derrick Rose).

Luka Doncic is erasing the European prospect stigma, one highlight at a  time - SBNation.com
Dončić is our unanimous MVP

Rookie of the Year: This should arguably be the toughest award to debate, given the pandemic has robbed us of learning anything about this year’s rookie class and has given us almost no data to inform our predictions. Most of the team, though, is split between James Wiseman and LaMelo Ball – the second and third picks in the 2020 NBA draft, respectively.

One-offs include Washington’s Devin Avdija and New York’s Obi Toppin. Avdija, Tom Haberstroh’s pick, is rumored to have been high on the Warriors’ ladder before they ended up going with Wiseman.

Defensive Player of the Year: Another category that our team was split on: AD is the slight favorite getting 3 votes, with Giannis and Ben Simmons tied for second place with 2 each.

Understandably, no one on the team picked two-time winners Kawhi Leonard (2015 & 2016) and Rudy Gobert (2018 & 2019) as only three players in NBA history have ever won the award more than twice (Ben Wallace and Dikembe Mutombo have each won 4, and Dwight Howard is the only player to have won three straight). Giannis, the 2020 recipient, is going to try to be the only player in NBA history to win MVP for the third straight year and win back-to-back DPOY titles.

Sixth Man of the Year: Relatively even split again here; Clarkson, LeVert, and Lou Williams (3-time winner) garnered two votes each. Lou is currently tied with Jamal Crawford for the most 6th man titles, and is poised to break that tie and become the only player to ever win 4.

Most Improved: This is one of the near-impossible awards to predict – especially with a very quick offseason for most players. Still, we saw a couple of players with multiple votes: Christian Wood (3) and Tyler Herro (2). In the bubble, Herro showed the world on the biggest stage how much he has already improved, leading some to wonder if he will be ‘penalized’ if he picks up where he left off after the NBA Finals. Michael Porter Jr. (Marcellus Wiley’s pick) could suffer that same ‘penalty’ with his play elevating Denver to an improbable conference finals appearance.

Coach of the Year: As the undefeated team (8-0) in the bubble, the Suns are positioned to make a big playoff push after adding CP3. This could be why Monty Williams is the slight majority winner in our panel with three votes. Unlike the other individual categories, this award seemed to have the most variability among our team with Carlisle being the only other coach to get multiple votes. 5 of the 9 votes were unique (Erik Spoelstra, Doc Rivers, Brad Stevens, and Steve Nash). 46% of NBA GMs consider Spoelstra to be the best coach today – making it seem odd that he hasn’t won the award yet.

Playoff Predictions:

Unsurprisingly, the Lakers are the Fansure team’s favorite to win both the West and the Finals, getting 75% of our votes. This is consistent with betting activity, with heavy money being put on the defending champs to repeat. The remaining two of our team members picked the “other” LA team to win – with Marcellus “Mr. Clippers” Wiley predictably being one of them. Of the six team members who are predicting a Laker title, four have picked LeBron’s running mate to win the Finals MVP honor. Could this be the year LeBron takes a back seat to his co-star?

Ultimately, the team unanimously foresees the Larry O’Brien trophy staying put at Staples.

Although the Lakers are favorites, not everyone has them pegged as the #1 seed; Dallas and Denver each received one vote for that title. This is likely not a knock on the Lakers, but rather the notion that LeBron and AD, whose team has had only a 72-day offseason, will commence significantly more load management during the regular season.

The East predictions show a little more variability; while most have Milwaukee again securing the #1 seed, the Nets, Celtics, and 76ers each received votes by our team to represent the East in the NBA Finals.

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The Fansure Index: Measuring the Superstar Effect

Superstardom and Dark Matter

How and when does an NBA player transcend from being simply an elite athlete to the near-mythical status of “superstardom”? With the obvious exception of LeBron James who was anointed a basketball King in his freshman year of high school, it is rarely obvious when this transition is happening. In retrospect, we can convince ourselves that the signs were there, but in truth there are many contributing factors that must come into alignment at just the right time for a player to emerge as a superstar. The multi-dimensional nature of superstardom makes it difficult to see as it is crystallizing. The elements that come together to form a superstar are a function of both on-court performance and off-court factors. When we have a superstar on our hands, these elements combine to form something that is greater than the sum of the individual parts.

Through the lens of a recovering rocket scientist, the alchemy of superstardom looks awfully like dark energy or dark matter – something that we do not have a descriptive framework for, but is pervasive and has very tangible effects that cannot be explained in its absence. Today, we at Fansure have made significant strides in peering behind the curtain of superstardom and quantified it with the Fansure Player Index. Solving the grand challenges of astrophysics will be left to our good friends over at NASA.


