Beverly goes 2-11
Gallo was 1-5 before he left the game at -5 after only 13 minutes played
but Austin lost the game

looks like this game thread is coming to its demise
heh heh
Neddy wrote:
you are the only person I have ever seen with more and1s than the post count.
despite of it all, you must be doing something right.
clip set wrote:This team isn't really running any sets on offense. I know people brushed off all the ISOs a little because we won the first few games, but you can't have the majority of your possessions be four guys swinging the ball on the 3 point line pump faking 3 times each with no one cutting or any back picks or anything. The ball movement is a facade. Blake backing someone down from 28 feet out isn't a good place to be with 8 seconds left on the shot clock. Even the high PnR we run, it's like the roll man is completely lethargic. No one's cutting hard to the rim and Blake doesn't really even pop off it anymore. This team needs some practice time to get sorted.
The defense was pretty undisciplined this game too, with way too many possession of guys collapsing into the paint and leaving everyone wide open on the wings - especially Tyler Johnson.
"I can barely walk," Gallinari told the Los Angeles Times. "I've been having pain the past two or three games, and now it's getting to a point where I'm having problems walking, so I've got to take care of it."
Iso offense worked for the Westbrook/Durant Thunder teams in terms of being a top regular season offense, but having Westbrook/Durant allows you to have a functional iso offense. So far our ball movement has regressed from previous seasons. We actually hadn't done a ton of the backing down Blake for most of the shot clock offense since back in the VDN days.wco81 wrote:clip set wrote:This team isn't really running any sets on offense. I know people brushed off all the ISOs a little because we won the first few games, but you can't have the majority of your possessions be four guys swinging the ball on the 3 point line pump faking 3 times each with no one cutting or any back picks or anything. The ball movement is a facade. Blake backing someone down from 28 feet out isn't a good place to be with 8 seconds left on the shot clock. Even the high PnR we run, it's like the roll man is completely lethargic. No one's cutting hard to the rim and Blake doesn't really even pop off it anymore. This team needs some practice time to get sorted.
The defense was pretty undisciplined this game too, with way too many possession of guys collapsing into the paint and leaving everyone wide open on the wings - especially Tyler Johnson.
Brent Barry said the ISOs are not sustainable offense.
But that could also apply to the OKC Thunder this year.
esqtvd wrote:My guess is Doc's letting the players fail THEIR way and then they will be more amenable to more structure. But it's logical to let them gravitate to what they like best first and impose a structure on that, rather than impose a structure first and force players to tailor their games to it like they do in college.
This is a brand new team still with only 2 starters returning and that's only if you count DJ, who's not really in the offense. CP didn't leave a structure behind like the Spurs have year to year. The only one who can run Chris's offense is Chris [and maybe Milos].
There is also the problem that although we knew Austin's not really a PG, and although Pat Bev's better at the point, he's not a PG either, as we hoped his 4 apg last year promised. Neither of them are particularly bad: Pat's at 43%/45% and as a starter, Austin's at 42%/47%. But the chemistry's not there. Also, Gallo was supposed to take up some of the playmaking slack but he's scuffling badly at the moment [36%/26%] and now he's dinged up and going to miss some games."I can barely walk," Gallinari told the Los Angeles Times. "I've been having pain the past two or three games, and now it's getting to a point where I'm having problems walking, so I've got to take care of it."
http://www.espn.com/blog/nba/rumors/post/_/id/45912/rumor-central-danilo-gallinari-to-sit-a-few-games
og15 wrote:Iso offense worked for the Westbrook/Durant Thunder teams in terms of being a top regular season offense, but having Westbrook/Durant allows you to have a functional iso offense. So far our ball movement has regressed from previous seasons. We actually hadn't done a ton of the backing down Blake for most of the shot clock offense since back in the VDN days.wco81 wrote:clip set wrote:This team isn't really running any sets on offense. I know people brushed off all the ISOs a little because we won the first few games, but you can't have the majority of your possessions be four guys swinging the ball on the 3 point line pump faking 3 times each with no one cutting or any back picks or anything. The ball movement is a facade. Blake backing someone down from 28 feet out isn't a good place to be with 8 seconds left on the shot clock. Even the high PnR we run, it's like the roll man is completely lethargic. No one's cutting hard to the rim and Blake doesn't really even pop off it anymore. This team needs some practice time to get sorted.
The defense was pretty undisciplined this game too, with way too many possession of guys collapsing into the paint and leaving everyone wide open on the wings - especially Tyler Johnson.
Brent Barry said the ISOs are not sustainable offense.
But that could also apply to the OKC Thunder this year.
og15 wrote:You're very apologetic for the coaching staff, but if we have to be consistently apologetic about similar things, well, where there's smoke, there's fire. Hopefully, things change, but Doc does have to look in the mirror. You're saying it is the "CP3 offense", but now it just looks like we're doing the "Blake offense", a coach has to take responsibility there because he's the one who made all the promises. We didn't say it, he's the one who went out of his way to say that he "had" to use CP the way he did, and now he would have a more ball movement offense, more pace, more flow. So it's kind of backtracking to now start saying that Doc wants them to do their own thing and fail to make them more amenable to structure. It just seems like an excuse for every outcome. If it was the actual plan, then Doc would and could have said that. He could have said something simple like "we're trying to figure out how the players fit, so we're going to let them run their own thing on offense and figure it out from there". Instead, he said they will have a more ball movement offense, and that this is what he had always run.
