wednesday toughie at their gym. we will be the underdogs. bradley will need some scoring help.
I guess the idea is to bring in as many guards as you can, and hope one of them pans out to be a real point guard. They are becoming rare. Either they can dish or they can shoot, but usually not both in the same player. Gone are the days of coach Don Nelson, who said, "Good point guards are a dime a dozen. If your point guard gets hurt, there are plenty in the CBA."helltopay1 said:
That's why you need a PG who can score as well as dish. Fox has recruited two players for next year, but neither of them are complete PG's.
helltopay1 said:
Dear Hoops: Wishful thinking I think: when we were kids, you could identify the shooters in the 4th grade--decades later, thge shooters could still shoot while the others still couldn't shoot. fox badly needs to recruit a PG who is a natural shooter.
University of Hawaii beat the previously undefeated USF several nights ago 85-75. USF's center 7'0" Jimbo Lull had 24 points including 3-4 3FGs, but Hawaii limited the other Dons shooters to 4-17 3FGs, which was Hawaii's game plan along with slowing down the game tempo. Lull is also effective around the basket using his big body so our centers may have their hands full.calgo430 said:
wednesday toughie at their gym. we will be the underdogs. bradley will need some scoring help.
Thanks for this info.SanseiBear said:University of Hawaii beat the previously undefeated USF several nights ago 85-75. USF's center 7'0" Jimbo Lull had 24 points including 3-4 3FGs, but Hawaii limited the other Dons shooters to 4-17 3FGs, which was Hawaii's game plan along with slowing down the game tempo. Lull is also effective around the basket using his big body so our centers may have their hands full.calgo430 said:
wednesday toughie at their gym. we will be the underdogs. bradley will need some scoring help.
Perhaps, ASU who plays the Dons tomorrow night will wear them down.
bearmanpg said:
While it is the exception when someone becomes a good shooter after shooting poorly, it has been done....Jason Kidd is the most notable but also Magic Johnson came into the NBA without a reliable shot....More recently, Kawhi Leonard has become an elite shooter...actually, IMO, shooting doesn't require exceptional athletic ability but it does require hours and hours of practice with the correct form...if you put those hours in without correcting your form you are wasting your time....
helltopay1 said:
dear dim: didn't i read somewhere that Kidd became a prolific NBA three-point shooter???? My imagination???But, if true, that would negate my theory to some extent.
I remember a few times at Cal where it seemed like he wasn't concentrating and missed some wide open layups. I had followed him a little as kid, and in high school, and had never seen that, so I was stunned , when I saw it at Cal. I think the game just came so easy for Kidd, that he might not always be paying attention. And shooting was not what he was all about, which was setting up teammates and playing shut down defense.dimitrig said:helltopay1 said:
dear dim: didn't i read somewhere that Kidd became a prolific NBA three-point shooter???? My imagination???But, if true, that would negate my theory to some extent.
Kidd shot .400 overall for his NBA career and .349 from 3PT. He had three seasons in Dallas where he shot well from 3PT but he was never a good shooter.
bearmanpg said:
Just curious dim...who do you consider a good shooter? I don't consider Kidd a great shooter but good, yeah...Kidd was an example of someone who became a good shooter at a later stage in his career...
my guess is he's a pass first PG who is also being a tentative freshman with his shot. I think there's a decent chance he grows out of this and becomes a more complete PG, starting later this year.HoopDreams said:
They haven't been pretty but I was encouraged by browns 3s when left open
Perhaps in the off season he puts in a ton of shooting and becomes enough of a threat to open up the court
I'd like to see him start with a pull up or floater which I think will complement his drive game (and of course continue to work on his deep ball)
This team needs a PG to be a scoring threat
bearmanpg said:
So a difference of 3.5 makes per 100 attempts is the difference between not being a good shooter and being a great shooter.....can't say I agree with that but I do agree that Steph is a great shooter...JJ has better numbers than Stockton but JJ is only a good shooter but Stockton is a great shooter....I can't agree with Stockton being a great shooter as his 3 pt % is under 40...He shot a ton of lay-ups....The original intent of my post was to point out guys who improved their shooting considerably over time....Maybe I wasn't clear in my intent...
If you say Jason Kidd was a terrible shooter at Cal and a terrible shooter in the NBA, either you are exaggerating, or you have very high standards.dimitrig said:bearmanpg said:
While it is the exception when someone becomes a good shooter after shooting poorly, it has been done....Jason Kidd is the most notable but also Magic Johnson came into the NBA without a reliable shot....More recently, Kawhi Leonard has become an elite shooter...actually, IMO, shooting doesn't require exceptional athletic ability but it does require hours and hours of practice with the correct form...if you put those hours in without correcting your form you are wasting your time....
I was sort of with you and then you mentioned Jason Kidd. He was a terrible shooter at Cal and he was a terrible shooter in the NBA. What did get better over the years was his free throw shooting.
