The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5)

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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1901 » by Joey Wheeler » Sun Aug 30, 2020 10:22 pm

therealbig3 wrote:
MisterHibachi wrote:
jantxc wrote:Watching the Clippers - Mavericks game. The fact that LeBron hasn't been able to develop a reliable mid-range jumper like Kawhi is infuriating.


He's still a better scorer despite it.


Eh, disagree. Kawhi is the best scorer in the league, pretty clearly imo. Can literally get whatever he wants, whenever he wants. There's no good half court defense against him other than 1. hoping he misses and 2. doubling him, and leaving other players wide open.

That's not the case with LeBron. He can be slowed down as a half court scorer, unless he's hot with his jumper.


Probably true. Durant is the best scorer in the league clearly imo, but he's not a factor this season and might never return to his best. Harden is superior in the RS, but that has never translated to the playoffs. Kawhi is probably the best scorer right now, he's just deadly from midrange, looks a bit like Jordan even...
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1902 » by MyUniBroDavis » Sun Aug 30, 2020 10:23 pm

limbo wrote:
MisterHibachi wrote:
Read on Twitter
?s=19

Interesting thread about not going small against Houston.


- How are rotations easier for the Lakers by playing big/standard?
- OReb dominance is overrated. Last night Adams had 5 off. rebounds in the first 10 minutes of the game and OKC still scored only 14 points in the 1st qtr. Granted, OKC is worse offensively than the Lakers, but still. You're giving up in other areas of the game when you decide to go Big and crash the glass
-Vertical threats are overrated again. It's not going to win you the game, i'd rather have spacing, it's a more consistent threat and the impact is felt every possession. Besides, AD is one of the best lob finishers in the league. You can play him at the 5 as the roll man or off-ball near the paint as a finisher and he will pose a bigger threat around the basket and have more space to move around in the paint, since he won't have another big body like McGee/Dwight there trying to do the same.
- Post-up mismatches? How? The only guys that can post up effectively on the Lakers are LeBron and AD... And if you have McGee/Dwight there with them, you're actually making it harder for LeBron/AD to effectively post up, since you're shrinking the floor, which makes it harder for LeBron/AD to drive to the basket and you're also not a kick-out threat because you can't shoot. I'm struggling to figure out what mismatches the Lakers have in McGee/Dwight + AD lineups over AD at the 5? McGee/Dwight in the post against Covington or Tucker isn't a mismatch. That's what Houston wants.
- Rim protection? Houston shoots 60 threes per game dude... Having McGee/Dwight + AD there is kind of an overkill on rim protection... You don't need that much rim protection, especially against a team that shoots 60 threes per game. AD at the 5 is enough rim protection, the rest of the players will need to be guys that are mobile enough to stay in front of driving threats and rotate in time to the guys that will be open on the perimeter, since Houston is gonna play 5 shooters... And McGee and Dwight don't fit that description.
- RE: Harden's tendencies to iso against 2 bigs. I don't know about that, would like to see some stats backing this up, as well as if that indeed generates worse looks for Houston on offense. Last time i check, Harden was the most effective isolation player in the league. Ultimately, even if that makes it harder for Harden to score in the paint, he's versatile enough as an offensive threat to hurt you in other ways, with his shooting, passing, drawing fouls and floaters.


Okc is the worst offensive rebounding team in the league, including houstan. Thats 100% one of our biggest advantages over them and a tradeoff they face for their offense.

Mcgee in the post would schmack covington lol, theres a point where height just makes it impossible

Agree on the rest but cranjis is kind of crazy reliable lol so im curious to see his writeup
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1903 » by MyUniBroDavis » Sun Aug 30, 2020 10:31 pm

Joey Wheeler wrote:
therealbig3 wrote:
MisterHibachi wrote:
He's still a better scorer despite it.


Eh, disagree. Kawhi is the best scorer in the league, pretty clearly imo. Can literally get whatever he wants, whenever he wants. There's no good half court defense against him other than 1. hoping he misses and 2. doubling him, and leaving other players wide open.

That's not the case with LeBron. He can be slowed down as a half court scorer, unless he's hot with his jumper.


Probably true. Durant is the best scorer in the league clearly imo, but he's not a factor this season and might never return to his best. Harden is superior in the RS, but that has never translated to the playoffs. Kawhi is probably the best scorer right now, he's just deadly from midrange, looks a bit like Jordan even...


