Q12543 wrote:
My larger point - and it's a hypothesis - is that his improvement as a mid-range shooter is less impactful than if he were, say, an above average 3-point shooter. The very threat of a made 3 by a credible shooter creates more space than the threat of a guy knocking down a 17 footer because the defense went under a screen. Most defenses will live with Rubio taking 2-point jumpers, even if he makes a few.
Broadly, I agree with this. But it's great fun to consider all the possible permutations of different potential outcomes. The complexity of basketball and how 5 guys interact together so fluidly is one of its great appeals.
I'm playing devils advocate a bit here, but think about this:
One of the things that I've always been curious about is how Rubio shoots so many FTs for such a terrible shooter. Shouldn't the defence just let him shoot rather than bailing him out and fouling him? Clearly, despite what may be logical or probabilistically correct, the defence reacts to him and is forced to guard him.
So maybe it is much more valuable for Rubio to draw the defence off balance than to actually maximise his own scoring efficiency. And a defensive anchor is going to be much more likely to be drawn off-balance if Rubio has penetrated to the elbow for a jump shot than if he's just camped at the 3 pt line to take a 3. We could try to collect an endless number of stats to analyse all of the different contexts of different plays. I wonder if there is any difference between our offensive rebounding % when Rubio shoots a mid-ranger compared to a 3 pointer (has he drawn the defensive anchor slightly off balance and allowed Gorgui a 5% better chance at grabbing the offensive board if he's dribbled into a mid-range jumper?). If there is a legitimate difference, should we consider second chance points when considering a true effective shooting percentages? We could think of an endless number of different types of plays to analyse, and then we'd be tasked with trying to filter out the noise from the genuine signals.
There's just something about Rubio that is unique, where conventional thinking doesn't apply to him. As you've noted above, early in the season when he was giving up shots, it stood out as being the incorrect decision. In this case, somehow it seems quite clear to our minds that taking a relatively inefficient shot would have been a better strategy despite what quant metrics might say.