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Ten Stats that Every Basketball Coach Should Track

Ten Stats that Every Basketball Coach Should Track

This basketball coaching article was written by Oral Roberts University Assistant Coach Sam Patterson.

 

Before I talk about some useful basketball statistics that all college and high school coaches should track, I wanted to give a little background on myself. I have had the privilege of spending a good portion of my life involved in college basketball. The last 13 years I spent on staff at Baylor University, working for Coach Scott Drew.

I most recently took an assistant job at Oral Roberts University, joining former Baylor assistant coach Paul Mills in his first year as head basketball coach. During my tenure at Baylor, I spent four years as an undergraduate manager, two years as a Graduate Assistant, and the last seven years as the Video Coordinator/Director of Video Operations. I had the rare opportunity of serving under just one head coach, Scott Drew, for which I got to understand and know quite well.

Understanding your head coach and knowing what he or she values from his or her staff is an integral part of being an effective assistant basketball coach. There is usually a give-and-take when talking analytics within coaching staffs across the country.

Understanding what your head coach values will help determine which statistics are worth tracking and which statistics are a waste of time. Finding ways to effectively utilize my time and develop a workflow to save precious hours was one of the most valuable lessons I learned.

We took the time to chart all of these statistics during basketball practices and games. Naturally, the sooner you can communicate the results to your basketball players, the quicker and more effective their buy-in will be. Coach Drew always believed that if he could emphasize a teaching point and have a statistic to back up his claim, the easier it would be to get his message across to his players.

 

 

Offensive Basketball Stats you Should Track

 

Land on Two Feet

 

Paint Touches

 

Ball Reversals

 

Potential Assists

 

 

Defensive Basketball Stats you Should Track

 

Contested Shots

 

Consecutive Scores by an Opponent

 

FG% / DER

 

 

Basketball Rebounding Stats you Should Track

 

Offensive Rebound Attempt

 

Defensive Block Outs

 

 

Miscellaneous Basketball Stats you Should Track

 

3+ Players to Help Up a Teammate

 

 

Ten Stats that Every Basketball Coach Should Track Conclusion

Tracking basketball stats may not always be the most fun job in the world, but it can add real value to your team. It will allow you to emphasize better what is important to your team and promote better buy-in from your players. So make sure that you take advantage of tracking these ten stats in this basketball coaching article and begin to see a marked improvement within your program.

 

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