Your inbox approves Best MLB parks ranked 🏈's best, via 📧 NFL draft hub
RAPTORS
DeMar DeRozan

DeMar DeRozan bringing mid-range game back in vogue

Jeff Zillgitt
USA TODAY Sports

Toronto Raptors guard DeMar DeRozan (10) has been among leading scorers all season.

Toronto Raptors All-Star DeMar DeRozan is not your modern NBA shooting guard. He makes his money inside the three-point line with an old-fashioned mid-range game.

DeRozan makes no apologies for his game which doesn’t fit into the conventional notion of what a shooting guard should do.

“My mindset every time I go out there is, ‘You have to stop me from doing this first. You’ve got to make me do something you think I can’t do,’ ” DeRozan said. “Until then, I’m going continue to do what I know I’m comfortable doing.”

All things Raptors: Latest Toronto Raptors news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Chris Paul on relationship with Blake Griffin: 'Better now than ever'

He is comfortable scoring from the mid-range distance and closer, and this season, DeRozan is off to the best start of his career.

DeRozan is averaging 30.9 points, has scored at least 30 points in 10 of 14 games and became the fourth player in the past 50 years to score 30-plus points in eight of team’s first nine games.

“Just putting everything together at this point in my career,” he said. “Being eight years in, I’m just really engulfing myself in being the best player I can be.”

DeRozan attributes his start to confidence and familiarity. He’s comfortable in Toronto and with the Raptors, and he made that clear reaching a five-year, $139 million deal early in free agency and leaving money on the table.

“It just all comes together now because at this point there’s not much you haven’t seen. There’s not much you don’t know from play-calling to terminology to schemes,” DeRozan said. “There’s only so many schemes a team can you throw at you. ... They throw everything at you – best defenders, blitzes, double-teams, every single thing.

“Once you leave with that mindset of every single night I’m prepared for that type of coverage, it comes easier. The game comes a lot slower. You understand what you can do and how you can do it better.”

He also has a genuine appreciation of the game. “You want to take full advantage of it because I feel like yesterday I was a rookie and now I’m now in my eighth year. I want to at least leave everything I’ve got out there for the game of basketball,” he said.

The Raptors have designed an offense that allows DeRozan to utilize his skillset. Get the ball to him and let him break down the defender inside the three-point line. (Improved three-point shooting would help him and the rest of the offense.)

Nineteen-feet and closer, DeRozan is shooting 51.3% from the field, including 57.6% on shots 10-14 feet, according to the stats.nba.com.

His mid-range game is one of the best and most prolific in the league. No guard takes more shots from 15-19 feet (6.8 attempts per game), 10-14 feet (4.7 attempts per game) and 5-9 feet (2.6 attempts per game) than DeRozan. Just 25.2% of his makes are assisted compared to 85.5% for Klay Thompson. Even 36.5% of Dwyane Wade’s makes are assisted.

Most surprising teams after first month of NBA season

DeRozan said other shooting guards have approached him and told him, “You’re the hope for us two guards with this mid-range. They say, ‘I want my mid-range game to be like yours.’ ”

He’s happy he’s flourishing in his style. “For me, it’s just always being resilient and never letting anybody sway my thought process or try to discredit something I may do because I don’t do something everybody else does,” DeRozan said.

It’s not conventional today, but it works for DeRozan and the Raptors. On youtube, search for Alex English and Adrian Dantley videos.

“I watch a lot of the old-school guys. You hear about them scoring 40 a night before there was a three-point line, and they didn’t have that athleticism and speed we have today and still found a way to get it done,” DeRozan said.

He has worked on his game, prospered from the Olympic experience and adding muscle has allowed him to increase his free throw attempts per game from 7.2 in 2014-15 to 9.6 this season.

“That bulk has helped him take hits and still complete plays,” Raptors coach Dwane Casey said.

Hear Jeff Zillgitt’s interview with DeMar DeRozan and check out the rest of the NBA A to Z podcasts here.

Featured Weekly Ad