The Oregon game got me to thinking about this. Basketball teams have been shooting more threes for several years, but in college, that trend has slowed and leveled off somewhat now. Nevertheless, I wonder if it is more and more becoming the weapon of choice for players and coaches. Larry Bird said not long ago that it seemed any gym he walked into, all the young kids would be practicing shooting threes, and nothing else.
When I watched the Oregon game, the score was within a bucket, with only 5 minutes to go, when Oregon's Chris Duarte hit a three. Then Cal's Bradley quickly fired up a three to try and keep pace, and missed. Duarte came down and made another three. Then Cal's Foreman tried a three and missed. Then Duarte knocked down another three, and Cal's Betley shot a three and missed. Duarte made his 4th three in a row, in about 2 and a half minutes, and Cal's Betley tried another three and missed. That was 8 three pointers hoisted up by the teams in about 3 minutes, with no other kinds of shots attempted by either team. This type of offensive play was highly successful for Oregon, and a total failure for Cal. Was it a tactic by both teams? Did the coaches on both sides plan or encourage this tactic? Or did it just happen in the moment?
If it was a tactic on both sides, to let it all hang out, one side gambling they could get a lead by shooting a bunch of threes, and the other team trying to match them three for three, then what would that mean for basketball?
Right now only about a third of the shots attempted in college games are threes, while two thirds are twos. The main purpose of shooting and making long distance shots is to draw the defense out to the perimeter, opening up the area close to the basket or at least the mid range area for higher percentage shots. The highest percentage shot is the open layup or dunk, say 98%. Free throws are shot at an average of say 65%. The close in shot by a big who is defended, is maybe 50%. The short to midrange jumper maybe 40-45%, and the three about 35%, the lowest percentage shot on the floor.
The game has changed so much from my youth, where if you shot a 25-30 footer, and missed, the coach would often yank you out of the game for taking such a low percentage shot (maybe 20-25%in those days, because very few players ever practiced that shot). If we move from a game of a few years ago of shooting threes to open up the area near the basket, all the way to going exclusively to shooting threes for stretches, like trying to blow a close game open with each shot counting an extra point, we will be doing the reverse. The skilled big man with a variety of shots near the basket might even make a return to the game as coaches will use the big men to force defenses to collapse on the area near the basket and leave the perimeter shooters open to shoot those low percentage threes.
I loved the three when I was a kid, even though my team received only 2 points for me making one. I was not a good athlete or a good player, but I could shoot, so I stayed on the floor, because I made shots. Today, I don't like watching the three as much. It was exciting to see Duarte make 4 threes in a row, but every one was a dagger in my heart. And every three Cal missed down the stretch gave me yet another dagger in the heart. I know, and all those players know, and both coaches know that Cal could have made 4 threes in a row and Oregon could have missed all 3 of theirs. I don't like seeing games left primarily to chance like that. I'd rather see teams use more clock in crunch time, work for good open looks behind screens, or open shots near the basket, and maybe mix in an occasional three. I'd like to hear everyone's thoughts.
SFCityBear