Mike G wrote:Sorry, let me clarify. At present and in the foreseeable future, I don't see how the league average shot distribution will change much.
I suppose I could be persuaded that the league average shot distribution won't change much in the near term. But this wouldn't be based upon the absence of real opportunities. These still exist. Rather it would imply that the "new" NBA isn't that much different from the old.
It's been about 45 years since the ABA came into being and with it the 3 point shot. Thus, decades to capitalize on the opportunity for those both willing and able to multiply by 1.5 and understand the concept of opportunity cost. Never throughout this history, however, was this opportunity decisively seized. Painting with a broad brush, just incremental bits of tentative progress.
So now these increments have gotten tiny or disappeared. What is a more reasonable prior (if you had to choose one)? That this stabilization of the 3PA share in the offensive mix reflects a very recent and thorough league-wide adoption of best practice, butting up against real constraints, or that the dead hand of tradition that has ever dominated 3P decision-making in the NBA - from the front office, through the coaching ranks, down to the players themselves - is what has stopped progress cold?
Mike G wrote:Schtevie, you noted earlier that frequency and accuracy of 3-pt shots has topped out over the last few years. Teams have demonstrated the effectiveness, and yet they still take those pesky long-2's.
I actually noted that the frequency only has topped out. As for the accuracy, my comment was only about the wedge between long 2s and 3s, which remains huge for each and every team in the NBA. But yes, teams still take those pesky long 2s.
Mike G wrote:Of course there are great variations between players, and between teams that have these varying players. Coaches also make a difference. But success breeds success, and the league average doesn't seem to be changing.
Very strange, no, success not breeding success? Let's take a brief pass through last season's data to see what there is to see. In particular, lets focus on long-range offense as a whole - the combination of long 2s and 3s - and the implications of choices made in this area.
Why focus on this combination? Well, long range shooting (long 2s and 3s) is a distinct component of offensive organization - what becomes available to you as you move away from the teeth of the defense - and this fraction of overall shot attempts is quite similar across teams (with a standard deviation of 3.96 percentage points). Hence, the approximate share of long range offense that is to take place behind the 3 point line is a basic and fundamental strategic choice.
Organizing the data on this dimension we see at the two extremes the hopelessly hapless Bobcats (32.6 of its long range shots being 3PAs) and the envelope-pushing Magic (66.8%). For the purposes of this exercise, wanting to infer potential opportunities for the "representative" team, let's throw these two out of the mix (we can include them if one wishes; it only makes things a bit clearer than the truth). What do some naive, univariate regressions then suggest to us?
First, for every percentage point increase in 3PA share, long-range eFG% (the weighted average of long 2s and 3s) increases 0.136 percentage points. What this implies for the average team is that the marginal benefit of a 3PA (at the expense of a long 2) is an additional 0.272 points. This is not small (and, one recalls, does not include the premium owing to a higher expected OR%) and, coincidentally, is equal to what is implied by the average wedge between 3P eFG% and long 2 FG% for the teams in question: 0.279 points per 3PA.
But might this hypothetical gain reflect the fact that teams that shoot more 3s are somehow "innately" better at it? Maybe, but if so, it is being directly offset by compensatory defensive pressure, because such a notional skill premium isn't apparent. Regressing 3P eFG% on 3PA share, you get that an additional percentage point increase in 3PA share is only associated with an 0.013 percentage point increase in 3P eFG%. Essentially no effect over the possible, relevant range.
On the face of it then, the very significant gains from three point shooting are, still, just there for the taking.
Mike G wrote:So, it may well be that (a) all teams should minimize their long 2's, and (b) better teams tend to be better at this. And (c) is still that the average team will take 20-30% of their shots from long-2 range.
So, I would summarize the situation as: (a) it is sure that most if not all teams should switch thier long 2s to 3s on the margin, (b) this benefit is apparently available to teams regardless of quality, and (c) I have no confidence, given the observed history of the NBA, that the ultimate potential - whatever it is - will be realized anytime soon.