kg01 wrote:Jamaaliver wrote:And for the record, I still see it as wasteful to pull a dominant inside player away from their strength in painted area...to be mediocre on the perimeter.
I generally agree with your last statement but you're using "dominant" rather loosely. I'd never use "dominant" to describe our bigs under Buttz. More like, "present".
I venture to say, though, that anyone with a truly dominant inside force isn't going to force them to shoot 3's. And, if they do, they won't win.
I believe, with his agility and athleticism, that J Collins could be a devastating (dominant?) inside scorer. Particularly if he improved his face up game, added a 15-18ft jump shot and a modest post game. The two big men I'd like us to model his game after are Antonio McDyess and LaMarcus Aldridge.
I don't think there are many defensive bigs quick and strong enough to stop John Collins one-on-one in the post. He'd get so many opposing bigs in foul trouble plus dominate the offensive boards.
That's why I get so frustrated when I see/hear us moving him out to the perimeter. Particularly when he camps out on the 3-pt line and doesn't even touch the ball. I view him as a greater threat for lobs and offensive boards than as a 3-pt shooter who misses 65% of his shots and is out of position for o-rebounds.
Just my humble opinion. Turning a dominant inside force into a mediocre outside shooter is not ideal.
(I'm not against Collins having the ability to pull out opposing shot blockers. But it should be a strategic option, not a widespread part of a team's everyday offense.)
















