Bgil wrote:This is an example of a minor change in emphasis couple with some misdirection. No question that Kobe's offensive rebounding went way down in the playoffs -- probably due to the emphasis on getting back that you describe. To suggest that this affected his scoring is absurd. In fact, he shot more frequently in the series against Phoenix than he did during the regular season, and scored about as many points. What he did against Phoenix was get fewer assists and commit more turnovers -- up nearly a full turnover per 40 minutes.
1. Not sure where you got your stats from but:
2005-2006 Regular season against the Suns:
Game 1: 11 for 28 43 points
Game 2: 19 for 33 - 51 points
Game 3: 12 for 33 - 37 points
Game 4: 13 for 26 39 points
In the playoffs he had 145 shots in 7 games which is only about 20 shots per game vs 30 shots in the regular season. Just under 4 apg in the regular season vs 5.1 in the playoffs. fg% was 45.8 in the regular season and 49.7% in the playoffs. Defensive rebounding went up, offensive rebounding went down. Overall scoring went down from 42.5 per game in the regular season to about 28ppg. FTA's were 14 per game in the regular season and 7 per game in the playoffs.
He shot the ball less frequently but more efficiently. His assists and turnovers went up. Obviously the strategy to shift the scoring to the frontline affected Kobe's box score production.
2. The entire series is on Youtube so there's no need to speculate about what happened based on the box score. You can actually witness it for yourself. Game footage > box score + calculator anyday.
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_q ... arch_type=
I was talking about the regular season/playoffs from last season -- 2006-2007.
For LAST SEASON, here's the breakdown on Kobe's shooting attempts.
Regular season -- 26.9 fga per 48 minutes
Reg. season vs. PHX -- 28.9 fga per 48 minutes
Playoffs vs. PHX -- 29.2 fga per 48 minutes
29.2 is MORE than 26.9 or 28.9 (albeit 29.2 and 28.9 are pretty close to each other). This would suggest that in 2006-2007, Kobe's role did not change from regular season to playoffs.
In 05-06, Kobe did indeed take significantly fewer shots (31.8 per 48 in the regular season vs. 22.2 per 48 in the playoffs). He shot the ball better in the playoffs than he did in the regular season (except from the free throw line), but grabbed more rebounds and had more assists. His turnovers also went up while steals and blocks declined. And (kinda interesting), this was one of his better playoffs according to Win Score. His Win Score in 05-06 was 83% of his regular season mark -- a lesser decline in his overall production than he normally has in the playoffs.