DCZards wrote:NatP4 wrote:DCZards wrote:
So are you saying that the problems are Wall, Beal, the offense and coaching...and that Otto doesn't have any shortcomings?
Otto has zero issues in the way he approaches the game. People who blame him for being passive are deflecting. He shoots open shots he passes to open players. 
Have you EVER in your life seen Otto take a dumb shot or make a selfish play? Nope. How many times do you see Wall do one of those things? Maybe 5-6 times per game. 
most of the blame should be on Brooks though, it could be such a simple fix. Maybe call a post up at the elbow for Otto, maybe play him at small ball 4 more (instead of never at all) where he can pick and pop a little bit or drive it against bigger less athletic players. Maybe stagger the starters and let Otto takeover with the bench which he does from time to time when you aren’t subbing him out for Kelly Oubre and only playing him 31 damn minutes a game  
 It’s simple ****, Otto would be a star on the spurs or the Celtics. He’s just not an isolation one on one player. Coaches have to get these guys in the right spots to utilize their scoring ability. Coach Pop had to adjust to get Kawhi more offensive opportunities. 
Two things I promise you, without looking them up because I don’t know how to or want to:
1. Otto takes more shots per 100 possessions when he plays power forward 
2. Otto took more shots per 100 possessions when Wall was out injured.
 
I agree with a lot of what you say here. Porter is indeed unselfish (maybe to a fault) and rarely, if ever, takes a bad shot. I too would like to see Otto post up more and possibly look to pass more out of the post like he did very well at G'Town. 
But Otto has to become a better ballhandler and become much better at putting the ball on the floor and taking opponents off the dribble. That's pretty obvious, imo. Those are skills that are absolutely essential for a perimeter player in today's NBA.
 
Well that’s what I’m saying, he’s not really that player, he’s a power forward, especially in today’s NBA. He always talks about playing the 4 in interviews, he’s one of the few players that loves it. He did it at G-Town and high school. At the 4, he doesn’t have to take guys off the dribble, and if he does, it’s a lot easier against bigs. 
AND, it benefits everyone, Wall and Beal get more spacing which helps the iso game, having a 44% 3pt shooter at the 4 opens the court for everyone, it gets Oubre on the court, who NEEDS to play with Wall and needs to play starters minutes and be treated like a core player instead of another backup. We are at our best when we do play small. 
He can get shots when he sets a screen and teams switch because he can post up PGs and score over them, he can roll to the basket, he can pop and hit 3s, we know he can spot up and when you play small, Oubre and Porter get WIDE open looks. 
Sorry to rant about the same thing so much, but this is the actual player development stuff Brooks was supposed to be good at. He shouldn’t be underutilizing anyone.