getrichordie wrote:Dn4sty wrote:getrichordie wrote:Question. What style do you think best fits our current roster if not the style we are seeing now?
Sent from my iPhone using
RealGM mobile app
I think the best offense for this team is going to be “do whatever you can do to get more shots than the other team.”
Basically when you are locked into a starting roster that assumes at most 2 shooters (although Russ can get on streaks), you are going to have to figure out ways to shoot more shots than the team you are playing.
The best OKC team was a suffocating defense combined with an insane offensive rebounding team, who pushed the pace.
I think that is the blueprint as long as the team in locked into this roster. You already have pieces to make parts of it work, but adding a PF who can block shots, play with pace, and shoot the 3 would be massive. Basically if you could find a Serge Ibaka type player to insert into the starting lineup, that would help immensely.
I know that doesn’t sound like an “offense” but in reality this team has to generate as many additional shots as possible in a game.
Also a huge benefit would be FT shooting.
I’m pretty sure that sums up how we’ve been playing. It’s why we were able to hang 120 despite going 9/39 from down town and committing 18 turnovers. Just have to figure out how to play that thing called defense without Roberson. Our team seems allergic to it for the most part. We did well versus Warriors, though.
Sent from my iPhone using
RealGM mobile app
No, that's not how an NBA offense is going to work if you want to win. You can't just build your whole offensive approach around Steven Adams grabbing offensive rebounds and the defense getting deflections. We saw how that worked out last season when the other team stopped turning the ball over. We have the Spurs on the ground and they came back because of our offense collapsed in that one game; they simply took better care of the ball and that was it.
This is last season if you substract points off turnovers per 100 possessions and 2nd chance points per 100 possessions from each team's ORtG:
1. Golden State Warriors - 85,3 ORtG adj
2. Houston Rockets - 84,6 ORtG adj
3. Cleveland Cavaliers - 84,4 ORtG adj
4. Toronto Raptors - 82,4 ORtG adj
5. New Orleans Pelicans - 81 ORtG adj
6. Minnesota Timberwolves - 80,1 ORtG adj
7. Denver Nuggets - 80 ORtG adj
8. Portland Trail Blazers - 80 ORtG adj
9. Dallas Mavericks - 79,6 ORtG adj
10. LA Clippers - 79,6 ORtG adj
----------------------------------------------------
11. Brooklyn Nets - 79,5 ORtG adj
12. Charlotte Hornets - 79,5 ORtG adj
13. Milwaukee Bucks - 79,3 ORtG adj
14. Boston Celtics - 78,5 ORtG adj
15. Utah Jazz - 78,3 ORtG adj
16. Philadelphia 76ers - 78 ORtG adj
17. Orlando Magic - 77,9 ORtG adj
18. Washington Wizards - 77,8 ORtG adj
19. Miami Heat - 77,6 ORtG adj
20. Indiana Pacers - 77,5 ORtG adj
----------------------------------------------------
21. New York Knicks - 77,2 ORtG adj
22. Chicago Bulls - 77 ORtG adj
23. Detroit Pistons - 76,5 ORtG adj
24. San Antonio Spurs - 76,1 ORtG adj
25. Los Angeles Lakers - 76 ORtG adj
26. Oklahoma City Thunder - 75,6 ORtG adj
27. Sacramento Kings - 75,2 ORtG adj
28. Phoenix Suns - 75 ORtG adj
29. Atlanta Hawks - 74,3 ORtG adj
30. Memphis Grizzlies - 73,4 ORtG adj
That is pathetic for a team that has two top 15 players on its squad. And out of those bottom 10 teams, the Spurs were the only Playoff team. All the other squads were basically tanking the **** out of the season.
"I don't know of any player that, when the shot goes up, he doesn't want it to go in," Donovan said