Tuesday, September 8th, 2009 at 8:00 am  |  78 responses

Top 50: Kevin Martin, no. 41

The definitive ranking of the NBA’s best players.

by John Krolik

Alright, Let’s start out by playing one of these games. (TS=”True Shooting,” a FG% stat that takes threes and free throws into effect, TO=”Turnover Rate,” the percentage of a player’s possessions that end in a turnover.)

Player A: 24.6 PPG/3.6 RPG/2.7 APG/60% TS/11% TO/38 MPG

Player B: 25.3 PPG/6.5 RPG/2.8 APG/58% TS/11% TO/39 MPG


Player A is the subject of this writeup and #41 on SLAM’s list, Mr. Kevin Martin. Player B is Kevin Durant. (Spoiler alert: Durant is a good bit higher than this on SLAM’s list.) Now, before I ruffle any feathers, Durant is a lot younger than Martin, and has only been in the league for two years, has a ton more upside left while Martin seems to have just about topped out, and has a much more intriguing collection of tools. And Martin only played in 51 games last year. But look at those numbers again. There’s no cherry-picking in there (in fact, +/- based statistics are much less favorable to Durant), and apart from rebounding the numbers are nearly identical.

So why is Kevin Durant who he is and Kevin Martin who he is? Well, on just about every possible level, Durant is a more traditionally appealing player. His college pedigree is worlds more exciting, he’s the cornerstone of an exciting young franchise, he was a #2 overall pick, his skill-set and size are nearly unprecedented, and he’s fundamentally a gorgeous player to watch. Meanwhile, Martin spent three years at Western Carolina University, often wasn’t acknowledged as the best player on some atrocious Kings teams, and looks like he should be on a high school freshman team.

But more than anything, Martin’s game is just, for lack of a better word, weird. AKevin Martinnd not Lamar Odom “I scoff at your notion of positions” cool-weird; Martin’s game is just funky to look at. He’s obviously not very physically imposing, isn’t very explosive at all, doesn’t have a slick handle, doesn’t really even appear to have go-to moves from midrange, and he has a bizarre, left-leaning jumper. With his wonky game and his pedestrian 42% field goal percentage, it’s easy to miss just how amazingly good of a scorer Martin is.

Martin, along with Durant, might be the best pure scorer in the game in terms of combining scoring volume with scoring efficiency. Martin seldom explodes for a gigantic scoring night, but his 23.2 points per game last year was good for 6th in the league, the same spot he occupied in 2007-08.

But it’s Martin’s True Shooting, the best indicator of scoring efficiency available, that’s really incredible- his 60% TS last season is almost unprecedented for someone who scores as much as he does. Even more amazingly, that mark was Martin’s lowest TS since his rookie season, and a big step down from his last two seasons, when he recorded marks of 61.4% and 61.8%. Overall, Martin has the 2nd-highest career TS among all active players, trailing only Brent Barry.

To be completely clear: 60% TS for a #1 option is INSANE. LeBron’s never cracked 60%. Neither has Kobe, whose career high is 58% and average is 56%. Wade’s never done it. The last season MJ did it was the 1990-91 campaign.

Martin is a great scorer not because of superior skills but through a carefully crafted strategy to get points in the most efficient way possible. In a lot of ways, the best comparison for Martin isn’t a basketball player at all, but baseball’s Adam Dunn. Dunn is an athletically unexciting player with some serious holes in his game, but he’s a stat geek darling because of his ability to focus his hitting approach on hitting home runs and drawing walks-he’s long been one of the most statistically effective hitters in baseball despite his career batting average of .250.

Martin, as was mentioned, only had a field goal percentage of 42% last season, but is a ridiculously efficient scorer because of his focus on two of the most efficient ways to get baskets possible-from beyond the arc and at the free-throw line.

