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NBA Storylines: Whose usage, time of possession is up (and down) this season?

With one month of the season complete, these players are rising (or falling) in time of possession and usage.

James Harden, Norman Powell

James Harden and Norman Powell have both seen a big jump in usage rate this season.

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Teams have played an average of 15 games through Wednesday, and some look much different than they did last season.

Players are also taking on new roles, whether they’re on a new team or the same one. Those new roles can result in big jumps (or drops) in usage rate and/or time of possession.


1. Usage rate jumps

Biggest jump in usage rate, 2023-24 to ’24-25

2023-24 2024-25 Diff.
Player (Team) USG TS% USG TS% USG TS%
James Harden (Clippers) 20.2% 61.2% 28.3% 53.2% +8.1% -8.0%
Trey Murphy III (Pelicans) 18.2% 61.2% 25.6% 51.5% +7.4% -9.7%
Malik Beasley (Pistons) 14.2% 60.3% 21.0% 55.8% +6.8% -4.5%
Tre Mann (Hornets) 18.3% 55.9% 25.1% 55.8% +6.8% -0.1%
Norman Powell (Clippers) 19.3% 62.6% 25.9% 63.8% +6.6% +1.2%
Josh Okogie (Suns) 12.5% 55.2% 19.0% 65.0% +6.5% +9.8%
Dyson Daniels (Hawks) 12.3% 52.9% 18.6% 52.4% +6.3% -0.5%
Noah Clowney (Nets) 13.7% 62.6% 20.0% 50.8% +6.3% -11.8%
Grayson Allen (Suns) 14.3% 67.9% 20.5% 56.8% +6.2% -11.1%
Gradey Dick (Raptors) 16.7% 54.6% 22.6% 56.3% +5.9% +1.7%

TS% = PTS / (2 * (FGA + (0.44 * FTA)))
Minimum 250 minutes played last season and 100 minutes played this season (278 players)

Usage rate is the percentage of his team’s possessions that a player ends (via field goal attempts, turnovers and trips to the line) while he’s on the floor. The league leader through Wednesday is LaMelo Ball at 36.2%.

True shooting percentage measures scoring efficiency (Ty Jerome is the current leader among players with at least 75 field goal attempts), and can often go down when a player sees a jump in usage rate.

A couple of notes…

  • James Harden‘s usage rate of 20.2% last season (his first with the Clippers) was a drop from 24.7% the season prior (his lone full season with the Sixers) and his lowest rate since his second season in the league. With Paul George gone and Kawhi Leonard having yet to play, Harden has obviously been asked to do more offensively. But his efficiency has suffered, and his true shooting percentage of 53.8% is the lowest mark of his career.

2. Usage rate drops

Here’s the other end of the list …

Biggest drop in usage rate, 2023-24 to ’24-25

2023-24 2024-25 Diff.
Player (Team) USG TS% USG TS% USG TS%
Alec Burks (Heat) 23.4% 53.6% 11.6% 65.8% -11.8% +12.2%
Shake Milton (Nets) 17.3% 49.9% 10.2% 56.7% -7.1% +6.8%
Tim Hardaway Jr. (Pistons) 22.0% 54.2% 15.1% 61.8% -6.9% +7.6%
Jake LaRavia (Grizzlies) 20.1% 54.0% 14.1% 57.6% -6.0% +3.6%
Terry Rozier (Heat) 25.3% 55.5% 19.4% 50.5% -5.9% -5.0%
Mikal Bridges (Knicks) 23.8% 56.0% 18.0% 56.2% -5.8% +0.2%
Brandon Boston Jr. (Pelicans) 24.0% 47.6% 18.6% 54.2% -5.4% +6.6%
Caris LeVert (Cavs) 22.4% 52.4% 17.3% 66.3% -5.1% +13.9%
Gary Trent Jr. (Bucks) 19.5% 54.8% 14.5% 48.8% -5.0% -6.0%
Cam Reddish (Lakers) 12.3% 50.4% 7.4% 72.8% -4.9% +22.4%
  • The Heat rank higher offensively (15th) than they did last season (21st), though Terry Rozier has struggled on offense. His true shooting percentage of 50.3% ranks 155th (though a few spots ahead of teammate Bam Adebayo) among 175 players with at least 100 field goal attempts.

