It’s been two weeks since we checked in on the advanced NBA statistics, which has been enough time for some movement to take place. While Seattle and Indiana remain tops in their respective conferences, other contenders are starting to emerge – most notably in the Big Apple. As always, see our updated Statistical Analysis 101 page for explanations of these stats.
OFFENSIVE/DEFENSIVE RATINGS
Team ORtg Team DRtg
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Phoenix 112.7 Indiana 95.9
Seattle 110.8 Seattle 97.6
Indiana 103.4 Washington 98.2
New York 103.3 Atlanta 99.1
LEAGUE 102.9 New York 101.1
San Antonio 102.8 Chicago 101.3
Connecticut 102.7 Connecticut 102.9
Atlanta 102.7 LEAGUE 102.9
Chicago 102.1 Minnesota 104.1
Washington 101.5 Los Angeles 104.7
Los Angeles 100.3 San Antonio 108.4
Minnesota 98.2 Tulsa 109.9
Tulsa 94.3 Phoenix 110.3
The league just continues to get better and better on offense. Teams are now averaging nearly 103 points per 100 possessions, and just two of the WNBA’s 12 teams are below a point per possession. In part due to the rise in scoring around the league, the Phoenix Mercury is likely to set an interesting pair of records this season. In terms of raw per-possession ratings without any adjustment for league context, the Mercury will almost certainly have both the best offense in WNBA history (surpassing the 2000 Houston Comets, who posted a 110.1 Offensive Rating) and the worst defense (surpassing the 2000 Charlotte Sting, which allowed a 107.9 Defensive Rating).
The big climber over the last two weeks has been New York, which has joined the Storm and the Fever as teams in the top five in both offense and defense. Actually, that took improvement on offense from Indiana as well. The Fever and Liberty bumped down the Sun and Dream, who have struggled to score lately. San Antonio has also surged in terms of Offensive Rating.
EXPECTED WINS STANDINGS
Team Exp. W% Team Exp. W%
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Seattle .827 Indiana .668
Phoenix .583 Washington .596
Los Angeles .367 Atlanta .595
Minnesota .356 New York .540
San Antonio .355 Connecticut .509
Tulsa .101 Chicago .506
Saturday’s overtime loss at Minnesota was probably a death knell for the Sky’s season. Chicago’s un-magic number is two to be eliminated from playoff contention. There is little question that the Sky has been the league’s most unlucky team. Chicago will likely finish with a worse record than 2008 (16-18) despite dramatically improving its point differential. The Sky also drew the short stick in terms of playing in the loaded Eastern Conference; in the West, Chicago would still be very much in the postseason mix.
After Indiana, the East still looks very wide-open. Meanwhile, point differential does little to help us separate the three contenders for the last two playoff spots in the Western Conference.
WARP LEADERS
Player Tm Win% WARP
-------------------------------------
Tamika Catchings IND .815 8.6
Lauren Jackson SEA .790 8.1
Sylvia Fowles CHI .755 7.9
Cappie Pondexter NYL .665 6.0
Diana Taurasi PHO .672 5.6
Penny Taylor PHO .662 5.3
Tina Charles CON .659 5.3
Katie Douglas IND .660 5.2
Sue Bird SEA .649 5.0
Angel McCoughtry ATL .616 4.5
With a couple of big recent efforts, Tamika Catchings has taken the league lead in WARP for the first time. Lauren Jackson remains right on her heels, but statistically it won’t help her that Brian Agler plans to reduce minutes for his starters during the Storm’s remaining road games.
Atlanta’s Angel McCoughtry returns to this list for the first time since early in the season, bumping out slumping Crystal Langhorne.


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