tdjm wrote:Following your shot is only desirable in certain situations at the NBA level. If you do it too much you'll get smoked on the fast break.
As far as the illegal screens go, every team sets them, you can't be good if you don't and it will be that way until they actually call it. Markieff sets some nasty picks that get guards free but the coaching staff is trying to use him in the low post because we don't have anyone else who can do it. That's a mistake. He can roll or pop or do pretty much anything else with the ball. Miscasting him as mostly a post up player is really wasting what he can do.
He rarely ever pops, even when he has the room to do so. He likes to draw the defender in, and then drive to one of the blocks, usually the left block, and take a fade away over his player. I've actually seen him travel more than he does illegal screens.
As for following your shot, I find it's worse to watch it, because you are not watching you man anyways. Usually I've found that the shooter has the best eye on how the ball will be bouncing, and if you are shooting from one of the corners or closer to the block, you really aren't giving your opponent much of an advantage of space. The guy at the top of the key should be one of the first guys back. Plus we don't even hustle back on defense anyways, so what are we really losing by following our shots? I've seen Markieef jog back after a missed shot that he watched, and his man made the easy layup on the other end. josh Smith did it to him a few times the last time we faced Houston.
I'm all for setting more screens, but in no way would I want any of our guys to do illegal screens, we actually get called for them.