Most agree Davis is a very high level defender, yet the Lakers defense didn't always live up to what it seemed it should with him. One thing I saw people talking about was players possibly overly relying on his excellence, expecting he can cover mistakes, which leads to complacency and worse defense than should otherwise be expected.
I wish I could find the post, and it might have been on another thread, but someone describes a typical sequence where peremiter player gets beat, partially because they know they have AD to clean up, AD manages to block or alter the shot, but the offense rebounds and scores before the defense can recover. AD is excellent, but the possession is a failure because the team effort isn't where it needs to be.
One poster mentions similar issues with Gobert.
SK21209 wrote:I always thought those Gobert Jazz teams over relied on him to do everything on defense. Guys who had previously been average or better defenders (Conley, Mitchell, Bojan) were getting blown by constantly. When your whole defensive scheme is predicated on funneling ball handlers into your rim protecting center, that can sometimes turn into perimeter defenders getting complacent.
I think the something similar was happening with AD. He’s an incredible defensive player, go look at that 2023 series against the Grizzlies and Warriors. He dominated those offenses in the halfcourt. Swapping DLo for DFS, Vando coming back, and Knecht losing minutes to Goodwin have also really helped from a personnel standpoint. The biggest thing, though, is that the team is playing with an energy and effort level I haven’t seen since right after the 2023 deadline when they got rid of Russ. Belief and buy in goes a long way in the regular season.
A similar thing can be observed on Jordan's Bulls where scoring outside of Jordan was often very anemic. Did they rely on Jordan so much, that they underperformed their offensive potential simply because they relyed on his excellence there so much. Yes the triangle helped with this, but it didn't fix the problem entirely and their offense could bog down and fall into a trap of just expecting Jordan to do it all at times.
Guys like LeBron and Harden are offensive systems wholey unto themselves, but their teams often looked completely lost with them off the floor. How much of that is coaches and other players relying on the talents of these paragons so much that they simply failed to work to produce complimentary and supplemental systems to maintain production without the player?
Many like to frame this issue as a flaw in the player. They don't let their teammates get into a rhythm or want to hog stats or something like that, but I don't think that adequately explains the issue even if it is a component to varying degrees at times.
What causes teams to underperform in the very area their best talent excels? Is it as simple as the player being overrated, underperforming, or taking up all the oxygen, or is there something else there? A trap that players and coaches fall into of just expecting the star to perform, of being pulled into complacency by excellence, which springs at the worst time and ends a season.
Are there other examples of this I haven't mentioned?
What are some ways teams have solved or minimized this problem?