If you look at the top defensive teams none of them other than orlando really have the big stud shot blocker. Atlanta does have josh smith but i dont people are scared to go inside against them and Indiana has roy hibbert who really isnt all that athletic, he's just huge. People who think we have to get a big time shot blocker next to cousins are wrong. Sure it helps but there are only so many dwight howards or tyson chandlers out there. Javale mcgee blocks shots? surely nobody wants him. Thats why i feel guys like Thomas Robinson, harrison barnes or MKG would be great for this team. All 3 are pretty good position defenders and bring much more to the table. If the guys on the perimeter could actually stay in front of somebody shot blocking wouldnt really matter. Barnes may not be as good a defender as MKG but he is still pretty good in his own right. Same with Thomas Robinson. And for all those people who are worried we might lose JT, who really cares?? Dont get me wrong i would like to bring him back but nobody is going to be blowing up his agents phone and there is a reason for that. JT is not a great defender, he is out of position quite often. He is a pretty good rebounder and has decent shot but he is not going to be a starter on a good team. Get some guys who can play team defense. Its not like miami, boston or chicago has a shot blocker back there. Noah averages 1.4 a game. just fyi and garnett is 36 so dont even go there. They all play excellent team defense. Thats what we need.
One does wonder why NBA fans are routinely so completely lost when it comes to shotblocking. Its been such a core part of defense for basically as long as the league as been around. The geomerty of that is simple: the basket is far off the ground, and hence a taller person is going to be able to come inbetween you and that basket much easier than a shorter person. And the shotblocker is generally your center or PF and hence normally positined BEHIND your other defenders. Its rather basic math to say that an offensive player having to beat two defenders is going to have a harder time than one having to beat one defender, and that an offensive player trying to shoot the ball into a 10 foot hoop over a 7 foot guy with long arms is going to have a harder time doing it than if he is faced with a 6'7" guy with shorter arms.
Now let's explore the odyesseys of the very teams you are citing, the top defensive teams in the league. Defensive FG% is the way to do that BTW, since Defensive Pts allowed depends to some degree on pace. So this is how the top 5 defesnive teams THEMSELVES feel about the importance of shotblocking:
#1 Boston (tied for 5th in shotblocking) -- start the season with Jermaine O'Neal at center. What is Jermaine's purpose you might ask? Shotblocking. Its all he can do anymore. As Jermaine breaks down turn to some degree to Greg Steimsma, who is a lousy basketball player in every way except, you guessed it, shotblocking. finally install 7foot Kevin Garnett back there where he drinks a fountain of youth potion and ups his shotblocking in the playoffs to about 1.5 a game. Let me ask you, as I will repeatedly, if shotblocking is not a key component of NBA defenses, why do the best defensive teams in the league try so damn hard to keep aroudn players that can do little else? Do you know something they don't? Perhaps you should become a consultant and explian to them the wrongheadedness of their thinking.
#2 Chicago (3rd in shotblcoking) -- let's see, employ not 1, not 2, but THREE frontline shotblockers in Noah, Gibson and Asik, with the three of them combining for nearly 4 blocks a game. Not that I know why they bother. Surely there must be a scoring combo guard or hardworking 6'7" PF they could employ instead.
#3 Philadelphia (tied for 12th in shotblocking) -- I would generally consider them an exception to the rule driven by Collins, but did you know that Brand and Hawes combined to block nearly 3 shots a game last season? In fairly limited minutes? Did you also know that after the season ended they immediately announced that their primarily goals were finding a guy who could create his own shot, and finding more shotblocking and length inside? Seems silly to us, since we know how unimportant that stuff is, but hey not everybody can be basketball geniuses.
#4 OKC (#1 in shotblocking) -- Serge Ibaka, Kendrick Perkins. 'Nuff said. Their frontline exists for no other reason.
#5 Miami (tied for 9th in shotblocking) -- Joel Anthony is a terrible basketball player. Just terrible. He's only good at one thing. Would you like to guess what that one thing is? Would you further like to guess who started at center for the Heat all season long? It wasn't Battier. It wasn't Haslem. It wasn't Mike Miller. It was the guy who could barely dribble with two hands. So again, let me ask you the question, if length/intimidation/shotblcoking/interior defense is NOT considered a critical component of defnese by the league's best defensive teams, why on Earth would a basketball player like Joel Anthony be starting for the likely world champs this year? What could possibly possess them?