Kawhi is a better overall scorer, brons a smarter scorer

Against elite man D kawhis a better scorer, against bad or avg man D lebrons better

But bron can pick and choose his spots better
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1904 » by Homer38 » Sun Aug 30, 2020 10:44 pm

therealbig3 wrote:
kayess wrote:The rockets matchup is obviously going to be tough - but their ability to stop the Lakers' O is just as much in question right?

How do they stop PNRs where DAvis is the roll man if they're using Tucker at the 5? It'll just be lobs all day every day right?

LeBron posting up is also going to be a massive problem, and any LeBron PNR.

Is there something I'm not seeing here?


Problems are gonna come up when LeBron and Davis can't hit their outside shots and Davis plays soft...the Lakers don't have the shooting to keep up with the Rockets in that scenario.



Chance that LBJ and Davis not playing at a big level against Houston are very slim especially in the playoffs ... Maybe one game it can happen, but for most of the series, no.At least it would be very disappointing if they don't do that.

If LBJ and Davis are aggressive, they should have multiple games with over 60 points combined ... They are the best duo in the NBA.

The lakers just need to make their 3 points in their average and dominate inside and they will have a good chance to win
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1905 » by Heej » Mon Aug 31, 2020 1:25 am

Joey Wheeler wrote:
therealbig3 wrote:
MisterHibachi wrote:
He's still a better scorer despite it.


Eh, disagree. Kawhi is the best scorer in the league, pretty clearly imo. Can literally get whatever he wants, whenever he wants. There's no good half court defense against him other than 1. hoping he misses and 2. doubling him, and leaving other players wide open.

That's not the case with LeBron. He can be slowed down as a half court scorer, unless he's hot with his jumper.


Probably true. Durant is the best scorer in the league clearly imo, but he's not a factor this season and might never return to his best. Harden is superior in the RS, but that has never translated to the playoffs. Kawhi is probably the best scorer right now, he's just deadly from midrange, looks a bit like Jordan even...

NGL man watching Kawhi get whatever he wants in the mid-range really makes me rethink Jordan is the GOAT from time to time. Can't imagine him not putting up 30+PPG on 63+ TS%
LeBron's NBA Cup MVP is more valuable than either of KD's Finals MVPs. This is the word of the Lord
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1906 » by freethedevil » Mon Aug 31, 2020 1:59 am

therealbig3 wrote:
MisterHibachi wrote:
jantxc wrote:Watching the Clippers - Mavericks game. The fact that LeBron hasn't been able to develop a reliable mid-range jumper like Kawhi is infuriating.


He's still a better scorer despite it.


Eh, disagree. Kawhi is the best scorer in the league, pretty clearly imo. Can literally get whatever he wants, whenever he wants. There's no good half court defense against him other than 1. hoping he misses and 2. doubling him.

Not sure how people think kawhi's clearly the best scorer in the league when

A. his best scoring postseason ended with a past=peak steph curry doing as well against a much better defense h2h.
B. Lebron did better against a vastly better warriors defense than kawhi did in his best scoring postseason
C. Lebron has multiple postseasons where he's trumped kawhi's best in rTS and volume.
D. Metrics which correlate scoring with winning give lebron the #1 scoring postseasons in 09, and a bunch of other postseasons that are really only rivalled or surpassed by those of jordan, kareem, and shaq and one postseason from curry.

Kawhi has scored well against exactly one atg postseason defense in milwaukee. Lebron has strung together comparable or better performances against multiple elite defenses over multiple postseasons and went ham against multiple atg teams.

Kawhi has done absolutely nothing to suggest he's clearly the best scorer in the league. How good he looks to you on paper doesn't match up to how he's actually produced on the court.
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1907 » by freethedevil » Mon Aug 31, 2020 2:10 am

Joey Wheeler wrote:
therealbig3 wrote:
MisterHibachi wrote:
He's still a better scorer despite it.


Eh, disagree. Kawhi is the best scorer in the league, pretty clearly imo. Can literally get whatever he wants, whenever he wants. There's no good half court defense against him other than 1. hoping he misses and 2. doubling him, and leaving other players wide open.

That's not the case with LeBron. He can be slowed down as a half court scorer, unless he's hot with his jumper.


