[Grades] Grades v. Heat 3/7/2015

George Karl has coached 9 games thus far (3-6). How many have you watched?

  • 0

    Votes: 4 6.5%
  • 1

    Votes: 2 3.2%
  • 2

    Votes: 4 6.5%
  • 3

    Votes: 2 3.2%
  • 4

    Votes: 5 8.1%
  • 5

    Votes: 4 6.5%
  • 6

    Votes: 5 8.1%
  • 7

    Votes: 6 9.7%
  • 8

    Votes: 12 19.4%
  • All 9

    Votes: 18 29.0%

  • Total voters
    62
  • Poll closed .

Bricklayer

Don't Make Me Use The Bat

Alright...I think I remember the drill, Another tough late game loss so...the coach sucks and we need to immediately fire him so that we can make a better run at the playoffs, or win with pace, or play 4 on 5 or something.

The details aren't important. We had tough losses, therefore Karl has to go. I'll be starting up our 3rd thread of the season on who the next coach should be as soon as the grades are up. I'm thinking Vivek.


Boxscore

Stats: 46min 27pts (12-24, 3-8, 0-2) 8reb 5ast 1stl 2blk 3TO
Gay ( B+ ) -- picked right up in this one where he left off vs. Orlando (the scoring, not the defensive brainfarts) and notched 10pts in the early going carrying the offense along with Ben. Back in after we lost Cuz to fouls in the 2nd and continued to hit tough tough shots just right over good defense. Other than Durant and Melo might not be any other SFs in the league who can bury those shots even if you do everything right on defense. Started slowly after half, missing his early 3rd quarter shots, but buried a three on a pass busted out to him by Cuz and returned the favor with a nice pick and roll pass back to a Cuz rolling to the hoop. Battled through the 4th, often against a surprisingly tough Michael Beasley apparently emerging from his pothead fog and realizing this may be his last shot in the league. Got beat by Beasley for a board and finish at a critical time to make it a 1pt game. But came up with another tough finish to get the lead back to 5 and at the end of regulation it was Rudy who got the call to win it -- a good call I thought given the absolute swarm of guys around Cuz by that point. And it worked...he got iso'd on Wade, crossed him over, got the angle, drove in for a little 5-8 foot flip off the glass for the win...and it rolled off. Cuz got a hand on a tip and almost saved us but no. It was right there. Right play, right move, right everything...ah well. At least we played it right. if this was a playoff series that one would stick with you though. There was hustle in the OT, but getting blocked by Bird and he never did score after regulation was over. There was one nice pass to a backcutting Miller with Cuz swarmed, but once we lost the big guy to his 6th foul we were both stupid in not getting Gay the ball, and he was ineffective trying to make anything happen when he did touch it. So instead of Cuz (27pts) and Gay (27pts) carrying us in the OT as they had all night, we got to see Ray (9pts in 39min) Andre (7pts in 30min) and Ben, who had last been heard from in 3rd quarter, dominate the ball and shots. that worked out roughly as well as you would expect. --Brick

Stats: 23min 4pts (1-2, 0-0, 2-2) 3reb 1ast 1stl 0blk 1TO
Thompson ( C- ) -- just not much here again. Suffering from his normal lack of touch finishing in the early going, and when he finally got a post hook to fall in the final minute of the first quarter it would be his only hit of the night. After we abandoned the crazed miniature lineup we experimented with in the early 2nd (THREE SFs (Rudy/DWill, Casspi, no bigs at all) we brought back Jason and he promptly fouled/fouled/fouled himself right out of the game within 3min of entering. Nothing in the early third again, and at a certain point just petered out and wasn't used anymore except except to fill in for Cuz. You can't say he was even that bad. Just no more relevant than Ryan Hollins, or me for that matter. Empty jersey and another C- type grade, which is basically Jason's standard when he has nobody to guard anymore. --Brick

