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Zach Lowe: The Reinvention of The Miami Heat

Posted: Tue Mar 26, 2013 7:28 pm
by MartyCONLONNN
Tues column: On the reinvention of the Miami Heat, plus the 10 Things I Like and Don't Like this week: http://www.grantland.com/story/_/id/9098417/how-miami-heat-went-historic-winning-streak-came-dominate-league

Zache Lowe IMO is a pretty enjoyable and very knowledgeable NBA writer right now... He's not really a homer and is as close to an unbiased media guy in the league that you can get. If anything, his bias is towards GOOD basketball... pretty much a bball snob.

Anyways, point being this is a great comprehensive article that covers the dimensions of what some of us die-hard fans have seen flourish and evolve over the 3 seasons. And personally as a longtime Heater I felt an awesome sense of pride reading through it and having someone articulate what really has been not only historic, but also aesthetically amazing basketball, OUR MIAMI HEAT. And if you really look into it & think for a moment on the beautiful, rare cohesive ball we're playing (all while getting the LOLZ in as well)... even as of now with just 1 ship from this team, what more can a fan really ask for? well, 1 more ring wouldn't hurt 8-)

Another thing: this article subtly points out a couple things that (to me) hint at the future of the franchise. We're talking evolution, chemistry, years worth of rehearsed detail, and patience. Now how in the hell does one acknowledge that as a recipe for HISTORY and then consider the idea that Lebron, a history nut, will bolt to restart the process as his prime is closing out. Maybe I'm too optimistic in thinking that we're looking at a team like the Spurs as a model for a sustained decades-worth of success, but I think there's a very good chance that's where we're headed.

Re: Zach Lowe: The Reinvention of The Miami Heat

Posted: Tue Mar 26, 2013 7:41 pm
by mopper8
I think this really highlights the excellent job Spo has done designing and coaching our offense. He renames the pace-n-space offense the "5-out" and I think that's on point. I know GreenHat will want to point out that we are only 22nd in pace, but Spo has said in the past that pace meant as much speed of getting the ball from side-to-side as it did getting the ball up and down. The 5-out scheme is clearly the "space" part of it--the constant player and ball movement is the pace. And it's beautiful to watch.

Re: Zach Lowe: The Reinvention of The Miami Heat

Posted: Tue Mar 26, 2013 7:55 pm
by MartyCONLONNN
mopper8 wrote:I think this really highlights the excellent job Spo has done designing and coaching our offense. He renames the pace-n-space offense the "5-out" and I think that's on point. I know GreenHat will want to point out that we are only 22nd in pace, but Spo has said in the past that pace meant as much speed of getting the ball from side-to-side as it did getting the ball up and down. The 5-out scheme is clearly the "space" part of it--the constant player and ball movement is the pace. And it's beautiful to watch.


Definitely, I was a Spo doubter/condemner.. but then again I'm also kind of a frantic overly passionate fan that needs work with patience. So these past 3 seasons have been eye opening for me and I've kind of evolved as a fan too. I appreciate what's been crafted here, there were just moments that had you wondering if that ideal could actually be attained... Personally I think it's still evolving, which is scary.

On the "5-out"scheme, even just that clip with the floor spaced Lebron with the ball and Mario makes a cut the right corner while Bron drives.. it's just so nice to see that simultaneous shift in the defense and Battier's movement into the pocket for the 3. I mean, this kind of stuff happens on other teams but we do it so often, in so many different ways, with so many different players. It's just very cool, effective, and SIMPLE.

Remember when it was hard to get easy hoops? :P

Re: Zach Lowe: The Reinvention of The Miami Heat

Posted: Tue Mar 26, 2013 8:24 pm
by mopper8
^Other teams do it, but few do it as much, or as well. Yes, we have a ton of talent, but we also have a ton of ball and player movement. The only team that hangs with Miami on both those aspects is San Antonio

Re: Zach Lowe: The Reinvention of The Miami Heat

Posted: Tue Mar 26, 2013 8:53 pm
by DWadeno3
I think in terms of creating a system that benefits our players' strengths, Spoelstra has done a decent job. While Wade and James have done a good job adjusting their playing styles to our team, it's still a difficult task to find an offense that fits two dominant perimeter players. That's where a pace-and-space lineup is a very good solution to create the necessary space for drives and cuts, which is still both Dwyane's and LeBron's strong suit. If I remember correctly, those two are the two top points in the paint scorers, which shows you how going small with a lot of players to space the floor while not having a big to clog the paint has helped them to be as efficient as possible.

My knock on Spo, and that may be something that comes with time and experience, is his lack of in-game adjustments. I don't expect him to become the next Pop in that regard, but it's his lack of awareness and his stubbornness during games that still leaves causes problems for us. While our system as it is is a good one, it doesn't hurt to adjust accordingly depending on how the game is going. But again, this quality usually develops the longer a coach is in the league as an actual headcoach (it's a huge difference between being an assistant and a head coach).

Re: Zach Lowe: The Reinvention of The Miami Heat

Posted: Tue Mar 26, 2013 9:39 pm
by SideshowBob
Quarter-by-quarter breakdown of Miami's offense in the last 36 Games

1st - 113.6 ORTG
2nd - 114.0 ORTG
3rd - 116.2 ORTG
4th - 120.6 ORTG

Overall - 116.1 ORTG

Re: Zach Lowe: The Reinvention of The Miami Heat

Posted: Tue Mar 26, 2013 9:54 pm
by Slot Machine
While I credit Spoelstra for developing a very effective and fun to watch offense, a lot of credit has to be given to the players as well. LeBron and Dwyane are both willing and talented passers and unselfish guys like Bosh, Battier, and Chalmers know when to make the extra pass. If we had a guy like say, Marcus Thornton, gunning up shots at every opportunity, our offense would look a lot worse. Wade has changed his game from an on-ball player to off-ball player, LeBron added a post game, Chris has given up his post iso's and primarily spaces the floor. Those are all big things that if we didn't have, our offense wouldn't be nearly as good. Still though, I don't want to look like I'm hating on Spoelstra or anything, the article speaks for itself in terms of how much the playcalling and offensive flow has improved.

Like DWadeno3 said, Spo's in-game adjustments still leave stuff to be desired, but it's hard to deny that Spoelstra has improved as a coach. He just needs to take the next step.

Side note: I think Zach Lowe is my favorite NBA writer, good mix of writing skills/style, humor, and tactical and statistical insights. Grantland in general is pretty great for sports analysis. Lowe, Barnwell, and Keri all do great jobs.

Re: Zach Lowe: The Reinvention of The Miami Heat

Posted: Tue Mar 26, 2013 11:21 pm
by 420
Bill Simmons is part of Grantland, therefore, Grantland sucks. Don't care if you call me biased; the guy's a giant douchebag when it comes to the Heat.

Re: Zach Lowe: The Reinvention of The Miami Heat

Posted: Wed Mar 27, 2013 12:25 am
by This IsMy House
420 wrote:Bill Simmons is part of Grantland, therefore, Grantland sucks. Don't care if you call me biased; the guy's a giant douchebag when it comes to the Heat.

I know what you mean but lately he's been a lot better and really appreciating what they're doing. It's about time someone who rode the hate wagon did this and just admitted they are doing work.

Re: Zach Lowe: The Reinvention of The Miami Heat

Posted: Wed Mar 27, 2013 6:10 am
by 420
This isMy House wrote:I know what you mean but lately he's been a lot better and really appreciating what they're doing. It's about time someone who rode the hate wagon did this and just admitted they are doing work.
He has, no doubt about it. But maybe he's just playing nice, hoping we fail and then he'll come back out and start putting asterisks on our titles again.