Not, at least in the NBA, according to this analysis. I wonder if college is different due to maturity, etc. https://arxiv.org/pdf/1903.08716
fwiw, UF is tied for 4th with 1.75 double-digit scoring runs per game & tied for 175th in allowing those runs.
Scoring runs depend on luck and matchups and probably other things. With only three games I don't think we have enought data to say anything. But damn we put a hurt on FSU the other night in the first part of the second half. Probably not Golden analytics here. I think that they mostly choked and I am OK with that. But analytics told use to play that way and it worked out way beyond my expectations.
I totally appreciate the analytics approach we take and the beneficial results, at least statistically, we should yield from it. I am glad Coach is cutting edge in that department. With that said, even as a stat head myself usually, does anyone feel like it changes the game when you're watching as a fan? I thought maybe it was my middle age creeping in, but all the focus on analytics seems a bit overboard.
I can't be anticancer about the subject matter because I wouldn't recognize right from wrong but my feeling is that runs are vommon and have that feeling like an inning that never seems to end, no matter the pitcher. They seem to start with mistakes of some sort of a chain of unproductive possessions. To me, they look psychological or just being caught on the bad side of the probability distribution curve which can't be avoided. Better teams are just prone to having fewer "events".
In other words, watch what you say in the first half because it may come back to bite you in the arse.