Just messing with ya. He's a UCLA boy. Can never hate on them.
seriously, House doesnt even belong in this conversation
Just messing with ya. He's a UCLA boy. Can never hate on them.
Hollingers whole article is BS. His minimum requirements alone remove some of the greatest shooters of all time.
Miller was amazing during the 90s. You think he's not going to make it because of his awkward-looking shots, but he does. Peja meanwhile was an unbelievable shooter during his prime in Sacramento.
Wide-open - no serious attempt to close-out, fastbreaks
Open - half hearted run out to the shooter, single hand raised, staying on ground
Contested - both hands high with the defender on the ground, shot-blocking hand raised to the shooters face
Heavily contested - defender rises up with the shooter w/ both hands outstretched, double-teams
Yes, but his streakiness is not night-by-night; he goes hot/cold for longer periods - hits everything in a month, doesn't hit any in the following 2 weeks, etc.
that's def. true. Sums up his one season with the Suns perfectly.
you know when your team is down a couple possessions with seconds left, and you think 'we can still win...they just have to run down and hit a 3..then steal it and hit another 3 real quick, etc..etc..' ....well, reggie miller ACTUALLY DID that,by himself in a playoff game![]()
And yeah, the argument about the rest doesn't matter. The indisputable thing that shows Hollingers' system is re ed is that Reggie is #1, Ray Allen is a close 2nd, and everyone is way behind them.
Kinda subjective. Nothing for double and triple teams?
.... but clearly proves your point between House and Peja if taken correctly.
Charting games is always subjective to some extent. Even filling a boxscore can be, let alone evaluating the contestedness level of a shot.
Double-teams are there, in level 4. Triple teams are included in that one, as well.
Btw, I feel most fans grossly underrate the importance of contesting shots.
Last edited by mogrovejo; 03-10-2010 at 12:26 AM.
If Nash is in fact one of the greatest shooters of all time (and I agree he is), it just proves once again that defense wins championships.
Eh...whether he tried to take into account by creating CSR I still think guys today have more space to get a shot off than players during the 90s. The rules of today create that space.
Which is why, for me, Miller >> Nash as a shooter. Miller was constantly getting bodied up while shooting.
Nash no doubt though is one of the more underrated shooters in NBA history; but the best ever? Not close.
Miller was a better cutter than shooter. He was great getting looks. Cutting is an under-appreciated skill.
Does one shot make a career? All I can say in that regard is that at least Peja had a big shot to take. Mark Price had exactly .
How does simply adding up FT%, FG% and 3P% make it fair to the players from the 80s and 90s? Shouldn't each player have their FG% and 3P% adjusted to that particular year instead? FT% should always stay constant, as 15 feet is 15 feet.
It's all about selective memory Mono, same as with Dirk. I remember Peja hitting countless clutch shots, in the NBA and the Euro and World Championships he led Yugoslavia to. He made an amazing 3pt plus the foul to tie the game against Minny in the 04 playoffs which was just sick. I think it's still around in youtube somewhere.
But when he missed that one jumper against the Lakers, that's all it took for people to label him with the stereotype of the "soft, choker, European", which is what everyone was always ready to label him as. Just as with Dirk, it doesn't matter how many clutch shots he's made, how many games he has won, how he has been one of the best 4th quarter scorers for years now in the league (I think he is second after Bron this year). As soon as he misses one, there it is, he is a choker again.
Godlinger
I'm not saying he could or that he will I'm just saying you haven't shown that he won't - spurrollinger21
He was literally saying that he could.
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