2019-20 NBA Season Discussion

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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3221 » by limbo » Mon Sep 14, 2020 9:11 am

MartinToVaught wrote:
limbo wrote:
GSP wrote:Theyre easily gonna win at this point. Lakers have looked incredible.

Not sure how much of it is "stars aligning" tho

It was obvious pre playoffs at least to me that a team with playoff Bron/Ad and a great defense wasnt gonna lose 4/7


Honestly, it has to do with me expecting more from the Clippers than thinking the Lakers wouldn't be a serious threat. Like, this Clippers team is essentially the same team that took 2 games off the Warriors last year, except they lost SGA and Gallo (who was pretty bad in that series) and replaced them with Kawhi and PG... These are astronomical upgrades... And then they've also added Marcus Morris and Reggie Jackson. I thought putting Lou Williams next to Kawhi/PG would make it easier for him to be a more effective scorer and not struggle so much with his efficiency because he had to create a lot more off the dribble.
I thought having Kawhi/PG would make them better defensively, making it easier on guys like Harrell to not get exposed there...

The problem is what we didn't upgrade: the coach who has underachieved year after year for the past seven years.

I've been saying it all season on the Clippers board and I'm saying it again here: same Lob City coach, same Lob City results. We already saw what Doc could do with a contending team in the west. It wasn't good enough. Giving him another chance to do it all over again was the definition of insanity.


Well, the Lob City Clippers had to deal with Paul and Griffin's injuries constantly, and the supporting cast was honestly overrated. With this in mind, i can understand why people weren't bringing out the pitchforks against Doc, even though some of the coaching decisions at the time were indeed head scratching...

Right now, though, he doesn't have the same excuses... Both of his star players are healthy and far more experienced than CP3 and Blake were st the time, especially Kawhi who is a battle tested champion. Like, Zubac might be straight up bettet than DeAndre was... Lou Williams should be better than Crawford, but he's not currently playing like it. You got Morris/Harrell/Green/Shamet/Beverley/Jackson as the bench mob... How is this comparable to Randy Foye, young Austin Rivers and i don't even know what Lob City had on the bench at the time... Probably relics like Paul Pierce...

This is definitely a new low for Doc. Guys like Stevens and Spo are taking rookies and young cores to much greater heights.
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3222 » by E-Balla » Mon Sep 14, 2020 9:58 am

GSP wrote:
E-Balla wrote:.


Still think Doc Rivers is a top 5 coach?

Mike Malone is completely mediocre

If Clips lose this series it might not even be a top 5 Doc blunder :lol: :lol: getting taken to 7 by that garbage 37 win Hawks team still stuns me

Hes nowhere in the company of Pop, Carlisle, Nurse, Spo, Stevens, Kerr and prolly even Bud

Doc got 20 years in this. One game isn't changing my opinion on how good of a coach he is just like Pop benching Timmy didn't remove him from my top 5.

Kerr clearly isn't better and Bud could never win a championship with his horrible postseason coaching. His rotations the last 2 games have been trash but they're definitely better than whatever the hell the Bucks were doing. Kawhi and PG still played 80 minutes combined not 70. He just refuses to bench Montrezl.
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3223 » by freethedevil » Mon Sep 14, 2020 10:10 am

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
I mean its more so coaching than fit there. Outside of his shooting improving and being able to run the pick and roll better, ingram wasnt really different back then vs now

He was really bad at running it on the lakers and walton was just like nah fam keep doing it , whether he was bad becauze of coaching or worked on it in the summer idk, but walten put a bunch of guys in a position to fail


I mean, the Lakers hired Walton as coach with him pitching them on a motion offense that resembled Kerr's Warriors and Phil's Lakers. The moment LeBron announced he was coming, we all thought "Well, LeBron's not going to want to do that and there's not much point to Luke as coach then, so they should probably just fired Luke now." And that's totally what happened. Luke, like all the other players, were basically powerless in LeBron's wake.

Look: I wouldn't be so hard on LeBron here if I didn't have so much confidence in his floor raising abilities. He joined a team that won 35 games the year before and they were basically a .500 team when he played. I understand there were other lineup differences, but this is LeBron. He's made a habit of lifting mediocre talent to 60 wins. He didn't show the ability to do anything like that last year, and while chalk some of that up to not being 100%, I just never got that "We're going to go hard every damn game!" edge from him that I've seen from him in many years.


