noone wrote:Kleiza has become very good at taking his player off the dribble. He has a relatively unique combination of quickness and strength.....the guys that can match his strength (like okur or boozer last night) dont stand a chance of staying in front of him, while most swingmen are too weak to prevent from getting bullied into the lane. He's about as quick as a SG but as strong as a PF.
Kleiza isn't a player that can pull up for a jumper off the dribble, so unless another player (ala Iverson/Melo) draws in the defense and kicks out to him so that his man is left running at him, he also wouldn't be able to drive to the basket like he did against the Jazz. Any SF that is quick enough to stay in front of him would likely give him trouble.
I dont think I said that he pulls up off the dribble for jumpers....its usually a drive into the lane for a runner, layup, dunk, or kickout to the perimeter. And he can easily drive past any PF that comes out to defend him on the perimeter. A lot of SF's are quick enough to stay with him, but there really aren't many that are strong enough or big enough to bother him once he makes it into the paint. Its his combination of strength/quickness that makes him a tough matchup.
But IM not saying he is a number 1 or number 2 option type guy. A lot of guys would be able to shut him down like gerald wallace, ron artest, josh smith.