The Orange have rather quietly developed into a proficient three point shooting team over the last few weeks. The team has shot 44% from three point range over the past six games (44-101) with the Pitt game being the only poor effort. That stretch of games included Cornell, Pitt, Boston College, Louisville, Virginia, and Virginia Tech.
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Joe Girard |
It is no surprise that Joe Girard is leading the three point charge. The senior shooting guard has made 22 of 48 three point attempts over the past six games, hitting at a 47% clip. His 22 made shots is half of made threes for the Orange during that period.
However, it is not only Girard who is hitting at a hot clip. The rest of the team has made 22 of its 53 attempts, for a 41.5% percent. This includes:
- Chris Bell: 8 for 17, 47%
- Justin Taylor: 5 for 12, 42%
- Benny Williams: 3 for 6, 50%
- Symir Torrence: 2 for 3, 67%
- Judah Mintz: 3 for 13, 23%
As you can see from that list, Mintz is the only one on that list who has struggled to make three point shots during that stretch. Chris Bell has been very hot recently making 75% (6-8) over the past three games.
It will be interesting to see if this is an anomaly, or is this Orange team really a three point threat?
Unfortunately with the good comes the bad. The Orange are making 44% of their threes, but only 47% of their shots inside the arc. That is an area of the game they will have to continue to work upon.
My assumption is that opposing defenses are sagging off of the Orange perimeter, with the exception of Girard, leaving most of the players with clean looks. Fortunately the Orange are making those defenses pay for that. Eventually teams will adjust and cover the perimeter more, which should help the Orange insider, particularly Jesse Edwards and Maliq Brown.
It is nice to see this run of hot perimeter shooting. One concern about the Orange in the preseason was where their perimeter offense would come from. They knew they had Girard, but the rest were unproven underclassmen.