Open any player on a standard basketball site and you get a table. Points, rebounds, assists, field goal percentage. The numbers are there. What they mean — whether they're good, bad, average, rare — is left entirely to you.
The player pages on The Buzzer Lab work differently.
Every number has context
Take True Shooting percentage. On most sites you see a number. Here you see the number, the league average, and where the player sits relative to every other player in EuroLeague. Elijah Bryant's 64.2% TS looks strong — and the page confirms it: 80th percentile, league average 58.4%. You don't need to know the league average by heart. The page knows it for you.
This applies to every advanced stat on the page. PIR, PRA, eFG%, FTr, Stock, Ast/Tov — each one comes with a one-line explanation of what it measures and a percentile rank that tells you immediately whether the number is impressive or not.
A narrative, not just a table
At the top of every player page there's a short paragraph that doesn't list stats — it explains the player. What kind of scorer they are, how they use their minutes, what makes them valuable or limited within their team's system. It's written the way a scout would talk about a player, not the way a spreadsheet would display one.
How the season actually went
The season rhythm section shows PIR game by game across the full season, color-coded from quiet to elite. You see immediately whether a player was consistent or streaky, when they peaked, when they struggled. One glance replaces scrolling through 34 box scores.
Fair comparisons
Per 36 minutes numbers sit at the bottom of every page. This matters because EuroLeague players have wildly different roles — a player averaging 8 points in 18 minutes is doing something very different from a player averaging 8 points in 32. Per 36 puts them on equal footing.
Where to find it
Every player from the 2025-26 EuroLeague season has a full profile in the Players section. Season stats, advanced metrics with context, situational splits, season rhythm, per 36 numbers — all in one place, all explained.
If you've ever looked at a stat and wondered whether it was actually good, this is the page that answers that.