Probably true. Durant is the best scorer in the league clearly imo, but he's not a factor this season and might never return to his best. Harden is superior in the RS, but that has never translated to the playoffs. Kawhi is probably the best scorer right now, he's just deadly from midrange, looks a bit like Jordan even...

durant vs the rockets in 2018 as the secondary focus of the rocket's defense:
30 ppg on .59% ts
lebron vs the warriors in 2018 as virtually the sole focus of the warriors (even better) defense:
34 ppg on .64% TS

The only time durant has managed to do anything special against an elite defense since 2012 was when the 16 spurs decided westbrook was more important.


I don't know how anyone can seriously consider durant on lebron's stratosphere as a scorer without willfully ignoring context. KD onlymatches lebron's effiency against the greatest defenses in history when he plays average to terrible defenses as the secondary focus of the opposing defense.

Anyone whose interested in results, picks lebron's scoring every time.
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1908 » by trickshot » Mon Aug 31, 2020 2:24 am

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
limbo wrote:
MisterHibachi wrote:
Read on Twitter
?s=19

Interesting thread about not going small against Houston.


- How are rotations easier for the Lakers by playing big/standard?
- OReb dominance is overrated. Last night Adams had 5 off. rebounds in the first 10 minutes of the game and OKC still scored only 14 points in the 1st qtr. Granted, OKC is worse offensively than the Lakers, but still. You're giving up in other areas of the game when you decide to go Big and crash the glass
-Vertical threats are overrated again. It's not going to win you the game, i'd rather have spacing, it's a more consistent threat and the impact is felt every possession. Besides, AD is one of the best lob finishers in the league. You can play him at the 5 as the roll man or off-ball near the paint as a finisher and he will pose a bigger threat around the basket and have more space to move around in the paint, since he won't have another big body like McGee/Dwight there trying to do the same.
- Post-up mismatches? How? The only guys that can post up effectively on the Lakers are LeBron and AD... And if you have McGee/Dwight there with them, you're actually making it harder for LeBron/AD to effectively post up, since you're shrinking the floor, which makes it harder for LeBron/AD to drive to the basket and you're also not a kick-out threat because you can't shoot. I'm struggling to figure out what mismatches the Lakers have in McGee/Dwight + AD lineups over AD at the 5? McGee/Dwight in the post against Covington or Tucker isn't a mismatch. That's what Houston wants.
- Rim protection? Houston shoots 60 threes per game dude... Having McGee/Dwight + AD there is kind of an overkill on rim protection... You don't need that much rim protection, especially against a team that shoots 60 threes per game. AD at the 5 is enough rim protection, the rest of the players will need to be guys that are mobile enough to stay in front of driving threats and rotate in time to the guys that will be open on the perimeter, since Houston is gonna play 5 shooters... And McGee and Dwight don't fit that description.
- RE: Harden's tendencies to iso against 2 bigs. I don't know about that, would like to see some stats backing this up, as well as if that indeed generates worse looks for Houston on offense. Last time i check, Harden was the most effective isolation player in the league. Ultimately, even if that makes it harder for Harden to score in the paint, he's versatile enough as an offensive threat to hurt you in other ways, with his shooting, passing, drawing fouls and floaters.


Okc is the worst offensive rebounding team in the league, including houstan. Thats 100% one of our biggest advantages over them and a tradeoff they face for their offense.

Mcgee in the post would schmack covington lol, theres a point where height just makes it impossible

Agree on the rest but cranjis is kind of crazy reliable lol so im curious to see his writeup

Diasgree with most of it. He's overly focusing on all the big man advantages that we now know get negated by spacing. Can Mcgee protect the paint from the 3 point line? Do offensive rebounding opportunities come enough to make up for the open threes an extra big will give up? Even making it work will require so many layers of gameplanning that could still easily get figured out after a quarter but the Lakers staff are free to try. It's like he doesn't realise protecting the 3 is what you need to worry about against the Rockets, they play outside-in not inside-out
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1909 » by MyUniBroDavis » Mon Aug 31, 2020 2:26 am

Heej wrote:
Joey Wheeler wrote:
therealbig3 wrote:
Eh, disagree. Kawhi is the best scorer in the league, pretty clearly imo. Can literally get whatever he wants, whenever he wants. There's no good half court defense against him other than 1. hoping he misses and 2. doubling him, and leaving other players wide open.

That's not the case with LeBron. He can be slowed down as a half court scorer, unless he's hot with his jumper.


Probably true. Durant is the best scorer in the league clearly imo, but he's not a factor this season and might never return to his best. Harden is superior in the RS, but that has never translated to the playoffs. Kawhi is probably the best scorer right now, he's just deadly from midrange, looks a bit like Jordan even...

