BigO wrote:Cubbies2120 wrote:BigO wrote:
Serious question. Is there any other player in the league who on a regular basis has the entire opposing team guarding him?
Regular basis? This looks to be an end of game situation and a miscommunication by the Raptors.
If there's a compilation out there of the "entire opposing team guarding him" out there, I haven't seen it. The Raptors played this very poorly.
This has been going on for years. In Milwaukee, we're used to seeing this kind of photo.And no, I'm not going to spend the time finding them.
Building a wall against Giannis is a regular thing. Not all coaches utilize it, but many, including Nick Nurse, do. Can you imagine any coach doing that with Tatum? He's just not as impactful.
So, I'll say first that if you ask me to name the Player of the Decade in the 2020s so far, I'd say Giannis - and so I'm certainly not looking to say Giannis isn't amazing.
But simply put, an extreme situation like the one in the photo says one of two things:
a) This was a mistake on the defense where too many guys helped on Giannis.
or
b) The opposing coaches believed Giannis was so bad at remembering to pass once he committed to the score that it was tactically beneficial to abandon all the other guys.
When you say "this is gravity", you're right, but there's a rub:
Great passers have an anti-gravitational effect because you know that if you leave your man, he's going to get an open shot...and if he's at the 3-point line and a good shooter, then the star with the ball should be looking to make that pass.
By contrast, the concept of gravity is considerably more straight forward off-ball. A great shooter off-ball has a purely attractive gravitational pull and so you can - simply by taking a photo like above - get a very clear sense of how much respect an off-ball scorer has in a way that is just too simplistic for judging a player on-ball.