Stats: 35min 27pts (10-17, 0-0, 7-8) 17reb 3ast 2stl 1blk 5TO
Cousins ( A- ) -- with news just before the game that Whiteside (they have taken to calling our former center "GOATside" btw -- another one of those things that hurts even if he did look to be failing with us) was out, you knew the Heat were basically going to have no answers for Cuz tonight (except oddly for Michael Beasley, who gave maybe the best defensive effort of his life giving up 3 inches and 30lbs but wrestling Cuz at every chance). Still, having no answers wasn't going to be quite the Knicks having no answers. The Heat still have some remnants of pride and coaching, and so they swarmed the hell out fo Cuz in there, and he actually only began 1-4 in the early going before picking up his 2nd offensive foul after Beasley cleverly arm locked him. Responded to that one with a big angry block -- and I'm not sure how the scorekeepers only had him with 1 in this game. Didn't last long in the second quarter either as Miller turned his head and Napier blew right by him and drew a foul on Cuz trying to protect the rim -- you know one way to save Cuz some fouls might be if our center wasn't having to be basically the FIRST line of defense against all these guards blowing by our guards on the perimeter. Cuz began to rumble (noticed announcers starting to use the word "truck" as a verb in regards to Cuz when he starts rolling) after half, eating up boards and getting on that rim . Beasley was still a pest, but when he got his 4th Cuz went into monster mode with a reverse dunk past Birdman, flat ripped the ball away from Johnson down on the other end, then came up with another power dunk finish and a big roar as Miami called a timeout to rethink things. Unfortunately part of that rethink may have been the idea that hey, we can't guard this guy inside, maybe what we need to try is a zone. Uhoh. Did the zone stop Cuz? No. But he spent the rest of the game with a constant swarm on munchkins swirling around him, often two of them before he even made a catch. it made every post feed a major adventure as they fronted him, doubled him without the ball, collapsed, and generally treated him like Shaq. Bodies were getting knocked around...and they weren't normally Cuz as he repeatedly shed little guys on his way to scores. Picked up his 5th foul down the stretch when we turned it over and he reached back to try to stop the break, not only did it put him in danger, but it got called a clear path foul. On an inbounds play at the 1:50 mark came up with a great baseline spin, tough catch, and quick layin to put us up 2, but we couldn't get the stops. Got a falling down offensive rebound tip off the blown Rudy layup with 2 seconds to go, but the tip rolled in and out too. Had an early TO in the OT, but was big on the glass finishing our misses and clearly again represented our best chance to pull off the win. When we lost him to a risky charge attempt at the 1:41 mark (it was very close, but felt like he got a little overexcited there given his foul situation) we promptly -- stop me if this sounds remotely familiar -- collapsed again, and yay, another loss. I've long been an advocate for the somewhat fringe position that there should not be foulouts in basketball. No other sport has them. Its dumb. If my position ever prevails and we don't have to worry about losing Cuz anymore, we'll probably be a 60 win team. --Brick

Stats: 45min 20pts (7-16, 3-8, 3-4) 4reb 0ast 2stl 1blk 2TO
McLemore ( B- ) -- responded to the Orlando debacle by coming out and having one of "those halves" he sometimes haves. The ones where you go wow, maybe...and the eternal optimists start posting mockups of Ben as Ray Allen etc. etc. Unfortunately as it almost always happens he immediately followed up with one of "those other halves" which cause the doubters to start posting trade posaibilities, and after having 17pts at the break, 30 minutes of gametime later he finished with 20. Early on in the game you were worried that Miami might have been watching the Portland tapes, as Wade took him directly into the post to start things off and just overpowered him. But this time Ben responded, hitting a corner three back down the other way and added another three later in the quarter. He also saved a hoop getting back defending the break to strip Johnson, and had several nice leakouts and finishes at the rim in the open court in the second. Just before half he canned a third three to match Rudy with 17pts going into the break. In fact his first half shotchart would have been a George Karl dream -- all threes or right at the rim. And when he came up with an athletic up and under finish in the early 3rd there was no real evidence that was going to be it. But it was. Whether at S or SF (we ran 3 guards much of the late game) Ben just disappeared, and this during a long stretch of the game where the Heat had gone zone, we could not score, and we desperately need a shooter to break it. Nor was Ben's disappearance in an opponentless vacuum, as Dwayne Wade and Tyler Johnson were precisely the two Heat who blew up and carried them to victory late in the game, leaving Ben as the 3rd best SG in the game even as he had the bounceback from the Orlando nightmare. This grade started much higher, but he absolutely needed to give us something after half as our offense died and his counterparts killed us. --Brick

