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Monday, August 25, 2025

Raising Basketball Performance with OKRs

Structure helps outcomes. Better process, better outcomes. In Measure What Matters, John Doerr explains OKRs (objectives and key results) and how they transformed organizations both well-known (Intel, Google) and less-known (Nuna, MyFitnessPal).

OKRs provide transparency in setting and achieving goals, with the KRs (key results) measurable, trackable, and ideally scalable.

Recognize that less is more. Attacking problems with a hundred battle fronts fails. There's no way to plan, monitor, and fix each one because the approach is too diffuse.

Imagine you have the worst offense in the league and it's obvious from film review that two issues dominate, shot selection and turnovers. 

Each OKR has a target and 'measurable' key results

Our first objective listed is "Shoot better." The criteria are flawed because the first key result "shot selection" is semi-quantitative. Passing matters, recalling Pete Carril's quote, "the quality of the shot relates to the quality of the pass." Shooting percentage will depend on shot selection, better passing, and skill. Prioritizing passing also emphasizes the impact of teamwork. 

Every turnover is a zero percent possession, a shot nullified. 

Be granular (detailed) so that players can understand and comment, sharing their input.

In a business, quarterly and annual reviews measure impact. For a basketball season, more frequent measurement (e.g. monthly) makes more sense. 

As an assistant years ago, I tracked stats and told the middle school girls that we'd report team shooting percentage and turnovers. Tracking improved shooting percent by twenty percent and reduced turnovers by an even higher percentage. Players felt more accountable for shots and ball security. 

OKRs give teams a proven and measurable way to impact results. 

Lagniappe. Players don't want to let down excellent coaches.  
Lagniappe 2. Pascal Meurs shares a drill for finishing at the rim

Sunday, August 24, 2025

Basketball - Perception, Power, and Teamwork



Teamwork is hard won not freely awarded. 

Sport teaches life. Learning key lessons early can change our lives. When you read a book chapter, an essay, or a blog post, take a minute to ask "what did I learn?" Use 'critical thinking' to test the validity of the information.

Success follows not only performance but perception. If our performance is excellent but we are viewed as uncooperative or less collaborative, then career advancement will suffer. First impressions matter. People judge us on how we look and how we sound before they have objective data about our abilities. Eye contact and a firm handshake go a long way. 

First impressions are powerful, creating "thin slices" of truth. If we want visibility in a role, then be visible. A coach recently told me that a player was at practice over 90 minutes before her practice officially started. She wanted to get extra reps. Coaches may not see everything but they see a lot

The best way to earn a favorable eye is to make your boss look good. Your success rises with your ability to make your boss succeed. 

Enthusiasm and positivity count. To promote a player, emphasize and prioritize what she can do. Don't dwell on her limitations.

Advocate for yourself. When you want a bigger role, ask "how can I earn more playing time?" The answer might be "work on consistency" or "work on passing." When we don't ask, we don't know. 

Teamwork builds champions or dissolves them. 

An area high school team was favored to go deep in the postseason. Before the first playoff game, one player "stole" another's boyfriend. The team split psychologically and was eliminated in the first round. 

Years ago a college basketball program encountered a situation where a rift developed between the 'straight' and 'gay' players. They couldn't coexist and the team fell apart with several players transferring because of the broken culture. 

The 1999 UCONN Men didn't have the resume' or the cachet of Duke which entered the Finals on a 32-game winning streak with future NBA players. Duke featured Shane Battier, Elton Brand, Corey Maggette, Trajan Langdon, and William Avery on that squad. Brand was a top NBA selection, Battier 6th, and the others were no lower than 14th. Rip Hamilton was UCONN's most celebrated player and the only one drafted (7th) in the first round. Exceptional teamwork overcame star power. 

The 2004 Detroit Pistons had excellent players with Hamilton, Chauncy Billups, Rasheed and Ben Wallace, and Tayshaun Prince. But they didn't have the "conventional" star power usually seen in NBA champions. The Lakers had Shaq, Kobe, an aging Karl Malone, Gary Payton, and Derek Fisher. "Chemistry and commitment" can defeat superior forces. 