3. Time of possession jumps

Jalen Suggs

Jalen Suggs’ time of possession has jumped 7.9% from last season.

Usage rate looks at the end of a possession, while time of possession (tracked by Second Spectrum) tells us how much a player has the ball in his hands.

Here are the players who’ve seen the biggest jumps in time of possession, as a percentage of the minutes that they’ve been on the floor …

Biggest jump in time of possession, 2023-24 to ’24-25

2023-24 2024-25 Diff.
Player (Team) Per game TOP% Per game TOP% Per game TOP%
Patty Mills (Jazz) 0.6 4.6% 2.2 14.6% +1.6 +10.0%
Jalen Suggs (Magic) 2.4 8.7% 4.9 16.6% +2.6 +7.9%
Brandon Boston Jr. (Pelicans) 0.8 7.2% 4.3 14.6% +3.5 +7.4%
Scottie Barnes (Raptors) 3.6 10.4% 5.8 17.2% +2.1 +6.8%
Anthony Black (Magic) 1.5 8.8% 3.9 15.4% +2.4 +6.6%
RJ Barrett (Raptors) 2.4 7.6% 4.7 13.7% +2.3 +6.1%
Jaden Ivey (Pistons) 2.8 9.6% 4.6 14.2% +1.8 +4.6%
Paul George (76ers) 3.3 9.9% 4.1 14.3% +0.8 +4.4%
Jose Alvarado (Pelicans) 2.1 11.3% 4.0 15.6% +1.9 +4.3%
Giannis Antetokounmpo (Bucks) 4.7 13.3% 6.2 17.6% +1.5 +4.3%

Per game = Time of possession per game
TOP% = Time of possession / total minutes on the floor
Minimum 250 minutes in 2023-24 and 100 minutes in 2024-25
via Second Spectrum tracking

  • With all the Raptors’ injuries, Scottie Barnes and RJ Barrett have played just 22 minutes together, while neither has played more than 46 minutes with Immanuel Quickley. So both have been asked to handle the ball a lot when they’ve been on the floor, though Gradey Dick (in the table above) is the Toronto player who’s seen the biggest jump in usage rate from last season.

4. Time of possession drops

Biggest drop in time of possession, 2023-24 to ’24-25

2023-24 2024-25 Diff.
Player (Team) Per game TOP% Per game TOP% Per game TOP%
Craig Porter Jr. (Cavs) 2.5 20.0% 0.9 8.4% -1.6 -11.6%
Devin Booker (Suns) 6.2 17.2% 4.4 11.9% -1.8 -5.3%
Bradley Beal (Suns) 4.7 14.1% 3.1 8.9% -1.6 -5.1%
Spencer Dinwiddie (Mavs) 3.7 13.2% 1.5 8.7% -2.3 -4.5%
Luka Dončić (Mavs) 8.3 22.3% 6.6 17.9% -1.8 -4.3%
Jamal Murray (Nuggets) 5.9 18.9% 5.4 14.9% -0.5 -4.0%
Cody Martin (Hornets) 2.9 10.9% 1.7 7.0% -1.2 -3.9%
Terry Rozier (Heat) 5.9 17.5% 4.3 13.6% -1.5 -3.9%
Tyrese Haliburton (Pacers) 6.5 20.2% 5.7 16.4% -0.8 -3.8%
Darius Garland (Cavs) 6.6 19.8% 4.9 16.1% -1.7 -3.7%
  • The Phoenix Suns have a point guard, so Devin Booker and Bradley Beal have been handling the ball less. But Booker has been less efficient, registering a true shooting percentage of 57.7%, his lowest mark in the last three seasons and down from 61.1% last season.
  • Luka Dončić led the league in time of possession for three straight seasons before finishing second (to Jalen Brunson) last season at 8.3 minutes per game. This season, he ranks ninth at just 6.5 minutes per game, by far his lowest mark of the last six seasons and tied with his mark from his rookie season (when he averaged 4.5 fewer minutes per game than he has this season). Interestingly, Kyrie Irving has also seen a drop in time of possession, with one difference being new Mavs forward Naji Marshall (1.9 minutes per game) handling the ball much more than Derrick Jones Jr. (0.7 minutes per game) did last season.

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John Schuhmann is a senior stats analyst for NBA.com. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on X. 

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