I analyzed over 18 years of NBA game data and found a fascinating trend: the home court advantage has steadily declined in the modern NBA.

Key Findings: ๐Ÿ  Home teams peaked at ~59% wins (2012), down from ~54% in 2007 ๐Ÿ“‰ Recent seasons show ~52-56% (2024 hit a low of 52.2%) ๐Ÿ˜ท 2020 COVID bubble: 53.2% with no crowds ๐Ÿ† Playoff home advantage is highly volatile (42-74% range) ๐Ÿ“Š Total games analyzed: ~12,800 (11,700 regular season + 1,100 playoffs)

Posted by One-Anywhere-3348

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5 Comments

  1. DwayneBaconStan on

    Mostly just how pro sports are, playing at home helps but only marginally cause of travel, usually the better team just wins. Now college sports, we need a graphic for that because I’m sure it’ll be pretty tilted

  2. ASDFzxcvTaken on

    I do appreciate minimalism as an elegant art form. While my comment on another post was about not always needing to start the x,y axis at zero, I do feel that labeling the xy axis helps communicate to the reader what the chart is about. Liven it up a little with a bit of tasteful flair to draw the readers eye to pertinent data rather than forcing them to read your analysis separately. But interesting finding.

  3. Rampaging_Ducks on

    I’d be interested to see how this breaks down by teamโ€”The Denver Nuggets play at a higher altitude in their home court versus the Miami Heat playing at their home court, for example.

  4. RolandSnowdust on

    Home field advantage is not an advantage unless you take advantage of it.