gandlogo wrote:Still chortling over a lot of the reactions. 1985 called and it wants its power forward back. This game - like the vast majority of games in the NBA - was decided by shooting and spacing. Other than when the Nets dragged out the LaMarcusaurus, they initiated offense outside the arc and buried threes at a terrific rate or penetrated because help had to stay out on the shooters. If KAT boxes out Claxton the first two possessions are empty chances for the Nets. Clearly adding a plodder to chase on the perimeter would have helped (green font not used, but implied). Let's not forget that Denver - despite starting one of the biggest frontcourts in the NBA - still jacked up 58 threes against the Wolves last week. I'm more concerned about Beasley's shot selection - figuring his legs (and stroke) will eventually return.
The reasoning for a traditional-sized PF is not mainly for defensive purposes against traditional-sized PFs, it is for rebounding. F. e. Simmons would be a PF with legit size to help us not get outrebounded every game, while still being able to defend all positions. Larry Nance could've been smth like that too, with less spectacular results on switches on the perimeter.
I didn't see anybody arguing for a bigger PF because of some 1 on 1 PF defense on this board, so you're not making a counter-point to anybody here really.
But you're right, a lot of teams succeed while having a very small PF and sacrificing rebounding because of that, but PFs on those teams do a lot of stuff that our projected small PF's don't, i. e. shoot 3s at like 38+%, attack the rim, create for themselves and others etc.