2021-22 NBA Season Discussion

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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1601 » by Colbinii » Mon Mar 7, 2022 8:04 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
Colbinii wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
Putting aside from the fact that the team was clearly playing very differently in the Oubre/Wiseman era, the bigger issue I have with your statement is this idea that the coach has some static impact on his team.

When a team improves as a result of player development - which includes training players on how to play within the team's schemes - that's precisely what a coach and his staff are trying to do over time. Hence, while I would argue that basically all of us underestimated Kerr because we didn't expect this sort of player development, you're giving the impression that you underestimated Kerr because it didn't occur to you that a coach could develop his players.

I'm skeptical you actually believe this.


I would give most of the player development credit to Ken Atkinson who has shown a tremendous ability at developing young talent [D'Angelo Russell/Caris LaVert and Trae Mann prior to this season].

I would give Kerr credit in identifying and allowing Atkinson to be part of the coaching staff and give him full reigns on the player development of the younger players.


An understandable perspective, and certainly I think a team should be hiring Atkinson as their head coach next year (never should have been fired by the Nets.)

However:

We're not talking simply about players learning skills in isolation. These aren't kids, and we're not talking about guys just becoming better shooters (a la Chip Engelland on the Spurs). We're talking about professional athletes learning how to play in a) a motion offense (influenced by Kerr's time with Phil Jackson in Chicago) built around having one (or two, when Klay's health) outlier shooters, and b) a defensive scheme built around aggressive team play and communication (influenced by Kerr's time with Lute Olson at Arizona).

None of this means that when players get traction on how to play within these schemes that all the coaching credit goes to the head coach who originally brought these ideas into Golden State, but we're definitely not talking about a situation where the coaching staff had no ability to help players get better at basketball before Atkinson showed up. I think Atkinson deserves some credit, I think Adams deserves credit as always, it's clear that Brown is particularly revered by the players for his defensive mind, and on top of that I think it's very clear that the team leadership (Green, Iguodala, Curry) have been vital to this sort of improvement as well. In general, it's the sort of thing that you hope to see with team continuity where it's not so much that anyone is "making" the new guys figure stuff out, but that the new guys come to master the schemes with time based on their own continued efforts augmented by the help from the team leaders who already have this stuff on lock.

On Kerr specifically, something I'll say:

When GS first hired Kerr and hired Gentry as an offensive coach, I said "Should be flipped, Gentry is the more deserving head coach, Kerr needs more experience." I came to change my tune because over time it's just become clear that Gentry really isn't an offensive visionary, he's just a guy who has successfully run some offensive schemes. Kerr was the one with the vision - which is why he got the job - and he finds guys to come in on to his staff who can help with specific things. While those other guys deserve credit, I don't think it makes sense to talk as if Kerr's not the one running the show from what I've seen over the years.


This is all true and what HeartBreakKid is saying is true.

Kerr has a system and if you are a player who is unwilling to fit into the system then you can grab the next bus out of Golden State. This fact doesn't make Kerr a great coach and doesn't make Kerr a bad coach.

Kerr is the visionary and was gifted quite literally the perfect basketball player ever to fit into and dominate in his system. We have seen players who struggled to make rotations elsewhere flourish in Golden State and we have seen players who are quality NBA rotation players struggle in Golden State.

D'Angelo Russell and Craig Finch are an example of how Steve Kerr failed.
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1602 » by sp6r=underrated » Mon Mar 7, 2022 8:08 pm

Totally Random, stray thought: We talk a lot about overrated/underrated players. Leaving aside the total extremes, Lebron on end guys on the ten day contract on the other, I was trying to figure out who was the most perfectly rated player out of all the guys I've followed in the NBA since I started watching decades ago. I concluded it was Paul Pierce.

He grades out as a secondary star, 8-12 guy in the league, no matter the criteria you pick.

If you look at his basic stats, advanced stats, all-star games, All-NBA/MVP vote totals, team success it all grades out the same. It also matches the subjective impression I always got from how he was regarded by his peers and fans, a damn good player you want on your team but was never really in consideration for best in the league.
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1603 » by Doctor MJ » Mon Mar 7, 2022 8:38 pm

HeartBreakKid wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
HeartBreakKid wrote:
The Warriors were underrated this year because they did not do well last year with a similar roster and the same coach.


