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Is Indiana Really Better Without J.O.?
Authored by Andrew Perna - December 6, 2007 - 6:29 pm



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So much has been said about Jermaine O’Neal and his place on the Indiana Pacers this season, that I’ve become exhausted by the mere mention of the sentence ‘The Pacers are better without Jermaine.’

I’m not here to rant and rave about his worth based solely on the team’s record without him, which I’ll admit is much better when his behind is firmly planted on the bench, instead I’ve come bearing numbers. O’Neal has appeared in thirteen games this season, as of Thursday evening, with Indiana posting a measly 4-9 record when he’s in uniform.

Basketball fans can be an impatient bunch, which explains why some Pacer fans have turned on O’Neal so quickly this season. While it’s true that Indiana has been more successful without Jermaine, that doesn’t necessarily mean that they are a better team without him for good.

O’Neal began the season on the bench as the Pacers were victorious over the Wizards in overtime. He returned for the team’s next game, against the Heat, and posted 10 points, 9 rebounds, 7 assists and 3 blocks. Not exactly a pedestrian performance. Things went downhill from that point on though.

Indiana lost seven of nine games as O’Neal struggled to find his game, more because of his bulky knee than anything else. I say that because immediately following a disappointing 4-for-13 shooting performance against the Raptors, Jermaine and team doctors decided he needed to rest his gimpy appendage.

Once again, feeding into the theories of his harshest critics, the Pacers won four of five games with O’Neal on the sideline.

Jermaine returned to the court against Seattle last weekend, posting a respectable double-double in just twenty-seven minutes of play. This rested, seemingly healthy, version of O’Neal seems more like the player that finished third in the MVP voting three short years ago, than the one who struggled through his first ten games this season.

Let’s compare O’Neal’s numbers before and after his five-game rest:

Before: 13.2 points and 7.1 rebounds in 30.2 minutes per game.

After: 20.6 points and 12 rebounds in 30.0 minutes per game.

O’Neal’s individual plus-minus statistic for the 2007-08 season isn’t pretty, he has a -22 rating for the season. However, according to the Lenovo (+/-) statistic, O’Neal is part of two of the Pacer’s three most-efficient lineup combinations.

That leads me to believe that Jermaine plays well with his teammates, specifically Indiana’s starting five, but has struggled individually. The stats mentioned above separating his numbers before and after his five-game absence coincide with the theory that the Pacers aren’t a better team without Jermaine, but rather his knee has kept him from producing at the level we expect.

If Jermaine is going to silence his critics he’s going to have to do two things – maintain the torrid three-game pace he’s currently on, while winning some games for the Pacers. Assuming O’Neal’s knee can hold up, he’ll have the chance to achieve both of those goals as the Indiana battles the Magic, Cavaliers, Bulls, Raptors and Heat over the next eight days.

By then we should have a better barometer to judge him with, but hopefully his play will have made the decision for us.

Is Indiana a better team without Jermaine? If so, defend your theory… Andrew.Perna@RealGM.com