Waltons offense system in 2018 pre lebron was pretty much worst in the league as well though, and it was as bad in 2019. It wasnt bad in the sense that it just didnt put the players in correct positions although it didnt but they didnt have a list of non high school level set plays iirc

Like cranjis literally made a tier list of coaches schemes and had like a gap at the bottom and below that put luke tier or something lol, he sold himself as one thing and completely failed at it, although alot of it was murmeys

Hes been better in the kings i think system wise but it doesnt change that it was horrible with the lakers. Theres an idea that lue just said lol give it to lebron and leave in the cavs vut their offensive system as a whole was probably better than the current lakers

Luke getting fired was the best thing to happen to the lakers, like genuinly would lose 4th pikc from last year vs another year of luke

The 18-19 lakers started, like all first year lebron teams, badly, and then started winning at a 60 win pace giving them the 4th seed and putting them on pace for 50 wins. Thne lbron got injured. Then rondo got injured. Then lonzo got injured Then ingram got injured.

Lakers were a solid team, then everyone got injured. Lebron's response off the court was prettty disappointing, but the lakers failures really aren't that deep. They got injured. When healthy they were a good team despite atrocious fit and roster construction.
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3224 » by MyUniBroDavis » Mon Sep 14, 2020 12:49 pm

freethedevil wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
I mean, the Lakers hired Walton as coach with him pitching them on a motion offense that resembled Kerr's Warriors and Phil's Lakers. The moment LeBron announced he was coming, we all thought "Well, LeBron's not going to want to do that and there's not much point to Luke as coach then, so they should probably just fired Luke now." And that's totally what happened. Luke, like all the other players, were basically powerless in LeBron's wake.

Look: I wouldn't be so hard on LeBron here if I didn't have so much confidence in his floor raising abilities. He joined a team that won 35 games the year before and they were basically a .500 team when he played. I understand there were other lineup differences, but this is LeBron. He's made a habit of lifting mediocre talent to 60 wins. He didn't show the ability to do anything like that last year, and while chalk some of that up to not being 100%, I just never got that "We're going to go hard every damn game!" edge from him that I've seen from him in many years.


Waltons offense system in 2018 pre lebron was pretty much worst in the league as well though, and it was as bad in 2019. It wasnt bad in the sense that it just didnt put the players in correct positions although it didnt but they didnt have a list of non high school level set plays iirc

Like cranjis literally made a tier list of coaches schemes and had like a gap at the bottom and below that put luke tier or something lol, he sold himself as one thing and completely failed at it, although alot of it was murmeys

Hes been better in the kings i think system wise but it doesnt change that it was horrible with the lakers. Theres an idea that lue just said lol give it to lebron and leave in the cavs vut their offensive system as a whole was probably better than the current lakers

Luke getting fired was the best thing to happen to the lakers, like genuinly would lose 4th pikc from last year vs another year of luke

The 18-19 lakers started, like all first year lebron teams, badly, and then started winning at a 60 win pace giving them the 4th seed and putting them on pace for 50 wins. Thne lbron got injured. Then rondo got injured. Then lonzo got injured Then ingram got injured.

Lakers were a solid team, then everyone got injured. Lebron's response off the court was prettty disappointing, but the lakers failures really aren't that deep. They got injured. When healthy they were a good team despite atrocious fit and roster construction.


That doesnt change that the lakers playbook was a below average high school one lol
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3225 » by freethedevil » Mon Sep 14, 2020 2:04 pm

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
freethedevil wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Waltons offense system in 2018 pre lebron was pretty much worst in the league as well though, and it was as bad in 2019. It wasnt bad in the sense that it just didnt put the players in correct positions although it didnt but they didnt have a list of non high school level set plays iirc

Like cranjis literally made a tier list of coaches schemes and had like a gap at the bottom and below that put luke tier or something lol, he sold himself as one thing and completely failed at it, although alot of it was murmeys

Hes been better in the kings i think system wise but it doesnt change that it was horrible with the lakers. Theres an idea that lue just said lol give it to lebron and leave in the cavs vut their offensive system as a whole was probably better than the current lakers

Luke getting fired was the best thing to happen to the lakers, like genuinly would lose 4th pikc from last year vs another year of luke

The 18-19 lakers started, like all first year lebron teams, badly, and then started winning at a 60 win pace giving them the 4th seed and putting them on pace for 50 wins. Thne lbron got injured. Then rondo got injured. Then lonzo got injured Then ingram got injured.

Lakers were a solid team, then everyone got injured. Lebron's response off the court was prettty disappointing, but the lakers failures really aren't that deep. They got injured. When healthy they were a good team despite atrocious fit and roster construction.


That doesnt change that the lakers playbook was a below average high school one lol

No, but it kinda nips any on court criticismm in the bud.
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3226 » by Doctor MJ » Mon Sep 14, 2020 2:37 pm

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
I mean its more so coaching than fit there. Outside of his shooting improving and being able to run the pick and roll better, ingram wasnt really different back then vs now

He was really bad at running it on the lakers and walton was just like nah fam keep doing it , whether he was bad becauze of coaching or worked on it in the summer idk, but walten put a bunch of guys in a position to fail


I mean, the Lakers hired Walton as coach with him pitching them on a motion offense that resembled Kerr's Warriors and Phil's Lakers. The moment LeBron announced he was coming, we all thought "Well, LeBron's not going to want to do that and there's not much point to Luke as coach then, so they should probably just fired Luke now." And that's totally what happened. Luke, like all the other players, were basically powerless in LeBron's wake.

