But can it help a team in the NCAA Tournament - where you'd have to be hot 6 games in a row? ...
Per Sports Illustrated...
This season we have "the highest three-point rate in the 29-plus years college basketball has used the arc
—treys account for 35.2% of all Division I shot attempts..."
..with many teams over 40% of their shots coming behind the arc - Bradley is at 37.9%, Wichita 39.3%, Northern Iowa 42.4%
..and you think Big Ten teams are all about their inside game?? Think again...
Most Big Ten teams are up there - Illinois 38.5% of their shots come from behind the arc, Indiana 40.4%, Northwestern 42.3%, Michigan 45.1%!
"..several college coaches postulate that D-I's rising reliance on the three is due to a "Curry Effect"..
Can (a team that shoots over 40% of their attempts from beyond the arc)
.. actually win a title, in a championship format that requires six consecutive victories, on three neutral courts? It has only happened once, and that was 15 seasons ago, when 2000–01 Duke had a three-point rate of 41.8%...
The average three-point rate for title teams over the past decade is 31.2%—lower than the 33.4% rate for all teams during that span. While there have been 380 college teams over the past decade with three-point rates higher than 40%, only one of them, '10–11 VCU, reached the Final Four, and that was as a wildly improbable 11th seed."
so it appears the best guarantee of sustained success is a strong inside game & not reliance on long shots.
Per Sports Illustrated...
This season we have "the highest three-point rate in the 29-plus years college basketball has used the arc
—treys account for 35.2% of all Division I shot attempts..."
..with many teams over 40% of their shots coming behind the arc - Bradley is at 37.9%, Wichita 39.3%, Northern Iowa 42.4%
..and you think Big Ten teams are all about their inside game?? Think again...
Most Big Ten teams are up there - Illinois 38.5% of their shots come from behind the arc, Indiana 40.4%, Northwestern 42.3%, Michigan 45.1%!
"..several college coaches postulate that D-I's rising reliance on the three is due to a "Curry Effect"..
Can (a team that shoots over 40% of their attempts from beyond the arc)
.. actually win a title, in a championship format that requires six consecutive victories, on three neutral courts? It has only happened once, and that was 15 seasons ago, when 2000–01 Duke had a three-point rate of 41.8%...
The average three-point rate for title teams over the past decade is 31.2%—lower than the 33.4% rate for all teams during that span. While there have been 380 college teams over the past decade with three-point rates higher than 40%, only one of them, '10–11 VCU, reached the Final Four, and that was as a wildly improbable 11th seed."
so it appears the best guarantee of sustained success is a strong inside game & not reliance on long shots.
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