NGL man watching Kawhi get whatever he wants in the mid-range really makes me rethink Jordan is the GOAT from time to time. Can't imagine him not putting up 30+PPG on 63+ TS%


I think guys like jordan, kobe, wade would put up insane numbers in todays league, kobe and jordan especially

I wonder how good Kobes midrange game would be today, i recall illegal defense rules lowered guard offense all around, and the changes in 06 mostly let them get to the rim more easily but kobe went the opposite route and actually shot more middies that year (and iirc people were sayinf he was getting hacked, althouh i was too young to jnow first hand). The average top midrange shooters at the wing were lower in the 2000s vs now too, which makes sense since easier penetration gives you alot more space/seperation off of midrange pullups

Kobe himself was around 43-45% from midrange, but one big thing thats happened more recently is mid rangwrs thenselves are getting closer because of better penetration opportunities, jordan was better at long midrangers than shorter ones according to the guy that made the shot chart stuff. Kobe was actually better at short middies than jordan was according to the shot chart data

Alot of people say the 2000s was the last time for the midrange game, but i almost feel like it was the worst time for it, at least fir slashinf wings. People were more forced into taking it because of new help d rules and teams hadnt adjusted yet, so midrange percentages were
Lower than in other areas, and were taken from further away. (So midrange was more a quick reaction as a second option rather than getting what you want)

I mean, kobes postgame has always been more of an outlier than his iso game in terms of synergy data, i mean he was better than KG and Duncan in terms of post effeciency which is pretty absurd

Otoh, the reason why I have lebron as my personal GOAT, aside from playcalling and all of that is versatility. Imo this is what seperates him on offense vs the hardens and lukas in the world. I think both kobe and jordan would average ludicrious numbers in todays league, I mean since we have some synergy data for kobe, when i ran it and compared his average per play types to the 50th percentile in 2016, the disparity of kobes effeciency per playtype vs "the average" was actually ridiculous (and ive always felt kobe wasnt helped by his system in terms of his impact vs he helped it, but he was always in trash offensive systems that didnt work modern day when the triangle wasnt there, and when he was wih d antoni and they literally barely had a system other than using post freezinf screens and ball screens more its no coincidence he had a reneissance).

Id argue both are better scoriers than lebron on ball, but bron has the ability to fill ANY role in offense, which just adds versatility to the team, outside of sharpshooter

For example, if you put him in the portland offense instead of nurkic, put a restriction that he cant be the primary ball handler, it still completely solves the problem they had acorinf against us, and would absolutely unleash lillard in that it means that the trapping D we used on him wouldnt work since bron would be an incredible short roll playmaker instead of a guy like nurkic or whiteside.

Essentially, lebron is prolly not the GOAT scorer, but in terms of total package hes at least arguably the best at running the offense as a ball handler ever.

Otoh, when you take into account everything else, that he essentially is the best "hole plugger" on offense ever, then i think it puts him over the edge. Outside of shooting, or not having centers or something, lebron pretty much automatically can plug in any weakness a team has.

Essentially its his well roundedness that seals the deal for me. He could even play an off ball big roll if he wanted to.
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1910 » by MyUniBroDavis » Mon Aug 31, 2020 2:37 am

donnieme wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
limbo wrote:
- How are rotations easier for the Lakers by playing big/standard?
- OReb dominance is overrated. Last night Adams had 5 off. rebounds in the first 10 minutes of the game and OKC still scored only 14 points in the 1st qtr. Granted, OKC is worse offensively than the Lakers, but still. You're giving up in other areas of the game when you decide to go Big and crash the glass
-Vertical threats are overrated again. It's not going to win you the game, i'd rather have spacing, it's a more consistent threat and the impact is felt every possession. Besides, AD is one of the best lob finishers in the league. You can play him at the 5 as the roll man or off-ball near the paint as a finisher and he will pose a bigger threat around the basket and have more space to move around in the paint, since he won't have another big body like McGee/Dwight there trying to do the same.
- Post-up mismatches? How? The only guys that can post up effectively on the Lakers are LeBron and AD... And if you have McGee/Dwight there with them, you're actually making it harder for LeBron/AD to effectively post up, since you're shrinking the floor, which makes it harder for LeBron/AD to drive to the basket and you're also not a kick-out threat because you can't shoot. I'm struggling to figure out what mismatches the Lakers have in McGee/Dwight + AD lineups over AD at the 5? McGee/Dwight in the post against Covington or Tucker isn't a mismatch. That's what Houston wants.
- Rim protection? Houston shoots 60 threes per game dude... Having McGee/Dwight + AD there is kind of an overkill on rim protection... You don't need that much rim protection, especially against a team that shoots 60 threes per game. AD at the 5 is enough rim protection, the rest of the players will need to be guys that are mobile enough to stay in front of driving threats and rotate in time to the guys that will be open on the perimeter, since Houston is gonna play 5 shooters... And McGee and Dwight don't fit that description.
- RE: Harden's tendencies to iso against 2 bigs. I don't know about that, would like to see some stats backing this up, as well as if that indeed generates worse looks for Houston on offense. Last time i check, Harden was the most effective isolation player in the league. Ultimately, even if that makes it harder for Harden to score in the paint, he's versatile enough as an offensive threat to hurt you in other ways, with his shooting, passing, drawing fouls and floaters.


