Ice Man wrote:MrDollarBills wrote:Aren't post ups viewed as inefficient shots analytics wise?
Very much so in the NBA. I haven't seen any studies of the WNBA, though.
So in general I've enjoyed the progression of this topic with you two and GG. My impression of things:
- Post-up do seem to be more efficient relatively in the WNBA compared to the NBA based on the volume & efficiency we've continued to see from players known for posting - Sylvia Fowles was a lock for well over 60% TS until the day she retired.
- But I think we've still generally see evidence that perimeter-led attacks are better for elite offense than interior-led attacks, and I'd note that this parallels the NBA prior to the modern era. Even before the shooting efficiency of post-ups fell off, the effectiveness of relying upon them as the focal point of your offense generally didn't work. There were of course players who were extremely effective leading teams in that role, but perimeter-led offenses have mostly been the dominant force ever since they widened the key to slow down Mikan.
- To elaborate on what I see as the fundamental problem with looking at shooting efficiency as the way to judge volume post-ups: The post-up scorer typically needs the ball delivered to them in a narrow band of places for them to go to work, and the defense knows this. So the defense can focus not just on defending the player once they get the ball, but in keeping the player from getting the ball when they are in their preferred position.
- Circling back to the WNBA being in the era where post-offense looks efficient by common metrics: I'd say so long as this remains the case, you're going to have folks who cling to more of an old-school paradigm. I'd say, for example, that the "death" of the post-up in the NBA accelerated not so much when it stopped being a wise approach, but when it become so much worse of an approach that it lost the superficial statistical advantage it had previously had.
- And it's possible this will never be the case in the WNBA. I'm not going to claim a definitive statement here, but I think that shotblocking in general is something that becomes a bigger deal in basketball with height, and we haven't actually seen the WNBA get dramatically taller in the past 25 years. If we go look at the highest season BPG seasons it's utterly dominated by two woman (Margo Dydek & Brittney Griner) who to this day remain utter outliers in a sport where 6'4" makes you a "big".
- That said, I don't see the trend toward 3-point shooting hitting a wall soon in the WNBA, and the Clark phenomenon will accelerate matters. In the end if shooters become adept enough from outside, 3>2.