LOL..I knew it was the Onion as soon as I read the headline..funny stuff though..
The Onion continues to love Duncan.
Tim Duncan Calls Out Geometric Angle Needed To Make Bank Shot
SAN ANTONIO—Immediately after releasing a 12-foot jump shot Tuesday night, Spurs center Tim Duncan called out the angle necessary for the ball to bank off the backboard and into the basket. "Forty-six-point-seven degrees," said the airborne Duncan, also noting the ball's initial upward velocity of 14.4 meters per second after a moment of mental calculation. "Two points." According to team sources, when teammate Tony Parker failed to call out the angle of a bank shot later in the game, Duncan glared at the point guard for the entire fourth quarter.
LOL..I knew it was the Onion as soon as I read the headline..funny stuff though..
priceless...and probably accurate
Links to The Onion's past pieces on Duncan on page 5 of the Duncan Forum.
A well-educated man
duncan was born to be on the onion
Tony Parker failed to call out the angle of a bank shot later in the game, Duncan glared at the point guard for the entire fourth quarter.
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it's been years since he's consistently been able to hit that bank shot, yet everyone still thinks it's his signature shot.
what are the actual stats on it? I bet he shoots it less than 50% and hits only around one per game.
If it's your hypothesis, don't be a lazy ass. Look it up yourself.
If I had every game this year recorded, I maybe would, but I don't, so I can't
It should be obvious that he can't/doesn't utilize it like he once did, yet no one seems to be keeping up, media and such are still using the TD talking points from 4 years ago
I don't have Duncan's career bank shot stats, but I do have every game recorded. Maybe I'll find some time to put something together.
Meanwhile, this is from May 2007.
Duncan perfects art of bank shot
Doug Haller
SAN ANTONIO - Tim Duncan's bank shot is nothing exciting. It's the librarian in a beauty pageant.
The vanilla ice cream of basketball.
Go ahead and yawn.
But here's the thing: Duncan's basic, boring jumper goes in most of the time, which produces a significant question: Why don't more players go glass?
"Shoot, I don't know," Suns guard Raja Bell said. "Everybody has their thing they fall in love with, and Timmy fell in love with the glass. That's a security blanket for him."
According to postgame stat sheets, Duncan went 3 for 5 on bank shots in Game 1. Decent enough. But then the All-Star forward went 9 for 12 in Game 2, making Robert Sarver wonder whether it was time to exercise his authority in Phoenix.
"I was about ready to take the glass down," the Suns managing partner joked on his weekly radio show. "I mean, can you believe the way that guy banks those things off the backboard? It's not even soft. He knows exactly were to hit the backboard, and it goes in every time."
Duncan made 6 of 9 bank shots in Game 3. He finished with 33 points. How does he make it look so easy? The process starts with court sense. Every bank shot Duncan took in Game 2 came from within 8 to 12 feet. None was forced.
Then Duncan's height factors in - he stands 6 feet 11 - as well as his arm length.
"The angle he gets on that shot is not natural for most players," said David Griffin, Suns' vice president of basketball operations. "It's really a rare thing."
Suns forward James Jones couldn't think of another bank-shot perfectionist in the league.
"Tim's the only player I've seen in the last 10 to 15 years that can do it consistently from wherever," Jones said.
Part of this stems from society's preference for flash over substance. As Suns reserve Sean Marks points out, "The kids in the schoolyard aren't working on their Tim Duncan bank shots."
They're launching three-pointers, perfecting crossovers and timing dunk steps. And there's nothing wrong with that, Suns reserve Jalen Rose said.
"That's like saying how come poor free-throw shooters don't shoot under their legs like (Rick Barry). Or how come big men don't shoot the skyhook like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar," Rose said. "That's just Tim's trademark thing."
Rose did, however, admit that the bank shot lacked a certain coolness. That's why you hear recreational players calling "glass" when they're about to release a bank shot.
They don't want anyone to think they actually missed that badly. It happens in the NBA, too.
"I'll say glass," Rose said. "When you shoot it from the front of the rim or from a bad angle, you must call it."
It's actually harder than it looks.
"You have to have touch to shoot it off the backboard," Suns center Kurt Thomas said. "I like to swish the ball in, but every now and then, depending on the angle, I'll look for the glass. It depends where I'm at on the floor."
At the end of a recent practice, the Spurs big men all took turns shooting nothing but bank shots.
At the end of Saturday's pregame shooting session, the Suns shot from both ends of AT&T Center. Eric Piatkowski and a few others attempted bank shots, but not many. This is natural.
"It's a fundamental skill," Jones said. "Every player wants to have it in his game, but pulling it out in a game is a different story."
I\m guessing Timmy got a protractor set for X'mas as a kid..
I think I've only seen Tim miss about three bank shots this whole year but it might be more.
I love it with Timmy faces up with a rookie defender and you can sense that the rookie is scared because he doesn't know what to do and there is hesitation and Timmy just shoots the bank shot over his head and welcomes him into the NBA.
I know the Onion started in Madison, WI, so did Timmy beat Wisconsin in college or something?
He's been on there more than anyone not sitting in the White House.
Duncan is shooting 20-32 off bank shots this year, 62.5%..I'd say that's a very high %, probably his best in years..
dang, that's better than I would have thought. I would have guessed around 50%.
I use the backboard in pick-up games.
I especially like to use it in games of HORSE.
Impressive![]()
Thanks for the info.
man i love the onion they are hilarious...
bank is open all day everyday for TD...its his choice to shoot it or not...
oh boy![]()
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