Los Soles wrote:Start of the third quarter, the Suns were up 2. Our starters went head-to-head with their starters...and we punched them in the mouth. The Clippers starters are one of the best crews in the league: raw stats say that, but just look at the names. Chris Paul and Blake Griffin is probably the best guard-big combo in the league, and the other starters are no scrubs. Experienced, solid starters, most of whom have been playing together for at least a couple years now, and with one of the top five coaches in the league calling the shots.
Our cobbled cast of upstarts and rejects dominated them.
Ok, so why did we lose? Small-ball. DeAndre Jordan didn't play a minute in the 4th: Griffin was the five. Our defense didn't adapt well to their extra spacing, and they added mobility that disrupted our offense. Dudley in particular threw things out of whack for us. I thought Hornacek adjusted lineups reasonably well, but we don't really have a go-to small-ball lineup that we can rely on. Markieff-Frye is a decent small-ball frontcourt, but the Clips were smaller and quicker than that. We can move Tucker to the 4, but then either Marcus or Green has to play the three, and neither one is the savvy, disruptive defender we need in that role.
I think we're missing one more player for small-ball: either a SF/PF 3&D swingman or an ATHLETIC PF/C (or one of each?). That 4th quarter, we needed:
Bledsoe
Dragic
Tucker
????
Frye/Markieff/Plumlee (depending on the matchup & who the other guy is)
Good analysis. I also feel we take too many threes in games where we are up by more than seven points. It doesn't happen every time, but still too often. It also hurts us when we go small, because often it is Frye taking those threes and when long rebounds happen on a miss, he is just not fast enough to stop a fast break (similar to the first Nets game).
I still can't believe we blew that lead. We became checkers in that fourth quarter, and couldn't stop them.