Bensational wrote:What offense did Skiles run with Phoenix and Jason Kidd?
I was thinking about your question Ben...maybe instead we should look at how Doc Rivers used Rajon Rondo and how that roster was built. Obviously they had hall of famers and that can't be replicated, but lets look at the skillsets and roles surrounding Rondo in that championship year + add context of different time / competition:
PG: Rajon Rondo
Elfrid Payton | Eddie House
SG: Ray Allen
Mario Hezonja | Tony Allen
Victor OladipoSF: Paul Pierce
PF: Kevin Garnett | James Posey
C: Kedrick Perkins | Glen Davis
R Rondo: elite defender, elite unselfish passer
E House: 3pt sniper back up level point guard
R Allen: high volume high efficiency shooter, adequate defender
T Allen: elite defender (split volume time at both 2-3), terrible at offense
P Pierce: elite scorer (3pt, post, mid range, clutch), all around good player that could initiate offense, pass, rebound, and defend
K Garnett: elite defender (PnR / rim protection), highly efficient and effective volume scorer (20+ppg), could defend 4-5
J Posey: stretch 4, good defender, below avg rebounder
K Perkins: good defensive center, very bad offensive player
G Davis: good defender (4-5's), good screen setter, average offensive
...what is Aaron Gordon? I want him to be Paul Pierce but reality is he's probably somewhere between Garnett/Pierce. Not an elite scorer, not able to defend bigger front court players (at least not yet and its unclear if he ever will).
...Vucevic picks up the scoring load that KG carried but not the defensive load. He is the inverse of KP. KP was there to slow Howard, Duncan, Bynum/Gasol etc. who dominated that era.
...again we seem to arrive at the forward position as the crucial position that makes this roster work...a player or two that distributes the skill sets found in Boston's formula.
Seems to me the Magic need is a slightly bigger version of AG at PF and/or a more natural elite scoring version of AG at SF..