Post#26 » by milesfides » Mon Apr 13, 2009 4:23 pm
Why don't we run these plays at the end of games?
Because of pressure. The defensive pressure exposes the weaknesses in our offense, the fact that Ariza and Fish cannot create plays, and to a large extent, Odom, and if defenses cover Gasol and deny him the ball, that puts pressure on Kobe to create something.
The bottom line is that the triangle offense requires players to be multi-dimensional, and the fact is that this group of players are not.
And when we get behind by a certain number of points, say more than three, our team, well, the backcourt, will launch threes to get us back into the game.
It may look like Kobe and the rest of the backcourt are playing keep away or selfishly, but I don't really see that.
It's defensive pressure exposing the pretty obvious weaknesses in our offense. I'm sure Kobe and the guards could have done a better job of incorporating Gasol, but after a certain point, it's pretty predictable what our team would have to do to win the game.
Also, just as an observation, Gasol has trouble getting deep position in the post against physical defenders. So when he's thrown the ball, he's at the high post, which allows defenses to load up if he decides to back his man down.
Somebody mentioned Andrew Bynum as a late game option, and I think he has the potential. Because like Shaq, Bynum can get deep position, and either:
1. he gets the ball and scores faster than defenses can help
2. he kicks the ball out when he gets doubled, creating an open shot
Until that happens, expect our guards to try to cover multi-possession deficits from behind the arc.
“OH! Caruso parachutes in! You cannot stop him - you can only hope to contain him!” -Kevin Harlan, LAL-GSW 4/4/19