HarthorneWingo wrote:louisorr wrote:B8RcDeMktfxC wrote:The Knicks had 59 Offensive rebounds, the Hawks 40 Offensive rebounds over the series. I didn't look at the percentages - maybe the Knicks missed many more shots. But it's probably an illusion to think the Hawks did better on the O-boards than the Knicks?
wow, thats surprising. I guess I noticed the ones that ended in a Bogdanovic dagger more than the others.
@ B8Ro9p8*&)@!*T129%ckl,
Do you know what the conversion %s, respectively, on the ORB were?
I took the original stat from basketball-reference.
But I've just been and combed through the play-by-play and come up with some slightly different numbers. I ignore rebounds of shots at the end of quarters (1 sec or less left) and on shot clock violation misses. Make is a made basket before end of possession - or get to the free throw line. (In fact no one missed 2 fts after an off reb, so make always meant increase in pts total.) I think the discrepancy may be that bbref only includes player-attributed rebounds, whereas the play-by-play gives some "team" rebounds. (Lots of those are where a player on D fouls in the rebounding melee after a miss, but not all of them.)
However, the proportions are almost identical with the Knicks obtaining 50% more off reb than the Hawks by either method: we get Knicks with a total of 71 off reb and Hawks with 48 off reb by this method (as opposed to 59-40 by bball-ref)
Knicks made, Knicks missed, Hawks made, Hawks missed. By games and then the totals
Code: Select all
G, K+, K-, H+, H-
1, 9, 9, 5, 3
2, 7, 10, 2, 5
3, 4, 9, 3, 2
4, 4, 2, 1, 9
5, 9, 8, 10, 8
T, 33, 38, 21, 27
The Knicks conversion is thus 46.5% and the Hawks was 43.75%
I didn't do separate counts for 2s, 3s and FTs. But the conversion efficiency can't really be that much different given the Hawks low (comparatively) totals.
I didn't count rebound opportunities. However, you can make a rough estimate from the total number of missed shots.
Again using bbref (but this time there shouldn't be such discrepancy, I believe), the Knicks missed 240 shots (over the whole series) whilst the Hawks missed 236.
That's not an exact reflection of rebound opportunities: air-balls at the shot clock/shots at the End of Quarters are missed shots with no rebound opportunity, and missed last free throws are rebound opportunities without a missed shot. Nevertheless, it's a decent estimate - and the take home is that both teams had essentially identical numbers of rebound opportunities.