In many ways, basketball is the polar opposite of soccer. While soccer is a low-scoring game where one unpredictable moment can decide the result, basketball is a high-volume, high-scoring game defined by repetition and "shot quality." However, as we look at the data in 2026, the answer is a resounding yes. Unpredictability isn't just a style of play in basketball; it is the ultimate defensive disruptor.
In the modern NBA and high-level college ball, every player has a "book" on them. Defenses know if a player prefers to drive left, if they only shoot 28% from the corner, or if they always pass out of a double-team. When an offense becomes too predictable—even if they are highly efficient—the defense can "pre-rotate." They beat the offense to the spot.
The "Unpredictability Factor" in basketball works by breaking the defense's internal scouting report. When a team uses Spatial Randomness—attacking from angles that aren't "optimal" on a spreadsheet—they force defenders to make split-second decisions instead of relying on muscle memory.
If we applied the Flinders University "Rényi entropy" model to basketball, we would look for Ball Movement Randomness. In the past, teams relied on one "heliocentric" star (like Luka Dončić or James Harden) who controlled the ball 90% of the time. While efficient, this is highly predictable. The most successful teams of the mid-2020s are those that embrace "read-and-react" systems. These teams don't run rigid plays; they move the ball to whoever is open, regardless of "star power" or "optimal zones."
This creates a high level of EDRan (Spatial Event Distribution Randomness). If a defense doesn't know where the next pass is going because the offense doesn't even know yet, it is impossible to stay in a disciplined shell.
We’ve spent a decade teaching players that mid-range jumpers are "bad" and layups/threes are "good." However, this created a predictable "donut" offense: everyone at the rim or behind the arc. The "Chaos Factor" suggests that a team that occasionally takes a mid-range floater or an "unbalanced" runner is actually more dangerous. Why? Because it forces the defense to guard the entire floor. When the defense has to respect every square inch of the 94-foot court, the high-value lanes to the rim suddenly fly wide open.
The Flinders study shows that in soccer, unpredictability in every region predicts winners. In basketball, the same applies. The winning teams of 2026 aren't just the ones with the best shooters; they are the ones who can maintain their efficiency while maximizing their randomness.
In a game of 100 possessions, the team that keeps the defense guessing for 60 of them is going to find more "easy" buckets than the team that runs the "perfect" play 100 times. Chaos isn't a lack of coaching—it is the highest form of tactical execution. Let me know what you think, I'd love to hear. Have a great day. Let me know what you are thinking, I'd love to hear. Have a great day.