
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


On the 74th episode of Hot Hand Theory, XJ and Geoff break down LaMelo ball, Kon Knueppel, and the Charlotte Hornets' emergence as one of the NBA's most dangerous offensive teams—and reveal why their Big 3 of LaMelo, Kneueppel, and Brandon Miller might be the league's most unguardable trio that nobody's talking about.
Fresh off a statement win over the Oklahoma City Thunder that shocked the entire NBA, XJ and Geoff exposes the Hornets' offensive secret weapon: elite spacing. The Big 3 shoots 39% combined on step-backs and pull-ups, all three rank 90th+ percentile in deep three-point shooting talent, and they combine for nearly 30 three-point attempts per 75 possessions. This creates so much space that the Hornets lead the NBA in points per possession on rolls—despite having role players like Ryan Kalkbrenner, Moussa Diabate, and PJ Hall as their primary screeners. When defenses have to respect shooters 30 feet from the basket, even average to slightly above average rollers become elite finishers.
The duo explore swhy LaMelo Ball is one of the most misunderstood superstars in basketball. Despite shooting just 55% true shooting this season, LaMelo has a near identical offensive impact to Jaylen Brown (who's getting MVP buzz) according to top-down metrics. How? Every single Hornets player except their centers is significantly more efficient when LaMelo is on the court. He's trading his personal efficiency for team-wide efficiency gains through elite passing, deep shooting gravity, and defensive collapse creation. Combined with Knueppel (already one of the top shooters in the league as a rookie) and Miller's two-way upside, this is a Big 3 that only gets scarier as they build chemistry. When this 24-23-20-year-old trio plays together, they score nearly 130 points per 100 possessions.
The only thing stopping them? Health. If they stay on the court, they're shocking the Eastern Conference.
We cover:
🔹 Why Hornets lead NBA in roll man efficiency despite average screeners
🔹 LaMelo Ball's offensive impact = Jaylen Brown despite lower efficiency
🔹 Big 3 shooting 39% on step-backs and pull-ups combined
🔹 Kon Knueppel already one of the NBA's elite shooters as a rookie
🔹 Ghost screens and spacing creating unguardable offense
🔹 Smart 2025 draft: Kalkbrenner's value, Sion James' defense
🔹 Why health is the only thing holding this team back
🔹 How LaMelo makes everyone better despite lower personal efficiency
💬 Let us know in the comments: If the Hornets stay healthy, how far can they go in the East?
If you value strategic analysis over hot takes and want NBA breakdown that explains WHY young teams are more dangerous than anyone realizes, subscribe and catch every episode.
#CharlotteHornets #Hornets #LaMeloBall #KonKnueppel #BrandonMiller #HotHandTheory #NBAPodcast #NBAAnalysis #HornetsBasketball #Eastern
By Hot Hand Theory4.5
2020 ratings
On the 74th episode of Hot Hand Theory, XJ and Geoff break down LaMelo ball, Kon Knueppel, and the Charlotte Hornets' emergence as one of the NBA's most dangerous offensive teams—and reveal why their Big 3 of LaMelo, Kneueppel, and Brandon Miller might be the league's most unguardable trio that nobody's talking about.
Fresh off a statement win over the Oklahoma City Thunder that shocked the entire NBA, XJ and Geoff exposes the Hornets' offensive secret weapon: elite spacing. The Big 3 shoots 39% combined on step-backs and pull-ups, all three rank 90th+ percentile in deep three-point shooting talent, and they combine for nearly 30 three-point attempts per 75 possessions. This creates so much space that the Hornets lead the NBA in points per possession on rolls—despite having role players like Ryan Kalkbrenner, Moussa Diabate, and PJ Hall as their primary screeners. When defenses have to respect shooters 30 feet from the basket, even average to slightly above average rollers become elite finishers.
The duo explore swhy LaMelo Ball is one of the most misunderstood superstars in basketball. Despite shooting just 55% true shooting this season, LaMelo has a near identical offensive impact to Jaylen Brown (who's getting MVP buzz) according to top-down metrics. How? Every single Hornets player except their centers is significantly more efficient when LaMelo is on the court. He's trading his personal efficiency for team-wide efficiency gains through elite passing, deep shooting gravity, and defensive collapse creation. Combined with Knueppel (already one of the top shooters in the league as a rookie) and Miller's two-way upside, this is a Big 3 that only gets scarier as they build chemistry. When this 24-23-20-year-old trio plays together, they score nearly 130 points per 100 possessions.
The only thing stopping them? Health. If they stay on the court, they're shocking the Eastern Conference.
We cover:
🔹 Why Hornets lead NBA in roll man efficiency despite average screeners
🔹 LaMelo Ball's offensive impact = Jaylen Brown despite lower efficiency
🔹 Big 3 shooting 39% on step-backs and pull-ups combined
🔹 Kon Knueppel already one of the NBA's elite shooters as a rookie
🔹 Ghost screens and spacing creating unguardable offense
🔹 Smart 2025 draft: Kalkbrenner's value, Sion James' defense
🔹 Why health is the only thing holding this team back
🔹 How LaMelo makes everyone better despite lower personal efficiency
💬 Let us know in the comments: If the Hornets stay healthy, how far can they go in the East?
If you value strategic analysis over hot takes and want NBA breakdown that explains WHY young teams are more dangerous than anyone realizes, subscribe and catch every episode.
#CharlotteHornets #Hornets #LaMeloBall #KonKnueppel #BrandonMiller #HotHandTheory #NBAPodcast #NBAAnalysis #HornetsBasketball #Eastern

30,178 Listeners

3,898 Listeners

2,875 Listeners

9,253 Listeners

505 Listeners

828 Listeners

700 Listeners

335 Listeners

413 Listeners

4,207 Listeners

77 Listeners

498 Listeners

247 Listeners

527 Listeners