Agreed, use some of that PF game; dance on him a little with those magic handles. Also like to see some more of that righty hook in the lane Sean likes.
Face him up take him to the hole draw fouls on him by upfaki g. It really is that freaking simple....
Agreed, use some of that PF game; dance on him a little with those magic handles. Also like to see some more of that righty hook in the lane Sean likes.
He was very good in games 1 and 2, but more as a finisher than a creator; his passes out of doubles were not nearly as efficient as they could be. He looks like Amare Stoudemire on offense more than Tim Duncan, and I don't trust that kind of offensive strategy to win games for the Spurs going forward. 25 points on 60% shooting is well and good, but there has to be a coherent, structured offense for the Spurs to win against the Lakers, the Jazz, the Magic, Cs, or Cavs, and what I've seen out of Duncan on his isolation attempts is not nearly what he once could do. Even his play against Dampier is more ... tepid ... than it was in 2006.
Haywood's too agile for that to be the best strategy. Against Dampier, that will draw fouls at a reliable clip, but Haywood can back off and recover to affect the shot if Tim goes into the lane. The best way is simply to give Duncan the ball on the right block and punish Haywood going baseline.
He needs to go over his left shoulder towards the baseline. Haywood has a hard time stopping that. It is always a decent shot attempt from Duncan. If Duncan wants to go middle he is gonna have to find another way to do it. Haywood seems to be able to get a good contest on it.
My 3 step plan.
Step 1. Pull his headband over his eyes.
Step 2. Pull it back really far.
Step 3. Snap it back in his face.
(repeat steps 1-3 if necessary).
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