Adam Silver says changes coming to Hack-A-Shaq rule

thernbroom

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Silver says changes coming to Hack-A-Shaq rule

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver’s evolving opinion of Hack-A-Player indicates there may be changes to the increasingly practiced and increasingly reviled strategy.

After months of media debate, putrid foul shooting, lengthy games and fan discontent, Silver told USA TODAY Sports in an NBA A to Z podcast that, “I’m increasingly of the view that we will be looking to make some sort of change in that rule this summer.”

Long neutral on Hack-A-Player – the strategy of fouling a poor free throw shooter away from the basketball in an attempt to limit an opponent’s scoring – Silver is taking a side.

“Even for those who had not wanted to make the change, we’re being forced to that position just based on these sophisticated coaches understandably using every tactic available to them," Silver said. "It’s just not the way we want to see the game played."

Hack-A-Player is up this year. The number of those intentional fouls through mid-December surpassed the number of times it happened last season (164), and the league is closing in on 300 Hack-A-Player instances before the All-Star break.

Through Tuesday’s games, fouls against Los Angeles Clippers center DeAndre Jordan, Detroit Pistons center Andre Drummond and Houston Rockets Dwight Howard have accounted for 69% of Hack-A-Player fouls. Jordan accounts for 34%.

Silver knows the data. But the interaction with fans as he watches a game has made an impact, too.

“Again, as I travel around the league, there’s that one school of thought ‘Guys have got to make their free throws,’ ” Silver said. “But then at the end of the day, we are an entertainment property, and it’s clear that when you’re in the arena, that fans are looking at me, shrugging their shoulders with that look saying, ‘Aren’t you going to do something about this?’ ”

What is the NBA going to do? That remains unclear publicly but one person familiar with the situation told USA TODAY Sports nothing is off the table and the league’s competition committee will explore several potential resolutions.

Another person familiar with the process told USA TODAY Sports he doesn’t think there is enough support to ban Hack-A-Player outright. He said initial change will be incremental, eliminating loopholes to the rule such as one player jumping on a player’s back during a free throw attempt.

"Clearly that’s not a natural basketball move," he said. "That’s something that, in my view, we need to address quickly because ultimately there’s nothing more important than the health and safety of our players. Again, I think that’s an accident waiting to happen with guys jumping on each other’s shoulders just trying to attract officials’ attention to call a foul."

Both people spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to speak publicly about rules changes.

There are solutions that would either eliminate or curtail the practice:
Ban it.
Allow the team fouled to the opting of shoot the free throws or taking the ball out of bounds, which would essentially eliminate the strategy, as suggested by Tom Ziller of SB Nation.
Allow a team to use the strategy a certain number of times per game so that DeAndre Jordan is not shooting 34 foul shots in a game, as he did against Portland on Nov. 30.
Include one extra free throw attempt by any player for a set number of intentional fouls off the ball, an idea suggested by NBA.com’s David Aldridge.


Basketball is a game of flow, rhythm and pace. Multiple intentional fouls interrupt that unique style, and the game becomes an eyesore, such as the Jan. 20 game in which Detroit’s Andre Drummond shot 36 fouls shots.

“Because more and more teams are doing it to more and more players, there is an absolute necessity to get this right,” ESPN/ABC analyst Jeff Van Gundy told USA TODAY Sports. “And it's not for the individual players. It's not even for the teams. It's for the fans, because I see this escalating more and more.”

Most coaches don’t like the practice. But most use it, too.

“I don’t know if any of that’s good for our league,” Clippers coach Doc Rivers said. “But if the rules say you can do it, you should do it. I hate it, too. I’m not saying I like it. But I’m going to use it until someone tells me I can’t.”

NBA data through Tuesday’s games reveals that teams use the Hack-a-Player strategy more often when trailing (68 times) than when winning (21 times). But teams have won 16% of the time using the strategy when trailing but 61% of the time when using the strategy while ahead.

“All the analytical people say the best time to use it is when you’re up, not when you’re down. That’s the best time to do it,” Rivers said. “It prevents you from making a comeback. A couple of teams have done that, and it’s pretty smart.”

If the strategy rarely helps a trailing team win, why do coaches use it?

“Because you never know … if you’re down, you might as well try something,” Rivers said.

From a pure data standpoint, the strategy is sound way to keep a team from piling up points. Avid NBA observer and data cruncher, Haralabos Voulgaris, said on Twitter recently that teams using Hack-A-Player allow .82 points per possession – which is better than NBA-best .951 points allowed per possession by the San Antonio Spurs.

NBA rules prevent intentional fouls away from the ball in the final two minutes of the game. If a team does it, the opposing team is awarded a free throw and possession of the ball.

Coaches have found those loopholes.

