Searching the team rosters of the NBA rosters, there is an inevitable draw for comparing aces Stephen Jackson and Al Harrington. The pair are good friends off the court, and both play the game with an open minded open floor attack posture that is very exciting to watch. Jackson may be the overall better player by the numbers, but they are both capable of red hot streaks of basketball. Three point blitzkriegs and uncontested rim smacking dunks are the name of the game with both players.
None of the elements of basketball are exempt from the judging eyes of purity. This includes the three point shot. Let's face it, the game loves the three point shooters. Among the game's most productive are this two of a kind, Harrington and Jackson. Both are capable of massive scoring barrages, and both can score from anywhere on the floor. It's the three point shot that brings the comparison for this purist, however. If there were stats for three point shots that turn around a week or a month or a season for a team, these two would lead the league.
The three point basket is in basketball terms the perfect thing. If a player shoots the three pointer at 40%, in 10 three point attempts, he will have scored 12 points. Only a 60% shooter could match the total from inside the three point line with the same number of attempts. This is a way too overlooked truth of basketball. A player who shoots the three point shot at .350, scores on average 10.5 points in 10 attempts. A 50% shooter inside the arc would score only 10. This can be a little bit of a stunning revelation..that a .350 3 point shooter is shooting effectively over .500 when compared to a player who does not attempt three point shots.
As devastating as a the three pointer can be, it's players like Harrington and Jackson who make the most out of them. There are others like Mehmet Okur and Hedo Turkoglu who use the three point shot masterfully, but none use it the way Harrington and Jackson do. They are the NBA's deadliest assassins, both with superior height, speed, and agility, and both fully capable of getting to the basket on the dribble or with a back door off a wing. Okur and Turkoglu use the 3 point shot to augment their rebounding totals and to gain a competitive advantage in the offensive end. Jackson and Harrington use the three pointer to establish total domination of the offensive end. Nevermind that their steals totals increase as a result of the three point shots they attempt. This pair can get close to the basket, too. On top of it all, they can both run the floor with the absolute best the NBA has to offer. That's a subject for another post...tall players who run the floor...
The most important element of the impact of the three point shot on the game is the overwhelming pressure it places on an opponent's offense. NBA basketball is a game of rhythm and court ownership and domination. Nothing in the game compares even remotely to the impact of a three point attempt on tempo and floor control and positioning. It's practically impossible to stress the importance of this fact enough. With the taller three point shooters like Harrington and Jackson and Okur and Turkoglu on the floor, the floor is automatically spread for the offense. Defenses must match the tactical height advantage of the shooters with aggressive perimeter defense. The need to match up closely with the taller shooters leads to opportunities in transition for other players and opens the door for yet another of basketball's underrated events...the easy two. There is another element to this array, too. The taller players who shoot the three point shot are able to retreat more quickly on defense and be a factor there. This is a schemer's dream come true...ask any coach...if you can get him to tell you the truth.
Put it all together, and you have what I consider to be the formula for basketball domination in Stephen Jackson and in Al Harrington. Two of a kind knocking down three point shots, working the back door, penetrating to the basket, picking up easy twos, making plays in transition, AND playing good defense and setting up their teammates in the offensive end. Harrington and Jackson are basketball's most underrated forces of the game. As for me, I say be careful you don't underestimate the importance in NBA terms of basketball purists Al Harrington and Stephen Jackson. Their bark isn't just a bluff...