The Fansure Player Index

There is body of literature describing the observed economic effects of superstars [1-3]. Some of the most recent work in this area comes from our very own Scott Kaplan who has measured the impact of superstar popularity on secondary market ticket prices and Nielsen ratings (Figure 1). This research indicates that there are clearly a few tiers of players and only those in the upper echelon can individually move the needle for fans – as measured by ticket prices and viewership ratings.

Ticket Price (top) and TV Ratings (bottom) Impacts for All NBA Players (Ranked by # of Fan All-Star Votes)

What we are doing here is looking upstream of these end results to propose a metric that attempts to capture the contributing factors that generate a superstar and quantifies them through the Fansure Player Index. The direct on-court metrics which feed into the Fansure Player Index include a handful of well-known advanced metrics: John Hollinger’s Player Efficiency Rating (PER), ESPN’s Real Plus-Minus (RPM), Win Shares from Basketball Reference, and Game Score (also from John Hollinger). We synthesize all of these into one meta-advanced metric in an effort to balance out the imperfections of each statistic and get an average picture of the on-court contributions of each player.

In addition to the wonky advanced statistics, the Index also includes MVP odds and All-Star Votes. These factors are partially related to statistical performance, but also infuse some less tangible information into the Index regarding the perception of players. Finally, the Index includes fan-engagement related factors including the social media footprint. All of these metrics are rolled up into one number: The Fansure Player Index, where a “perfect” superstar is rated 100.

Future versions of the Index will include jersey sales to further inform the fan-engagement facet of superstardom and the number of “exciting” plays that a player creates (dunks, blocks, long-distance 3-pointers, for example) to add another dimension to the on-court performance of players.


To nobody’s surprise, LeBron James is an absolute outlier. What is insightful here is to see the moat between him and the rest of the back quantified. When healthy, the second highest player on the Fansure Player Index is Stephen Curry (rated at 60.6 before the start of the season). With Curry injured this season, Giannis is holding down the second spot en-route to his second straight MVP caliber season. The steady climb of Giannis’ Index rating over the last five seasons is shown in Figure 2.  Still, Giannis and Curry are closer to the 10th or 11th player on the list than they are to King James.

Giannis Antetokounmpo’s Fansure Index has risen meteorically since the 2014-15 NBA season

Beyond LeBron, there are clearly a few tiers of players as measured by the Index. The Tier 1 players appear to end with Anthony Davis at #5 and include those you would expect (Curry and Durant are in this tier when healthy), but also indicate just how quickly Luka Doncic has exploded onto the scene. In all likelihood Zion Williamson will find himself in this category in the very near future. A perhaps surprising omission from this top tier is Finals MVP Kawhi Leonard, who pays a pretty substantial superstardom price for not being on social media.

The second tier of superstars includes Kawhi, Joel Embiid, Kyrie Irving, and Jimmy Butler. Beyond that, there is a relatively slowly decreasing cascade of players which, rounding out the top 20 players, we will call Tier 3.

Fansure Player Index Distribution of the Top 20 Players

Comparing the Index of players from last season to this season, we see that some of the biggest increases belong to the younger generation of players who are starting to shine and those who are experiencing resurgence years (Porzingis, Carmelo Anthony, and Dwight Howard). Despite having an impressive first season with the Clippers, Paul George has regressed from his near-MVP season last year, due in part to the injury he dealt with at the beginning of the season. As such, his All-Star vote totals and advanced statistics have taken a pretty appreciable step backward this season and, after being ranked as high as #6 last year, he has fallen to #13.

Rising and Falling Players in the Fansure Player Index

Summing It All Up

Fansure is a sports analytics company focused on predicting player availability that provides a variety of insights and services related to this core competency. In an effort to better understand the star players that dominate the NBA market we have developed a metric quantifying superstardom called the Fansure Player Index. This tool is being used to provide insights to everyone that is affected when superstar athletes are unavailable: fans, ticket retailers, teams, TV networks, fantasy sports participants, and the sports betting sector. We also use the Fansure Index to define the “top” players in our portfolio for our ticket protection product which provides fans a way to protect their in-game experience when their favorite player is absent and is live today at fansure.com.

Be sure to check back in after the final All-Star vote tallies have been announced when we will provide another update and also tell you about how we can measure franchise value using the cumulative contributions of the players on the court in addition to a similar index metric for team-related factors.

References

[1] Hausman and Leonard 1997, [2] Humphreys and Johnson 2017 [3] Kaplan 2020