Page 4 of 8 FirstFirst 12345678 LastLast
Results 76 to 100 of 183
  1. #76
    Veteran hater's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Post Count
    74,105
    Rockets just showed how to choke

  2. #77
    Done with the NBA
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    May 2010
    Post Count
    18,479
    You can compete with many different offenses if you get the switching defense down tbh. Shooters are clearly important in the NBA but your offense doesn't need be a bunch of threes jacked up.

  3. #78
    Veteran
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Post Count
    4,829
    Warriors can’t guard size...

    Players that can enforce their will on offense and take efficient shots plus be able to handle a switch on D is the key. Boris Diaw type player is good example..

    It’s not about chucking 3’s..Crazy enough it was the Rockets offense strategy that got them beat. They couldn’t get to the line or get easy/good looks when needed.

  4. #79
    Veteran bklynspursfan's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Post Count
    15,095
    The Spurs got to the WCF last season even with their Mills/Pau on the roster. HOU got just as far despite being viewed as so superior.

    Did they have more success than SA in that WCF? Sure, but they were fully healthy until game 6/7. But SA gets killed for “blueprint” and “Mills/Pau” while HOU gets lauded for their team. SA is in a better more flexible spot than HOU assuming they keep Kawhi and had the same level of success.

    Could that change over the next 3 years? Sure, but people acting like their is a massvie gap so far are wrong results wise and have been basing everything off this just one year with HOU (which I agree is a fine strategy).

    But if Kawhi doesn’t get hurt, even against a BETTER GS team, and they go to 6 or 7 (which is entirely possible) does that mean they had the blueprint?
    I think we showed the blue print last year. Each time we played them (except once maybe (?) ) we had a 20+ point lead . We played fast, switched everything, and knew when to slow the game down. Timely timeouts, played a lot of guys, etc...

  5. #80
    Veteran SpursforSix's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jul 2015
    Post Count
    21,159
    I think we showed the blue print last year. Each time we played them (except once maybe (?) ) we had a 20+ point lead . We played fast, switched everything, and knew when to slow the game down. Timely timeouts, played a lot of guys, etc...
    That blueprint involved having one of the few players on the league that's long enough and quick enough to guard Durant on the outside.
    And strong enough to defend him if he tries to post up.

    Not to mention the attention Leonard demands on offense.

  6. #81
    Veteran r0drig0lac's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    May 2013
    Post Count
    14,624
    That blueprint involved having one of the few players on the league that's long enough and quick enough to guard Durant on the outside.
    And strong enough to defend him if he tries to post up.

    Not to mention the attention Leonard demands on offense.
    yes, the "blueprint" is to have one of the two best players in the world absolutely elite offensively and defensively

  7. #82
    Veteran bklynspursfan's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Post Count
    15,095
    That blueprint involved having one of the few players on the league that's long enough and quick enough to guard Durant on the outside.
    And strong enough to defend him if he tries to post up.

    Not to mention the attention Leonard demands on offense.
    Yup. Durant was a non factor until Kawhi went out.

  8. #83
    Veteran Poolboy5623's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Post Count
    1,484
    The Spurs are a long ways away from being able to switch on everything(defensively)....

  9. #84
    The Dude minds DPG21920's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Post Count
    77,863
    HOU played 6-7 guys. If you look at SA top 6-7 guys:

    Kawhi: DPOY
    Danny: All NBA Defense last year
    Murray: All NBA Defense this year
    LMA: True defensive anchor
    Kyle: Grades out tremendous on defense

    Then Mills & Rudy.

    So if you look at SAS 7 man rotation only two aren’t plus defenders but Rudy has size and Patty plays with energy.

    HOU 6-7 man rotation has Hardens defense so SA had what, one more player not great on defense than HOU?

    People like op act like it was HOU style of play that did it; SA style was fine and with just some minor tweaking (taking out Mills / TP / Pau with some better defensive players) they are there

  10. #85
    Veteran hater's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Post Count
    74,105
    mentioning Patty in a thread about winning vs the Showers

  11. #86
    ಥ﹏ಥ DAF86's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Post Count
    47,238
    Pau Gasol might work in the regular season, but in the playoffs, against teams like the Warriors, he's a easily exploitable.

  12. #87
    ಥ﹏ಥ DAF86's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Post Count
    47,238
    -No weak links on defense: Always have 5 average to above average defensive players

    Harden starting

    ?
    Did you watch the series?

  13. #88
    ಥ﹏ಥ DAF86's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Post Count
    47,238
    What kind of horse is this? The rockets showed how to beat GS by losing the series?? By choking away two games when hey were up by double digits at the half? By getting outscored by 39 in the second half of game 6? By getting outscored by 20 at home in game 7?? By missing 27 threes in a row?? GTFO with that .
    No son, the rest of the league showed it by not even being close to beating them.

  14. #89
    ಥ﹏ಥ DAF86's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Post Count
    47,238
    I normally don’t agree with the OPs takes but Houston definitely had a good defensive plan and players capable of implementing the plan.

