Pistons coaching advice from the UK South London Press
Posted: Mon Jan 14, 2013 2:24 pm
from South London Press
http://www.southlondon-today.co.uk/Spor ... 0to%20know
3. Youngblood: Greg Monroe
Greg Monroe is a big part of the team -along with Andre Drummond. He is arguably Detroit’s best player at the moment - and he was only drafted in 2010.
But at the end of that season, he had proved to be one of the most solid and consistent rookies.
According to SynergySports, Monroe is most successful when he's put in situations where he's moving, such as when he's cutting (running from the wing to catch a pass from the player who has the ball) and when he's the screener in the pick-and-roll (setting a screen for a teammate handling the ball then taking a pass as he slips behind the opposing defender).
Recent figures show that he shoots 57.1 percent and scores 1.15 points per possession in the pick-and-roll, and 64.1 percent with 1.17 points per possession as the cutter. This is good shooting and point-scoring.
4. Winning at home, losing on the road
Detroit have an abysmal record of losing on the road. At home, Monroe has a higher shooting percentage than he does when he’s away. Also, he is only put into cutter and screener positions, where he is most dominant, 18.3% of the time. Why not play him in his most effective positions more when Detroit are on the road?
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Wow.
So Greg is most efficient when he's not playing the role of point guard - he's actually best when playing with a point guard that can get him the ball... And it took someone from the UK to figure this out?
"Trey Burke... meet Joe Dumars, and your new shooting guard of the future - Brandon Knight"
http://www.southlondon-today.co.uk/Spor ... 0to%20know
3. Youngblood: Greg Monroe
Greg Monroe is a big part of the team -along with Andre Drummond. He is arguably Detroit’s best player at the moment - and he was only drafted in 2010.
But at the end of that season, he had proved to be one of the most solid and consistent rookies.
According to SynergySports, Monroe is most successful when he's put in situations where he's moving, such as when he's cutting (running from the wing to catch a pass from the player who has the ball) and when he's the screener in the pick-and-roll (setting a screen for a teammate handling the ball then taking a pass as he slips behind the opposing defender).
Recent figures show that he shoots 57.1 percent and scores 1.15 points per possession in the pick-and-roll, and 64.1 percent with 1.17 points per possession as the cutter. This is good shooting and point-scoring.
4. Winning at home, losing on the road
Detroit have an abysmal record of losing on the road. At home, Monroe has a higher shooting percentage than he does when he’s away. Also, he is only put into cutter and screener positions, where he is most dominant, 18.3% of the time. Why not play him in his most effective positions more when Detroit are on the road?
--
Wow.
So Greg is most efficient when he's not playing the role of point guard - he's actually best when playing with a point guard that can get him the ball... And it took someone from the UK to figure this out?
"Trey Burke... meet Joe Dumars, and your new shooting guard of the future - Brandon Knight"