Aki wrote:[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kW86Uv7DaSw&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]
just salivating...![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()


Moderators: Kilroy, Danny Darko, TyCobb
Aki wrote:[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kW86Uv7DaSw&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]
just salivating...![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
ray ray wrote:Kalidogg24 wrote:
You guys got a great leader both on and off the court. He'll make things much easier for both Byrant & Gasol.
seoulman wrote:I get a kick out of how much Steve Nash looks and talks like a young Clint Eastwood. The comparisons will grow even more if the Lakers start kicking butt with a Dirty Harry like Steve Nash.
GMATCallahan wrote:seoulman wrote:I get a kick out of how much Steve Nash looks and talks like a young Clint Eastwood. The comparisons will grow even more if the Lakers start kicking butt with a Dirty Harry like Steve Nash.
I don't see how Nash looks or talks like Clint Eastwood (circa forty years ago) at all, and that Canadian accent doesn't exactly help the argument ...
Aki wrote:[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kW86Uv7DaSw&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]
just salivating...![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
But a lot of pick-and-roll basketball, guys, is dependent on how the other three guys can space the floor. Remember in Phoenix, Nash was always playing with great perimeter shooting to open up the roll man. So it didn't matter if it was Stoudemire rollin' or Marcin Gortat rollin', the lane was open because of the great three-point shooting. Right now, the Lakers—they're not a great shooting team. They play a big four man, Gasol, so his man's gonna clog the lane. Artest is a little bit erratic as a three-point shooter, so his man will be in the lane. And so too will Kobe Bryant's man. And then off the bench, they don't really have that shooter—other than Jodie Meeks—that's really gonna spread the floor. So the pick-and-roll game is even tougher because of the roster composition.
http://espn.go.com/espnradio/play?id=8622897
D-BE-LAW wrote:GMATCallahan wrote:seoulman wrote:I get a kick out of how much Steve Nash looks and talks like a young Clint Eastwood. The comparisons will grow even more if the Lakers start kicking butt with a Dirty Harry like Steve Nash.
I don't see how Nash looks or talks like Clint Eastwood (circa forty years ago) at all, and that Canadian accent doesn't exactly help the argument ...
I hope you're joking about the Canadian accent ROFL.
Tasp wrote:Someone who actually posts with interesting insights and it's frowned upon. Typical.
GMATCallahan wrote:ray ray wrote:Kalidogg24 wrote:
You guys got a great leader both on and off the court. He'll make things much easier for both Byrant & Gasol.
Well, Bryant shot 16-41 from the field last night. Indeed, Kobe is more of a "stand alone" player whose style and statistics are unlikely to be significantly affected by whoever he's playing with. Heck, he never even shot .470 from the field when he was playing with Shaquille O'Neal.
GMATCallahan wrote:Aki wrote:
... very good video, but I need to take issue with a couple points there.
First, Steve Nash did not turn Jared Dudley into an NBA player, give me a break. One of the myths about Nash is that he turns "scrubs into real players," or something along those lines, but it's bogus. Just because some people had never or scarcely heard of Raja Bell or James Jones before they joined Phoenix didn't mean that they couldn't play. Indeed, the Suns signed them precisely because they had already established themselves as dangerous shooters (and useful defenders), with Bell having shot a combined .387 on threes over the previous two seasons in Utah before joining Nash in Phoenix, including .403 for the Jazz in '04-'05. (And Bell wasn't playing with John Stockton or Deron Williams in Salt Lake City, either). In fact, Bell shot .454 from the field and .403 on threes in '04-'05 with Utah, compared to .438 from the field and .419 on threes in his three full seasons with Nash in Phoenix.
Likewise, James Jones had shot .398 on threes in '04-'05 for an Indiana team that advanced to the Eastern Conference Semifinals. In '04-'05, Jones shot .396 from the field and .398 on threes; in two seasons with Nash in Phoenix, he would shoot a combined .397 from the field and .382 on threes. And actually, in his six seasons since leaving Nash, Jones has shot .407 from the field and .416 on threes, including .444 on threes for Portland in '07-'08. Jones and Bell constituted high-quality three-point shooters before they ever joined Nash in Phoenix, explaining why the Suns signed them in the first place. The fact that many people proved ignorant of these facts does not change the fact that those facts existed.
