Now that I passed a smooth season in a bot-league, I´ve also noticed that besides a relatively settled shot distribution (depending on the offense) the season average FG-Percantages seem to converge to a certain value.
Just for understanding: When I relegated I didn´t sell my core players. That´s why my player where way too strong for the IV. and for a IV.-Bot-league in particular. Still my team couldn´t pass the 56% 2-FG and ca. 46% 3-FG over the whole season.
This might be a wrong perception due to my lazyness for fancy tactics but it was still quite interesting to watch.
That's an interesting concept. I don't think it's strictly true, at least not on an individual game level - I had a game against an actually good team where we shot 60% from behind the arc (and 26.67% from 2) :
(96943333) If you can access the PBP (or want to sit through the viewer) you'll also note that we hit a 3 to get within 2 points with 32 seconds left, stole the ball and then with 10 seconds left, tried a jump shot. That naturally missed, we fouled and went down four, promptly drilled a three, fouled again with two seconds left, they hit one of two to go up two, and we naturally attempted a jump shot. I was actually watching that game live and I was so disappointed they missed the second FT because if it were made, we'd try a three and likely hit it, but instead of course they did the jumper and failed.
The thing I find more frequently is that outside offenses in general and Princeton in particular are very prone to having a guy (usually a SG) who is expected to score fairly well based on his PP100 prediction who nonetheless puts up a 4-17 type of day. On some other rare occasions he'll be insanely hot. My old Princeton team (I don't have the handling or passing to really do it now) was notorious at having a six minute stretch with less than four points scored and a different six minute stretch where they get almost 20.