Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
http://www.nbaminer.com/clutch-time-stats/
Feel free to compare others.
Clutch Time: During the 4th quarter or overtime, with less than five minutes remaining, and neither team ahead by more than five points
Lebron James
2016: 7-21
2015:10-35
2014: 6-11
2013: 11-25
2012: 10-27
FG%: 0,369
Michael Jordan
1997: 22-50
1996: 20-39
FG%: 0,472
Kobe Bryant
2012: 7-23
2011: 3-12
2010: 13-33
2009: 14-34
2008: 15-31
FG%: 0,391
Dirk Nowitsky (2013 missing)
2014: 1-9
2012: 3-11
2011:15-28
2010:1-4
2009: 3-10
FG% 0,371
Kevin Durant (2015 missing):
2016: 4-20
2014: 17-33
2013: 9-24
2012: 14-28
2011: 12-27
FG%: 0,420
Dwayne Wade (2015 missing)
2016: 15-29
2014: 6-9
2013: 7-15
2012: 11-27
2011: 11-27
FG%: 0,467
It's always nice when stats allow you to back up your eye test.
Keep trying yourself with the above link.
What is remarkable is of course Michael Jordan's absolutely insane clutch scoring ability. Lebron is not even close.
What is also worth noticing is that unlike others I compared, Lebron is consistantly bad, the others have at least one season of being a top notch finisher, but Lebron is consistently a poor finisher.
Feel free to compare others.
Clutch Time: During the 4th quarter or overtime, with less than five minutes remaining, and neither team ahead by more than five points
Lebron James
2016: 7-21
2015:10-35
2014: 6-11
2013: 11-25
2012: 10-27
FG%: 0,369
Michael Jordan
1997: 22-50
1996: 20-39
FG%: 0,472
Kobe Bryant
2012: 7-23
2011: 3-12
2010: 13-33
2009: 14-34
2008: 15-31
FG%: 0,391
Dirk Nowitsky (2013 missing)
2014: 1-9
2012: 3-11
2011:15-28
2010:1-4
2009: 3-10
FG% 0,371
Kevin Durant (2015 missing):
2016: 4-20
2014: 17-33
2013: 9-24
2012: 14-28
2011: 12-27
FG%: 0,420
Dwayne Wade (2015 missing)
2016: 15-29
2014: 6-9
2013: 7-15
2012: 11-27
2011: 11-27
FG%: 0,467
It's always nice when stats allow you to back up your eye test.
Keep trying yourself with the above link.
What is remarkable is of course Michael Jordan's absolutely insane clutch scoring ability. Lebron is not even close.
What is also worth noticing is that unlike others I compared, Lebron is consistantly bad, the others have at least one season of being a top notch finisher, but Lebron is consistently a poor finisher.
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
- Heej
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
Obvious agenda is obvious. Obvious cherrypick is obvious. Move it along folks, nothing to see here. We've seen what a 90sgoat thread turns into.
LeBron's NBA Cup MVP is more valuable than either of KD's Finals MVPs. This is the word of the Lord
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
So in the three year stretch between 08-10, Kobe Bryant managed to shoot 50%, 40% and then 30% on these shots in consecutive seasons. Jordan himself sees a difference of almost 10% between seasons.
With your extensive statistical background, I'm quite surprised you're not familiar with the concept of randomness.
With your extensive statistical background, I'm quite surprised you're not familiar with the concept of randomness.
“I’m not the fastest guy on the court, but I can dictate when the race begins.”
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
lol if you find Lebron's 3 years prior to those posted.
MyUniBroDavis wrote: he was like YALL PEOPLE WHO DOUBT ME WILL SEE YALLS STATS ARE WRONG I HAVE THE BIG BRAIN PLAYS MUCHO NASTY BIG BRAIN BIG CHUNGUS BRAIN YOU BOYS ON UR BBALL REFERENCE NO UNDERSTANDO
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
selecitve stat selection is selective
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
Hmm, a LeBron agenda post? I'll play.
