At some point, we're going to have to go over what a motion offense actually is. But in general, no matter the type of motion offense we might run, it's not going to be Cuz who's going to be cutting/slashing all over the offensive end. What you'd want to look for is movement/cutters/spacing off Cuz, or off Rudy, our focal points.
There basically was none. I know it's become popular to single in on Cuz and Rudy and their jacking up shots as not buying into the "motion" offense, but it really is the wrong way to be looking at this. A motion offense will consist of movement which takes advantage of the attention they draw, usually with weak-side misdirection and movement. The large majority of the time either had the rock, guys stood and watched. That is what should be worrying everyone. Passing the ball to Sessions/JT/Ben/Landry/Evans/etc just for the hell of it, doesn't equate to good ball movement or a motion offense, nor is it really a good idea for sets to be ending with those guys having the rock.
Maybe I'll dig up some of the videos I posted a while back showing various sets we used to run under Rick, but the first thing people would notice is when we had Webber or Vlade at the high-post, the "motion" came from the screens/cutters/misdirection off them, almost always with better spacing than we show. When we had Bibby or Doug in a P&R situation up top, we were running off the ball flares/cuts off multiple screens for a guy like Peja to get open. If it was Webber on the wing, he'd often play a two man game with Peja or Bibby off their movement while on the weakside we'd have Doug diving. It was both strong and weakside movement, ala the Spurs. The whole point of off the ball movement is to create options, multiple options. No movement, poor spacing, there's not going to be any options. That's our issue. That's quite worrying in regards to Malone's coaching acumen as well given these guys looked like they've never played together after a full training camp. We're not even getting Cuz and Rudy the ball in good spots. Actually, for some reason I can't figure out, we're giving Reggie freaking Evans the ball in the high-post and running cutters off him far more than we do with Cuz, which makes no sense at all.
This in no way a Cuz issue for not buying in or "trying" hard enough. Bogut is a tough matchup for him. And as far as Cuz and Rudy go in this "motion" offense, first thing to look for is the movement and options off them. When the movement/options aren't there, it's an issue with our system and roster construction.
At some point, we're going to have to go over what a motion offense actually is. But in general, no matter the type of motion offense we might run, it's not going to be Cuz who's going to be cutting/slashing all over the offensive end. What you'd want to look for is movement/cutters/spacing off Cuz, or off Rudy, our focal points.
There basically was none. I know it's become popular to single in on Cuz and Rudy and their jacking up shots as not buying into the "motion" offense, but it really is the wrong way to be looking at this. A motion offense will consist of movement which takes advantage of the attention they draw, usually with weak-side misdirection and movement. The large majority of the time either had the rock, guys stood and watched. That is what should be worrying everyone. Passing the ball to Sessions/JT/Ben/Landry/Evans/etc just for the hell of it, doesn't equate to good ball movement or a motion offense, nor is it really a good idea for sets to be ending with those guys having the rock.
Maybe I'll dig up some of the videos I posted a while back showing various sets we used to run under Rick, but the first thing people would notice is when we had Webber or Vlade at the high-post, the "motion" came from the screens/cutters/misdirection off them, almost always with better spacing than we show. When we had Bibby or Doug in a P&R situation up top, we were running off the ball flares/cuts off multiple screens for a guy like Peja to get open. If it was Webber on the wing, he'd often play a two man game with Peja or Bibby off their movement while on the weakside we'd have Doug diving. It was both strong and weakside movement, ala the Spurs. The whole point of off the ball movement is to create options, multiple options. No movement, poor spacing, there's not going to be any options. That's our issue. That's quite worrying in regards to Malone's coaching acumen as well given these guys looked like they've never played together after a full training camp. We're not even getting Cuz and Rudy the ball in good spots. Actually, for some reason I can't figure out, we're giving Reggie freaking Evans the ball in the high-post and running cutters off him far more than we do with Cuz, which makes no sense at all.
This in no way a Cuz issue for not buying in or "trying" hard enough. Bogut is a tough matchup for him. And as far as Cuz and Rudy go in this "motion" offense, first thing to look for is the movement and options off them. When the movement/options aren't there, it's an issue with our system and roster construction.
Thanks. Motion offense discussion.
Couple of things. I don't know a motion offense very well but I do know that any offense involves all five players.
A second point and may be it should be the main point I was talking about. Bogut and the Warrioss threw a tough defenxe against Cuz. Surprise? No. We all knew that was coming last night. Cuz lost severely to it. How could that happen when the whole world knew it was coming? Cuz and Malone could have easily countered that in pre game planning. I won't bother to explain that to you because you understaqnd it betterr than I. Cuz lost twicee to it - once through blocked or poor shot and once because it got into his head. Both losers for us.
Become popular to get on Cuz's case? Does that mean you are on Cuz's case? When your best player is blocking progress you have a problem.