dangermouse wrote:rockymac52 wrote:Wittman quote from that article:
“You take open shots. You take open shots. Where they are is dictated by what the defense does. If you predicate what kind of shot you’re going to take not based on what you’re doing reading the defense, you’re not going to get good shots. I just worry about goods shots.
You know what? Those numbers you can stick… alright? You know, all you analytical people that take that… You take good shots, that’s the most important thing. Maybe we’re not taking good midrange shots, maybe we’re taking contested ones. I understand the numbers are there for a reason, we look at the numbers, but to sit there and… We got a good, open shot we’re taking, I don’t care where it is.”
Wow that is one of the most frustrating pair of paragraphs ive ever read.
Does he not realise that those shots are open shots for a reason?
"Where they are is dictated by what the defense does."
Wittless, the good teams,
the WINNING teams, dictate where they take a majority of their shots regardless of the defensive sets. It is called having an offense, running plays, and so forth.
I couldn't disagree with that statement more.
Teams call their plays based on the opposing team's personnel, strengths, and weaknesses. When teams come up with their game plan for the next game, they take into account who they're playing and how that team will react. Teams don't draw up a game plan weeks in advance based only on their own players and their skills. If they did, then you'd likely see the exact game plan and play calls night in and night out from every team in the NBA, regardless of who they were playing.
To illustrate this, think about the Spurs. What makes them so good on offense isn't just the individual talent of the players on their roster. It's not just exceptional play calling or complicated playbooks. It's that all of their players have been coached to react to the defense in the heat of the moment, in order to find the best open look possible. Sure, they may design some of their plays with the intention of getting an open look for a good shooter in the corner, but if that player isn't open, the play isn't totally broken. The Spurs players react to what the defense gives them. If that good shooter in the corner is defended well, then they look to alternate options elsewhere on the court.
Basketball is about getting open looks. Some of those looks can be by design, but many others are the result of the offense reading and reacting to how the defense plays them.