Higga wrote:You can't bench Hibbert there. I know the reasoning, he can't guard Bosh/pick and roll D, but I'll give them that everytime over Lebron getting to the basket undeterred.
That wasn't the goal of the defense. George made a mistake that gave Lebron that opening.
I mean you KNEW Lebron was gonna drive for a layup, you can't take out your best rim protector, a guy you(referring to Coach Vogel here)said is the best rim protector in the league. Just a bonehead coach move.
No, you didn't. The tendency of most players taking that shot is to take a jumper. That's been Lebron's tendency on last-second shots as well. Vogel thought George would be able to stay with Lebron and contest the jumper. George didn't execute and Lebron got a lane to the basket.
PLUS, Hibbert probably would not have been in position to protect the rim even if he'd been on the floor. He'd have followed Bosh to the weak side and would have been on the edge of the paint -- right where Sam Young was. Hibbert might have recognized Lebron was driving a split second quicker, but he's not as physically quick as Young. And Lebron's drive was so quick -- he actually seemed to start it before he even caught the pass -- that it would have been tough for anyone to contest it at the rim who wasn't already standing under the rim.
All that said, maybe the right strategy would have been to station Hibbert under the basket and tell him just to stay there to contest anything in the paint. Let Bosh float to the corner or flash to the elbow. An open FT line jumper from Bosh is probably a 50% shot. Although...a contested jumper from Lebron is probably a 40% proposition. And there couldn't have been an illegal defense call because it's a 3-second count and there were only 2.2 seconds on the clock.
On yet another hand, an uncontested layup from Lebron is a 90% shot (at least), so there's that. Of course, Vogel was thinking that one of the top perimeter defenders in the league would be able to keep Lebron from getting a free run at the basket.
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