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The Importance Of Shooting Threes

The Nets offensive woes from last year have been well documented on NAS, but for those of you who still aren’t in shell shock from the 2009-10 campaign, I wanted to revisit the team’s three point shooting performance. At .314 percent, the Nets ranked second-to-last in the league on treys, and while there were a number of reasons why the Nets ranked last in the league in offensive efficiency, they’re inability to hit much from behind the arc was certainly a contributor and something the front office has very forcefully addressed in their player acquisitions this summer.

Anthony Morrow is one of the best sharpshooters in the league, while Troy Murphy may be one of the NBA’s better shooting PFs. However, Jordan Farmar and Travis Outlaw also bring respectable shooting to the team. And while I’m sure you’ve heard this before, I’d like to point the many advantages of having legit shooters in the NBA: it spaces the floor better for your big men in the post while preventing defenses from settling into monotonous zone defenses – something that repeatedly did the Nets in during their close games last year.

So how much better are the Nets at shooting threes? By looking at just how their new acquisitions performed last year, the answer is: miles and miles better. Collectively, the current Nets roster shot 37 percent from three last year, which would have placed them 6th in the league based on overall percentage. It’s difficult to gauge if those shooters could have replicated those numbers in the Nets system last year – keep in mind that Courtney Lee went from a 40 percent shooter in Orlando to a 34 percent shooter with the Nets – but it’s a good indication as to how much more improved the Nets are in that one area.

It’s also worth noting that good three-point shooting does not guarantee success in the NBA – Toronto and Golden State were both in the top 6 last year. But look at some of the other teams near the top in this statistic – Phoenix (1st), Cleveland (2nd), Orlando (3rd) and Dallas (5th). So it obviously only helps, especially if they’re able to accomplish other things on offense besides launching treys.

As a fan, these numbers are also reassuring that the front office has developed a legitimate strategy for improving the team on offense. While the Nets didn’t acquire the “best” player at any one position, outside of Johan Petro, all of the new acquisitions have long range shooting skills and an offensive system can be built around that, especially with Brook Lopez in the middle.

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Shooting is a very big part of basketball...Duh...The bigger thing in the nba where almost anyone can shoot.... Is can the guy get open... Players who demand a double can get you open.... Sometimes coaches that get you open... We are improved in so many departments i cant predict just how good we are yet but im excited .... Maybe murphy goes off being this is a contract year..

So it looks like Carmelo A is going to get traded before the year starts. Nets just don't give up too much for this guy. He is good but like I said before we don't need him we only want to have him.

I say Devin Harris is going to be the big surprise this year. He's in great shape physically and just as importantly, mentally. If he returns to his all-star form of two years ago, watch out. With 3 points threats at various positions (Morrow, Outlaw, Murphy) Harris will have more weapons to play with.
I expect Harris to benefit greatly from the 3pt prowess we now have. Maybe he will even improve his own 3pt shot in the process.

We got better at every position, and our 3 point shooting got better at every position. (Except maybe starting PG)

word yea same here! thinking about going to the opener even tho i work that night. shhhh lol

Ya I no RC, Im just messing lol. You know whats the most exciting about thi season? Every single player on our roster can do significantly better than last year. Can't wait for the season to start

@markgin and chriscash

yea it sounds like Marks saying Johan Petro is one of the best players at his position... but i know what he meant.

its supposed to read like this:

While the Nets didn’t acquire the “best” player at any one position, all of the new acquisitions, outside of Johan Petro, have long range shooting bla bla bla

All of the acquisitions? Doesn't Sean May technically count as an acquisition? Not to be nit picky or anything :P

Hey Mark, regarding the 37%, did you weight by attempts? I get .376 on about 20 attempts/game for the current roster, which would have been 3rd last year, and very similar to GSW in attempts and pct. I'm pretty confident we'll do even better next year since none of these guys is coming off a career year, no one will need to carry more of the weight than they're used to because of depth (unlike Lee last year), and attempts can be redistributed away from Harris and Williams toward the new guys. Plus Williams shot about 70 points better after the break than before. Offense should not be a problem for this team (eventually), but defense could be an adventure.

I remember Mike Fratello stressing the importance of having a "3pt game" in todays NBA. He said in a Nets telecast last season, that most NBA coaches think you cannot successfully compete without having a good 3pt game in your team arsenal. The Nets have that weapon now.

Lmao except Johan petro

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