brownbobcat wrote:TS+ can be a little misleading sometimes. Obviously DeRozan was not hugely efficient being a mid-range specialist, but he drove a lot of possessions for other guys to find space for efficient shots. The 2015 Raptors were 4th in ORTG while DeRozan and Lowry had below average TS+ numbers. I think concluding that it was a good offensive team in spite of Lowry/DeRozan would be the wrong takeaway.
The better phrase would be "in spite of those two scoring inefficiently."
But remember what I said earlier: our team ORTG was driven heavily by possession control and draw rate, things at which Demardid well, and Lowry drew fouls quite well, too. It left the team vulnerable to their inability to actually make shots, of course (particularly since Lowry was an extreme rim-or-3 guy), but on the balance of a season, it produced a well-ranked per-possession rating due to the possession control and extra points.
Then later, we started adding peripheral players who scored efficiently inside the arc, and as a team began to shoot more 3s at a higher percentage, which helped. Obviously, especially when things were clicking in the RS, Demar and Lowry were at the core of our success, driving the action which permitted those peripheral guys to get it done. Lowry even more than Demar in that sense, but even DDR started to improve as a playmaker in his later years with us.
It worked, but it was also a bit of a mirage, because you can't JUST operate with possession control. That will eventually catch up to you, as it routinely did for us.
If you take away RJ's slashing & drives (easier said than done), his lack of shooting gets exposed badly. Barnes has a similar limitation so this is something the team has to figure out if there's any hope of them being a successful 1-2 punch. Somebody has to excel at taking those difficult shots off the dribble and being the release valve.
Yes, but the deciding factor on a lot of teams is how good is the guy doing that? It's a big limitation if that guy can't score efficiently, and it's a demarcation between an AS and an upper-bound star bordering into superstar territory, right?
Demar and Lowry were great for us, stepping back. The Raptors were quite successful in the pre-Kawhi times. Lots of wins, lots of playoff appearances, series victories and stuff. We ran into some pretty high-end competition, too, and some wicked defenses. Clearly, the strategy we employed was workable within certain goal parameters, right?
That was the most successful stretch in franchise history, and we capped it off with the Kawhi trade and a title, which was wild stuff.