First, the threes. Most high-volume scorers in the NBA shoot many more mid-range jumpers than three-pointers, because it’s much easier to get a good look from midrange than three-point range when you’re the focus of an offense. However, statistically speaking, three-point jumpers are almost universally more efficient than mid-range jumpers, to a degree that would astound most fans. Jason Terry led the league last year by making 49.2% of his mid-range jumpers; effectively, that percentage is the equivalent of shooting 32.8 from beyond the arc, which is right around where Nate Robinson and Stephen Jackson shot from deep last season. So, over time, shooting threes is almost always a more efficient play than shooting midrange jumpers, but most players who score as much as Martin end up shooting a much higher proportion of mid-range jumpers than threes:

Dirk Nowitzki: 74% of overall attempts from midrange/10% of attempts from three

Kobe Bryant: 59%/19%

Dwyane Wade: 49%/15%

Chris Paul: 59%/14%

Kevin Durant: 56%/16%

Brandon Roy: 48%/16%

Carmelo Anthony: 50%/14%

In contrast, Martin’s ratio of midrange jumpers to threes is 45%/34%. Among high-volume wing scorers, really only Danny Granger has that kind of split, with a 42%/35% proportion of mid-range jumpers to threes. Taking such a high proportion of threes, and making them at an impressive 41.5% clip (the equivalent of shooting 62% from midrange), is one reason why Martin is a much more efficient scorer than anybody realizes.

But as nice as the threes are, the key to Kevin Martin’s effectiveness is definitely his incredible ability to draw fouls. Martin was fouled on an unbelievable 21% of his field goal attempts last season; Only Dwight Howard, Marc Gasol, Shaq, Gerald Wallace, and Devin Harris were fouled at a higher rate. (LeBron was at 19%, Wade was at 17%, Roy was at 14%, Durant was at 13%, and Bryant was at 12%, for some points of reference.)

Again, there’s absolutely nothing pretty about this part of Martin’s game-he goes past his man and drives directly into a defender near the basket, his 185-pound frame goes flying, and he gets the benefit of a whistle. Some think of it as boring, others think of it as downright underhanded, but the fact is that it’s an extremely effective way to put points on the scoreboard. Of course, the joke of the thing is that Martin isn’t even that great of a finisher if he doesn’t get fouled-he only made 47% of his layups last season, and only got 3.4 points per game on “inside” shots, while he got a full 9 points per game from the line. (A word of advice-if the Kings manage to get good in the near future and play your favorite team in a big game, put away all heavy objects, full bottles, significant others, or anything you find valuable. Kevin Martin will drive you absolutely insane. You will think the refs are absolutely insane that night. But realize that Martin gets those calls every single night, by design.)

The ability to draw fouls is a lot like the ability to draw walks in baseball-it’s unexciting, nobody really keeps track of it seriously, and fouls are seen as just as much of a mistake by the defense as a product of offensive skill. But it’s an important, even vital, skill in the NBA, and it often separates the good scorers from the chuckers. And nobody has mastered the undignified art of drawing contact in the NBA like Kevin Martin.

However, there is a downside to Martin’s offbeat effectiveness. Martin, as much as anyone else in the NBA, has turned efficient individual scoring into an absolute science. But basketball isn’t baseball, and can’t be broken down into individual matchups as easily. There’s a reason most scorers don’t base their games around threes and free throws; it’s almost impossible to get other players involved in the offense when the #1 option is shooting from beyond the arc, thus shooting before the defense has to adjust, or trying to draw a foul, where the goal is to go directly into the adjusting defense. Martin’s passing stats reflect this; his career assist % (defined by basketball-reference.com as the percentage of a teammate’s field goals a player assisted while he was on the floor) is an abysmal 10.3%, which is almost unheard of from a perimeter player who has the ball in his hands as much as Martin does.

In my last one of these, we considered the riddle of Baron Davis, who can lead a very good team and can change the flow of a 10-man game with the best of them, but struggles mightily when asked to play a one-on-one game. Martin is the opposite paradox: what do you do with a player who doesn’t have the skills that offenses are built around, but is way, way too good to be considered a role player? In a perfect world, Martin would come off the bench, where it wouldn’t be a problem that Martin was taking shots away from the other 4 players on the floor with him. However, Martin’s just too good for that; an offense of Kevin Martins would have been the most efficient offense in the league last season. (By the way, all of this applies to Kevin Durant, whose assist statistics are just as bad as Martin’s and is also a perimeter player who is the cornerstone of an offense.)

It’s really unprecedented for an effective offense to be built around a perimeter player as passing-adverse as Martin-Kobe’s career assist % is, at 23.6%, more than double Martin and Durant’s, and MJ’s career assist percentage is 24.9%. And they played in the triangle, where they were less responsible for creating shots for others than most #1 perimeter options. To find the last instance of something like this working, you have to go all the way back to the days of Dominique Wilkins and Bernard King, and the game’s changed a lot since then. Durant, with his more traditional game, still has a chance to grow into someone who can create enough opportunities for others to build an effective offense around; with Martin’s reliance on the three and the free-throw line, I’m not sure how it’s going to be possible.

