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MAVS ROMP IN MIAMI
TWENTY-TWO MADE THREES

Buckets were raining down for the Mavericks in a rollicking victory ten years after they took home the championship in this very city. What a fun watch!


GAME STORY

Porzingis was ruled out for Dallas with his sore knee, and Carlisle broke the news that Maxi would be out for this game and probably two to three more, due to Achilles soreness. He said that Maxi has been “very unlucky,” and has been dealing with the issue for a while. Jimmy Butler was unexpectedly out with illness for Miami, and Tyler Herro sat with a sore foot. 

The Heat opened the game with a made three on each of their first four possessions, followed by a score on a Mavs turnover. The Mavs were 3-14 within the first three minutes. They were down double digits several times during the period, thanks mostly to eight Heat threes, and closed the frame trailing 30-39. Luka led the Mavs with 11. 

The Mavericks crawled slowly back into the game in the second, tied it a few times toward the middle of the period, and achieved their first lead of the game on a deep Luka three with 2:39 remaining in the half. That seemed to get your boys going, and Dallas closed the period on a 8-2 run, going into the locker room with a 63-54 lead. Miami went from shooting 8-9 threes in the first quarter to 1-11 in the second. The Heat were only 3-11 even from inside the arc, and were held to an embarrassing 15 points in the period. Timmy and Luka combined for 17 of the Mavs’ 33. Josh Green played all 12 minutes of the period, and gave the team a needed burst of energy. 

Rick made an adjustment to start the third, electing to go with Green and Powell in place of Richardson and Willie, and sticking with that group for most of the period. Your Dallas Mavericks blew the doors off the gym, playing a brilliant brand of basketball in the period.  Hardaway was a flaming streak of incandescence, with the ball repeatedly flying from his red-hot hands to the basket in a blaze of heat and light. The Mavs led 98-77 after three.

The Heat won the fourth quarter 36-29, but don’t let that fool you — it was a Mavs party! The bench guys got some good run, and Luka never had to step on the court. 


STATISTICS

The shooting stats again tell the story. The Mavs were 62% inside the arc, 46% from deep, and 72% from the line. Comparable Heat percentages were 49/44/81. In terms of where the teams scored their points, Mavs were +6 on points from twos, +12 on points from threes, and -4 in made free throws. Miami had a 40-30 advantage in PIP, and a 16-9 margin in fast-break points, but the Mavs had an 18-9 edge in second-chance points. When the Mavericks are hot from three, they’re all but unstoppable. 


PLAYERS

HARDAWAY. Timmy’s bearded grill was a most welcome sight on the court, after the team sorely missed his scoring punch against the Kings. He was a fresh-legged wonder after the rest game, leading the squad in scoring with 36 points. His career-high ten triples tied Wesley Matthews and George McCloud for the franchise all-time record for made threes in a game. Eighteen of his points came in the third quarter, when he practically emblazoned his number on the Miami court. 

Tim has scored a total of 78 points in his last two starts. Carlisle congratulated him for his exceptional shotmaking after the game, and speculated that his starting roles in his last two games may have had something to do with his amazing performances. Hmm. I think Tim likes to have someone to show off for — he played high-school basketball in Miami, his grandma was in the audience, and his Dad’s number was in the rafters, so it was an extra-special night for him in front of his friends and family. He thanked Shamgod for pushing him during a difficult stretch, encouraging him to work for more arc and a little more follow-through on his shot. Effort rewarded! Keep up the great work, Timmy! This guy's importance to the team cannot be overstated. 

DONCIC. It was also a great night for Luka, who had a 23/12/8 line in a relaxing 30 minutes on the court. He was 5-10 from long range, and hit numerous miracle shots, including an extremely difficult basket over a double team in the second. Rick said he was great — I guess, at some point, you just run out of superlatives. 