Stanford Professor Jeffrey Pfeffer has made a career studying, teaching, and writing about power. Power can be used for good or evil and advancing your career depends in part on your understanding of power. Inform people about your accomplishments without bragging. But as Hall of Fame pitcher Dizzy Dean said, "If you can do it, you ain't boasting."

Here's a ChatGPT Plus 'hallucination' (what AI does) in response to a 'prompt' about Professor Pfeffer. 

Jeffrey Pfeffer has built his career on studying and teaching power—how it is built, used, and maintained. In Power: Why Some People Have It—and Others Don’t, he distills decades of research into practical lessons. Here are half a dozen of his signature power principles:


1.Power Comes from Social Perception, Not Just Performance

Pfeffer argues that being seen as powerful often matters more than actual performance. People tend to equate confidence with competence, so projecting authority, decisiveness, and certainty helps build power. Those who wait to be “discovered” often never are.


2.Build a Strong Personal Brand and Reputation

Reputation acts like a form of currency in organizations. Pfeffer emphasizes visibility, recognition, and differentiation—ensuring others know who you are and what you stand for. He often cites that it’s not enough to be effective; you must also be known as effective.


3.Control Resources and Access

Power flows to those who control scarce resources—budgets, information, opportunities, or access to key people. Pfeffer stresses that resource dependence creates influence. By positioning yourself at points of leverage, you make others reliant on you.


4.Act with Boldness and Persistence

Pfeffer highlights that many people hesitate because they fear being disliked or making mistakes. Yet those who act boldly and persistently often win by default. He notes that over-caution erodes influence, while decisive action signals leadership and attracts followers.


5.Cultivate a Broad and Strategic Network

Powerful people rarely operate alone. Pfeffer insists on building diverse, deep networks across levels, departments, and industries. Connections expand access to information, amplify reputation, and create allies who can advocate when you’re not in the room.


6.Understand and Play by Organizational Rules—Not Just Ideals

Pfeffer pushes against naïve views of fairness. He reminds us that organizations often reward political skill, loyalty, and alignment more than pure merit. To succeed, one must recognize how power really works in practice—then align strategy to those realities rather than wishful ideals.


👉 Taken together, Pfeffer’s principles reflect a pragmatic worldview: power is not accidental, but something you intentionally cultivate through visibility, networks, and bold action.

Lagniappe. One way organizations underachieve is through "silos" as people hang with those like them. Upperclassmen with classmates and underclassmen with younger teammates. General Stanley McChristal achieved more in the Middle East intelligence community by breaking down silos. He shared this in "Team of Teams." 

 

Saturday, August 23, 2025

Basketball - "Stacking Days"

Whether building a house, earning a degree, or training, "stacking days" adds value. The analogy to "stacking bricks" in construction is obvious. 

Stacking represents:

1) The power of consistency - an excellent day is great; streaks of great days creates long-term excellence. 

2) The primacy of process, "Trust the process."

3) Compounding, a one percent daily improvement produces a 37-fold improvement over 365 days

4) Resilience - power comes from showing up every day. 

Classic examples of stacking:

Kobe Bryant, featured in "Relentless," worked by himself and with Tim S. Grover to become an unstoppable force winning five titles. He earned accolades both offensively and as an All-NBA defender. 

Tom Brady was drafted 199th in the 2000 NFL draft. His self-care with nutrition and recovery as well as his study habits were legendary. A Patriots' exec was leaving late around 730 and asked a custodian why the lights were still on. The janitor explained, "there's some guy named Brady in watching film." He rose from a depth chart "four" as a rookie to winning the Super Bowl in his second season. 

Serena Williams' career was the ultimate journey of 'stacking' from childhood through adulthood, winning  23 Grand Slam titles. She even won multiple titles after overcoming the grind of recovering from life-threatening blood clots. 

Lagniappe. "To inspire true commitment, leaders must practice what they teach. They must model the behavior they expect of others." - "Measure What Matters: How Google, Bono, and the Gates Foundation Rock the World with OKRs" by John Doerr

Lagniappe 2. Chris Oliver's advice of defensive rebounding... 

Friday, August 22, 2025

Basketball - Points to Ponder - More, Impact, and Cellphone Use

How do we use information? Is AI adding useful information or more? 

