LACtdom wrote:Just paraphrasing... blake said that doc didn't care if he went 0-15 as long as he had the confidence to keep taking shots. Last season I wasn't a fan of blake taking jump shots and I always wished he backed down into the post more. I have a question for you guys.
Do you guys think that Doc wants blake to expand his offence more because DeAndre has no shooting ability and he wants blake to spread the floor more or does he just want blake to be the best he can be? I'm hoping this means that Doc is going to try to transform DeAndre into a monster in the low post. He has so much athletic ability. Jordan can camp down low and blake with the ability to take a jump shot, or drive to the basket for a slam, will have more control of the offence. IMO the improvement of DJ and blake will determine the success of Reddick, Dudley and Barnes (offensively).
It's actually just a better point of attack for Blake. Facing up allows you to still attack with post type moves, but then against bigger guys you can hit jumpshots and straight line drive past them and make the opposition adjust. Facing up at the elbow will give him better floor vision and allow him to see more passing oppurtunities and see the defense better (less turnovers).
From what they are saying, it seems to be based on how Doc and Gentry want to run the offense, similar to some things Phoenix did. The face-up and jump shooting isn't in order to take away his post-game, it is to compliment it and the team. He was taking jumpshots last season, and as a rookie, just wasn't making them too accurately. What they seem to be attempting to do is pick the spots where he's taking jumpshots from (elbow, instead of long 20 footers, etc), and get him more accurate from those spots.
10-11: 4.6 attempts from 10-23 (3.1, 16-23, 34% FG)
11-12: 4.6 attempts from 10-23 (3.9, 16-23, 37% FG)
12-13: 4.3 attempts from 10-23 (3.4, 16-23, 34% FG)
He played less minutes last season, per 36:
4.4 (27.4% of attempts)
4.6 (29.7% of attempts)
4.8 (32.1% of attempts)
So his jumpshot attempts have increased, but from his rookie year to last season, it's a 0.4/game increase, less than 1 shot every two games, 33 more jumpshots over an 82 game season. But we have to look at percentage of attempts, and he's shooting jumpshots 5% more than as a rookie. Huge difference? No, but still a bit, especially adding that he's drawing about 2 fewer FT's/36, so maybe one more attempt a game at the rim where he's fouled. So it's a bit more than a 5% increase in terms of being at the rim vs outside.
Slower pace compared to rookie year is part of that, so that has to be accounted for as more transition oppurtunities will get him a few more oppurtunities at the rim over the season, maybe one more every two games. In the end he hasn't drastically changed his game, he just needs to make these jumpshots that he is taking.
The 0-15 thing is just about confidence and aggressiveness. Every shot is a new shot, the old shot is over with, forget what happened, make or miss, its aboutmthis current shot. You have to have that mentality as a shooter, if you're open in your range, you need to shoot it and not hesitate.