And further, I'd go on to explain why I feel oversized SFs (who play game changing defense) qualify as "game changing bigs." In other words, a guy who can cover the two forward positions, or roam to zone off the lane, can lead a championship team.
I break this up into two different players. The perimeter defender -- most often a Long Forward-- who can guard the three but still collapse to form a one-man zone, and the true game-changing Big who can intimidate in the paint, force players away from the basket, and snatch contested boards.
Dat disagrees and suggests that the defensive perimeter forward is a luxury, provided you have a sufficiently mobile and intimidating Big. The Celts won with no Tayshaun/Artest/Bruce Bowen. Maybe, but they had KG, who can play both roles as needed, and Rondo who can approximate the rest.
Mostly I'd point my finger towards the best defensive X's & O's coach in the game and defer to his opinion: notice that Larry Brown is stockpiling all the multi-tool lanky defenders he can land. With Crash Wallace on the roster, he traded for Tyrus Thomas, then added Dom McGuire on the cheap. He has no intimidating Big, but he can clog the rest of the court with active hustlef@cks who will contest everything. And a track record that says he knows how to read the situation and improve his teams.
The method to win a championship is pretty simple. You want to deter the opponent from scoring easily. It's axiomatic. The single stat with the strongest correlation to consistent championships is opponent eFG%. Scoring a basket is difficult. The best players, world class champions, manage to score about half the time they have the ball. Not easy. It's easier to simply make it a little harder every time; shade the odds in your favor.
That's it. We're talking about simply slicing a few % points here and there. Taking a raw 46%+ opponent scoring rate to a 44% or less. That's all it takes. Make it a difficult shot, give up no second chances.
But the league and fans like to see teams score. So the NBA fiddles with the rules as much as they can to de-emphasize this defensive aspect. You can't have any Detroit vs. Spurs games-- that kills your ticket sales and revenue. No old school NYKnicks force basketball where a logjam of bigs would bump and rumble under the basket, clogging the funnel.
Used to be the easiest thing in the world to simply choke off the basket. All activity has to end here-- if you have the biggest, toughest, fiercest thugs in the league, nobody can get near. And refs can't whistle every foul, since no fan wants to see a zebra-dominated slogfest.
They would much rather see Celtics/Lakers with superior perimeter talents and active dynamic Bigs who can hit a jumper from the midrange, sure, but the real action is dominated by the little guys. Nobody loves a Giant. Shaq (and Gheorghe!) excepted.
The rules were tweaked to emphasize the perimeter players. Your most reliable source of 'free' points is from that perimeter attack. Fouls on the dribble drive not the 'pound it in' Bigs who used to feast at the line.
So, yes, all action still does flow towards the basket, and a dunk is still the most efficient easiest field goal, and it is far easier for a Big Fella to reach up there and shove it home, and you need Bigs who can prevent that from happening as well as making it happen themselves. Game-changing Bigs, especially on defense, make all the difference in the world. All plays still have to finish at the basket.
But you also have to have that all-purpose multi-level defensive predator with the dedication of a Secret Service agent willing to put himself in the way of the point of attack and make it difficult. Make it difficult for the ball to get anywhere near the basket, starting with the point of the dribble.
Larry Brown seems to think if he has 18 fouls worth of these then he'll be a-okay. Especially now that an offensive freight train like LeBron is in his division. They can't call every play. Make the refs work. Most refs hate to be the focus of the game, under the spotlight. At some point they will swallow their whistle. This is a tough defensive team, you just have to let them play. (Hack, hack, hack...).
I'd watch Larry carefully anytime you need to know what the new order of defense needs to be. Nobody defensively adjusts in real time or long term as well as Larry Brown, even if he is whiny as a hungry toddler with a wet diaper.
SO you're looking to add these sorts of players:
Superstar raise-the-game scorers, who get the benefit of the glamor-whistles.
One-man zone swarm, outside/inside defensive predators.
Defensive thug who prevents easy buckets and won't allow second chances.
Multi-tool mobile two way Big who allow room underneath for those perimeter attackers, and on defense can play the 2.9 second mambo: defend the rim but avoid ref whistles.
Something like that.






















