Personal observations from watching shot clock games in California:
Not that common for most teams, even JV or Frosh, to have trouble with the shot clock.
Most possessions that do have an issue get there because the team deliberately pulled back and slowed down, not because they could not run their offense to a reasonable shot in 35 seconds.
The biggest advantage, IMO, is that it reduces deliberate fouling at the end, as the team can elect to play defense for 35 seconds for a stop instead of fearing the other team will never shoot again.
It is not unusual for the operators to have a problem at some point in resetting or not resetting the shot clock at the appropriate time. (All resets are to the full 35.)
(The games I have watched have been at schools with sold programs--I have no sense how it would play out at less skilled levels.)
All in all, I think it is marginally beneficial to the game on a routine basis.
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