Carlos Danger wrote:Camden wrote:CoolBreeze44 wrote:I really don't care what he makes. Every team has overpaid players and eventually those contracts run out. What i care about is the inconsistency, the durability, and the lack of 2-way ability. The things that had him sitting on the bench while we went down at home to Memphis. We need to be better. We need a PG who we can afford to put on the opposing teams point guard. It's up to management to find that player, and until then, we have to leverage DLO's strengths while overcoming his weaknesses.
Fair enough, but you should also be able to understand and even admit that
that player might not be available right now either by trade, free agency, or the draft, and the current alternatives to D'Angelo Russell on the roster are not upgrades in any sense.
I'd double down on that considering this was an uncharacteristically poor season for him shooting the basketball. I'd double down on that considering this was an uncharacteristically poor season for him shooting the basketball.
In my opinion, trade talks concerning Russell have no real legs until there's some kind of reporting concerning the contract demands and negotiations between his side and the Timberwolves' front office. We're essentially just spinning the tires.
Was it an uncharacteristically poor shooting season for DLO shooting though? In three seasons with the Wolves, his FG% is .418. He shot .411 this past season. If you look at his career, he's never fluctuated much. His lowest season was .405 and his highest was .434. But the .434 was his All Star year - which now appears to be the one off. I think it would be risky to believe he's going to be a significantly better shooter at this point.
Yes, it was an
uncharacteristically poor shooting season for D'Angelo Russell. I also don't think field goal percentage illustrates the entire picture. Consider the following:
Russell shot 34.0-percent from three-point range this season in 65 games. In the 168 games that he played in over the three seasons prior to 2021-22, he shot 37.2-percent from three-point range -- 36.9, 36.7, 38.7 over those seasons, respectively. That's not on low volume either. That's on 1,376 attempts (or 8.2 per game).
Russell also took a step back in mid-range efficiency. He made just 39.6-percent of shots attempted beyond 16-feet but still inside the three-point line. This is an area of the floor that he has typically thrived in. Before this season, he made those shots at a 42.3-percent clip for his
career and 44.5-percent over the last three seasons.
Furthermore, Russell only made 34.4-percent of his catch-and-shoot three-point attempts this past season on 4.0 attempts per game, or just under one-third of his shot attempts this season . Over the last three seasons, he made 39.4-percent in 2018, 39.1-percent in 2019, and 39.1-percent in 2020 on these shots. He had never shot below 36.3-percent on catch-and-shoot threes in his career until this season.
It's inexplicable really how up and down, hot and cold Russell's shot-making was this season, and that's while acknowledging he's typically streaky anyways. Normally, it's a matter of he can't miss or he's average and not he's above average or he can't make anything, period. This season was an outlier for him shooting the basketball, which is unquestionably a huge element of his game.
What's the cause of this? I really can't say for certain. I do think the change in basketball may have had something to do with it, and perhaps Russell was dealing with more injury issues than we know about, but the bottom line is that he has to hit more shots like he has for the majority of his career and the most recent seasons of his prime.