    That said, we just witnessed absolutely horrid team offense. Harden takes over with people standing and watching except for the lob dunk is just debilitating recipe for others. Harden gets himself into rhythm while others stand or try to find an open passing lane on a Harden drive, ad nauseum. The Warriors just hung in and let this offense die. Gordon tried to break up the monotony with his own barrel to the basket mentality. Paul tried to fit in and did a decent job. The sad thing about the NBA is this offense almost worked. Give me a Lebron lead team any day. Or Curry. Curry is absolutely necessary for the Warriors because Durant leads them down the same dark rabbit hole.
    That must suck for you, son. Being wrong most of the time.

  15. #90
    ಥ﹏ಥ DAF86's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Post Count
    47,238
    Did the 2016 Thunder have the blueprint to beat the Warriors?
    In 2016 the Thunder were the ones that had Durant, not the Warriors, tbh. But now that you mention it, that OKC team and this Rockets team shared a lot similarities:

    -They both ran a short rotation of 6 players, with a 7th just buying some minutes here and there.
    -They both had two perimeter playmakers.
    -They both had no weak defensive links.
    -They both didn't have many non-shooters (Rockets only Capela and OKC only Adams and Roberson who, by the way, shot 44% from 3 on that series).
    -They both played a lot of isos (I don't think this is necessarily part of the blueprint, but maybe it is, who knows).
    -And they both went small (outside of a few minutes where Kanter and Adams shared the floor, OKC went with lineups of just one big, since Ibaka played pretty much as a wing, and even with no bigs, playing Ibaka as the center like Houston played Tucker as center).

    Add to that how the Cavs beat them in the finals that year (again: 2 perimeter playmakers, many isos, lots of three pts threats, going small, etc.) and yeah, it's pretty easy to see that the blueprint is there. I don't know why so many people are having problems accepting this fact.
    Last edited by DAF86; 05-29-2018 at 03:31 PM.

  16. #91
    Board Man Comes Home Clipper Nation's Avatar
    My Team
    Los Angeles Clippers
    Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Post Count
    54,257
    There is no blueprint, tbh. Durbeta simply choked in a few games.

  17. #92
    ಥ﹏ಥ DAF86's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Post Count
    47,238
    HOU played 6-7 guys. If you look at SA top 6-7 guys:

    Kawhi: DPOY
    Danny: All NBA Defense last year
    Murray: All NBA Defense this year
    LMA: True defensive anchor
    Kyle: Grades out tremendous on defense

    Then Mills & Rudy.

    So if you look at SAS 7 man rotation only two aren’t plus defenders but Rudy has size and Patty plays with energy.

    HOU 6-7 man rotation has Hardens defense so SA had what, one more player not great on defense than HOU?

    People like op act like it was HOU style of play that did it; SA style was fine and with just some minor tweaking (taking out Mills / TP / Pau with some better defensive players) they are there
    So not only you have major defensive weak links, but you also have non-shooting guys like Murray and Anderson, and another one who, although capable, doesn't shoot it much (Aldridge).

  18. #93
    Veteran
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Post Count
    14,854
    Nothing anyone who knows their stuff hasn't realized for a while. Where I differ from the conventional take is, I don't believe that a cadre of traditional 3 and D wings is the way to go, especially considering the Spurs lack of anything resembling a lead play maker.

    4 of the Warriors 5 best players (minus Curry) are their 3 and D players. Outside of Thompson, they're not thought of that way, because Green and Iguodala are below average from 3 and are more all around types, but they provide that too.

    You don't need so called stoppers, you need as much non physical liability/exploitable players who can dribble, pass and shoot as possible (think Gay, Evans, etc.). A bunch of specialists aren't going to get it done.

  19. #94
    Every game is game 1 Seventyniner's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Post Count
    10,608
    In 2016 the Thunder were the ones that had Durant, not the Warriors, tbh. But now that you mention it, that OKC team and this Rockets team shared a lot similarities:

    -They both ran a short rotation of 6 players, with a 7th just buying some minutes here and there.
    -They both had two perimeter playmakers.
    -They both had no weak defensive links.
    -They both didn't have many non-shooters (Rockets only Capela and OKC only Adams and Roberson who, by the way, shot 44% from 3 on that series).
    -They both played a lot of isos (I don't think this is necessarily part of the blueprint, but maybe it is, who knows).
    -And they both went small (outside of a few minutes where Kanter and Adams shared the floor, OKC went with lineups of just one big, since Ibaka played pretty much as a wing, and even with no bigs, playing Ibaka as the center like Houston played Tucker as center).

    Add to that how the Cavs beat them in the finals that year (again: 2 perimeter playmakers, many isos, lots of three pts threats, going small, etc.) and yeah, it's pretty easy to see that the blueprint is there. I don't know why so many people are having problems accepting this fact.