GREEN.  We got a serendipitous turn tonight from Josh, who showed out well with a peppy performance in 24 big minutes in his best game as a Mav. His 4/4/3 line doesn’t really reflect his contribution, so perhaps an elaboration is in order. He first appeared in the second quarter, and in Rick’s words, changed the game. He fought for an offensive rebound, made a drive from the baseline for a pretty finish, had a steal resulting in a bucket for Hardaway, and tossed a kick-out pass to THJ for a three. Toward the end of the period, he wrestled Robinson to the floor for a jump ball. He earned a start in the third quarter, and continued his impactful play in similar fashion. Such a treat to see that display of explosiveness and athleticism, which is not really a trademark of the skills-oriented Mavs. 

Rick praised Green's “heart” post-game. He has gotten minutes in, I believe, four of the last five matches, and perhaps this is a harbinger of things to come. Congratulations, rook, you looked like a veteran out there!

BRUNSON. Jalen was outstanding off the bench, with 19 points on 7-12 shooting .He played all 12 minutes of the fourth quarter, and his competent performance was a big factor in giving Luka some much-needed rest. 

DFS. Dorian led the team in minutes (33), and continued to show his offensive chops with 12 points on 5-6 shooting. The Mavs were a team-high +28 while the Doe-ster was on the court. 

POWELL. Dwight was the primary big on the night, and had 7 points and 10 boards in 29 minutes off the bench. I thought this was one of his best nights of the season, and he was very effective on both ends of the floor on an evening when the Mavericks were missing their two main bigs. 

RICHARDSON.  J Rich was replaced by Green in the second quarter and most of the third, and responded well, scoring 15 of his 17 points in the second half and making some good defensive plays as well. He lives in Miami in the off season, and going home was probably a bit of extra incentive for him, as well as for THJ. 

MENTIONS. It was a good night for all the Mavs. Willie provided 18 minutes in a de facto backup center role. Burke and Redick also contributed in short minutes, and Hinton and Bey had a couple of minutes at the end of the contest. 

HEAT. Duncan Robinson and Luka’s Slovenian compatriot Goran Dragic led Miami with 19 points apiece. Trevor Ariza, always motivated against the Mavs, had 18. Kendrick Nunn and Gabe Vincent added 14 apiece, and Bam Adebayo barely missed a triple-double with an 11/9/11 line. The team actually played pretty well, but the better team on the night definitely won.  


OBSERVATIONS

Rick was not crazy about the “terrible start,” but was proud of his squad for fighting their way back with some stops, and then making good things start to happen. He termed the victory an important win. 

This was expected to be an intense game, as it involved relatively high stakes for both teams. Each side was in sixth place in its respective conference, and in danger of falling back to the play-in seeds. It did not disappoint in that respect, and even the minutes when the game was already out of reach were entertaining. The Mavericks imposed their style of basketball on the contest, and numerous players made significant contributions to the win. It was a huge break for Dallas that Butler was out, but they were short-handed themselves, and still had to put in the work to take advantage. 

This was an excellent bounce-back game from Dallas, after laying an egg against Sac. Your boys face the loaded Nets on Thursday. Maxi will be out, and KP’s status is game-to-game. The Mavericks are currently a tiebreaker ahead of the Lakers in fifth place, and are playing musical chairs with the Blazers and the Lakers for the 5-6-7 seeds. Let’s hope for a spirited performance against Kyrie and the boys!

Fun times, Mavs fans!!
Quote:. His career-high ten triples tied Wesley Matthews and George McCloud for the franchise all-time record for made threes in a game.
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I had the pleasure of watching this game in person. Let me tell you that Josh Green was the MVP for me. The whole atmosphere in the arena took a turn when he entered the game. He was ALL over the court.

Timmy's offensive barrage was a pleasure to see as well. Hope he continues his bounce back after his putrid stretch of games.
I tell you what, I was resistant before tonight to replace Richardson with Green. Even though Richardson's offense isn't great, Greens's has been nonexistent. 