Jared Dudley amounts to a somewhat different case because Phoenix traded for him in the middle of the '08-'09 season, when Dudley was only twenty-three and in just his second NBA season. But already, Dudley was showing signs of being a good three-point shooter before joining Nash, shooting .375 on threes in 20 games for Charlotte that season prior to the deal. In his first full season with Nash and the Suns, '09-'10, Dudley's three-point field goal percentage mushroomed to a staggering .458, but Dudley spent a significant share of his minutes that year playing without Nash. Coming off the bench for 81 regular season games, Dudley was often playing with Goran Dragic and/or Leandro Barbosa at guard. And this season without Nash, Dudley is currently shooting a career-high .489 from the field while connecting on threes at a .396 clip, higher than his .383 mark from last season with Nash, when Dudley started 60 games (in a 66-game schedule). Dudley grabbed 7 boards on Saturday night and passed for 10 assists on Friday night, after enjoying a game with 15 points, 9 rebounds, and 5 assists earlier in the month. In fact, over his last 12 games, Dudley is averaging 14.6 points, 3.3 rebounds, 3.6 assists, just 1.0 turnovers, a 3.58:1.00 assists-to-turnover ratio, 1.3 steals, a .556 field goal percentage, a .451 three-point field goal percentage (in 4.3 attempts per game), an .842 free throw percentage, and a stunning .702 True Shooting percentage and 137 Offensive Rating. Over his last 7 games, Dudley has posted at least 15 points six times, 19 points five times, and 20 points four times. Over his last 7 games, Dudley has recorded 5 or more assists four times and multiple steals four times, including 3 steals three different times. Dudley is an NBA player not because Steve Nash turned him into one, but because Dudley turned himself into one. He reminds me of three-time NBA champion Mario Elie, except (unfortunately) with less athleticism and slashing ability.
The other problem with the video is that it suggests that just because the "roll man" proved so prolific and efficient in Phoenix playing with Nash, he will necessarily be that way with the Lakers. But that situation existed with the Suns not simply because of Nash, but largely due to the way that Phoenix spread the floor. As one can see from the video, the Suns generally surrounded the pick-and-roll with three off-ball three-point shooters or perimeter players, spaced perfectly. When combined with the modern, revamped defensive three seconds rule (instituted following the 2001 season), the result was that the middle (or the lane) usually proved almost completely open. In basketball, space equals time (the game's fundamental equation), so when defenders are fanned out that widely and need to cover so much space, they often can't help on the pick-and-roll and deal with the "roll man" in time. Often times, the opposing defense doesn't even want to help on the "roll man" (or the ball-handler, Nash in this case) for fear of not being able to help and recover in time to contest a perimeter jump shot for a dangerous perimeter shooter or scorer. Thus if you scrutinize those highlights, you'll find that the Spurs usually preferred to take their chances in the two-on-one situation created by the Suns' pick-and-roll, rather than sending a third defender to help on the play. For when the court is spaced so widely, successful defensive rotations become extremely difficult, sometimes impossible. Therefore, instead of allowing three-point shooters such as Jared Dudley and Channing Frye to find their groove from the perimeter via open looks, San Antonio preferred to gamble that two players (Nash, the ball-handler, and Marcin Gortat, the "roll man") wouldn't be able to overcome the Spurs, even if they proved prolific and efficient. Indeed, the Spurs employed much the same approach when they defeated Phoenix in the 2005, 2007, and 2008 playoffs (back then, Phoenix's primary "roll man" constituted Amar'e Stoudemire). For instance, in Game One of the 2005 Western Conference Finals at Phoenix, Stoudemire and Nash combined for 70 points on .581 (25-43) field goal shooting, but the Spurs limited Shawn Marion and Quentin Richardson to a total of 10 points on .267 (4-15) field goal shooting.
