no, i'm not talking about the gold ball in a three-point contest. rather the incredible statistical analysis that has changed baseball strategy so profoundly over the past three decades, and whether the same analysis isn't now being applied to basketball.
as an example, the golden state warriors have found that the more times a team passes the basketball per offensive set, the higher the field goal pecentage. makes sense, right? but also--the greater number of offensive rebounds a team gets. isn't that interesting?
during a recent slump, the warriors found they were passing the ball less, and so they jacked up the number of passes, and got right back on the winning beam. to me this is statistical verification of a an offensive philosophy i've always held--ball moves faster than players, pass that fukcing ball, hot potato, hot potato.
by the way, the warriors are the most entertaining team i have watched since showtime with magic johnson and james worthy. tonight they play the hawks, and if you get a chance to see the game, do. you will enjoy it.
(but, mods, not as much as grizzly baskeball, of course.)
as an example, the golden state warriors have found that the more times a team passes the basketball per offensive set, the higher the field goal pecentage. makes sense, right? but also--the greater number of offensive rebounds a team gets. isn't that interesting?
during a recent slump, the warriors found they were passing the ball less, and so they jacked up the number of passes, and got right back on the winning beam. to me this is statistical verification of a an offensive philosophy i've always held--ball moves faster than players, pass that fukcing ball, hot potato, hot potato.
by the way, the warriors are the most entertaining team i have watched since showtime with magic johnson and james worthy. tonight they play the hawks, and if you get a chance to see the game, do. you will enjoy it.
(but, mods, not as much as grizzly baskeball, of course.)