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Ultimate Franchise Standings Charlotte Hornets #83

Posted: Thu Oct 15, 2015 3:46 pm
by JDR720
Hornets rank http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/13845784/charlotte-hornets-roster-coaching-take-big-ultimate-standings-drops
Full rank http://espn.go.com/espn/story/_/id/13875380/ultimate-standings
Overall: 83
Title track: 112
Ownership: 84
Coaching: T88
Players: 101
Fan relations: 93
Affordability: 39
Stadium experience: 83
Bang for the buck: 40
Change from last year: -54

As the Hornets learned last season, what seems like a good idea -- like signing Lance Stephenson -- sometimes isn't. A borderline contender entering the season, Charlotte went 33-49 and dropped 54 spots in our rankings.

What's good

The Hornets have ranked among the NBA's best franchises in affordability for the past two seasons, thanks to a $30.60 game ticket (only 40 cents more than the cheapest in the league), $5 parking (the NBA's best deal) and a league-low $47.77 average cost per game (more than $30 cheaper than the NBA average). That also assists their bang for the buck rating, which, while it dropped from the previous year, is still among the top 40 in all of pro sports. Not bad for a team with a losing record and no superstar draw on the roster.

What's bad

No surprise for a team that hasn't made it out of the first round since 2002, the Hornets' lowest score came in title track, where, at 112, they're third worst in the NBA. At 101, their second-worst showing was in the players category, a 60-spot drop from last year. That was in large part due to the play of Stephenson, who had performed very well in Indiana but bombed in the Queen City after signing a three-year, $27 million contract. Factoid from the Charlotte Observer's Scott Fowler: Of every NBA player in history with at least 100 attempts in a single season from 3-point range, Stephenson shot the lowest percentage last year (17.1). So GM Rich Cho traded Stephenson to the Clippers in June.

What's new

Besides that big drop in the players category, fan relations also fell a whopping 63 slots, and coaching dropped 55, down to 88th overall. If anyone can increase that players score, it's Wisconsin star and fan favorite Frank Kaminsky, whom the Hornets chose as their top draft pick (ninth overall). Add Kaminsky to a stable of steady vets, including Al Jefferson and Kemba Walker (Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, who signed a four-year extension in August, now will miss six months with a shoulder injury), alongside fresh faces like Jeremy Lin, Nicolas Batum and Jeremy Lamb, and the Hornets could see themselves back on the right side of the standings next year. The ever-competitive Michael Jordan, who no doubt didn't like that 28-spot drop in ownership, is counting on it

Re: Ultimate Franchise Standings Charlotte Hornets #83

Posted: Thu Oct 15, 2015 4:14 pm
by Liver_Pooty
Jazz matching the Hayward deal was a killer

Re: Ultimate Franchise Standings Charlotte Hornets #83

Posted: Thu Oct 15, 2015 4:37 pm
by fatlever
What I don't understand is why our "fan relations" score dropped so much?

Re: Ultimate Franchise Standings Charlotte Hornets #83

Posted: Thu Oct 15, 2015 6:27 pm
by EwingSweatsALot
fatlever wrote:What I don't understand is why our "fan relations" score dropped so much?


All the death threats the organization sent fans and Stephanie Ready not letting LP take her out on a date.

Re: Ultimate Franchise Standings Charlotte Hornets #83

Posted: Fri Oct 16, 2015 2:24 pm
by floppymoose
from http://espn.go.com/espn/story/_/id/13875380/ultimate-standings

What's good

The Hornets have ranked among the NBA's best franchises in affordability for the past two seasons, thanks to a $30.60 game ticket (only 40 cents more than the cheapest in the league), $5 parking (the NBA's best deal) and a league-low $47.77 average cost per game (more than $30 cheaper than the NBA average). That also assists their bang for the buck rating, which, while it dropped from the previous year, is still among the top 40 in all of pro sports. Not bad for a team with a losing record and no superstar draw on the roster.



That's not very good analysis from ESPN. The prices are low *because* they don't win and don't have a superstar. Take it from a GS fan, who has seen parking go from $15 to $40 (!), and ticket prices double in 4 years. When CHA starts winning, prices will go up.

Re: Ultimate Franchise Standings Charlotte Hornets #83

Posted: Fri Oct 16, 2015 4:40 pm
by Flip Murray
If you can drop 54 spots in one season that means the rankings don't mean ****.

This is supposed to be a long term analysis it shouldn't have so much volatility. Typical stupid BS from ESPN just about the level of the "future power rankings", which are quite possibly the single dumbest invention ever.