beau wrote:
Nah... I didnt contradict myself.
Add up all the 16-24 ft jump shots, not including 3s, this dude takes and find the percentage. That is what I was referring to as 'long twos' in my 3rd paragraph. He shoots well below the 43 percent or 47 percent from the left or right as the writer is referring to.
I could of wrote an article saying how horrible Jennings is on 'long two's' by only focusing on the areas where he shot 13/37 and 17/56 in that range. Yeah that is 32.2 percent with a little bit more sample size. Take it for what its worth.
My point, why focus on something that small? Were talking about 16-24 ft shots right? Add them all up and stop playing games with numbers anyone can see through. Once you add those up, you can see Jennings is a pretty horrible shooter in that range. Hell, Ill do it for you.... its 38.4 percent. with a total of 198 shots in the sample size.
Whats shocking is, how close that percentage is to his 3 point percentage of 37.5. If anything, he should avoid shooting a 16-24 foot jump shot, unless it is a clear 3 pointer. HIs effectiveness would increase dramatically.
Thats what I take from those stats and shot chart, and I dont play number games.
I don't know what you are arguing about, because no one has claimed he is a good 16-24 ft shooter from everywhere in that range. All that was said was he is good from certain spots in that range, and the percentages prove it. You may think those percentages are too small of a sample size, but they are actually right in line with what other top scorers attempt from that range.
Take a look at Durants shot chart

He only shoots 39% or lower in four of the five main areas from that range. He's only great from 1 spot, where he shoots 58% on 76 FGA. Those 76 attempts only account for 5% of his total FGA's on the season- just like you said of Jennings from his hotspots in that range. So is Durant not a good shooter from 16-24 either, because he only shoots great from 1 spot in that range and its too small of a sample size?
Its not as simple as just looking at the range as one number on the whole and concluding a player is or isn't a good shooter from that range. You have to examine further behind the number to see where he is good/bad, because he doesn't have to shoot that shot from every spot. So if you can identify which spots he excels at, then you know which spots to position him at that gives you the best chance of making them. That is the whole point. No player shoots great from every spot.
If you just say Durant is a great shooter period from 16-24 because he shoots 43% overall, and think you can just spot him up above the FT line all day and he will make them at that rate, you will lose, because he is poor from that spot. You have to know which spots within each range that a player excels at. You can't just judge by the range as a whole. Its not number games, its just identifying specific strengths/weaknesses and not generalizing it.