shakes0 wrote:Andre Roberstan wrote:shakes0 wrote:
SGA, JDub and CHet all lost their legs in that series. Had nothing to do with Dort. Had everything to do with them being young and being in the playoffs for the first time after a long season. SGA was already hurt and struggling with fitness the entire last month of the regular season.
SGA, JDub and Chet are also the 3 biggest creators on the team and ahve the ball the most. Makes perfect sense that they would tire quicker than the guys who sit in the corner and shoot 3s all game. SGA and JDub struggled to beat their man and even make it to the lane. THat has nothing to do with big men cheating off Dort and everything to do with those guys losing their legs.
In the playoffs, which team do you expect to get tired first?
My money would NOT be on the youngest team in the league.
You're saying they got tired because they're
young?
I'll take experienced legs over young legs when things get physical like they do in the playoffs.
You do remember Thunder vs. Spurs in 2012, right? They ran them off the court.
I think you just like Dort and are trying to come up with reasons why what obviously happened (because it's been the playbook since GSW did it to Tony Allen years ago) didn't happen. You can look at Dort's shooting volume from 3 and see it crystal clear: the last four games of the Mavs series he shot significantly more from 3.
Because he was open. His FGA ticked up too. The Mavs locked down the other guys and let him do what he wanted because it was a winning strategy.
https://www.basketball-reference.com/players/d/dortlu01/gamelog/2024I'm not saying he was Tony Allen or Andre Roberson as an offensive player; he's clearly not. But forcing a less-skilled offensive player to take a bigger role and concentrating your defense on the best players on the team by bringing help from that least skilled player ... that's such an obvious tactic that everyone does it. Including the Mavs in the series OKC lost.
It's weird that you're being this defensive about it given that it happens in
every single playoff series that a team can get away with it.