mos_def wrote:Mob Byers wrote:hamncheese wrote:He wasn't the jumping guy. That was Keon Johnson. Bouknight was hyped by his Pro Day shooting display.
This isn't exactly directed at you or this Bouknight example
But I've never been impressed with guys making open jumpers in an empty gym
Maybe I'm missing something? Anyone more into the scouting side explain to me how this is impressive?
Tho I'm a Bouknight guy, I have yet to see a NBA player miss on these type of clips. I remember a few months ago we were watching Jessups gym shooting clips and the first thing I wondered was it edited
I would draw one distinction between the typical clip we see from YouTube or elsewhere (such as Jessup’s), and Bouknight’s performance.
With the former, you have no idea how many “bad” clips simply weren’t posted. The video is obviously cherry-picked from the best shooting stretch somebody had.
Bouknight’s was done “live”, as part of a Pro day, in front of NBA personnel. I assume he didn’t get any “do-overs”, or a chance to say “ignore those 2 minutes”. And the thing which impressed me about the clip wasn’t just that he made a bunch in a row…… it was the fact that he hit something like 8 or 10 in a row, without even touching rim on any of them. To me, that demonstrates a consistency of form, to be able to have that level of precision.
So yeah, shooting on an empty court isn’t the best proxy for how one will do at game speed, against defenders and with crowd noise, background movement, etc….. but I do think Bouknight’s Pro Day performance does stand a notch above the standard shooting videos, because it wasn’t cherry-picked and was done in a situation where he would potentially have a lot of nerves.
















