The Clippers have moved from nonbelievers to skeptics over the past year.
With new owner Steve Ballmer's willingness to spend, the Clippers hired Jud Winton as director of analytics and former Houston Rockets intern Greg Peim. Assistant director of scouting Jason Piombetti, who previously was the team's liaison to the analytics community, is also a believer.
The problem is the lack of buy-in from coach Doc Rivers, who is also the president of basketball operations, running the front office along with Kevin Eastman, Dave Wohl and former general manager Gary Sacks. None of the four has demonstrated much faith in basketball analytics, although Rivers has become an enthusiastic champion of Harvard professor Dr. Charles Czeisler's research on the value of sleep for NBA players. He's built the team's schedule around Czeisler's insights.
On the player acquisition side, the Clippers have tended to go after players with poor numbers who are overrated based on Rivers' experience with them. Byron Mullens, who had 25 points and 18 rebounds against the Celtics in 2012-13, signed with the Clippers the following season. That pattern has continued with the acquisition of former Celtic Glen Davis, former Eastern Conference stars Danny Granger, Antawn Jamison and Hedo Turkoglu and, most recently and infamously, Doc Rivers' son Austin Rivers.
With their new staff, the Clippers could rise in our ratings in the future, but only if their analytics efforts aren't undone by Rivers and a skeptical front office.
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Disappointing, and confirms my suspicions that this franchise is still too out-of-touch with the modern NBA. Let's hope Ballmer can change things in this regard. That being said, at least the Clippers aren't as bad as my Chargers
