Not having a mid ranger jumper is fine if you want to be a roleplayer. To be a franchise player a PG likely needs to be able to hurt the team from mid range. Look at the top 3 point guards today - Curry, Paul and Westbrook, they all utilize the mid range game significantly, Paul and Westbrook even default to it.
GuyClinch wrote:What are you talking about? You just said "nobody goes for the mid-range jumper unless you are a big"
I gave you an example of probably the best PG in the NBA who feasts in the mid-range and you brush it off as if what you said was correct?
Wow.. Buddy that article does zero to prove your point. Talk about a math fail - LMA0. Chris Paul shoots 53% from the 'mid-range" and 39% from 3.
This means that if he takes 100 mid range jumpers he scores 106 points. But if he takes 100 3 pointers he scores 117 points - and this is the 'best' mid-range shooter at the PG spot. It's not any great surprise that Smart would take so many 3s - he probably can handle basic math and doesn't go around crowing about articles wholly unrelated to his point..
This doesnt really make that much sense, as you're ignoring shot creation and not taking into context how volume would affect the %'s.
Everyone knows that 3 is higher than 2, if you think you've disprove that article with your elementary (literally) math skills then you're not analyzing hard enough. The mid range jumper's value exist in its ability to bypass defenses, not to out score the 3 point shot. Someone like Chris Paul's mid range shot can hurt the opposing team from nearly any side at the court at multiple distances - Paul's 3 point shot is primarily just from the top of the key, some times the shoulder, much easier to stop the latter.
You're comparing a shot that is typically created off the dribble to a shot that is usually spotted up.