bwgood77 wrote:Saberestar wrote:Mulhollanddrive wrote:I shoot around 50% from FT like Dunn, maybe I just need a nice video to make the team.
Ryan Dunn just attempted 99 FTs in college, that's an small sample size.
Yeah, he just improved from 50 (freshman) to 53.2 (sophomore) but watching his release form and knowing that he is hard worker I seriously doubt that he will not score over 60% of his FTs already in Summer League.
So I hear a lot of talk about his form looking good.
So does this mean when he shot really poorly in college his form was terrible?
Because yes, if his form was terrible and now it's good that is very good news.
If his form was good and he shot that poorly, well, not sure what continuing to have good form would mean, if anything, other than the fact that I guess it's good that it's not poor form.
You should read the breakdown on Dunn by kellan Olson in the link from the tweet that I posted above :
https://arizonasports.com/story/3550024/ryan-dunn-oso-ighodaro-maximized-suns/
It speaks to the context of his opportunities at Virginia a bit man:
Dunn’s Cavaliers under head coach Tony Bennett have been known for years now as a plodding offensive team, lucky to reach a point total in the 70s or 80s, an intentional effort to control pace. In KenPom’s adjusted tempo, which calculates the amount of possessions a team has per game, Virginia ranked dead last in the country. That is 362nd out of 362 teams.
Dunn is a hyper-athletic wing with an explosive physical profile best utilized in transition and with as much space as possible. Considering he’s a limited offensive player at this time as well, it’s even more important for him to get chances on the run. That was of no interest to Virginia.
I talked about this contextually as to how the very low pace low posessions seriously limited his overall opportunities/ posessions towards development in my back and forth discusions with Fishi. Dunn only played 11-13 minutes in his freshman season, and his opportunities in his role severely restricted his opportunities for on court improvements due to very low possessions and very limited opportunities overall.
My point being that Dunns' role was again limited to Bennett's strategy of using him exclusively as a play finisher, rebounder, and dunkers' spot lob threat. And overall, a defensive specialist for them because Bennett himself stated that was exclusively his role because they were undersized and unathletic.
So with increased opportunity, Dunn should get more reps to actually improve in live game scenarios whether in the G league or in garbage time initially? The mental aspects should improve as he gets opportunities and makes some shots to build confidence.