Stats: 39min 9pts (3-10, 1-2, 2-2) 1reb 7ast 0stl 0blk 2TO
McCallum ( C ) -- Ray had kind of a strange evening from a game flow point of view. In the first half he was doing a very good job of moving the ball, getting four assists (all for jumpers) and attempting only one shot, but then he came out in the third quarter and to use a Karlism he was "thirsty". He went 0-4 in the quarter and I'd say that three of them were inadvisable shots. On top of that, he only managed to set up three shots in the quarter - for one assist - he basically went straight from PG mode to SG mode after the half. Then, an even weirder thing happened, with Ray joining Andre Miller and actually playing the SG for the final nine and a half minutes of the game...and he disappeared. He missed one three and had two assists but was otherwise just taking up space on the offensive end of the court. I kind of get the point of trying to run a two-PG offense and Miami was playing small, but as an actual SG Ray was not able to do anything useful for us - particularly against the zone. He's not going to be able to break the zone with his outside shooting (nor is Miller) so it might have been a better move to get Nik in there to spread that zone a bit and get our big guy a chance to work down low. In OT Ray actually got thirsty again (as he probably should have as the SG in the fourth) and got a basket on a nice cut before things got out of hand. He finally did bury a three but it was too little too late. Defensively, Ray did a very nice job as usual. He allowed 7 points on six shots before "fouling time" which is more or less average, but it's notable that the Heat were more or less avoiding attacking Ray on the defensive side in favor of either Miller (in the fourth) or some other option. --Capt.
 
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Bench

Stats: 18min 10pts (3-7, 2-3, 2-2) 2reb 0ast 1stl 0blk 2TO
Williams ( C+ ) -- in and hit a corner three immediately as he jumped off to his Karl era scoring backup role. Also made a nice athletic catch inside of a bad pass...but then dribbled out and threw up a stupid airballed jumperoff his dribble. Capped the quarter hitting a wild buzzer beating three off his dribble to close the first quarter with us up 30-26. And he gave us an uncommon rebounding effort grabbing not one, but TWO rebounds this time. The second half did not go as well. Late in the 3rd, missed a three, got blocked in side. Did hit one more shot, but his wild play in the early 4th aided in our meltdown, and down the stretch if we wanted a small PF it was Rudy, not DWill. --Brick

Stats: 18min 3pts (1-3, 1-2, 0-0) 7reb 2stl 0stl 0blk 2TO
Casspi ( C ) -- well, provided some hustle around the boards, which was important given that he may have been playing some "center" for us in a ridiculous Omri/DWill/Rudy frontline experiment in the 2nd quarter. But offensively got blocked on hsi first attempt and never did do much. meanwhile on defense he was more effective using his length on DWade than he was guarding Beasley. Was part of the crew in the early 4th that got wild and let the Heat back into the game, and down the stretch this time we went 3 guards, Rudy and Cuz rather than playing any of the benchers or Jason. --Brick

Stats: 30min 7pts (3-8, 0-2, 1-2) 4reb 8ast 0stl 0blk 1TO
Miller ( C+ ) -- Miller was in full-on maestro mode tonight as far as orchestrating the offense goes, at least in the first half. Andre doled out 6 assists before the half (in about 11 minutes!!) including a really nice dish to Cousins under the basket immediately after Boogie won a jump ball. In the second half, things tightened up a bit with the Heat breaking into a zone to stymie the Kings. For the remainder of the game, while Miller was still moving the ball well and setting up shots, they weren't quite as open or quite as comfortable, and Andre only got two assists out of it, one off of an inbounds pass to Cousins right under the hoop. Miller has shown a predilection for the lob pass since coming over from the Wizards, but tonight, he was only 1-3 on lobs, serving up a bad one to both DWill and Gay (Gay made the catch, came down, and found a way to convert anyway). In classic Miller style, he didn't look for his own shot until late in the game. He was scoreless until about halfway through the fourth quarter. Still, when we needed a bucket down the stretch Miller came up pretty big, hitting on a drive to tie the game with 40 seconds left, and sneaking in for a backdoor cut to give us a one-point lead in the overtime period. Unfortunately, Miller really got abused defensively. He allowed 24 points on only 16 shots, and while he had one nice play in the second quarter where he shut down Wade on a post up attempt and forced him to kick it out, he also was unable to stop Wade down the stretch. It's hard to knock Miller for Wade's crazy turnaround on the baseline that gave the Heat a one-point lead in the fourth, but a few plays later he allowed Wade to spin right around him for an easy basket. He had plenty of other defensive difficulties, including some notably slow close-outs which suggest that at his age maybe he shouldn't be sloughing off the perimeter shooter as much as he does. --Capt.

