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[Haberstroh] As injuries and rest days mount across the league, new research shows that NBA stars play about 76% of their games, down from 86% in late 90s and 84% in the 2000s.



[Tweet](https://twitter.com/tomhaberstroh/status/1605615007231643648?s=46&t=HlsIMkezOqENW9r76BVH5A)

> As injuries and rest days mount across the league, new research shows that NBA stars play about 76% of their games, down from 86% in late 90s and 84% in the 2000s.

Haberstroh, when asked what was considered an “NBA star,” in his research:

> All-NBA or All-Star in previous season. About 25-30 players every year.

by lopea182

20 Comments

  1. constantlymat

    Fun fact:

    There’s not a single player in the NBA under the age of 33 who has a 2200 point season which equals 26.83 PPG over a span of 82 games

    The only active players who have one are James Harden, Kevin Durant, Stephen Curry, Russel Westbrook and LeBron James.

    That’s a reason why I rate James Harden more highly than I did just a few years ago. He has 4 top 100 all-time scoring seasons when you count total points. He and Kobe Bryant are the only players since Michael Jordan to have a top10 season.

  2. DonGarlandMobleyJA

    90’s players just built different. and they didn’t have all the modern technology, medicine and recovery methods either

  3. What would be interesting to see is the length of the career for said players. It seems to me that, unlike in the past, more star players are productive into their late 30’s. If that’s the case, that’s a reasonable tradeoff to make, less games per year, but longer career.

  4. foye2smith

    Basketball has to get Baseball’s PR. No baseball fan blinks an eye about their irrelevant too long regular season and/or players taking a routine meaningless game off.

    I guess it comes down to fans going to go see a baseball TEAM versus fans going to see a basketball PLAYER?

  5. VinylJones

    I’d like to see if traditional employment trended this way too; I’m betting there’s an overall trend towards less hours at work which makes this even more interesting.

  6. DJBabyB0kCh0y

    Not calling today’s league soft because everybody is much bigger stronger and faster but it seems like guys today sit for the kinds of bumps and bruises that wouldn’t have kept them out 20-30 years ago. Like a little bit of soreness wouldn’t have kept anybody out.

  7. sctthuynh

    As “Thinking Basketball” points out, NBA players have to run/move a lot more than they did in the 80s 90s and even early 2000.

    An increase in effort, movement, spacing and specialization are some factors to why modern players exert more energy while playing less minutes.

  8. OkBarber6

    Great, now do the same thing with average career length

  9. Zoepound305

    well yeah. only playing 3/4 games does seem kind of wild. I cant imagine missing 1 out of every 4 days of work

  10. noknownothing

    Living the basketball life more important nowadays.

  11. Neuroxex

    I think 2021-22 on this chart is a pretty unique year for this and is having a relatively severe impact on the trend. There’s a difference between players resting, and players playing through a pandemic with mandated 10 day breaks away from the team when they’re sick which happened fairly frequently. How many star players that season *didn’t* get Covid? A significant amount of the league just had 3-5 games sat because of protocols.

  12. SirThixcksAlot

    There’s more wear and tear on the minutes the players are playing today. I won’t lie it kills the product though, that Lakers suns game the other day was unwatchable.

  13. LemonPepper-Lou

    Pussies!

    Jk, the Spurs started this trend so I can’t really talk shit about it lol

  14. FullEntologist

    Need to make a standard 80% games played threshold in order to get your full salary. Below that and salary should automatically decrease by 20%.

  15. Burnem34

    76% sounds like such a low number. You’re telling me if I buy a ticket there’s a 1/4 chance the stars gonna be sitting

  16. odaschox

    at this point is just unfair and wrong to compare star regular season numbers from different eras

  17. bringatothenbiscuits

    I wonder how this compares with NHL and MLB. It’s reasonable to expect players to take rest days, even though it is tough for fans.

  18. PatronSaintOfUpdog

    On one hand, this sucks for fans. Especially ones at the games.

    On the other, look how many old players played through injuries and their body is still messed up even years into retirement.

    Shorten the season.

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