Here are my points to consider -
1. You're using playoff numbers, which are much smaller sample sizes than regular season sample sizes. A team plays far fewer close games in the playoffs than in the regular season, even if they make it to the finals. FWIW, LeBron has played 150 "clutch" regular season games in the past 5 years, equivalent to 30 "clutch" games a year. That's 23 more games (i.e. an entire finals-inclusive postseason) than your stats would indicate.
2. Playoffs are not only small sample sizes, but also heavily prone to context bias. It fails to account for opponent faced and quality of teammates - do you really think LeBron is going to have incredible clutch shooting numbers in 2014-15, when he was forced to do everything for those Cavs? Not only is his volume of shots increasing, but his team was also absolutely crippled and hapless without his presence against the league-leading defence of the Warriors, so that's obviously going to shatter his averages.
3. You're not accounting for free throws and 3 pointers at all. Akin to how we incorporate them via TS% in regular season analysis, the same should be done in clutch time. Aside from 2015-16, he had at a FTr of at least .500 from 2011-12 until 2014-15. His TS% over the past 5 years is 0.395, 0.443, 0.718, 0.602, 0.566. Remove 2014-15 (because that year is utterly unfair given the context) and his TS% is at 0.564 in the other 4 seasons. Against playoff teams (who traditionally have better defence than non-playoff teams) that's an excellent number.
4. Clutch play spans more than just "scoring in close games." James is an excellent clutch playmaker and defender, and heck, even a great rebounder (around 10 rebounds per game in regular season clutch stats the past 5 years). His approximated GmSc, which is a rough accumulation of box score stats, is 26.1 in regular season clutch games (643 minutes). The Brow has 28.7 (237 minutes) and Houston James Harden has 26.3 (622 minutes). Aside from that, LeBron beats everybody else. Clutch scoring is very important when we're talking about clutch statistics, but LeBron's scoring is already quite good in the clutch - but the rest of his game is excellent.
5. Looking at Engelmann's Win Probability, LeBron has a career score of 25.7, which trumps absolutely anybody in the post-2000 time frame and it's not even close. LeBron is arguably even better in clutch time than normal time, and I'd fully believe it, given his tendency to coast during the regular season. In fact, if you regress Win Probability against RAPM, the top 10 are -
Player / RAPM / WinProb / Change
LeBron James / 9.25 / 10.65 / 1.4
Kevin Garnett / 9.11 / 8.42 / -0.69
Tim Duncan / 7.27 / 8.19 / 0.92
Dirk Nowitzki / 6.85 / 8.14 / 1.29
Chris Paul / 7.55 / 7.95 / 0.4
Manu Ginobili / 6.82 / 7.52 / 0.7
Shaquille O'Neal / 5.3 / 6.76 / 1.46
Steve Nash / 6.36 / 6.57 / 0.21
Draymond Green / 5.95 / 6.53 / 0.58
Rasheed Wallace / 5.51 / 6.48 / 0.97
So, LeBron isn't half bad in the clutch the way you're portraying him to be, right?
In closing, if you need the "eye test" to show you what a clutch performance looks like, I'd like to refer you to this -
Here are my points to consider -
1. You're using playoff numbers, which are much smaller sample sizes than regular season sample sizes. A team plays far fewer close games in the playoffs than in the regular season, even if they make it to the finals. FWIW, LeBron has played 150 "clutch" regular season games in the past 5 years, equivalent to 30 "clutch" games a year. That's 23 more games (i.e. an entire finals-inclusive postseason) than your stats would indicate.
2. Playoffs are not only small sample sizes, but also heavily prone to context bias. It fails to account for opponent faced and quality of teammates - do you really think LeBron is going to have incredible clutch shooting numbers in 2014-15, when he was forced to do everything for those Cavs? Not only is his volume of shots increasing, but his team was also absolutely crippled and hapless without his presence against the league-leading defence of the Warriors, so that's obviously going to shatter his averages.
3. You're not accounting for free throws and 3 pointers at all. Akin to how we incorporate them via TS% in regular season analysis, the same should be done in clutch time. Aside from 2015-16, he had at a FTr of at least .500 from 2011-12 until 2014-15. His TS% over the past 5 years is 0.395, 0.443, 0.718, 0.602, 0.566. Remove 2014-15 (because that year is utterly unfair given the context) and his TS% is at 0.564 in the other 4 seasons. Against playoff teams (who traditionally have better defence than non-playoff teams) that's an excellent number.