Stats: 3min 0pts (0-0, 0-0, 0-0) 0reb 0ast 0stl 0blk 2TO
Stauskas ( INC ) -- he came, he saw, he got his shot smushed inside, for what I guess was called a turnover. Meanwhile Coach Karl saw too, pulled him, and he never returned despite Ben at one point going 20 straight minutes without scoring a point. Instead down the stretch McCallum was playing backup SG, and not very well. --Brick

Stats: 7min 2pts (0-1, 0-0, 2-2) 0reb 0ast 0stl 0blk 0TO
Evans ( INC ) -- in late in the half with both Cuz and JT with 3 fouls. Actually played some good help defense stopping Johnson on a drive. On the other end took a pick and roll pass from Ben and got it blocked. Also one of the very rare games you are ever going to find where Reggie Evans plays 6+min and does not find a way to grab a rebound. --Brick
 
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oh and food for thought....Miami got two players off the scrap heap that are contributing for them while we have two lottery picks and only one that shows up every so often
 
oh and food for thought....Miami got two players off the scrap heap that are contributing for them while we have two lottery picks and only one that shows up every so often

to be fair... Miami is getting insanely lucky with their D-league scrap heaps randomly being amazing. Exactly 0.00% of NBA people went into this season thinking "You know who I think can contribute to an NBA team as a role player this season? Hassan Whiteside and Tyler Johnson."

Those 2 are distant outliers from what normally happens with D-league call-ups. The David Stockton result is much more to the norm.
 
to be fair... Miami is getting insanely lucky with their D-league scrap heaps randomly being amazing. Exactly 0.00% of NBA people went into this season thinking "You know who I think can contribute to an NBA team as a role player this season? Hassan Whiteside and Tyler Johnson."

Those 2 are distant outliers from what normally happens with D-league call-ups. The David Stockton result is much more to the norm.
I actually thought Tyler Johnson was going to be decent in the NBA I remember writing about him on this forum in a Summer League Thread (which I think has been deleted), Miami also got Walker and Beasley both who have helped them win games. I guess they were lucky but at the same time they put themselves in a position to get lucky and we have not really done that I mean we called up Quincy Miller and basically didn't even give him a chance to prove himself (not saying he would have been good).
 
Our roster is sooooooooooo bad.

Starters (when healthy):

Cuz: beast.
Rudy: great #2 guy, but inconsistent.
DC: solid PG, would be better off of the bench, but I still believe in him as a starter.
JT: Should be a bench big.
B-Mac: At this stage in his career, he is bench quality. He has potential to be much, much better though.

Bench:

I'm not even going to go into it. Our bench is a bunch of fringe role players, and projects. I dont think anyone we bring off of the bench gets more than 15 mpg in an upper tier playoff team.


PDA has made SOME decent moves, I'll give him that..... But he has allowed a lot of talent to bleed off of this roster for nothing. You HAVE to get assets for players like Tyreke or IT. And I STILL get pissed off that he just gifted Robin Lopez to Portland. I'm not even close to being sold on PDA as a GM. Hopefully Karl gains some influence, because with PDA, Mullin, and Vivek making personnel decisions... You get a team that cant even beat crippled Eastern Conference cellar dwellers.

I'm not going to get really worked up over the final games of the season. Would it be nice to get some wins? Heck yes. Should we expect a lot more losses? Heck yes.


