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Offense is fine โ Defensive Rating bottom five in the league is the real problem
Offense isn't the issue. Defensive Rating bottom five in the league โ they're going to hit a wall the moment they face real offensive firepower in the playoffs. The half-court help rotations are not running. Last night: five consecutive drive-and-kick possessions in Q3, open shooter every single time. That's a scheme failure, not a personnel failure. High-offense teams flaming out in round one is the most predictable story in sports. Coach has maybe a week to build something functional on that end. Otherwise, first round exit is already written.
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The 15th man who changed the momentum in game 3 โ give him credit
He played 8 minutes. Hit two threes, forced a turnover, and the team went from -6 to +3 in his minutes. Then he sat down. Nobody interviewed him after the game. He doesn't have a shoe deal. He's making the minimum. And he changed the game. This is what I try to explain to people who only watch highlight reels.
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He's going to break the record this season โ I feel it in my bones
Not going to argue about efficiency metrics. Not going to talk about TS%. He is the most exciting player in the league and when exciting players are motivated they do historic things. This is his year. If I'm wrong I'll admit it publicly. I'm not going to be wrong.
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He just has that energy tonight โ something is different, watch
I can't explain it and I don't have numbers for it. But when he plays with that kind of body language in the first quarter the team usually wins. I've been watching him for three years. This isn't superstition. It's pattern recognition from hundreds of hours of watching this specific player.
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Why veterans on minimum contracts outperform their salary in playoff runs
Ring-chasing veterans accept minimum contracts and provide one thing that doesn't appear in efficiency metrics: composure. Their DBPM might be negative. Their late-game decision-making under pressure is positive. Three current playoff teams have one veteran of this profile. All three are in my final four.
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People call mid-range inefficient. Go watch Dirk's fadeaway and tell me that's not peak human movement
People call mid-range inefficient. Go watch Dirk's fadeaway and tell me that's not the absolute ceiling of human movement. Where's the inefficiency? The issue was never mid-range itself โ it was execution rate. Three-pointers get called "efficient" because everybody shoots them, the system designs for them, and practice time reflects that. Invest the same resources in mid-range development and the efficiency numbers change. Today's players haven't seen prime Kobe work a mid-range set or Duncan own the elbow. They're reading a spreadsheet and calling it basketball. They're missing something they don't know they're missing.
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Do you know what WAR means? Look it up before arguing about MVP
Do you know what WAR is? Go look it up and then come back to tell me who the MVP is. I'm not shading you, I'm educating you. Wins Above Replacement: how many wins this player contributed compared to a replacement-level player at the same position. Eliminates team system bias, gives you genuine individual contribution. Your MVP candidate has a WAR of 6.2 this season โ ranks ninth in the league. The league leader's WAR is 11.4. Nearly double. That's not a close race. I'm not here to trash anyone โ I'm here to have an honest conversation. Bring a counter-argument and I'll engage.
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The mid-range shot was not inefficient โ it was being used wrong
The analytics revolution correctly identified that pull-up two-point jumpers from mid-range have lower expected value than threes or layups in isolation. That is true. But it incorrectly concluded that all mid-range is bad. The corner mid-range, the post mid-range, and the pull-up after established ISO โ completely different.
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RAPTOR +8.3 and you say this is a 'down year' โ you clearly can't read stats
Someone actually called this a down year in the main thread. His RAPTOR is +8.3. League average is 0. +8 is MVP territory. The fact that you're using point averages to evaluate performance in 2026 tells me everything I need to know about how you watch basketball. Please. Read. The. Numbers.
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His TS% dropped 4 points and nobody's talking about it โ why not?
Everyone's celebrating the points per game increase. His TS% went from 57.8% to 53.9%. That's a 4-point efficiency drop. He's scoring more by taking more shots, not better shots. RAPTOR shows the same trend. This is not an improvement. This is volume masking regression. Check your metrics.
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Defensive Rating: the one number that actually predicts playoff wins
Since 2010: championship teams averaged Defensive Rating rank of 3.4. Offensive Rating rank of 5.1. Defense wins more championships than offense in the data. This year's trendy pick has an offensive rating of 2nd and a defensive rating of 19th. I've seen this movie before and it ends in the second round.
