itsxtray wrote:This is the best article I've read on the power of the 3 pointer and why nerfing it is a good idea.
https://deanondraft.substack.com/p/its-time-to-nerf-the-3-pointer?r=24q2x6&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&triedRedirect=true
I appreciate the link and opening for discussion. Having read the article, I have some quibbles.
1. The idea that we're essentially seeing offense score to the point that it's too easy for them, I'd object to this on the ground that when you watch a possession you don't feel like a 3-pointer is 50% more of a success than a 2-pointer. And the reality is that we are not at peak FG%, which happened in '83-84, 40 years ago.
2. Just because teams today shoot a lot of 3's compared to the past doesn't mean they're all playing the same style. Frankly the style oftentimes depends much on the team's star and his particular strengths and weaknesses.
3. I don't think it makes sense to say that the Tony Allens of the world went away because they were too well-rounded. Quite the opposite.
4. "less athletic today"? Oh I don't think so. Mobility is at an absolute premium.
On the other hand:
1. The rise of the 3 certainly has changed the aesthetic of the game, and it's fine to prefer how it used to look. Personally, I think the 3 has brought more good than bad and that the aesthetic blight on the modern game comes from officiation-related woes.
2. The fact that nearly all players nowadays focus on shooting from 3-point range, regardless of body type, does decrease the diversity of player types in the league, and it's good to mourn this.
3. He's absolutely right that the NBA is more random today, and there are drawbacks to that. I don't think what you actually want is zero randomness in a spectator sport, so a balance is to be struck...but no one in 2001 was saying "Y'know what the NBA needs? More randomness."
In the end I personally don't see 3-point shooting as a problem at this time, and even those with active concerns about it generally aren't going to embrace a radical change as the author proposes, but it's good to think about such things.
For me a line to cross would be 50% league-wide FG% for reasons similar to what he gave in his article: If it ever gets to a point where players missing a shot is more noteworthy than making it, that's not good for the excitement of the game.
As it is my focus, were I czar of NBA basketball strategy, would be to sour the milk that is incentivizing players to play the refs rather than the basket. Both offense and defense is guilty of playing the refs of course, but my guess is that the changes I'd be looking to make in how the refs officiate would help the defense more than offense.