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Lakers News: The Injury That May Have Impacted Anthony Davis's Shooting Last Season

The star big man had a down year from outside the paint.
Lakers News: The Injury That May Have Impacted Anthony Davis's Shooting Last Season
Lakers News: The Injury That May Have Impacted Anthony Davis's Shooting Last Season

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Los Angeles Lakers star forward Anthony Davis just recently indicated a possible cause for his long-range shooting woes last year.

Mike Trudell of Spectrum SportsNet reports that Davis revealed this week that he had been dealing with a wrist injury during the second half of L.A.'s miserable 2021-22 season, in which it went 33-49 and missed the postseason for the first time in A.D.'s Los Angeles tenure. Davis was sidelined for 42 regular season contests last season as a result of other, previously-known ailments: a left knee MCL sprain and a right ankle injury.

Per Jovan Buha of The Athletic, the wrist injury hampered Davis's follow-through on his shot:

For his career, Davis is a respectable (but still sub-par) three-point shooter, with a conversation rate of 30.3% on 1.6 attempts. During his first season in L.A., in which he and James led the club to its 17th NBA title, Davis made 33% of his 3.5 long-range takes a game during the regular season, and boosted that metric to 38.3% on 2.9 looks in the playoffs.

Last year, the 6'10" big man knocked down just 18.6% of his 1.8 looks from deep per night. 

Beyond the three-point drop-off, he also had his worst-ever season from the charity stripe, though that wasn't nearly as precipitous a decline as his shooting beyond the arc. In 2021-22, Davis made 71.3% of his 6.1 free-throw looks a game, down a bit from his career rate of 79.4% on 7.0 attempts. During that standout first L.A. season, Davis got to the line and connected much more consistently: he nailed 84.6% of his 8.5 attempts, pretty elite for a big man.

Davis also connected on a career-worst 31.7% of his looks from 10-16 feet, far below his 42.3% average.

How much did the wrist injury affect his shooting? Time will tell, though it seems the answer is "somewhat." Maybe the eight-time All-Star won't be an MVP this season, but at the very least we can hope that the 29-year-old can stay healthier and bounce back to an All-NBA level.

One way L.A. could try to mitigate some of the wear and tear is a simple positional pivot. Davis logged the vast majority of his minutes at center last season. Los Angeles got younger at center this offseason, signing 27-year-old Damian Jones (the probable starter at the five) and 25-year-old Thomas Bryant. Moving Davis back down to power forward could help keep him from banging around in the paint quite so much, which could in turn preserve his body a bit better.


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Alex Kirschenbaum
ALEX KIRSCHENBAUM

Currently also a scribe for Newsweek, Hoops Rumors, The Sporting News and "Gremlins" director Joe Dante's film site Trailers From Hell, Alex is an alum of Men's Journal, Grizzlies fan site Grizzly Bear Blues, and Bulls fan sites Blog-A-Bull and Pippen Ain't Easy, among others.