Now, obviously we all know that off-season workout videos can be extremely misleading. They are selectively edited, at the very least: if a player has been ''working on their three point shot'', they aren't going to put out a video that shows them bricking threes. Instead, we get videos in which players shoot 90+% from everywhere on the floor, including taking shots they would rarely take in game, if ever.
That said, they're not entirely useless. They do show form, they do show the physical shape a player may be in, and they can show some progress in certain areas of the game if the videos are shown in raw enough form.
We've had a lot of off-season workout videos for Pelicans players this year, and largely they're just workouts: weightlifting, running drills, etc. But we're hitting the point of the off-season where we will get gym montages on the actual court, and sometimes those can be fun to talk about. So here's a thread for this.
We can start it with this video, of Lonzo:
Lonzo back in the lab 🔥
— New Orleans Pelicans (@PelicansNBA) August 19, 2019
(#Repost via @ZO2_ / @ProsVision1) #Pelicans pic.twitter.com/Y2ntWiVsNZ
There are some good signs in this, beyond just the standard workout video stuff. One thing I've noticed, and some other people have too, is that his three point release is different. It's not 100% textbook perfect, not at all, there are still issues with it from a technical side, but it looks much much better than it used to. Elbows are brought under control, and that strange sideways launch it always had has been pulled much closer to being in line. If his old shot was 100% off, this one is more like only 30% off, and you can work with that.
Downsides to it exist, and they can basically be boiled down to the fact that it's a slower release. But if he's more accurate with it, which seems certainly possible, then that could be huge, especially on catch and shoot style shots. If Lonzo can be even just a league average three point shooter, that will help his game and the team a LOT. More exciting than even just the three point shooting though is the implications this could have on the free throw game: if he's reworked his three pointer, it's likely that he's reworked his FT shooting.
I've said before that I don't expect someone to go from shooting 41% from the FT to 80%, at least not in one season, but if he can improve even to a 60, or 65% FT shooter like Andre Drummond did a few years back, that would be huge as well. Would make it easier to keep him on the floor later in games, and would hopefully give him more confidence in driving knowing that he could actually take contact without wasting the possession. And that would make his passing more deadly as well.
Extremely good signs here!