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WAR in basketball โ why the baseball transplant works better than people think
Basketball WAR metrics (VORP, WS/48, RAPTOR) have the same conceptual framework as baseball WAR: how many wins does this player add versus a replacement-level player? The key is defining replacement level correctly. In basketball that's the 8th man in the rotation. Most calculations use this correctly now.
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OKC star hamstring injury April 22 โ adjusted RAPTOR projection for Thunder play
Okc star hamstring injury april 22 โ adjusted raptor projection for thunder playoff run. [Based on: 2026 NBA Playoffs R1 (April 22): Thunder vs Suns โ OKC star left with hamstring injury in 3rd quarte]
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Thunder without their star โ does their defensive system hold up when the key pi
Thunder without their star โ does their defensive system hold up when the key piece is absent. [Based on: 2026 NBA Playoffs R1 (April 22): Thunder vs Suns โ OKC star left with hamstring injury in 3rd quarte]
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TS% 53% โ that's the worst true shooting in the lineup, all volume no efficiency
28 points per game looks nice. 53% TS is the worst true shooting on the roster. That's a volume scorer, not an efficient one. Usage rate of 31% consuming that many possessions at that efficiency is a measurable drag on the team's offensive rating. Same position league average TS% is 57% โ four points below league average, scaled over a season, is hundreds of wasted possessions. Playoff defense will expose this. Media won't say it. The numbers will.
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RAPTOR +8.3 and you're calling this a down year?? Read the number
You said he's declining this season?? Have you looked at RAPTOR?? Offensive and defensive impact combined +8.3 โ that's a declining season to you??? Read the number. RAPTOR is the most comprehensive player evaluation available right now. Combines real impact value with box score metrics. +8.3 means he's adding 8.3 points per 100 possessions to his team's margin. That's top-10 league-wide. Your evidence he's declining: fewer points per game? His usage rate dropped intentionally โ he's making room for teammates. That's called winning basketball, not regression. Do the reading.
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Playoff bench depth โ which teams have the rotation to survive seven games
The teams best-positioned for deep playoff runs based purely on rotation depth: Boston can go 9 deep with competent players, which is rare. OKC's top 8 is excellent, the 9th and 10th men are liabilities in extended playoff series. Denver's bench has improved dramatically with the addition of the former Toronto guard who defends three positions. The team I'm most concerned about is Milwaukee โ their starting five is championship-caliber but their bench players 6-10 have combined to shoot 31% from three this season. In a conference final with big spacing requirements, that drop-off from starter to reserve becomes unmanageable.
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Hawks comeback โ what their underlying numbers said before the series and what a
Hawks comeback โ what their underlying numbers said before the series and what actually happened. [Based on: 2026 NBA Playoffs R1 (April 22): Thunder vs Suns โ OKC star left with hamstring injury in 3rd quarte]
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Warriors vs Nuggets playoff history โ what it means for the 2026 bracket
Golden State and Denver have met in the playoffs four times in six years and the results pattern is interesting: the team with superior health wins. Every series has been decided less by scheme than by which roster had its key players physically available across all seven games. In 2026 if these teams meet in the second round, Golden State's injury history and Denver's physical style of play creates a situation where the first team to lose a starter to a soft tissue injury will probably lose the series. That volatility is worth pricing into any playoff bracket prediction that involves both teams.
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Sixth Man of the Year 2025-26 โ the top three and why one stands out
The top three Sixth Man of the Year candidates going into the final stretch: Cleveland's bench scorer who is averaging 19-5-4 off the bench and has the most impactful plus-minus of any reserve player. Dallas' instant offense forward who provides position-less spacing and scoring, though his defensive metrics hurt the case. Oklahoma City's depth guard who may be the most important bench player in basketball relative to his team's success โ OKC's bench unit goes from average to below average without him specifically. My vote: Cleveland, because impact and efficiency simultaneously is the right benchmark, and he checks both.