4. Clutch play spans more than just "scoring in close games." James is an excellent clutch playmaker and defender, and heck, even a great rebounder (around 10 rebounds per game in regular season clutch stats the past 5 years). His approximated GmSc, which is a rough accumulation of box score stats, is 26.1 in regular season clutch games (643 minutes). The Brow has 28.7 (237 minutes) and Houston James Harden has 26.3 (622 minutes). Aside from that, LeBron beats everybody else. Clutch scoring is very important when we're talking about clutch statistics, but LeBron's scoring is already quite good in the clutch - but the rest of his game is excellent.
5. Looking at Engelmann's Win Probability, LeBron has a career score of 25.7, which trumps absolutely anybody in the post-2000 time frame and it's not even close. LeBron is arguably even better in clutch time than normal time, and I'd fully believe it, given his tendency to coast during the regular season. In fact, if you regress Win Probability against RAPM, the top 10 are -
Player / RAPM / WinProb / Change
LeBron James / 9.25 / 10.65 / 1.4
Kevin Garnett / 9.11 / 8.42 / -0.69
Tim Duncan / 7.27 / 8.19 / 0.92
Dirk Nowitzki / 6.85 / 8.14 / 1.29
Chris Paul / 7.55 / 7.95 / 0.4
Manu Ginobili / 6.82 / 7.52 / 0.7
Shaquille O'Neal / 5.3 / 6.76 / 1.46
Steve Nash / 6.36 / 6.57 / 0.21
Draymond Green / 5.95 / 6.53 / 0.58
Rasheed Wallace / 5.51 / 6.48 / 0.97
So, LeBron isn't half bad in the clutch the way you're portraying him to be, right?
In closing, if you need the "eye test" to show you what a clutch performance looks like, I'd like to refer you to this -
I use a lot of parentheses when I post (it's a bad habit)
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
Bad Gatorade wrote:Hmm, a LeBron agenda post? I'll play.
Here are my points to consider -
1. You're using playoff numbers, which are much smaller sample sizes than regular season sample sizes. A team plays far fewer close games in the playoffs than in the regular season, even if they make it to the finals. FWIW, LeBron has played 150 "clutch" regular season games in the past 5 years, equivalent to 30 "clutch" games a year. That's 23 more games (i.e. an entire finals-inclusive postseason) than your stats would indicate.
2. Playoffs are not only small sample sizes, but also heavily prone to context bias. It fails to account for opponent faced and quality of teammates - do you really think LeBron is going to have incredible clutch shooting numbers in 2014-15, when he was forced to do everything for those Cavs? Not only is his volume of shots increasing, but his team was also absolutely crippled and hapless without his presence against the league-leading defence of the Warriors, so that's obviously going to shatter his averages.
3. You're not accounting for free throws and 3 pointers at all. Akin to how we incorporate them via TS% in regular season analysis, the same should be done in clutch time. Aside from 2015-16, he had at a FTr of at least .500 from 2011-12 until 2014-15. His TS% over the past 5 years is 0.395, 0.443, 0.718, 0.602, 0.566. Remove 2014-15 (because that year is utterly unfair given the context) and his TS% is at 0.564 in the other 4 seasons. Against playoff teams (who traditionally have better defence than non-playoff teams) that's an excellent number.
4. Clutch play spans more than just "scoring in close games." James is an excellent clutch playmaker and defender, and heck, even a great rebounder (around 10 rebounds per game in regular season clutch stats the past 5 years). His approximated GmSc, which is a rough accumulation of box score stats, is 26.1 in regular season clutch games (643 minutes). The Brow has 28.7 (237 minutes) and Houston James Harden has 26.3 (622 minutes). Aside from that, LeBron beats everybody else. Clutch scoring is very important when we're talking about clutch statistics, but LeBron's scoring is already quite good in the clutch - but the rest of his game is excellent.
