Post#831 » by chpmntsptx » Mon Jun 27, 2011 5:35 pm
This is what I see as each player's biggest needs:
Wall (passing, jump shot, defense)
McGee (maturity, offensive game, strength and positioning on D)
Blatche (fewer doritos, the meaning of offensive flow)
Young (how to pass, esp out of pick and roll)
Seraphin (more reps, mid-range, keep improving hook)
Lewis (get form back)
Booker (reps, mid-range)
Crawford (distribution, defense)
Singleton (any type of offense)
Vesely (possession - read that he turns it over like 20-25% from the post, free throw, mid-range)
Mack (catch and shoot, reps)
N'diaye (strength, offense, reps)
Now to lineups. The preferred lineups are based on how I think the 5 will work together, not just on any one player's highlights or stats. Obviously, this team lacks interior size and vet leadership, and I'm only dealing with the team as-is. Right now, in terms of team play and cohesion, Blatche, McGee, Crawford, and Young are the biggest concerns. So, I'd minimize shared floor time. [Honestly, Blatche is a poison imo and I'd just move him as soon as possible. McGee is just immature and weak.] Moreover, I hate McGee and Blatche together at any time and try to minimize this.
Further, I'm big on youthful exuberance and raw energy, and I think this is undervalued. As a development project, this next season should feature lots of youth-heavy lineups, but I'm skeptical it happens as much as it should. I think the starting unit should be more youthful, and I see potential for a backup unit that is really young and nasty on D... may not pad leads but will serve as a stopper and will run and frustrate. Given all of that, I think all of the new picks and Booker, Seraphin, and Crawford need lots of time (well, maybe not as much for Crawford). The young guys were neglected last season, imo, so I definitely mean A LOT more time relative to that horror show. Also, I'm really high on Seraphin and I'd roll with him a ton more than he played last year. His developing offensive game and toughness put him ahead of McGee for me.
Probable initial lineup and terrible idea:
Wall/Young/Lewis/Blatche/McGee -- Yuck. Just repeating last year. A giant baby, a lazy and selfish forward, and a guard that can't pass. Terrible rebounding. No flow. If this is the starting lineup, just pray it doesn't last.
Preferred:
Initial Unit: Wall, Young, Lewis, Blatche, Seraphin. Lewis/Young to stretch. Blatche for mid-range, occasional go-to. Seraphin for toughness, will contribute offensively; though I have him starting, he won't go for an extended period. Needs rebounding contribution from Lewis and Blatche. [Edit: to clarify, this is preferred over the probable starting unit, but it certainly is not preferred for the long term. Ball movement may still be lacking and it will be more 1 on 1 and drive and kick.]
Rotation Options:
Rot A: Wall, Young, Vesely/Singleton, Booker, Blatche. Will rely on Wall driving, and Young and Blatche as go-to, with Vesely and Booker cleaning up and adding energy and D near end of 1st quarter. Seraphin may come out mid-1st btw. Dependent on Booker having a better jumper.
Rot B: Wall, Crawford, Vesely/Singleton, Booker, McGee. Short spurt. Weak offensively. High energy, running lineup.
Rot C: Crawford, Young, Lewis (4), Booker (3), McGee. Young/Lewis stretch, Crawford penetrate. Allow Booker to post up his 3. Booker/McGee for rebounding, with Lewis' size helping out.
Youth movement A: Wall, Mack, Young, Booker, Seraphin. Tiny lineup.
Youth movement B: Wall, Young, Booker/Singleton/Vesely, Seraphin/Vesely, McGee. Prefer not to have McGee and Vesely together, turn over city.
Young, D, running: Wall, Young, Singleton/Vesely, Booker, Seraphin/McGee. Smallish but banking on team/effort rebounding.
I'm sure there's lots of holes in this. Be gentle.