Patterns of NBA team performance from 1950 to 1998
Mustafa Yilmaz and
Sangit Chatterjee
Journal of Applied Statistics, 2000, vol. 27, issue 5, 555-566
Abstract:
This paper examines team performance in the NBA over the last five decades. It was motivated by two previous observational studies, one of which studied the winning percentages of professional baseball teams over time, while the other examined individual player performance in the NBA. These studies considered professional sports as evolving systems, a view proposed by evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould, who wrote extensively on the disappearance of .400 hitters in baseball. Gould argued that the disappearance is actually a sign of improvement in the quality of play, reflected in the reduction of variability in hitting performance. The previous studies reached similar conclusions in terms of winning percentages of baseball teams, and performance of individual players in basketball. This paper uses multivariate measures of team performance in the NBA to see if similar characteristics of evolution can be observed. The conclusion does not appear to be clearly affirmative, as in previous studies, and possible reasons for this are discussed.
Date: 2000
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DOI: 10.1080/02664760050076399
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