Warrior's regular season record
PostPosted:Sat Apr 02, 2016 9:45 pm
Since Warriors actually have a legitimate shot at breaking the Bull's 72 wins in regular season record there's a lot of buzz. What I don't get is all the guys, including the players/analysts/whatever that are saying championship matters more than records, and someone will always bring up that nobody remembers the Patriots when they choked in Superbowl despite being 16-0. It's like by mentioning that shows you do remember they went 16-0 and choked at Superbowl, and I sure have no idea who won the Superbowl that year but I know the Patriots choked after going 16-0. These things aren't even an either/or proposition to begin with, as in there's no guaranteed not going 16-0 means you win the Superbowl. I guess you can frame it as an either/or question if say some team was going for a record hardcore and then have someone injured for the season, but I don't know of any team that's actually dumb enough to do that. The only thing I can think of was one year the Showtime Laker had some hardcore practice for a finals they're expected to win and then I think Magic Johnson and a few guys got injured during practice and they end up losing the finals, and that's got nothing to do with going for a record and it does illustrate how dumb you'd have to be to have something like that happen in the first place.
As a sidenote, the Warrior's dominance is forcing the analytics guys to come up with reason explaining why the Warriors are that dominant because they actually fall behind Spurs in point differential which I guess is supposed to be the Holy Grail of analytics. I mean, the Spurs are likely historically great, but the Warrior's record is currently unprecedented, and if you listen to the analytics it's supposed to be the Spurs that are chasing for 73 wins even though they obviously have no shot at that record. I get that points differential is probably a very good starting place for team strength, but I think Spurs pretty much run up the score similar to how in college football back when the automatic rankings use margin of victory as part of the ranking and you see people run up the score on purpose. Of course, I doubt Spurs are doing that to appear more powerful in some hypothetical ranking, but they literally have a ton of relatively old guys who are chasing rings who are actually pretty decent and want to prove they still got it, so the Spurs's second unit tends to continue to build a lead even after a game is decided, while Warrior's bench is pretty average and generally doesn't expand a lead because there's no reason to play that aggressively while you're already ahead by 15. Obviously having a strong bench helps, though both traditional stuff and analytics tend to agree that a strong bench is overrated in playoffs just because the starters play more at that point.
As a sidenote, the Warrior's dominance is forcing the analytics guys to come up with reason explaining why the Warriors are that dominant because they actually fall behind Spurs in point differential which I guess is supposed to be the Holy Grail of analytics. I mean, the Spurs are likely historically great, but the Warrior's record is currently unprecedented, and if you listen to the analytics it's supposed to be the Spurs that are chasing for 73 wins even though they obviously have no shot at that record. I get that points differential is probably a very good starting place for team strength, but I think Spurs pretty much run up the score similar to how in college football back when the automatic rankings use margin of victory as part of the ranking and you see people run up the score on purpose. Of course, I doubt Spurs are doing that to appear more powerful in some hypothetical ranking, but they literally have a ton of relatively old guys who are chasing rings who are actually pretty decent and want to prove they still got it, so the Spurs's second unit tends to continue to build a lead even after a game is decided, while Warrior's bench is pretty average and generally doesn't expand a lead because there's no reason to play that aggressively while you're already ahead by 15. Obviously having a strong bench helps, though both traditional stuff and analytics tend to agree that a strong bench is overrated in playoffs just because the starters play more at that point.