So there’s Kevin Martin. He’s a lot better than most people think he is, and I mean a whole lot better, but he also probably doesn’t quite have the impact on a game that his numbers say he should.

Notes
• Rankings are based solely on projected ’09-10 performance.
• Contributors to this list include: Jake Appleman, Brett Ballantini, Russ Bengtson, Toney Blare, Shannon Booher, Myles Brown, Franklyn Calle, Gregory Dole, Emry DowningHall, Jonathan Evans, Adam Fleischer, Jeff Fox, Sherman Johnson, Aaron Kaplowitz, John Krolik, Holly MacKenzie, Ryne Nelson, Chris O’Leary, Ben Osborne, Alan Paul, Susan Price, Sam Rubenstein, Khalid Salaam, Kye Stephenson, Adam Sweeney, Vincent Thomas, Tzvi Twersky, Justin Walsh, Joey Whelan, Eric Woodyard, and Nima Zarrabi.
• Want more of the SLAMonline Top 50? Check out the archive.

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  • German Reignman

    O.K. …. wow, that was …. well…. interesting

  • German Reignman

    Is there a statistic that gives notion to the “everybody-on-my-team-sucks-and-therefore-I-will-not-pass-the-ball”-factor, which obviously is important when judging the likes of Martin and Durant ? I mean, Sacto and OKC were 25th in FG% last year for a reason …

  • michaeldott

    statsketball, hate it.

  • RM

    I liked this read. I also like Kevin Martin’s game; definitely unique. It’s going to be interesting to see how he and Tyreke Evans will be able to play together.

  • http://myspace.com/showbread Bryan

    I think this kid is overrated.

  • RM

    Also, cosign German. Tyreke’s driving ability I think will help Martin even more.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com DP

    there is one thing you got right out of all of this….his game is funky as hell. dude is hella awkard. play wit it.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com DP

    Baron Davis, Ron Artest….need I say more? I like K-mart but there is no way he should even be on this list. But once again, this is predicting how they will play this year right? aite then. play wit it.

  • Michael

    i respect his ability to score but its hard to imagine him ever being the number one option on an actual winning team. Although for fantasy ball purposes he is great.

  • ctkennedy

    would u really take kevin martin over jr smith kevin martin might not deserve to be in the top 50 at all

  • Ken

    Yeah, one needs to be careful about confusing a good fantasy bball player, with a good NBA player. I know he doesn’t have a lot of talent around him, but still, I think this is a little high for Martin on this list. I’d much rather have Artest, Howard, Baron, etc.

  • neaorin

    I actually think Martin might get himself higher on this list if he ever gets to be the second option on a contender. He would get noticed more and also not land awkwardly on those ankles as much.

  • http://bleacherreport.com/users/42594-hoops4life Overtime

    This post is a bit Hollinger-ish for me. And it seems like it paints K-Mart 2 as a perimeter oriented player who can’t finish?
    He’s good, but should no way be this high, if in the top 50 atal.
    And, believe it or not, not all value can be derived from stats.

  • mumadone

    @ ctkennedy, ,give me martin over jr.
    Also, doesn’t seem like carmelo shoots more midrange j’s than that?

  • Daniel

    “Martin, along with Durant, might be the best pure scorer in the game in terms of combining scoring volume with scoring efficiency.”

    Does Carmelo Anthony no longer play in the NBA?

  • mumadone

    doesn’t it seem

  • http://Slamonline.com Akira

    K-Mart my player i think he is the smartest player in the nba, he can shoot, he penetrates the basket well and is stats are good he’s not like wade or lebron or kobe but he uses the brain to score and actually in the nba arent many players like him.

  • http://www.manutd.com Z

    Brilliant. You’ve put into words what I’ve always FELT about his game. The numbers are there BUT… he doesn’t affect the game or his teammates in a way that a 25 ppg should. I don’t think you win with guys like Kevin Martin unless he’s your 6th man wreaking havoc with the second unit. It’s not based on stats or anything but I always thought that there was a magical number for guy where they cease to be productive past that number because they can’t score that many points within the flow of the game. 25 is too much for someone like K-Mart, he can’t get you a meaningful 25. One thing though: you’re underrating his athletic ability. He’s got some hops and a MEAN first step. Seriously, his first step is off the charts, that’s the only reason he blows by everybody.