Life throws a firehose of information at us daily. Separate "signal" from "noise."

Author Fergus Connolly, a Human Performance Expert, writes an article about the Fallacy of AI. Performance isn't about acquiring the most information, it's about applying what works best for our organization.

Two points stand out for me:

1. Better is better

That's not necessarily more or less. It's better. Judge ideas on merit, not the source.

During the 2015 NBA Finals, 28 year-old Warriors video guy Nick U'Ren suggested to Coach Steve Kerr that video showed the Warriors might matchup better with a small lineup, Iguodala over Bogut. Kerr made the change and Golden State rallied to defeat Cleveland. 

2. Does it impact winning? 

Organizations become wedded to "that's the way we do it." If it wins, keep doing it. Brian McCormick wrote a series of Fake Fundamentals books exploring which traditional drills didn't impact winning and advised coaches to ditch them. 

One author suggested that players shouldn't use cellphones on game day because it changed their visual and mental focus. 

Here's the skinny from AI:

There is indeed a growing body of evidence—both experimental and observational—that suggests refraining from smartphone or cellphone use around training sessions or competition (e.g., game day) can help preserve athletes' focuscognitive function, and even performance. Here's what research highlights:


Evidence from Controlled Studies

1. Mental Fatigue & Decision-Making

  • A controlled study with professional male soccer players found that 30 minutes of smartphone app exposure led to mental fatigue and a significant decline in passing decision-making performance during simulated matches. The Physical Movement+8YSBR+8TIME+8The Guardian+4ResearchGate+4ScienceDirect+4.

  • In volleyball, young athletes using social media immediately before training experienced mental fatigue and impaired anticipatory effort. PMC+1.

2. Physical & Technical Performance in Footballers

  • Another controlled experiment involving adolescents found reduced physical endurance and worsened technical skills (like passing accuracy) after 30 minutes of smartphone-induced mental fatigue. DMT&E Center+12Efsupit+12ResearchGate+12.

3. Cognitive & Reaction Impairments Across Sports

  • A broader review emphasized that across sports—including football, volleyball, swimming, boxing—pre-activity smartphone or social media use leads to mental fatigue, which lowers decision-making accuracyslows reaction time, and increases errors. YSBR.

4. Training Adaptation and Long-Term Effects

  • In volleyball players over four weeks, those engaging in social media before sessions showed no improvement in decision-making metrics, while control groups (e.g., watching neutral content) did. TIME+14YSBR+14PMC+14.

  • In swimming, avoiding pre-training social media use correlated with measurable gains in endurance, race times, and cognitive control—results not mirrored by those who used social media. YSBR.


Mechanisms: Why Phone Use Can Be Detrimental

Cognitive Distraction and Mental Fatigue

  • Engaging with social media or apps involves rapid micro-decisions, emotional content, and fragmented attention—depleting cognitive reserves essential for game-time focus. YSBR+2Tuition Rewards+2.

Sleep Disruption

  • Evening phone use—especially screens or social media—disrupts melatonin production and sleep quality, which indirectly diminishes recovery and performance readiness. YSBRNature.

Cognitive Bottlenecks

  • Media multitasking (e.g., using phones while preparing for play) slows reaction times and impairs attention switching, reducing performance efficacy. Wikipedia.

Presence Alone Can Distract

  • Even just having a phone visible, without using it, can diminish performance on complex tasks—suggesting phones may remain mental distractions until out of sight. TIME+1.


Bottom Line: Does Avoiding Cellphone Use Help?

Yes—there is clear evidence supporting the idea that abstaining from smartphone or social media use before training or competition:

  • It helps preserve decision-making accuracy and cognitive focus.

  • It potentially ensures better physical and technical performance, especially in skill-dependent sports.

  • It supports optimal recovery and sleep quality, indirectly bolstering performance sustainability.


Practical Takeaways for Athletes and Coaches

  1. Implement “phone-free” zones during pre-game preparations and training warm-ups.

  2. Encourage downtime before key sessions—replace spontaneous scrolling with relaxation or mental visualization.

  3. Discourage evening phone use, especially on social media, to protect sleep and recovery.

  4. Remind athletes that even a visible phone can sap focus, so stashing it away matters.

 Lagniappe. Make work cool. 

