All of that supports my point....there is a drastic difference between what is considered a turnover on a wild drive by Mathis, which is still a shot attempt that could result in a basket, foul (which speeds up how you get to a 1 and 1 or bonus) and not taking a shot altogether.
Mulcahy is not turning the ball over because he's careless with the ball....his turnovers are almost always "unforced".....it's not like he's getting pick pocketed by Jacob Young at mid court and giving up a layup.....or whatever pressure from an opponent. His turnovers are occurring when a shot and space are available and then he is making a pass to a player who is in a worse position or not able to score.
It is a simple fix.....
A) in order for Mulcahy to be a more effective passer, he has to be willing or want to score....Jacob Young doesn't get assists because he is looking to pass the ball, teams are defending him, because he threatens the team that he will score....does that mean a wild or ill-advised pass happens, or he tries to split a double team off the dribble??? YES, but he has intent on scoring....his assists are from that.
Mulcahy has to drive with intent on scoring early in the game, so he can get points on the board...teams will have to adjust if he takes 5 shot attempts a half....he handles the ball so he could take 5 shots a half and then if he wants to make 5 passes for assists, he'll probably get 3 assists per half.
Mulcahy in 29 minutes should have a stat line that looks like this.
4-11 FGA
2-5 3 PT FGA
2-3 FTA
12 PTS
4 RPG
4 AST
1 to 2 TOs
There's all types of space to make the others around him better by looking to score first.
Don't disagree, but when compared to Mathis, it's a pick-your-poison.... someone who takes ill-advised shots when he should pass, or someone who gives up open shot opportunities to pass. If they could somehow be fused into a single player taking the strengths of both, that player would be hugely valuable.
You mentioned getting fouled, which is also an important element, too. Mathis gets another 2.2 pts/40 at the line, while Mulcahy gets 1.7/40.
Trying to get at points generated in conference play..... Mathis scores 14.2 pts/40 while Mulcahy scores 8.2 pts/40. But how many points is each assist worth?
We make 19.6 FGs and 6.2 3P per game, so about 24% of our made buckets are from the arc. So, very roughly, 24% of the assists would count for 3 points, and 76% would count as 2 points. With that metric, Mathis' 1.2 assists would account for about 2.7 pts and Mulcahy's 3.9 asists would account for about 8.7 pts.
So, altogether, both account for about 16.9 pts per 40 min across shots, FTs, and assists.
This ignores the # of assists and attempted assists that resulted in FTs... either as And-1 attempts on made shots, or FTs on missed shots. On the flip side, Mathis presents many more offensive rebound opportunities than Mulcahy does - resulting in, very roughly, an additional 1.6 opportunities off offensive rebounds per 40 min than Muclahy does.
There really isn't a ton of daylight between them this year in conference play when it comes to putting points on the board.
In the "what have they done for me lately" column, though, Mathis' stats benefit greatly from some early-conference success before falling off (19.0 pts/40 over first 5 games, 10.5 pts/40 over next 11). Mulcahy has also seen a bit of a falloff, but not as large (9.6 pts/40 over first 5, 7.4 pts/40 over next 11).