5. Looking at Engelmann's Win Probability, LeBron has a career score of 25.7, which trumps absolutely anybody in the post-2000 time frame and it's not even close. LeBron is arguably even better in clutch time than normal time, and I'd fully believe it, given his tendency to coast during the regular season. In fact, if you regress Win Probability against RAPM, the top 10 are -
Player / RAPM / WinProb / Change
LeBron James / 9.25 / 10.65 / 1.4
Kevin Garnett / 9.11 / 8.42 / -0.69
Tim Duncan / 7.27 / 8.19 / 0.92
Dirk Nowitzki / 6.85 / 8.14 / 1.29
Chris Paul / 7.55 / 7.95 / 0.4
Manu Ginobili / 6.82 / 7.52 / 0.7
Shaquille O'Neal / 5.3 / 6.76 / 1.46
Steve Nash / 6.36 / 6.57 / 0.21
Draymond Green / 5.95 / 6.53 / 0.58
Rasheed Wallace / 5.51 / 6.48 / 0.97
So, LeBron isn't half bad in the clutch the way you're portraying him to be, right?
In closing, if you need the "eye test" to show you what a clutch performance looks like, I'd like to refer you to this -
What's stunning is that you have the variance of posting quality between Bad Gatorade and 90sgoat on the same thread.
lessthanjake wrote:Kyrie was extremely impactful without LeBron, and basically had zero impact whatsoever if LeBron was on the court.
lessthanjake wrote: By playing in a way that prevents Kyrie from getting much impact, LeBron ensures that controlling for Kyrie has limited effect…
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
- Joao Saraiva
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
90s goat it was a nice try. Keep on trying man...
What a slap in the face with Bad Gatorade's post.
Don't worry, if you make 2023139210 threads trying to bring down LeBron at least in one you might have some type of valid point. Keep looking.
What a slap in the face with Bad Gatorade's post.
Don't worry, if you make 2023139210 threads trying to bring down LeBron at least in one you might have some type of valid point. Keep looking.
“These guys have been criticized the last few years for not getting to where we’re going, but I’ve always said that the most important thing in sports is to keep trying. Let this be an example of what it means to say it’s never over.” - Jerry Sloan
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
Joao Saraiva wrote:90s goat it was a nice try. Keep on trying man...
What a slap in the face with Bad Gatorade's post.
Don't worry, if you make 2023139210 threads trying to bring down LeBron at least in one you might have some type of valid point. Keep looking.
No it wasn't a good try. His more recent attempts at least forced you to navigate through a lot of off-ball decoy action to get to the main play. In this one it looks like he's just given up all pretence of subtlety and decided to run a straight iso.

Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
- eminence
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
Bad Gatorade wrote:.
A) Good post, again.
B) Any chance you have Engleman's win probability stuff laying around somewhere and would be able to pass it on?
I bought a boat.
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
Lol BadGatorade, all I heard from you was ignoring stats.
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
Wow, don't know how LeBron somehow got so bad in the clutch. I suspect that these stats are BS accumulated by a notorious LeBron hater.
UncleDrew wrote: I get Buckets!
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
There's better ways to attack Lebron than in the clutch .Skip Bayless! Lol
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
Bad Gatorade wrote:Hmm, a LeBron agenda post? I'll play.
Here are my points to consider -
1. You're using playoff numbers, which are much smaller sample sizes than regular season sample sizes. A team plays far fewer close games in the playoffs than in the regular season, even if they make it to the finals. FWIW, LeBron has played 150 "clutch" regular season games in the past 5 years, equivalent to 30 "clutch" games a year. That's 23 more games (i.e. an entire finals-inclusive postseason) than your stats would indicate.
There's no such thing as a clutch regular season game.....maybe if you fight for a playoff spot but let's face it Lebron never really had to throughout his career.. i don't care that he made a game winner in sacramento in march that's not clutch scoring to me...
Bad Gatorade wrote:2. Playoffs are not only small sample sizes, but also heavily prone to context bias. It fails to account for opponent faced and quality of teammates - do you really think LeBron is going to have incredible clutch shooting numbers in 2014-15, when he was forced to do everything for those Cavs? Not only is his volume of shots increasing, but his team was also absolutely crippled and hapless without his presence against the league-leading defence of the Warriors, so that's obviously going to shatter his averages.
