One was a guard and the other a forward. They really shouldn't have been split. Domas should have made it. Clearly the second best center in the West, owned AD all year.
Leaving off Fox is unfortunate but expected in the crowded field.
One was a guard and the other a forward. They really shouldn't have been split. Domas should have made it. Clearly the second best center in the West, owned AD all year.
Leaving off Fox is unfortunate but expected in the crowded field.
Perhaps but Domas is among the more divisive players in terms of how good he is. Many look at his counting stats and feel like you while others look at his lack of floor spacing and rim protection and wouldn’t put him top 10.
the people who feel like you voted Domas and the people who felt differently voted Fox. As a result neither made it.
Yeah I'm just going off of his DPOG background pics. I'm pretty sure you could make a collage out of them and it would have him making the exact same face 40+ times.
yep but they have rings on their fingers. Tends to make a difference in perceptions. If Domas made even a deep play-off run it would silence the doubters. Something we all hope he does.
Have seen this like a dozen times but never noticed Mason Jones and Alvin Gentry hanging out behind the announce desk at Smackdown on Friday until someone pointed it out on twitter lol
The most interesting thing here is that literally all of the top 30 scorers shot fewer corner threes than league average, despite the corner three being being one of the top analytically efficient shots. There's obviously got to be a lesson here, but it seems that it's something like "corner threes are for complementary players".
The most interesting thing here is that literally all of the top 30 scorers shot fewer corner threes than league average, despite the corner three being being one of the top analytically efficient shots. There's obviously got to be a lesson here, but it seems that it's something like "corner threes are for complementary players".
I was thinking about that too and all I can come up with is most of these guys are going to have the ball in their hands more often than not and normally ball handlers aren't standing in the corner dribbling the ball since it would be much easier to defend them due to the sideline limitations.
I was thinking about that too and all I can come up with is most of these guys are going to have the ball in their hands more often than not and normally ball handlers aren't standing in the corner dribbling the ball since it would be much easier to defend them due to the sideline limitations.
The most interesting thing here is that literally all of the top 30 scorers shot fewer corner threes than league average, despite the corner three being being one of the top analytically efficient shots. There's obviously got to be a lesson here, but it seems that it's something like "corner threes are for complementary players".