High points first, because some people have a tendency to stop reading when they don't like what they see. He's been great defensive rebounding---whether it's because of Lopez or coaching schemes or whatever, he gets a big gold star b/c if you only counted defensive rebounds, he would be at a total rebound career high (8.7/g), and a DRB% over 25%,
which puts him 14th among players who play 15mpg. (In comparison, last year, which was his previous career high--by far--
he was 48th.). It's not that he's more ferocious on the boards (he's 48th in rebounding percentage per chance), but he's 10th in the league in "rebound opportunities" (defined by nba.com as being within 3.5 of a rebound). Again, whether it's scheme, drive or luck, he's putting himself in position to get a lot more rebounds on the defensive end. When he's trying to be LaMonster, he's nigh-unstoppable. Alas, he's only doing that on the defensive end (rebounding) and 30% of the time on offense.
For me, it's this inconsistency between playing down low (since we disagree on definitions, I'm going to say "10 feet and in") and pretending he's an elite shooter, especially "on the block".
He has 274 catch-and-shoot attempts (defined by nba.com as "Any jump shot outside of 10 feet where a player possessed the ball for 2 seconds or less and took no dribbles") this year (7.2/g), #4 in the league among players who have more than 15mpg, and a eFG% of 50.1% on them. That's 155th in the league (among the same qualifiers). Of the other high-volume shooters, Klay (60.4%), Dirk (57.5%), Ryan Anderson (61.0%) and Kyle Korver (71.8%) round out the top 5.
In terms of pull-up jumpers (defined by nba.com as "Any jump shot outside 10 feet where a player took 1 or more dribbles before shooting") this year, he's 16th at 6.3 attempts per game. His eFG% on them is 40.2%, 145th in the same category.
Yes, his ppg are up 2.7 per game to a total of 23.8ppg. But he's taking 3.1 more shots per game and shooting the lowest percentage of his career (47.4%), which means that for every extra shot he's putting up over last year he's only getting .87 extra points. That's turrble. He's shooting the same number of FTs (about 5/g, down a bit from 5.5 during the LaMonster days).
So unfortunately, he's only shooting 232 of his 795 shots (30%) within 10 feet of the hoop (where he gets the vast amount of his foul shots and shoots 59%). He's (comparatively) almost stopped shooting from the left side (only 101 of his 795 shots)--you might think maybe because he's shooting only 41% from there, or because schematically they don't want him over there. But it's not much better from the right side, aside from the corner 16-23-footer that he's making at 52%. Every other shot he takes from the right side (including the one he takes most, the left "block" jumper) he shoots 38% on 245 shots. For those counting at home without a calculator, that means that of the 523 shots he takes outside the paint (leading the league) he's shooting 42%, which is the same as his career 41.8% average.
Additionally, where are you getting that he's shooting 50.1% since Dec. 1? He shot
54% in October, 44% in Nov., 49.3% in Dec and 48.1% so far in Jan. He's shooting the worst percentage of his career (47%).
Looking at the win-loss splits, his rebounding is much more of a factor than his shooting, since his volume and efficiency shooting are very similar. He shoots 20.8 FGA/g for 47.9% (24.0ppg) in wins, and 21.3 FGA/g for 45.8% (23.3ppg) in losses. However, he averages 12rpg in wins and 8.6rpg in losses.
If you really want to make MVP arguments, and you really want to "jump on the L-Train", then stick with the counting stats and enjoy. The more you watch, and the more that you study what your eyes may not see, the more you realize that LMA has become the perfect Robin, and that he probably isn't even the
team's MVP (I'll save that for another post), and he probably shouldn't keep jacking up the voluminous amount of jumpers that he does, since he's not doing any better than anytime else in his career (actually, worse, since he's shooting more of them).
Sure, chant M-V-P and make him feel comfortable in Portland. If it helps him sign a max extension here, great. I like having him on the team, and the potential of LaMonster bubbling below the surface. I (and everyone else should) recognize that when he's playing like LaMonster he's the best all-around big (not named LeBron) in the NBA. But recognize as well that his uptick in scoring isn't b/c he's playing more like LaMonster, it's because he's playing more like a mix of K*be's chucker-ness and Andrea Bargnani's efficiency (no, really,
look it up). His rise in rebounding isn't from crashing the offensive boards (lowest total AND ORB% of his career), it's from sticking himself in position on D to get them. It's not LMA that's increasing the team's offensive efficiency to 1st in the league, since he's actually less efficient than he was last year--just taking more shots.