Great analysis. Thanks for posting. I started following him on Twitter now.
"His loftier shooting results from every level are a product of sharper fundamentals and more confidence. Brown keeps his shooting elbow tucked in more consistently, and he doesn't rush his arm release as much as he used to. He also smoothed out his shooting release so it's more fluid and less mechanical, which is not a transition that all prospects can make."
These are 3 key things I watch for in a shooter. The other 2 are arc and balance.
Focusing on his point on shooting motion… with legs, body and arms all in a single flowing motion is probably the toughest to learn…
1. how did the player get to a the shooting position with knees bent?
2. Where did the ball start (low?),
3. what was the ball path to the release? (ball close to the body, and in line to the basket? Or away from body, or crossing the body)
4. Has there a hitch in the ball path (e.g. did the ball pause in the "shooting pocket" or not). This is an interesting one, as some people advocate the shooting pocket approach which is wrong to me)
5. Was the release high, with a strong wrist flick and no off hand influence? Did shooter hold the release?
6. Was the ball arc high, with a backwards rotation?
7. Was the players body lift straight up or slightly jumping forward (but not leaning or legs kicking out)
NBA players break these rules all the time, and amazingly still make the shots because they are so talented (e.g. they can catch the ball high and immediately shoot without loading their legs or bringing the ball down, or they can shoot off balance and twisted) but I'm talking about their base shooting form
bearister said:
Jaylen Brown' 3P % at Cal was 29. His NBA career 3P % is 37. He was 50 last night.
Interesting article from 2020:
How Jaylen Brown Turned His Basketball Weaknesses into Strengths
https://bballwriters.com/profiles/how-jaylen-brown-turned-his-basketball-weaknesses-into-strengths/