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Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 12:55 pm
by supersub15
Toronto Star
Energetic Sonny Weems powers Raptors

He spent time Sunday trying to harness waterbug-like Houston guards Kyle Lowry and Aaron Brooks and did an admirable job.

"Man, did you see how fast those guys are out there?" the 6-foot-6 Raptor swingman asked. "They (were) quick. That's real tough."

But dealing with them was necessary and that got Weems as many minutes as he's ever played in an NBA game.


Smith's Blog

Not sure how many noticed a very slight change in what the Raptors do offensively but as Chris Bosh was going nuts from the field (11-19 on a rather economical day), you can be sure the Rockets did.

The subtle shift in a new Toronto offensive set, which Jay mentioned in his post-game dissertation, moved Bosh to the elbow rather than on the low post or midway up the lane and it worked wonders.

The set, which they just put it, works two-fold.

The option of Jack delivering the ball to Bosh at the elbow, heading to the corner while Bosh made a dibble-handoff move with Turk worked wonders. It got Turk around the corner and in paint, where he made little fades or hit an open Jack in the corner.

But, just as importantly, it didn’t give the Rockets a chance to double Bosh, who was too far from the basket to make a double-team effective. It takes a lot longer for a second defender to come and double at the elbow in that time, Bosh would get the ball moving on the perimeter and someone would have got an open look.

It’s amazing that moving a guy two steps can have such an impact but it does. And it did. And it’s a pretty good coaching move, if you ask me.


Toronto Sun
Raps bring work boots

Defensively, that extra bounce in their step resulted in nine blocks, as well as consistently contested shots that held the Rockets to just 37% shooting.

"We are starting to get better on the weak side defence and that's really helping us out," Bosh said. "Against a team like Houston, who moves the ball and runs their offence pretty well, I think we did a good job of that."


Sonny soaring

"Take advantage," the first-year Raptors forward said. "Especially on the defensive end. I'm willing to do that. As long as they keep me on the floor, I will do that all day."

"That feels great coming from last year and not playing at all to today and playing 29 minutes. It just feel awesome," Weems said, adding he views every chance to play as an opportunity to bring energy, regardless of the minutes.


Globe & Mail
Raptors rebound against Rockets

Raptors head coach Jay Triano said moving Mensah-Bonsu up in the rotation was an effort to take advantage of the possibility that he’d be motivated playing against the Rockets, who cut him in November, but also to reward him for taking advantage of the playing time he did get.

“We rank our guys every single possession, every play of every game, whether we’re up 20 or down 20,” Triano said. “That’s what we tell guys at the end of the bench … that’s how we move guys up and how we keep guys honest.”


National Post
Raptors push past Rockets with rare ease

It would be hard to call the notes on the wipe board inside the Toronto Raptors locker room insightful.

Pre-game messages such as "effort and energy, constantly," "ball movement" and "shoot smart 3's and rebound" qualify as Coachspeak 101 in basketball.


Houston Chronicle
Rockets find it difficult to overturn Toronto jinx

The Raptors have done little to slow opposing teams this season, and in the previous three games, they had allowed an average of 114 points on 52.1 percent shooting.

Unable to defend much, the Raptors decided to take away something and loaded up in the lane, fronting Carl Landry and swarming to cut off penetration.

That left the Rockets plenty of open shots but few they could make.


Ariza's frustration stems from struggles

The Rockets' Trevor Ariza seemed to know immediately he would be ejected after throwing a forearm at DeMar DeRozan in Sunday's third quarter. He will have to wait to learn whether a suspension will come.

Ariza was unavailable for comment after Sunday's game, but the cause of his frustration was clear. He had missed all nine of his shots, with the turnover that precipitated his swing at DeRozan his fourth in his 26 minutes.

“I think he got frustrated after I got a steal,” DeRozan said. “I really didn't know what happened after the fact.”

Jarrett Jack confronted Ariza, saying: “Why do that? He didn't do anything to you.”


Image

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 1:00 pm
by Bo0bo0
merci

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 1:16 pm
by theonlyeastcoastrapsfan
Thanks Sub.

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 1:35 pm
by Fairview4Life
http://twitter.com/dmorey

Daryl Morey wrote:Limited ball movement=tough shots. Missed even the open shots from 3&at rim. Missed shots impacted all areas.Scola leading league in Def Reb


Ya gotta make your shats!

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 1:39 pm
by bingolong
Thanks for the papers and the girl.Looks like I just became a Charlotte fan.

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 1:40 pm
by execoftheyear
That's the same hand off play I pointed out in the post PG thread...very effective

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 1:43 pm
by ATLTimekeeper
Fairview4Life wrote:http://twitter.com/dmorey

Daryl Morey wrote:Limited ball movement=tough shots. Missed even the open shots from 3&at rim. Missed shots impacted all areas.Scola leading league in Def Reb


Ya gotta make your shats!


I'm more impressed by this. He's over 30%. The dude is without a doubt the most underrated player in the NBA. He's a free agent this year, too...

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 1:52 pm
by timdunkit
Thanks for the papers :)

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 2:30 pm
by wille-dynamite
thanks for the papes....and charlotte

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 2:51 pm
by Kabookalu
Not sure how many noticed a very slight change in what the Raptors do offensively but as Chris Bosh was going nuts from the field (11-19 on a rather economical day), you can be sure the Rockets did.