Okc is the worst offensive rebounding team in the league, including houstan. Thats 100% one of our biggest advantages over them and a tradeoff they face for their offense.

Mcgee in the post would schmack covington lol, theres a point where height just makes it impossible

Agree on the rest but cranjis is kind of crazy reliable lol so im curious to see his writeup

Diasgree with most of it. He's overly focusing on all the big man advantages that we now know get negated by spacing. Can Mcgee protect the paint from the 3 point line? Do offensive rebounding opportunities come enough to make up for the open threes an extra big will give up? Even making it work will require so many layers of gameplanning that could still easily get figured out after a quarter but the Lakers staff are free to try. It's like he doesn't realise protecting the 3 is what you need to worry about against the Rockets, they play outside-in not inside-out


1. Hes more so saying that harden himself drives less with 2 bigs vs 1 big which intuitively makes alot of sense, and Hes gonna get mismatches either way, and a stepback three vs mcgee isnt as threatening as a harden drive against an open paint. Some advantages big men have are negated yes, but not all. Vertical spacing is extremely important and is how the mavs had the league best offense along with their regular spacing, 1 ball handler + 3 shooters + 1 big man isnt far off of 1 ball handler + 4 shootsrs. When your opponent lacks a center its fair to see why this would be important, they cant really stop lob plays by a team playing it right and cant expect to beat that by banking on threes

2. Im not sure personally if i agree two bigs is the way to go, but rebounding and inside scoring is 100% the way to beat the rockets

3. The rockets play inside out in terms of they make threes off of drive opportunities. If two bigs deters harden from driving for whatever reason itd make them shoot less threes

I would be rather for the lakers to play them with AD at the 5 straight up, just to because i feel we could field a roster with 5 good wing defenders, and harden would tire himself out over the course of the series

I think the idea that a guy thats an nba consultant and prolly the best film nba guy on twitter doesnt understand something super basic like centers can get played off the court is a but too simplistic though. I dont neccessarily agree with him but i see where hes coming from
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1911 » by trickshot » Mon Aug 31, 2020 2:46 am

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
donnieme wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Okc is the worst offensive rebounding team in the league, including houstan. Thats 100% one of our biggest advantages over them and a tradeoff they face for their offense.

Mcgee in the post would schmack covington lol, theres a point where height just makes it impossible

Agree on the rest but cranjis is kind of crazy reliable lol so im curious to see his writeup

Diasgree with most of it. He's overly focusing on all the big man advantages that we now know get negated by spacing. Can Mcgee protect the paint from the 3 point line? Do offensive rebounding opportunities come enough to make up for the open threes an extra big will give up? Even making it work will require so many layers of gameplanning that could still easily get figured out after a quarter but the Lakers staff are free to try. It's like he doesn't realise protecting the 3 is what you need to worry about against the Rockets, they play outside-in not inside-out


1. Hes more so saying that harden himself drives less with 2 bigs vs 1 big which intuitively makes alot of sense, and Hes gonna get mismatches either way, and a stepback three vs mcgee isnt as threatening as a harden drive against an open paint. Some advantages big men have are negated yes, but not all. Vertical spacing is extremely important and is how the mavs had the league best offense along with their regular spacing, 1 ball handler + 3 shooters + 1 big man isnt far off of 1 ball handler + 4 shootsrs. When your opponent lacks a center its fair to see why this would be important, they cant really stop lob plays by a team playing it right and cant expect to beat that by banking on threes

