League: Prvenstvo BiH | Season: 2025-2026 (Regular Season)
Date: April 18, 2026 | Venue: SC Nenad Ba
Matchup thesis: Two negative net teams, one possession economy problem
On paper, this is a meeting of two teams that have struggled to win the efficiency battle over the sample we have. Over the last eight analyzed games, Student Igokea sits at a -8.8 Net Rating (98.4 Offensive Rating, 107.2 Defensive Rating), while Donji Vakuf - Promo is at -13.2 (105.0 ORtg, 118.2 DRtg). That framing matters: both offenses have shown the ability to score efficiently by shot quality (both above 63% True Shooting), but both defenses have leaked points at a rate that keeps their margin thin.
The most actionable question becomes: which team can reduce variance? Student Igokea’s profile suggests more possessions and more ball movement; Donji Vakuf - Promo’s profile suggests higher three-point volume and a defense that has not held up.
Tempo and possession math: Student Igokea wants more reps
The pace differential is real. Student Igokea has played at a 64.8 pace over the sample, compared to Donji Vakuf - Promo’s 55.2. In practical terms, Student Igokea is more likely to push the game toward a higher-possession environment—where their assist-heavy offense can repeatedly stress rotations—while Donji Vakuf - Promo benefits from fewer possessions that amplify shot-making streaks.
Custom metric: Possession Pressure Index (PPI)
Methodology: PPI = Pace × (1 − Turnover Rate). This approximates how many “clean” possessions a team generates, blending tempo with ball security.
| Team | Pace | Turnover Rate | PPI (higher = more clean possessions) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Student Igokea | 64.8 | 22.8% | 50.0 |
| Donji Vakuf - Promo | 55.2 | 18.8% | 44.8 |
Student Igokea’s faster pace is partially offset by a 22.8% turnover rate (vs. 18.8% for Donji Vakuf - Promo). But even after accounting for giveaways, Student Igokea projects to produce more “usable” possessions. That’s a subtle edge in a matchup where both defenses have underperformed.
Shot profile clash: Donji Vakuf - Promo lives (and dies) from three
If you’re looking for the tactical center of gravity, start with where shots come from. Donji Vakuf - Promo has an extreme perimeter lean: a 74.0 three-point rate across the sample. Student Igokea is also three-forward at 54.2, but Donji Vakuf - Promo is operating in a different risk band.
The efficiency is respectable—Donji Vakuf - Promo has a 62.5 eFG% and 64.7 TS%—yet their overall scoring output has been modest (58.0 ppg in the analyzed sample; 75.6 ppg season context provided). The likely culprit is volume suppression: slower pace plus fewer free points at the line (64.6% FT) can turn “good shooting nights” into merely average offensive results if the defense gives everything back.
Student Igokea’s offensive identity: Assist-heavy, but turnover-sensitive
Student Igokea’s offense has been built around connectivity: a 68.2 assist rate (vs. 65.1 for Donji Vakuf - Promo). Their shooting efficiency is also strong—60.4 eFG% and 63.7 TS%—but the possession leak is significant, with 14.8 turnovers per game and that 22.8% turnover rate. When an offense is both efficient and turnover-prone, its game-to-game outcomes tend to hinge on whether it can keep the live-ball mistakes down.
Defense decides the expected value: who can get even one stop more per segment?
The defensive numbers are the loudest signal in the dataset. Donji Vakuf - Promo’s 118.2 Defensive Rating is the weakest unit on the floor by a margin, and Student Igokea hasn’t been sturdy either at 107.2. That creates a straightforward preview angle: if Student Igokea can merely be “less porous,” their higher pace and assist-driven offense can compound the advantage over repeated possessions.
Donji Vakuf - Promo’s counter is variance: if the three-point volume (74.0 3PA rate) converts at enough of a clip (31.9% 3PT in the sample), they can erase defensive gaps with shot-value math. Student Igokea’s three-point accuracy is similar (30.6%), so the difference is more about shot distribution than raw percentage.
Rebounding and extra chances: slim edges, but important in a low-margin game
Neither team has dominated the glass in the available sample. Student Igokea holds a small edge in rebound percentage (49.3% vs. 46.9%), while raw rebounds are close (33.5 vs. 32.6). In games where both defenses allow efficient looks, the extra possession created by a rebound swing can be one of the few controllable levers.
Home/away context: the split that matters most is Donji Vakuf - Promo’s travel scoring
The split data we have is limited, but it does highlight a potential scoring environment shift. Donji Vakuf - Promo is averaging 67.2 points in away games with a 1–4 road record (20% win rate). Student Igokea’s home split shows 0–2 with 88.5 average points—a high figure that suggests their home games have trended toward higher-scoring outcomes, even if wins haven’t followed in that tiny sample.
Rest, injuries, and lineup continuity: no hidden schedule tax
Both teams enter with the same schedule setup: six days rest and one game in the last seven days. The injury report lists no significant injuries for either side. That removes the usual fatigue-based handicapping and puts the emphasis back on scheme and shot profile.
Key player lenses: where creation and usage are likely to concentrate
Student Igokea
- T. Hrelja: 15.4 PPG, 3.0 APG, 6.7 RPG (7 games) — the most balanced box-score engine among the listed options.
- S. Milosevic: 13.8 PPG (6 games) — secondary scoring that can punish overhelp.
- K. Ateljevic: 13.2 PPG, 2.6 APG, 6.4 RPG (5 games) — a connector profile that fits their assist-heavy identity.
- S. Jovanovic: 10.8 PPG, 7.5 RPG (6 games) — rebounding presence in a matchup with thin margins.
Donji Vakuf - Promo
- B. Zepcic: 29.0 PPG, 7.0 APG (1 game) — eye-catching production, but on a one-game sample; still, it signals where high-usage creation can live.
- K. Cardaci: 26.8 PPG (5 games) — a reliable scoring source within the provided sample.
- R. Livadic: 13.7 PPG, 10.3 RPG (7 games) — double-digit rebounding that could be pivotal against Student Igokea’s slight rebounding edge.
What to watch (four swing factors)
- Turnover battle vs. pace battle: Student Igokea’s 22.8% turnover rate is the most exploitable weakness; Donji Vakuf - Promo must convert those mistakes into stability.
- Three-point volume variance: Donji Vakuf - Promo’s 74.0 3PT rate can either compress the game into a coin-flip or bury them if misses turn into runouts.
- Can either defense reach “adequate”? With DRtgs at 107.2 and 118.2 in the sample, even incremental improvement—one extra stop per quarter—can swing the result.
- Free throws as efficiency insurance: Student Igokea’s 70.3% FT vs. Donji Vakuf - Promo’s 64.6% can matter late if the game tightens.
Projected game shape
Expect Student Igokea to try to lift the possession count and leverage their ball movement (68.2 assist rate) into high-efficiency looks, while Donji Vakuf - Promo attempts to keep the game slower and let three-point volume dictate the outcome. With equal rest and clean injury reports, the most predictive edge in the provided data is defensive: Donji Vakuf - Promo’s 118.2 Defensive Rating leaves less room for error if the threes aren’t falling.
Odds note: No market odds were provided for this matchup, so this preview is driven strictly by the supplied efficiency, pace, and split indicators.
