Doctor MJ wrote:bondom34 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
A lot of truth this, though I don't know if it's a trap or just the Bucks not being fundamentally very good at "moving the ball", also known as passing.
The Bucks have 3 guys who get major assists on the team, and none of them are guys who should be your main assist guy on a great offensive team. They just don't have that floor general vision, nor the ability to consistently adapt adroitly and make heady plays.
So I'd say with the Bucks we saw essentially the perfect team to make the Nets look good on defense, which doesn't bode well for the Bucks when they face teams that are better equipped to do what even the Nets were able to do defensively.
But hey, I'd agree that if we start seeing the Bucks adapt with an offense where the ball flows across the court - the beautiful game rather than the ugly one we've seen - that would change things.
Yep, think this is the chicken or the egg a little bit. Did the offense fall off because the Nets were good at it, or because the Bucks fell into a trap (or a combination of both)? Ultimately it's a bit of why I still struggle trusting the Bucks entirely, they feel a little like a slightly more trustworthy version of the Sixers in some regards.
Also a bit like the Houston/GSW matchup from a few years ago with the Warriors falling into Houston's defensive strengths.
Well, I do think that the use of switches tends to induce iso play, and thus a stagnant, swampy offense. In this sense you could call what's happening a trap, but it's not a trap that I see as pertaining to specific defensive teams. It's just something that might make a coach scream "Keep the ball moving!" in any given game. The Nets are probably aware that teams falling into stagnancy is a possible advantage of their scheme, but their scheme is also one of "just getting by how we can".
It's within the realm of possibility that the Bucks are able to come into future series saying "Remember what happened against Brooklyn, gotta keep the ball moving" and this changes everything. Teams learn from their past mistakes after all, which is why prediction is so hard.
But just seeing what we've seen so far from the Bucks offense, I'm concerned. Going into the Nets series I said something like "Bucks going to lose again, but Giannis might average 40 per game". It's nice the Bucks won, but I was expecting their offense to be able to do more (and granted, their defense played particularly well, which may carry them to the chip).
Was Brooklyn switch heavy? I was under the impression they weren't switching, it was just stagnant offense and they didn't require it. I'd expect them to struggle a good bit more with that type of defense than straight 1 on 1.
Saying all this, I absolutely could see the Bucks winning the title. They've got the talent, I don't question if they have the right fit for it either. I could talk myself into either them or the Suns on any given day.







