2. Im not sure personally if i agree two bigs is the way to go, but rebounding and inside scoring is 100% the way to beat the rockets

3. The rockets play inside out in terms of they make threes off of drive opportunities. If two bigs deters harden from driving for whatever reason itd make them shoot less threes

I would be rather for the lakers to play them with AD at the 5 straight up, just to because i feel we could field a roster with 5 good wing defenders, and harden would tire himself out over the course of the series

I think the idea that a guy thats an nba consultant and prolly the best film nba guy on twitter doesnt understand something super basic like centers can get played off the court is a but too simplistic though. I dont neccessarily agree with him but i see where hes coming from

For me there's no need to go on extensively about something that will be decided in a couple days. We'll see Mcgee's impact and whose predictions come to fruition soon enough. Beauty of sports is no one knows the future and even the most qualified are still only making opinion-based projections

Maybe Westbrook's presence is what makes the double big viable in that series. Cheating off him is a no-brainer
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1912 » by MyUniBroDavis » Mon Aug 31, 2020 2:49 am

donnieme wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
donnieme wrote:Diasgree with most of it. He's overly focusing on all the big man advantages that we now know get negated by spacing. Can Mcgee protect the paint from the 3 point line? Do offensive rebounding opportunities come enough to make up for the open threes an extra big will give up? Even making it work will require so many layers of gameplanning that could still easily get figured out after a quarter but the Lakers staff are free to try. It's like he doesn't realise protecting the 3 is what you need to worry about against the Rockets, they play outside-in not inside-out


1. Hes more so saying that harden himself drives less with 2 bigs vs 1 big which intuitively makes alot of sense, and Hes gonna get mismatches either way, and a stepback three vs mcgee isnt as threatening as a harden drive against an open paint. Some advantages big men have are negated yes, but not all. Vertical spacing is extremely important and is how the mavs had the league best offense along with their regular spacing, 1 ball handler + 3 shooters + 1 big man isnt far off of 1 ball handler + 4 shootsrs. When your opponent lacks a center its fair to see why this would be important, they cant really stop lob plays by a team playing it right and cant expect to beat that by banking on threes

2. Im not sure personally if i agree two bigs is the way to go, but rebounding and inside scoring is 100% the way to beat the rockets

3. The rockets play inside out in terms of they make threes off of drive opportunities. If two bigs deters harden from driving for whatever reason itd make them shoot less threes

I would be rather for the lakers to play them with AD at the 5 straight up, just to because i feel we could field a roster with 5 good wing defenders, and harden would tire himself out over the course of the series

I think the idea that a guy thats an nba consultant and prolly the best film nba guy on twitter doesnt understand something super basic like centers can get played off the court is a but too simplistic though. I dont neccessarily agree with him but i see where hes coming from

For me there's no need to go on extensively about something that will be decided in a couple days. We'll see Mcgee's impact and whose predictions come to fruition soon enough. Beauty of sports is no one knows the future and even the most qualified are still only making opinion-based projections


Dude its a sports discussion forum thats literally the point
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1913 » by trickshot » Mon Aug 31, 2020 2:52 am

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
donnieme wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
1. Hes more so saying that harden himself drives less with 2 bigs vs 1 big which intuitively makes alot of sense, and Hes gonna get mismatches either way, and a stepback three vs mcgee isnt as threatening as a harden drive against an open paint. Some advantages big men have are negated yes, but not all. Vertical spacing is extremely important and is how the mavs had the league best offense along with their regular spacing, 1 ball handler + 3 shooters + 1 big man isnt far off of 1 ball handler + 4 shootsrs. When your opponent lacks a center its fair to see why this would be important, they cant really stop lob plays by a team playing it right and cant expect to beat that by banking on threes

2. Im not sure personally if i agree two bigs is the way to go, but rebounding and inside scoring is 100% the way to beat the rockets

3. The rockets play inside out in terms of they make threes off of drive opportunities. If two bigs deters harden from driving for whatever reason itd make them shoot less threes

I would be rather for the lakers to play them with AD at the 5 straight up, just to because i feel we could field a roster with 5 good wing defenders, and harden would tire himself out over the course of the series

I think the idea that a guy thats an nba consultant and prolly the best film nba guy on twitter doesnt understand something super basic like centers can get played off the court is a but too simplistic though. I dont neccessarily agree with him but i see where hes coming from