Putting aside from the fact that the team was clearly playing very differently in the Oubre/Wiseman era, the bigger issue I have with your statement is this idea that the coach has some static impact on his team.

When a team improves as a result of player development - which includes training players on how to play within the team's schemes - that's precisely what a coach and his staff are trying to do over time. Hence, while I would argue that basically all of us underestimated Kerr because we didn't expect this sort of player development, you're giving the impression that you underestimated Kerr because it didn't occur to you that a coach could develop his players.

I'm skeptical you actually believe this.


Or maybe the players just got better, independent of our white savior Steve Kerr. I'm a little tired of the whole "oh this guy is only good cause this guy coached him" thing. Players train on their own and improve on their own. Steve Kerr is not their personal trainer, you're saying he did something he did not do.

The premise is still flawed. You're trying to say "you thought the Warriors wouldn't be that good this season therefore Kerr is underrated" - but the entire basis for why people thought the Warriors were not going to be good this year was because they weren't very good last year...there's a logic chain there that is broken.

You could just as easily say that Kerr underachieved with his team last year and that the Warriors are more talented than we thought (which is actually true, they are better than we thought).



I mean the real reason why people thought the Warriors wouldn't be good is because the core players are in their 30s and one of them was injured (Klay). Two of their starters Poole and Wiggins improved, people seldom take into account improvement from non-stars. Jordan Poole did not improve because Steve Kerr trained him, he improved because he is 22 years old.



And this also goes back that none of this is even relevant to "Steve Kerr is not underrated". Steve Kerr has been cited as one of the best coaches in the league every year since he has been coaching....that's not even hyperbole, literally since his first year.

Saying Steve Kerr is underrated is like saying Kobe Bryant is underrated. What's next, we're going to start saying old, rich white guys have it the hardest in America? Let's save the underrated arguments for coaches who are actually overlooked and seldom praised - which are most coaches.


"Did you think the Warriors would be that good this year" - did you think the Grizzlies, Cavs and Bulls would be as good as they are? Do they have top ten all time coaches as well?


Whoa.

So first:

You're not giving a basketball explanation when you say "or maybe the players just got better". You're saying "whatever happened with the basketball, let's assume it had absolutely nothing to do with the coaching staff who are paid to help players get better". You're not giving any answer to how it actually happened - your explanation is completely devoid of basketball insight - you just giving a simple hand-waving argument and saying "Case closed!" while at the same time alleging that those who are actually thinking about basketball have some cynical, racial motivation.

To be clear, while you seem to think I'm saying the same thing in reverse, I'm absolutely not. I'm looking at how the Warriors have improved, and asking myself what the likely role each employee played in that total improvement. The players who improve always, always, ALWAYS deserve credit...but that doesn't mean that the coaches don't.

The thing that's specifically interesting about the Warriors is that they play quite differently from anyone else in the NBA, and so we need to ask ourselves how they are getting their players to master the unique skillsets that only the Warriors really need these guys to play. And here's the thing:

If it turns out that it's so easy to learn how to play the GS way that anyone can figure it out without the help of direct coaching...then that actually goes right back to the person who first set up the schemes, which is the head coach, Steve Kerr.

Let's note specifically though that this is kind of the opposite of what is typically allege about motion offenses. I cannot tell you how many times I've seen people say "Yeah, but they need smart players, which means it's harder to build around compared to heliocentric offenses that really only require 1 brain to be on the court." Not saying this was ever my perspective, but I think people should understand that if we're switching from a mindset of "Hard to train players on this" to "Players can figure it out themselves", then this makes it that much smarter to play motion offense in general, and it's an indication that the rest of the NBA should be doing more of it.

Second: Your use of "white savior" here is utterly ridiculous and tells us that you're thinking about this stuff not simply in terms of "Either Person X or Person Y deserves credit" (which is too simple-minded to yield real basketball insight) but based on assuming that you can use a coarse racial lens to understand what's going on in the mind of people who see things differently from you. While considering the racial lens in general makes sense in any context in our society, it becomes a horrible approach when you bypass actual analysis of the subject at hand (basketball) and choose a cynical caricature as a reason to ignore other people.

For the longest time I've said that I think Kerr did a horrible job as the GM of the Suns, and as I alluded to my post above I thought the Warriors should have hired Gentry rather than Kerr. The esteem with which I see Kerr's coaching performance in the time since isn't because I'm looking for a white guy to champion, but because I saw the drastic transformation of the team when he took over, and now because I've seen how the team is able to develop its role players so effectively within the schemes they have in place.