It's all about this off season. Our FO HAS to make the right moves. From the draft (if we keep our pick) to FA, they can't keep messing up.
 
Poll: I admit viewing all 9 games, some with more close attention than others but lately listening lots to radio call (G-Man!!!) happily drowning out Napear nonsense. But as far as next one on Monday it might be case of rubberneck viewing all the road kill carnage.
 
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It is very interesting to me to consider, in hindsight after nine games with Karl, whether Malone was really that bad after all (of course everyone knows I am a true blue Malone guy). It is probably not in PDA and Vivek's DNA to admit they were wrong, but it seems to me that they were obviously so effing wrong. I wonder if Karl himself would ever frankly tell Pete & Vivek and Mully "guys you were so effing wrong to whack Michael Malone like that - it is way harder than you think to hold leads with this roster, and by now he would PROBABLY have them doing it much better if you hadn't torpedoed the season". I wonder.
 
I know that there is really nothing substantial to be gained by a win right now but that had to suck watching your team lose like that. Sorry guys ( and gals of course).
 
What were the two leads that were blown immediately after Demarcus left the court?
It had to be a 10-0 run and a 10-2 run or something like that.
This game it actually showed how horridly dependent this team is on BOTH Rudy and Demarcus, because those 2 minutes Rudy was out was when even Boogie on the court couldn't stop the bleeding (because every single person not named Andre Miller apparently is not passing Demarcus the ball and no plays are called for him).

Some weird aspects to this game:

(Know ahead of time Demarcus was a beast this game, and I'm not disparaging him - I'm bringing up points because he's SO good this team can't win without him off the floor for even a minute of crunchtime (as was AGAIN proved tonight)

* Demarcus HAS to stay in the game for the Kings to win it.
So his 4th foul is to stop a breakaway in the early 4th quarter, that was ruled a clear path foul even though half of Demarcus' body was in front of the ballhandler who didn't have the ball, Omri got back in front a millisecond later, AND it looked like Andre Miller was in front of the ball on the other side of the court.
Why did Demarcus foul?
What do we care about 2 points? They were giving them out like donuts - and it's not Demarcus' job to stop fast breaks - that;s Omri's and Andre's job on that playset. It's Demarcus' job not to get that 4th foul early in the 4th quarter.
But he threw away that foul.

* Let's talk Demarcus' 5th foul.
Hoo- boy- howdy!
So DMC bites on Walkers fake 3 pt pullup for no apparent reason THREE time in a row (Napear said he wasn't a threat, of course immediately after the Curse of Napear strikes again again he hits a backbreaker).
Is there some basketball reason I'm not aware of for a big man to fling his body at a jump shooter 10 feet from him going up for an open 3 pointer?
Because I'm pretty sure DMC can't jump 15 feet in the air to block it. Either the guy shoots the open shot, or he is faking and you lunging just gives him the opportunity to go by you into the unprotected middle.
Which Walker did, two times in a row.
Now, I'm positive Demarcus is a smart basketball mind -
WHY would he make the same mistake three times in a row?
Then, compound it by clearly fouling Walker as he drove by for his 5th critical foul.
It just makes no sense to me if the Kings really want to win.

*DMC's 6th foul was tough, but the right call - Boogie shouldn't have tried to draw a charge when being screened from the play by Birdman. Made it impossible for even his fast feet to get down and planted in time.

* Rudy makes that game-winning layup when he beat Wade off the dribble 9 times out of 10. Boogie makes the put-back 5 out of 10. Heat got lucky.
But -
Didn't Birdman absolutely lay Rudy out on that play? I only saw it once, but aren't fouls called after the ball leaves the hand?

* Why does this Kings team, even with a future HoF coach with 25 years experience.... NOT be able to figure out how to make an entry pass to Demarcus against a zone?
It alone lost them multiple games in the start of the season, and the whole league took note and that was the way to stop the Kings, yet - here we are, 50 games later and the Kings STILL are completely helpless to deal with it.
It's starting to be a bit creepy - or more like an elephant in the room ; "All these rich, experienced basketball geniuses and noone can figure out what other teams have been doing for decades?"

