Indazone
01-12-2010, 07:56 PM
Landry is being groomed by Adleman to become the All-Star that T-Mac never could be. He takes it strong to the hoop and dunks the ball. He's got a sweet 18 footer and he's going to be shooting from three point territory soon as he extends his range out. If there was one guy on the team that I think Adleman/Morey are extremely high on and will make untouchable it's Landry. Yao is untouchable because of his size and huge popularity and when healthy he's a tremendous offensive force. But Landry...this dude is going to put up astronomical numbers as his career advances.
Rockets' Landry has become a marked man
Teams scheme to keep forward from hurting them offensively
By JONATHAN FEIGEN
Copyright 2010 Houston Chronicle
Jan. 11, 2010, 11:22PM
Smiley N. Pool Chronicle
Rockets forward Carl Landry knows that with all the defensive attention he's getting, he's got to find open teammates.
From the moment the ball reached Carl Landry's grasp, the Knicks came charging from every angle. They swarmed him , determined to keep him from taking over Saturday night's game.
This was not, however, the inside family-secret type of information Knicks rookie Marcus Landry promised to use against his older brother
It was the same strategy Landry has seen for weeks since he became the Rockets' go-to scorer in the fourth quarter and most reliable offensive force. It also is a technique he expects to see often, especially tonight at Charlotte, N.C., against the Bobcats, the team that signed him to the three-year, $9 million offer sheet that was matched by the Rockets before last season.
More work to do
The trick now for Landry is to beat those defenses as well as those he conquered to inspire the change.
“I just have to keep working,” Landry said Monday. “Today after practice, I worked on passing out of the double team. That's just something I have to get used to, when the double team comes, I have to be able to find the right guy in the right position, just like my teammates find me in the right position.
“It just means I'm doing something right. Before, I felt like if it was any one guy, they couldn't guard me one-on-one. Now, it's not about me scoring; it's about the guy on my team who has the best position to score. If that's not me due to a double team, I just have to find the right guy.”
The Rockets had been working to create more opportunities off the attention Landry has been drawing . But as much as they want Landry to find open teammates, they have emphasized movement to get teammates open.
“They're digging down on him, they're doubling him,” Rockets coach Rick Adelman said. “If he gets it, they're not going to leave. We have to do a better job with clearing space and he has to recognize it. We have to cut through and clear the area and if they (opposing defenses) hang in there, he has to find people. It's something he's going to have to learn.
“The key is, if he's got some room and there's not two guys in his area, then attack. If there's two guys in his area, he's got to learn how to draw that guy and then find somebody for an offensive shot. You have to read what the defense is doing. Guys can score, but the really effective offensive players are not only scorers but they're playmakers.”
Milestone year so far
Landry's evolution began last month. With four 20-point games in his first two seasons, Landry already has topped 20 points 14 times this season, including a career-high 31 at Phoenix last week .
“Teams have to prepare for Carl,” Rockets assistant coach Jack Sikma said. “Early in the year when Carl went in the game, there was a defensive substitution for the other team based on a one-on-one situation. But now as we've gone on, we see different types of double teams.
“The key for Carl is we have to have some people around to hit some 3-pointers to keep the floor spaced. Any time teams are packing the paint or trying to help out to stop somebody, we're going to have to find other ways to make them pay for that, such as a kick-out 3-point shot.
“It's not so much getting him the ball as his work will be how to recognize when it's coming, deal with and be effective out of double teams.”
With that in mind, Landry said he will be studying video to look for opportunities to attack the defenses he has been seeing. A year ago, he often watched the Bobcats, thinking about how his career would have been if the Rockets had not matched the Bobcats' offer . This season, he said he will study the Bobcats “just like all other teams.”
That likely will mean he will check out the defenses designed to stop him.
“A lot has changed since the beginning of the year,” the third-year forward from Purdue said. “You know, this is the first time teams have ever guarded me like this since college.