And yes that happened in his first year. When a coach comes in, changes how everything works, and the team goes from a 1st round exit to champs, that's what happens.

And to be clear: None of this means Kerr is my COY this year. Wouldn't be in my Top 3 at the moment in fact, because there are many impressive candidates. But yes, the way his role players have become as valuable as they have, while the players themselves deserve credit, and so do others on the staff, the head coach deserves credit too.

Re: "saying he's underrated is like saying Kobe is underrated". Perhaps, but the fact remains that if Kerr's teams overperform what you would predict, due to stuff happening in their ecosystem that you're not even looking for, you're literally underrating him. While I understand that you're thinking of "underrated" from a perspective of "Is this guy acknowledged to be great? Yes? Then he's getting plenty of love", that's not how to think about this stuff if you're wanting to really think about this stuff for yourself.

I have repeatedly underrated Kerr - even as I've been seen as one of the people highest on him - because he's been able to do things I did not realize he could do. In the end, that's what's real.

(Re: Top 10 all-time coaches Grizzlies, Cavs, Bulls. Stature like that comes with time, so obviously none of those guys are in those conversations. I would rank Jenkins ahead of Kerr in my COY to be clear, and I've been impressed by Donovan since his Florida days. I do think all 3 need to actually have some great all-season success before we get too excited, and while Jenkins seems poised for this, the other two are less clear. With Bickerstaff in Cleveland I'm super-excited for them going forward, but they have a long way to do. With Donovan in Chicago, the sad truth is that they may never actually be anything but a 1st round exit...which is about what was expected from them before the season.)

On Poole & Wiggins, I can't help but not that you don't even try to address why Wiggins got better. You're literally addressing only what you see as the simple answer on one of them, and then blowing right past the more interesting example that you yourself brought up.

Last:

To be clear, I do think that traditionally white coaches have had an easier time getting executive/media/fan respect than Black coaches and I don't want to come off like I don't think that's a thing. When I talk about taking issue with Gentry being Kerr's assistant, back when that happened, I brought up the racial concern myself.

But as real of a phenomenon as that is, in the end every individual is an individual. I've been quite critical of plenty of white coaches - didn't think Thibs should have even gotten much hype last year, think Bud is an absurdly rigid coach, and the nicest thing I can say about Nash's performance in Brooklyn is that I don't think bringing in a more experience coach makes sense when everyone in the organization kowtows to the diva superstars who don't actually want the coach to coach. Kerr however, has impressed me.

And of course, that not unrelated to the fact that the Warriors have impressed me so much as they've had the most dominant run since the Jordan Bulls. I've said repeatedly that I actually think every long-time member of the Warriors - Curry, Thompson, Green, Iguodala, and the coaches - are underrated due to a complicated interaction of default expectations and specific events that have left much of the smart basketball fans thinking about this most winning of teams as if they've been a disappointment.
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1604 » by Doctor MJ » Mon Mar 7, 2022 8:41 pm

sp6r=underrated wrote:Totally Random, stray thought: We talk a lot about overrated/underrated players. Leaving aside the total extremes, Lebron on end guys on the ten day contract on the other, I was trying to figure out who was the most perfectly rated player out of all the guys I've followed in the NBA since I started watching decades ago. I concluded it was Paul Pierce.

He grades out as a secondary star, 8-12 guy in the league, no matter the criteria you pick.

If you look at his basic stats, advanced stats, all-star games, All-NBA/MVP vote totals, team success it all grades out the same. It also matches the subjective impression I always got from how he was regarded by his peers and fans, a damn good player you want on your team but was never really in consideration for best in the league.


He's got a case. I'm not sure who I'd pick, but I do believe Pierce went from significantly underrated to a bit overrated as a result of the Big 3.
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1605 » by Doctor MJ » Mon Mar 7, 2022 8:46 pm

Colbinii wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
Colbinii wrote:
I would give most of the player development credit to Ken Atkinson who has shown a tremendous ability at developing young talent [D'Angelo Russell/Caris LaVert and Trae Mann prior to this season].

I would give Kerr credit in identifying and allowing Atkinson to be part of the coaching staff and give him full reigns on the player development of the younger players.


