The C's are on pace for ~60 wins. I can handle a game like this, against a good team, on the road, on the second night of a back-to-back, with no bigs.
I guess what also bothers me is the NBA's scheduling. The season is still young and Boston's already had three back-to-backs, if my memory is correct. And there's the Lakers coasting with a cupcake schedule so far. Maybe everything will balance out in the end, but I don't know, will it? Does every team end up playing the same number of back-to-backs?
http://basketbawful.blogspot.com/2010/11/unnecessarily-comprehensive-and-overdue.html
links to a
A bunch of spreadsheets and such on the schedule this year
the celtics play 13 back to backs this year but no 4 in 5 nights
13 seems like on the lower end, 15 seems to be the most common number. Also learned a new acronym SEGABABA SEcond GAme of a BAck to BAck
Thanks for posting this, TP. Hard to understand at first glance but this guy did a nice job on the details.
Column F is the raw # of B2Bs for a team regardless of the opponent's B2B status or home/away. Lakers have the least at 15, Celtics have 19, and the Hawks, Bulls, and Bucks have 23.
Column G is when your team has a B2B and the opponent is rested; Column I is when your team is rested and the opponent is on the B2B.
Seems amazing the huge difference between the numbers for when your team is rested but your opponent is on the 2nd day of the B2B:
Suns 20, Celtics 14, LA 9, Knicks just 6 (a factor of -3.3X).
Celtics actually have one 4 games in 5 nights stretch this season according to column L, but have 4 opponents on the 4 in 5, to lead the league in 4-in-5 margin...
Interesting also is the B2B margin (how many B2B's your team has vs your opponents) - the Celtics have 1 more, but the differences are again significant with the most being +7 for the Suns and Thunder and the Knicks at -8.
Knicks appear to have the toughest schedule.