I start considering you a "sniper" around 40%.
I know Matt and Naz have that reputation, but, with the season well over 1/3rd the way over, they are just not delivering on that promise so far. The numbers back it up.
Shooting is contextual, however -- it is incredibly noticeable this year how teams are *not* sagging off our shooters compared to past seasons. Matt and Naz did not forget how to shoot, but teams are so unafraid of what our big men can do under the basket in a 1v1 post up or being in available position on a drive that they are not giving up guarding position on the outside. Thus, our guys do not have the quality of shots that they had before, and it makes it much harder to make it when somebody is guarding you closely.
When we had posts like Ejim, Niang, and even Hogue or McKay around, teams had to respect us inside and double most of the time. Niang could beat anybody in CBB 1v1 without much trouble, and the others were either big, fast, or crafty enough to cause some damage if you left them alone or against even numbers (if only as a dunker or, in many cases, on the offensive boards). That is just not the case with our current set down low.
This is more of a symptom of a cause. I try to have a holistic view of the offense, and I think our shooting problems come from how teams are defending the outside, which comes from how they do not much have to defend the inside.
Jackson has turned out to be the "this guy can shoot" player that CW promised, however, so that is nice. I will be excited next year to see how he will do with a much more prominent role in the rotation as a likely starter, full health and recovery after his wrist injury, the experience of this season, and a talented, athletic, but raw co-PG in Wigginton with him in the back court. Heck, you could make a case that Jackson should start now. He is small, but probably our best shooter and tenacious on defense. He featured heavily in the TTU comeback.