“It's something new to me, something I'm not used to, something I haven't seen before and something I have to continue to learn.”
It's something that's a long way from the Landry family one-on-ones, no matter what secrets Marcus Landry might have to share.
[email protected]
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/sports/bk/bkn/6810496.html
Rockets' Landry has become a marked man
Teams scheme to keep forward from hurting them offensively
By JONATHAN FEIGEN
Copyright 2010 Houston Chronicle
Jan. 11, 2010, 11:22PM
Smiley N. Pool Chronicle
Rockets forward Carl Landry knows that with all the defensive attention he's getting, he's got to find open teammates.
From the moment the ball reached Carl Landry's grasp, the Knicks came charging from every angle. They swarmed him , determined to keep him from taking over Saturday night's game.
This was not, however, the inside family-secret type of information Knicks rookie Marcus Landry promised to use against his older brother
It was the same strategy Landry has seen for weeks since he became the Rockets' go-to scorer in the fourth quarter and most reliable offensive force. It also is a technique he expects to see often, especially tonight at Charlotte, N.C., against the Bobcats, the team that signed him to the three-year, $9 million offer sheet that was matched by the Rockets before last season.
More work to do
The trick now for Landry is to beat those defenses as well as those he conquered to inspire the change.
“I just have to keep working,” Landry said Monday. “Today after practice, I worked on passing out of the double team. That's just something I have to get used to, when the double team comes, I have to be able to find the right guy in the right position, just like my teammates find me in the right position.
“It just means I'm doing something right. Before, I felt like if it was any one guy, they couldn't guard me one-on-one. Now, it's not about me scoring; it's about the guy on my team who has the best position to score. If that's not me due to a double team, I just have to find the right guy.”
The Rockets had been working to create more opportunities off the attention Landry has been drawing . But as much as they want Landry to find open teammates, they have emphasized movement to get teammates open.
“They're digging down on him, they're doubling him,” Rockets coach Rick Adelman said. “If he gets it, they're not going to leave. We have to do a better job with clearing space and he has to recognize it. We have to cut through and clear the area and if they (opposing defenses) hang in there, he has to find people. It's something he's going to have to learn.
“The key is, if he's got some room and there's not two guys in his area, then attack. If there's two guys in his area, he's got to learn how to draw that guy and then find somebody for an offensive shot. You have to read what the defense is doing. Guys can score, but the really effective offensive players are not only scorers but they're playmakers.”
Milestone year so far
Landry's evolution began last month. With four 20-point games in his first two seasons, Landry already has topped 20 points 14 times this season, including a career-high 31 at Phoenix last week .
“Teams have to prepare for Carl,” Rockets assistant coach Jack Sikma said. “Early in the year when Carl went in the game, there was a defensive substitution for the other team based on a one-on-one situation. But now as we've gone on, we see different types of double teams.
“The key for Carl is we have to have some people around to hit some 3-pointers to keep the floor spaced. Any time teams are packing the paint or trying to help out to stop somebody, we're going to have to find other ways to make them pay for that, such as a kick-out 3-point shot.
“It's not so much getting him the ball as his work will be how to recognize when it's coming, deal with and be effective out of double teams.”
With that in mind, Landry said he will be studying video to look for opportunities to attack the defenses he has been seeing. A year ago, he often watched the Bobcats, thinking about how his career would have been if the Rockets had not matched the Bobcats' offer . This season, he said he will study the Bobcats “just like all other teams.”
That likely will mean he will check out the defenses designed to stop him.
“A lot has changed since the beginning of the year,” the third-year forward from Purdue said. “You know, this is the first time teams have ever guarded me like this since college.
“It's something new to me, something I'm not used to, something I haven't seen before and something I have to continue to learn.”
It's something that's a long way from the Landry family one-on-ones, no matter what secrets Marcus Landry might have to share.
[email protected]
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/sports/bk/bkn/6810496.html