Fun fact: since Ricky became the starting PG for good 12 games ago, he's averaged:
11.4 PPG (43.8% FG, 43.5% 3-PT, 80.6% FT), 7.3 APG, 4.1 A:TO RATIO (with a good chunk of his TOs being due to his teammates -mainly Vanderbilt- being unable to catch a pass) in 28 MPG.
Now let's put it in 32 MPG, which is closer to what a true starting PG minutes should be:
13.0 PPG on high efficiency (
57.7% TS) and
8.3 APG with an
outstanding A:TO ratio. That's on a team that does not utilize him to the best of his strengths and where he's surrounded by non-shooters, no cutters and a bunch of guys who love to handle the ball and call their own numbers.
Who would have thought that him playing as the starter and simply having more of an established role (although far from a perfect one) would have that effect on his performance, compared to what we saw at the beginning of the season.
