Mess wrote:
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Everything Kyle Lowry
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Mess wrote: View PostDeMar is leading the league right now. But yeah, I think it's also a deliberate effort on the refs to cut out some of the stuff almost every guard tried to get away with, but that Lowry excels at. Like after almost every layup Lowry falls to the ground.
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DogeLover1234 wrote: View PostYeah, I know it probably hurts some of DD and KL's game, but I kind of like it. Watching a ton of free throws through the regular season gets boring real quick.
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Hey Ekoreen must have been browsing this thread today. (I'm not a subscriber but I'm guessing the eerily similarity continues past the first 1.5 paragraphs)
https://theathletic.com/152317/2017/...ee-throw-rate/Two beer away from being two beers away.
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Mess wrote: View PostHey Ekoreen must have been browsing this thread today. (I'm not a subscriber but I'm guessing the eerily similarity continues past the first 1.5 paragraphs)
https://theathletic.com/152317/2017/...ee-throw-rate/
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Mess wrote: View PostHey Ekoreen must have been browsing this thread today. (I'm not a subscriber but I'm guessing the eerily similarity continues past the first 1.5 paragraphs)
https://theathletic.com/152317/2017/...ee-throw-rate/
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Nilanka wrote: View PostThen it would be even less likely to be ageing, no? To perform like a unanimous allstar for the first half of last year, and then suddenly get "old" a few days later?
Unless he became an old geezer on February 1st (or rather the 2nd, because he had a great game on the 1st), I think it's more likely that he had a mini-slump for seven games in February last year, got injured, and is now adapting to a new system (lower usage) and different refereeing (lower free throws, though this can also be tied to lower usage).
He turns 32 this year, so decline is lurking, but I'm not convinced what we've seen is evidence of it.
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Jclaw wrote: View Post
The jujitsu of drawing fouls hardly gets you on SportsCenter. It doesn't lend itself to hero worship. But it does come with the admiration of Rockets star James Harden, the NBA's reigning free throw king. In fact, DeRozan and Harden spend summer study sessions in Los Angeles, where they examine every little opportunity to earn a whistle -- like bringing a very low dribble into traffic. This often forces active-handed defenders to make an exaggerated reach to swipe at the ball and creates the kind of reach a referee just might notice. They also hone the fine art of tracking defenders in transition and finding inadvertent-looking contact with them while shooting, which DeRozan calls "body hunting."
Last March, when Harden's team visited Toronto, he and DeRozan dined together. The night before, DeRozan had gotten to the line 25 times in a win over the Portland Trail Blazers -- making his first 24 and missing the last on purpose to kill the clock and secure the win. In baseball, pitchers have perfect games. In golf, there's the hole-in-one. For what Harden and DeRozan do, this was the top of the mountain, and Harden wanted to compare notes, maestro to maestro.
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Shaolin Fantastic wrote: View PostExcept DeRozan's draw rate hasn't really been affected, in fact it's the highest it's ever been in his career at 53.1%.
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I don't remember seeing this quote from any previous article, but somewhat telling.
“Last couple years, Coach would give me the game for the first five, six, seven minutes. I could feel out the game and get passes off and get everyone involved and now it’s like everyone has to be involved from the jump. For me, it’s getting off the ball, moving and cutting, and it just hasn’t been there for me yet.”
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Nilanka wrote: View PostI don't remember seeing this quote from any previous article, but somewhat telling.
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