An understandable perspective, and certainly I think a team should be hiring Atkinson as their head coach next year (never should have been fired by the Nets.)

However:

We're not talking simply about players learning skills in isolation. These aren't kids, and we're not talking about guys just becoming better shooters (a la Chip Engelland on the Spurs). We're talking about professional athletes learning how to play in a) a motion offense (influenced by Kerr's time with Phil Jackson in Chicago) built around having one (or two, when Klay's health) outlier shooters, and b) a defensive scheme built around aggressive team play and communication (influenced by Kerr's time with Lute Olson at Arizona).

None of this means that when players get traction on how to play within these schemes that all the coaching credit goes to the head coach who originally brought these ideas into Golden State, but we're definitely not talking about a situation where the coaching staff had no ability to help players get better at basketball before Atkinson showed up. I think Atkinson deserves some credit, I think Adams deserves credit as always, it's clear that Brown is particularly revered by the players for his defensive mind, and on top of that I think it's very clear that the team leadership (Green, Iguodala, Curry) have been vital to this sort of improvement as well. In general, it's the sort of thing that you hope to see with team continuity where it's not so much that anyone is "making" the new guys figure stuff out, but that the new guys come to master the schemes with time based on their own continued efforts augmented by the help from the team leaders who already have this stuff on lock.

On Kerr specifically, something I'll say:

When GS first hired Kerr and hired Gentry as an offensive coach, I said "Should be flipped, Gentry is the more deserving head coach, Kerr needs more experience." I came to change my tune because over time it's just become clear that Gentry really isn't an offensive visionary, he's just a guy who has successfully run some offensive schemes. Kerr was the one with the vision - which is why he got the job - and he finds guys to come in on to his staff who can help with specific things. While those other guys deserve credit, I don't think it makes sense to talk as if Kerr's not the one running the show from what I've seen over the years.


This is all true and what HeartBreakKid is saying is true.

Kerr has a system and if you are a player who is unwilling to fit into the system then you can grab the next bus out of Golden State. This fact doesn't make Kerr a great coach and doesn't make Kerr a bad coach.

Kerr is the visionary and was gifted quite literally the perfect basketball player ever to fit into and dominate in his system. We have seen players who struggled to make rotations elsewhere flourish in Golden State and we have seen players who are quality NBA rotation players struggle in Golden State.

D'Angelo Russell and Craig Finch are an example of how Steve Kerr failed.


I think you definitely can talk about system-oriented coaches as guys who are flawed in the sense that they can only work with certain players.

However it also has to be understood that when you're not a star player, it's always your job to fit in with how the big dogs run. Maybe Kerr could have done good things with Russell if Russell was the franchise player he had to work with...but he wasn't.

Also, Craig Finch? Who?
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1606 » by Colbinii » Mon Mar 7, 2022 8:52 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
Colbinii wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
An understandable perspective, and certainly I think a team should be hiring Atkinson as their head coach next year (never should have been fired by the Nets.)

However:

We're not talking simply about players learning skills in isolation. These aren't kids, and we're not talking about guys just becoming better shooters (a la Chip Engelland on the Spurs). We're talking about professional athletes learning how to play in a) a motion offense (influenced by Kerr's time with Phil Jackson in Chicago) built around having one (or two, when Klay's health) outlier shooters, and b) a defensive scheme built around aggressive team play and communication (influenced by Kerr's time with Lute Olson at Arizona).

None of this means that when players get traction on how to play within these schemes that all the coaching credit goes to the head coach who originally brought these ideas into Golden State, but we're definitely not talking about a situation where the coaching staff had no ability to help players get better at basketball before Atkinson showed up. I think Atkinson deserves some credit, I think Adams deserves credit as always, it's clear that Brown is particularly revered by the players for his defensive mind, and on top of that I think it's very clear that the team leadership (Green, Iguodala, Curry) have been vital to this sort of improvement as well. In general, it's the sort of thing that you hope to see with team continuity where it's not so much that anyone is "making" the new guys figure stuff out, but that the new guys come to master the schemes with time based on their own continued efforts augmented by the help from the team leaders who already have this stuff on lock.