But Green showed he can have a huge impact on the game with very little offense. If he could get his three ball even up to Richardson's low standard (31%) there would be no reason to play Richardson at all, except maybe in a bench role.
(05-05-2021, 12:47 AM)Dahlsim Wrote: [ -> ]
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Next time make one more to erase Robin Hood from the history books. One more argument for Lavine. Surely he´ll easily break that record.

So I guess Carlisle agreed with my assessment of the last game. He was wrong to bench Green.
Thanks for a review, a couple of my observations.

Miami played extremely small line-up with Nunn at 6-2, three wings between 6-6 and 6-8 and Adebayo towering over everyone with 6-9. They move a lot on offense which caused some problems for Mavs, especially WCS looked sort of out of sync and a step late. But small and fast Miami lineup also allowed Mavs to go comfortably to small ball and be still effective on offensive boards.

WCS late

https://www.nba.com/stats/events/?GameEventID=7&GameID=0022000986&Season=2020-21&flag=1&title=Ariza%2027%27%203PT%20Step%20Back%20Jump%20Shot%20(3%20PTS)&sct=plot

WCS late

https://www.nba.com/stats/events/?GameEventID=10&GameID=0022000986&Season=2020-21&flag=1&title=Ariza%2025%27%203PT%20Jump%20Shot%20(6%20PTS)%20(Nunn%201%20AST)&sct=plot

Luka and JRich miscommunication

https://www.nba.com/stats/events/?GameEventID=13&GameID=0022000986&Season=2020-21&flag=1&title=Ariza%2025%27%203PT%20Jump%20Shot%20(9%20PTS)%20(Adebayo%201%20AST)&sct=plot

Ariza didn't get the message that the guy Luka is guarding is not supposed to be dangerous and went for 16 points in the first quarter. Fortunately, he received the message in the break after the first and scored only 2 points in the remaining three quarters.

Heat were aggresively doubling Luka, but he was still excellent as far as scoring goes. His three was falling nicely after a couple of colder games. He had few defenses lapses in the first quarter but his scoring helped keep Mavs close, preventing a total collapse of the system. Heat looked like a team on totally different level than Mavs in the first quarter. He had more troubles with passing where long Miami wings doubling him had enough reach to affect even tall Luka passing lanes resulting in several bad passes way off target. 

Fortunatelly THJ was on fire and his shooting ability really showed. He needs extremely little space and time to shoot it and was able to punish smallest holes Heat defense allowed with doubling Luka. 

https://www.nba.com/stats/events/?GameEventID=347&GameID=0022000986&Season=2020-21&flag=1&title=Hardaway%20Jr.%2026%27%203PT%20Jump%20Shot%20(15%20PTS)%20(Doncic%204%20AST)&sct=plot

I think this was main reason Heat defense fell apart in the third quarter. Especially Robinson looked extremely frustrated by all the tough shots THJ made.

https://www.nba.com/stats/events/?GameEventID=416&GameID=0022000986&Season=2020-21&flag=1&title=Hardaway%20Jr.%2012%27%20Pullup%20Jump%20Shot%20(27%20PTS)&sct=plot
The way the Mavs handled the Luka trap is the story of the game. With WCS and JRich the spacing was off and the Mavs lacked off ball movement. With Powell and Green on the floor the Mavs created a wide open shot every single time.
Off ball movement and rotations are crucial and some guys simply do a better job. This is just my eyetest but it feels like Maxi, KP, WCS, JRich and THJ rarely cut to the basket or try to create passing lanes for Luka when he is getting trapped. Powell, Melli, Green and Brunson are making the right reads and movements to get open.
It´s really easy to spot the difference when it comes to the bigmen. Everyone on the team should know that the trap is coming. WCS isn´t even watching Luka and just goes through the usual motions, waits for Luka to call the screen. Powell and Melli recognize what is happening and immediately rotate to the top of the key/ FT line. When Luka finds them they have a 4vs3 situation and just need to make the right read.
(05-05-2021, 06:30 AM)dirkfansince1998 Wrote: [ -> ]The way the Mavs handled the Luka trap is the story of the game. With WCS and JRich the spacing was off and the Mavs lacked off ball movement. With Powell and Green on the floor the Mavs created a wide open shot every single time.
Off ball movement and rotations are crucial and some guys simply do a better job. This is just my eyetest but it feels like Maxi, KP, WCS, JRich and THJ rarely cut to the basket or try to create passing lanes for Luka when he is getting trapped. Powell, Melli, Green and Brunson are making the right reads and movements to get open.
It´s really easy to spot the difference when it comes to the bigmen. Everyone on the team should know that the trap is coming. WCS isn´t even watching Luka and just goes through the usual motions, waits for Luka to call the screen. Powell and Melli recognize what is happening and immediately rotate to the top of the key/ FT line. When Luka finds them they have an 4vs3 situation and just need to make the right read.

