sco wrote:ShouldaPaidBG wrote:He's already improved his jumper and therefore has proven that he's capable of improving his jumper
I think you hit the key point that has been the center of the issue. Josh with a 3pt shot is a near-allstar. He has shown continual year-over-year improvement in the area, even if you focus on his full-year numbers vs. his 29 game hot streak. Still, much of the debate as to the level of player that Giddey is is centered around how much of that 29 game (statistically nearly impossible) hot streak 3pt shooting carries over going forward. His ability to make and take more 3's makes a huge difference on what else he can do from an efficiency perspective offensively.
I think a wider problem is that visually watching him shoot, the improvement feels considerably much less than the statistics make you think it is.
- 98.6% of his shots are open / wide open (no defender within 4 feet)
- 82.6% of his shots are catch and shoot (not ideal for a PG that spends most of his time handling the ball)
- His release speed is still very slow and form still looks very poor
- He still passes up a ton of open threes
- Opponents still generally do not guard him or view him as a threat as a shooter (ie do not guard off the ball, always go under screens)
There are some really positive objective measures:
- slightly increased volume 4.7a per 36 (career average of 4.3)
- career high 37.8% from 3
Objectively, his shooting was much better, but the impact of that improved shooting is still relatively minimal when taken into the context of his role and how an NBA offense works. The fact that he improved is important, but there are a lot of indicators as to why people are highly skeptical that improvement is long lasting, and people tend to look at shooting as just a function of percentage / volume. Coby White's impact as a shooter is much, much higher than Giddey's as an example, but it'd be real easy look at the basic raw numbers and think otherwise if you aren't digging in or watching the game.
If Giddey were to become a legitimately good shooter which would require:
- A quicker release that allows for high volume
- Ability to shoot off the dribble
- Ability to shot side step / step back threes
- Shoot while defended (likely outcome of the above)
- Require the defense to guard him reasonably closely when off ball
- Require the defense to fight over screens rather than just going under screens
Then he would likely be a max player, but it's really hard for me to see Giddey taking the leap from where he is today to the guy who can do those things. Coby White can do all of those things, and the defense respects him as a shooter. He's only a 36.9% shooter for his career, but if he's left open, teams know that he will burn them. His percentage is low because he gets up a lot more shots and much, much more difficult shots. He gets up 7 attempts per 36 minutes with intense defensive attention, and his impact on the defense is big because teams have to guard him everywhere and can never lay off of him for a second. The impact on how the defense guards him is the much more important impact than the actual points per attempt he's able to generate, because it's what creates easy opportunities elsewhere.