E-Z wrote:What makes a player "dominant" in the post? I believe Monroe is quite a force already on the low block. He has made gains since his rookie year, and shows extremely high potential with his footwork, smarts, and aggressiveness.
That's a lot of info

I agree that Monroe is a solid post player, but I don't think he is a force on the low block. If anybody is going to be a force in the low block, i'd guess it's going to be Drummond. I don't pay for Synergy, but I don't see any evidence that they distinguish between low/mid/high post play. They appear to just lump it all together into "post-up".
Here are highlights from his
35 point game against Toronto.
The first play is about as close to the low block as he gets. Most of his plays come from the mid post or elbow and he's usually collecting the ball a couple of feet outside the paint. Dominant low post players establish position much closer to the basket than Monroe does.
Here are highlights from his
game against the 76ers that you referenced.
The closest he gets to the low block is early on in the video (18s and 28s). Nice plays, but he's being guarded by guys like Young, Moultrie and Lavoy Allen. Not the bigger/longer guys he struggles against. Even in these highlights he still starts a lot of his plays from what I would consider mid post and high post positions.
E-Z wrote:In 2012 Monroe ranked 113 of all NBA players offensively. He also ranked 84th in scoring from the post. His offensive production took a nosedive this season, ranking 247 offensively, seeing decreased touches (35% to 28%) and a lower field goal percentage (43% to 41%). However, I don't believe this is his fault by any stretch.
Monroe is a good player. There is no reason to give him a free pass when he doesn't play well. He had some stretches of bad play, especially early in the season.
E-Z wrote:[url=http://www.82games.com/1213/1213DET2.HTM]82games.com shows that Detroit's best five man unit included Knight, Singler, Prince, Maxiell and Monroe. 2 shooters, one okay shooter, and a stretch four. They had a win percentage of 50% together (20-20).
I don't think anybody is arguing that it's good to have players that can't shoot. Drummond isn't a shooter so I am not sure how open the paint is going to be next year. I agree that makes it even more important to have players at the 1, 2 and 3 that can hit an open shot.
E-Z wrote:The fact that Monroe constantly faces collapsing defenses illustrates the only constant from last season up until now. He desperately needs shooters around him. The floor is poorly spaced nearly every play.
I am not convinced that defense played against Monroe is substantially different from what a guy like Duncan has faced throughout his career. Parker has never been a reliable threat from downtown.