Posted by Sabrina B. @gametimegirl
Boston Celtics sharpshooter Ray Allen has always taken excellent care of his body, watched his conditioning, and passed on the sort of late nights and cloudy thrills that can cut an NBA career short. As a result, he’s been effective at a young man’s perimeter game deep into his 30s, though there has been some fretting over his stamina at times. When the Celtics traded for Allen in 2007, there was some concern about how his already-gimpy ankles would hold up as he entered the latter stages of his career. And by 2010, Allen was shooting a league average (the horror!) mark from three-point range.
Enter bigger shoes. Size 15s, to be exact.
From an interview with CSNNE’s Jessica Camerato (via Bleacher Report), it appears as if a switch upward to size 15 shoes allowed Allen’s doggies the room to breathe, and the larger pairs may have contributed to an upshot in three-point shooting that has seen Allen pour in a white hot 45 percent mark from behind the arc in the two seasons since. From CSNNE.com:
“My feet were always hurting,” he told CSNNE.com. “I was at shootaround in Detroit two years ago, I was running through it, and when I got back to the bus, it was just like the shoes, my orthotics — I called over to Nike and said, ‘The next shoe allotment, send it to me in 15s.’ I’ve been a 15 ever since.”
That shootaround was in March of 2010, and it’s probably no co-incidence that Allen managed to hit 39 percent from deep during that year’s Finals run for Boston, a nice mark against improved defensive competition, nailing a postseason-best 54 triples along the way.
To fill in that extra space, Allen just slipped a pair of orthotics into his shoes. Because that’s what we do when we get older. From his talk from Camerato:
“It just doesn’t restrict my feet as much,” he said. “My feet can breathe.”
(Story Continues…)
WRITTEN BY  Kelly Dwyer | Ball Don’t Lie  & FULL STORY HERE