Knightro wrote:JojoSlimbiid wrote:Something I've been meaning to ask you guys since I've picked you guys up as my second team. The Aaron Gordon creation/mid-range thing....is this new? Or is it a habit. Some of the most robotic attempts at shot creation I think I've ever seen.
You can blame Frank Vogel and Rob Hennigan for that nonsense.
Hennigan traded Oladipo and Sabonis for Serge Ibaka (ugh) in June which forced Gordon to have to play small forward for the 16-17 season.
Gordon spent that whole offseason relentlessly working on his ball handling and came back with the ability do fancy crossovers and fancy dribbles through his legs, but still no actual ability to use his dribbling to beat defenders.
Vogel tried to convince the media and fans (and did convince Gordon IMO) that he could be the next Paul George. A perimeter based scorer from the wing and Gordon has desperately wanted to be that player ever since.
Clifford beat it out of him pretty good last year as 66% of his shots were at the rim or from three, but bad habits have crept back in this year as his percentage of midrange shots (any shot not at the rim or from three for the sake of his argument) is way up compared to last year.
What we heard this offseason is that Gordon relentlessly worked on his post game and that Clifford was going to afford him opportunities to work in the post.
The problem is he's an AWFUL (21st percentile) post player. He usually pounds the ball and ends up taking a wild fadeaway. He's actually pretty bad at anything offensively that requires multiple dribbles.
Gordon 0 dribbles: 57.7 eFG%
Gordon 1 dribble: 40.9 eFG%
Gordon 2 dribbles: 48.0 eFG%
Gordon 3-6 dribbles: 30.2 eFG%
Gordon 7+ dribbles: 41.7 eFG%
Ok so there is some history here. Even with Kobe's reputation I doubt he would have had this much influence over a player in one off season. Good to know that there seems like a history of enabling the player to be more than he is. Those stats you posted tell pretty much the whole story. Guy is a finisher and not a creator.