Good stuff.  Willie's court awareness is really bad at times.  He gets a lot of praise here because his on court defensive numbers are so good.  I have to wonder if KP has more to do with Willie's (and Powell's) good defensive +/- numbers than Willie does.  The team gives up 118 per with KP on the floor.  If you aren't on when KP is playing and the team has an overall D-Rating of 113, then you are going to have really good numbers.  The question is whether it is because of how good you are or because of how bad KP has been?
(05-05-2021, 04:16 AM)omahen Wrote: [ -> ]Thanks for a review, a couple of my observations.

Miami played extremely small line-up with Nunn at 6-2, three wings between 6-6 and 6-8 and Adebayo towering over everyone with 6-9. They move a lot on offense which caused some problems for Mavs, especially WCS looked sort of out of sync and a step late. But small and fast Miami lineup also allowed Mavs to go comfortably to small ball and be still effective on offensive boards.

WCS late

https://www.nba.com/stats/events/?GameEventID=7&GameID=0022000986&Season=2020-21&flag=1&title=Ariza%2027%27%203PT%20Step%20Back%20Jump%20Shot%20(3%20PTS)&sct=plot

WCS late

https://www.nba.com/stats/events/?GameEventID=10&GameID=0022000986&Season=2020-21&flag=1&title=Ariza%2025%27%203PT%20Jump%20Shot%20(6%20PTS)%20(Nunn%201%20AST)&sct=plot

Luka and JRich miscommunication

https://www.nba.com/stats/events/?GameEventID=13&GameID=0022000986&Season=2020-21&flag=1&title=Ariza%2025%27%203PT%20Jump%20Shot%20(9%20PTS)%20(Adebayo%201%20AST)&sct=plot

Ariza didn't get the message that the guy Luka is guarding is not supposed to be dangerous and went for 16 points in the first quarter. Fortunately, he received the message in the break after the first and scored only 2 points in the remaining three quarters.

Heat were aggresively doubling Luka, but he was still excellent as far as scoring goes. His three was falling nicely after a couple of colder games. He had few defenses lapses in the first quarter but his scoring helped keep Mavs close, preventing a total collapse of the system. Heat looked like a team on totally different level than Mavs in the first quarter. He had more troubles with passing where long Miami wings doubling him had enough reach to affect even tall Luka passing lanes resulting in several bad passes way off target. 

Fortunatelly THJ was on fire and his shooting ability really showed. He needs extremely little space and time to shoot it and was able to punish smallest holes Heat defense allowed with doubling Luka. 

https://www.nba.com/stats/events/?GameEventID=347&GameID=0022000986&Season=2020-21&flag=1&title=Hardaway%20Jr.%2026%27%203PT%20Jump%20Shot%20(15%20PTS)%20(Doncic%204%20AST)&sct=plot

I think this was main reason Heat defense fell apart in the third quarter. Especially Robinson looked extremely frustrated by all the tough shots THJ made.

https://www.nba.com/stats/events/?GameEventID=416&GameID=0022000986&Season=2020-21&flag=1&title=Hardaway%20Jr.%2012%27%20Pullup%20Jump%20Shot%20(27%20PTS)&sct=plot

Thanks for putting this together, and for the detailed observations. Very interesting insights.
(05-05-2021, 01:45 AM)embellisher Wrote: [ -> ]I tell you what, I was resistant before tonight to replace Richardson with Green. Even though Richardson's offense isn't great, Greens's has been nonexistent. 