    • Of course rotations are short, this is the playoffs
    • I'm not sure I'd call 2016 Durant a playmaker, at least not nearly on the level of Westbrook, Harden, and Paul
    • Harden is a huge defensive liability
    • Roberson shot 32.4% from three in those playoffs, the 44% was a fluke. He shot 31.1% during the regular season which is a career high for him. Of the 2016 Thunder's top 7 in the playoffs, 3 were non-shooters: Adams, Kanter, Roberson
    • Agree on the isos. It certainly helps to have good iso players at the end of close games: a low-percentage shot is still better than risking a turnover
    • Looking at the 2016 Thunder/Warriors series:

    Player Gm 1 Gm 5 Gm 6 Gm 7 Avg
    Ibaka 36 40 36 43 39.75
    Adams 37 31 28 26 30.5
    Kanter 18 6 11 9 11
    I picked out the non-blowouts to reduce garbage time effects, but even games 2-4 followed this pattern. Adams and Kanter combined took up almost all 48 minutes at center each game, so there wasn't much "Ibaka at the 5" going on. Ironically, of those four games the Thunder went biggest in game 1; it was also the only game of those four that they won.

    I think this "blueprint" is all in your mind. You just look at characteristics of teams that did or almost did beat the Warriors and find the similarities while ignoring the differences. And this Rockets/Warriors series was far closer to being Warriors in 5 or 6 than the Rockets winning at all.

  20. #95
    Lab Animal Capt Bringdown's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Post Count
    11,443
    The Warriors just hung in and let this offense die. Gordon tried to break up the monotony with his own barrel to the basket mentality.
    Agreed. Re last nite's game, after the layup to finish the first half, when's the next time the Rockets took it to the rim? Against a team with no shot-blockers?

    Shot selection matters, ffs.

  21. #96
    The Dude minds DPG21920's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Post Count
    77,863
    So not only you have major defensive weak links, but you also have non-shooting guys like Murray and Anderson, and another one who, although capable, doesn't shoot it much (Aldridge).
    Huh? SA was a better defensive team than HOU was this year my man. SA’s top 7 compare extraordinarily well vs HOU top 7 when it comes to defense.

    If you take out Harden’s bad defense and Mills, SA’s top 6 defenders are much, much better than HOU’s top 6 defenders.

    Is the shooting an issue? Sure, but how great were HOU shooters when they shot like 39% from the field for the entire series? At least SA would have Kawhi/LMA that can score inside if 3’s stop falling. The point is SA’s defense THIS YEAR was better than HOU’s.

  22. #97
    The Dude minds DPG21920's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Post Count
    77,863
    SA went “big” vs GS and had some success in the regular season. It also looked promising in the playoffs before Kawhi got hurt although we never will know.

    HOU was built well; it’s just not the only way and SA was already better on defense than HOU even with SA’s “liabilities”. , SA didn’t even have Kawhi and still finished ahead of HOU defensively this year.

    Does that mean that replacing Mills/Pau with Ariza/Bell type players is not needed or bad? NO. Just means SA showed somethings themselves and are very close and better than HOU.

  23. #98
    Veteran
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Post Count
    14,854
    HOU was built well; it’s just not the only way and SA was already better on defense than HOU even with SA’s “liabilities”. , SA didn’t even have Kawhi and still finished ahead of HOU defensively this year.
    The Spurs defense is fools gold and the worst suited to the playoffs of any elite defense. Their sheer size, length, knowhow and IQ masks their deficiencies in most random regular season games against mostly middling teams. In the playoffs, they have 3 massive targets in their rotation that are rendered virtually unplayable vs the elite.

    The Warriors, a middling offensive outfit sans Curry, posted an offensive rating .01 better than their regular season mark that mostly featured him.

    In '17, regular season to series vs Spurs: Grizzlies were +3.7, Rockets were -6.3 (pre Paul, of course), Warriors were +6.6.

    Before you bring up Leonard's absence in a lot of that, you can't have it both ways (citing the elite regular season mark without him).

  24. #99
    my unders, my frgn whites pgardn's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Post Count
    39,469
    That must suck for you, son. Being wrong most of the time.
    Yeah.

    I also said you were a humble intellect...

    *right cross to the jaw knockout emoticon*

    Down goes DAFfy.

  25. #100
    The Dude minds DPG21920's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Post Count
    77,863
    The Spurs defense is fools gold and the worst suited to the playoffs of any elite defense. Their sheer size, length, knowhow and IQ masks their deficiencies in most random regular season games against mostly middling teams. In the playoffs, they have 3 massive targets in their rotation that are rendered virtually unplayable vs the elite.

    The Warriors, a middling offensive outfit sans Curry, posted an offensive rating .01 better than their regular season mark that mostly featured him.

    In '17, regular season to series vs Spurs: Grizzlies were +3.7, Rockets were -6.3 (pre Paul, of course), Warriors were +6.6.

    Before you bring up Leonard's absence in a lot of that, you can't have it both ways (citing the elite regular season mark without him).
    You absolutely can have it both ways. Kawhi is a major part of that and even with those Mills/TP/Pau type players SA still held firm over a bigger sample size. Of course it will be exploited when their best defensive player is out. Even with Curry out, Kawhi out was a bigger blow to the defense due to KD having no one that could match him.

    Also, like HOU having a 7 man playoff rotation with one massively exploitable player (Harden), SA with a healthy Kawhi is basically in the same boat yet for 2 years in a row (one pre-CP and others one post) SA was better on defense.

    That is just a fact.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •