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Offensive proficiency rating or offensive productive efficiency is a statistic used in basketball to measure either a team's offensive performance or an individual player's efficiency at producing points for the offense by approximating the number of points generated by a team or individual over 100 possessions.
In basketball statistics, Offensive Efficiency Rating (OER) is the average number of points scored by a basketball player per shot taken. This includes missed field goals as well as free throws. The statistic stems from the previously created Player Efficiency Rating (PER). The per-minute rating was created by John Hollinger. Hollinger states ...
In theory, efficiency accounts for both a player's offensive contributions (points and assists) and their defensive contributions (steals and blocks), but it is generally thought that efficiency ratings favor offense-oriented players over those who specialize in defense, as defense is difficult to quantify with currently tabulated statistics.
The Nuggets have a 54.9 offensive rating in the 24 minutes Jokić has sat, and Russ has been on for 22 of those minutes, tossing up bricks. But it’d be foolish to blame Westbrook entirely.
Advanced basketball statistics include effective field goal percentage (eFG%), true shooting percentage (TS%), (on-court/off-court) plus–minus, adjusted plus-minus (APM), real plus/minus (RPM), player efficiency rating (PER), offense efficiency rating, offensive rating, defensive rating, similarity score, tendex, and player tracking. [4]
Offensive rating: 115.4 (15th) Defensive rating: 114.8 ... If the longtime NBA marksman has his druthers, the Lakers won’t be finishing 27th and 28th in 3-point attempt rate anymore. (Enter ...
Through the Cup semis, Houston has the fifth-best record and the seventh-best net rating in the NBA. A year after they won 41 games, the Rockets are on pace to win 53. ... the Rockets’ offensive ...
The NBA also posts to the statistics section of its Web site a simple composite efficiency statistic, denoted EFF and derived by the formula, ((Points + Rebounds + Assists + Steals + Blocks) − ((Field Goals Attempted − Field Goals Made) + (Free Throws Attempted − Free Throws Made) + Turnovers)). [2]