SlamBall stats page reveals league's most detailed performance metrics
SlamBall’s stats hub tracks far more than scoring, and that’s the point. Face-offs, slams, and loose-ball recovery now show who really controlled the game.

The best way to understand SlamBall is not to start with the standings, but with the stat page. It is the league’s analytical backbone, updated after every game and built to answer the one question traditional box scores miss: who actually controlled the chaos.
The stat page is the sport’s language
SlamBall’s official stats hub is organized into four core views: all-team stats, all-player stats, league leaders, and box scores. That structure matters because it gives fans a clean way to move from the big picture to the smallest possession, one game at a time. When a league describes itself as “a combination of basketball, football, and trampolines,” a standard hoops box score is only going to tell part of the story.
The glossary shows just how specific SlamBall gets. Alongside wins, losses, games played, winning percentage, points, field goals, and assists, the page tracks 2-point, 3-point, and 4-point opportunities, rim attacks, slams, offensive and defensive face-offs, loose-ball recoveries, steals, turnovers, blocks, hits, penalty points, violations, and overtime face-offs. That is not decorative detail. It is the league admitting that possession, physicality, and restart situations are as important as shot-making.
Why these categories matter more than a normal box score
SlamBall’s numbers do something basketball stats usually cannot: they separate scoring from control. A player can pile up points and still lose the possession battle, while another can swing a game through face-offs, loose-ball recovery, or hits that change how an opponent attacks the rim. In a sport built on speed, collisions, and bounce, those extra categories are not extras at all. They are the game.
The value of categories like OFO, DFO, LBR, HITS, PPA, PP, VIO, OT OFO, and OT DFO is that they measure the things fans see but box scores often blur together. Offensive and defensive face-offs show who is winning restarts. Loose-ball recoveries show who is first to the mess. Hits, penalty points, and violations tell you which team is imposing its physical style and which one is losing discipline under pressure.
That is why the stats page is more than an archive. It turns SlamBall into something measurable possession by possession, which is crucial for broadcasters and analysts trying to explain not just the final score, but the path to it. In this league, a run of slams is only part of the story. The hidden edge often sits in the rebounds, the recoveries, and the face-offs that decide who gets the next clean chance.
The 2023 table shows what dominance looks like
The 2023 cumulative all-team table gives the clearest example of what this system can reveal. At the top sat a team that finished 18-0 with 1,106 total points, a perfect season documented in the league’s own season-long data. That is the kind of number that tells you the title race was not just close, but controlled from top to bottom.
The Mob’s championship run made that dominance concrete. In Las Vegas, the eight-team 2023 season stretched across a six-week regular season and a seventh week of playoffs, and the Mob finished the job on August 17, 2023. They beat the Lava 49-36 in the semifinals and then defeated the Slashers 72-42 in the title game at Cox Pavilion. The stats page gives that run a backbone, because it does not just show who won the title, it shows how the season unfolded into that finish.
That is the useful part for anyone following the league closely: the numbers connect the table to the trophy. An undefeated team with 1,106 points is not a trivia note. It is a signal that the league had a runaway standard-setting club, one that translated physical dominance and scoring depth into a perfect record.
The relaunch-era hub makes the league easier to read
SlamBall’s stats hub and team pages were centralized for the relaunch era on February 25, 2026, and that consolidation matters. Instead of scattering team-by-team and player-by-player information across different corners of the site, the league put the data in one place built for comparison and repeat viewing. That makes the numbers easier to follow for fans, easier to quote for broadcasters, and easier to use for anyone trying to separate signal from noise.
The timing also fits the league’s identity. SlamBall has always sold speed and spectacle, but the centralized stats presentation gives the sport something more durable: a repeatable way to explain dominance. If a team is winning face-offs, converting slams, cleaning up loose balls, and avoiding penalties, the page lets you see it all without guessing from the final score alone.
That is the real surprise buried inside the stats hub. SlamBall now has sport-specific data points that traditional basketball box scores cannot capture, and that changes how the league is discussed. The final score still matters, but the deeper truth lives in the categories that show who owned the bounce, who owned the restart, and who owned the game.
This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.
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