For me there's no need to go on extensively about something that will be decided in a couple days. We'll see Mcgee's impact and whose predictions come to fruition soon enough. Beauty of sports is no one knows the future and even the most qualified are still only making opinion-based projections


Dude its a sports discussion forum thats literally the point

Maybe you mistook the tone in that post. Am saying we'll see and agreeing to disagree on what happens
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1914 » by MyUniBroDavis » Mon Aug 31, 2020 2:56 am

donnieme wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
donnieme wrote:For me there's no need to go on extensively about something that will be decided in a couple days. We'll see Mcgee's impact and whose predictions come to fruition soon enough. Beauty of sports is no one knows the future and even the most qualified are still only making opinion-based projections


Dude its a sports discussion forum thats literally the point

Maybe you mistook the tone in that post. Am saying we'll see and agreeing to disagree on what happens


No lmao i get ur not being aggressive im just saying thats a weird thing to say XD gotchu though, im oretty sure if we play those lineuos wed get messed up anyw
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1915 » by homecourtloss » Mon Aug 31, 2020 4:07 am

ISO scoring so far in the playoffs (min. 4 games GP, 3+ possessions per game)

1. LBJ, 1.52 PPP, eFG 84.4% :lol:
2. Giannis, 1.50 PPP, eFG 80%
8. Harden, 1.22 (on a massive 12 possessions per game, basically GOAT ISO metrics the last three years)
11. Kawhi, .93 PPP
16. Luka, .87 PPP
22. Lillard, .56 PPP

https://stats.nba.com/players/isolation/?sort=PPP&dir=1&CF=GP*GE*4:POSS*GE*3&SeasonType=Playoffs
lessthanjake wrote:Kyrie was extremely impactful without LeBron, and basically had zero impact whatsoever if LeBron was on the court.

lessthanjake wrote: By playing in a way that prevents Kyrie from getting much impact, LeBron ensures that controlling for Kyrie has limited effect…
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1916 » by TheGOATRises007 » Mon Aug 31, 2020 8:14 am

Will be interesting to see how Westbrook looks in game 6.
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1917 » by trickshot » Mon Aug 31, 2020 9:36 am

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
donnieme wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Dude its a sports discussion forum thats literally the point

Maybe you mistook the tone in that post. Am saying we'll see and agreeing to disagree on what happens


No lmao i get ur not being aggressive im just saying thats a weird thing to say XD gotchu though, im oretty sure if we play those lineuos wed get messed up anyw

Yes watching the Okc series Steven Adam's man has often been the one to catch fire, Jeff Green was having a good series just knocking down open shots. When it's not him Tucker was the one finding himself open in the first couple games. But the biggest reason I doubt Mcgee should start is he's just not good holding his own on the perimeter
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1918 » by Dupp » Mon Aug 31, 2020 10:45 am

For the longest time every playoffs I’ve wanted lebron to have as much rest as possible. Hoping for quick series so he can rest up for the warriors. Right now I feel the complete opposite and think it’s been too much rest and want him to play again ASAP to keep getting into peak form.
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1919 » by Homer38 » Mon Aug 31, 2020 10:48 am

Dupp wrote:For the longest time every playoffs I’ve wanted lebron to have as much rest as possible. Hoping for quick series so he can rest up for the warriors. Right now I feel the complete opposite and think it’s been too much rest and want him to play again ASAP to keep getting into peak form.


if houston wins tonight, i think game 1 will be wednesday.
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Re: The Lebron '20 Thread (Pt. 5) 

Post#1920 » by limbo » Mon Aug 31, 2020 11:07 am

homecourtloss wrote:ISO scoring so far in the playoffs (min. 4 games GP, 3+ possessions per game)

1. LBJ, 1.52 PPP, eFG 84.4% :lol:
2. Giannis, 1.50 PPP, eFG 80%
8. Harden, 1.22 (on a massive 12 possessions per game, basically GOAT ISO metrics the last three years)
11. Kawhi, .93 PPP
16. Luka, .87 PPP
22. Lillard, .56 PPP

https://stats.nba.com/players/isolation/?sort=PPP&dir=1&CF=GP*GE*4:POSS*GE*3&SeasonType=Playoffs


Surprised seeing Brogdon so high. Also where is Jamal Murray. The dude has looked absolutely unstoppable scoring the ball against the Jazz. I guess they're running more screens for him than i thought.

Not surprising seeing LeBron and Giannis getting what they want against 8th seeded teams. Need to check how Harden is doing against Dort in iso.

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