Look: I wouldn't be so hard on LeBron here if I didn't have so much confidence in his floor raising abilities. He joined a team that won 35 games the year before and they were basically a .500 team when he played. I understand there were other lineup differences, but this is LeBron. He's made a habit of lifting mediocre talent to 60 wins. He didn't show the ability to do anything like that last year, and while chalk some of that up to not being 100%, I just never got that "We're going to go hard every damn game!" edge from him that I've seen from him in many years.


Waltons offense system in 2018 pre lebron was pretty much worst in the league as well though, and it was as bad in 2019. It wasnt bad in the sense that it just didnt put the players in correct positions although it didnt but they didnt have a list of non high school level set plays iirc

Like cranjis literally made a tier list of coaches schemes and had like a gap at the bottom and below that put luke tier or something lol, he sold himself as one thing and completely failed at it, although alot of it was murmeys

Hes been better in the kings i think system wise but it doesnt change that it was horrible with the lakers. Theres an idea that lue just said lol give it to lebron and leave in the cavs vut their offensive system as a whole was probably better than the current lakers

Luke getting fired was the best thing to happen to the lakers, like genuinly would lose 4th pikc from last year vs another year of luke


Feels like you're moving the goalpost of conversation here.

You blame Walton for not creating a more positive culture, I point out that only LeBron sets culture on his teams and that Walton made no sense once LeBron got there, now you're getting into Xs and Os. I'm not saying Walton should still be the Lakers coach, I'm just pointing out that LeBron never, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever gets to hide behind a coach when it comes to passing blame for culture. LeBron sets his team culture, always, for good and for ill.
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3227 » by Doctor MJ » Mon Sep 14, 2020 2:46 pm

Heej wrote:In regards to LeBron and Jokic's passing it's a fascinating debate. I think Jokic is clearly one of those guys that inspires people to cut and he has incredible touch, timing, and accuracy with his passing. Personally, I think football terms are the best way for me to sum up my thoughts on the matter. And what I'm gonna go with is that LeBron has the GOAT arm talent in NBA history.

Arm talent in NFL terms being the power and accuracy a quarterback can get on their throws. It doesn't have anything to do with vision or progressing through your reads or whatever, just which guy can hit the bullseye and throw a ball thru sheetrock kinda deal. Jokic has exceptional arm talent, especially with his shorter range passes to cutters and his outlets; but the one thing no one in this league has managed to come close to LeBron in is the zip that he has on his passes to spot up shooters. Even watching a guy like Luka who can make the same skip passes, he throws lofty lobs over defenses that allow an extra split second for the closeout to get there and either force the player to burp up a contested miss or record scratch the offense. LeBron throws MFin darts to those guys man.

No one else creates that same extra half second that LeBron consistently buys you with his kickouts. And honestly, most of it is just his unusually explosive tendons and ligaments. Sometimes when you play ball with guys or even younger kids that are more explosive than you, there's times you can tell from the weight of the pass you catch that this person is able to put a different level of zip on that ball that you're not gonna be able to replicate. Some young guys I've seen that do have comparable zip to LeBron are Simmons and Lonzo coincidentally. Those 2 just have great pop to their passes, it's great to see.

So while Jokic has many things in his favor, from a mechanical efficiency standpoint you're just not gonna get a guy that can create wide open shots at the same rate because some of the exact same passes that a Luka, Harden (although his zip is comparable), or Jokic throw just doesn't create a look that's as open because the defender has an extra split second to recover due to the decreased velocity.

That's why Magic is the GOAT and will be for a while, because he had a comparable amount of arm talent to LeBron in terms of the speed at which some of his catchable passes zipped to teammates; but he also had a different energy and natural sense about his passing that's rarely seen. But that's how it goes ya know, if Ricky Rubio had even James Hardens arm talent he'd be the best passer in the league lol.


Great, great points. The think about Jokic is that he inspires proactivity in his teammates whereas most heliocentric guys - of which LeBron is the alpha and omega - tend to induce passivity. And part of why AD is so impressive here is that this isn't what's happening with him, but he's the exception to the rule.

This also hearkens back to the Walton Blazers where his teammates were just playing better because of the scheme the Blazers played under Ramsay, which was cut heavy.

I think it's worth noting that on a certain level there's nothing new or gimmicky about this. This is basically how the Original Celtics played back in the 20s, and I basically have zero doubt that it could still be basically the dominant form of offense in the modern game if it wasn't such a lost art. You don't need a Jokic level big man passer to implement it, it's simply that if you recognize what Jokic can do, you end up re-creating.

