Tag: 2010-11 NBA season (Page 6 of 52)

Who is the best three-point shooter in the NBA?

Boston Celtics’ Ray Allen competes in the three-point contest during the NBA basketball All-Star weekend in Los Angeles, February 19, 2011. REUTERS/Gary Hershorn (UNITED STATES – Tags: SPORT BASKETBALL)

As the season winds down, I try to answer questions like these. Here’s my criteria:

1. The player has to shoot at least 38% from long range.
2. He must make at least 1.0 three-pointer per game played.
3. He has played in at least 50 games.

Here’s the alphabetical list of players that qualify: Arron Afflalo, Ray Allen, Ryan Anderson, Marco Belinelli, Mike Bibby, Chauncey Billups, Matt Bonner, Stephen Curry, Jared Dudley, Mike Dunleavy, Landry Fields, Channing Frye, Rudy Gay, Daniel Gibson, Ben Gordon, Kirk Hinrich, Eddie House, Richard Jefferson, James Jones, Kyle Korver, Kevin Love, Kyle Lowry, Kevin Martin, Wes Mathews, Jodie Meeks, Anthony Morrow, Steve Nash, Gary Neal, Jameer Nelson, Anthony Parker, J.J. Redick, Jason Richardson, Luke Ridnour, Brandon Rush, J.R. Smith, Deshawn Stevenson, Marcus Thornton, Hedo Turkoglu, Charlie Villanueva, Reggie Williams, Shawne Williams, Dorell Right and Nick Young.

Three-point accuracy is important, but so are makes. To me, it’s more impressive when a guy is hitting 2.0 threes per game at 39% than if he’s hitting 1.2 per game at a 41% clip. The more makes, the more the defense is keying on stopping that player from getting open looks, so that makes the makes (yep, makes the makes) that much more impressive.

Here’s a look at the chart. As always, click it to see a bigger version.

A few takeaways:

— What a year Ray Allen (45.2%, 2.2) is having. Not only did he break the three-point record, but he’s having his best year accuracy-wise if his career, all at the age of 35 years. As a Bucks fan, I was sad to see the team trade him away for Gary Payton, but I understood the reasoning behind it. They had the younger Michael Redd waiting in the wings. Now look at the two of them.

— Stephen Curry is proving that last year’s accuracy was no fluke. Whenever Ray Allen decides to retire, Curry is the odds on favorite to take the mantle of the best three-point shooter in the league.

— Best big man shooter? I guess we’d have to go with Matt Bonner, who is listed at 6’10” and is hitting 47.5% of his threes. Kevin Love, Channing Frye and Ryan Anderson are also impressive.

— Thirty-two of the 43 players are black. Eight are white Americans. Three are foreign-born (Turkoglu, Belinelli and Nash). I’m surprised there aren’t more foreign-born players on the list, though a few (Carlos Delfino, Omri Casspi, Sasha Vujacic) just missed the list.

— Of the 43 players, there are five power forwards, nine small forwards, 12 point guards and 17 shooting guards. Best shooter by position…PG: Curry, SG: Allen, SF: Jefferson and PF: Bonner. There are two Spurs on that list.

Like this post? Here are more statistical studies.

Video of Lakers/Mavs fight

From NBA.com…

Lakers guard Steve Blake was driving to the basket, only to have Jason Terry shove him out of bounds. Matt Barnes tried to get into the mix and shoved Terry. Mavericks assistant coach Terry Stotts, who tried to restrain Barnes, was then shoved into a courtside spectator by Barnes, who kept screaming “get off of me.” When the dust settled, Terry, Blake, Barnes and Mavericks center Brendan Haywood were ejected. Minutes later the game had to be stopped when a spectator was kicked out of Staples for fighting and then another spectator tried to run onto the court, but was tackled by security before he could. In the final two minutes of the game, Lakers guard Shannon Brown was ejected when things got chippy between him and Mavericks forward Brian Cardinal.

If the Lakers aren’t able to catch the Spurs, there’s a good chance that these two teams will meet in the second round of the Western Conference Playoffs. If that’s the case, it looks like it will surely be a testy series.

Ilgauskas elbows Wall, Wall punches Ilgauskas [video]

Zydrunas Ilgauskas and John Wall got into a bit of a dust-up last night. Wall was pressuring Ilgauskas, who had the ball and Z swung his elbow through and popped Wall in the face. Wall, of course, took exception and punched Ilgauskas in his torso.

The best shot of Wall’s punch is at around the 1:15 mark, while the best view of Ilgauskas’ elbow is at around the 1:30 mark. No one likes to get hit in the face, but Wall needs to keep a cool head there. He really hurt his team by getting ejected.

Cavs get some measure of revenge on LeBron, Heat

A 14-win team doesn’t have much to play for this time of year, but give the Cavs credit, they showed up on Tuesday night to face LeBron, riding a thirsty crowd to a 102-90 victory.

The Cavs led by 23 points with 5:06 remaining in the third quarter, but the Heat went on a 22-4 run to close the quarter and cut Cleveland’s lead to five at the break.

Mike Bibby’s seventh three-pointer of the game tied the score at 83-83, but the Cavs went on a 12-0 run (sparked by Luke Harangody of all people) that included four points from Ryan Hollins and six points from Anthony Parker.

LeBron finished with a 27-10-12 triple-double, but the Cavs had the last laugh, breaking the Heat’s five-game winning streak and knocking Miami out of a tie with Boston for the #2 spot in the East.

As a side note, Chris Bosh had another clunker, shooting just 5-of-14 from the field for 10 points to go along with four rebounds and four assists. He was thoroughly outplayed by J.J. Hickson (21 points, 12 rebounds) and Hollins (13 points, three blocks). Bosh was coming off seven double-doubles in his last eight games, but his performance in tough environments on the road is something to keep an eye on.

Here are the highlights:

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