brad can give one helluva vicious pick....go ask harris when he was with the mavs![]()
I still cringe when I think of that screen. And new players wonder why they spend hours working on drills to learn to warn their fellow teammates about blind picks.
brad can give one helluva vicious pick....go ask harris when he was with the mavs![]()
I still cringe when I think of that screen. And new players wonder why they spend hours working on drills to learn to warn their fellow teammates about blind picks.
You can probably find it on YouTube. Look for Brad Miller/Devin Harris.
While both the subjects are at hand.. can you imagine Hawes's physicality with bmillers big man bball IQ? That would be scary. (maybe it just floats in my head cause they are both white boys that play the 5 and were on the kings... nothing prejudiced intended just a rare coincidence in the NBA)
Hawes's what with BMiller's what??
I'd rather keep it simple -- Hawes's skillset, and body for that matter and let's jsut put in Dejaun Blair's heart and toughness. Or hell, for the approrpiate comparison, let's just put in McHale's brain. You put a warrior into Spencer's body wiht those skills and he's tearing up the league.
He's not that athletic, its not like he can do much. He's got 5 other way athletic basketball players going crazy around him. You can't ask for much.
Did you ever see Kevin McHale play? (legit question -- if you are young enough you may not have).
The whole point of those moves is they negate athleticism. If he was running around trying to dunk over everybody, sure. He fails. But he has skills that not 10 guys in the whole league have. He's just too wimpy to go in there and absorb the punsihment you have to to make use of them. He's a flag football player in a tackle league.
As an aside, Spencer's athleticsm is probably about average for a center and better than some PFs (Luis Scola comes to mind) as well. Nenad Krstic, Joel Pryzbilla, Marc Gasol, Bogut, Haywood, Miller the list goes on. Including our own muscleless post playing ex-center (Vlade).
I guess thats true. I would honestly like to keep Nocioni on the team for that fact. The more tougher players the more tough your team gets... right?
Yes quandry that. We are winning and forming up a tough persona...and then in 8 weeks we have about 60 minutes of guys returning to eat up the bulk of the minutes at 2 positions. Something will have to give. Unclear what at this point.
I like your jigsaw puzzle analogy. I also like chocolate cake.Ah, but maybe it's a cake you've never had before. It's a chocolate cake with almonds and perhaps a dash of ameretto, etc.
What's developing with the Kings just isn't clear enough to know.
Perhaps my cake example was wrong.
let's put it this way. If you have a 82-piece jigsaw puzzle and you lose the box top are you going to be able to tell what the picture is by the first 7 pieces you put on the table?
Examples aside, I'm saying they're a work in progress and I think it's way to early to try and draw conclusions. What we saw the first couple of games hasn't been what we've seen the last couple of games and what we might see tonight could be different still.
Bottom line Spencer needs to be assertive in the paint and he hasn't been thus far. That's why I said he plays short. It's like he doesn't know he's 7 feet tall and big enough to body up on a lot of the people that are being matched against him. Not sure why...could be just his game but it's not a symptom of his college days I don't think since Brockman gets it and Brockman came from the same school.
One habit, that drives me nuts, is when he's on defense and the offense performs a simple pick and role. Without fail, he ineffectively lunges toward the guard, and then tries to recover and re-guard the big man he left who's running towards the basket. This would work if Spencer was spritely and speedy enough to recover, but he's not and is always caught in no-man's land - too far from both players to do anything. If you watch him, he will, without fail, do this on every single pick & roll that he's involved in. Why the opposing team doesn't exploit this on every play is beyond me. And why he keeps doing this, is a complete mystery to me.
Three point shooting of championship centers since 3pt shot was instituted:
...
There is one, ONE model in the entire history of the NBA to justify Spencer.
I'm not sure (because I don't live in an area where I can watch games) but it sounds to me like he is making a poor attempt to show. The idea behind it is to act like, as a result of the pick, you're going to switch on to the man with the ball, tricking the ballhandler into thinking that you left the guy who set the pick. Ideally, then you jump back to your man, or into the passing lane to get the steal. It especially works great in pickup games where there are no NBA level PGs (they're easier to trick).
Really, it is a good defensive move...if you can get back quick enough. I don't get to watch games, so I don't know if this is actually what's happening, but it seems like Spencer may be playing what should be good defense, but due to lack of quickness is actually bad. Kind of the "play within your abilities" thing.
Stockton and Malone never got a ring, despite being some of the nastiest players in NBA history; should Sloan have thrown out the pick 'n roll page of the playbook?
I think Spence shooting and making 1-2 wide open threes a game can open up the paint to Reke, who looks like our #1 option anyway. Forcing a long range jumpshot should nail him to the bench to be sure, but even with all Hawes' moves, he's probably not going to be as dominant in a one on one post situation as Reke.
The two sets all stem from a single mentality, one which Spencer does not have.
thats not fair... they did go to the finals a few times but jordan kinda got in the way of malone/stockton winning a ring or two...