But Green showed he can have a huge impact on the game with very little offense. If he could get his three ball even up to Richardson's low standard (31%) there would be no reason to play Richardson at all, except maybe in a bench role.

I understand that Richardson is on a short leash and Green may have his spot next year...

But is Green capable of playing playoff level defense this year?  Genuinely asking.

Green's hustle plays and defense are good...but is he too "Green" for playoffs?  A better was to describe what I am asking is like a rookie cornerback in the NFL....even if highly touted talent wise those guys seem to have a rough first year in the league.

Richardson's offense hurts the team by turning into a 5 v 4 situation for the defense(at least in regular season...will teams lag off him that much in playoffs?)...but I think we see Richardson kick it into another gear on defense in playoffs.   I could be wrong...but Im hoping he shows another gear and wows us.   Doesnt mean he shouldnt be replaced for a player that doesnt hurt us on the offensive side, though.
(05-05-2021, 06:30 AM)dirkfansince1998 Wrote: [ -> ]The way the Mavs handled the Luka trap is the story of the game. With WCS and JRich the spacing was off and the Mavs lacked off ball movement. With Powell and Green on the floor the Mavs created a wide open shot every single time.
Off ball movement and rotations are crucial and some guys simply do a better job. This is just my eyetest but it feels like Maxi, KP, WCS, JRich and THJ rarely cut to the basket or try to create passing lanes for Luka when he is getting trapped. Powell, Melli, Green and Brunson are making the right reads and movements to get open.
It´s really easy to spot the difference when it comes to the bigmen. Everyone on the team should know that the trap is coming. WCS isn´t even watching Luka and just goes through the usual motions, waits for Luka to call the screen. Powell and Melli recognize what is happening and immediately rotate to the top of the key/ FT line. When Luka finds them they have an 4vs3 situation and just need to make the right read.


I am no scout by any means and dont know much about the little nuances of the game...Im an eye test guy which means you have to jump off the screen for me to recognize your play usually...

But I saw an offensive sequence last night by Powell where he was moving around so much trying to set screens and open the floor for the ball handler it was beautiful(even if at the end of the day people think he is not good enough)...he would set a screen, roll back to the paint but while rolling back to the paint he was aware of if he was clogging the lane and would swing out to the baseline drawing his man away from the paint.   You could visibly see what he was thinking while he was doing this.   He was completely aware of not wanting to clog the lane.   His mission was to set a screen if need be,  dont clog the paint but put himself in position to get a rebound.   

He did this like 3 or 4 times on one possession.  Head was completely in the game.  For that possession at least.
(05-05-2021, 06:30 AM)dirkfansince1998 Wrote: [ -> ]The way the Mavs handled the Luka trap is the story of the game. With WCS and JRich the spacing was off and the Mavs lacked off ball movement. With Powell and Green on the floor the Mavs created a wide open shot every single time.
Off ball movement and rotations are crucial and some guys simply do a better job. This is just my eyetest but it feels like Maxi, KP, WCS, JRich and THJ rarely cut to the basket or try to create passing lanes for Luka when he is getting trapped. Powell, Melli, Green and Brunson are making the right reads and movements to get open.
It´s really easy to spot the difference when it comes to the bigmen. Everyone on the team should know that the trap is coming. WCS isn´t even watching Luka and just goes through the usual motions, waits for Luka to call the screen. Powell and Melli recognize what is happening and immediately rotate to the top of the key/ FT line. When Luka finds them they have an 4vs3 situation and just need to make the right read.

Good observations. 

I think trapping Luka is the defense de rigueur against the Mavs in the league at this point, and we are likely to see a lot of it in the playoffs. As you point out, off ball movement and court awareness are key to counteracting that. 

