SWedd523 wrote:I guess I'm thinking about it differently but I don't see how Marvin being a left corner shooter and Al being a left block postman are a good match. Ideally you'd want him to be on the weakside so he could get swing-around shots. There won't be enough space to get quality open looks on that same side of the court. His 3P% dropped from 38.9% in 2012 to 32.5% his one year with Al, then back up to 35.9% last year.
I went and looked at his shot charts over those last three years.
LC13-14- 36.84%
12-13- 35.00%
11-12- 47.62%
LW13-14- 41.56%
12-13- 41.67%
11-12- 30.77%
TOP13-14- 37.14%
12-13- 32.00%
11-12- 72.73%
RW13-14- 31.75%
12-13- 31.11%
11-12- 28.13%
RC13-14- 29.41%
12-13- 25.00%
11-12- 32.43%
IF you look at 11-12, there are some high anomalies. Look at the left corner and straight on. That shot up his 3P%, especially on less attempts than the other two years. If it was 5-7% higher then I would contribute that to having other outlying factors, but brings 12% higher on the LC and 50% higher from straight on I just attribute those to what is more than likely just a fluke.
So comparing last year and then 12-13 when he played with Al, they are somewhat similar in the areas of need for his shooting, the LW and LC. He was close to identical on percentage from the LW and just a tad better from the LC. From the left side of the court he shot 40% last year and 37.5% with Al. Part of that could be attributed to with or not with Al, but 2.5% isn't that much of a deviance especially when you consider the work he has put in to expand his game. It could just be an uptick because of the work he put in on his 3 ball.
Also, Williams shot worse on the right side with Al than he did without him as well.
Any way you look at it you want as much 3 point shooting as you can get in the NBA now. The fact we have a guy that excels on the left, another that excels on the right, and a guy that excels from straight on at volume in our starting lineup is a huge plus. Wherever you can get it you take it. If Williams continues to shoot in the high 30-low 40% from the left side of the court, then Al cannot be doubled on his favorite spot whatsoever. If you have Al posted up on the left in a semi clear out with Williams on the LW, Kemba slightly off center, MKG in the oppo post and Lance in the right corner, you cannot double Al whatsoever.
Al also shot better from the left block the year he played with Marvin compared to the other two years as well.