Bob8 wrote:Chanel Bomber wrote:Bob8 wrote:
Celtics scored 107 and 105 points and we're talking about Mavs D? Really? On the other hand Mavs scored miserably 88 and 97? Do you really believe that Mavs lost because of D?
In game 2 Mavs outside Luka have been able to hit 11% of open 3s. They made 2 3s.
But if you insist talking about Luka's D, Mavs plan is to direct Celtics penetration to help, which I agree is more capable than Luka to defend, and to rotate him and others primarily defenders to shooters. I understand that GB is not the place for serious discussion, but basketball is a little more complex than it seems.
The Mavs defensive gameplan is not to collapse in the paint and leave the Celtics shooters wide open on the perimeter. This is what happened repeatedly in game 2 off of Boston's dribble penetration against Luka. So I appreciate your smug energy, but I'd argue that making the argument that the Mavs defense was sound in game 2 isn't "serious discussion", if anything.
The reason why it didn't cost Dallas more points and a blowout was Boston's lower-than-usual conversion on their open 3s. You don't evaluate a scheme merely by the outcome in a single game, but also by the process and the type of shots it generates. Dallas played with fire all game long on defense and it started with Luka's defense.
Obviously, Luka played great on offense, and Dallas's shooters shot horribly. This was another issue for Dallas. Not the sole issue.
I don't know why I would need to make the second point when highlighting the first.
Maybe you have a Luka problem. I don't know.
Discussion goes like that,
1. Celtics D is great, that's why Mavs outside Luka
made only 2 3s, shooting
11% wide open 3s. 2. Mavs D is awful, especially Luka's, but Mavs are lucky that Celtics couldn't hit wide open 3s.
3. Tatum is attacking Luka relentlessly and shooting 6/22.
I don't know what you're even arguing, or who you're arguing against.
The Celtics defense was great and the Mavs shooters failed to make their open 3s. Both things can be true.
Dallas's defense allowed 18 wide-open 3s and 16 open 3s. Boston's defense allowed 11 wide-open 3s and 12 open 3s. The volume isn't remotely comparable. That's before even factoring in the quality of shooters, which is superior on Boston's side for those types of shots.
So again, Boston had a better process when it comes to their defense in terms of allowing 3s.
As far as point #3, the comment isn't about man defense when contesting the shot. It's about being unable to contain dribble penetration, which leads to the defense collapsing and leaving elite shooters open. Tatum got 12 assists largely off of those drives. And it's how Boston got such an outsize amount of wide-open 3s. They just didn't convert as they usually do.