post wrote:Ecmic wrote:post wrote:
over the last 4 years she shot a combined 41% from 3. she's played 7 seasons. her rookie year she shot 43% from 3. her second year she missed a lot of time with injury and had a sub par 3 point shooting year for her. her third year was a great year overall but an outlier from 3 as she shot 31% from 3. so if you take her last four years and her rookie year from 3 she's at 41.8% for her career from 3 which is a more accurate estimate of how she really shoots from 3 when healthy.
in terms of her percentages going down based on history, i'm not sure what you are referring to, but let's compare her to curry. curry shot 41% from 3 in college. he shoots 43% from 3 in the nba. now i suspect the defense in the nba would lower her percentages, but if she's starting with a 41.8% and it gets knocked down to 39.8% because of nba defense that still makes her a roughly 40% 3 point shooter
I was referencing the trend that developed when the NBA moved the three point line to, basically, the WNBA’s current distance for a few years in the 90s.
The five year trend of ~33% three-point shooting prior to the relocation (with little variance) shot up to 36% basically overnight. That’s the most cut-and-dry, variable-controlled data we have for how distance affects percentage.
Move a 41.5% shooter at 22’2” back to 23’9”, and historical data shows they’re going to lose 2-3% on their shot. Factor in a transition from shooting against a WNBA defense to shooting against an NBA defense, and it’s more than reasonable to assume that Delle Donne would shoot somewhere in the range of 36-38% in the NBA.
My personal view is that’s still too rosy, but even still, it’s no where close to elite enough to cover for every other weakness.
you make a reasonable point. however i'll point to jeff hornacek (6'4" 190 compared to delle donne 6'5" 187), one of the best pure shooters of all time in the nba. in the 3 years when the nba 3 point line was shortened he shot 41.6% on 637 attempts and 43.8% on 346 attempts in the 3 years after the line was pushed back further. considering delle donne is one of the best pure shooters of all time i think that's a reasonable comparison
I mean, for every Hornacek there’s a counter in guys like Steve Kerr or John Stockton or Reggie Miller.
I see it as self-evident that the further away the three point line moves from the basket, the lower the percentage will be. This has historically been true for great shooters, mediocre shooters, and bad shooters. I don’t agree that outliers, like Hornacek, should be used for predictive purposes. There are outliers for everything. They’re usually not as instructive as are general trends informed by a much larger sample size of data.
Let me ask you - What would Curry's three point percentage be if he played in the WNBA next year?















