SacTownKid
Hall of Famer
That's just circumstance. We agree that the Cavaliers won because of defense; it just so happens that the only way that they could defend the Warriors' small ball is with small players. If they'd had the personnel to defend Golden State's small ball with larger players, like Oklahoma City does, like Minnesota appears to be trying to build towards, they would have. And, even then, they still took fewer threes as the stakes got higher in the playoffs, and won playing a lot of what essentially amounted to bully-ball on offense; they just happen to have the one of the very few guys in the modern NBA that you could play at small-ball center, and still play bully-ball with... which was my point.
Yeah, the Cavaliers ran a lot of screen/roll, too, but they were running screen/roll to get layups and dunks, and the other guys were running screen/roll to get twenty-five-foot jumpers, and the percentages finally caught up with them.
Yeah, and they got some good looks from 3 out of it too. The Cavs used screen and roll for the same reason the Warriors do, they did it to create a mismatch for James. When the Warriors had Ezeli out there, they ran screen and roll so they'd be stuck with a big on a "small" and yes, James abused him. He got a 3 point foul on him via a pump fake, and the next play they reset a screen to get the same match up.
This isn't an anomaly by any stretch, and yes, some teams have stayed big with success in switching. If you go back to Miami a few years back with James, they essentially ran the same pick and roll scheme when he played a lot at PF. However, they ran into the Spurs and Mavs who switched with success and that's how they beat the Heat. The Warriors undoing was what their undoing usually is: living by the 3, and turning the ball over at the worst possible times. If the Warriors and Cavs are the teams to beat, being able to switch to at least some degree, or play tight on pick and roll is your best shot.