

Mossman had several DirecTV dishes set up at his home, and he recorded every NBA game. In 1998, while still with the Suns, he started a company called Quantified Scouting with his friend Scott Mossman, who was the head coach at Grand Canyon at the time. So the coaches watched as Barr went through clips and rated the challenges on the spot.īarr saw an opportunity to take what he did for the Suns and make it a service. "How do we know you're going to do a good job?" assistant coach Paul Silas asked Barr.īarr had been an assistant at Grand Canyon University, but this was his first NBA job. They wanted him to log all challenged shots, and every time an opponent took a shot, Barr was supposed to rate the challenge. One of the first tasks the Suns gave Barr was keeping track of how their players challenged shots on defense.

Self is able to watch a lot of this while KU is traveling.
#Synergy sports full
Kansas video coordinator Jeff Forbes said that late in a season, head coach Bill Self will watch four or five full games of KU's next opponent in addition to watching an offensive and defensive edit of that opponent's last 700 possessions. The amount they can now consume has drastically changed. They would rewatch tape just like any of us then-on a VCR with fast forward as the only way to speed things up. Back in the day-and by back in the day, we're talking early '90s-it was difficult for a coach to consume more than a game or two a night. And that's how advanced statistics and video helped Duke win its fourth national championship.Ĭoaches have watched game film practically from the time moving pictures became a thing. "But that's going to be a really tough shot, and you're going to make them do something they're not as comfortable doing." "If they're going to hit that shot and win that national championship game, then God bless them," Cullen said. Hayward was forced to take an off-balance jumper over the reach of Zoubek, who is 7'1". Hayward tried to go left, but Singler stayed on his left hip and forced him back to his right and toward the baseline, where center Brian Zoubek was waiting. Processing that data on the fly, Singler shaded Hayward to the right as he made his move (see the video to the right). "You watch five or six Butler games, and you learn that Hayward likes to go left, then Synergy backs up that data, and you go with it," Duke video coordinator Kevin Cullen told Bleacher Report recently.
