The report above then led me to ask about points per possession (PPP) for fast and slow. That report is available below.
Bottom Line Up Front: LVs were faster in 24-25. They also scored better overall. But, the 25-26 team scored better on slow possessions after both opponent makes and a LV defensive rebound, though even then they didn't score as well as the 24-25 team in either category.
First-12 Seconds Productivity: Were Fast Possessions Actually Better?
I looked at Tennessee's offensive possessions after three transition-type triggers:
- Opponent made field goal
- Tennessee defensive rebound
- Opponent turnover
A
fast possession means Tennessee's first recorded field-goal attempt came within 12 seconds of the trigger. A
slow-FGA possession means Tennessee did get a field-goal attempt, but the first one came after 12 seconds.
No-FGA possessions ended before Tennessee attempted a field goal.
PPP here means total Tennessee points on the possession, including later shots, offensive rebounds, and free throws. It is not just whether the first shot went in.
Overall Result
| Season | Category | Poss | Points | PPP | First-shot FG% | Avg sec to first FGA |
|---|
| 2024-25 | Fast FGA <=12s | 1082 | 1472 | 1.360 | 45.6% | 7.4 |
| 2024-25 | Slow FGA >12s | 776 | 981 | 1.264 | 40.7% | 18.9 |
| 2024-25 | No FGA | 586 | 248 | 0.423 | -- | -- |
| 2024-25 | Non-fast all | 1362 | 1229 | 0.902 | 40.7% | 18.9 |
| 2025-26 | Fast FGA <=12s | 804 | 1018 | 1.266 | 44.3% | 7.2 |
| 2025-26 | Slow FGA >12s | 723 | 838 | 1.159 | 38.9% | 19.3 |
| 2025-26 | No FGA | 541 | 215 | 0.397 | -- | -- |
| 2025-26 | Non-fast all | 1264 | 1053 | 0.833 | 38.9% | 19.3 |
Takeaway: Overall, faster possessions were more productive in both seasons. But the trigger type matters.
PPP By Trigger
| Season | Trigger | Fast PPP | Slow-FGA PPP | No-FGA PPP | Non-fast PPP | Fast Poss | Slow Poss | No-FGA Poss |
|---|
| 2024-25 | After opponent made FG | 1.272 | 1.137 | 0.315 | 0.837 | 279 | 386 | 222 |
| 2024-25 | After Tennessee defensive rebound | 1.198 | 1.251 | 0.481 | 0.821 | 425 | 167 | 212 |
| 2024-25 | After opponent turnover | 1.608 | 1.493 | 0.500 | 1.091 | 378 | 223 | 152 |
| 2024-25 | Steal-coded turnovers only | 1.753 | 1.561 | 0.563 | 1.044 | 247 | 66 | 71 |
| 2025-26 | After opponent made FG | 1.016 | 1.094 | 0.333 | 0.822 | 189 | 371 | 207 |
| 2025-26 | After Tennessee defensive rebound | 1.252 | 1.262 | 0.453 | 0.819 | 353 | 168 | 203 |
| 2025-26 | After opponent turnover | 1.466 | 1.196 | 0.412 | 0.870 | 262 | 184 | 131 |
| 2025-26 | Steal-coded turnovers only | 1.536 | 0.875 | 0.561 | 0.693 | 194 | 48 | 66 |
The Defensive-Rebound Caveat
The overall data says fast possessions were better. But after Tennessee defensive rebounds, the slow-FGA possessions were actually a little more productive.
| Season | Def Reb Category | Poss | PPP | First-shot FG% | 3PA rate on first shot | Avg sec to first FGA |
|---|
| 2024-25 | Fast FGA <=12s | 425 | 1.198 | 39.1% | 48.2% | -- |
| 2024-25 | Slow FGA >12s | 167 | 1.251 | 41.9% | 41.9% | -- |
| 2025-26 | Fast FGA <=12s | 353 | 1.252 | 42.5% | 47.9% | -- |
| 2025-26 | Slow FGA >12s | 168 | 1.262 | 43.5% | 51.2% | -- |
I don't have the average seconds for defensive-rebound fast/slow possessions isolated in the summary table above, but by definition the fast group shot within 12 seconds, while the slow group shot after 12 seconds. In the overall dataset, the slow-FGA group averaged about 19 seconds to first shot:
- 2024-25 overall slow-FGA possessions: 18.9 seconds to first FGA
- 2025-26 overall slow-FGA possessions: 19.3 seconds to first FGA
So the defensive-rebound finding is not saying Tennessee was better when it walked the ball up forever. It is saying that after defensive rebounds, the possessions where Tennessee did not force a shot in the first 12 seconds were at least as productive, and slightly more productive by PPP, than the quick-shot possessions.
That probably means defensive rebounds are a mixed category. Some are true live-ball runouts. Others are normal rebounds where pushing immediately may not create a real advantage. In those cases, getting into offense, making one more pass, or attacking a better matchup may have been just as good or better.
First-Shot Accuracy By Trigger
| Season | Trigger | Fast first-shot FG% | Slow first-shot FG% | Fast 3PA rate | Slow 3PA rate |
|---|
| 2024-25 | After opponent made FG | 42.7% | 38.1% | 48.4% | 42.7% |
| 2024-25 | After Tennessee defensive rebound | 39.1% | 41.9% | 48.2% | 41.9% |
| 2024-25 | After opponent turnover | 55.0% | 44.4% | 39.4% | 40.8% |
| 2025-26 | After opponent made FG | 35.4% | 36.7% | 48.7% | 45.0% |
| 2025-26 | After Tennessee defensive rebound | 42.5% | 43.5% | 47.9% | 51.2% |
| 2025-26 | After opponent turnover | 53.1% | 39.1% | 37.0% | 50.5% |
The report above then led to the next obvious question: Are fast possessions more productive? BLUF: Yes, especially because of the productivity and pace of points off turnovers (especially live steals).
Main Conclusions
- Fast possessions were more productive overall in both seasons.
- The biggest payoff came after opponent turnovers, especially steal-coded turnovers. That is the clearest statistical support for the pressure/transition part of Caldwell's system.
- No-FGA possessions were terrible offensively, which is one reason the combined non-fast group looks much worse than slow-FGA possessions alone.
- Defensive rebounds are the important caveat: slow-FGA possessions after defensive boards were slightly more productive than fast-FGA possessions in both seasons.
- That suggests the goal should not be "shoot fast no matter what." The better version is probably "attack fast when there is an advantage, especially after turnovers, but don't mistake every defensive rebound for a true transition chance."
Data Caveats
This is based on ESPN-style play-by-play data, not optical tracking or official shot-clock data. Game clock is used as the timing proxy. That should be close for this question, but it cannot catch every shot-clock reset, delayed inbound, replay correction, or scoring-table quirk.
The imported play-type field was unreliable for missed jumpers and missed threes, so the analysis parsed the written play descriptions instead.
Points per possession were computed from Tennessee score changes during the possession, not just the first shot and not just the imported points field.
One listed 2025-26 Ole Miss game had zero play rows and was omitted.
So I would not treat the exact decimals as gospel, but the broad pattern is useful: quick attacks were generally good, turnover-created quick attacks were very good, and defensive-rebound possessions need a more nuanced read.