In the long run, I don't like it. Nobody has ever been able to win a championship with this style of play.
The Mavs last year. The showtime Lakers.
The Mavs last year. The showtime Lakers.
i just hope that its not fool's gold for the maloofs, who absolutely LOVE buying stock in fool's gold, and i just hope that we don't see the same trickle-down effects we've seen in the past from the offices of this team, because such a virus is almost helplessly contagious. example: don nelson is the winningest coach in nba history. in the last few decades of his career, he caught the small ball bug, and it ran rampant across his better senses until he retired. nelson believed in his style of play SO MUCH that he would never return to the more sensible, traditional, championship-contending styles of play that he cut his teeth on. as such, he never did win a championship as a head coach, after winning several championships as a player on a traditionally-stacked boston celtics team. its kinduva sad story, really. but there's still time to save keith smart!! GP's gotta help him out, though!! the kings need to have some of their gaps filled in so that small ball becomes less of a necessity, and more of a hazy memory...
the mavs last year were NOT a run and gun team. not by a LOOOOOOOOOONG shot. to think that is to misunderstand run and gun altogether. its honestly a bit bewildering to mention such an old, slow, and measured halfcourt team alongside a team like the showtime lakers. as for the those lakers, they were a true rarity. i mean, ****, magic johnson, their starting PG, was 6'9". they did not play small, nor did they sacrifice rebounding, which is usually what a run and gun style of play asks you to do, and its usually what prevents those teams from winning championships. they were exceptionally athletic at every position, and they are the exception that proves the rule. more importantly, NOBODY was comparing this kings team to that lakers team last time i checked...
now, as for the poll, i agree with brickie. i do not believe that a small ball style of play is sustainable in the long run. i've come down HARD on keith smart and his lineups in the last few weeks. i take back very little of what i have said, however, the team is on a three-game win streak, they're beginning to play together, and their showing a newfound amount of trust in each other. these are improvements worth lingering on. and they don't strictly play run and gun, anyway. they're running a motion offense in the halfcourt that partly resembles the more controlled offenses of the adelman-era kings. their outstanding passing in these last three games, tyreke's deferral to john salmons last night, demarcus' positivity and encouragement on the bench, and even smart's gesture to let demarcus "coach" the final moments of the game all point towards tremendous chemistry-building. marcus thornton is learning to pass, while discovering that he can still fill up the scoreboard if he gives the ball up every now and then, and that alone might be worth it. but its still those small ball lineups that get me. given that this season is "lost," in the sense that the kings will not be competing for the playoffs, i can be okay with spurts of small ball in the short term, as long as the team is winning most of their games at home, and remaining competitive in their games on the road...
my fear, though, is that geoff petrie and keith smart will get trapped inside of these small ball fantasies. my fear is that, with minimal stakes at the moment, any winning the kings accomplish with small ball lineups will result in further impotence from the kings' front office, and an unwillingness to match up on defense from the kings' coaching staff. i am enjoying the solid play of isaiah thomas as much as anybody, but i do not believe his starting status is sustainable in a league of grown-*** men. i do not believe a starting lineup that features three guards is sustainable, either. the good news is that jason thompson continues to play very well, and demarcus is beginning to wake up from whatever hypnotic state he was in, although the kings' fast pace is clearly effecting his rebounding rate. our frontline still has defensive issues, but our guards are helping with the rebounding, so small ball is finding some success in sacramento right now. i'm just happy to see the kings win a few, and i can be content with this style of play for the remainder of the season...
i just hope that its not fool's gold for the maloofs, who absolutely LOVE buying stock in fool's gold, and i just hope that we don't see the same trickle-down effects we've seen in the past from the offices of this team, because such a virus is almost helplessly contagious. example: don nelson is the winningest coach in nba history. in the last few decades of his career, he caught the small ball bug, and it ran rampant across his better senses until he retired. nelson believed in his style of play SO MUCH that he would never return to the more sensible, traditional, championship-contending styles of play that he cut his teeth on. as such, he never did win a championship as a head coach, after winning several championships as a player on a traditionally-stacked boston celtics team. its kinduva sad story, really. but there's still time to save keith smart!! GP's gotta help him out, though!! the kings need to have some of their gaps filled in so that small ball becomes less of a necessity, and more of a hazy memory...
I haven't seen any evidence that Petrie and Smart believe that they can win an NBA championship with an undersized team. I just think Smart is working with what he has. Give Smart a 6'9" SF and a 6'11 PF and a 6'6" SG who are good players, he'll play them. If we had Kirelinko do you think he wouldn't play him because he's in love with small? Or, if we had P. Gasol, do you think he wouldn't play him because he's love with small? He's not going to substitute in small guys for the sake of being small. He's forced to play small because of the deficiencies of the current lineup.
Well, if you think the Mavs were playing run and gun, I don't really know what to say...
BTW, we are not talking about fast pace teams. It's different from the run and gun style.
I didn't pick any of the above, because I agree with Brick. Smart obviously needed to get this team working together and they're so young. Smart had no training camp with the team, just came to the organization this year and has had little practice time due to the compressed schedule.Its acceptable at this time because of our youth and unbalanced roster. Those things need to be corrected though as we get serious about winning.
The last few games hasn't been, "run and gun". They've gotten up and down the floor quickly on some plays, but they are playing incredible HALF COURT offense. They ditched the small ball run, run, run, jack it up crap and have gone to almost a version of classic Kings basketball with tons of off the ball movement, back cuts, and team oriented passing. This team looks much better emulating millennium era Kings than it did emulating the Warriors or Suns, now Smart needs to stick with it.
I didn't pick any of the above, because I agree with Brick. Smart obviously needed to get this team working together and they're so young. Smart had no training camp with the team, just came to the organization this year and has had little practice time due to the compressed schedule.
Easiest to start with offense and use their youth to really run. He wants the team to bond and have fun, too. Easier to bond, if you are winning and enjoying it.
I expect (hope) that they will work more on the halfcourt offense, although it's not been bad in the last 3 games, due to a lot of passing, instead of dribbling so much. Finally, defense is critical for this team, but may be the hardest part to get guys to really focus on.
The team of our "glory days," were pretty awful on defense, until they realized they wouldn't have a shot at a championship until they focused on improving their defense. Went from one of the worst defensive teams to arguably the best defensive team in the league.
I haven't seen any evidence that Petrie and Smart believe that they can win an NBA championship with an undersized team. I just think Smart is working with what he has. Give Smart a 6'9" SF and a 6'11 PF and a 6'6" SG who are good players, he'll play them. If we had Kirelinko do you think he wouldn't play him because he's in love with small? Or, if we had P. Gasol, do you think he wouldn't play him because he's love with small? He's not going to substitute in small guys for the sake of being small. He's forced to play small because of the deficiencies of the current lineup.
If we go the uptempo route, our best case scenario is second round exit (thats assuming Cousins and Reke turn into allstar caliber players).
I want us to go halfcourt/D. Will probably never happen. Not with our Silly owners and GM.
He also wants to push the ball up court which I THINK is because he wants to wear the other team down.