The Miami Heat are enjoying a renaissance. Duncan Robinson, SG, Miami Heat, stats and updates at CBSSports.com. Now he’s starting for the Miami Heat because he’s …

This combination of volume and efficiency from three-point range is virtually… He is shooting 44.8% from three on 8.4 attempts per game. Duncan Robinson is one player who had to prove himself at the verge of the most vital times in his career before he can move on to the next phase. Robinson is averaging 1.24 points per possession so far this season, per Synergy, which ranks in the 99th percentile among all players in the NBA. After spending one-year in the G-League, Robinson earned a fully-guaranteed contract with the Miami Heat.
Meanwhile, no one in … Now he’s starting for the Miami Heat because he’s one of the best shooters on the planet.

In his second NBA season, Duncan Robinson is on fire. The Most Improbable Player in the NBA Duncan Robinson went to Williams College and played Division-III basketball.
Duncan Robinson is playing good ball. CBSSports.com ... (Achilles) sidelined, Robinson was a good bet to earn plenty of minutes, though he's been a …

Robinson is an absolute killer on catch-and-shoot threes. Those make up an astonishing 72.1 percent of his shot profile — an even six per game, per NBA.com — and he’s hitting them at a … The young basketballer went undrafted in the 2018 National Basketball Association (NBA) draft but this was not new to him as he also didn’t receive any Division I offers following his impressive high school career. So, those who know Robinson maybe aren't as surprised he's now an every-night starter for the Heat, averaging 11.2 points per game while making 2.9 3-pointers per contest, tied for 13th in the NBA as of Wednesday. Duncan Robinson went to a Division-III college. Robinson was a good player on that team, but he wasn’t anything special. Once again, he proved everyone wrong. FORSBERG: Good vibes are snowballing for these C's

I expected him to warm …

| Michael Reaves/Getty Images . I, and every other basketball fan in the Northeast loved watching him play, but we knew that his career would be over once he graduated from Michigan.