JerrySloan wrote:I meant do you believe that Korver, e.g., really has had much more positive impact on the court for Atlanta than Butler has had for the Bulls?
There's a reason I have a picture of Korver as my avatar
You may not realize it, but this is one of the most important questions you could've asked in your quest to understand impact statistics. This is generally the part of the conversation where people tend to look at me sideways or even outright dismiss me, so I really hope you'll read this with an open mind.
Think about this: on offense, a basketball player is always in one of two conditions. Either he has the ball, or he doesn't. A player can contribute by doing good things with the ball (this is what's captured by the box score and what most people focus on when watching games) or he can do good things without the ball (this is something that isn't traditionally measured by any of our counting statistics and something most people don''t notice).
Now with that in mind, consider Korver's shooting. Obviously, people see that he scores 12 ppg and question how this guy can be seriously considered an impact player. But consider a couple things: among players who have equalled Korver's 3 point shooting volume in history, the highest percentage ever recorded was 45%. Korver is currently shooting
49.6%. He's bombing 3s at a rate equivalent to some of the highest in history, and he's hitting them at a percentage no one has ever come close to. On Catch & Shoot plays, per NBA.com, Korver is averaging over 1.3 points per possession. The best offense in NBA history scored about 1.15 points per possession.
Now another thing Korver has mastered is being a brutally quick decision maker. He catches and either shoots if he's open or finds an open teammate to pass to. This means that failed attempts to get him the ball cost very little shot clock time, and he's not taking bad shots when he does possess the ball. This is the most underrated aspect of what made guys like Bird and Jordan so ridiculous on offense. It was always catch, read, attack or pass within the blink of an eye. Korea does this as well as anyone, and the result is he doesn't waste possessions. His teammates who are better at isolating and pick and roll have more shot clock to work with.
And another thing in Korver's favor: right now he leads the league in True Shooting Percentage. What that means in practice is that a shot attempt by Korver on average results in more points than a shot attempt by any other player in the NBA. This is a big, big deal.
Okay so we've established what Korver does with the ball that makes him so special, but what about without the ball? Well, given that he's the best in the league when he actually does decide to shoot, any reasonable opposing coach is going to do their best to keep the ball out of his hands. And this is the secret to the Hawks offensive success. It's almost a joke how far opposing teams will go to stop Korver from shooting. I'm talking doubles at the 3 point line, switching every screen, I've even seen multiple times this year opposing defenses concede an open dunk just to avoid Korver being open. It's ridiculous.
And Korver does not behave like a normal shooter. Watch him during a Hawks game sometime, he's constantly moving, sprinting in circles around the arc, making decisive dives to the corner. He's the biggest threat on the Hawks, and all eyes are on him all the time. Defenses literally treat him like he's LeBron.
We imagine the typical low volume 3 point shooter as a guy who sits in the corner and shoots when he's passed to. But this is not the case with Kyle. The Hawks will run him around screen after screen, watch the defense shatter, and then attack the craters he leaves behind. They are so brutally effective at using Korver's gravity to set up 2-on-1s and mismatch isolations. Korea doesn't get credited with an assist on these plays, but he deserves it.
And think about what you'd do if you're defending a pick-and-roll with Korver lurking on the weak side. You absolutely cannot help off of him. In Thibodeau's defensive scheme, the weak side corner help man needs to drop into the paint and bump the roll man, impeding his way to the basket. But if that defender is guarding Korver,
you can't use that guy to help on the pick and roll at all. Watch the Hawks run pick and roll, and it honestly looks like you could drive a semi through the lane at times.
So yeah, Korver is having tangible, transcendent impact every single possession, and he never even has to touch the ball to do so.
So big picture, what does this mean? I don't think Korver is a better basketball player than Jimmy Butler. Butler has much better defensive told, a more versatile skill set, and can be a high-usage guy in a way that Korver can't. However,
Jimmy Butler is not having as much impact on the basketball court as Korver is right now. Very few players are.
And this gets a little philosophical, but follow me here: we tend to think of basketball players in terms of how well they could do without quality talent around them. But to me this is a fallacy, because if the goal is to win a championship, I want players that play really well when they have other talented players around them, even if they need other talent to do their thing effectively.
A real world example: The Knicks would be far, far worse with Korver in place of Carmelo. This is a given, since Carmelo is much better suited to carrying a team like that. But flip things around: do you honestly believe the Hawks would be better with Carmelo in place of Korver? Because I legitimately don't. I think the Hawks would be worse with Carmelo.
Another real-world example: You have the option of putting any shooting guard in the league on the Cavaliers. do you pick anyone other than Korver? The guy is going to make life so much easier for the other offensive stars, and when he does use possessions, he's going to use them better than even the other stars would!
Now what you'll take issue with is Korver's context-dependency. And that's totally fair, and for a lot of teams they wouldn't hesitate to take a litany of other guys over Korver. But think about this: is it more valuable to make a bad team mediocre, or to be able to make a great team championship-worthy? Because the latter is what Korver does. And I'll take that over the Carmelo's of the world any day.
Wow that was long. Anyway this is why I'm such a huge advocate of film study. Once you accept RAPM as being a valid indicator of "impact" you start looking at basketball in a different way, and start to understand the unseen impact of guys like Korver. Other big ones are Steve Nash, Bill Walton, David Robinson, etc.
āIām not the fastest guy on the court, but I can dictate when the race begins.ā