IthacaMatt
Old Timer / Unofficial Contributor for 25+ years
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I agree in principle about Starling needing to shoot less often… But with several points of added context. Syracuse as a team took 59.5 shots last season, ranked around the 100th most shots per game as a team… I was surprised when I looked that up, I felt like our place was way slower watching games. The top three were about 65 shots per game, so even the fastest pace teams aren’t shooting that much more per game. Syracuse was 147th in forcing teams to foul us, not a bad ranking. Where Syracuse wasn’t very good is in turnovers, 259th in the NCAA. All these factors come into team pace, and Starling winds up shooting 27% of all team shots when he wasn’t injured. If we turned it over three fewer times, that’s three extra shots, and Starling shooting 16 seems less like a gunner.
But looking at our roster, there was nobody else you wanted shooting… Davis and Carlos were 5th and 6th on our roster, with 12.4 combined shots per game. Honestly, did you want Starling to shoot, or pass to one of the bricklayers around him?
Looking ahead, on next years roster, I expect an increase in pace with George loving to run. He’s a lead guard who immediately turns to initiate offense in transition after rebounding the ball, either himself, or getting an outlet pass. He also does a really good job of limiting turnovers, only 3 in 36 minutes while having the ball in his hands the whole time.
Considering those things like faster team pace and limiting turnovers, I’m hopeful we’ll be closer to 65 shots per game instead of 59. That would still be Starling taking 24% of our shots if he was at 16. 14 makes more sense for Starling in a balanced team concept taking 65 shots per game. Plus, he’ll be playing next to extremely efficient Kingz, who we want shooting more, as well as strong finishers in Freeman and Kyle.
Maybe Starling shoots better with more selectivity, increases his efficiency, and still can score his 16-18 points on 12-14 shots, instead of 16. Ideally, Kingz increased his average shots from 8 to 12, keeps his efficient scoring, and winds up neck and neck with Starling for the scoring lead in the team.
Starling won’t need to carry the load the way he did last season. Hopefully his season looks more like the Starling that finished his sophomore season playing next to high usage combo guard Mintz. Starling had .573 TS% on .360 Three point shooting in conference play on still heavy usage. That roster, with Mintz and an effective Chris Bell taking a lot of the attention, put Starling in a much better position to succeed than this past season. While George and Mintz are radically different players, Kingz is like a better version of Bell… I think the roster, even without additions, will put Starling in positions to succeed much better than this past season. He was just asked to offensively carry a bunch of mid major players, and everybody else good was injured.
*Sorry to write a thesis in response to your short post.
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Really good analysis. Thanks for the effort.