Any way, I would tend to say that I include the effect of a player's passing on his teammates on his passing ability. There's actually a phrase for this: He doesn't pass you the ball where you are, he passes it where you need to go. I first heard this about Meadowlark Lemon of the Harlem Globetrotters, and have heard anecdotes back down from Nash's college years that he would do this on the regular. I think that this cut system Denver runs basically ends up allowing Jokic to train his teammates to be more effective, and this is not how I see LeBronball.
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3228 » by freethedevil » Mon Sep 14, 2020 3:07 pm

On lebron jokic, the tldr for me is this:

Jokci has better vision, iq, shot selection, ect, but Lebron is able to compensate for most of this via athelecism. His strength and the speed of his passes makes up for not seeing all the openings jokic can
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3229 » by MyUniBroDavis » Mon Sep 14, 2020 8:29 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
I mean, the Lakers hired Walton as coach with him pitching them on a motion offense that resembled Kerr's Warriors and Phil's Lakers. The moment LeBron announced he was coming, we all thought "Well, LeBron's not going to want to do that and there's not much point to Luke as coach then, so they should probably just fired Luke now." And that's totally what happened. Luke, like all the other players, were basically powerless in LeBron's wake.

Look: I wouldn't be so hard on LeBron here if I didn't have so much confidence in his floor raising abilities. He joined a team that won 35 games the year before and they were basically a .500 team when he played. I understand there were other lineup differences, but this is LeBron. He's made a habit of lifting mediocre talent to 60 wins. He didn't show the ability to do anything like that last year, and while chalk some of that up to not being 100%, I just never got that "We're going to go hard every damn game!" edge from him that I've seen from him in many years.


Waltons offense system in 2018 pre lebron was pretty much worst in the league as well though, and it was as bad in 2019. It wasnt bad in the sense that it just didnt put the players in correct positions although it didnt but they didnt have a list of non high school level set plays iirc

Like cranjis literally made a tier list of coaches schemes and had like a gap at the bottom and below that put luke tier or something lol, he sold himself as one thing and completely failed at it, although alot of it was murmeys

Hes been better in the kings i think system wise but it doesnt change that it was horrible with the lakers. Theres an idea that lue just said lol give it to lebron and leave in the cavs vut their offensive system as a whole was probably better than the current lakers

Luke getting fired was the best thing to happen to the lakers, like genuinly would lose 4th pikc from last year vs another year of luke


Feels like you're moving the goalpost of conversation here.

You blame Walton for not creating a more positive culture, I point out that only LeBron sets culture on his teams and that Walton made no sense once LeBron got there, now you're getting into Xs and Os. I'm not saying Walton should still be the Lakers coach, I'm just pointing out that LeBron never, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever gets to hide behind a coach when it comes to passing blame for culture. LeBron sets his team culture, always, for good and for ill.


Oh i was only talking about them playing .500 bball with him on the floor and stuff lol. In terms of culture and stuff, i mean weve never heard anything bad about him in la and i dont see how he handled anything badly though
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3230 » by Heej » Mon Sep 14, 2020 11:07 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
Heej wrote:In regards to LeBron and Jokic's passing it's a fascinating debate. I think Jokic is clearly one of those guys that inspires people to cut and he has incredible touch, timing, and accuracy with his passing. Personally, I think football terms are the best way for me to sum up my thoughts on the matter. And what I'm gonna go with is that LeBron has the GOAT arm talent in NBA history.

Arm talent in NFL terms being the power and accuracy a quarterback can get on their throws. It doesn't have anything to do with vision or progressing through your reads or whatever, just which guy can hit the bullseye and throw a ball thru sheetrock kinda deal. Jokic has exceptional arm talent, especially with his shorter range passes to cutters and his outlets; but the one thing no one in this league has managed to come close to LeBron in is the zip that he has on his passes to spot up shooters. Even watching a guy like Luka who can make the same skip passes, he throws lofty lobs over defenses that allow an extra split second for the closeout to get there and either force the player to burp up a contested miss or record scratch the offense. LeBron throws MFin darts to those guys man.

No one else creates that same extra half second that LeBron consistently buys you with his kickouts. And honestly, most of it is just his unusually explosive tendons and ligaments. Sometimes when you play ball with guys or even younger kids that are more explosive than you, there's times you can tell from the weight of the pass you catch that this person is able to put a different level of zip on that ball that you're not gonna be able to replicate. Some young guys I've seen that do have comparable zip to LeBron are Simmons and Lonzo coincidentally. Those 2 just have great pop to their passes, it's great to see.

So while Jokic has many things in his favor, from a mechanical efficiency standpoint you're just not gonna get a guy that can create wide open shots at the same rate because some of the exact same passes that a Luka, Harden (although his zip is comparable), or Jokic throw just doesn't create a look that's as open because the defender has an extra split second to recover due to the decreased velocity.