* It should not take a spin move and layup (off the in-bounds play) that no other big man in history could have accomplished for Boogie to finally have gotten a touch and a look at the basket.

* Demarcus HAS to stop passing the ball when he gets it down low. He must be telegraphing his moves, because EVERY single player knows when he is trying to hit a cutting teammate. Thing is - when they cheat to make the steal, it would give Demarcus the opening to bull to the basket - they can;t play the charge and the steal at the same time.
He NEEDS to incorporate a FAKE pass and synchronous move to the basket into his game.
He (and the team purportedly) works so hard to get the ball down low, for him to give it up for virtually any practical reason when being single covered down low is a BAD PLAY and a waste of valuable basketball court resources/possessions.
ESPECIALLY when the refs were letting him be physical on offense tonight. What is Demarcus waiting for? An open invitation to continue going to the basket? Do the refs have to pull him aside and say "Hey, Boogie, if you make a basketball move that isn't a blatant charge we're going to swallow our whistles tonight for your offensive fouls."
 
Watching Ray Mac as our starting PG gives me nightmares. He simply doesn't see the floor well at all. A for effort though. I see his ceiling being more like Patty Mills, who himself was benched for so long until he finally got it and developed. Ray is not ready to be playing more than 10 Min/game.
 
Great learning experience for us. Great job by Spoelstra.
And in my humble opinion a great example why all those comparisons with teams from the 90's build around dominant bigs just don't work and why it's pretty difficult to build your offense around a old fashioned big man using an inside-outside approach.
Zone defense and small ball makes it very tough for Cousins. The moment he gets really physical with those smaller guys swarming him, he gets called for fouls, while they are allowed to body up on him all the time.
We couldn't punish them for going small and Cousins was forced to guard Sf's out on the 3point line. And this happened while our shooters were hot from the arc.
It isn't so easy to build around a center today. You won't win by simply adding more shooting and following samples from the 90's.
 
Second night of a back to back. We played tough through the first. They really looked tired in the second. Cousins was getting mugged constantly. We couldn't play they're zone as was discussed by the announcers. We needed more three point shooting. Not sure why we did not try to change anything during that whole mess.
 
Second night of a back to back. We played tough through the first. They really looked tired in the second. Cousins was getting mugged constantly. We couldn't play they're zone as was discussed by the announcers. We needed more three point shooting. Not sure why we did not try to change anything during that whole mess.
The Heat were on a back to back as well and had to travel back from Washington and literally aside from D-Wade were missing there entire starting line up as well as Josh McRoberts. This was nothing short of a sad performance, Karl is going to make some seri0us moves next year or he may as well just retire it's a joke.
 
if the last two games have taught me anything, it's that I can still feel something towards Kings basketball, which is good. that this feeling appears to exclusively be blinding rage...less of a good thing.
 
Great learning experience for us. Great job by Spoelstra.
And in my humble opinion a great example why all those comparisons with teams from the 90's build around dominant bigs just don't work and why it's pretty difficult to build your offense around a old fashioned big man using an inside-outside approach.
Zone defense and small ball makes it very tough for Cousins. The moment he gets really physical with those smaller guys swarming him, he gets called for fouls, while they are allowed to body up on him all the time.
We couldn't punish them for going small and Cousins was forced to guard Sf's out on the 3point line. And this happened while our shooters were hot from the arc.
It isn't so easy to build around a center today. You won't win by simply adding more shooting and following samples from the 90's.

If you think this team is built around Cousins then you are sorely mistaken.
 
If you think this team is built around Cousins then you are sorely mistaken.

No I don't think this team is perfectly built around Cousins atm. But nonetheless it's concerning, that it is possible to beat us with zone defense and small ball, when our shooters are actually hitting their 3pointers.
This just brings me to the question, if we are a bit mistaken around here in our thinking, that we can easily built a contender around Cousins by adding more shooters. There is no team in the current NBA, that follows the approach the majority of the board wants the Kings to establish. Is this just because of the lack of a dominant inside presence alone?
The Heat managed to beat us with quickness. And to be honest - they weren't the first team to do so. We really need to find a way to handle this.
 
