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schotpercentages

Schotpercentages is a family of statistics that express the share of successful shots relative to total attempts. They measure shooting efficiency for players or teams and are used across sports, most notably basketball and ice hockey.

Calculation and interpretation: A shooting percentage is computed as the number of successful shots divided by

Differences by sport: Basketball emphasizes different shot types (two-point, three-point, free throws) with corresponding percentages. Hockey

Limitations: Percentages can be unstable with small sample sizes and do not capture shot quality or playmaking

Related metrics: True shooting percentage (TS%), which accounts for free throws and three-pointers, and effective field

See also: Shooting percentage; Field goal percentage; True shooting percentage; Effective field goal percentage.

the
total
number
of
attempts,
multiplied
by
100.
In
basketball,
common
variants
include
field
goal
percentage
(FG%),
three-point
percentage
(3P%),
and
free
throw
percentage
(FT%).
In
hockey,
the
shooting
percentage
is
typically
goals
divided
by
shots
on
goal
(or
total
shots).
Higher
percentages
indicate
greater
efficiency,
but
results
depend
on
sample
size,
shot
difficulty,
and
game
context.
Teams
may
aim
for
high
percentages
while
balancing
shot
volume.
emphasizes
converting
attempts
into
goals,
where
marginal
increases
can
have
a
large
impact
on
win
probability
due
to
lower
scoring.
contributions.
They
should
be
considered
alongside
volume,
pace,
defensive
strength,
and
other
context-rich
metrics.
goal
percentage
(eFG%),
which
adjusts
for
the
extra
value
of
three-pointers.
Data
for
schotpercentages
come
from
official
box
scores
and
game
logs
and
are
widely
used
in
performance
analysis
and
scouting.