It's easier to be a role player who can shoot though. Stars can afford not to be shooters because they usually have the ball in their hands.
Haters are continuing to hate.
KOC could draft Michael Jordan and people on this board would find ways to complain.
"He's a cancer!"
"He's too competitive!"
"He's a ballhog!"
Folks, the Jazz got the 2 best players available when they drafted while also covering needs. The Jazz made out like very few teams did on draft night.
Yet, you morons complain.
I'm glad KOC doesn't care what you think. He can continue to give you his finger with picks of Hayward and Burks and Kanter for all I care.
Go back to playing 2K11, haters.
Agree, that's Burks' floor. And at best, who knows? If he can play 3 positions, that gives the Jazz a ton of versatility.I like the stats. Heck, worst case scenario, we now have a very solid bench player that can run the floor, get into lanes, get to the FT line, and at times, carry the second team offensively. Great role player.
@Lockedonsports : Found 10 comps to @alecburks10 NCAA 3pt % - those 10 on average shot within 1 percentage point of their NCAA three point shooting # in NBA
All 10 of those shot 33% or below from 3 in their college careers.
Found 15 comps to Alec Burks who shot 35% or below 3pt in NCAA - on average those players were also within 1% of their NCAA 3 pts %
Biggest improvements from NCAA to NBA - Michael Redd (32 to 38%) Eric Gordon (34 to 38%) Kevin Martin (34% to 38%) Randy Foye (33 to 36%)
Consensus of research - Guys who shots below 33% 3pt in NCAA don't become shooter in NBA - guys who go to line in NCAA go to line in NBA
That's a little disheartening.
With a tip of the hat to Bill Murphy who tipped me off to some of these numbers. Alec Burks may be a much better offensive player than we realize. Most people want to focus on what he can’t do which was shot the three in his sophomore season. However, if you place the focus on what he does do he is in some elite company.
Last year Alec Burks shot over 300 free throws. Since 1998, no other shooting guard in college has shot 300 free throws in a season in his freshman or sophomore season. The only players to do so are (Blake Griffin, Tyler Hansbrough, Troy Murphy and Derrick Williams).
If you drop the free throw attempt number to 250, wing players Michael Beasley, Kevin Durant, Eric Gordon, James Harden and Rodney Stuckey all join the group.
Bill Murphy ran a query of 19 pts a game, at least 5 rebounds per game, 2 assists and 7 free throws per game. James Harden and Kevin Martin were two of the names that appeared. Burks and Harden were the only players to emerge from a BCS conference.
In his sophomore year Burks scored over 700 pts, grabbed over 200 rebounds, had over 100 assists and went to the line over 225 times. He is the only player to accomplish this since 1998 as a sophomore in the NCAA. Six other players have accomplished this feat, they are Kemba Walker, Dominique Jones, Reggie Williams, Norris Cole, Bo McCalebb and Dwyane Wade.
Wade and Burks are the only players of that group to accomplish this without the three point shot being a part of their arsenal. In fact only Burks, Wade and Bo McCalebb (New Orleans) have had 700 pts, 200 rebounds, 100 assists with less than 30 three pointers.
Only 5 guards since 1998 have scored 700 points while hitting less than 30 three pointers, Alec Burks, Lanrdy Fields, Bo McCalebb, Andre Emmett and Dwyane Wade.
Bil Murphy looked at some career numbers and Burks has some interesting company. College players who averaged at least 19 pts, 5 rebs, 2 assists and shot 6 free throws per game in their career include names such as Wally Sczerbiak, James Harden, Dwyane Wade, Kevin Martin, Carmelo Anthony and Reggie Williams. What is worth noting is other than Lee Nailon their aren’t players who were drafted and didn’t make it. Nailon, in fact, had a solid career for a late 2nd round pick.
Three players come out as most common comparisons on the collegiate front to Alec Burks, Rodney Stuckey, James Harden and Dwayne Wade. Harden shot the three on the college level and has continued to do so on the NBA level. Wade and Stuckey have both had no difficulty getting to line and scoring in the NBA, but have never become shooters. Stuckey’s game has been muted by an ill-advised quest to turn him into a point guard.
Any of those three would be a great pick up for the Utah Jazz at 12 in this year’s draft
Wade's career 29% from 3, best season 31. Kobe's career 34, best season 38. Rose was 33 last season. Westbrook 33. James is basically a guaranteed 33 every year. Melo has put up 35 and 37, but he's basically a 33 on the rise. Ellis put up 36 last year, but that's his best season.
He's obviously very unlikely to be as good as any of these guys, but lots of elite scorers in the league don't shoot well from deep. Scoring is an actual talent. Hopefully Burks ability to score translates.
A perimeter player being able to be a deep-ball threat is quite pivotal in the grand scheme of things.
I'd like all players on 'my' team to be able to play inside of a team concept instead of on top of it. A perimeter player being able to be a deep-ball threat is quite pivotal in the grand scheme of things.
The problem with him not being a 3-point shooter is that it means he either is a big deal or he's out of the league after his rookie deal, the way I see it.
It's possible I'm just not getting your point hear, but it sounds like your saying he's not a team player.
Recent NBA history is absolutely littered with very effective wings who didn't/don't shoot the three well.
Richard Hamilton, Kobe Bryant, Jeff Malone, Reggie Lewis are just a few very good wings I looked up quickly who had some of their more successful seasons without shooting the 3 ball worth a ****.
This past season, you have a good mixture of all-stars and role playing wings who will have or have had long careers that didn't shoot the three well...
LeBron, Budinger, Foye, Mo Evans, Kobe, CJ, R. Fernandez, Wade, Posey, Jeff Green, Ariza, Joe Johnson, Arenas, Evan Turner, Matt Barnes, Aminu, Paul George, Tyreke Evans, Stuckey, Sefalosha