Unlike Toine, Sullynyk is just taking 2 3's a game.
It's not like Brad Stevens is trying to turn them into jump-shot-happy morons (like BBD), which you guys seem to be implying.
I'm only implying that he's encouraging them to take shots that are evidently not good shots.
Because the long 2 may be the "worst shot in the game", but when you're making 4 out of every 10, it's decidedly better than making 2 out of every 10 three pointers.
The difference in our views seem to be built on whether Sullynyk could and whether they should develop the 3 point shot by taking them in game.
Could they?I don't know, you tell me. All I know is that I see two guys who have had little success shooting threes in college, little success shooting threes in Summer League, little success shooting threes in preseason, and now -- little success shooting threes in actual NBA games. It's not a small sample issue, it's been happening with regularity at any level they've played at.
Their stats seem to disagree with them being incapable 3 point shooters "at any level" as
Sullinger hit 40% of his 3's in his last year of college and 36.5% overall. Olynyk hit 33.3% of his 3's in college, hitting 44.4% of them before his redshirt season.You could argue that college 3's are different but "little success at every level" isn't a fact.
I see that both of them have a nice looking stroke. Both not being dominant physically(Olynyk with his dinosaur arms), the jumpshot is a weapon they have been and will continue to be relying on.
I think they could and you seem to think they couldn't. That's a difference of opinion, which perhaps may never be resolved.
Should they?I still stand by what I've said:
As much as I'm not one for tanking, I certainly don't see anything more than a second round exit. The 3-4 3's a game Sully and Olynyk take definitely won't hurt us in the long run and I would say won't hurt us much in the short run either.
Additionally, unlike BBD or Toine, Sully and Olynyk aren't trigger happy with their jumpshots. There certainly is a danger of them falling in love with the 3. But so far, Sully is shooting 50% from the field. Olynyk, on the other hand, has been taking good shots outside of his 3's but shots just aren't falling.
*You seem to disagree with this too. My impression is that you're one or both of: Sullynyk shooting 3's doesn't help us win games and/or this is bad player development.
Again, difference of opinions.
The disagreement about whether Sully/Klynyk should take 3's may never be settled. I'm fine with that since having differences of opinion and different viewpoints is a good thing.
But what I find more interesting (and perhaps more important) is that the team as a whole is taking more 3's. And I'm actually quite happy about this change.
Not being a stathead, reading this (
http://www.celticsblog.com/2012/9/3/3289527/three-pointers-are-king-and-long-2s-are-bad) article was particularly enlightening.
Not long ago, a related article also touches upon this (
http://www.celticsblog.com/2013/10/21/4864588/can-the-celtics-beat-the-spread). The Jeff Green part was the part I really focused on.
Both good reads.
Because the long 2 may be the "worst shot in the game", but when you're making 4 out of every 10, it's decidedly better than making 2 out of every 10 three pointers.
This example is interesting since it does kind of prove the point (3's good, long 2's bad).
The difference in the example is 2 points.
Unless you're Brandon Bass, hitting mid range shots at an absurd rate (I recall it's something like 50%) and basically making a living off of such a shot, the payoff of the 3 is better and this is exemplified here.
Being a team without inside scoring, the only other option is jumpshots, and it seems intuitive to have the option in the gameplan to take the more rewarding shot.
Last year,
most top teams ranked in the upper half of 3's attempted (at 16th place, OKC attempted one less 3 than the 15th place Pacers).
Notable exceptions: Celtics, Grizzlies and Bulls. I believe the Grizzlies have tried to add more 3 point shooting last year. The Bulls I'm not too sure about.
Having the 3 point shot at your disposal (and not relying on it unlike the recent Knicks and Dwightmare-Magic) seems important. I'm glad Brad Stevens seems to have recognized that. With BS being a labelled stat geek, I'm optimistic that he'll find the right mix of 3's and I am optimistic about this change.
*Edits in asterisks