ctuk wrote:100% bro. If you look at Ihart and break down his game. He is literally the apex predator when it comes to screening in the nba. Thibs didn't start using his angled screening until Randle and Mitch went down. By January he had no choice but to let Ihart get loose. Now all of a sudden Brunson was cooking.
By the time the playoffs rolled around all of a sudden half of the screens set by ihart became gortat screens anytime JB wasn't trapped. This led to JB being the highest scorer in the playoffs. As great as thibs is at player development we are at an endgame situation now with the all in roster. So we can't really have a guy taking too long to make adjustments.
Sims can't do any of the elite level screening Ihart does, can't catch below his knees and his timing is off on lobs. Meanwhile Huk flashes all of Ihart's screening potential rn. I doubt they make the change at the end of the season unless a catastrophic injury or playoff sweep happens, but here's to hoping lol.GettinitDone wrote:B8RcDeMktfxC wrote:That is a great interview with Iisalo. Thank you ctuk.
And he's so on point about trying to improve the TS% rather than just thinking about spamming 3s.
The Knicks need this guy badly imo.
I'm onboard with this Iisalo dude... the off ball and cutting movements are unbelievable.
I found myself dozing off watching Knicks games this year... yesterday we were trailing only 5-10 pts, still very winnable, but I dozed off.. the style of play is so boring and kills camaraderie and team chemistry. Thibs was lucky he had players like Divo and iHart last year who naturally kept moving, screening, and relocating and they massively influenced the way their other teammates to play the same play.
Huk has it, Sims doesn't. It's not particularly complicated.




























