DWadeno3 wrote:narmerguy wrote:As for his own game, Wade isn't planning to change much. The San Antonio Spurs often left him alone on the perimeter in order to pack the paint against LeBron James. Wade said the unorthodox game plan won't serve as a motivator to improve his jump shot or change his style in the offseason.
"I welcome it, it's fine," Wade said of the Spurs daring him to shoot. "Especially if I get a chance to shoot midrange shots. That's what I've done my whole career, and I won't stop doing it until I stop playing this game."
Wade shot just 35.4 percent on midrange shots in the playoffs, according to NBA.com.
Well he's right, he also said if he's healthy he's able to do the things he wants to do, shooting midrange j's is one of them. He seems to dedicate his entire summer on strengthening the areas around his knees to avoid the problems he's had in the past two seasons and I actually like it.
What I also found interesting is the following:On bypassing the type of blood-spinning procedure offered in Germany and previously utilized by Kobe Bryant and others for knee pain, Wade said, "I wasn't taking that flight. But you ask your doctors what they feel and they didn't feel I needed to go there. . . . It's not a structural thing, so it's really not what [blood-spinning] does. I think people have a little bit of a misconception about exactly what that treatment does."
Looks like Orthokine isn't the recommended method for his issues.
But to me, the most welcoming sign was the following:Friday, while speaking at his adult fantasy camp at the Westin Diplomat Resort & Spa,
there only were positive signs, less than 12 hours after completing his first basketball-related workout since winning his third championship on June 20, at AmericanAirlines Arena against the San Antonio Spurs. Thursday's night-owl session came under the tutelage of noted trainer Tim Grover, who is among those working Wade's annual camp.
I hope he sticks with Grover for the rest of the summer. I always felt he was the best for him, as he's experienced with guards in that mold.
Regardless of his midrange shooting ability (which hasn't been that great in a while actually), it seems surprising that he's against the idea of adding to his arsenal. The 3pt game would help not just him but the rest of the team as far as spacing and the lineups that we can use. Just see what Lebron's uptick in 3P% did for teams guarding him out away from the rim.