tontoz wrote:tontoz wrote:I would say it is a lock that Wall ends up with more shots than Porter, probably Beal too.
Sure enough Wall ended up with more shots than both even though he played only 32 minutes. Beal played 37, Porter 38. Wall is all about getting his numbers.
@ Mahinmi's statline. 2 pts, 1 rebound, 2 turnovers, 6 fouls. Money well spent.
Wall has a strangle hold on the offense and loves to call his own number. He's successful enough where calling his own number is effective just enough to where you can't openly call him out on it. Sadly until Wall accepts the fact that he's not an effifcirnt scorer the Wizards won't be playing to the best of their ability. If Wall has it going, fine take all the shots you want. If the rest of the team is struggling, fine take the more shots. But, calling you number early and often, regardless of the situation is very problematic. To take the next step we need John to bring it defensively every night (not the flashy blocks or impressive steals, but rather the consistent defense that doesn't give up easy buckets, correctly plays screens and is on time with switches) and make the right decision offensively EVERY time.
If a team switches a pg onto Porter you have to get him the ball. If a team brings in an on-defender to guard Beal, you have to get him the ball. If a team is playing lackadasical defense and Gortat is open for an easy layup you have to get him the ball. This is what John can do to improve. Right now he's very good at getting scripted assists. Off screens, drive and kicks for 3 or to Gortat but what about the unscripted assist. If he can do what I listed above I'll be fine live with his current shooting. When one player has a complete stranglehold on the offensive decision making process the team goes as he goes. If he makes good decisions and gets the right people the ball, we are golden. If he doesn't...