deneem4 wrote:nate33 wrote:How exactly are you going to do that?
"Hey, excuse me Mr. Opposing Coach. I would like for you to have your big slow PF guard Rudy Gay and put your quick SF on Chris Singleton, even though both of us know that Chris Singleton can't create off the dribble and shoots south of 30% from 3-point range."
It doesn't work that way. The opposition will put a SF on Gay and a PF on Singleton. You can't create mismatches just by labeling Gay the PF.
Last season he was shooting 35% from 3...he cant create his own shot but he's athletic and can drive...plus if singleton is getting chased by a pf on the perimeter...whos left in the hole by himself?...a 7ft banger named okafor...
It's like arguing with a brick wall.
The opposing team won't have their PF chase Singleton around the perimeter because he isn't worth chasing. They will have an advantage on defense because Singleton's defender will play free safety. They will have the advantage on offense because their PF will post up Singleton and beat him on the offensive glass.
If things were so easy, every team would play SF's at PF just to create a mismatch. It only works if you have the right SF/PF (like Melo or Lebron) and you have the right kind of SF (like Battier) who can stretch the floor with an accurate, quick-release 3-point shot.
The real problem with you plan is that you bend over backwards to get Gay at PF, only to replace him at SF with Chris freaking Singleton: the worst starter in the NBA. At the very least, put Martell Webster at SF so we could at least reap the benefits on offense. (We would still get crushed on the glass because Gay can't rebound.)

