That's why Magic is the GOAT and will be for a while, because he had a comparable amount of arm talent to LeBron in terms of the speed at which some of his catchable passes zipped to teammates; but he also had a different energy and natural sense about his passing that's rarely seen. But that's how it goes ya know, if Ricky Rubio had even James Hardens arm talent he'd be the best passer in the league lol.


Great, great points. The think about Jokic is that he inspires proactivity in his teammates whereas most heliocentric guys - of which LeBron is the alpha and omega - tend to induce passivity. And part of why AD is so impressive here is that this isn't what's happening with him, but he's the exception to the rule.

This also hearkens back to the Walton Blazers where his teammates were just playing better because of the scheme the Blazers played under Ramsay, which was cut heavy.

I think it's worth noting that on a certain level there's nothing new or gimmicky about this. This is basically how the Original Celtics played back in the 20s, and I basically have zero doubt that it could still be basically the dominant form of offense in the modern game if it wasn't such a lost art. You don't need a Jokic level big man passer to implement it, it's simply that if you recognize what Jokic can do, you end up re-creating.

Any way, I would tend to say that I include the effect of a player's passing on his teammates on his passing ability. There's actually a phrase for this: He doesn't pass you the ball where you are, he passes it where you need to go. I first heard this about Meadowlark Lemon of the Harlem Globetrotters, and have heard anecdotes back down from Nash's college years that he would do this on the regular. I think that this cut system Denver runs basically ends up allowing Jokic to train his teammates to be more effective, and this is not how I see LeBronball.

I love LeBron but the inspiring passivity line for damn sure can happen occasionally, but let's not act like he doesn't also empower guys as well. Part of me thinks you're a liiittle harsh on Lebron due to having your own ideas about how basketball should be played, and I think you've alluded to as much in threads during previous years. From what I've seen, it's not that the dude necessarily wants to be heliocentric. It's just that he's just so damn good at it there's really no need to game system buckets a lot of the time in the eyes of coaching staffs that have limited resources to allocate to team development.

But there's been plenty of times over the years where he's happily ceded control to other ballhandlers. And we've clearly seen in Miami that with a high level offensive coach and roster in place LeBron can function very well within a systematic structure, esp when their identity crystallized in 2014 and he was leading the league in corner 3P% for a while. I'm assuming your part about throwing people open is more about the energy of the team as opposed to LeBron's actual ability to throw people open by leading them into open spaces (which we all know he does with regularity).

But from what I've seen he's only been under 1 gifted offensive coach and that's Spo. And while he was under Spo he fit in perfectly as the major cog in the machine as opposed to being the machine itself. Every other coach he's played with basically just hadn't implemented a great offensive system at any point in their career. Walton just kept the engine going on what Kerr built. Even Ty Lue talked a big game about finally having a system in place now that LeBron is gone and he got fired like 9 games into the season cuz the team was sputtering. Some coaches are just built different in terms of how quickly they can get their team up to speed with an offense while still giving the appropriate attention to installing their defense.

I'd be more inclined to blame LeBron's lack of system buckets throughout his career on his perceived toxicity as a teammate if it weren't for Spo kinda poking a hole in that idea. It just seems you need a really good offense to surpass what LeBron can generate and once you've proven you can't actually install that kind of offense in time for a playoff run LeBron just defauts back to his comfort zone. Cuz if Lebron is willing to screen and roll HARD for Matthew F***in Dellavedova while he handles the rock I don't think it's a case of unwillingness as much as LeBron not seeing many players as worthy of the responsibility or having learned the scripted read and react portions of playcalls well enough.

If anything the main issue is that LeBron requires his teammates to earn his trust in that regard, while perhaps someone like Jokic starts off with the baseline that he automatically trusts you to make plays the same way Mike D'Antoni appears to. Perhaps the former mindset is just a little irksome to you, especially if you've hooped a lot and seen the destructive effects of people playing with guys that don't trust them; but let's not go too overboard and paint LeBron as a guy who's a "my way or the highway" type when he's shown a lot of flexibility throughout his career. And sometimes the team culture being heliocentric isn't a case of LeBron outright rebelling as much as it is the offense being installed just isn't getting buckets at the rate that it needs to.

Like in the case of Luke Walton, like my dude ran his UCLA offense with 4 guys above the free throw line and hardly utilized any of the valuable real estate in the corner. Like wtf is anyone supposed to do with that lol. After a while when it gets to nut crunching time in the 4th quarter and this flawed offense isn't getting good looks, you're naturally gonna default to "everyone get the **** out the way and lemme bum hunt to close this game" and then you try again next game to get a little bit better. And you do that night in and night out and you find that teammates aren't flashing to spots early enough to get to the trigger points in your sets, or guys have to be directed where to go and now there's 15 seconds on the shot clock and you're trying to manufacture some busted set against a primed defense. And every night as the season goes on you find that the stuff just isn't being drilled into certain players' heads when all the coaching staff have for time to do it is during film sessions and shootaround since most teams don't practice much during the season unless they have like 3 days off. So every night you're just banging your head against the wall and barely making any progress and half the team doesn't believe in what the coaching staff is preaching and everyone just naturally drifts towards spacing out and letting you handle a spread PnR and you got guys calling you selfish and unable to fit in.