Maybe in the week before the playoffs, they can grab a little practice time to help the more non-intuitive players out on this.
(05-05-2021, 07:37 AM)dynamicalVoid Wrote: [ -> ]I understand that Richardson is on a short leash and Green may have his spot next year...

But is Green capable of playing playoff level defense this year?  Genuinely asking.

Green's hustle plays and defense are good...but is he too "Green" for playoffs?  A better was to describe what I am asking is like a rookie cornerback in the NFL....even if highly touted talent wise those guys seem to have a rough first year in the league.

Richardson's offense hurts the team by turning into a 5 v 4 situation for the defense(at least in regular season...will teams lag off him that much in playoffs?)...but I think we see Richardson kick it into another gear on defense in playoffs.   I could be wrong...but Im hoping he shows another gear and wows us.   Doesnt mean he shouldnt be replaced for a player that doesnt hurt us on the offensive side, though.

Unfortunately, my impression is that JRich doesn't have another gear. He isn't a bad defender but also not a very good defender and his occasional defensive highlight plays don't make up for his poor shooting and being a ballstopper on offense, not even mentioning his more and more regular defensive lapses and blackouts.

Didn't anyone else recognize JRich's rising number of blackouts on both ends of the floor?
Examples: -sleeping on an inbound pass vs Miami, which lead to a free layup of a Heat player
                 -several atrocious turnovers vs the Kings or the Wizards (can't remember which game it was. I think he didn't play in one of those two games)

Edit: I don't want to bash JRich and I absolutely respect all of our players. I also want to mention at this point that I find it disgusting to call our players Shitardson or Tim Hardashit as I was reading in another thread some days ago. My intention is just to point out Richardson's increasingly poor performances in the last few weeks. That being said I still hope he becomes a valuable player for the Mavs this year and that he can contribute to a good playoff run. But I also hope that the Mavs won't keep him because I think there are better and overall more valuable, gettable players out there.
(05-05-2021, 07:13 AM)DanSchwartzgan Wrote: [ -> ]The question is whether it is because of how good you are or because of how bad KP has been?


I think it is a combination of the two. I think WCS is a good NBA defender, but I think he looks great in contrast to KP right now.
(05-05-2021, 07:47 AM)dynamicalVoid Wrote: [ -> ]I am no scout by any means and dont know much about the little nuances of the game...Im an eye test guy which means you have to jump off the screen for me to recognize your play usually...

But I saw an offensive sequence last night by Powell where he was moving around so much trying to set screens and open the floor for the ball handler it was beautiful(even if at the end of the day people think he is not good enough)...he would set a screen, roll back to the paint but while rolling back to the paint he was aware of if he was clogging the lane and would swing out to the baseline drawing his man away from the paint.   You could visibly see what he was thinking while he was doing this.   He was completely aware of not wanting to clog the lane.   His mission was to set a screen if need be,  dont clog the paint but put himself in position to get a rebound.   

He did this like 3 or 4 times on one possession.  Head was completely in the game.  For that possession at least.

Thanks for posting this. 

Powell is a very smart player with a good feel for the game. Good to see that he is recovering his athleticism after his injury.  In some respects, he was the unsung hero of this particular contest, with the flashier performances tending to overwhelm our attention.
Fun game.  Such a Jekyll and Hyde team.   There are some games where I see things coming together and if they just upgraded a spot or two while keeping most of their glue guys, you could see the building of something very promising.   While on other nights, like the losses to Sacramento, this teams seems way too dependent on Luka and is very limited to do anything that Luka doesn't create.

I have loved the recent play of Powell.    I always viewed him as a baseball pitcher regular season innings eater.    But his play has really impressed me.   He just makes things happen.   Plus, he always plays hard.    That is a skill.   He is what he is, but right now he is playing good minutes, mostly.  I would be surprised if he was not on the team next year.  