Thursday, August 21, 2025

Basketball Advice that Players Will Never Regret

Target your audience. Today it's players. There's a lot to learn and the more you know, the more you realize there's much more to know.

Absorb and process a handful of truths.

1. "Do hard better." Skill development is hard. Conditioning is hard. Studying the game is hard. Make doing hard better a priority.

2. "Learn every day." Find resources to help you improve across a spectrum of sources - books, video, clinics online, leadership articles. 

3. "Find a mentor." Passionate athletes find people who want to help them develop. "Mentoring is the only shortcut to excellence." Ask. 

4. "Chunk" visual information. Chess grandmasters see a board and see relationships among the pieces. Basketball "minds" see 'setups' and read the play. 


Real-time, I saw a 1-4 high set with the wing at the top leaving and the wing at the bottom cutting, knowing this Iverson action would create a great shot. 

5. "Play with purpose." In Jay Bilas's "Toughness" article, he describes "set up your cut" as a tough action. Failure to set up cuts or to cut urgently is a major definition of offensive success or failure. Basketball is "a game of separation." If you don't separate you either won't get the ball or will be crowded on the catch. 

6. "Win in space." Your parents taught you not "to play in the traffic." Don't dribble into traffic or pass into traffic. Both play exactly into what the defense wants. If you "draw two" that opens a teammate. 

7. "The quality of the shot relates to the quality of the pass." - Pete Carril  Passers can lead players into open space or into trouble. Passes to the "shot pocket" allow the shooter better shooting conditions. Crisp passes open shots better than lackadaisical ones. 

8. "Think shot first." - Don Kelbick  If you're always ready to shoot, then you're always a threat. 

9. "Become a possession ender." Possession enders create scores and stops. Rebounds, steals, turnovers, and time end opponent possessions. Sometimes blocks and deflections do. 

10. "What is your primary skill?" Do more of what gets and keeps you in the lineup and less of what doesn't. If you don't know what your primary skill is, then you don't have one. 

Lagniappe. Simplify. What can we eliminate to become more successful? 

“A few extremely well-chosen objectives,” Grove wrote, “impart a clear message about what we say ‘yes’ to and what we say ‘no’ to.” A limit of three to five OKRs per cycle leads companies, teams, and individuals to choose what matters most." - "Measure What Matters: How Google, Bono, and the Gates Foundation Rock the World with OKRs" by John Doerr

Lagniappe 2. Stay abreast of new developments. This video shares what the author calls, "Three across." 


Wednesday, August 20, 2025

More Thoughts on Basketball Efficiency

What does 'efficiency' mean for a basketball player? There's the 'eyeball' reading and analytical metrics.

It makes sense that more positive contributions and fewer negative ones result in higher efficiency. I wrote about this first in 2015, although it was not a new concept. 

NBA and WNBA player efficiency calculations differ. ChatGPT explains:

The WNBA Player Efficiency Rating (PER) is a measure of a player's per-minute productivity, similar to the NBA's version created by John Hollinger. The WNBA does not officially publish PER on its website, but basketball analysts and advanced stat sites calculate it using the same core formula.

Here’s how PER is generally calculated (same as in the NBA, with WNBA-specific stats plugged in):


Formula (Simplified Overview)

The basic structure of PER is:

PER=1/Minutes×(Positive Contributions - Negative Contributions)×League Adjustment)

But in practice, it’s a very complex formula that includes:

Positive Contributions:

  • Points

  • Assists

  • Rebounds (Offensive and Defensive)

  • Steals

  • Blocks

  • Free Throws Made

  • Field Goals Made

  • Three-Pointers Made

Negative Contributions:

  • Turnovers

  • Missed Field Goals

  • Missed Free Throws

  • Personal Fouls


Complete Calculation (Highly Technical)

Hollinger’s original formula weights each action using statistical constants and adjusts for:

