The starters built nice leads in the 1st and 3rd quarters. They played great.
Makes sense for total touches, but doesn't really explain why he gets more frontcourt touches than Mitchell in less minutes.It means he brings the ball up the court.
How does it not make sense for front-court touches? He brings the ball up from the backcourt to the frontcourt more often than Mitchell = more touches.Makes sense for total touches, but doesn't really explain why he gets more frontcourt touches than Mitchell in less minutes.
edit: my initial guess is that Mitchell tends to end more possessions than Rubio but still thinking about it.
Vucevic will be all star this year.What are you talking? We lost against a mediocre team that has no stars.
How does that make any sense to you? The starting lineup scored 10 of those points in the first 5 minutes. The Jazz scored 4 points after they made the first sub out. They were up 10-2.
Defense is part of the game.The Jazz were up 8-2 five minutes in when Korver subbed in for Ingles, but that doesn't inherently mean the starters were great. The starters were shooting 3/11 at that point. They forced several turnovers though.
Because unless him crossing over the half court line counts as a second touch, him touching it in the backcourt and dribbling it up the frontcourt shouldn't qualify as a frontcourt touch since he touched it in the backcourt and dribbled it up the floor. To me a Rubio frontcourt touch would be something like him dribbling it up the floor (touch, not a frontcourt touch), he passes it off to someone and then he touches the ball again after receiving a pass from a teammate (frontcourt touch).How does it not make sense for front-court touches? He brings the ball up from the backcourt to the frontcourt more often than Mitchell = more touches.
Yep and they lost.The starters built nice leads in the 1st and 3rd quarters. They played great.
Yeah, I'm not sure on all that.Because unless him crossing over the half court line counts as a second touch, him touching it in the backcourt and dribbling it up the frontcourt shouldn't qualify as a frontcourt touch since he touched it in the backcourt and dribbled it up the floor. To me a Rubio frontcourt touch would be something like him dribbling it up the floor (touch, not a frontcourt touch), he passes it off to someone and then he touches the ball again after receiving a pass from a teammate (frontcourt touch).
I'm struggling to find clarification on that online, the tracking glossary is pretty useless on the stats.nba.com page.
Because unless you score more than the opposition, the rest is meaningless. Losses with good defence, effort etc. are still losses. In fact it just shows despite that effort, your players aren’t good enough.So they played really good besides hitting shots but no one should be happy with their defensive effort, their effort on rebounds, and their aggressiveness getting to the FT line?
OK.