Wow, good point. I was going to post something stupid about being ranked #275 before I read your post. You saved me from an embarrassment.It folllows that we are #275 in off rbs when we are #1 in field goal %. It also follows that our off rbs would be higher if we missed more shots. So to some extent our rb numbers are affected by our excellent shooting. Glass half full view of it.
Is there a stat like offensive rebounds per missed shot / offensive rebound opportunity ? It is likely we would be fairly low on that also.It folllows that we are #275 in off rbs when we are #1 in field goal %. It also follows that our off rbs would be higher if we missed more shots. So to some extent our rb numbers are affected by our excellent shooting. Glass half full view of it.
You can calculate the percentage you’re looking for.Is there a stat like offensive rebounds per missed shot / offensive rebound opportunity ? It is likely we would be fairly low on that also.
Thanks for the calculation. Is there a point of reference for other teams in this regard?You can calculate the percentage you’re looking for.
1,070 total shots taken
. 551 total shots made
. 519 offensive rebound opportunities
. 169 successful offensive rebounds
169 / 519 = 32.6%
I don’t know. Try this siteThanks for the calculation. Is there a point of reference for other teams in this regard?
I would assume our "success" in getting rebounds would vary quite a bit based on
the " degree of difficulty " = in my definition: how many BIGS the opposition had in
the Post area. I don't question our rebounding intent but the swing between a tall
opponent and "shorter" group would be very hard to calculate with real meaning as
as a bundled figure. It might be more significant comparing how we do against ONE TALL OPPONENT
against how we expect to do against ANOTHER TALL OPPONENT. I think that I'll leave
that stat analysis to the BONEYARD savants and to GENO and his analytics team! GO TEAM, don't
overthink! score, defend, and show your UCONN CHEMISTRY!
The point of reference is irrelevant. The stat tells me that UConn gets an offensive rebound one out of every three missed shots. Combined with the nation’s number one field goal percentage and the high rate of forced turnovers, that is an unbeatable combination.Thanks for the calculation. Is there a point of reference for other teams in this regard?
I would assume our "success" in getting rebounds would vary quite a bit based on
the " degree of difficulty " = in my definition: how many BIGS the opposition had in
the Post area. I don't question our rebounding intent but the swing between a tall
opponent and "shorter" group would be very hard to calculate with real meaning as
as a bundled figure. It might be more significant comparing how we do against ONE TALL OPPONENT
against how we expect to do against ANOTHER TALL OPPONENT. I think that I'll leave
that stat analysis to the BONEYARD savants and to GENO and his analytics team! GO TEAM, don't
overthink! score, defend, and show your UCONN CHEMISTRY!
You can calculate the percentage you’re looking for.
1,070 total shots taken
. 551 total shots made
. 519 offensive rebound opportunities
. 169 successful offensive rebounds
169 / 519 = 32.6%