What's new

GT: Jazz v 76ers | 12/28/15 | 7pm MST

Our franchise pillars are unsteady. We've broken this team down piece by piece this year. what looked sexy on the outside is cold and aloof in the middle.
 
I was hoping Qs system would get better this year, but it has regressed.

2015-16 Jazz: 105.4 Offensive Rating
2014-15 Jazz: 105.1 Offensive Rating

Important also to note that the 2014-15 Jazz had Kanter for most of the season (which, for all his shortcomings on defense, did help us out quite a bit on offense) and relatively little injuries.

The offense hasn't regressed at all, even though it has had every excuse to.
 
2015-16 Jazz: 105.4 Offensive Rating
2014-15 Jazz: 105.1 Offensive Rating

Important also to note that the 2014-15 Jazz had Kanter for most of the season (which, for all his shortcomings on defense, did help us out quite a bit on offense) and relatively little injuries.

Our players are playing better due to a year of growth, but the system is not helping.
 
Our players are playing better due to a year of growth, but the system is not helping.

Utah's offensive rating this year is top 10. Even with all the injuries, you expected better?

I think your expectations are the problem, not the system.
 
Utah's offensive rating this year is top 10. Even with all the injuries, you expected better?

I think your expectations are the problem, not the system.

We are 16th, so in the bottom half. Can you really say our offensive sets are working well? I don't even care about the losses. I just want to see good team (Jazz) basketball. Our assist percentage is second to last and has dropped 6% since last year (the 2003 squad was ninth in ast% btw), and 6% is HUGE if you look at the comparisons. There is a reason for this. We run plays for the ball handler. Is anyone really enjoying our offensive sets?

The top teams have high ast%. Good sets also tire the opponents. We usually have 3 stagnant players on offense.
 
Actually, that isn't updated for tonight's games (in which the Jazz had an absolutely horrible ORtg), so it might drop down as far as to 13th-14th after the update. But, given that tonight's game was played without 3 starters and our 6th man, such an outlier is expected.
 
Actually, that isn't updated for tonight's games (in which the Jazz had an absolutely horrible ORtg), so it might drop down as far as to 13th-14th after the update. But, given that tonight's game was played without 3 starters and our 6th man, such an outlier is expected.

October we were ranked 16th:
https://stats.nba.com/league/team/#...son=2015-16&SeasonType=Regular Season&Month=1

November we were ranked 17th:
https://stats.nba.com/league/team/#...son=2015-16&SeasonType=Regular Season&Month=2

December so far we are 15th:
https://stats.nba.com/league/team/#...son=2015-16&SeasonType=Regular Season&Month=3

So no, we are not 10th. We have been in the bottom half the majority of the season. I'll take the NBA's listing over your website any day.
 
NBA.com and ESPN.com calculate offensive ratings using a more simple and outdated formula:

100 x Pts / ((FTA * 0.44) + FGA + TOV - OREB).

Pick a handful of games, apply this formula, and you'll see that, often, within a single game, this formula will show one team having a lot more possessions than another team. It's a simple estimate of # of possessions, and quite flawed.

Basketball reference calculates it using a significantly more refined formula, taking into account several other variables that determine the total amount of possessions for a team within a given game:

100 x Pts / (Tm FGA + .40 x Tm FTA - 1.07 x (Tm ORB / (Tm ORB + Tm DRB)) x (Tm FGA - Tm FG) + Tm TO)
 
NBA.com and ESPN.com calculate offensive ratings using a more simple and outdated formula:

100 x Pts / ((FTA * 0.44) + (2 x FGA) + TOV - OREB).

Pick a handful of games, apply this formula, and you'll see that, often, within a single game, this formula will show one team having a lot more possessions than another team. It's a simple estimate of # of possessions, and quite flawed.

Basketball reference calculates it using a significantly more refined formula, taking into account several other variables that determine the total amount of possessions for a team within a given game:

100 x Pts / (Tm FGA + .40 x Tm FTA - 1.07 x (Tm ORB / (Tm ORB + Tm DRB)) x (Tm FGA - Tm FG) + Tm TO)

It has been a LONG time since I took Advanced Linear Statistics, but it is clear to me that Basketball Reference's calculation method is prone to high variance and multicollinearity, due to the relatively large number of predictor variables. There are pros and cons to any method. Regardless of the merits of simple and adjusted +/-, our assist % is a more telling to me. The sets we run are unwatchable, and as we have seen time and time again, are very stoppable. There is a place for our on ball screen/search dribble drive offense, but we run it WAY too often, and teams adjust and shut it down.
 
Basketball Reference's calculation method is prone to high variance and multicollinearity, due to the relatively large number of predictor variables. There are pros and cons to any method.

The larger number of variables exist because those variables are necessary in order to CALCULATE the number of possessions, as opposed to simply estimating them like NBA.com does.

To be clear, I'm not claiming that basketball-reference is perfect; just that it's far more accurate than NBA.com. In fact, I can prove it.

Let's look at Game 1 of the 2013 NBA Finals, as this is one of the best examples that had me dig into the differences between formulas in the first place:

According to basketball-reference:
SAS ortg 108.2
MIA ortg 103.5
SAS +4.7 efficiency differential

According to NBA.com:
SAS 102.3 ortg
MIA 102.9 ortg
SAS -0.6 efficiency differential.

The Spurs won by 4 points, and yet NBA.com gave the Spurs a lower offensive rating than the Heat in that game.

The main reason why NBA.com's numbers are way off (according to them, the Spurs lost Game 1!) is because they calculate offensive and defensive ratings from team pace rather than from game pace. Basketball-reference calculates team A's and team B's possessions, adds them and divides by 2, and that gives us game pace and then based on THAT calculates ortg/drtg.

It's a very good method, and from this and several other examples, I've found the error margin is very small if we compare estimated results to real (calculated manually from play-by-play).
 
Say what you will about the stats, but Jazz offense fails the EYE test. It was awful to watch in person. How bad was it? I think Carlos Arryo would've liked this offense.
 
Oh my word i was about to rage before Hayward's 3. 6:50 AM here and I don't wanna sleep. I'm pretty sure i will see sixers win in my dream.

I still have an headache. What if Gordon missed that shot?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

I fell asleep and woke up thinking how could we lose to Sixers?
 
See, my feeling is that every game we win without Exum, Gobert, Burks and Favors is a small miracle. Hood doesn't look right either.
 
See, my feeling is that every game we win without Exum, Gobert, Burks and Favors is a small miracle. Hood doesn't look right either.

Aside from all the injuries, I nominate Hood as my biggest disappointment for the season thus far.
 
Aside from all the injuries, I nominate Hood as my biggest disappointment for the season thus far.

I agree. I expected him to be better than this. His shot has been off all season.
 
I agree. I expected him to be better than this. His shot has been off all season.

he's also had consistently bad body language about it all. I'd guess that he's letting the mental side of the game get the better of him. Shooters need short memories; he appears to have a very good one.
 
Back
Top