emunney wrote:We didn't lose this series because of shooting disparities. We lost because the Pacers playing 5 out opened up all sorts of lanes due to our insistence on playing Prince and Lopez, and because Kuzma was generally atrocious to a degree I don't think even his biggest haters would have anticipated.
Consider that in the 114 minutes that none of Kuzma, Prince, or Lopez were on the floor, the team was +11.5 in net rating.
In lineups that included one of these 3 players, we allowed over 60% on 2 pointers. That's catastrophic, and it *was* catastrophic. When all three were on the bench: 50.43%.
We can talk about more than one issue. I also acknowledge we
may (or may not) have won the series w/ better rotations.
But we also have to note there are ways we didn't maximize our advantage, like finding open shooters. In addition our late game execution stinks compared to the Pacers, regular season and post. That came together in running the ball thru Giannis in an end game situation and him not passing to Green wide open. The prior game Green started 3/5 from 3 in like the 1st 8 minutes, then didn't take a shot his next 15, w/ Giannis looking him off repeatedly. We had the D breakdown between Dame-Kuz-Bobby in game 2 to kill our run.
If people want to make everything about Kuz, we had 1 d breakdown after another at the end of game 5. We weren't close enough to have many late game situations that even mattered this series. But regular season we have that breakdown in Indy. At Orlando multiple guys were inside the 3 pt line when they needed a 3 w/ .4 secs. Against Brooklyn Bobby didn't peel off when Green was covering a drive allowing an open 3 to Cam Johnson.
We were having late game breakdowns, most which didn't involve Kuz or the lineup. We sucked against very good teams, which Indy were the 2nd half. Those are things we need to acknowledge that, yea, maybe it wouldn't have mattered what we'd have done either, as far as winning the series. Just would have been nice to have given ourselves a real shot.