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Also, what was Kobe's?
I think Kobe's injured hand has had a huge impact on his game.
I'm not sure what's wrong with it right now, but try Hoopdata.com later and it will give you more than you'd ever want to know about a game.
On basketball-reference, you could look up his season PER tonight, then look it up tomorrow. Then calculate what the game's PER must have been.
(I've never done it because I just thought of it, but multiply tonight's average PER by the number of games, and tomorrow's average PER by the new number of games, subtract, and the difference must be the game's PER.)
If only the 21.4 were rounded to an additional decimal place, you might get a meaningful difference.
You're right to check the minutes--maybe minutes should be used in the calculation instead of games played, since PER is a per-minute stat.
Thanks. BTW, here's a good analysis of the tear Roy's been on:
http://www.blazersedge.com/2010/1/5/1234900/brandon-roys-streak
When the article gets down to comparing Roy to Bryant and James, I need comparisons to more players so I can see whether the differences are indeed as small as the author says. Stats per possession are skewed by the fact that 1) we have fewer possessions, so each one is more crucial, so he has slightly better stats per possession that Bryant and James out of necessity. 2) A 2nd reason they have more gravy train possessions is that they are on teams that spend more minutes per game having a bigger lead than we do, so more time is garbage time or at least low-pressure time.
wow barkley once had 36 points on 10 shots
