Both are two-stage quality control shots with high shooting points, which are characterized by lower center of gravity and obvious pause when lifting the ball to the forehead. Stretch your lower limbs, stretch your arms, and finish shooting. The strength of shooting mainly comes from muscles, but after George was seriously injured, he began to adjust the shooting, simplify the shooting action and speed up the shooting, and finally formed a more silky shooting today.
Today, George's shooting is dominated by 1.5, with fewer pauses and higher fluency. Make full use of the strength of the lower limbs and throw the ball through the relaxed upper limbs. First of all, from the stress of George's lower limbs, George quickly lowers his center of gravity by catching the ball, and bends his knees, hips and ankles to drive him to take a deep breath, that is, the forefoot takes off quickly, which can make full use of the elasticity of fascia and the force generated by stretching reflection, shorten the storage time and improve the shooting speed. The take-off of traditional shooting is mainly muscle, while the take-off of modern shooting is mainly fascia elasticity. Secondly, the upper limb part of George's shot. George is very gentle. When shooting, his upper limbs are completely relaxed, but they are in an elastic state. George's fast break technique, when shooting, the shooter holds the ball empty-handed, and his fingers are naturally slightly open, and his wrist drives his fingers to pluck the ball and bend it fully. After shooting, the middle and ring fingers point to the ground. George's arm is not completely straight behind his hand, which also uses the elastic strength of the upper limb fascia to speed up his hand.
Finally, in shooting posture, paul george adopted close-range sideways shooting. George's shooting posture, his feet slightly spread over his shoulders, his left foot facing the basket, his right foot slightly beyond his left foot, and turned inward to form a slight standing posture. This can provide more stable foot support, and a slight tilt to the left can balance the center of gravity of the body during the jump shot. This is because the center of gravity will tilt to the right when shooting from the right shoulder. Paul george's shooting is not perfect. When he shoots, the angle between his arm and his body is large, and the shooter's fingers are everted, which leads to scattered shooting power and difficult direction control. This is one of the fundamental reasons for his unstable shooting.