You mentioned Magic Johnson above.bearmanpg said:
So a difference of 3.5 makes per 100 attempts is the difference between not being a good shooter and being a great shooter.....can't say I agree with that but I do agree that Steph is a great shooter...JJ has better numbers than Stockton but JJ is only a good shooter but Stockton is a great shooter....I can't agree with Stockton being a great shooter as his 3 pt % is under 40...He shot a ton of lay-ups....The original intent of my post was to point out guys who improved their shooting considerably over time....Maybe I wasn't clear in my intent...
SFCityBear said:If you say Jason Kidd was a terrible shooter at Cal and a terrible shooter in the NBA, either you are exaggerating, or you have very high standards.dimitrig said:bearmanpg said:
While it is the exception when someone becomes a good shooter after shooting poorly, it has been done....Jason Kidd is the most notable but also Magic Johnson came into the NBA without a reliable shot....More recently, Kawhi Leonard has become an elite shooter...actually, IMO, shooting doesn't require exceptional athletic ability but it does require hours and hours of practice with the correct form...if you put those hours in without correcting your form you are wasting your time....
I was sort of with you and then you mentioned Jason Kidd. He was a terrible shooter at Cal and he was a terrible shooter in the NBA. What did get better over the years was his free throw shooting.
At Cal as a freshman, in 1993, Kidd's FG% was 0.463, above the NCAA average of 0.452. His 3PT% was 0.286, below the NCAA average of .354. His FT% was .657, below the NCAA average of .677.
At Cal, as a soph, in 1994, Kidd's shooting improved a lot. His FG% was 0.472, again above the NCAA average of .443, and his 3PT% was 0.362, above the NCAA average of .354. His FT% was .692, above the NCAA average of .671.
Kidd was an average shooter in college, compared to all of Div 1 for his two seasons. If we say he was terrible, then we are saying the average player in the NCAA for those two seasons was a terrible shooter, and I don't think many people would say that. And he did improve his shooting during his two years at Cal.
In the NBA, his FG% was lower than average. His 2PT FG% went down from .541 at Cal to .421 for his NBA career. I did not follow him much after Cal, but I suspect he was unable to score inside as much due to defenses with taller and better defenders protecting the rim and defending Kidd. His three point shooting fell off in the NBA as well, and over his first 10 years in the NBA, his 3PT% was .319. However, his 3PT% was better than the NBA average for three of those years, 1997, 1999, and 2005. At that point, Kidd may have been slowing down and was being utilized differently, as he was shooting threes a lot better. In four of his last six seasons he was above the NBA average for 3PT%. His best seasons were 2009 (.406) and 2010 (.425). In his first season, 1995, Kidd shot FTs at .698. By 1998, Kidd had improved and reached his first 80% FT season. He would have 11 out of 19 seasons where his FT% was 80% or higher. In 15 out of 19 seasons, his FT% was above the NBA average.
Compared to his peers:
FG%: Stockton .515, Nash .490, Payton .466, Kidd .400
2PT%: Stockton .541, Nash .518, Payton .501, Kidd .429
3PT%: Nash .428, Stockton .384, Kidd .349, Payton .317
FT%: Nash .904, Stockton .826, Kidd .785, Payton .729
Kidd was not a terrible shooter, just average. And we expected more.
Why are you comparing a PG to all players? Kidd simply just didn't shoot at a level expected of an all-time great guard.
JKidd was also a player who gladly threw the court length hail marys at the end of quarters, which didn't help his average. Not saying he was a good shooter--I agree his overall stats made him average for a point guard.SFCityBear said:If you say Jason Kidd was a terrible shooter at Cal and a terrible shooter in the NBA, either you are exaggerating, or you have very high standards.dimitrig said:bearmanpg said:
While it is the exception when someone becomes a good shooter after shooting poorly, it has been done....Jason Kidd is the most notable but also Magic Johnson came into the NBA without a reliable shot....More recently, Kawhi Leonard has become an elite shooter...actually, IMO, shooting doesn't require exceptional athletic ability but it does require hours and hours of practice with the correct form...if you put those hours in without correcting your form you are wasting your time....
I was sort of with you and then you mentioned Jason Kidd. He was a terrible shooter at Cal and he was a terrible shooter in the NBA. What did get better over the years was his free throw shooting.
At Cal as a freshman, in 1993, Kidd's FG% was 0.463, above the NCAA average of 0.452. His 3PT% was 0.286, below the NCAA average of .354. His FT% was .657, below the NCAA average of .677.
At Cal, as a soph, in 1994, Kidd's shooting improved a lot. His FG% was 0.472, again above the NCAA average of .443, and his 3PT% was 0.362, above the NCAA average of .354. His FT% was .692, above the NCAA average of .671.
Kidd was an average shooter in college, compared to all of Div 1 for his two seasons. If we say he was terrible, then we are saying the average player in the NCAA for those two seasons was a terrible shooter, and I don't think many people would say that. And he did improve his shooting during his two years at Cal.
