It was good to hear that they'll be running an ICE P&R coverage this season. Fewer instances of giving up middle and 2v1's will only help the overall defensive effectiveness. Funny Masai mentioned he didn't want Jonas hedging that much, because frankly, he rarely if ever did it anyway.
Thing is though, I think Undefeated/VVV pointed this out in the other thread..
If Jonas still sits too far back in the P&R coverage, forcing the ball to the sidelines won't help him that dramatically. He still needs to be a step closer to the action in order to defend it properly, and to do so he'll need to regain some of his mobility so he won't have to compensate by sitting that one step further back.
Here it is:
Undefeated wrote:vini_vidi_vici wrote: I oft wonder how ICE is affected by dropping your big as far as back as JV was this year? because I think by using the screen and getting the PG on his hip, its alot more difficult if the big isnt atleast closer to the FT line extended, but thats just idle speculation.
The screen defender is normally supposed to be "up to touch" against the screen which means an arm's length away at the very worst or "level" the screen to prevent the ball-handler from attacking the "drop/flat hedge" and getting back to the middle by "snaking" thereby creating a mismatch where the screen defender has to totally contain the ball. With the "level" it's almost a trap with the on-ball defender trying to get back on the ball-handler's hip to force the ball-handler to get rid of the ball which is the objective of ICE; getting the ball out of the ball-handler's hand and force the screener to beat the defense. ICE isn't supposed to give up the mid-range jumper to the guard since that's a shot that most guards can drain consistently but not for most bigs although I'm not sure how effective ICE is now since most teams play with a 4 that has some range extending to 15-18 feet or they so small negating the advantages of ICE.
Whether by design or not, I'm unsure of, but JV drops back against the ball-handler too far.