sleepyvato wrote:I'm a huge Booker fan but It's definitely disappointing that he is struggling with his shot this season among other things like his attitude which is poor so far. I hope it's only temporary and he starts shining once again like he did in his rookie year. If not, then I hope the Suns cash in on him before it's too late.
... something to keep in mind is that Booker's performance as a starter last season was really no better than it has been this year. In 51 starts a season ago, he averaged 17.4 points, 3.5 assists, 3.0 rebounds, a .412 field goal percentage, a .302 three-point field goal percentage, an .850 free throw percentage, and a .522 True Shooting Percentage.
http://www.basketball-reference.com/players/b/bookede01/splits/2016In 30 starts this season, Booker is averaging 19.2 points, 3.2 assists, 2.9 rebounds, a .411 field goal percentage, a .329 three-point field goal percentage, an .816 free throw percentage, and a .505 True Shooting Percentage.
One might have expected more of an improvement from one year to the next, but Booker might simply need more time. After all, with 81 career starts, he is just now reaching a full season's worth of starter sample size. From what we have so far, we are talking about a 41 percent field goal shooter overall, a below-average yet high-volume three-point shooter, and a good free throw shooter yet one who fails to reach the foul line often enough to rescue his True Shooting Percentage (the best measure of scoring efficiency). We are also talking about a respectable passer and modest rebounder for a shooting guard. Of course, Booker is probably one of the worst defensive shooting guards in the game, as indicated by both Defensive Real Plus-Minus and most any visual observation, which would find him prone to mental gaffes and lacking for physical strength.
http://www.espn.com/nba/statistics/rpm/_/page/3/sort/DRPM/position/2http://www.espn.com/nba/statistics/rpm/_/year/2016/page/2/sort/DRPM/position/2(That metric can be questionable in some cases; I do not believe that Booker is one of them.)
A recent example of those mental gaffes occurred in the recent home game versus Houston where Booker, despite being the only player in position to contest a pending slam dunk, nonetheless ran back out to the corner to protect the three-point shot (and not in a late-game strategic sort of situation).
http://www.espn.com/nba/video?gameId=400899877And he had done that sort of thing before.
His future is probably still bright. Again, I feel that many Phoenix fans just became carried away last year and imagined that at twenty years of age, he might be what Kobe Bryant was at that age (19.9 points, 3.8 assists, 5.3 rebounds, 1.4 steals, 1.0 blocks, .465 field goal percentage, .549 True Shooting Percentage). Of course, Bryant was in his third season in the NBA, after arriving out of high school, and he was playing with Shaquille O'Neal for one of the better teams in the league. Then again, without O'Neal, he might have averaged 25 points per game that year.