In the NBA, his FG% was lower than average. His 2PT FG% went down from .541 at Cal to .421 for his NBA career. I did not follow him much after Cal, but I suspect he was unable to score inside as much due to defenses with taller and better defenders protecting the rim and defending Kidd. His three point shooting fell off in the NBA as well, and over his first 10 years in the NBA, his 3PT% was .319. However, his 3PT% was better than the NBA average for three of those years, 1997, 1999, and 2005. At that point, Kidd may have been slowing down and was being utilized differently, as he was shooting threes a lot better. In four of his last six seasons he was above the NBA average for 3PT%. His best seasons were 2009 (.406) and 2010 (.425). In his first season, 1995, Kidd shot FTs at .698. By 1998, Kidd had improved and reached his first 80% FT season. He would have 11 out of 19 seasons where his FT% was 80% or higher. In 15 out of 19 seasons, his FT% was above the NBA average.
Compared to his peers:
FG%: Stockton .515, Nash .490, Payton .466, Kidd .400
2PT%: Stockton .541, Nash .518, Payton .501, Kidd .429
3PT%: Nash .428, Stockton .384, Kidd .349, Payton .317
FT%: Nash .904, Stockton .826, Kidd .785, Payton .729
Kidd was not a terrible shooter, just average. And we expected more.
Of those four, these are the percentage of total attempts that were three-point attempts (career)con said:Quote:
Compared to his peers:
FG%: Stockton .515, Nash .490, Payton .466, Kidd .400
2PT%: Stockton .541, Nash .518, Payton .501, Kidd .429
3PT%: Nash .428, Stockton .384, Kidd .349, Payton .317
FT%: Nash .904, Stockton .826, Kidd .785, Payton .729
Kidd was not a terrible shooter, just average. And we expected more.
Why are you comparing a PG to all players? Kidd simply just didn't shoot at a level expected of an all-time great guard.
Well, I had to start somewhere. A post here said that "Jason Kidd was a terrible shooter at Cal, and he was a terrible shooter in the NBA." I wanted to defend Kidd against this statement. The poster did not qualify his statement, by defining what terrible meant to him. Whether Jason looked terrible to him while shooting, or whether he was terrible compared to other players, and if so, what players? I took it to mean compared to all the players playing at the same time that Jason played in the NCAA and NBA. You want to compare Jason only to "All-time great guards" Fine, then I would agree with you that he didn't shoot at a level expected of such a guard. But at least you did not say he "was a terrible shooter" for an all-time great guard. At the end of my post, I showed how he compares with the three best point guards of his era in the NBA, which is below them in most shooting categories.concernedparent said:
Why are you comparing a PG to all players? Kidd simply just didn't shoot at a level expected of an all-time great guard.
oskidunker said:
Usf favored by 8.5.
I use stats a lot, because my memory becomes more clouded over the years with my own biases. So here are some surprising stats from sports-reference for Cal's team of 1994, Kidd's sophomore year:dimitrig said:bearmanpg said:
While it is the exception when someone becomes a good shooter after shooting poorly, it has been done....Jason Kidd is the most notable but also Magic Johnson came into the NBA without a reliable shot....More recently, Kawhi Leonard has become an elite shooter...actually, IMO, shooting doesn't require exceptional athletic ability but it does require hours and hours of practice with the correct form...if you put those hours in without correcting your form you are wasting your time....
I was sort of with you and then you mentioned Jason Kidd. He was a terrible shooter at Cal and he was a terrible shooter in the NBA. What did get better over the years was his free throw shooting.
Objectively speaking, one of the Brown's threes was sweet, the other two were lucky to go in.HoopDreams said:
They haven't been pretty but I was encouraged by browns 3s when left open
Perhaps in the off season he puts in a ton of shooting and becomes enough of a threat to open up the court
I'd like to see him start with a pull up or floater which I think will complement his drive game (and of course continue to work on his deep ball)
This team needs a PG to be a scoring threat
Freshie PG Leilani McIntosh on our women's team is averaging 4.7 assists and 2.9 turnovers. Also 3.3 rebounds and 2.7 steals. She's not shooting well but at least not shooting too much.Quote:
I agree with the rest of it, but so far neither of our point guards has proven that they can dish the ball at an acceptable level. Both are averaging less than 2 assists per game. Assist to turnover ratios for both players are upside down. This needs fixing.
stu said:Freshie PG Leilani McIntosh on our women's team is averaging 4.7 assists and 2.9 turnovers. Also 3.3 rebounds and 2.7 steals. She's not shooting well but at least not shooting too much.Quote:
I agree with the rest of it, but so far neither of our point guards has proven that they can dish the ball at an acceptable level. Both are averaging less than 2 assists per game. Assist to turnover ratios for both players are upside down. This needs fixing.
Is it too late to sign her for the men's team?stu said:Freshie PG Leilani McIntosh on our women's team is averaging 4.7 assists and 2.9 turnovers. Also 3.3 rebounds and 2.7 steals. She's not shooting well but at least not shooting too much.Quote:
I agree with the rest of it, but so far neither of our point guards has proven that they can dish the ball at an acceptable level. Both are averaging less than 2 assists per game. Assist to turnover ratios for both players are upside down. This needs fixing.