Sounds like you're conceding he's not the best of clutch scorer already...otherwise you wouldn't use this sorry excuse as to why his numbers aren't all that
Bad Gatorade wrote:3. You're not accounting for free throws and 3 pointers at all. Akin to how we incorporate them via TS% in regular season analysis, the same should be done in clutch time. Aside from 2015-16, he had at a FTr of at least .500 from 2011-12 until 2014-15. His TS% over the past 5 years is 0.395, 0.443, 0.718, 0.602, 0.566. Remove 2014-15 (because that year is utterly unfair given the context) and his TS% is at 0.564 in the other 4 seasons. Against playoff teams (who traditionally have better defence than non-playoff teams) that's an excellent number.
Good point...i agree wholeheartedly we should look a TS% but that would penalize him as he's not the best foul shooter....and explain me how does it make sense to remove 2014-2015? Should we remove the game winner he had against chicago too?
Bad Gatorade wrote:4. Clutch play spans more than just "scoring in close games." James is an excellent clutch playmaker and defender, and heck, even a great rebounder (around 10 rebounds per game in regular season clutch stats the past 5 years). His approximated GmSc, which is a rough accumulation of box score stats, is 26.1 in regular season clutch games (643 minutes). The Brow has 28.7 (237 minutes) and Houston James Harden has 26.3 (622 minutes). Aside from that, LeBron beats everybody else. Clutch scoring is very important when we're talking about clutch statistics, but LeBron's scoring is already quite good in the clutch - but the rest of his game is excellent.
This isn't up for debate and anyone who's arguing to the contrary is a fool.. he's a formidable well rounded player who makes the right decision almost everytime
Look....nobody said he wasn't a clutch player he's at the very least a neutral (which is all you can ask for).......the point being made is that he's not an optimal choice for late game isolation scoring situation....Is it so hard to recognize? like i said he's not perfect and that's one of his biggest flaw as a player that only the most blinded stans fail to acknowledge
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
Kendrick Perkins
2014: 2-2
2012: 3-5
2011: 2-3
2010: 1-2
2009: 6-8
Overall clutch FG%: 70%
Kendrick Perkins: Clutch GAWD
2014: 2-2
2012: 3-5
2011: 2-3
2010: 1-2
2009: 6-8
Overall clutch FG%: 70%
Kendrick Perkins: Clutch GAWD
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
Lol just lol at saying we shouldn't use 2015-2015 because "Lebron had to do it all".
This is the final stats of Bulls in 98 playoffs:
Pip: .410/.231 - 15ppg
Kukoc: .500 - 15ppg
Ron Harper: .364 - 5ppg
Longley: .444 - 5ppg
Should we not use MJs ridicolous clutch scoring in that series?
This is the final stats of Bulls in 98 playoffs:
Pip: .410/.231 - 15ppg
Kukoc: .500 - 15ppg
Ron Harper: .364 - 5ppg
Longley: .444 - 5ppg
Should we not use MJs ridicolous clutch scoring in that series?
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
90sgoat wrote:Lol just lol at saying we shouldn't use 2015-2015 because "Lebron had to do it all".
This is the final stats of Bulls in 98 playoffs:
Pip: .410/.231 - 15ppg
Kukoc: .500 - 15ppg
Ron Harper: .364 - 5ppg
Longley: .444 - 5ppg
Should we not use MJs ridicolous clutch scoring in that series?
Jordan has never had his 2 best teammates being injured as it was the case with Lebron in 2015.
Also against the pacers in 2013, after LeBron, the 3 best players in this series were 3 players of the pacers, but LeBron has still win the series.
Big difference between being OUT than having teammates not played well
Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
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Re: Clutch Time 4th Quarter Scoring
Not sure why folks call agenda. it looks like jordan/wade/and Durant are tops(didn't open link). So because lebron isn't painted in the best light then there must be an agenda? No stat is perfect and unless he made up the numbers I'm still not seeing what he's doing wrong.