I have to admit it took my brain a moment to calibrate to what’s going on, but the more I looked at the more I liked it.
I like looking the team chart at the top where you can where each team was making runs and where there were dry spells. Player level is obviously a lot more sporadic, but you the flurry of 3s by Steph sticks out.
Thanks for doing this, it’s great!
Would be useful to see who is on the floor at each time stamp too.
I’d love to see this with one more thing: transparent-filled, translucent-bordered circles for missed attempts. That way we can see who the team attempted to utilize for scoring.
Also, the bottom graph is usually going to be better if you make it the score difference, not the cumulative scores.
4 comments
Made using a SAS program from data at [https://www.espn.com/mens-olympics-basketball/playbyplay/_/gameId/401694866](https://www.espn.com/mens-olympics-basketball/playbyplay/_/gameId/401694866) .
I have to admit it took my brain a moment to calibrate to what’s going on, but the more I looked at the more I liked it.
I like looking the team chart at the top where you can where each team was making runs and where there were dry spells. Player level is obviously a lot more sporadic, but you the flurry of 3s by Steph sticks out.
Thanks for doing this, it’s great!
Would be useful to see who is on the floor at each time stamp too.
I’d love to see this with one more thing: transparent-filled, translucent-bordered circles for missed attempts. That way we can see who the team attempted to utilize for scoring.
Also, the bottom graph is usually going to be better if you make it the score difference, not the cumulative scores.