falcolombardi wrote:65% at rim
39% 3-10 feet
46% 10-23 feet
Ngl while they are obviouslt very great numbers they demithify jordan being a goat tier rim finisher (we knew this but is nice to have the data) or a clear goat mid range scorer
I dunno—I’d say that that playoff mid-range scoring looks pretty great to me. We can roughly derive a similar number for other players by using some back-of-the-napkin math on BBREF and taking a weighted average of a player’s playoff FG% on shots from 10-16 feet and 16ft-3P, weighted by what percent of their shots they took from those categories. Dirk Nowitzki is someone who sticks out to me as a GOAT-level mid-range shooter. And Dirk’s playoff mid-range FG% is essentially exactly the same as Jordan’s (just below 46%), and that’s with less volume than Jordan. Durant’s is slightly higher (around 47%), but again with lower volume. Steph Curry’s is also a little higher (should be right above 46%), but his mid-range volume isn’t very high at all. Kobe’s playoff mid-range FG% was around 42%, so that’s a good deal lower. Steve Nash was one of the greatest shooters ever, but had a playoff mid-range FG% of around exactly 45%, while obviously on much lower volume. [EDIT: Note that, as per my post just below this, there’s also good reason to believe that Jordan’s midrange FG% would be higher using this BBREF method than it is in Djoker’s data, since the two methods are a little different and in 1997 and 1998 where we have both sets of data, Jordan does better in the BBREF method than in Djoker’s data].
I think there’s a very good argument that Jordan’s combination of mid-range FG% and volume makes him the GOAT mid-range scorer, and I think this data backs that up—even if the percentage itself is not unprecedented (and so perhaps you can plausibly say it doesn’t show him being the “
clear goat mid range scorer”)
That said, I think with Jordan, just looking at the mid-range FG% and volume doesn’t quite tell the whole story about why his mid-range game was so good offensively. A big reason it was so good is that Jordan could get to his spots and get his shot off with very minimal numbers of turnovers. This was a really big deal. For instance, if Jordan makes 46% of his mid-range shots and Durant makes 47% of his mid-range shots, you’d still expect to have a more efficient offense with Jordan shooting mid-range shots because Jordan is going to turn the ball over significantly less in the process of getting those shots. That’s true for all the above-mentioned guys except maybe Dirk.
Another thing worth noting is that I think the calculus of mid-range shots was different in Jordan’s era than in the more recent eras that the above-discussed guys played in, in a way that I think makes Jordan’s numbers even more impressive. More recent eras have had more spacing (with that additional spacing obviously getting more and more pronounced the more recent we get). That makes it easier to get a good look on a jumper. But it also makes offensive rebounding less likely. So I think there’s a bit of trade-off here, where, all else being equal, we’d expect players in more recent eras to have a higher FG% on their mid-range shots, but to have that balanced out in terms of overall team offensive efficiency by teams in more recent eras getting fewer offensive rebounds on those shots. In that context, Jordan’s mid-range FG% looks even more impressive IMO.