- Hollinger’s power rankings that are the playoff-odds model's primary input are flawed in that they use total strength of schedule (“SOS”) rather than adjust it for the record of one's opponents on the road vs when they are home. As a result, with such an unbalanced home schedule as the Lakers have, the Lakers' SOS is misleading. If one adjusts their SOS accordingly, then LA's SOS is slightly higher than the C's and the Lakers' power ranking would a couple of points lower. The Lakers have played better teams, but they have played them at home.
Obviously, the Lakers schedule stands out, but other teams have unusual schedules too (e.g., the Suns). The model is biased even without knowing how adjustments are made to "regress to the mean". The Power rankings that are the primary input are flawed for a small data set that includes unusual outliers due to schedule imbalances. By season's end, this particular fault should be substantially diminished.
- One possible adjustment to "regress to the mean" that would hurt the Cs might be made to their road record. 12-1 puts the Cs on a record-smashing pace of 38 road wins. The current record is 33 wins piled up by the Bulls 72 win team. It would not be unreasonable to expect that the Celtics cannot win 38 road games as a simple projection of current road win% multiplied by 41 road games in a season. No one else has come close to 38 road wins. OTOH our home record is good, but nothing special and our SOS is low. Thus it's likely that if you adjust our road record downwards, then the Cs don't perform as well under the model as one might expect. How ESPN does this or even if they do is anyone's guess.