Posts Tagged ‘Hornets’

EPISODE #83: Oh, Now I Get It.

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

 
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Okay, we know the segment last episode with Josh Levin had some audio issues.

We decided that the best thing to do was have him back on the show, in our first ever Make-Up Call. Ken joins in this time. New Orleans and the Hornets are discussed.

Ken and Dan also talk amongst themselves in regards to various excellent things other people wrote, such as this piece by Howard Beck in the NY Times, this post by Seth at Posting and Toasting, this one by Kelly Dwyer at Ball Don’t Lie, and this from Shoals at Fanhouse. Plus, a new twist on one of our segments, using the Pro Basketball Prospectus.

It all sounds normal. The audio part, if not the topics of conversation or the participants in said conversation.

Songs from the episode:

“Re-Ignition” - Bad Brains
“Once Again (Here To Kick One For You)” - Handsome Boy Modeling School
“Whatever” - Husker Du
“If You Don’t Get It The First Time, Back Up and Try It Again, Party” - Fred Wesley and the J.B.’s
“Another Batch (Play It Again)” - Madlib
“Never See Me Again” - Vivian Girls
“Try Again” - Big Star

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EPISODE #82: Technically, I Don’t Know

Friday, February 5th, 2010

 
icon for podpress  Standard Podcast [64:28m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Yes, we’re back. It was only Dan that left the country for a week, but still, now the show is back.

Dan checks back in with Ken, and they talk a little trade action. Then Dan does something that’s never been done on this show.

In the next segment, Dan talks with Josh Levin, of Slate.com, writer and host of the Hang Up and Listen podcast. Josh is originally from New Orleans, which gave them a chance to talk about the sports scene there (Super Bowl relevant!) as well as the Hornets (NBA Podcast relevant!)

We’ll be honest, there’s some static-y noise in the talk with Josh. We did the best we could about it. It’s probably Ken’s fault.

Songs from the episode:

“Come On Feet” - Quasimoto
“All Tomorrow’s Linoleum” - Autechre
“Perception” - Kylesa
“Ease Back” - The Meters
“The Saints Are Coming” - The Skids

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Dan’s on Twitter, loitering: @DanFilowitz

The Recency Effect

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

They warn us about it in corporate management training.  When evaluating an employee for a performance review, consider the entire body of work, and don’t be too heavily influenced by the things the person did most recently, positive or negative.

The same is true for evaluating NBA playoff series.

Too often, we make sweeping judgements about a series based off of the first game.  Like right now, how after game one of Celtics-Magic it looked like the Celtics were about spent.  Or after game one of Rockets-Lakers, how it looked like this would be the real big test for the Lakers, and maybe an upset brewing.

Of course, nobody should have been surprised that the Celtics and Lakers won game two.  And no one should be too surprised if those two teams manage to win their respective series in 5 or 6 games, without too much more trouble.

Sometimes, even against relatively well-matched teams, game one doesn’t prove anything.  It can be no more meaningful than one team having a bad game four on the way to a 4-1 series win.

But there is something about seeing a team in that first game that makes even normally intelligent and reasonable basketball fans lose their sense of perspective.  We want to believe that we know what’s going on, and that we have special abilities to predict outcomes based on not only what we’re seeing but how what we’re seeing fits into larger patterns, so we can project current reality into future results.

This gets further exasperated by those times where game 1 tells you exactly how a series will go.  Cavs-Hawks this year, for example.  Typically, it’s the game 1 against two unevenly matched teams where you can say with some certainty that if the lower-seeded team is over matched, they will not pull off the upset.  And it feels pretty certain that these Hawks aren’t beating these Cavs (especially with Horford, Williams, and Joe Johnson injured.)

But then, think about Celtics-Hawks last year.  Everyone predicted a Celtics sweep, and the Celtics blew the Hawks out in the first two games.  Then, all of a sudden, the Hawks take two in Atlanta and made it a series. No one saw that coming.

This can also happen when there are teams meeting each other while on different trajectories, ascending and descending.  The prognosticators in us want to take early results and make conclusions about the ultimate trajectory of the teams we’re seeing.  Take last year’s Hornets-Spurs series.  The Hornets come out and win the first two games handily.  This leads to a lot of “Spurs are done, Hornets are what’s new” stories.  The Spurs come back, take it to seven, and win.

So what’s the point of this?

Mostly that everyone who pretends to know with certainty what’s going to happen is only as likely to be right as someone guessing randomly about what’s going to happen.  In the NBA playoffs, the thing that you saw most recently is not necessarily a good predictor of things you will see in the future.

Which, you know, is good.  Otherwise what would be the point of watching?  It’d be no more fun than pressing ‘run’ on some computer simulation that doesn’t even have any cool pictures.

And this is fun.  I don’t know what’s going to happen in game 3 of Rockets-Lakers or Celtics-Magic.  I don’t know how the Nuggets will play on the road.  I’m not even that sure that Atlanta won’t win a game or two at home.  And I don’t want to know, until it’s actually happening.  I don’t feel like it makes me more or less of a fan to make a prediction early on and then turn out to be right.  I don’t care if I’m right.  I just care that I’m enjoying it as it happens.