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Chicken...Steph or Eddy?
Chicken...Steph or Eddy?
Have you ever watched Hawkins shoot. I know you are an expert but this is not correct. Ray Allen released it at the top of his jump. The motion starts on the way up. Just look at the film.Best practice is releasing the ball on the way up, not at the apex. Ain't the 90s any more.
Have you ever watched Hawkins shoot. I know you are an expert but this is not correct. Ray Allen released it at the top of his jump. The motion starts on the way up. Just look at the film.
So does Hawk shoot it on the way up or just as he is getting to his apex? His shot looks a lot like Allen’s. I understand being able to shoot from different release points. But Curry developed that to keep usually a bigger defender off balance. With Andres hops and if he shot more like Hawk from a form perspective he would not have to pump fake move his feet to get open enough to shoot. You develop what you have to to give you the best chance to get the shot off. Just curious about how “they” now teach foul shooting. Because a jump shot and a foul shot are not the same thing.He's not wrong, now most shooting coaches teach the Curry style of shooting over the Allen style.
Debatable which is better all things considered as where Curry's shot sacrifices the high release point it has the advantage of being a quicker release with arguably less motion to mess up. I'd argue Allen's form is better if you are getting a lot of shots off of off-ball screens (which isn't common anymore in the NBA, while Curry's is better off the dribble. Catch and shoot is up in the air because really mechanics are less important than consistency and touch.
Jackson's shot at UConn was bad mechanically but it also was inconsistent in how it was bad. His mechanics are better now, if marginally but he is still inconsistent in how he shoots. The big positive I saw is that his looks more connected to his lower body now and his elbow is marginally better. His release point is still off and inconsistent, as are the fingers that control the shot.
Have you ever watched Hawkins shoot. I know you are an expert but this is not correct. Ray Allen released it at the top of his jump. The motion starts on the way up. Just look at the film.
Does Andre's brother still play in college? Is his shot normal looking?
Heck, I shoot at the apex of my shot and I'm the best jump shooter on this message board.

His 3pt percentage is somewhat a casualty of the tyranny of low numbers.He shot 25% from three last night, and is at 20% throughout the preseason. He was at 28% last season at UConn
The form looks better and it's clear he's been in the gym, but he still has a lot of practice and development to get to a good level. Hopefully he can train his way into at least 33-35%. I think that will be the threshold to be considered a good enough 3P percentage
The form is SO much better, and I expect the ball to start falling for him.He shot 25% from three last night, and is at 20% throughout the preseason. He was at 28% last season at UConn
The form looks better and it's clear he's been in the gym, but he still has a lot of practice and development to get to a good level. Hopefully he can train his way into at least 33-35%. I think that will be the threshold to be considered a good enough 3P percentage
Hawkins can actually do both, but the vast majority are apex (or very near apex) shots. Probably better for him given his ability to elevate quickly.So does Hawk shoot it on the way up or just as he is getting to his apex?
Eh, guys who are confident shooting 3's shoot them, particularly in today's game. Most shooting a low percentage on a low # of attempts should probably keep that number low.His 3pt percentage is somewhat a casualty of the tyranny of low numbers.
28% last year. Vs. 25% this year, so far. Take 1 more shot, and it falls, suddenly 30% (as an illustration). As the # of shots goes up, the % becomes a much more stable (and appropriately representative/descriptive) number.
So does Hawk shoot it on the way up or just as he is getting to his apex? His shot looks a lot like Allen’s. I understand being able to shoot from different release points. But Curry developed that to keep usually a bigger defender off balance. With Andres hops and if he shot more like Hawk from a form perspective he would not have to pump fake move his feet to get open enough to shoot. You develop what you have to to give you the best chance to get the shot off. Just curious about how “they” now teach foul shooting. Because a jump shot and a foul shot are not the same thing.