http://www.basketball-reference.com/boxscores/200505220PHO.html
In Game Five at Phoenix, Stoudemire and Nash combined for 62 points, but the other three Phoenix starters—Shawn Marion, Quentin Richardson, and Joe Johnson—combined for just 23. Actually, the entire Suns' team aside from Stoudemire and Nash combined for only 33 points.
http://www.basketball-reference.com/boxscores/200506010PHO.html
Indeed, the sheer stupidity of most basketball fans could be found in the many Suns' fans who became giddy over Stoudemire's performances while censuring Marion and Richardson for their diminished productivity. But of course, those results largely stemmed from San Antonio's defensive response to Phoenix's offensive scheme. The Spurs bet that impressive production from the Suns' two primary pick-and-roll players would not be enough to defeat San Antonio, especially given Phoenix's defensive mediocrity. Sure enough, the Spurs won the series four games to one, winning all three contests in Arizona.
A similar situation occurred in Game Six of the 2007 Western Conference Semifinals, when the Spurs eliminated the Suns in San Antonio. Stoudemire and Nash combined for 56 points, but no other Sun scored over 13. Stoudemire's statistics proved especially significant: he scored 38 points and attempted 28 field goals, but he passed for 0 assists and recorded just 1 assist in the entire series.
http://www.basketball-reference.com/boxscores/200705180SAS.html
Those results stemmed in part from Stoudemire being a disinterested passer (to phrase matters with euphemistic kindness), but also because the Spurs weren't overly concerned with collapsing on the "roll man." They knew that if they routinely attempted to stop Stoudemire by constantly sending help defenders to the pick-and-roll, they would rarely be able to successfully rotate to Phoenix's widely spread shooters and slashers, given that there was so much space to cover.
The lesson for the Lakers is twofold. First, overwhelming numbers by the "roll man" aren't necessarily a positive sign come playoff time. When Stoudemire scored more than 31 points in a playoff game against the Spurs during his Phoenix career, the Suns went 0-7. Second, the apparent dominance of the "roll man" is created not simply by Nash, but the combination of Nash, the system, the personnel, and the spacing that results. Since Phoenix typically surrounded the Nash-Stoudemire (or later Nash-Gortat) pick-and-roll with three perimeter players or three-point shooters, the middle was open, the defense proved unwilling to help for fear of being burned (sometimes, the defense just couldn't help successfully even when it tried because there was so much space to cover and the help defense couldn't get there in time), and the "roll man" could enjoy all kinds of prime opportunities resulting from switches or two-on-one situations. The Lakers, however, are not going to surround the pick-and-roll with three perimeter players or three-point shooters, at least not when they're playing their starting lineup. Relative to the Suns' offense (or to many offenses around the league nowadays), the Lakers are not going to feature as much court spacing, thus enticing and enabling defenders to collapse to the "roll man" more often. Here's what Jeff Van Gundy stated in November on ESPN Radio:But a lot of pick-and-roll basketball, guys, is dependent on how the other three guys can space the floor. Remember in Phoenix, Nash was always playing with great perimeter shooting to open up the roll man. So it didn't matter if it was Stoudemire rollin' or Marcin Gortat rollin', the lane was open because of the great three-point shooting. Right now, the Lakers—they're not a great shooting team. They play a big four man, Gasol, so his man's gonna clog the lane. Artest is a little bit erratic as a three-point shooter, so his man will be in the lane. And so too will Kobe Bryant's man. And then off the bench, they don't really have that shooter—other than Jodie Meeks—that's really gonna spread the floor. So the pick-and-roll game is even tougher because of the roster composition.
http://espn.go.com/espnradio/play?id=8622897
Due to presence of the modern defensive three seconds rule and the fact that Pau Gasol can certainly step out and hit a nineteen-foot jumper, I don't think that the Lakers' offensive situation is as dire as Van Gundy suggests. That said, he offers the salient point that the pick-and-roll's dynamics and the quandaries that it creates for the defense are largely determined by spacing, and that the Lakers' spacing usually will not be as wide and deep as Nash and the "roll man" enjoyed in Phoenix. The Lakers can still be effective on that play, but just because Nash is now in Los Angeles doesn't mean that there's going to be a carbon copy of what occurred in Phoenix, even with D'Antoni as coach. For again, the spacing and three-point threats will be comparatively diminished for LA and defenses will hence feel emboldened to help on the "roll man" more so than was the case against Nash's Suns. Of course, the bet is that with superior talent, the Lakers don't need the "perfect" pick-and-roll game that existed in Phoenix, just a more effective one than they featured last year.
