Posted by Iguana1 on 9/7/2012 11:28:00 AM (view original):
At one point Tarek said fatigue is based on possessions. But I really hadn't noticed the opponents being more or less fatigued when I changed my tempo.
In the past year I started looking a bit closer at the substitution patterns and there seemed to be more credibility to that (possessions=fatigue) than I originally thought.
The example I gave above was from one of my teams for the two most recent seasons. After any recent engine adjustments. The game plan really didn't change much. I ran the same depth chart each game. Ran slow tempo each game.
A reason I only looked at the first half was for the consistent starting point.
Second halves can contain some fatigue carryover from the first half, as well as the second half more often than the first turns into a rout which results in more liberal subs or at times they can turn into a foul fest.
I used a rough formula to estimate possessions. FGA+ (FTA/1.7) + TO - Off Reb
I broke the 60 games played into 4 equal groups of 15 games based entirely on the estimated number of possessions in the first half.
The 15 fastest paced games averaged around 65 possessions in the first half.
The 15 games with the fewest possessions averaged in the mid 40's.
I was somewhat surprised to see almost a lineal line between the number of possessions and the amount of time a player was on the court prior to being subbed out.
Besides FG attempts, what other changes did you notice. Since this about ST, what did you notice exclusively with press teams? If there is a ST penalty for being tired, those teams should succumb to it more than any of the other sets. In the fastest paced games if you have a decent sample of this, how did press teams fare ?