The Sabonis Thread

How did players know where to stand while the one player dribbles the clock down?
Teams actually had offenses that resembled what the Kings do. Lots of motion, setting picks and moving without the ball. As long as you had players that could get to the rim, and players who knock down 15-20 ft jump shots, there was good spacing.
 
Old school Sabonis. What a box score
Sabonis, another three!!! Who knew?
People falsely believe that Domas can’t or won’t shoot 3’s, but he had 2 seasons with Indy where he made at least 50 (On roughly 160 attempts).

Even the past 4 seasons he’s made at least 30. That’s not a lot, but certainly isn’t nothing either.

His 37.5% average the past 2 seasons is certainly not bad at all.

I happen to think it’s a good thing he doesn’t shoot so many, as this team is already too reliant upon it. Hopefully adding DDR along with Domas balances things out even more.
 
Last edited:
I will continue to advocate for him getting that Brad Miller mid range shot in his arsenal. NO one is stopping this team if he can hit that around the freethrow line consistently
Taking midrange shots (and making them) would be grand. I just don’t want him out at the 3pt line much. But, yeah, making shots from the elbow or at the high post would be ideal.
 
The 3 point shot is different for Sabonis than many bigs - because he can still run the dribble hand off from the top of the key. If he takes 3-4 threes a game and runs the dribble hand off from the top of the arc or sets up a pick n roll - then I think the offense is going to be impossible to guard.
 

hrdboild

Moloch in whom I dream Angels!
Staff member
This might lend more credence to the idea that Sabonis is better than most think on the perimeter. I wonder how much number of possessions are factored into the metric.

I think this supports the eye test in two ways -- (1) Sabonis is a better overall defender than he typically gets credit for, largely on the strength of his decision-making as the primary defender on pick and roll actions and (2) Our need for an interior defensive specialist to compliment him is dire.

With Keegan expected to move to the PF position in the starting lineup next season, Monte will need to find a defensive big who slots into the 9-man rotation and can play significant minutes next to Sabonis before next season's playoffs or this team will be forced to depend on favorable matchups in order to make a long playoff run.
 
We need and have needed a long shot blocking 4/5 for years. Preferably, it should be one who can shoot 34-35% from 3 to make defenses honest.

Basically, it's a Jonathan Issac/Brandon Ingram type. But lower usage. It's a hard player to find.
 
I still think that player is most likely Keegan Murray. Again, all of this doesn't really matter if the defense can find some sort of stability like it had appeared to last season. Maybe not what it was at the end of the season because that might have been a little too high expectation wise, but somewhere in the 8-12th in the league rating range is doable. The Kings run so much switching and rely on run outs so much that whoever is next to Domas has to be more versatile than anything else. The Kings now have a crop of long guards that can reliably play on ball and then switch which will allow Keegan to be pinged off less screens and give him the chance on help and run outs instead. We saw in the Warriors play in game once coach Brown took Keegan off of Curry and put Keon on him instead it was basically over for the Dubs. The Kings flat out LOCKED them up. Keegan moving over to Klay and helping down at his size was a big part of it too. If they continue to let him be in that role it's probably a matter of time before his college blocking numbers reappear. When he's been at the rim we've already seen his effectiveness in changing shots just standing with his arms straight up.