I understand that's a very convoluted example but like this is what these guys deal with when you have a low level coaching staff that's bad at teaching and a handful of guys on your team that aren't the sharpest tools in the shed and occasionally forget stuff while they're out there because they're nervous and their brain goes into autopilot cuz the game is starting to get too fast for them. It's up to coaching staffs to prepare these guys just as much as it's on LeBron to inspire them ya know.
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3231 » by MyUniBroDavis » Tue Sep 15, 2020 2:32 am

freethedevil wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
freethedevil wrote:The 18-19 lakers started, like all first year lebron teams, badly, and then started winning at a 60 win pace giving them the 4th seed and putting them on pace for 50 wins. Thne lbron got injured. Then rondo got injured. Then lonzo got injured Then ingram got injured.

Lakers were a solid team, then everyone got injured. Lebron's response off the court was prettty disappointing, but the lakers failures really aren't that deep. They got injured. When healthy they were a good team despite atrocious fit and roster construction.


That doesnt change that the lakers playbook was a below average high school one lol

No, but it kinda nips any on court criticismm in the bud.


Huh? I dont think its a criticism of lebron that the lakers scheme failed him. The offense never ended up clicking which is what mostpeople talk about when they say lebrons a floor raiser, they were league average ish pre warriors game

(This years lakers were top 3 pre bubble)
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3232 » by Doctor MJ » Tue Sep 15, 2020 3:24 am

Heej wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
Heej wrote:In regards to LeBron and Jokic's passing it's a fascinating debate. I think Jokic is clearly one of those guys that inspires people to cut and he has incredible touch, timing, and accuracy with his passing. Personally, I think football terms are the best way for me to sum up my thoughts on the matter. And what I'm gonna go with is that LeBron has the GOAT arm talent in NBA history.

Arm talent in NFL terms being the power and accuracy a quarterback can get on their throws. It doesn't have anything to do with vision or progressing through your reads or whatever, just which guy can hit the bullseye and throw a ball thru sheetrock kinda deal. Jokic has exceptional arm talent, especially with his shorter range passes to cutters and his outlets; but the one thing no one in this league has managed to come close to LeBron in is the zip that he has on his passes to spot up shooters. Even watching a guy like Luka who can make the same skip passes, he throws lofty lobs over defenses that allow an extra split second for the closeout to get there and either force the player to burp up a contested miss or record scratch the offense. LeBron throws MFin darts to those guys man.

No one else creates that same extra half second that LeBron consistently buys you with his kickouts. And honestly, most of it is just his unusually explosive tendons and ligaments. Sometimes when you play ball with guys or even younger kids that are more explosive than you, there's times you can tell from the weight of the pass you catch that this person is able to put a different level of zip on that ball that you're not gonna be able to replicate. Some young guys I've seen that do have comparable zip to LeBron are Simmons and Lonzo coincidentally. Those 2 just have great pop to their passes, it's great to see.

So while Jokic has many things in his favor, from a mechanical efficiency standpoint you're just not gonna get a guy that can create wide open shots at the same rate because some of the exact same passes that a Luka, Harden (although his zip is comparable), or Jokic throw just doesn't create a look that's as open because the defender has an extra split second to recover due to the decreased velocity.

That's why Magic is the GOAT and will be for a while, because he had a comparable amount of arm talent to LeBron in terms of the speed at which some of his catchable passes zipped to teammates; but he also had a different energy and natural sense about his passing that's rarely seen. But that's how it goes ya know, if Ricky Rubio had even James Hardens arm talent he'd be the best passer in the league lol.


Great, great points. The think about Jokic is that he inspires proactivity in his teammates whereas most heliocentric guys - of which LeBron is the alpha and omega - tend to induce passivity. And part of why AD is so impressive here is that this isn't what's happening with him, but he's the exception to the rule.

This also hearkens back to the Walton Blazers where his teammates were just playing better because of the scheme the Blazers played under Ramsay, which was cut heavy.

I think it's worth noting that on a certain level there's nothing new or gimmicky about this. This is basically how the Original Celtics played back in the 20s, and I basically have zero doubt that it could still be basically the dominant form of offense in the modern game if it wasn't such a lost art. You don't need a Jokic level big man passer to implement it, it's simply that if you recognize what Jokic can do, you end up re-creating.

Any way, I would tend to say that I include the effect of a player's passing on his teammates on his passing ability. There's actually a phrase for this: He doesn't pass you the ball where you are, he passes it where you need to go. I first heard this about Meadowlark Lemon of the Harlem Globetrotters, and have heard anecdotes back down from Nash's college years that he would do this on the regular. I think that this cut system Denver runs basically ends up allowing Jokic to train his teammates to be more effective, and this is not how I see LeBronball.