Loved what I have seen with Green as well.  His basketball IQ is what really gets me pumped.   He really makes smart plays and he too always hustles.    I hope we continue to find some minutes for him.   He probably will not be a big factor in the playoffs, but lets hope he builds on his recent play.   I think he needs to have a solid rotation role next year (15-20 minutes).  There will be bumps, but I like what he brings.  It may take some work to give him consistent minutes for the remainder of the year with all the mouths to feed, but I hope he gets some run.  

I thought Luka's defense was a little lax at the beginning of the game.   The turnovers were too much too.  It seems like the team is still not totally in synch when Luka is doubled and that typically causes a few turnovers a game.   

Hardaway was great.  He is the classic case of no, no, no, yes, good shot!  You got to appreciate his confidence because he shows the same confidence when he is 2 for 10 and pulls up from 23 feet while contested.
(05-05-2021, 09:18 AM)Chicagojk Wrote: [ -> ]Fun game.  Such a Jekyll and Hyde team.   There are some games where I see things coming together and if they just upgraded a spot or two while keeping most of their glue guys, you could see the building of something very promising.   While on other nights, like the losses to Sacramento, this teams seems way too dependent on Luka and is very limited to do anything that Luka doesn't create.


I think that the only real difference between Sacramento game and this one was that guys couldn't hit a broad side of the barn against Sacramento, while they were excellent against Miami. Mavs shot 6-35 against Sacramento from 3. If they would score 6 more the percentage would still be a little below league average but Mavs would have 18 points more.
(05-05-2021, 09:46 AM)omahen Wrote: [ -> ]I think that the only real difference between Sacramento game and this one was that guys couldn't hit a broad side of the barn against Sacramento, while they were excellent against Miami. Mavs shot 6-35 against Sacramento from 3. If they would score 6 more the percentage would still be a little below league average but Mavs would have 18 points more.

That is true.

One of my hopes for this offseason, is we get away from the dependency on the three pointer.  It seems like too many games are decided on who makes more threes between the two teams.  I still think the three should be a big weapon for us, but I want other ways to attack teams besides Luka creating and our others guys shooting open threes.   I have mentioned names in the past, but I want a guy who can create off Luka, get into the lane, and get to the free throw lane.
(05-05-2021, 10:22 AM)Chicagojk Wrote: [ -> ]One of my hopes for this offseason, is we get away from the dependency on the three pointer.  It seems like too many games are decided on who makes more threes between the two teams.  I still think the three should be a big weapon for us, but I want other ways to attack teams besides Luka creating and our others guys shooting open threes.   I have mentioned names in the past, but I want a guy who can create off Luka, get into the lane, and get to the free throw lane.


The Mavs have played 65 games so far this season.  They have won 37 and lost 28 [W% = .569].

Out of those 65 games, the Mavs have had a lower 3P% than their opponent in 37 games, and they have had a higher 3P% than their opponent in the other 28 games.

Out of the 37 games in which the Mavs have had a lower 3P% than their opponent, the Mavs have won 9 and lost 28 [W% = .243].

Out of the 28 games in which the Mavs have had a higher 3P% than their opponent, the Mavs have won 28 and lost 0 [W% = 1.000].

I REPEAT:

The Mavs record so far this season in games in which they have made a higher percentage of 3-point attempts than their opponent is ...

28 wins and ZERO losses.
(05-05-2021, 12:36 PM)Hogmelon Wrote: [ -> ]The Mavs have played 65 games so far this season.  They have won 37 and lost 28 [W% = .569].

Out of those 65 games, the Mavs have had a lower 3P% than their opponent in 37 games, and they have had a higher 3P% than their opponent in the other 28 games.

Out of the 37 games in which the Mavs have had a lower 3P% than their opponent, the Mavs have won 9 and lost 28 [W% = .243].

Out of the 28 games in which the Mavs have had a higher 3P% than their opponent, the Mavs have won 28 and lost 0 [W% = 1.000].

I REPEAT:

The Mavs record so far this season in games in which they have made a higher percentage of 3-point attempts than their opponent is ...

28 wins and ZERO losses.

There it is. Live by the 3PT percentage, die by the 3PT percentage. 

A striking stat.
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