On Kerr specifically, something I'll say:

When GS first hired Kerr and hired Gentry as an offensive coach, I said "Should be flipped, Gentry is the more deserving head coach, Kerr needs more experience." I came to change my tune because over time it's just become clear that Gentry really isn't an offensive visionary, he's just a guy who has successfully run some offensive schemes. Kerr was the one with the vision - which is why he got the job - and he finds guys to come in on to his staff who can help with specific things. While those other guys deserve credit, I don't think it makes sense to talk as if Kerr's not the one running the show from what I've seen over the years.


This is all true and what HeartBreakKid is saying is true.

Kerr has a system and if you are a player who is unwilling to fit into the system then you can grab the next bus out of Golden State. This fact doesn't make Kerr a great coach and doesn't make Kerr a bad coach.

Kerr is the visionary and was gifted quite literally the perfect basketball player ever to fit into and dominate in his system. We have seen players who struggled to make rotations elsewhere flourish in Golden State and we have seen players who are quality NBA rotation players struggle in Golden State.

D'Angelo Russell and Craig Finch are an example of how Steve Kerr failed.


I think you definitely can talk about system-oriented coaches as guys who are flawed in the sense that they can only work with certain players.

However it also has to be understood that when you're not a star player, it's always your job to fit in with how the big dogs run. Maybe Kerr could have done good things with Russell if Russell was the franchise player he had to work with...but he wasn't.

Also, Craig Finch? Who?


Chris Finch**
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1607 » by Doctor MJ » Mon Mar 7, 2022 8:59 pm

HeartBreakKid wrote:
GSP wrote:
Colbinii wrote:
So Wiseman is the difference between a 30 win and 60 win team?


Elgee talked about this briefly on one of his vids and they were at a 43 win pace with Wiseman and 60 win pace without him. The pace without him matches up with the team this year TBH. Wiseman is a really talented player but a bad fit with the Warriors system.


Kerr was playing a player that bad on purpose?


The Warriors began last season with a player development mindset rather than a contending mindset. Oubre and Wiseman were handed the primacy they were because that was the level of role the Warriors were hoping they could grow into.

When those guys got hurt, the Warriors shifted toward just playing the best basketball they could, and the team played better.

I don't say any of this to defend the choices involved - I think there was good reason to think that Oubre was never going to be a team player, and that Wiseman wasn't anywhere near ready for the role they were hoping he could play - but that is what happened, and yes, it was clear that this was happening in real-time.
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1608 » by Doctor MJ » Mon Mar 7, 2022 9:09 pm

Colbinii wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
Colbinii wrote:
This is all true and what HeartBreakKid is saying is true.

Kerr has a system and if you are a player who is unwilling to fit into the system then you can grab the next bus out of Golden State. This fact doesn't make Kerr a great coach and doesn't make Kerr a bad coach.

Kerr is the visionary and was gifted quite literally the perfect basketball player ever to fit into and dominate in his system. We have seen players who struggled to make rotations elsewhere flourish in Golden State and we have seen players who are quality NBA rotation players struggle in Golden State.

D'Angelo Russell and Craig Finch are an example of how Steve Kerr failed.


I think you definitely can talk about system-oriented coaches as guys who are flawed in the sense that they can only work with certain players.

However it also has to be understood that when you're not a star player, it's always your job to fit in with how the big dogs run. Maybe Kerr could have done good things with Russell if Russell was the franchise player he had to work with...but he wasn't.

Also, Craig Finch? Who?


Chris Finch**


Ah, well, to be clear:

Box score-wise, Russell hasn't taken a clear leap forward since leaving Golden State, so what we're really talking about is that Finch has found a way to fit Russell in with KAT & Edwards that has been good enough to make the team a 1st round-level team.

Given that Kerr wasn't trying to fit Russell in with KAT & Edwards, this isn't an apples-to-apples comparison. This also has everything to do with why everyone was nervous about adding Russell to the Warriors. The idea of adding a point guard to help KAT & Edwards makes sense in a way that adding one to Curry, Thompson & Green was never so clear cut.
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1609 » by falcolombardi » Mon Mar 7, 2022 9:11 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
HeartBreakKid wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
Putting aside from the fact that the team was clearly playing very differently in the Oubre/Wiseman era, the bigger issue I have with your statement is this idea that the coach has some static impact on his team.

When a team improves as a result of player development - which includes training players on how to play within the team's schemes - that's precisely what a coach and his staff are trying to do over time. Hence, while I would argue that basically all of us underestimated Kerr because we didn't expect this sort of player development, you're giving the impression that you underestimated Kerr because it didn't occur to you that a coach could develop his players.

