I don't think you even need to get to 70% to be honest. Anything above like 55% is enough to punish the other team for fouling. It hurts more in the college game where they do the 1 and 1 stuff. With that being said at the end of games the higher miss chance could keep him off the floor, or from touching the ball much at the end of games.
The worry is that he ends up like Andris Biedrins and the misses make him avoid contact and he gets so messed up mentally you just cant play him.
Another player who improved his shot is Trevor Ariza shot 50% free throws and 24% from 3 in his 1 year at UCLA. Compared with Gordon of 42% free throws and 35% from 3.
I guess you could always look negative and find 100 players who never learned to shoot and never made it.
Finding a handful of players with double digit % increases and saying Gordon will do the same is fallacy. It is a fact, that most players don't have large bumps in shooting or FT percentages. Yes, outliers exist, but you don't use an outlier to make general assumptions. Based on averages, Gordon will not have a huge increase in FT/shooting %. Yes, it may happen, but if you draft him you do it because you think his other abilities outweight his shooting ineffectiveness. (And a poor shooting SF at#5 better have a lot of other great skills).
The top 10 teams in the league all shot 77% or better. We were ranked 22nd at 74.7. The Jazz, as a team, are at a disadvantage compared to most opponents. Giving minutes to players with even lower FT%s will only magnify the disadvantage at the FT line.
Can you prove the first paragraph please. Not being a jerk just wanted some research and couldn't find any. From what I can tell on the few players I looked up a ten percent increase is perfectly normal... 20-25 percent increase is the outlier based on the players I looked at.
There are definitely studies. This is the most recent one I have read on 3-point FG% changes
https://www.numberfire.com/nba/news...ions-can-players-truly-improve-their-shooting
Edit: Also, when you are comparing, make sure they took a similar # of FTs in each year to get a fair comparison.
I can think of a handful of players that have improved over 10%. Webber, Baron Davis, Dale Davis. It is rare.
It's not.Lol that 70% isn't good enough. Let's pass on everyone except stauskas.
The onus really is on Derrick Favors to improve. He only shot 67%. Burke and Hayward are both great FT shooters. Burks was just slightly above the team average. Jefferson was at 74% and Kanter at 73%. No one else really mattered since they didn't take enough FT's to push the needle one way or the other.Finding a handful of players with double digit % increases and saying Gordon will do the same is fallacy. It is a fact, that most players don't have large bumps in shooting or FT percentages. Yes, outliers exist, but you don't use an outlier to make general assumptions. Based on averages, Gordon will not have a huge increase in FT/shooting %. Yes, it may happen, but if you draft him you do it because you think his other abilities outweight his shooting ineffectiveness. (And a poor shooting SF at#5 better have a lot of other great skills).
The top 10 teams in the league all shot 77% or better. We were ranked 22nd at 74.7. The Jazz, as a team, are at a disadvantage compared to most opponents. Giving minutes to players with even lower FT%s will only magnify the disadvantage at the FT line.
It's not.
https://espn.go.com/nba/statistics/player/_/stat/free-throws/sort/freeThrowsAttempted/seasontype/2/position/small-forwards
Do yourself a favor and look for a "Star" that shoots under 70%.
When did I say he was a star or a small forward. I think his best position is at PF... he will likely play some SF as well.
The argument was that you couldn't play him at the end of games because the other team would foul him intentionally. You said shooting 70% wasn't good enough like the other team would hack him at the end of games if he shot 70%. Statistically that only works if you are a 50% or lower shooter. No coach would purposely foul a 70% free throw shooter.
If Aaron was a power he'd have to be a stretch 4. HE CAN'T SHOOT.
Why pick a guy who's 1 weakness is the worst weakness a basketball player could have? #tradethepick