calumnus said:
sluggo said:
Ireland ended up in ninth place. Alajiki slowed down to 13 pts and 6 rebounds per game. He shot only 5/29 (17%) on 3s. So while his improved driving ability was nice to see, his continued poor shooting is somewhat worrisome. I think he is somewhere between that level and the 50% (20/40) he shot last season. 30% seems about right.
I'd like to see Alajiki focus and practice on his 3pt shot from a favored location. Askew and Brown too. A place where teammates know to look for you. All three can drive to the hoop if defended tightly outside, but our best chance of being OK on offense is if we knock down some threes. We were a poor shooting team last year and look to ge worse this year at this point.
Completely disagree. If these or any players will always be shooting their threes from their preferred location, every opponent except the opponent in the season opener will know that by watching video from that first game. Our players had better not be standing around at their preferred spots behind the three point line, or every opponent will be well prepared to stop their three point shots. I believe Alajiki already has favorite spots, and he needs to experiment and find more of them to utilize. And it is nice to hear Sluggo say he has improved his drives. I'll look forward to seeing if he can drive better than last season.
And here you go again with touting Brown's three point shooting. Most of his threes are prayers at best. Very few of his made threes go in hitting nothing but net, or just grazing the back of the rim, like most of the threes made by most of the good three-point shooters. His made threes rattle around, or hit the rim and bounce up 6 feet and drop in, or go in by bouncing off the backboard, likely not planned that way. Like I said in the past, let him take one three in the first half. If he makes it, let him take a second one. But that is it, unless he has made a massive improvement over the summer. I think he should work more on making his free throws (career 46%), distributing the ball, finishing his drives, and leave the three pointers to others.
SFCityBear