Solid D
02-02-2009, 06:30 PM
Regardless of the playing status of Andrew Bynum, I'd like to bring up a statistical category that perplexes me, somewhat.
The Los Angeles Lakers currently have the most potent offense in the NBA, however, they have a curiously poor ranking in an oft overlooked category of Opp Assists Per Game. The Lakers are 28th in the NBA allowing 23.15 APG.
Naturally, an up-tempo team that scores 108 PPG is going to allow more points and more assists than teams that play at a slower pace. However, you would think a team that attempts to play strong defense, like LA does, would have a lower Opp. APG number.
Leaders in this category are Orlando (18.06), Boston (18.20), Cleveland (18.41, and San Antonio (18.54). The Lakers are certainly outscoring their opponents, so a statistically poor ranking here won't matter if they show up offensively. This high team average may indicate teams that do a good job of passing, reversing the ball and finding the open man can do well versus the Lakers. Teams with highly efficient execution on offense such as Utah (at full strength), Boston and San Antonio should have some success versus the Lakers....particularly teams that match offensive execution with great defense.
I'm not saying this is an area of huge concern, but it does bear watching....don't you think?
The Los Angeles Lakers currently have the most potent offense in the NBA, however, they have a curiously poor ranking in an oft overlooked category of Opp Assists Per Game. The Lakers are 28th in the NBA allowing 23.15 APG.
Naturally, an up-tempo team that scores 108 PPG is going to allow more points and more assists than teams that play at a slower pace. However, you would think a team that attempts to play strong defense, like LA does, would have a lower Opp. APG number.
Leaders in this category are Orlando (18.06), Boston (18.20), Cleveland (18.41, and San Antonio (18.54). The Lakers are certainly outscoring their opponents, so a statistically poor ranking here won't matter if they show up offensively. This high team average may indicate teams that do a good job of passing, reversing the ball and finding the open man can do well versus the Lakers. Teams with highly efficient execution on offense such as Utah (at full strength), Boston and San Antonio should have some success versus the Lakers....particularly teams that match offensive execution with great defense.
I'm not saying this is an area of huge concern, but it does bear watching....don't you think?