PDA

View Full Version : Spurs Roundup: Could the Spurs be bracket busters in 2010?



duncan228
03-10-2010, 04:23 PM
Spurs Roundup: Could the Spurs be bracket busters in 2010? (http://www.kens5.com/sports/Spurs-Roundup-Could-the-Spurs-be-bracket-busters-in-2010-87230287.html)
by Dan Oshinsky / KENS 5

Every morning for the last two weeks, I've woken up the same way: by flipping open my laptop and trying to figure out the NCAA Tournament bubble.

It's that time of year, when -- promo alert!: starting this Sunday with the NCAA Selection Special (here on KENS 5) -- basketball fans switch their attention to the college game.

It's that time of the year when we conduct an extensive, national debate on whether or not a bunch of teams that the majority of Americans have never seen play -- raise your hand if you can name a starter on bubble-sitting South Florida, San Diego State or Saint Louis -- are worthy of entry into the bracket.

But all this bracketologizing has gotten the Roundup thinking: how do you objectively judge a basketball team, and how do you decide if that team is fit for postseason play?

Let's be fair: compared to the process that takes place every March, the NBA's system for seeding teams is painfully uninteresting. There's no debating a team's RPI or picking apart a team's good wins and bad losses. There's no mention of schedule of strength, and there's certainly no factoring in a team's ability to win on the road.

But if you did consider all those things -- if you created a hypothetical NBA Tournament committee to consider those metrics -- you'd learn quite a bit about the San Antonio Spurs.

THE SEEDING PROCESS

When the NCAA Tournament committee meets in Indianapolis this weekend, they'll start making the bracket by selecting the teams that are "locks" for the postseason. For the sake of this article, let's imagine that the NBA would use an NCAA-style bracket, and that any conference affiliations have been eliminated for the postseason. Teams would be seeded 1 to 16 by the hypothetical NBA Tournament committee, just like the one the NCAA uses.

For the 2010 NBA Tournament, those locks would probably be (in alphabetical order):

Atlanta, Boston, Cleveland, Dallas, Denver, LA Lakers, Orlando, Phoenix, Utah

Then there's a second wave of teams, those that would be sitting on the "bubble." Those include teams that have a legitimate shot to make the postseason, including the Spurs.

BUBBLE WATCH

Why are the Spurs on the bubble? Consider the factors that the NBA Tournament committee would look at:

Record: 36-25 overall, 22-17 in conference

Good wins: vs. LA Lakers, at Denver, at Oklahoma City

Bad losses: at Philadelphia, at Detroit, at Chicago

Last 10 Games: 6-4

Strength of Schedule: They've played the 7th toughest schedule in the NBA to date. That number should rise, as the Spurs play one of the toughest schedules over the final weeks of the season.

RPI: ESPN.com actually measures a team's RPI (http://espn.go.com/nba/stats/rpi) -- rating's percentage index -- using the same formula as college RPI. (Click here for the wonkish details (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ratings_Percentage_Index).) They say the Spurs are 10th in RPI this year.

THE BRACKETOLOGIST'S TAKE

If the playoffs started today, based on the numbers above, the Spurs would be on the right side of the imaginary bubble (though, based on actual NBA models, the Spurs are holding onto the 7th seed in the West as of Wednesday). Their overall record is good enough, and their strength of schedule and RPI are very strong.

What the Spurs lack is a series of big wins. The win at Denver is excellent -- the Nuggets were at full health for the game -- but the win at L.A. is a bit deceiving, as both Kobe Bryant and Pau Gasol were out for the majority of the game.

What the Spurs need, at least to move off the bubble and into a lock for the postseason, is another big win. With the Lakers and the Cavs coming to the AT&T Center this month, they won't have to travel far to get a chance to impress the NBA Tournament committee.

THE PATTY MILLS EFFECT

But there's something else that the NCAA Tournament committee would take into consideration if they were evaluating a team based on merit and not a team's final record.

They'd consider the loss of a key player like Tony Parker.

With the news that Parker is likely out for the remainder of the regular season (http://www.kens5.com/sports/basketball/Parker--86738952.html), the NBA Tournament committee would start asking whether or not Parker would return for the postseason. Even if he could, they still might essentially toss out the rest of the regular season and evaluate the Spurs based only on how they play out these final weeks without Parker.

