Used
By Permission: Big Al McMordie
Posted on 02/11/2008 7:45 AM
By: CappersPicks.com NBA Basketball Handicapping
Staff
NBA Handicapping - Inside the Numbers, By Big Al McMordie
Feb. 11, 2008
As we pass
the mid-point of the NBA season, let's
take a look at some overall season stats.
What correlates more with success, a good
offense or good defense? Well, let's take
a look at the highest scoring teams in
the NBA: They are, in order, the Suns,
Warriors, Lakers, Nuggets, Jazz and Magic.
What stands out is that these are good teams
in the postseason race, all with winning
records. However, don’t get too carried
away with that, because usually that’s
not the case. Most seasons, the top teams
in scoring will be a mixture of good teams,
bad teams, playoff teams, those on the bubble
and those out of it.
Despite the
fact that they are all having good seasons,
you can't look at that group and say offense
is what makes them a strong team, with the
exception of the Suns and Warriors. Those
teams have been built round a unique style
of uptempo attack. Golden State shocked the
NBA world last season by upsetting the Mavericks
in the first round. They did it with an attacking,
uptempo offense.
Yet,
while the Suns have had that style for years,
they never have advanced to the NBA Finals
because of a weakness in other areas, such
as defense and rebounding. The Warriors experience
that, too, and after beating Dallas, they
were pounded on the boards by Utah as the
Jazz advanced.
Part of that is
what prompted the Suns to pull off the big
trade for Shaquille O'Neal, a controversial
move giving up a good player (Shawn Marion)
for a 350-pound, 35-year old center who is
rarely healthy anymore. O'Neal also brings
a different element to the Suns, and his
biggest benefit might bet that Amare Stoudemire
will stay out of foul trouble.
In six seasons
as a head coach, the post players in Mike
D'Antoni's fast-paced system have included
Raef LaFrentz, Jake Voskuhl, Jahidi White
and Steven Hunter – basically, nobody.
This move was more strictly for defense and
a weapon against the Spurs, who the Suns
can never beat in the playoffs. Defensively,
the Suns hope O'Neal can make up for Shawn
Marion's absence. Marion often found ways
to deflect passes in the lanes. Notice that
in last week's loss to the Hornets, their
first game without Marion, the Suns had one
steal in 58 minutes, tying a franchise low.
That only happened once with Marion, and
in that game Marion had the lone steal!
For totals players,
note that the Suns are 14-8 over the total
at home, the Warriors are 15-9 over at home,
LA is 12-11 over at home, while Denver is
12-12 over at home. So the top uptempo teams
are a combined 53-40 over at home.
Now let's examine the teams that have allowed
the fewest points in the league: The Celtics,
Pistons, Spurs, Rockets, and Hornets. From
that small group you have a collection of
the NBA's elite – and defense historically
is a larger factor in winning titles. That
appears to be what the Suns are thinking
(Phoenix is 6th worst allowing 103 ppg, while
Golden State is dead last allowing 107 ppg).
The Celtics
have been the biggest turnaround team with
Kevin Garnett, while the Hornets have been
the biggest surprise. Notice that Boston
allows 42% shooting by opponents, tops in
the NBA. Both have been outstanding on the
road, and note that New Orleans is 9-4 SU/ATS
as a dog! Strong defense gives dogs an excellent
chance to win or cover.
The
point is, the better defensive teams are
the dominant ones in the NBA and ones that
are likely to be in the NBA Finals or the
NBA Final Four. It's no coincidence that
last year's NBA Finals participants, San
Antonio and Cleveland, were dominant defensive
teams.
Here's a list of
the teams that have allowed the most points
in the NBA: The Warriors, Grizzlies, Pacers,
Nuggets, Sonics, Suns, Kings, Lakers, Bucks,
T-Wolves and Knicks. What stands out about
that group? Only a handful have a shot at
the postseason and most of them stink!
The best indicator
of defense is how opponents shoot against
them. Here are the 5 worst teams in the
NBA allowing over 46% shooting by opponents:
The Timberwolves, Heat, Bobcats, Bucks,
Knicks and Grizzlies. That's a lot of easy
lay-ups! What stands out about that group?
They're awful AND will be battling for
the top spot in the draft lottery. Defense
is key in the NBA playoffs and down the stretch.
It can also show up in great disparities
in spread marks. Bad defense can often mean
poor spread marks and more games over the
total than under at all times of the season. Good
luck, as always...Al McMordie.
Check out Al McMordies's Basketball Selections
Daily Here At CappersPicks.com >>
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