Speaking of which, I’ve been surprised about the degree to which Miami has abandoned lineups with two traditional bigs. We knew the Heat would make the small Battier-James forward pairing, with Bosh the lone big, the team’s foundation going forward, but a lot of folks around the league expected Spoelstra to use a little more “big ball,” if only to save James and Battier some wear.
That hasn’t been the case so far. Joel Anthony, destroyer of pick-and-rolls, is basically out of the rotation. Bosh and Haslem have appeared together in only five of Miami’s nine games, for a piddling total of 29 minutes — a span in which Miami’s defense has been very stingy.
Again, Spoelstra is absolutely right to work his rotations this way. It was what won them the title last season, unleashing a new LeBron, and it has Miami scoring more efficiently than everyone but the Knicks. But I’d be worried especially about wearing out Battier, who is banging with big guys to spare LeBron the heavy lifting there. Battier is as tough and smart as anyone in the league, but he’s working his tail off every night and just turned 34. Spoelstra has wisely limited him to just 24 minutes per game, but Battier will need to give more in the playoffs.
Excellent article by Zach Lowe of Grantland. Touches on many of the problems we've noticed over here(frontcourt combos) and how Allen fits into the defense.
http://www.grantland.com/blog/the-trian ... on-defense