I'll give it time, but I don't but this explanation as it doesn't fit into what they have actually been saying previously. It's a very after the fact convenient explanation.
esqtvd wrote:My guess is Doc's letting the players fail THEIR way and then they will be more amenable to more structure. But it's logical to let them gravitate to what they like best first and impose a structure on that, rather than impose a structure first and force players to tailor their games to it like they do in college.
esqtvd wrote:It's a new team. You have to see what they're good at, then you figure out what works for their skills.
We also need to try combinations of the Dekkers and Trezzes yet but first you have to figure out the core. There have been a lot of turnovers that won't be happening in a few months as they get familiar with each other.
I don't defend Doc as much as get repulsed by infantile criticisms. The CP era was its own thing and Chris had the ball. Tell him what to do with it and you have a war on your hands. I don't know if Doc's a good coach in the 21st century or not but I look for the most reasonable explanation for why he's doing what he's doing and usually I'm borne out later.
And the real possibility exists that I'm 100% right about his thinking and he's still a crappy coach. But we're shooting 3s and attacking the rim, just like everybody says we should. Problem is that the damn ball's not going in. Frankly, my observation so far is besides the turnovers, we're getting out-athleticked, and there's no easy fix for that.
clip set wrote:esqtvd wrote:It's a new team. You have to see what they're good at, then you figure out what works for their skills.
We also need to try combinations of the Dekkers and Trezzes yet but first you have to figure out the core. There have been a lot of turnovers that won't be happening in a few months as they get familiar with each other.
I don't defend Doc as much as get repulsed by infantile criticisms. The CP era was its own thing and Chris had the ball. Tell him what to do with it and you have a war on your hands. I don't know if Doc's a good coach in the 21st century or not but I look for the most reasonable explanation for why he's doing what he's doing and usually I'm borne out later.
And the real possibility exists that I'm 100% right about his thinking and he's still a crappy coach. But we're shooting 3s and attacking the rim, just like everybody says we should. Problem is that the damn ball's not going in. Frankly, my observation so far is besides the turnovers, we're getting out-athleticked, and there's no easy fix for that.
I don't see how you can call observations infantile, while just conjecturing that Doc is probably letting the team free wheel for a while despite having an ultimate plan to implement structure after he sees how well the players randomly play together for a couple months. Frankly one of my biggest gripes over the last few years was that there was no strategic implementation with the bench, so this isn't some new phenomenon. This is the ideal time to instill any sort of rhythm with the sets that the team runs, considering he has a largely blank slate. The bill of goods Doc wants to sell is that the Clippers are now finally alleviated of the evils of CP3 and his resistance to coaching. If that's the case, it should align with his supposed desire to really get his hands dirty and coach the team, and we shouldn't be reverting even further into what's effectively random offense.
You can call the CP3 PnR / Reddick pin down / floppy / motion sets a gimmick, but it was a structured offense that produced consistent results when we stuck to it. Is it going to be exactly the same now? Of course not. Should we at least be making an effort to run anyone / anything off ball? I would think so.
og15 wrote:I don't even think Doc is a "crappy coach", but I think he needs to be separated from Austin, and I'm not even one of those who hates on Austin. I think he did a lot of great for this team when he came in, and I think he's shot himself in the foot with his comments before because he set an expectation. The Clippers actually had very good offense and flow etc for the talent they had, but him going back and saying Paul was essentially holding him back from what he really wanted to do puts an even bigger target on his back and greater expectation. The 13-14 and 14-15 Clippers were a top 2-5 team in passes made and secondary assists and were the league's best offense. They had larger injury issues the past two seasons, but last season they were not even that bad. They had very good ball movement despite being a two-man initiated offense, especially when you compare to teams like OKC and the Raptors, other two man only initiated offenses. If Doc is downplaying that and saying "oh that was CP3, and this new thing will be me", well then he's the one that set the expectation for SA like ball movement, so there's no backtracking now.
I understand looking for a reasonable explanation, and that is fine, but the more convoluted an explanation becomes, the less likely it is. If the explanation is that Doc is playing mind games with his new team like he's trying to be some Zen Master, then I don't know about that, especially since he's already said things that disprove that. Is he playing mind games with us too?
A coaches job, especially with most of these guys being established NBA players is to watch film, know where they are comfortable, know what they like to do, and be prepared, then you adjust as you go. I find it hard to believe that Doc didn't do this and doesn't know how he would want to integrate his players together. The problem here is that even if what you are saying was true, it isn't good. If Doc as the head coach came into the season with the plan of "let them figure it out first", then he failed.
This also is hard to accept because when Doc came to the Clippers in 13-14 with a new team, with a lot of new additions, he totally revamped things. The CP you said does his own thing was doing the things Doc wanted him to do. The pace got faster, CP ran a lot of similar actions, but he used misdirection, off-ball action, etc to set those things up. So Doc was able to come in and do it then, but then now he's going to let the players first figure it out, then come in 20 games later to revamp the offense? Yikes!
A coaches job, especially with most of these guys being established NBA players is to watch film, know where they are comfortable, know what they like to do, and be prepared, then you adjust as you go. I find it hard to believe that Doc didn't do this and doesn't know how he would want to integrate his players together.
wco81 wrote:Neddy wrote:
you are the only person I have ever seen with more and1s than the post count.
despite of it all, you must be doing something right.
He probably got most of those from **** on KD and the Warriors on the General Board.
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