We should play Blair/Bonner/Neal all together at the same time.
Defense? Who needs it?
We should play Blair/Bonner/Neal all together at the same time.
Defense? Who needs it?
If you're trying to prove that statistics are meaningless, or at least misleading, you're doing a great job. Bonner is a malignant cancer who has been killing the Spurs for years. Any "evidence" to the contrary is just plain wrong.
Great writeup.
IMO the way Duncan played the 1st quarter yesterday shows it is possible Splitter-Duncan pairing in the dying minutes of the 4th quarter. That being said, Diaw should start over Blair.
The Green and Red in these charts should be symmetrical across the middle diagonal. Why is one Parker-Leonard pairing green and the other red, for instance...
The green and red are relative to the individual player. The numbers should be symmetrical, but not the colors. They have the same number, which is higher than Parker's and lower than Leonard's.
Careful. You're getting dangerously close to Nellie-ball territory.![]()
unless you are thinking of playing jax or kawhi at PF, that second unit would mean that one of jax, kawhi, or green would be out of the rotation.
That threesome gives up 141 points per 100 possessions
Good guess.
Nice stats, too bad they don't take into account the strength of the opposition (although to be honest I have no idea how they could do that). I'd like for a 3rd color to be included (some shade of grey) when the difference with the average is less than 1 point (or, say, 1%). Right now it's red regardless of whether the score dips by 0.01 or several points. Another way to show that would be to show differentials in all the tables, and not only in the first.
I'd also like to see Parker's value along the years, just to know if he's always been underrated as a defender, or if he's really improved in this area recently.
In case of players with full red on one side and full green on the other side, it's easy to conclude that they are specialized players (Neal on O, Green on D) but that wouldn't be the case for Parker.
My guess why his D numbers are so good, based on watching games: the Spurs tend to go on a run when he's on the floor, which means even if the O isn't stellar, the D has to be flawless. That would definitely improve his numbers in the way we see right now. He's also playing a lot in the clutch when the D tightens up.
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