No I don't think this team is perfectly built around Cousins atm. But nonetheless it's concerning, that it is possible to beat us with zone defense and small ball, when our shooters are actually hitting their 3pointers.
This just brings me to the question, if we are a bit mistaken around here in our thinking, that we can easily built a contender around Cousins by adding more shooters. There is no team in the current NBA, that follows the approach the majority of the board wants the Kings to establish. Is this just because of the lack of a dominant inside presence alone?
The Heat managed to beat us with quickness. And to be honest - they weren't the first team to do so. We really need to find a way to handle this.

I would say that we should first look into improving our feeding the post. That's a skill that is often overlooked. If we're not even getting Cousins the ball in the post for him to take advantage of the smaller defenders then we have no idea whether the problem is having him in the post as the center of the offense. Better ball movement, better screen action should be implemented to get him free to receive the pass.
 
No I don't think this team is perfectly built around Cousins atm. But nonetheless it's concerning, that it is possible to beat us with zone defense and small ball, when our shooters are actually hitting their 3pointers.
This just brings me to the question, if we are a bit mistaken around here in our thinking, that we can easily built a contender around Cousins by adding more shooters. There is no team in the current NBA, that follows the approach the majority of the board wants the Kings to establish. Is this just because of the lack of a dominant inside presence alone?
The Heat managed to beat us with quickness. And to be honest - they weren't the first team to do so. We really need to find a way to handle this.
This is the exact reason why I think this team needs a PG more than anything. The offense runs so much more smoothly with Andre Miller on the floor. He'd be great for our team if he wasn't 60.
 
I would say that we should first look into improving our feeding the post. That's a skill that is often overlooked. If we're not even getting Cousins the ball in the post for him to take advantage of the smaller defenders then we have no idea whether the problem is having him in the post as the center of the offense. Better ball movement, better screen action should be implemented to get him free to receive the pass.
Our players suck. You take a look at every other big man in the NBA and they get easy put backs and alley oops because their PGs and teammates create for them.. we've barely ever seen Cuz get an easy putback dunk. However, I've noticed that a lot of defenders NEVER leave Cuz. In PnR, there's always somebody standing by Cuz, and everyone else converges into the paint to defend the driving man.. I think this is why we get a lot of open 3's. They're daring us to take them knowing we can't.
Pretty weird considering other teams don't use this game plan against AD since a lot of his offense does come from PnR....


I think we need an upgrade at PG. No one really seems to be able to give Cuz the ball down low
 
IMO the Refs let the Heat mob Cousins with lots of bumping and slapping on every play. When Boogie retaliated it was a foul. It happened all game long. The way the Refs let Beasley defend Cousins was pretty crazy. He literally laid on him the whole time he was on Cousins. The one play where he intertwined his arms with Cousins and then flopped was ridiculous.

That said all the Kings needed to do was break down the Zone and hit their shots. Which they did not do when it mattered in the 4th and OT.

The Heat deserve credit for the scheme to deny Cousins the ball, Playing tough physical D and finding players that can play. How did they find a 6' 4" Guard that up until a few days ago was on a 10 day contract that appears to belong in an NBA teams 8 man rotation? He played 4 years at Fresno State and he ends up in Miami??? Tyler Johnson led the Heat in minutes played at 44 and scored 24 points while going pretty much anywhere he wanted to go on the floor. D Wade was D Wade and the Heat get the win, again:mad:
 
I would say that we should first look into improving our feeding the post. That's a skill that is often overlooked. If we're not even getting Cousins the ball in the post for him to take advantage of the smaller defenders then we have no idea whether the problem is having him in the post as the center of the offense. Better ball movement, better screen action should be implemented to get him free to receive the pass.

Yes i agree that this might be one area of improvement. But that last night in several situations Cousins was fronted, forcing a high arcing pass in the post. But the moment Cousins was able to catch this slow, high pass, 2 to 3 defenders were right there, making it impossible to do something with the ball other than throwing up a contested shot and hoping for a foul call. What can we do, to counter this?
The Heat did a very good job defending Cousins with their limited roster. Of course this was still winnable and Gay and Cousins won't miss those gamewinners most of the time. But still - what the Heat did to us in the 4th quarter was concerning.
 
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