Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:Nivek wrote:Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:WD, I believe Flip consistently leaves stagnant lineups on the court on the road. Wall is not a game closer. Hinrich is not a closer. Lewis is not a closer. Blatche generally does not finish strong. Where I agree with WD is that McGee has no post game. Flip uses Javale for defense only and I think this allows opponents to double Blatche. The Wizards have no success on the road because they rely on jump shooters who can't draw fouls or hit big shots and they have no bigs that get to the rim.
I'm struggling to understand what you're saying. Flip is at fault for leaving stagnant lineups on the court on the road. Wall, Hinrich, Lewis and Blatche are not "closers." Aside from playing Nick Young 1-on-5, what options does Flip have?
Those are his best players. Does anyone seriously think a lineup of Young, Martin, Booker, Seraphin and Thornton are going to "close" out a game successfully?
The Wizards haven't won a game on the road because they don't have good NBA players.
Go back and see who was on the court when Wittman coached. The Wizards blew a team out in the fourth using said players. Nivek, I do have a reason for saying this--I have seen them play well and finish strong.
Best players are not best all 48 minutes. Best players are not necessarily big shot makers or finishers or hustle players late. Flip loses because he is really predictable and his methods and thinking are fixed and rigid. Washington would be MUCH better with the right guys on the court at the end.
First, one game proves absolutely nothing. Which you know.
Second, do you really want to hang your "crunch time" hat on Booker and Martin?
The Wizards are -21 in Booker's few crunch time minutes this season. They're 0-6 during his crunch time minutes -- outscored every time he's been on the floor during crunch time (according to 82games). The per 48 minutes numbers are preposterous -- 37.9 points per 48 minutes on offense; 435.8 per 48 allowed on defense. Obviously in limited minutes (2% of the team's crunch time minutes).
Martin's a little better -- the team is only -2 during his crunch time minutes (6% of the team's total). They're 1-3 during his crunch time minutes.
I agree with the idea of not necessarily going with the best players, but instead going with the best lineup. That would be Wall-Young-Lewis-Blatche-McGee. The coaches don't fully trust McGee yet, so Blatche moves to center and you're picking from Yi, Thornton and Martin, most likely. I'd like to see Martin get more playing time, so I'd be fine with him getting some of those minutes. What I've seen of Booker does not convince me that he's ready to play well during crunch time.
"A lot of what we call talent is the desire to practice."
-- Malcolm Gladwell
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