Starting Lineup Math
Posted: Mon Dec 26, 2011 11:35 pm
I'm not sure why Corbin won't announce the starting lineup. Maybe he's been getting calls from the player's Moms asking him for more playing time for jr.
He says everyone on the team is good and deserves to start, so I did the combinatorial mathematics (yes, I actually have a brain with an education) on the 13 players the Jazz have using 5 at a time. There are 1287 possible starting lineups.
If the Jazz add two more players to the roster, then there will be 3003 possible starting lineups.
Given how much trouble it's been for Corbin, who has a degree in computer science, to pick 5 guys and actually speak their names, I'm guessing that KOC doesn't want to add any more players thus increasing possible combinations of starting lineups to confuse Corbin even more.
In observing Sloan, I'm guessing he didn't understand sh** about arithmetic, much less combinations and permutations. He just looked at the 15 guys on the bench and only saw one combination of 5 he called starters.
The formulas I used to calculate these numbers are unbiased. They don't have a relationship with CJ, for example, but Corbin does and often his relationship clouds the facts. Locke says that Corbin has said publically that CJ could be bonafide scorer in the NBA. Okay, so now we know Corbin has bonafide CJ blindness and doesn't know when he's chucking bricks and needs to sit on the bench.
I have not added any constraints to the basic combinatorial formulas to provide for CJ bias.
He says everyone on the team is good and deserves to start, so I did the combinatorial mathematics (yes, I actually have a brain with an education) on the 13 players the Jazz have using 5 at a time. There are 1287 possible starting lineups.
If the Jazz add two more players to the roster, then there will be 3003 possible starting lineups.
Given how much trouble it's been for Corbin, who has a degree in computer science, to pick 5 guys and actually speak their names, I'm guessing that KOC doesn't want to add any more players thus increasing possible combinations of starting lineups to confuse Corbin even more.
In observing Sloan, I'm guessing he didn't understand sh** about arithmetic, much less combinations and permutations. He just looked at the 15 guys on the bench and only saw one combination of 5 he called starters.
The formulas I used to calculate these numbers are unbiased. They don't have a relationship with CJ, for example, but Corbin does and often his relationship clouds the facts. Locke says that Corbin has said publically that CJ could be bonafide scorer in the NBA. Okay, so now we know Corbin has bonafide CJ blindness and doesn't know when he's chucking bricks and needs to sit on the bench.
I have not added any constraints to the basic combinatorial formulas to provide for CJ bias.