hgut
G-League
And again, we were playing against a team missing Doncic, THJ, Maxi. Had they played we could have easily lost by 30pt.Dude, he had a .667 TS% for the day on that volume. It's not like he took 52 shots to get 44 points, it was 31 shots (and fouled twice not counting the and-1s, for 33 total "possessions ending in a scoring attempt") .667 is ridiculous efficiency, particularly at that volume, for a guard. League average TS% is about .560. Volume-shooting guards that aren't great at threes don't come close to .667. Kobe never touched .600 for a season. Jordan snuck past .600 four times, never crossed .620. And those guys were averaging low-to-mid 20s in FGA per game - that's high enough volume to start bringing down your efficiency. Your classic volume scoring guard - Allen Iverson - was at .518 TS% for his career. There may be others, but the only guard I can find who has put up .667 TS% for a season is Steph Curry, who has edged past that mark twice (both times he led the whole league in TS%) and that was on 20 or fewer FGA.
Dismissing Fox's DAY - not his season, not his career, but THIS DAY - as "volume scoring" is absolutely comical. Not unexpected, but comical.
You didn't watch the game, did you?
I think that in a loss against this Dallas team nobody gets a pass. Even with a .667 TS%.
Then what is the problem? Fox is surrounded with garbage role players? Gentry is a lot worse coach than Kidd? (I don't think that is the case)
What I do believe is that it is very difficult to build a winning team around Fox. Would this team be successful if we could surround Fox with the right players? Probably yes. But that's not the point. We cannot go out there to the market and cherry pick the very very reduced set of players that would make this team succeed with Fox as leader. That's not a realistic strategy.
The difference between a good player and a superstar, is that the superstar can adapt his game to the players in his team in order to succeed. For that reason it is a lot more simple to build winning teams around those kind of players.
Michael Jordan in his prime never missed the playoffs. Was he always surrounded by elite role players? I don't think so. But it was a lot easier to build a team around him because the pool of role players that complemented him was a lot bigger.
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