The Lakers recently snapped a four game losing streak.
In that game Kobe, the league leader in field goal attempts and missed shots, had a season low of 14 points but a season high of 14 assists.
This makes sense to me since Kobe shooting less means more efficient players are shooting more. Kobe has a lower career true shooting % than Gasol, Howard and Nash (ranked 17,3 and 2 respectively).
Despite this he takes more than 1/4 of the shots. Commentators usually praise top scorers no matter what, but recently they have started looking at data and noticed that the Lakers are 6-22 when Kobe has more than 19 field goal attempts and 12-3 in the rest of the games.
This graph shows score differential versus % of shots taken by Kobe*:
Linear regression suggests that an increase of 1% in % of shots taken by Kobe results in a drop of 1.16 points (+/- 0.22) in score differential. It also suggests that when Kobe takes 15% of the shots, the Lakers win by an average of about 10 points, when he takes 30% (not a rare occurrence) they lose by an average of about 5.
Of course we should not take this regression analysis too seriously, but it’s hard to ignore the fact that when Kobe takes less than 23 23.25% of the shots the Lakers are 13-1.
I suspect that this relationship is not unique to Kobe and the Lakers. In general, teams with a more balanced attack probably do better. Testing this could be a good project for Jeff’s class.
*I approximated shots taken as field goal attempts + floor (0.5 x Free Throw Attempts).
Data is here.
Update: Commentator Sidney fixed some entries in the data file. Data and plot updated.
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