Posted by gillispie1 on 6/13/2012 2:01:00 PM (view original):
Posted by ike1024 on 6/13/2012 11:24:00 AM (view original):
Posted by rednu on 6/13/2012 11:08:00 AM (view original):
70-87-74-53...every single day (assuming equal defensive ratings), especially since I press.
The higher ball handling for the high-perimeter guy is almost a double edged sword in my book. If you set him to drive, you're wasting the 96 PE. If you have him +1 or +2 it's going to greatly reduce his drives to the bucket and the high BH rating will lose some of its appeal.
Agreed, but the high BH allows him to create his own shot. I've had a lot of success with high per/bh guys.
me too, bh is very valuable in 3 point shooters. give me a guard with high per/spd/bh and ill happily let him shoot 3s all day long.
But is a guy's effectiveness really a function of the high BH, or is it a combination of the PE and SPD?
Here's an example from my D2 team:
Player A is 52/94 Ath/Spd, 93 PE, 71 BH.
Player B is 57/71 Ath/Spd, 88 PE, 34 BH.
Both have an A IQ for offense. Player A's distro has been 2-3 points higher throughout the season.
Through 23 games, Player A is 60-143 from behind the arc. Player B is 66-168. So A is knocking it down at about a 2 percent better clip, but Player B is getting shots off at a better rate despite the significantly lower BH and lower distribution setting, even taking into account the fact that he's played 68 minutes more of ball this season. Given the differential in BH between A and B, if it were a component that plays a pivotal role, I'd expect to see a lot more divergence in their respective performances.
Not saying high BH guys aren't good to have -- I'll gladly take any that anyone wishes to get rid of. I'm just not convinced its that vital a component for 3-pt shooting success compared to ATH/SPD/PER