I have not gone through the tape but I am all for taking "good" 3s. Of the 60 taken last night, no doubt some number of them were not "good" 3s. Those possessions that ended in a bad 3 would have been better served if someone had taken it to the hoop or generated some other shot. Is that number 10? 15? But that is in the range of 10% to 15% of the total possessions.
I am with Mazzulla on this, in terms of the question. When asked the question about number of 3PA, there is no answer. Every miss looks bad, every make looks good. You can't say that tonight we took 60 which is wrong but if we took 50, it would have been right. I don't think there were 60 "good" 3PAs tonight, but there could be. But even if you took 50 or 40, if you only made 25%, it would still look bad.
I feel that coaches and players need to execute to find the best shot. They need to do it better than they did in game 1.
Here's my objection to "good" threes: It's taught "if it's a good three, take it". But, that ignores the reality of runs and momentum.
Let's take an example. Your team has been shooting poorly, but you hold a 9 point lead in the fourth quarter. You've just seen the opponent shave off 11 points from their deficit.
The "take good threes" strategy says keep shooting. If you get five open looks from 3PT on five straight possessions, shoot them. If they're misses, oh well, things will even out eventually.
The "you don't need to take every open shot" strategy says that momentum is a thing. With every consecutive miss, your team loses confidence and the other team gains it. It's better to work for a high percentage 2PT shot than an open but low percentage 3PT shot to "stop the bleeding".
We started the 4th quarter by not scoring for nearly four minutes. That sequence was:
Missed close 2PT
Missed 3PT
Missed 3PT
Missed long 2T
Turnover
Missed 3PT
Missed 3PT
Turnover
That's just an example of how games are lost. What would it have looked like if, instead of settling for threes, they'd attempted some drives?