I'm not sure what the nephew stuff accomplishes as far as discussion of Kevin's game -- Jason Hart's relatives all think he is the shiznit too. And I know from other threads that Kevin doesn't stop by here himself. Be proud of him, but dropping it at the end of a post feels a bit like namedropping, and since I believe I have watched every minute of NBA basketball Kevin Martin has ever played, its not really relevant when we are talking about the NBA. I will defer to f&f on his favorite bedtime stories, first girlfriend, crazy high school dunks, any embarrassing baby pictures they want to post etc. Not on Kevin's NBA game.
A couple of notes:
Kevin Martin is obviously not going to shoot 60%. Ever. NotReven worth discussing. But there is the interesting possibility he could shoot 50% and further the Rip Hamilton comparisons. Much depends on how this develops. He's unveiled a variety of new shots in the last 6 weeks, and I'll qualify by saying new at the NBA level if for some reason he was sandbagging his career the first 1+ years. And those new shots all look smooth. A dramatic change for a guy who's only two modes a year ago were force it all the way to the hoop or miss a jumper he was clearly uncomfortable with. Furthermore, if he is left alone with his feet set on the perimeter, he hits a very high percentage of his threes.
Now however, what happens when a) we adjust, he's our starter, or at least a major player, and he's earned his stripes. Should mean more shots for Kevin. More points for Kevin. But like all volume shooters, the % probably dips a bit as the high % shots are used up and lower percentage stuff is taken. And b) when teams start gameplanning for him as a major threat? Think we've already seen a bit of that -- he's had a harder time getting the open looks he needs on the perimeter and people seem to be following him tighter out there -- think word has spread. With more attention, %s again may drop. Best sign that they may hold is that new midrange floater. Even against good defense that's tough to stop because of his elevation. In any case, I would be very surprised to see him ever return to a poor shooting %, but there is still every chance its going to slip somewhat as he becomes a more significant player. Just a question of how far.
In any case, the general point of my first post was that True Shooting % is a decent stat, but its never been one that has matched up terribly well with the impact players in the league. It is what it is and it statistically encapsulates the incredible efficiency that Kevin has displayed in the last month. But as far as predicting anything more...no, not really. It is exactly what it pretends to be -- a measure of effiiciency. And Kevin has been oh so efficient in the last month. But its never said much more. And that objection to the unwarranted extension of that stat is not in any way an attack on Kevin. Saying congrats to Kevin on leading the best basketball league in the world in a statistic is entirely warranted. Taking said stat and trying to extend it as evidence of future stardom or whatever....that's overreaching, and that's what the objection was to.