Rank |
Team |
Adj. Win % |
Weekly Rank Change |
1 |
Boston |
.808 |
+2 |
2 |
Minnesota |
.798 |
+3 |
3 |
Denver |
.764 |
-2 |
4 |
Philadelphia |
.736 |
-- |
5 |
Dallas |
.646 |
-3 |
6 |
Houston |
.645 |
+11 |
7 |
Indiana |
.614 |
+5 |
8 |
Milwaukee |
.601 |
-1 |
9 |
Oklahoma City |
.592 |
-1 |
10 |
Miami |
.589 |
+8 |
11 |
Atlanta |
.575 |
-2 |
12 |
Brooklyn |
.553 |
+3 |
13 |
Golden State |
.552 |
-7 |
14 |
Sacramento |
.550 |
+12 |
15 |
Toronto |
.548 |
-2 |
16 |
New York |
.518 |
-2 |
17 |
New Orleans |
.509 |
-6 |
18 |
LA Lakers |
.501 |
+1 |
19 |
Orlando |
.492 |
-8 |
20 |
Cleveland |
.471 |
-4 |
21 |
Chicago |
.380 |
+1 |
22 |
Phoenix |
.375 |
+1 |
23 |
San Antonio |
.346 |
-3 |
24 |
Utah |
.336 |
+3 |
25 |
Charlotte |
.323 |
-1 |
26 |
LA Clippers |
.299 |
-5 |
27 |
Washington |
.270 |
+2 |
28 |
Portland |
.251 |
-3 |
29 |
Detroit |
.205 |
-1 |
30 |
Memphis |
.174 |
-- |
I'm using the Colley Matrix iteration process (https://www.colleyrankings.com/method.html)
To summarize, you take the win percentage of every team and correct it against the win percentage of their opponents. Then you have a new win percentage. And I repeat that process until the correction factor is below .001. Essentially this is what I would expect the win percentages to be if the teams played an average team every game.
Serious question, I haven't been watching, how is Memphis so bad?
Ja is out, they lost tyus jones, and they don’t have a real #1 option
+ with Adams injury they dont have a real center and imo Brooks is bigger loss then Tyus.