The more I have thought about this and researched, I will admit that you understood the specifics to a greater degree than I did. Your information was much more contemporary. It’s funny because when I played in high school late 70s early 80’s. I would have all kind of release points if I was shooting off the dribble. Now mind you back in those days shooting off the dribble unless it was a lay up was frowned upon by my coach. And usually more so for average high school players like me. Our coach was fairly well respected in CT coaching circles at the time. The other thing he hated that I did was dribble penetration and kick out. I found it to be effective but it was not really coached at the time. If you were penetrating back then you were either going to shoot floater or lay up or passing the ball to the open man who was cutting to the basket once his man left him to stop my penetration. All this because I was 5’10” with my shoes on, so I was vertically challenged so you had to create. I was fast enough to usually beat my man off the dribble but once I ran into anyone 6’7” or taller I was going to get my shot blocked. I found it was easier to kick out than press an interior pass. I will tell you just like the cross over dribble was starting to be allowed and that really changed the game in my time. I had enough success with kicking it out that he eventually allowed more of it and it helped us in my senior year. So maybe I was ahead of my time then and now I am just old and out of date with how the game in coached and taught. My BBIQ has definitely improved since I rejoined the BY last year.Hawkins is good enough that he's developing both types of shooting, but is primarily an Allen-esque shooter who elevates above defenders. He's a brilliant shooter off screens when he elevates though, that much is obvious.
A big part of his shooting like Allen with a big jump is because he shoots primarily off screens and without much (if any) dribbling. It is much harder to shoot consistently and accurately with a high jump when you're shooting off the dribble. That's a major reason why you're seeing guys learn to shoot with a smaller, compact jump and a faster shot (rather than a slower shot that elevates over shooters).
Foul shooting is taught similarly modern shooting. Obviously no one is jumping in the air to elevate over a defender to shoot a foul shot. You're going to see coaches focusing on a high release point, keeping the ball close to the body as you lift from hip to set point, a high arc, and keeping a consistent finger position (usually index finger on the middle of the ball, but splitting middle and index is common too).
A subtle "tell" of bad foul shooters is that they hold the ball away from their body and swing it up to their head to release. Giannis comes to mind.
The more I have thought about this and researched, I will admit that you understood the specifics to a greater degree than I did. Your information was much more contemporary. It’s funny because when I played in high school late 70s early 80’s. I would have all kind of release points if I was shooting off the dribble. Now mind you back in those days shooting off the dribble unless it was a lay up was frowned upon by my coach. And usually more so for average high school players like me. Our coach was fairly well respected in CT coaching circles at the time. The other thing he hated that I did was dribble penetration and kick out. I found it to be effective but it was not really coached at the time. If you were penetrating back then you were either going to shoot floater or lay up or passing the ball to the open man who was cutting to the basket once his man left him to stop my penetration. All this because I was 5’10” with my shoes on, so I was vertically challenged so you had to create. I was fast enough to usually beat my man off the dribble but once I ran into anyone 6’7” or taller I was going to get my shot blocked. I found it was easier to kick out than press an interior pass. I will tell you just like the cross over dribble was starting to be allowed and that really changed the game in my time. I had enough success with kicking it out that he eventually allowed more of it and it helped us in my senior year. So maybe I was ahead of my time then and now I am just old and out of date with how the game in coached and taught. My BBIQ has definitely improved since I rejoined the BY last year.
At the apex (of the head, not the hand) the head is stationary, rather than rising or falling, and the eyes can best focus on the basket and judge location. An apex shot gives the most time to arrange hand-brain-eye coordination, this is best for accuracy.
At the apex of the head, the arm is still straightening/lengthening and imparting forward momentum to the ball. So the hand is still on its way up, even though the head has reached the apex of its jump.
You can get a bit more power and extend your range if you shoot while the body and head are still moving upward, but with a big cost in accuracy. It is unnatural to shoot this way and I have not seen anyone who does this. Bad shooters tend to shoot when the head is on the way down, good shooters at the apex of the head movement.
I think the historical change is not about the timing of shot relative to jump, the shot always is controlled at the apex of the head movement -- that is, the moment shortly before release when maximum force is applied to the ball and direction of the ball most influenced is also the moment when the head is highest and slowest moving. What has changed is that people don't jump as high and they don't extend the arms as fully before release. Speed of release and controlled accuracy has mattered more than height of release, with the shift to 3 point shooting.
Things happen so quickly it is hard to see the timing in real time. Slo-mo is needed and you'll find that for everyone, the shot leaves the hand very shortly after the head ceases to rise.
429 makes good points about the difference in shooting off the dribble and shooting off screens.