I never get the argument that foul shots some how negates a percent of a players scoring efficiency - or that you "have to take the foul shots into account as ft attempts".
It is actually very similar to why Base on Balls are not counted as at bats because it should not reduce a players batting average yet it increases their efficiency as a hitter (measured by on base percentage)
Because foul shots use up an offensive possession. If PP takes 20 shots in a game and makes 10 baskets that's 20 points on 20 shots. If he takes 20 shots in the next game and makes 2 out of 10 shots, gets fouled on 10 shots and makes 8 of the 20 foul shots that's 12 points that resulted from the 20 shots. You'd be claiming that the 12 points on 20 shots is more efficient than the 20 points on 20 shots because the box score would show 12 points on 10 shots. This is entirelyt different from a base on balls because the walk doesn't "use up" an at bat. If there was one out before the batter walked there's still one out after he walks.
It isnt different at all. If you want to use a selective portion of a post (the part that was a simile)and go to ridiculous extreme examples you can attempt to argue basically anything.
FTA comes with other benifits that a simple fga do not.
So the nba stat gods have decided not to include it in the statistics but you have.
20 pts on 20 shots is a horrible game, that is an antoine walker special, and is less efficient then 12 points on 10 shots.
And it does use a "possession" but it can save time leading to a greater number of possessions in the game overall that is the point.
The other benefits are marginal. The real benefit is that even the worst FTA shooter on your team is likely to get a point per two free throw attempts. Once you have a good shooter at the line that average is even higher, 1.6 or better. Even wide open shots typically have a lower conversion rate that FTAs.
I'd also point out that most people who look at stats in the NBA do look at TS%, which accounts for how free throw attempts use up a possession most of the time.
I agree that is why TS% is a much better stat.
However I disagree that the other benefits are marginal.
And base on balls do not use up at bats, they are "plate appearances" they are not logged as at bats
First of all, you're claiming that TS% is a much better stat and you're arguing the opposite. Secondly, you're missing the bigger picture. 20 points on 20 shots is less efficient than 12 points on 10 shots, but PP took 20 shots during that time, only 10 of them showed up as shots in the box score because he was fouled on the other shots. I agree that there are benefits to getting fouled and hitting your shots.
But when your team gets the ball, you do something with it and the other team gets it back. You generally either score or miss a shot and don't get the rebound or turn the ball over and the other team gets it back. Shooting and scoring uses a possession, shooting and missing and not getting the rebound uses a possession, and getting fouled and making your free throws uses a possession.
If Paul takes 20 shots without getting fouled and makes 10 shots (no offensive rebounds) he uses 20 possessions to get those 20 points. If he shoots the ball 20 times and gets fouled 10 times and goes 2-10 from the floor and 8-20 from the line then by the box score he got 12 points on 10 shots but from a game perspective he got 12 points from 20 possessions. It's not more efficient than 20 points on 20 shots, it's much less efficient.
It's nothing like a walk because the free throws used up a possession, so the other team got the ball back afterward. If a team were allowed a maximum of 5 batters in an inning so that walk cost you a chance at getting a hit it would be the same.
I think you missed a point somebody made earlier.
If you recall, our offensive rating is 106.6
That means, our offense is likely to score 1.066 points every time it goes down the floor.
Other than Shaq and Rondo (notoriously bad free throw shooters), there is not a single other player ON OUR ENTIRE TEAM that would fail to improve our efficiency by taking free throws.
In other words, if the player shoots over 53.33% from the line (1.066/2) then the player is HELPING our offense. If a player is a 90% free throw shooter like Ray, well, then I can't even stress how insanely efficient that is and how much it helps the team.
That's not even counting the other benefits of getting to the line listed by some of the other posters.
For those reasons free throws are the most efficient shot in the game unless you're actually beyond miserable at shooting them.
But none of this matters all that much since TS% accounts for free throw percentage. All I'm saying is, if you want to factor in free throws, then the fact that Paul Pierce, Ray and KG get to the line far more than Rondo actually really hurts your case and supports the fact that the Big 3 should get the ball more (which they should).