The subtle shift in a new Toronto offensive set, which Jay mentioned in his post-game dissertation, moved Bosh to the elbow rather than on the low post or midway up the lane and it worked wonders.

The set, which they just put it, works two-fold.

The option of Jack delivering the ball to Bosh at the elbow, heading to the corner while Bosh made a dibble-handoff move with Turk worked wonders. It got Turk around the corner and in paint, where he made little fades or hit an open Jack in the corner.

But, just as importantly, it didn’t give the Rockets a chance to double Bosh, who was too far from the basket to make a double-team effective. It takes a lot longer for a second defender to come and double at the elbow in that time, Bosh would get the ball moving on the perimeter and someone would have got an open look.

It’s amazing that moving a guy two steps can have such an impact but it does. And it did. And it’s a pretty good coaching move, if you ask me.


And here people were saying we shouldn't change up the offense because it isn't the problem.

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 3:00 pm
by ghuytro
Image

I guess this is why they call Scola crafty. Notice the jersey pull.

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 3:26 pm
by J-Roc
Oh my lord, I can't believe some think we won because we changed up the offense. Houston was missing W I D E open shots!!

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 3:29 pm
by Korr
Choker wrote:
Not sure how many noticed a very slight change in what the Raptors do offensively but as Chris Bosh was going nuts from the field (11-19 on a rather economical day), you can be sure the Rockets did.

The subtle shift in a new Toronto offensive set, which Jay mentioned in his post-game dissertation, moved Bosh to the elbow rather than on the low post or midway up the lane and it worked wonders.

The set, which they just put it, works two-fold.

The option of Jack delivering the ball to Bosh at the elbow, heading to the corner while Bosh made a dibble-handoff move with Turk worked wonders. It got Turk around the corner and in paint, where he made little fades or hit an open Jack in the corner.

But, just as importantly, it didn’t give the Rockets a chance to double Bosh, who was too far from the basket to make a double-team effective. It takes a lot longer for a second defender to come and double at the elbow in that time, Bosh would get the ball moving on the perimeter and someone would have got an open look.

It’s amazing that moving a guy two steps can have such an impact but it does. And it did. And it’s a pretty good coaching move, if you ask me.


And here people were saying we shouldn't change up the offense because it isn't the problem.

I might be misinterpreting something, but exactly how does that change prove that our offence was the problem? In terms of offense we were below our season average yesterday.

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 3:38 pm
by Kabookalu
Korr wrote:I might be misinterpreting something, but exactly how does that change prove that our offence was the problem? In terms of offense we were below our season average yesterday.


J-Roc wrote:Oh my lord, I can't believe some think we won because we changed up the offense. Houston was missing W I D E open shots!!


I don't know about you guys but we sure as hell looked A LOT better offensively than I've ever seen us this entire season besides making just about every single shot in New Orleans and the first game against Cleveland. People only look at the numbers but the offense looked more fluid and free flowing than the grindy stagnant ball movement we usually see.

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 3:46 pm
by supersub15
Choker wrote:I don't know about you guys but we sure as hell looked A LOT better offensively than I've ever seen us this entire season besides making just about every single shot in New Orleans and the first game against Cleveland. People only look at the numbers but the offense looked more fluid and free flowing than the grindy stagnant ball movement we usually see.


I agree. For once the numbers lie. The reason we were below our season average offensively is because the numbers were being inflated by Bosh's FTA. We were way below our season-average at the line yesterday, but we compensated by shooting the ball well.

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 3:46 pm
by Dr Octagon
Thanks.

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 4:18 pm
by Air Canada
Thanks SS

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 4:22 pm
by Kabookalu
supersub15 wrote:I agree. For once the numbers lie. The reason we were below our season average offensively is because the numbers were being inflated by Bosh's FTA. We were way below our season-average at the line yesterday, but we compensated by shooting the ball well.


And to be honest I didn't think we shot the ball THAT well. I watched the GIAH up to the end of the third quarter and we were missing shots that we usually make, the big difference here is that we had a much better combination of hustle, inside shots, and ball movement.

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 5:13 pm
by Nolan
Thanks for the papers SS.

Re: Daily Papers - December 14, 2009

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 6:12 pm
by Double Helix
I have to say I'm impressed with Triano's increasing ability to use the press to motivate his players and justify his actions. It was very intelligent of him to point to the way the Raptors grade defensive assignments on every possession and that it's what happening there that will determine who plays the most minutes, especially at SG at the moment.

A less savvy coach might have called a certain guy out, or just said, "He's not playing hard enough on defence," which is a little too non-specific to actually improve said player.

By reminding us, the fans, and the media that they record evidence of defensive play... it essentially forces the players to treat that same kind of data the same way they treat the box scores game after game. And the players who relish in improving their defence, using the tools given to them, will be the ones who play and improve the most.

Anyway, I just thought it was a really savvy way to avoid having players wonder why their minutes are cut or preaching as much to the media. A lot of coaches these days, Phil Jackson included, use the media to their advantage. I liked the adjustments from Jay yesterday and I like that I can see improvement from him.