  • Team pace

  • League averages

  • Minutes played

The detailed equation includes terms like:

uPER=1MP[(3P)+23(AST)+(2FGM)+0.5(FTM)VOPTOVOPDRBP(FGAFGM)VOP0.44(FTAFTM)+VOP(1DRBP)(TRBOREB)+VOPDRBPOREB+VOPSTL+VOPDRBPBLKPF(lgFT/lgPF)]uPER = \frac{1}{MP} \left[ (3P) + \frac{2}{3} (AST) + (2-FGM) + 0.5 (FTM) - VOP \cdot TO - VOP \cdot DRBP \cdot (FGA - FGM) - VOP \cdot 0.44 \cdot (FTA - FTM) + VOP \cdot (1 - DRBP) \cdot (TRB - OREB) + VOP \cdot DRBP \cdot OREB + VOP \cdot STL + VOP \cdot DRBP \cdot BLK - PF \cdot (lgFT / lgPF) \right]

Where:

  • VOP = Value of Possession

  • DRBP = Defensive Rebound %

  • lgFT = League FT made

  • lgPF = League Personal Fouls

Then the league average is normalized to PER = 15.0.


Alternative: Efficiency (EFF)

The WNBA does publish a simpler version called Efficiency (EFF), often used by broadcasters and box scores:

EFF=(PTS+REB+AST+STL+BLK)(FGAFGM+FTAFTM+TO)

This is not PER, but a rougher and easier-to-calculate metric of total productivity.


Summary

MetricUseProsCons
PERAdvanced stat sitesAdjusted for pace, team, and leagueComplex and less transparent
EFFBroadcast & WNBA.comEasy to calculateDoesn’t adjust for pace or context

If you're tracking player impact in the WNBA and need a balance of accuracy and clarity, EFF works for casual analysis, while PER is better for deeper insights when calculated correctly.

If you wanted to apply one to high school or youth play, the latter is much easier.

How can we "be a scientist" not a preacher as a coach? 

"Possession enders" get scores and help get stops (steals, blocks, deflections, defensive rebounds). 

Inefficiencies show up as turnovers and high volume shooting without many points. Neither Hollinger PER or WNBA "Efficiency" show up as defensive rating. 

Here's a link to the most current WNBA stats ranked by Player Efficiency. Napheesa Collier had been the league leader but A'ja Wilson has slipped ahead. Note that Angel Reese is a highly productive fifth.  

Here's a link to current WNBA defensive player ratings, sorted by those playing at least 20 minutes/game. Individual defensive ratings will depend to some extent on team defensive rating. For example, Dallas trails Indiana by 6.3 points per game so comparing individual defensive ratings might take that into account. 

Analytics don't replace the 'eyeball test'. They add to it. 

Lagniappe. Maintaining relationships with coaches and players is a blessing. 

Lagniappe 2. Effort, unselfishness, body language, character...and you have to be a player... 

Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Stoicism and Basketball*

*Inspired by and modified from "The Daily Stoic" 

Professional sports, teams and individuals, embrace stoicism as a high performance strategy. Stoic philosophy comes from a Greek word ‘stoa’ or porch. Stoics were the “porch guys.” 

As Coach Bob Knight said, "the mental is to the physical four to one," competitive advantage flows from mental edges. 

Two famous Stoic practitioners stood at opposite ends of the spectrum - the Emperor Marcus Aurelius and the former slave Epictetus

Stoicism encourages virtue - courage, wisdom, justice, and moderation. 

Basketball: Basketball virtue manifests in different ways including "competitive character." 

Control what you can control.” Professionals control attitudes, choices, and effort. They don’t control what happens to them, but how they respond.

Basketball: When players enter the league, they commit to career development or sometimes to "The Life." It's hard to excel as a pro while burning the candle at both ends. 

Aspire to virtue.” Marcus Aurelius had overwhelming responsibilities as emperor. He chose to focus on good character, good intentions, and good actions.” 

Basketball: Virtue shows up in work ethic, humility, and temperance.

Self-control is a choice.” 

Basketball: In a physical sport, a narrow gap exists between stimulus (contact) and response (retaliation). 

Develop the fortress within. The Stoics called this the "inner citadel." He who is tested has the privilege of learning resilience.

Basketball: The basketball inner citadel is the metaphorical place where a player finds peace. 