Finally, but similarly, the video notes how effective Nash happened to be as an isolation player, but surely, one of the reasons for that efficiency was because so many (perhaps most) of Nash's one-on-one scoring attempts came after the defense switched on the pick-and-roll, leaving Nash against a big man who couldn't stay with him off the dribble or who wouldn't guard him outside. But if the court isn't spaced as widely, the defense will feel less inclined to make disadvantageous switches that result in glaring mismatches, instead choosing to send a third defender to the play, to help and recover. Back when Nash entered the NBA, for example, defenses rarely switched on the pick-and-roll because there was usually little need to do so: there wasn't as much court spacing or as many three-point shooters on the floor and the league had yet to revamp its defensive three seconds rule. Thus defenses could protect the paint more easily and with less fear of being burned from outside.
The game has changed plenty since that time (to the benefit of the pick-and-roll, both the ball-handler and the "roll man"), and Nash will still be able to take advantage of some of those changes as a Laker. But because LA features more of a conventional starting lineup or primary lineup, Nash and the "roll man" won't be able to maximize those advantages to the same extent as in Phoenix. There surely won't be as many two-on-one situations without help, and there surely won't be as many one-on-one plays resulting from switches.
Tasp wrote:Great posts gmatcallahan
Nashty wrote:Tasp wrote:Someone who actually posts with interesting insights and it's frowned upon. Typical.
Was a crap post and waste of time to read.
IamBBAnalysis wrote:GMATCallahan wrote:Well, Bryant shot 16-41 from the field last night. Indeed, Kobe is more of a "stand alone" player whose style and statistics are unlikely to be significantly affected by whoever he's playing with. Heck, he never even shot .470 from the field when he was playing with Shaquille O'Neal.
That doesn't make sense and it was one game. Will Kobe be a catch and shoot player? No. Will he be helped because the defense is focusing on Nash and because Nash will set him up for some easy shots and make him have to work less hard on offense?
Yes.
GMATCallahan wrote:IamBBAnalysis wrote:GMATCallahan wrote:Well, Bryant shot 16-41 from the field last night. Indeed, Kobe is more of a "stand alone" player whose style and statistics are unlikely to be significantly affected by whoever he's playing with. Heck, he never even shot .470 from the field when he was playing with Shaquille O'Neal.
That doesn't make sense and it was one game. Will Kobe be a catch and shoot player? No. Will he be helped because the defense is focusing on Nash and because Nash will set him up for some easy shots and make him have to work less hard on offense?
Yes.
Of course my comments made sense and I proved completely correct. Entering tonight's game, Bryant has shot .448 from the field and .312 on threes in 16 games since Nash returned from his fractured fibula.
http://www.basketball-reference.com/players/b/bryanko01/gamelog/2013/#1188-1203-sum:pgl_basic
And for his career, Bryant is a .453 field goal shooter and a .337 shooter on threes.
Now, one might blame "tired legs" or whatever, but anyone who really knows basketball will know that what I wrote makes absolute sense. With great players or hugely prolific players, they possess their own style or rhythm and no teammate is likely to significantly alter it or the efficiency that results. Bryant has never shot .470 from the field—not when he was playing with Shaquille O'Neal, not when he was playing with Pau Gasol at the Spaniard's peak, and not in the Steve Nash/Mike D'Antoni offense—because he is what he is, essentially a one-one-one player who, despite possessing the best scoring skill of his generation, attempts a lot of bad shots. Playing with Steve Nash wasn't going to fundamentally alter that tendency any more than playing with Kevin Johnson in Phoenix was going to stop Charles Barkley from holding the ball or slowly dribbling within a limited radius for an eternity. Great point guards are going to change the game for the lesser players, not the true superstars, and that first game versus Golden State merely amounted to an indication of greater truths. One can theorize about this or that in the abstract, but basketball as played on the floor is largely about instincts and Bryant's instincts were not going to change because of Nash's presence.
