Gotcha. I hope those 40% shooters really do each produce the 15-20 ppg you predict. I mean, guess it’s a lock, right?
Can you point to where I made that prediction?
Now you’re just getting ridiculous. No it wasn’t a quote. To paraphrase even more accurately, the comment said we have plenty of shooters (firepower) on the roster already so the ability to score was not a big deal for the incoming players. That can only mean that we expect to replace the production of Mounce and Gurley (plus some extra for improvement) using guys who spent most of their time on the bench (riding the pine) plus some improvement among the returning starters. I thought that was understood. That was the whole point of the conversation. I don’t know how to break this down any better for you to understand what you were arguing about.youwouldno wrote: ↑Tue Oct 12, 2021 9:04 amI read the thread before posting. No one said that "we had a whole bunch of offensive firepower mostly riding the pine last year." That's something that only exists in your head. You don't need to post here to have an argument against yourself. Get a diary or something.
You literally asked who the shooters were and someone told you them, plus their stats. Because you were probably to lazy to look them up yourself. And YOU brought up dominating the conference and winning the tournament.
No one said Furman was going to improve by losing Mounce and Gurley. Your first paragraph is entirely anecdotal.Furmanoid wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 7:08 amYes, that was pretty uncool of me. But the frustrating thing is the way Furman basketball has made such a compelling case AGAINST the use of statistics for the past few years. Do you watch the games? Have you not seen the incredible dry streaks when nobody could throw the ball into the ocean? And have you noticed that those usually strike when we play good or decent teams? OK, maybe it’s just incredibly bad luck. Or maybe we just let the wrong guys shoot. But that can’t be seeing as how we have a Mt. Rushmore coach. Or MAYBE the stats are misleading.
If you want to argue that offensively we improve by losing Mounce and Gurley go ahead, but I’m skeptical despite what statistics say.
A couple of years ago we had a guy who was 15th nationally in 3 point attempts and was unranked in 3 pt percentage for most of the season. But when I pointed that out I was lambasted for paying so much attention to percentages. So maybe that converted me to the anti analytics camp.
Who is "you" when you say, "if you say so" ? No one on this board even said that.Furmanoid wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 11:51 amI’m just trying to follow the logic here. I guess the idea is that Pugh and Lawrence should have been the marquee players but their touches were limited because of Gurley and Mounce. Now with those guys out of the way they’ll show out, and the team will be vastly improved. OK, if you say so. But just in case, I hope some of the new guys can shoot, and I’m pretty sure they can. I think Hunter will show out.
OK let’s go step by step.PaladinPower wrote: ↑Tue Oct 12, 2021 3:56 pmNo one said Furman was going to improve by losing Mounce and Gurley. Your first paragraph is entirely anecdotal.Furmanoid wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 7:08 amYes, that was pretty uncool of me. But the frustrating thing is the way Furman basketball has made such a compelling case AGAINST the use of statistics for the past few years. Do you watch the games? Have you not seen the incredible dry streaks when nobody could throw the ball into the ocean? And have you noticed that those usually strike when we play good or decent teams? OK, maybe it’s just incredibly bad luck. Or maybe we just let the wrong guys shoot. But that can’t be seeing as how we have a Mt. Rushmore coach. Or MAYBE the stats are misleading.
If you want to argue that offensively we improve by losing Mounce and Gurley go ahead, but I’m skeptical despite what statistics say.
A couple of years ago we had a guy who was 15th nationally in 3 point attempts and was unranked in 3 pt percentage for most of the season. But when I pointed that out I was lambasted for paying so much attention to percentages. So maybe that converted me to the anti analytics camp.
If you shoot it a lot more than everyone else, you probably miss more than everyone else, too. Not sure what point you're trying to make there.