DarkXaero wrote:NyCeEvO wrote:DarkXaero wrote:I actually do not agree with this at all. It's actually the opposite, ISO offense becomes more valuable as teams go deeper into playoffs.
You’ve created a straw man. I did not say ISO offense becomes less valuable as the playoffs go on.
The best teams almost always have the best creators. I’ve always championed the belief that you need ISO players (especially those adept at drawing fouls) who can get you points when your regular sets aren’t working.
What I am saying is that you’re supposed to turn to ISO after your sets don’t work.
My issue is not that we that ISO, but rather that we go straight to ISO before even running full plays.
I'm not even disagreeing with you on the current problems with our offense. I agree with the point that we're relying on isos before even running full plays. But I cannot agree with the implication that iso offense cannot work, especially in the latter stages of the playoffs against better defenses. When its playoffs time, all these teams already know what the other team is running. As they get deeper into the post season, the attention to detail increases, and the defensive intensity becomes greater, teams' playbooks often go out the window. That's where ISO offense value still remains in an era of analytics driven ball.
Again, I don’t disagree with anything you’re saying and I don’t think what you’re saying goes against what I’ve said.
In fact, many times when sets are working, teams will go ISO to throw the opposition off, which in turn loosens up the defense, and allows the team to go back to their sets again. The relationship between ISOs and set plays is definitely symbiotic. I’m not saying ISOs aren’t valuable or shouldn’t be relied upon. As the playoffs go on and you face tougher defenses, you will need to ISO more and more often.
What I am saying though is that if all you run are ISOs and no actual sets, teams will adjust to that as well. ISOs can become highly inefficient offense if they aren’t properly counter-balanced by good plays. And some of the best ISOs come when a player breaks off a play to isolate against a mismatch that was initially setup by the actions from a play.
Also, just because both teams know what the other teams sets are doesn’t mean that they stop running those sets. They still run their plays. Each action within a play usually has a few options anyway, so it’s not like if a player misses a cutter that they should’ve passed the ball to that the play is over.