GMATCallahan wrote:IamBBAnalysis wrote:GMATCallahan wrote:Well, Bryant shot 16-41 from the field last night. Indeed, Kobe is more of a "stand alone" player whose style and statistics are unlikely to be significantly affected by whoever he's playing with. Heck, he never even shot .470 from the field when he was playing with Shaquille O'Neal.
That doesn't make sense and it was one game. Will Kobe be a catch and shoot player? No. Will he be helped because the defense is focusing on Nash and because Nash will set him up for some easy shots and make him have to work less hard on offense?
Yes.
Of course my comments made sense and I proved completely correct. Entering tonight's game, Bryant has shot .448 from the field and .312 on threes in 16 games since Nash returned from his fractured fibula.
http://www.basketball-reference.com/players/b/bryanko01/gamelog/2013/#1188-1203-sum:pgl_basic
And for his career, Bryant is a .453 field goal shooter and a .337 shooter on threes.
Now, one might blame "tired legs" or whatever, but anyone who really knows basketball will know that what I wrote makes absolute sense. With great players or hugely prolific players, they possess their own style or rhythm and no teammate is likely to significantly alter it or the efficiency that results. Bryant has never shot .470 from the field—not when he was playing with Shaquille O'Neal, not when he was playing with Pau Gasol at the Spaniard's peak, and not in the Steve Nash/Mike D'Antoni offense—because he is what he is, essentially a one-one-one player who, despite possessing the best scoring skill of his generation, attempts a lot of bad shots. Playing with Steve Nash wasn't going to fundamentally alter that tendency any more than playing with Kevin Johnson in Phoenix was going to stop Charles Barkley from holding the ball or slowly dribbling within a limited radius for an eternity. Great point guards are going to change the game for the lesser players, not the true superstars, and that first game versus Golden State merely amounted to an indication of greater truths. One can theorize about this or that in the abstract, but basketball as played on the floor is largely about instincts and Bryant's instincts were not going to change because of Nash's presence.
IamBBAnalysis wrote:Impressive that you took so much time. Unfortunately your analysis is flawed and you use examples that fit your your hypothesis while ignoring those that do not. In short, you appear to have an agenda.
Of course no NBA player is "made" by another. You're arguing with the guy's use of poor semantics and a cliche idea that no one really believes. The actual benefit Nash brings is he makes players better (more efficient) in the offense. And sometimes this means a "no name" player will have a career year with Phoenix in terms of efficiency OR increased output (or both).
For example, while you are correct that Bell and Jones could shoot the 3 well before Phoenix that is only a small part of the story.
Raja Bell's best shooting years were in Phoenix. He had his best shooting years there...largely because of the wide open looks. His three best (.442, .468, and .421). Also he led the league in makes one year. Of course he was noticed for this and gained his reputation there. Since leaving Phoenix he has dropped into obscurity and shot the ball less well.
James Jones on the otherhand never really fit in with Phoenix. His slow release was not ideal and his confidence also seemed to waver. But he's one guy out of many.
Look at guys like Channing Frye (not a 3 pt shooter but shot .439 his first year with the Suns), Tim Thomas, and Gortat?
Also, you mention the system and spreading the floor. How was Amare's fg% in NY when they spread the floor compared to when they did the same with Phoenix? Right, much worse.
Also, the Suns have not always spread the floor with Nash under Gentry. They often had a Lopez/Amare lineup and even had Shaq/Amare. So you saying the Lakers can't do what the Suns did with Nash is not accurate.
Anyway, I just wanted to provide a quick response. If you wanted to go into specific points perhaps you can keep it to a couple points per post. Or not. I have seen your posts before on the ESPN board back in the day. I know this is what you do and you are a Suns fan. If you could make a concise point that would be helpful. Are you trying to say something of consequence or just making subtle jabs at Nash?