I noticed that without Enes the Jazz went on a winning streak and thought it was just a coincidence, so I ran the numbers for a season. The results surprised me:
Kanter plays 0-9 minitues = 9W, 4L (69% - on par with OKC and Denver)
Kanter plays 10-19 minitues = 24W, 22L (52%, which exactly matches the Jazz record)
Kanter plays 20+ minitues = 6W, 10L (38% - matches the record of Washington and Minnesota)
These numbers seem to suggest that the less time Enes spends on the court the better it is for the Jazz... I wonder if that is the reason why Corbin played Kanter the limited minutes this season?
until you notice that the games that kanter plays the mose minutes in are when were are already getting stomped. Those high minute games for kanter consist of a high % of garbage minutes.
I guessed you missed the part that the Jazz are feeding on lotto teams (with the lone exception of Brooklyn who was playing their 3rd game in 4 night and was on the back end of a B2B with the other game the night before being in Denver, which is hard for even the elite teams) while Kanter has been out.
Clearly Kanter = Cancer. Amirite?
1. Who was backing up Kanter in those games?
2. The biggest problem with your conclusion is that the Jazz for the season have been much better statistically with Kanter on the court than off. Unless he has some magical negative effect on the team when he's on the bench, your conclusion is, well, idiotic.
Why, the other posters already pointed out the reason for it - Kanter often plays extended minutes in the blowouts, when the opponent stopped caring and the young Jazz players eager for minutes make a meaningless mini-run against the scrubs.The biggest problem with your conclusion is that the Jazz for the season have been much better statistically with Kanter on the court than off. Unless he has some magical negative effect on the team when he's on the bench, your conclusion is, well, idiotic.
The numbers do not bear it out.So Ty is absolutely right playing Enes limited minutes, the numbers bear it out - he is not a good fit for what Ty is trying to do
Just think, we could have drafted this guy:
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Instead of some guy that's shoulder can't even stay in its socket.
/ thread. Nothing else needed to be said.1. Who was backing up Kanter in those games?
2. The biggest problem with your conclusion is that the Jazz for the season have been much better statistically with Kanter on the court than off. Unless he has some magical negative effect on the team when he's on the bench, your conclusion is, well, idiotic.