CntOutSmrtCrazy wrote:nate33 wrote:
Well, I figure we're going to run a system that doesn't involve Steph Curry. And most systems that don't involve Steph Curry look about the same, with a lot of pick and rolls as the primary action.
if you are implying that Draymond Green really is only valuable in a system that employs the best shooter of all time, I disagree. While I think Curry and the rest the shooters that team has had (Thompson, Durant, etc.) has helped cover some of Green's weak areas, I still think he's a player any team could utilize.
I think these Finals illustrate the utility of a Draymond Green. Here we have 2 of the other best High Post centers in the league contending for championship hardware.
In Wes we have a coach who understands the utility of the empty paint where the Center initiates offense from the top of the key. He helped input it in Denver, advocated for it under the guise of the 'Princeton Offense' for the Wizards. Though we never got the right jumpshooting Big to make it work no matter how many draft picks we wasted (Hilton Necklong. Stewie Pecherov, etc.). Still, posting Jamison on the wing to shoot 3's initiated the small ball era that Curry and Draymond ultimately rode to a mini dynasty.
Long before that however Bill Russell carried the Celtics to a true dynasty playing the same role: directing the action from the Pivot. Where various HOF guards wheeled around him in constant motion, looking for backdoor cuts and getting loose from off ball screens. I wasn't alive then, but dived deep into it one year when the Main Board had an All-Time Draft and I got curious how and why Russ was able to win even against one of the best athletes of all time in Wilt Chamberlain. Then the Wiz started playing a hybrid Princeton offense under Eddie F Jordan with Gilbert and come to find out the offense was built off the principles of those Celtics.
Immaterial for the discussion of Deni vs Kuminga. But I do think it is a workable play model. In KP we have a guy who can approximate some of that skill set: a jump shooting Big who can defend on the interior, is a willing passer, has reliable range to above the free throw line, though is inconsistent outside of that.
Personally I think the post LeBJ era will show more of that. We see an influx of face-up Bigs who have morphed the small ball concept into the Tall Ball version. In these finals we see two non-Draymond teams making it work. Following the defensive rules emphasis that siphoned away the utility of driving into traffic to force fouls, or jacking up shots from outside hoping to induce a 4-point play, I expect the high percentage plays available will be: interior scoring, outside shooting by tall players unbothered by traffic. In that respect, passes from big to big will be available and productive options. Bigs that have to be guarded outside open up off ball motion and passing lanes for attacks into empty paint.
If Deni could shoot even a little bit, he'd serve well as a facilitator in these sets. If he learned to set a heavy screen or pick, even better. He and Kispert both understand when to cut, and how to take advantage of a split second opening. I still think we need a back up for KP, for whether he chooses to leave, if he struggles to stay healthy, or even to play with a 2nd ranged big to open up even more aerial passing lanes.
That's one reason why I amplified the potential of players like Dereck Lively or Zach Edey in this draft. Both pass well for their size, score efficiently inside. Lively shows range. I think the ability to play tall ball with an inverted court will be a significant weapon. IF we can stockpile players who fit that style, then we will have trading pieces that other teams will pay heavily for.