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Why is it in NBA career leaders in a category, they don't count the playoffs?
For example:
If Kobe Bryant is 12th in career points having 25,790. But that's only counting his points during the NBA seasons. NOT PLAYOFFS. Why shouldn't he playoffs be counted there? Kobe has career playoff points of 4,441.
Also, If they count Steve Nash's playoffs numbers, Nash would have more than 15,000+ career points and 9000+ career assists.
Why wouldn't they count the playoffs? Surely the record book should count every point/assist/block a player has made. THAT"S WHY IT"S CALLED CAREER POINTS yet, they don't count playoffs.
Maybe if they counted the playoffs, Kareem would not be the leading scorer in NBA history...
No.. you read it, it only counts games in the regular season..there is no category counting EVERY GAME A PLAYER HAS PLAYED..those they mention in the TV..when they say Kobe is the 12th leading scorer..that's just the regular season pal..Look at it here http://www.basketball-reference.com/leaders/pts_ca... it says CAREER..not regular season and yet it only counts regular season
10 Answers
- baudkarmaLv 71 decade agoFavorite Answer
This is only misleading if you haven't been paying attention. There is no major sport that counts postseason numbers when calculating career totals. Emmitt Smith got all of the 18,355 rushing yards he's credited with in the regular season. Barry Bonds hit all of his record-breaking 762 home runs in the regular season. Gretzkys 2857 career points? Same thing.
There are lots of reasons that sports don't include postseason numbers in their records. I think the major one is that the regular season is a level playing field. Everyone plays the same number of games, and there's usually not that much of a difference between different teams schedules. Once the postseason arrives, it's a different story. Team A might crush their opponents in 4 straight, while team B struggles and wins in 7. That gives players on team B extra games in which to add to their statistics, even though they might not be as good as the players on team B.
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- 6 years ago
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RE:
Why is it in NBA career leaders in a category, they don't count the playoffs?
For example:
If Kobe Bryant is 12th in career points having 25,790. But that's only counting his points during the NBA seasons. NOT PLAYOFFS. Why shouldn't he playoffs be counted there? Kobe has career playoff points of 4,441.
Also, If they count Steve Nash's playoffs numbers,...
Source(s): nba career leaders category don 39 count playoffs: https://biturl.im/9SF7n - brownboyLv 61 decade ago
Wow, I can't believe I haven't ever noticed that! Great point. Kobe has "technically" scored over 30,000 points already. John Stockton would have 17,645 assists in his career. Your question has definitely made me curious in what the "true" career-wise accomplishments of players in history have been.
I wholeheartedly agree with you. It seems that the whole "career points" stat is very misleading and unassuming of what a player might have done in the playoffs (in relation with the season). Although, though, one reason for why the whole total is not added is that not all players make the Playoffs. Not a great reason but it is one.
Extra - Kareem Abdul-Jabaar has scored a whopping 44,149 points in his career (not counting All-Star games! --> still leading scorer (at least Malone and Jordan's career points + playoff points don't exceed it); Shaq has 33,366 points.
Source(s): http://www.basketball-reference.com/leaders/ - VaderLv 61 decade ago
I think the NBA separated the stats of the both regular season and the playoffs due to the fact that not all players advanced in the playoffs in their whole career.
Kareem would still lead in career points if you will take a look and chat down the stats of the career leaders in points in both the regular season and the playoffs:
Kareem
Regular season - 38,387
Playoffs - 5,762
Total - 44,149 career points
Malone
RS - 36,928
PO - 4,761
Total - 41,689
Jordan
RS - 32,292
PO - 5,987
Total - 38,279
Chamberlain
RS - 31,419
PO - 3,607
Total - 35,026
Kobe
RS - 25,790
PO - 4,441
Total - 30,231
- Anonymous1 decade ago
I think they should actually add it with the playoffs. Especially the totals, not the "per game" numbers.
But one downside to that would be in the playoffs, teams don't play the same amount of games. Some don't even make it.
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- ifeelgoodLv 41 decade ago
says who? career stats count every game you played. yes including playoffs.
i agree there is such regular season stats where they have scoring leaders, assists, rebounds...
but a career stat is a career stat