Posted by jayhawks2130 on 12/27/2010 4:06:00 AM (view original):
not even gonna get into an arguement with people you should know that if your in foul trouble it doesnt effect your defensive rebouding ability AT ALL, i still dont see how anyone on his team could outrebound my player.
So you agree that foul trouble affects your offensive rebounding ability? If you agree to that, then all we have to do is to explain the defensive rebounding, correct?
Now think about how a fullcourt press works. You played basketball in college, you should know that when you run a fullcourt press all game, it hinders your defensive rebounding ability. Once the other team breaks the press, it generally leads to a 3 on 2 or 2 on1 situation, which means the offensive team has the rebounding advantage. At worst, it's a 3 on 3 once they break the press since you have 2 guys trying to trap the guy with the ball. When it becomes a quick 3 on 3, rebounding becomes pretty balanced since you are not boxing out as often. So that lowers some of your defensive rebounds.
And when your opponent is scoring via free throws, it eliminates alot of defensive rebounds. He took 45 free throws, or somewhere equivalent to 20-25 offensive possessions. Sure he missed 9 of them, but I didn't check whether they were the first shot or the 2nd shot. Suppose a team shoots 50% under this new engine, by allows your opponent to have 23 possessions worth of shots in free throws, you eliminated 11-12 defensive rebounding opportunities. Now let's assume half of the 9 misses, or 5, are on 2nd shots. So in reality, your fouls eliminated 12-5= 7 defensive rebounding opportunities.
Now throw in the fact that your guy got into foul trouble, which probably means he was involved in alot of plays when he was the guy pressing/trapping the one with the ball. This means if once the other team breaks the press, he would most likely not be involved in the 3on 2, 2 on 1, or the 3 on 3 on defense. This means he probably isn't even near the rim once the other team takes the shot. If he's not near the rim, how is he suppose to grab alot of defensive rebounds?
So there you go, the reasons why this guy had 0 rebounds in 11min. He was in foul trouble, so he can't rebound as aggressively on the offensive end, which from your post, you agree with.
Defensive rebounds are also 0 because you press alot, giving up any rebounding edge you have on the defensive end. Fouled ALOT, which means you eliminated defensive rebound opportunities. And your guy was involved in the press, so once press breaks, he isn't in position to grab a defensive rebound.
And is it really that absurd for a guy to have an off night and grab 0 rebound, much less 0 rebound in 11min?
Kevin Garnett had 2 rebounds in 30+ min on Nov 19th.
Amare had 3x 4 reb nights when he had over 30min.
Chris Bosh had 1 reb in 26 min, and then another 1 reb game 2 games later where he played 33 min.
Shaq just had a 1 reb game against the Magic
These are just a few big man who I think are the top rebounders on their team, and voila, have extremely poor rebounding nights. If you convert their skill into ratings for this game, where would it be. Ath = 80-100, reb= 80-100 as well? If these guys can have off nights and grab 1 reb in 33min, what makes your guy so special that he can't grab 0 rebound in 11min, running a full court press, while in foul trouble?
And not trying to beat a deadhorse, how well do you think a guy can box out after running a marathon? Probably not very good, right? Stamina, or in real life fatigue, invariably affects the skill of an athlete in all aspects of the game, whether it be MJ's ability to do the free throw dunk, Jamarcus Russel's 80 yard bomb during the Combines, or getting a defensive rebound via boxing out. I don't think stamina affected your player here since he only played 11min, but if there is a player with stamina of 1, no way should he be able to grab defensive rebounds as effectively as a guy with stamina = 100 late in the game.