Dat2U wrote:So here's Witt addressing good shots and Popovich addressing good shots. Which answer do you think is better?
Q. Can you explain the concept of “good-to-great?”
Popovich: “There are a lot of good shots, but if you can turn that into a great shot, percentages go through the roof. Contested shots are really bad shots. People’s percentage goes down almost by 20, almost without exception. All those things in an offense are things a coach is always trying to develop. It takes time to get everybody to the point where they all buy in and understand how it’s good for the group to do things.
“You want to penetrate not just for you, but for a teammate. Penetrating because I want to make things happen. It could be for me. It could be for a teammate. It could be for the pass after the pass I make. As people start to realize that, then you get a flow and people start playing basketball rather than just running the play that’s called or making up their minds ahead of time.”
http://blog.mysanantonio.com/spursnatio ... ense-a-qa/
"So you’re saying that a 15-foot open look is not good? "You take open shots. You take open shots. Where they are is dictated by what the defense does. If you predicate what kind of shot you’re going to take not based on what you’re doing reading the defense, you’re not going to get good shots. I just worry about goods shots. You know what? Those numbers you can stick… alright? You know, all you analytical people that take that… You take good shots, that’s the most important thing. Maybe we’re not taking good midrange shots, maybe we’re taking contested ones. I understand the numbers are there for a reason, we look at the numbers, but to sit there and… We got a good, open shot we’re taking, I don’t care where it is."
A great question posed by Kyle Weidie. Not sure what I think of this answer.
Witt is a joke of a coach. What really bothers me is how incredibly closed minded he is. The man has THE WORST WINNING PERCENTAGE IN NBA HISTORY of any coach who's coached over 400 games. It seems like it would behoove him to look at every possible resource to get better. The whole 'stick your head in the sand' attitude towards analytics is completely unacceptable in my eyes.[/quote]
Maybe I'm not reading this right but they don't sound
that far apart to me.
Randy is a bit more content with mid-range/long 2s. But both consider
contested shots anathema. Pops is saying penetration leads to better shots.
I doubt Randy disagrees with that.
No question that in practice ie actual games, we take too many long 2s.
And that an attitude of disrespect towards analytics isn't helpful.
But Randy sounded more frustrated than anything else.
As I see it, the fundamental idea is to create an opening or advantage, then respond by staying
ahead of the defense's effort to close that opening. Hopefully that results in the
highest possible quality shot, at rim or corner 3. Perhaps the flip side of our
settling too often for long 2s is the number of very low turnover games we've had.
The longer you try to improve your shot attempt, the more chances you give
the D to force a TO.
All this is not to say we can't and shouldn't do better at taking higher quality shots.