  • http://slamonline.com Lang Whitaker

    Also, neither Dunn nor Martin are any good at defense. So there’s that.

  • giogolo

    WTF

  • http://www.slamonline.com James the balla

    Good placing for him. Great scorer, terrible defender. Hopefully has a good season and the kings can win 20 ga …. hopefully he has a good season.

  • AlbertBarr

    When Peja and Bibby and Brad Miller were still on the Kings, Kevin Martin was a good addition to the team. He would be the main option in the first half and then in the second didnt see as many touches. “if the Kings manage to get good in the near future and play your favorite team in a big game, put away all heavy objects, full bottles, significant others, or anything you find valuable. Kevin Martin will drive you absolutely insane. You will think the refs are absolutely insane that night. But realize that Martin gets those calls every single night, by design.” This quote was the most important in the article for me as a kings fan. If you put an actual team around Martin, his skill set WILL help you win games. He just isnt going to run your team or your offense. Still, I think he is ranked too high because he is fragile like Mr Glass. Still, nice to see a King in the top 50.

  • underdog

    I like this dude, but he’s still the definition of one-dimensional. Pure scorer. No way I would choose him over Artest or Baron.

  • rob stewart

    A.I was way better than all of these other guys just a couple of years ago. Now, as much as I hate to do it, I have to admit they are better. Age catches up to you real quick in the game of baskteball. Especially for small, skinny, athletic point guards

  • http://slamonline.com Brad Long

    …..

  • http://www.sprint.com/sero dma

    i think it would help kevin martin’s case if he wasn’t so brittle. it seems the guy is missing games left and right because he weighs 150lbs give or take

  • http://dfsjklf.com Jukai

    I’d choose this dude over Baron just because of Baron’s glass composure, but damn, give me Ron Ron anyday. If anything, just for the youtube vids.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Wayno

    I’ve kinda thought Kevin Martin was a bit overrated over the last couple seasons…also Rob, did you really need to go there again? SLAM shoulda just ranked AI as #1 so the idiots would just shut up.

  • http://www.ubc.ca tealish

    Wow, I can’t believe people are arguing that KMart shouldn’t be on this list at all. It’s not all about the #’s, but you guys still read that side-by-side comparison with Durant right?
    25 ppg — although I hear you on the difference between a impactful 25 and one that isn’t — is still 25 ppg. Talk about overrating asthetics.

  • UnRel

    he was a beast for me during fantasy hoops last year.. when he wasn’t hurt..

  • http://vittoriodezen.wordpress.com Vittorio De Zen

    Fantastic piece. I love Martin’s offensive game, one-dimensional as it may be. Problem is that he doesn’t play a whole lot of D.

  • http://twitter.com/ramzy1of1 cramzy

    I agree w/ tealish. U can’t scoff at 25 per anyway you look at it. He deserves to be on the list. I think he’d be an incredible second option to a guy like Lebron or Carmelo or anyone on the frontline that attracts double teams. Imagine him in Minnesota w/ Al Jefferson.

  • http://twitter.com/ramzy1of1 cramzy

    Sidenote: I play w/ the kings on 2k9 because I wanted to turn a booty team into a contender lol..I can’t front,I didn’t touch his ratings but I had to change Kmart’s shooting motion to Kobe’s. I couldn’t hit nothing w/ the way he shoots but with Kobe’s shot, he leads the league 3pt pct.

  • http://joeloholic.wordpress.com Joel O’s

    Martin’s talent is indisputable. But will he ever make an impact on the league? Or will he be stuck on mediocre teams and score lots of inconsequential points a la Mitch Richmond, or more recently, Michael Redd?

  • http://www.sonicbids.com/shaemorin doyouwantmore

    Man, being a King’s fan is the ultimate exercise in patience and stiff-upper-lip-ness. Even in his own top-fifty write-up Kevin gets slightly dissed in the article itself and murdered in the comments section. Kevin’s a good guy, good scorer, and worthy of his spot on the list.