I love LeBron but the inspiring passivity line for damn sure can happen occasionally, but let's not act like he doesn't also empower guys as well. Part of me thinks you're a liiittle harsh on Lebron due to having your own ideas about how basketball should be played, and I think you've alluded to as much in threads during previous years. From what I've seen, it's not that the dude necessarily wants to be heliocentric. It's just that he's just so damn good at it there's really no need to game system buckets a lot of the time in the eyes of coaching staffs that have limited resources to allocate to team development.

But there's been plenty of times over the years where he's happily ceded control to other ballhandlers. And we've clearly seen in Miami that with a high level offensive coach and roster in place LeBron can function very well within a systematic structure, esp when their identity crystallized in 2014 and he was leading the league in corner 3P% for a while. I'm assuming your part about throwing people open is more about the energy of the team as opposed to LeBron's actual ability to throw people open by leading them into open spaces (which we all know he does with regularity).

But from what I've seen he's only been under 1 gifted offensive coach and that's Spo. And while he was under Spo he fit in perfectly as the major cog in the machine as opposed to being the machine itself. Every other coach he's played with basically just hadn't implemented a great offensive system at any point in their career. Walton just kept the engine going on what Kerr built. Even Ty Lue talked a big game about finally having a system in place now that LeBron is gone and he got fired like 9 games into the season cuz the team was sputtering. Some coaches are just built different in terms of how quickly they can get their team up to speed with an offense while still giving the appropriate attention to installing their defense.

I'd be more inclined to blame LeBron's lack of system buckets throughout his career on his perceived toxicity as a teammate if it weren't for Spo kinda poking a hole in that idea. It just seems you need a really good offense to surpass what LeBron can generate and once you've proven you can't actually install that kind of offense in time for a playoff run LeBron just defauts back to his comfort zone. Cuz if Lebron is willing to screen and roll HARD for Matthew F***in Dellavedova while he handles the rock I don't think it's a case of unwillingness as much as LeBron not seeing many players as worthy of the responsibility or having learned the scripted read and react portions of playcalls well enough.

If anything the main issue is that LeBron requires his teammates to earn his trust in that regard, while perhaps someone like Jokic starts off with the baseline that he automatically trusts you to make plays the same way Mike D'Antoni appears to. Perhaps the former mindset is just a little irksome to you, especially if you've hooped a lot and seen the destructive effects of people playing with guys that don't trust them; but let's not go too overboard and paint LeBron as a guy who's a "my way or the highway" type when he's shown a lot of flexibility throughout his career. And sometimes the team culture being heliocentric isn't a case of LeBron outright rebelling as much as it is the offense being installed just isn't getting buckets at the rate that it needs to.

Like in the case of Luke Walton, like my dude ran his UCLA offense with 4 guys above the free throw line and hardly utilized any of the valuable real estate in the corner. Like wtf is anyone supposed to do with that lol. After a while when it gets to nut crunching time in the 4th quarter and this flawed offense isn't getting good looks, you're naturally gonna default to "everyone get the **** out the way and lemme bum hunt to close this game" and then you try again next game to get a little bit better. And you do that night in and night out and you find that teammates aren't flashing to spots early enough to get to the trigger points in your sets, or guys have to be directed where to go and now there's 15 seconds on the shot clock and you're trying to manufacture some busted set against a primed defense. And every night as the season goes on you find that the stuff just isn't being drilled into certain players' heads when all the coaching staff have for time to do it is during film sessions and shootaround since most teams don't practice much during the season unless they have like 3 days off. So every night you're just banging your head against the wall and barely making any progress and half the team doesn't believe in what the coaching staff is preaching and everyone just naturally drifts towards spacing out and letting you handle a spread PnR and you got guys calling you selfish and unable to fit in.

I understand that's a very convoluted example but like this is what these guys deal with when you have a low level coaching staff that's bad at teaching and a handful of guys on your team that aren't the sharpest tools in the shed and occasionally forget stuff while they're out there because they're nervous and their brain goes into autopilot cuz the game is starting to get too fast for them. It's up to coaching staffs to prepare these guys just as much as it's on LeBron to inspire them ya know.


Great post.

Here's my clarification: I don't fault guys like LeBron because the way his game maps to the team game tends to induce passivity in other, but I do recognize the effect and pay attention to how the star handles such circumstances.

I give Jokic the nod on passing and do give Jokic some credit for the proactivity he inspires, but I also give credit to LeBron for being an all-around superhuman. To this point - and still at this time - I consider LeBron at his best the better offensive player despite acknowledging edges for Jokic.