The good of the many matters.” Marcus Aurelius shared the analogy of bees. What is good for the hive is good for the bees. 

Basketball: Stoic philosophy puts the team first. 

Set our standard. “Is this what the person I’d like to be would do?” Every day provides choices.

Basketball: Our choices and our habits define our destiny. 

A personal philosophy helps people with identity and performance, who we are and what we do. 

Lagniappe: (via ChatGPT Plus)

NBA Players & Coaches with Stoic Leanings

CJ McCollum

  • Context: The NBA guard CJ McCollum embraced Stoic philosophy after a teammate gifted him Ryan Holiday’s The Obstacle Is the Way.

  • Impact: The book helped him find balance between his personal life and professional demands.

Brad Stevens (Coach, formerly Butler & Boston Celtics Executive)

  • Approach: Known for his quiet composure on the sideline, Stevens models Stoic presence—he stays calm, focuses on what he can control (“the next play”), avoids emotional outbursts, and reinforces the “do your job” mentality of steady excellence.

Phil Jackson (Coach of Bulls & Lakers)

  • Though not explicitly Stoic, Jackson is known as the “Zen Master” for his integration of Eastern philosophy. His calm, meditative approach and psychological insight share substantial overlap with Stoic values of inner control, mental discipline, and composure.


Broader Professional Sports & Stoicism

NFL Coaches & Executives

  • Bill Belichick, Michael Lombardi, and the New England Patriots staff circulated The Obstacle Is the Way during their 2014 Super Bowl run. Similarly, John Schneider and Pete Carroll of the Seattle Seahawks passed the book around their locker room the following season.

Other Sports Figures

  • LeBron James and Kobe Bryant have been associated with Stoic practices, such as visualizing outcomes (including negative ones) and focusing on process over results.

  • Kawhi Leonard is often described as having a naturally stoic disposition: calm, measured, and unflappable under pressure.

Olympic Gold Medalist Speed Skater: Mark Tuitert

  • Tuitert credits Marcus Aurelius’ core Stoic principle—“what stands in the way becomes the way”—for transforming his approach after burnout and multiple crises. He went on to win gold at the 2010 Winter Olympics by focusing on what he could control and letting go of outcomes.

Greg Harden (Peak Performance Coach)

  • Though not Stoic in name, Harden’s mantra—“control the controllables”—echoes core Stoic teaching. He coached elite performers like Tom Brady, Michael Phelps, Desmond Howard, and NBA draft pick Nik Stauskas, helping them manage pressure and focus on internal resilience.

Lagniappe 2. Stoic principles include a bias to action. For example, Amelia Earhart became a pilot in an era with fewer opportunities for women. 

Lagniappe 3. A Stoicism infographic prepared by AI 






Monday, August 18, 2025

Basketball - Understand Military and Sports Parallels

"Never give an order that can't be enforced." - Gen. Wesley Clark in "American Military History" (The Great Courses)

Sport has war parallels, but war is deadly serious. Military experience teaches lessons about training, leadership, strategy, and operations. Preparation is paramount. Never ignore the hard-fought lessons from other domains

Lessons include impacts from politics, equipment needs, and leadership.

General Clark was West Point valedictorian and Rhodes Scholar earning an Oxford masters. He shared lessons he earned in class, Ranger School, and on Vietnam battlefields.

The first class discussed the rise of George Washington, an inconsistent journey, with experiences before and during the French and Indian War. He understood that North American fighting, a guerilla warfare, differed from European theaters warfare. Clark emphasized collaboration (multinational) and joint operations (land and sea).

What major parallels can coaches exploit? 

Training. An early advocate of proper treatment of his men was Russian General Alexander Suvorov. "The General Who Never Lost." An exception in his time, he treated troops well and taught, "Always forward." 

Individual and team development often define a coach.

Scouting. During General Robert E. Lee's greatest battle at Chancellorsville (VA) in 1863, he leveraged scouting to defeat Union forces despite being severely under-resourced in troops. His cavalry provided critical information about Union troop locations and movement. 