I'm skeptical you actually believe this.


Or maybe the players just got better, independent of our white savior Steve Kerr. I'm a little tired of the whole "oh this guy is only good cause this guy coached him" thing. Players train on their own and improve on their own. Steve Kerr is not their personal trainer, you're saying he did something he did not do.

The premise is still flawed. You're trying to say "you thought the Warriors wouldn't be that good this season therefore Kerr is underrated" - but the entire basis for why people thought the Warriors were not going to be good this year was because they weren't very good last year...there's a logic chain there that is broken.

You could just as easily say that Kerr underachieved with his team last year and that the Warriors are more talented than we thought (which is actually true, they are better than we thought).



I mean the real reason why people thought the Warriors wouldn't be good is because the core players are in their 30s and one of them was injured (Klay). Two of their starters Poole and Wiggins improved, people seldom take into account improvement from non-stars. Jordan Poole did not improve because Steve Kerr trained him, he improved because he is 22 years old.



And this also goes back that none of this is even relevant to "Steve Kerr is not underrated". Steve Kerr has been cited as one of the best coaches in the league every year since he has been coaching....that's not even hyperbole, literally since his first year.

Saying Steve Kerr is underrated is like saying Kobe Bryant is underrated. What's next, we're going to start saying old, rich white guys have it the hardest in America? Let's save the underrated arguments for coaches who are actually overlooked and seldom praised - which are most coaches.


"Did you think the Warriors would be that good this year" - did you think the Grizzlies, Cavs and Bulls would be as good as they are? Do they have top ten all time coaches as well?


Whoa.

So first:

You're not giving a basketball explanation when you say "or maybe the players just got better". You're saying "whatever happened with the basketball, let's assume it had absolutely nothing to do with the coaching staff who are paid to help players get better". You're not giving any answer to how it actually happened - your explanation is completely devoid of basketball insight - you just giving a simple hand-waving argument and saying "Case closed!" while at the same time alleging that those who are actually thinking about basketball have some cynical, racial motivation.

To be clear, while you seem to think I'm saying the same thing in reverse, I'm absolutely not. I'm looking at how the Warriors have improved, and asking myself what the likely role each employee played in that total improvement. The players who improve always, always, ALWAYS deserve credit...but that doesn't mean that the coaches don't.

The thing that's specifically interesting about the Warriors is that they play quite differently from anyone else in the NBA, and so we need to ask ourselves how they are getting their players to master the unique skillsets that only the Warriors really need these guys to play. And here's the thing:

If it turns out that it's so easy to learn how to play the GS way that anyone can figure it out without the help of direct coaching...then that actually goes right back to the person who first set up the schemes, which is the head coach, Steve Kerr.

Let's note specifically though that this is kind of the opposite of what is typically allege about motion offenses. I cannot tell you how many times I've seen people say "Yeah, but they need smart players, which means it's harder to build around compared to heliocentric offenses that really only require 1 brain to be on the court." Not saying this was ever my perspective, but I think people should understand that if we're switching from a mindset of "Hard to train players on this" to "Players can figure it out themselves", then this makes it that much smarter to play motion offense in general, and it's an indication that the rest of the NBA should be doing more of it.

.


just to make clear, are you saying that motion offenses are better (as in more effective) than not motion offense and the only reason teams dont do it more is the perception that you need very specific players to run it?

cause it really doesnt feel like that tbh when so many of the most succesful offenses ever in any era were fairly heliocentric in some way (nash, magic, lebron teams, west, oscar)

or do you mean that is weird teams dont mix it up mpre and get lazy with letting their star do all the work (which is pretty possible)

also i think the existence of players like wiseman, oubre, D'angelo who didnt work well in kerr system but had more success somewhere else (at least in russel case) suggests that not every player works well in that system

just like not every player works the best in other kind of offenses
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1610 » by RCM88x » Mon Mar 7, 2022 10:35 pm

With Allen likely out for the majority of the remainder of the season. Cavs most likely will fall to the bottom of the play-in and really struggle to make it into the playoffs.

Sexton, then Rubio, now Allen. No one has played more than 56 of 64 games for this team (Mobley, Love and Allen).

