PandaKidd wrote:Because he's trying to value 3pt shooting. The problem is they don't have the talent to do that.
Bud either needs to adjust his scheme based on the strength of his personnel...
Or just get new personnel.
Moderators: dms269, HMFFL, Jamaaliver
PandaKidd wrote:Because he's trying to value 3pt shooting. The problem is they don't have the talent to do that.
Jamaaliver wrote:MaceCase wrote:A jumper =/= a FGA unless dunks and layups are now being considered as jumpers of which Shaq then had the sweetest stroke in league history.
I don't know what this means. Who said anything about a jumper?
You brought up a really good point, but your premise was based on misinformation.
ATL Boy wrote:Horford needs to limit his range to the midrange game, which he's so good at, and he also needs to start attacking the basket. Him focusing so much on mastering the 3 has ruined him. It's Josh Smith all over again.
PandaKidd wrote:To be fair to Al, what I don't know is if this is all CMB dealings. Maybe he's made Horford do this. It's part of his "system". So what I don't know is if Al is camping out doing 3s because that is what he's been told is his job now.
Jamaaliver wrote:
BINGO!!!
It was poor strategy to have Horford play AWAY from his strength in the mid-range.
MaceCase wrote:Al has been a guy who has averaged close to 70% of his offense off of jumpers dating back to Woody. I think some just had the unsubstantiated hope he'd play better at PF, were gravely disappointed but instead of accepting that Al is who is, decided to throw the blame at Bud.
PandaKidd wrote:Al is taking 3 pt shots at an amazing rate, he never did that last year or any year. So you can quote 70% numbers all you want. 15 footers aren't the same as 25 footers.
Jamaaliver wrote:
Moving the most efficient scorer on this team further away from the basket is dumb. Moving the team's best big man away from the paint is dumb.
But Al at least rebounded much better at the PF spot....but all that jump shooting from deep is counter productive.
MaceCase wrote:Under Mike Woodson, dating to 9 years ago, Al took 23%, 23%, and 21% of his shots outside of 15ft.
But let's look at it for the 6 seasons after that though:
Larry Drew-
10-11: 41%
11-12*: 31% (11 games)
12-13: 37%
Mike Budenholzer
13-14*: 41% (29 games)
14-15: 42%
15-16**: 49% (45 games)
This is the great change that Bud is imposing on him?
Alright, stats aside (though I will bring up more) if we're going by eye test from WATCHING THE GAMES then I see a soft player when it comes to Al. An ever softer player of which I had already thought couldn't get any softer. It's mentioned multiple times in this thread how often Al would get into the paint and kick it out to the perimeter and you know why? Because he's soft, he doesn't want the contact as evidenced by a somehow even more abysmal FT rate lower than his already abysmal FT rate. As also evidenced by how him taking threes is allegedly affecting his ability to rebound at a career worst on the defensive end. He got blocked all of 36 times last year, this year he's been blocked 25 times already, he's playing timid in the paint. On a boxout in the closing seconds he's playing patty cake with Tyson Chandler (a guy he outweighs) while Chandler decided to get a forearm into him and clear him out effortlessly for a putback. Talk about Bud making him the new Pero? Pero had over 2x the 3 point attempt rate that Al currently has yet more than 3x the FT rate.
Al is in danger of doubling up his total free throw attempts in 3 point attempts, but it has to be Bud, right? So easy to see, right?
AL Horford wrote:It started the day we finished playing, It's a point of emphasis that I made. I want to be better. If you work on things and you give effort, Coach (Mike Budenholzer) is going to support it. I have gotten a chance to work on those shots. I never want to shoot a shot if I haven't worked on it. I feel comfortable with it. I understand that I have to be near the paint, (working) pick-and-rolls, working around the basket, but I want to be able to have the ability that if I need to shoot those shots, to take them.
"It helps our team, The ability to have your 5-man stretch out and every now and then shoot a shot like that, it keeps the defense honest and stretches the floor.
HereCoach Bud wrote:Through the summer and through 12 days of camp, Al has shown a comfort level with all threes, including the ones above the break, I think he just has a confidence and a belief that he can make them. We want him to take them when he is open. I think that was probably a big hurdle, just to feel good and feel confident shooting threes...
Coach Bud wrote:The first year he watched how the team played and the spacing of the offense and the opportunities in the offense started to plant the notion that this could be helpful to us. Last year, he started to do it some. Now, he spent the whole summer working on it and gaining confidence. I think he’s there...
We feel good when Al is getting his shots, where he is getting them and how much space he is getting...
Obviously, he didn’t make them the other night in Charlotte but he and I visited about it. They are good shots. We want him to shoot them. He looks very confident and comfortable. It’s a way for us to be harder to guard. We still want to get to the basket. We still want to collapse the defense and get to the free-throw line. When you have more space, you can do that.
HereAL Horford wrote:It’s been a process. All summer I’ve worked on it some but now that the season is here, now that we have games, you get a better feel for it. I think the biggest thing for me is coach is confident in allowing me to do it. I feel good shooting it so it’s something I’ll keep working on.
If you look at our offense, there are times when (the opposition) is giving me that shot, that top-of-the-key 3. Then there are some other times when I have to read (the defense) and make sure I pick-and-pop or that I just roll. It’s just making sure I have balance.
We still want to get to the basket. We still want to collapse the defense and get to the free-throw line. When you have more space, you can do that.
PandaKidd wrote:When your guards play this poor, and you have no slasher, who is "driving to the basket" ?? I dont get it. Even PM plays from the perimeter but he attacks the rim. I havent looked, is PM averaging more FTA than AH? hes got to be
PandaKidd wrote:So........you would agree that his shots outside 15ft have gone up? correct? Now we feel its part of the "scheme" of Budenholzer. you feel its not?
PandaKidd wrote:Do you think Bud is happy with Horford, or just accepts who he is?
PandaKidd wrote:But its not an outlier really. Like I said if you take 45 games or half a season and look at his shots....
I totally understand things can change but like you said in the business, this is called a trend, is it not?
HereThe Hawks also could abandon their attempts to make Al Horford a 3-point shooter. Horford has been among the best mid-range shooters for most of his career and still is, but now he’s launching 4.6 three-point attempts per 100 possessions and making just 33 percent. Better that those shots come from within his sweet spots at 15 to 20 feet.
Those are two obvious ways I see that the Hawks might become a better offensive team with their current personnel. I’m sure there are others...
In the end, though, the Hawks just have to make more open shots.