GSW were also at the forefront of using better tech to track fatigue last season to determine when to try and give players rest to try and reduce injury risk. Building up leads to give players extra rest in games also helped quite a lot. Some of it may be luck, but getting better at collecting and tracking health data can help create your own "luck" by minimizing that chance.
Because of that, even more teams are jumping on the wearable tech train this year:
Besides a Stephen Curry advantage, Golden State Warriors flaunt a tech advantage
As more teams get comfortable figuring out how to better track and use data, I'm sure we'll see less time lost to injury.
Unless you're someone like Kyrie or Rose anyway.
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Report: Tom Thibodeau resisted use of wearable technology that would have monitored recovery of Bulls players
At a presentation on wearable technology organized by coaching agent Warren Legarie last year in Chicago, Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau raised his hand. Everyone in the audience knew where this was going.
Thibodeau, fired last week by the Bulls and replaced by Iowa State’s Fred Hoiberg, had resisted overtures from Bulls management to employ wearable technology to monitor players’ recovery, league sources said.
“He was basically challenging it, like, ‘Michael Jordan didn’t need that,’” Kopp said. “Fair point, but one of the most amazing athletes in the entire world, I would argue, would’ve benefited, too. There’s a reason why they call it old school, because it’s been replaced by new thinking.