That sounds unfair, but it's not without precedent. Last season, Saint Mary's had a strong claim to an NCAA bid. They started the year 18-1, including wins over San Diego State, Oregon and Southern Illinois.

But then star point guard Patty Mills sprained his wrist, and the Gaels lost four of their next five. Mills returned for the West Coast Conference tournament, where the Gaels lost -- for the third time that season -- to Gonzaga. On Selection Sunday, Saint Mary's was one of the final teams left out of the NCAA Tournament.

What the tournament committee decided was that until Mills was 100 percent healthy, the Gaels were not postseason-worthy.

So the question for the Spurs is, Is a San Antonio team without Parker more worthy than a Charlotte or a Toronto, even if those other teams' overall record is a bit lower?

I suppose only the hypothetical NBA Tournament committee could know for sure.

mexicanjunior
03-10-2010, 04:42 PM
What the Spurs lack is a series of big wins. The win at Denver is excellent -- the Nuggets were at full health for the game

Kenyon Martin was out that game...

nkdlunch
03-10-2010, 04:46 PM
plus it was day before all star break. hardly a solid win.

Win vs. Atlanta was pretty good win as well as OKC but that's about it :(

ffadicted
03-10-2010, 04:51 PM
Good-ish article, entertaining at least. The Atlanta win was definitly the biggest of the season so far in my opinion, hoping for more similar ones to come soon :(

TIMMYD!
03-10-2010, 04:55 PM
Good-ish article, entertaining at least. The Atlanta win was definitly the biggest of the season so far in my opinion, hoping for more similar ones to come soon :(

Sad, when the best win is not against a top team, I mean Atlanta is still good but they're no Cavs or Magic.

8FOR!3
03-10-2010, 05:45 PM
The Spurs could be bracket busters. If it wasn't for John Wall and DeMarcus Cousins, I'd actually say we should beat Kentucky.

Manudo Flopo
03-10-2010, 05:59 PM
the spurts won't make the playoffs

TDomination
03-10-2010, 06:03 PM
Sad, when the best win is not against a top team, I mean Atlanta is still good but they're no Cavs or Magic.

Well we havn't played the Magic yet and we have only played the Cavs once. And even if we had beaten the Cavs, they were without Bron and Shaq.

We beat the lakers by 20 but they weren't healthy, and then they beat us but they still weren't healthy so beating them wouldn't have counted as a "big" win.

BigVee
03-10-2010, 06:12 PM
Regular season games are either wins or losses. You can find a million reasons why they do or do not mean something...back to back, 5th game in 7 nights, someone held out, someone doesn't feel like playing, and on and on. Big wins start when the playoffs start.

jimo2305
03-10-2010, 06:16 PM
at first i thought this was an article about whether the spurs would be bracket busters in the NCAA tourney this year..

alchemist
03-10-2010, 06:21 PM
Well we havn't played the Magic yet and we have only played the Cavs once. And even if we had beaten the Cavs, they were without Bron and Shaq.

We beat the lakers by 20 but they weren't healthy, and then they beat us but they still weren't healthy so beating them wouldn't have counted as a "big" win.
:lol Every win is basically a loss on ST. I don't think the Spurs have 1 decent win last decade (that includes Championship games) :wakeup

DesignatedT
03-10-2010, 06:24 PM
still a lot of ball to be played.

timtonymanu
03-10-2010, 07:40 PM
IMO, the best win was the one in OKC. That was right after the Lakers game where we won by 20. Duncan sat out. RJ was actually clutch in the final minutes.

The win in Denver was big too. K-Mart was out but so was Tony. Don't forget the Mavs game where Tim and Tony sat out. And those three wins were the only big ones.

The losses were just damn horrible. I've never seen a season in the Tim Duncan era where there were so many brutal losses. Letting Utah win 2 on our home floor and getting swept. Losing to LeBron-Kobe-Roy less teams a total of 4 losses. Getting swept by the fuckin Bulls. Losing to the Pistons on the road. Letting the Mavs score 42 in the 4th on our floor. Letting Houston win on our floor.

The lakers win sucked because Kobe left the game and Pau was out and the Lakers managed to cut the lead to 5 before the Spurs pulled away. Besides it was spoiled the next Laker game when we lost to team without Kobe.

smeagol
03-10-2010, 07:58 PM
the spurts won't make the playoffs

Is this the Rockets fan again . . . ?