As Clippers Jamal Crawford launched a free throw against Detroit on Dec. 14, Rivers had J.J. Redikk jump on the back of Detroit’s Drummond with 25 seconds left in the fourth quarter. It was loose ball foul and not an intentional foul away from the ball. Drummond made 1-of-2 free throws, Redikk made a three-pointer, forced overtime and the Clipper won.

San Antonio’s Danny Green fouled Houston’s Clint Capela while Capela was out of bounds and getting ready to in-bound the ball with 7.1 seconds left in the first quarter. Capela missed two free throws and the Spurs got a final possession before the end of the quarter.

To understand Silver’s shift in thinking, it helps to know his background. Silver was the head of NBA Entertainment with an emphasis on television, digital, marketing partnerships and media sales. He understands the importance of delivering an entertaining product.

In interviews with USA TODAY Sports, Silver has made it clear he is spending considerable time looking at the on-court product, after spending so much of his earlier time in the NBA on the business side.

But he has also heard from coaches, team executives and youth coaches about the value of the strategy and the importance of free throws, an integral part of the game that shouldn’t be minimized to cover up a flaw in a player’s game.

This is where the on-court product and entertainment value intersect.


Silver says changes coming to Hack-A-Shaq rule
 

pete clemenza

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Maybe players should work on their free throw shooting. It's one of the first things you learn to when you basketball.
Make your fukking free throws :pacspit:

Also the irony of them talking about flow and "basketball plays" when replays last for an hour and flopping is a go-to move now :camby:
True indeed but there's always been players who couldn't shoot free throws for sh*t since day one but teams didn't exploit to where it kills off the entire game like teams do today. Fans have always complained but maybe the networks and sponsors are complaining now as well
 

Gravity

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it's starting to turn people away from the product and so it's gonna start hurting those pockets which at the end of the day is all that matters to a business
Yea the NBA is more entertainment than competition. I still don't like that cats like Mrs. hooper at getting bailed out because they can't learn to make free throws. It's pathetic.
 
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Reid2Achieve

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It's like a glitch exploit at this point. NBA has to do something to appease fans and make the product better.
 

Liquid

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Not fair to great players like Shaq.

If they took that shyt away when Shaq was in his prime the Lakers might have run off with 8 straight.

Shaq took 11252 free throws in his career. Let's say that on average he took 1.6 shots per line visit (count for AND1's etc).

Let's say that 20% of those were "hack a shaq" visits (2,250). One can safely assume that at least 70% (1,575) of those times he was going to get the ball and score at his average FG % (58%) that would be an extra 1,827 points in his career which would have put shaq in the 30K point club with the other 5 on the list.

This is also assuming that everything stayed the same, an argument can be made that Shaq would have gotten the ball even MORE because teams wouldn't have been able to just foul him as an easy cop-out. Would have likely finished either slightly ahead or just behind Jordan in all-time scoring.

Learn to shoot your free throws, even C-Webb pointed it out that it's just a cop-out by big men who can't shoot. Ewing could shoot free throws, so could Hakeem, C-Webb improved as well, Duncan SHOULD have been a better free throw shooter because of his touch. It's a mental thing.
 

NoMorePie

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How about any person that shoots under 55% from the line has to go through extensive free throw training twice a week. 2 hours per session....

You're rewarding great basketball players making millions of dollars a year who can't even shoot free throws properly.
 

pete clemenza

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:heh:no one is not watching or coming to games because of late fouls. What are you talking about
What are you taking about, Pop is doing Hack-a-Shaq/Hack-a-Jordan from the opening tip and he has all the talent in the world on the Spurs. Pop is the leading culprit in all this. And I do agree DJ should be a better free throw shooter by now:snoop: But at the same time a bad free throw shooter is part of basketball. Its the same a pg who can't shoot a jumper, a big who can't rebound, etc. Hell in the American League in baseball they don't even let the pitcher bat for chr*ts sake. I do agree that bigs should be better at free throw shooting but that would be a perfect world which isn't reality in sports nor real life.
 

The God Poster

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What are you taking about, Pop is doing Hack-a-Shaq/Hack-a-Jordan from the opening tip and he has all the talent in the world on the Spurs. Pop is the leading culprit in all this. And I do agree DJ should be a better free throw shooter by now:snoop: But at the same time a bad free throw shooter is part of basketball. Its the same a pg who can't shoot a jumper, a big who can't rebound, etc. Hell in the American League in baseball they don't even let the pitcher bat for chr*ts sake. I do agree that bigs should be better at free throw shooting but that would be a perfect world which isn't reality in sports nor real life.
:what: Y'all just like posting to post. What does anything you said have to do with my post?:stopitslime:
 

GhostoftheMan

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:heh:no one is not watching or coming to games because of late fouls. What are you talking about
new watchers? or people that aren't super into it? it slows the game and if i'm watching on tv it gets boring and i change the channel, i've seen people say the same. the point of the NBA is that there is a flow and if that flow is hindered people are going to be disinterested.
 
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