Even at lower levels, coaches can often access game video to anticipate opponent offenses and defenses, allowing strategies against top players. A coach told me that Lowell had a great point guard, the team averaging over 60 points a game in Middle School, winning by over 30 points per game. We used a modified triangle and two with a player covering her and rolling the other guard to that side to double. We lost 42-25 in a moral victory despite our top player out for the season. 

Leadership (Chain of Command and diffused). Many distinguished coaches had military background and experience. Coach Gregg Popovich coached at the Air Force Academy as did Coach Dean Smith. Coach Bob Knight coached at Army including coaching future Coach Mike Krzyzewski. Superior leadership training and experience is a proven edge. 

Basketball coaches can learn from military leaders with readings including "Extreme Ownership" by Jocko Willink. Without followers there is no leader.

Fire discipline (Rules of engagement, direct orders). In his biography, General Clark discussed the importance of fire discipline in Vietnam. Shot selection is always important in basketball. Get "more and better shots" than opponents with more shots for better scorers. 

Spacing. In jungle warfare or open ground, spacing changes with greater spacing in open areas. 

Spacing always matters in basketball. Chuck Daly famously said, "Offense is spacing and spacing is offense.

Force multipliers. Deepseek provides a wonderful comparison between military and basketball force multipliers. 

The concept of "force multipliers" in the military refers to tools, tactics, or strategies that significantly enhance the effectiveness of a given force without necessarily increasing its size. These can include technology, training, intelligence, or even psychological tactics that allow a smaller or equal-sized force to outperform a larger or more conventionally equipped opponent.

In basketball, the same idea applies—certain strategies, skills, or adjustments can dramatically increase a team's effectiveness without requiring more talent or personnel. Here’s how military force multipliers translate to basketball:

1. Technology & Intelligence (Scouting & Analytics)

  • Military: Drones, satellite imagery, and signals intelligence provide real-time battlefield awareness.

  • Basketball: Advanced analytics (e.g., tracking player movement, shot selection, lineup efficiency) and film study help teams exploit opponents' weaknesses and optimize their own strategies.

2. Speed & Tempo (Pace & Transition Offense)

  • Military: Blitzkrieg tactics or rapid deployment overwhelm enemies before they can react.

  • Basketball: Fast-paced offenses (like the "Seven Seconds or Less" Suns or the Warriors’ transition game) force defenses into mismatches and prevent setup.

3. Specialized Roles (Elite Shooters & Defenders)

  • Military: Special forces (e.g., Navy SEALs, snipers) execute high-impact missions with precision.

  • Basketball: Elite 3-point shooters (e.g., Steph Curry) stretch defenses, while lockdown defenders (e.g., Draymond Green, Kawhi Leonard) disrupt opponents’ best players.

4. Deception & Misdirection (Offensive Schemes)

  • Military: Feints, decoys, and misinformation confuse enemies.

  • Basketball: Play-action passes, backdoor cuts, and the Princeton offense use misdirection to create open shots.

5. Leadership & Communication (Point Guards & Coaches)

  • Military: Strong leadership (officers/NCOs) ensures coordination and adaptability.

  • Basketball: Elite point guards (e.g., Chris Paul, Jason Kidd) and coaches (e.g., Gregg Popovich) maximize team execution under pressure.

6. Home-Court Advantage (Morale & Psychological Edge)

  • Military: High troop morale and psychological dominance (e.g., shock and awe) can demoralize enemies.

  • Basketball: Loud home crowds, momentum swings, and clutch performances (e.g., Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant) break opponents’ spirit.

7. Versatility (Positionless Basketball)

  • Military: Modern warfare values adaptable, multi-role soldiers (e.g., Marines trained for air, land, sea).

  • Basketball: Teams like the Warriors and Heat thrive with "positionless" players (e.g., LeBron, Giannis) who switch defensively and create mismatches.

Conclusion:

Just as a military force uses intelligence, speed, specialization, and psychology to amplify its effectiveness, basketball teams leverage analytics, pace, shooting, defense, and leadership to outperform opponents—even with less raw talent. The best teams, like the best militaries, don’t just rely on size or strength; they maximize every available advantage.

Lagniappe. Focus on being effective, not cool. 

Lagniappe 2. How does time on the shot clock impact percentage?