Dalek wrote:It is interesting the points about Ingram playing almost as a PG handling pick and rolls. Toronto doesn't run it a lot. Our motion offense is often with the big making decisions rather than straight pick and roll.To wit, the Raptors are near the bottom of the league (27th) in how often a pick-and-roll ball-handler finishes a possession with a shot, turnover or free throws, per Synergy. They use their screener — usually Jakob Poeltl — a bit more. Together, fewer than 20 per cent of their offensive possessions end immediately following a pick-and-roll action.
https://www.sportsnet.ca/nba/article/evaluating-key-areas-that-will-determine-brandon-ingrams-fit-with-raptors/
I do think pick and roll is physically demanding for the handler - you have handle the ball and dribble into the paint and take contact.
To reduce the load on Ingram I'd rely on the catch and shoot. I mentioned it earlier, but he has great C&S numbers at 39% over the past three years. It may be an adjustment for him which may not work out, but him being a scoring option doesn't have to mean he is the lead initiator.
I'd save his ISO offense for late game and the playoffs. We should be also not playing him too much on b2bs and resting him intentionally and not waiting for him to be injured. If we get him for 60 games but the whole playoffs that is good and likely inline with most ageing star players.
We don’t really run it because we don’t have anyone who is kinda great at it.
Ingram will 100% change that.























