conns7901 wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
Boilermaker Rick wrote:
Besides the shot clock needing to be shorter I don't really see the problem here.
Obviously, offense is down during this specific season, but I previously posted the numbers that show the difference between the time it takes a college team to shoot and the time for an NBA team is really minimal. The fact is college teams actually use a much smaller percentage of their clock than NBA teams.
Their shot clock is 46% larger.
The last record in futility was set two years ago. Scoring has been bad for a decade.
From the article
Quote:
Since 2000, scoring has declined year-to-year 13 times and increased twice. Overall field goal percentage has declined six times in the last eight seasons. Before that, it had decreased just four times in nine years.
NBA scoring ain't what it used to be either. But this is a no-win argument. When NBA scoring is down, you're going to chalk that up to world class defense.
Here are some real numbers from the 2010-11 season:
The San Antonio Spurs led the NBA in three-point percentage at 39.7%. Northern Arizona led the NCAA at 42.5%. Limiting our comparison to “major” conference teams (which you’re more likely to see on TV than Northern Arizona), Ohio State led at 41.3%. This is likely due in part to the fact that the college three-point line is three feet closer to the basket.
13 college teams had three-point percentages higher than the Celtics.
The median college team (Northwestern State) shot 34.5% from beyond the arc, compared to 35.5% for the median NBA team, the Philadelphia 76ers. The worst college team, the Niagara Purple Eagles, shot just 27.5% for three, compared to an NBA low of 31.6% from the Toronto Raptors.
Boston led the NBA in field goal percentage at 48.6%. Kansas led college ball at 51.4% Six college teams out-shot the Celtics.
The median college teams (most notably Arkansas and tournament darling Florida State) shot 43.6%. The median NBA team, again the 76ers, shot 46.1%.
The worst college team from the floor was Alcorn State at just 36.9%, which is terrible. The worst NBA team (Milwaukee) crushed this, coming in at 43.0%.
It's really not like NBA scoring is so much more efficient than in college. To suggest that it is is simply wrong.