  • ENDS

    didnt I say it Every single guy is gonna get the “WEll AI…” Factor

  • http://www.manutd.com Z

    I seriously think that the ‘demise’ of AI is grossly exagerated and over-reported. At the beginning of last year, when he was still with the Nugs there were NO TALKS of him coming off the bench. He was still a 25 ppg all-star. There is nothing to suggest that he is less of a player now than at the beginning of the 08/09 season but now they want him to back up guys like Conley or Chalmers. Please. AI was just flat out a better basketball player than Rip and Stuck (combined, even) so why should he have been okay with sitting for them? Think Shaq would be okay sitting behind Z?

  • http://myspace.com/showbread Bryan

    The pistons had it made if they played their cards right , a bunch of defensive minded second bananas with one cold blooded scorer, but they were grossly mismanaged and coached.

  • http://www.hibachi20.blogspot.com BETCATS

    id consider K-Mart top 30. And that is based on last year.

  • http://www2.gsb.columbia.edu/faculty/jstiglitz/ SOFOKLIS SCHORTSIANITIS(down to 130 kg!!!)

    Although i like Martin, i would prefer a player to start getting consideration for top-50 NBA honors after he plays really well on a team that actually does something (meaning: advance on the playoffs). Of course in some cases you don’t need that cause the player is clearly something special(Durant who is already top-5 in the NBA) but generally speaking i think it is risky to consider somebody great based just on stats and not on winning. Allen Iverson for example is….(blah,blah,blah)

  • http://sevendeu2u.wordpress.com/ rpcjr72

    Kevin Martin deserves his ranking and probably should be higher, 25ppg a game is no joke. And he’s not just a chucker either. He’s athletic despite how slim he is, which is how he gets those free throws. Unlike most perimeter based scorers though, he’s more catch and immediate attack versus waiting to look at the defense.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    If Martin played defense at all, he’d be a lot higher on this list. I actually thought that he’d be a good bit higher on here….

  • http://www.digitalthread.com AlbertBarr

    Dont forget he is on the Kings Moose…that’ll drop five spots right there.

  • http://www2.gsb.columbia.edu/faculty/jstiglitz/ SOFOKLIS SCHORTSIANITIS(down to 130 kg!!!)

    [EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP DAY 2] GREECE-CROATIA:84-76. On the game that was going to decide the team that finishes first from the first group Greece played perfect for the first half and jumped to a 52-31 lead. The game was over although Croatia managed to get close to -6 near the end of the game but a late 3 pointer from Spanoulis sealed the big greek win. Bourousis was phenomenal at the first half making 3 ponters, dunking on traffic and getting rebounds. Spanoulis and Schortsianitis were also very good while Kostas Koufos had 10 points. From Croatia only Ukic(Raptors) was really good. SPAIN – GREAT BRITAIN: The surprise of the year that never happened…Spain entered the 4th quarter being 10 points behind(!!!) and they needed a huge game by Gasol(27,11) to finally get their first win… On the other games of the day Poland surprised Lithouania that is very weak at this tournament(Kleiza had just 6 points) while France (led by Parker)won for the second time and seems to be in control at the second group. Congratulations to Germany that won against Russia and seems determined to prove that they can do some damage even without Novitski. A big win also achieved Slovenia that beat Serbia led by Bostjan Nachbar, Goran Dragic and Lakovic. Finally Turkey destroyed Bulgaria led by Ersan Ilyasova who scored all his 16 of his points at the first half. Hedo had 8.

  • http://www2.gsb.columbia.edu/faculty/jstiglitz/ SOFOKLIS SCHORTSIANITIS(down to 130 kg!!!)

    correction: Spain was leading with 10 points after the 3 first quarters but Britain managed to make it to -1 at the 4th.

  • davidR

    martin & marion have the worst form for a shot i have ever seen. on par with anthony mason’s free throw

  • davidR

    and as much as it frustrates me watching martin play, it’s always dope to see the kings vs warriors just to see martin vs monta. those two go at each other hard every time (assuming martin isn’t injured)

  • http://www.digitalthread.com AlbertBarr

    Warriors vs. Kings is always an awesome matchup…Warriors have had the Kings number for a bit though…when Calbert Cheney (is that how you spell his name?) was on the warriors, it seemed like he only played well against the kings. He would come outta no where. I was also at the game like five years ago when Jason Richarson scored like 25 or something in the second half after a near scoreless first. Dude can elevate!

  • Teddy-the-Bear

    Kevin Martin is definitely top 50.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    Anyone here RIGHT NOW who wants to chat?

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