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Tri-Cities teams poised to make opponents pay from three-point line

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In general, coaches’ level of tolerance for players’ chucking comes down to whether a guy has earned that faith through offseason commitment and consistent shooting touch in practice.

If a shooter has proven himself, Woods affords plenty of leeway, unless the time and score dictate a more conservative approach.

“I don’t like kids to be worried, Woods said. “If they’re taking a three, I want them to be comfortable because I believe the more comfortable they are when taking a shot, the better chance it’s going to go in. I’ve played for coaches where I’d be looking over my shoulder, and obviously it’s going to affect your shot and affect your game.”

Even when his players are battling off shooting nights, Ralston won’t tell them to stop taking threes, saying he’s seen too many occasions when a previously chilly shooter rediscovers his muscle memory in crunch time.

Other coaches aren’t always as patient. Aurora Central Catholic coach Nate Drye said “most of the guys are pretty smart” about curtailing their attempts when jumpers aren’t falling.

If not?

“I’m not going to say too much to them,” Drye said. “The bench will probably do most of the talking.”

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