Where you sense my frustration with LeBron is with the fact that I've seen him act out of frustration at the victims of his towering shadow. And as someone born and raised an Angeleno Laker fan, I felt this tenfold with Kobe. When a natural by-product of your optimized-for-your-own-glory game results in you acting like a petulant bully, I notice. I notice while recognizing that this is a very common human reaction and that i'm not immune from it myself, but the fact that I recognize I'm not necessarily any better doesn't change the fact that it's as a negative thing.
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3233 » by freethedevil » Tue Sep 15, 2020 3:43 pm

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
freethedevil wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
That doesnt change that the lakers playbook was a below average high school one lol

No, but it kinda nips any on court criticismm in the bud.


Huh? I dont think its a criticism of lebron that the lakers scheme failed him. The offense never ended up clicking which is what mostpeople talk about when they say lebrons a floor raiser, they were league average ish pre warriors game

(This years lakers were top 3 pre bubble)

well the 18-19 lakers roster was pretty slatned towards defense.
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3234 » by MyUniBroDavis » Tue Sep 15, 2020 3:52 pm

freethedevil wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
freethedevil wrote:No, but it kinda nips any on court criticismm in the bud.


Huh? I dont think its a criticism of lebron that the lakers scheme failed him. The offense never ended up clicking which is what mostpeople talk about when they say lebrons a floor raiser, they were league average ish pre warriors game

(This years lakers were top 3 pre bubble)

well the 18-19 lakers roster was pretty slatned towards defense.


But they fully should have been better on offense if walton wasnt coaching them. I mean because theyre players were specialized you have put them in the right position but they werent.
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3235 » by freethedevil » Tue Sep 15, 2020 4:00 pm

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
freethedevil wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Huh? I dont think its a criticism of lebron that the lakers scheme failed him. The offense never ended up clicking which is what mostpeople talk about when they say lebrons a floor raiser, they were league average ish pre warriors game

(This years lakers were top 3 pre bubble)

well the 18-19 lakers roster was pretty slatned towards defense.


But they fully should have been better on offense if walton wasnt coaching them. I mean because theyre players were specialized you have put them in the right position but they werent.

I agree. Was just saying 18-19 doesn't really hold up as a criticism of lebron's floor raising skills. The team was pretty good despite wonky construction and dubious coaching before basically everyone got injured. Furthermore prior to the wheels falling off lebron was considered one of the frontrunners for the mvp with advanced stats showing him pretty close to giannis. TBF, this was before harden's and the rocket's resurgence.
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3236 » by MyUniBroDavis » Tue Sep 15, 2020 4:16 pm

freethedevil wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
freethedevil wrote:well the 18-19 lakers roster was pretty slatned towards defense.


But they fully should have been better on offense if walton wasnt coaching them. I mean because theyre players were specialized you have put them in the right position but they werent.

I agree. Was just saying 18-19 doesn't really hold up as a criticism of lebron's floor raising skills. The team was pretty good despite wonky construction and dubious coaching before basically everyone got injured. Furthermore prior to the wheels falling off lebron was considered one of the frontrunners for the mvp with advanced stats showing him pretty close to giannis. TBF, this was before harden's and the rocket's resurgence.


Oh lol i mean i dont recall saying that tho lmao ive literally just been saying walton sucked

On lebron floor raising, i do think that lebrons floor raising is more based off of pieces around him that arent super talented but can make fit together if they fit around him

I dont know how lebron would do in a bad team of disjointed parts for example
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3237 » by freethedevil » Tue Sep 15, 2020 4:20 pm

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
freethedevil wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
But they fully should have been better on offense if walton wasnt coaching them. I mean because theyre players were specialized you have put them in the right position but they werent.

I agree. Was just saying 18-19 doesn't really hold up as a criticism of lebron's floor raising skills. The team was pretty good despite wonky construction and dubious coaching before basically everyone got injured. Furthermore prior to the wheels falling off lebron was considered one of the frontrunners for the mvp with advanced stats showing him pretty close to giannis. TBF, this was before harden's and the rocket's resurgence.


Oh lol i mean i dont recall saying that tho lmao ive literally just been saying walton sucked

On lebron floor raising, i do think that lebrons floor raising is more based off of pieces around him that arent super talented but can make fit together if they fit around him

I dont know how lebron would do in a bad team of disjointed parts for example

Oh, it wasn't you, mj doc alluded to lebron failing on court as well, and i said that doesn't make much sense if you consider the lakers were fine before literally everyone got injured,
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3238 » by Clyde Frazier » Tue Sep 15, 2020 10:35 pm

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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3239 » by MisterHibachi » Wed Sep 16, 2020 1:10 am

What an absolutely embarrassing flop by Smart and even worse that the refs fell for it. This shouldn't be going to OT.
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Re: 2019-20 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#3240 » by MisterHibachi » Wed Sep 16, 2020 1:25 am

Butler is just undeniable this year. I feel the Heat are gonna win the championship.
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