Pistol King wrote:Somebody can get into Deni's head and explain why he's refuses to take higher amount of shots?
On paper I don't see any glaring issues, he shots 33% from 3 (4'th best on the team among rotation players) and 45% from FG (5th best) on 55% TS (4'th best), and I feel he could end up with much better stats this year just by simply be willing to take more shots and increase his margin of errors. I'd claim he needs to take more shots even if he wasn't shooting 4'th and 5'th best on the team.
Yesterday he had a great opportunity to bump up his stats and create some hype around him, I've expected him to take 15 shots with the circumstances the team has with the short rotation, and he took only 4 miserable shots on 31 minutes. This is unacceptable for me. Should we put the blame on Deni? or is it more on the coaching staff to make sure he takes more shots? one way or the other, it shouldn't happen. I just checked up and his usage rate this year is 11th highest among the rotation players.
Dead-last. https://www.nba.com/stats/team/1610612764/players-advanced/?sort=USG_PCT&dir=1I really wondering What is going on in his mind. I'd rather seeing him ends up with a 4-15 FG shooting night than a 2-4. You just can't develop yourself as a player when you're so passive and not willing to take risks.
Sorry if it sounds like I'm too harsh on him, he has a tremendous upside IMO, and I don't want him to develop bad passive habits.
I don't think it's an issue.
A basic principle of basketball is that everyone gets 1 or 2 really good looks a game from fast breaks, offensive rebounds, missed defensive rotations, or being spoon-fed under the basket for an easy lay-in/dunk. And those shots are going to come at a very high TS% - probably north of 70%. Each additional shot attempt is likely to be more contested, with a lower TS%.
Avdija only has a TS% of 55.0%, despite an extremely low usage rate. His low usage rate means he is taking very few contested shots to offset his easy attempts, and yet his TS% is still pretty mediocre (just below the team average). That suggests that each marginal additional attempt is coming at a fairly low TS%, well below his overall average of 55.0%, and well below the team average of 55.7%. He therefore wouldn't be helping the team if he shot more.
This should also be viewed in context of role. The primary ball handlers (Beal, Dinwiddie, Neto) are often forced to take bail-out shots if the offense hasn't yielded a high-value shot. That will pull down their TS% to below team average, which is indeed the case with them. (Beal's is okay at .535, Neto and Dinwiddie are too low, down in the 50-51 range.) But complementary scorers typically don't have that burden, so one should expect a TS% slightly above team average, which is what we see out of Harrell, Gafford, and what we should see from KCP, Avdija, Kuzma, Kispert, Holiday, and Bertans. In fact, all 6 of the non-centers aren't quite meeting their responsibility to make shots with efficiency (though KCP, Holiday, Kispert and Avdija are close) and none of them really deserve more looks.
Ultimately, I'd say KCP, Avdija, Bertans, Holiday and Kispert are close enough to team average TS% that they don't deserve much criticism in shot selection, but they also shouldn't be whining about getting more looks. Kuzma, Dinwiddie and Neto are the guys that are definitely shooting too much at an unacceptable efficiency, particularly Kuzma.