Rotten Apple wrote:George and Russ scoring opportunities are coming in set situations instead of just a natural flow. It’s something to keep watching.
I don't quite understand what you're saying here.

I would argue we almost never run sets for Russ (besides the standard PnR with Adams).
Andre Roberstan wrote:Rotten Apple actually has a point—the tracking data indicates that Melo's actually getting a decent amount of touches and moving the ball well when he does. And his average time per touch is surprisingly low. I think the examples of the times that he doesn't are glaring enough that they're mentally overriding the rest.
Still don't feel like it flows right with him on the floor, though, which is a case where I'm not sure how to reconcile eye test and numbers. Time to go watch film.
That is indeed weird. Out of the 99 guys with at least 50 touches per game so far, he's only 71st in dribbles per touch and 70th in sec per touch.
slick_watts wrote:the issue to me is that a possession ending 27% of the time in melo's hands and 30% of the time in westbrook's hands-- that's over half the possessions they are ending collectively and even in the best case scenario at those usages they're going to be league average as far as scoring efficiency is concerned.
Yeah I think that number's too high. Although it's important to keep him with the starters and him with the bench seperate. With both Russ and George on the court, his USG% is at 23.9 %. With Russ on the bench it's at 39.7 %.
slick_watts wrote:i think it looks janky because the way they are playing there is considerable overlap between him and westbrook and george. one of them needs to be a spot-up shooter, i think. the 'taking turns' thing is just not getting the most out of the three collectively.
Especially since both Russ and Melo are prone towards taking ill-advised shots. You can live with one guy doing that, but not with two. Not at that volume.
NYKfan77 wrote:What I dont like seeing from Melo and PG for that matter is the standing around and watching at the 3 point line. They aren't spot up shooters. They can create more oppurtunities for others by simply moving and not standing still. They do a pin down for PG and if doesn't get the ball he stands at the 3 point line. If Melo isn't in the pick and roll or not involved in the set he just stands at the 3 point line.
They all need to do a better job of being involved and at least being a decoy when they are not involved in the set.
This is something we've been calling for for years, yet it has never happened. We're always just standing around and watch.
"I don't know of any player that, when the shot goes up, he doesn't want it to go in," Donovan said