tone wone wrote:Greyhound wrote:LeBron needs to utilize a midrange game if the Blazers are going to defend him with Trent.
LeBron kept getting the ball at the free throw line extended against Trent. He forced passes and kept driving into the shot blockers. This LeBron is all pass, long ball or drive. You need a reliable mid range game in the playoffs, particularly when you are not surrounded with shooting.
Miami LeBron would have inside pivoted, jab stepped and shot right over Trent. He might need to rediscover that, along with his floater.
Miami LeBron was a high scoring-playmaking wing. This LeBron is a mid-tier scoring point guard. The shots he gets and the spots he attacks from are very different. Mid range has been virtually nonexistent all year. He hasn't attack from the wings or out of the triple-threat with any real volume all season.
He's got a point guards shot chart.
I agree with your assessment for the most part, but the spots he found himself in late in that game made it absolutely possible.
That is why I made the comment.
I think he should have been more aggressive looking for his own offense. More then just where he is positioned now, I think he has ingested the analytical kool aid over the years (and purged the midrange stuff from his game entirely).
The threes and layups approach looks good numbers wise but the midrange is where you need to operate in the playoffs (particularly when operating in a traditional lineup with two bigs)
LeBron has been able to get away from that the past few postseasons because he was surrounded by good shooters and had a spread floor.
Be it operating out of the triple threat position in the high post, or picking and rolling into open spots from the midrange, I think it would benefit these Lakers if LeBron operated from there more.
Don't believe the hype...