3-Man lineups of Garland, Mobley and Allen were +8.0 in 763 minutes, 3-Man lineups of Garland-Rubio-Mobley were +15.5 in 255 minutes

Pretty disappointing trajectory compared to where this team was 30 games ago.
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1611 » by Jaivl » Mon Mar 7, 2022 11:09 pm

RCM88x wrote:With Allen likely out for the majority of the remainder of the season. Cavs most likely will fall to the bottom of the play-in and really struggle to make it into the playoffs.

Sexton, then Rubio, now Allen. No one has played more than 56 of 64 games for this team (Mobley, Love and Allen).

3-Man lineups of Garland, Mobley and Allen were +8.0 in 763 minutes, 3-Man lineups of Garland-Rubio-Mobley were +15.5 in 255 minutes

Pretty disappointing trajectory compared to where this team was 30 games ago.

You were blessed with Sexton's injury, something had to give.
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1612 » by RCM88x » Mon Mar 7, 2022 11:42 pm

Jaivl wrote:
RCM88x wrote:With Allen likely out for the majority of the remainder of the season. Cavs most likely will fall to the bottom of the play-in and really struggle to make it into the playoffs.

Sexton, then Rubio, now Allen. No one has played more than 56 of 64 games for this team (Mobley, Love and Allen).

3-Man lineups of Garland, Mobley and Allen were +8.0 in 763 minutes, 3-Man lineups of Garland-Rubio-Mobley were +15.5 in 255 minutes

Pretty disappointing trajectory compared to where this team was 30 games ago.

You were blessed with Sexton's injury, something had to give.


While I think there is some truth to that, I would much rather have preferred he missed like 8-10 weeks with a sprain or something minor rather than a significant knee injury that keeps him out the whole season.
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LookToShoot wrote:Melo is the only player that makes the Rockets watchable for the basketball purists. Otherwise it would just be three point shots and pick n roll.
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1613 » by feyki » Tue Mar 8, 2022 5:36 pm

Doncic in the last 20 games:
32,9 PPG, 10,3 RPG, 8,7 APG, %59,5 TS, 118 ORtg.
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1614 » by falcolombardi » Tue Mar 8, 2022 6:32 pm

right now what are the most interesting potential firat round matchups ?

nets vs sixers is obvious, but nuggets vs warriors and clippers vs suns (if kawhi actually plays) are pretty interesting too , i wouldnt sleep on the hawks as a 8th seed vs miami either

for later round miami vs bucks 3rd (and last?) round or milwauke vs philly/nets would be really interesting
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1615 » by parsnips33 » Tue Mar 8, 2022 6:35 pm

falcolombardi wrote:right now what are the most interesting potential firat round matchups ?

nets vs sixers is obvious, but nuggets vs warriors and clippers vs suns (if kawhi actually plays) are pretty interesting too , i wouldnt sleep on the hawks as a 8th seed vs miami either

for later round miami vs bucks 3rd (and last?) round or milwauke vs philly/nets would be really interesting


Would take some shuffling, but a Doncic vs Jokic matchup would be extremely fun to watch
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1616 » by feyki » Tue Mar 8, 2022 7:04 pm

Healthy LA vs Suns, Jazz vs Mavs or Warriors vs Jazz/Mavs in the West. For the East, Bucks vs Nets or Sixers vs Nets. However, I would watch every series this playoffs. Very balanced league is this right now.
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1617 » by Colbinii » Tue Mar 8, 2022 7:59 pm

I'm looking forward to watching Dallas, Minnesota and Golden State in the West.

In the East, Boston.
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1618 » by feyki » Tue Mar 8, 2022 8:10 pm

Colbinii wrote:I'm looking forward to watching Dallas, Minnesota and Golden State in the West.

In the East, Boston.


If Warriors keep giving big minutes to Klay, you won't be able to watch more than one round in the Playoffs :D .
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1619 » by LukaTheGOAT » Wed Mar 9, 2022 2:14 am

Jimmy Butler has a 45% eFG% his last 32 games. His TS% is around league average at 55.5% during the same time frame.
He is very reliant on free throws and I wonder if this reliable offense come PS time?
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Re: 2021-22 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#1620 » by LukaTheGOAT » Wed Mar 9, 2022 2:52 am

Kyrie Irving just scored 50 points on 101.1 TS% (19 shots). Incredible is an understatement.

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