DEEP3CL wrote:I hate that term and quite frankly I disagreed with Harlan harping on that. Everybody is so enthralled with this come down and pull jumper after jumper after jumper that they can't realize at times you have to be methodical in your offense when it lacks a creator like Kobe or one from the post.bws94 wrote:
No, not at all. I think Scott stinks as a coach and didn't coach that well tonight either. He got lucky and I credit the players out there, Hill, Ellington, Clarkson, even Sacre, the bench in the first half. Even the announcers were saying the ball was sticky with so many Laker possessions late. It just so happened that Hill, Ellington hit big timely shots. I don't credit Scott for much in this game.
So now when they see the shot clock at say even 10 seconds they claim the ball is sticking....that's bs in some cases.
In some cases it is a BS label but not in this one. The ball was sticking and it was mostly cause the offense came to a total stand still. There was no off the ball movement at all til the 2nd OT.
I agree with bws, Scott didn't really help the situation. There was no adjustments at all at the end of regulation and the 1st OT. They survived in part cause of the bulls missed free throws and lakers players making tough shots.
I'm not gonna blame Scott for that though. He's obviously trying to get guys like Clarkson some experience, and this game provided tons of that. The team looked lost out there with no guidance, and it took players pulling some tough shots out of their ass to pull the win off. The defense was good though, credit to players and coaches. I thought the big man help d was great.