The Pistons should not trade Mohammed; they should try to package Murray, McDyess and/or Davis to get a quality backup PG.
I disagree. The Pistons should trade Mohammed to the Kings for Garcia.
Care to explain what the problem is
Ok, fair enough.
But when have I said that I am not a laker fan, did you assume that I hide that side of it.
How do you know that I am not a kings fan as well, there are many fans who like multiple teams and it just so happens that Lakers, Kings, Jazz and Heat happen to be my favourites (well atleast the heat before Shaq and wade ).
I was a fan of Vlade and followed him from lakers to the kings, it just so happened that during the end of hir career the kings and lakers played in a couple of meaningfull playoff series.
I used to love the Pick and roll of Malone and Stockton and the jazz defense and I am still a fan of Sloan for the way he conducts himself and the team, no matter what the talent level is his teams always show up to play which is something you cant tell about any other team including championship calibre teams. Pop comes close second but his team also has been helped by some external factors.
Heat with their stiffling defense during Zo, Hardaway days with Majerlee, Bowen etc etc was something special. I was really very high on that team they assembled a few years ago with Eddie jones, Zo, Brian grant but it just didnt take off due to Zo's injury.
I suppose when you wear colored lenses things always look different to you, I like the game and then teams.
An interesting take on the effect thus far: http://www.nba.com/pistons/news/langlois_blog_070123.html
An interesting take on the effect thus far: http://www.nba.com/pistons/news/langlois_blog_070123.html
When Joe Dumars took that phone call from Webber’s agent, Aaron Goodwin, in the middle of his team’s blowout win at Oklahoma City on Jan. 4, he immediately warmed to it. Makes sense. To add a guy with Webber’s credentials and obvious motivation – a veteran nearing the end of his career, with a chance to win a title in his hometown, where he feels an urgency to make amends – at minimal risk or investment is as close as it gets to a no-brainer in the NBA.
But Dumars is sensitive to the delicate team chemistry that many of his peers consistently undervalue. So he took the temperature of his leadership on this one. And it was not only unanimous to bring Webber aboard, it was enthusiastically unanimous. The reaction was something on the order of, “If you can pull this off … wow.”
The Webber signing has put a bounce in all of their steps. Around the executive offices, among the coaching staff, throughout the locker room. Two games, two opponents shooting under 40 percent. And not because Chris Webber came to Detroit and channeled the spirit of Ben Wallace. But because he came and gave a team famous for its self-confidence a reason to believe in itself anew.
I was really struck by the last part of the article:
I'm glad Webb decided to end his career in Detroit, and I'll always have just a little ache in my heart for what might have been.
Chris McCosky: Burning Questions
Getting defensive with Webber
Answering some questions about Chris Webber and the Pistons defense as we approach mid-season.
Q. With Chris Webber starting at center, are the Pistons going to play more zone?
A. Coach Flip Saunders said the amount of zone they play will be predicated on opponents and matchups, but you would think they would play it a little bit more, just to ease some of the burden on Webber. They played it almost the entire game against Minnesota.
But they have to be careful. Zones are most effective when they take the opposition by surprise. The longer you stay in a zone, the more comfortable offenses get with it. Also, if you play zone too much, players have a tendency to get lazy. You saw that in some of those tough losses when Pistons defenders fell asleep and forgot to close out on the 3-point shooters late in games.
But there is such a thin line between playing man-to-man and playing in an efficient matchup zone, it's sometimes tough to tell one from the other.
Q. How bad a defender is Webber?
A. Not as bad as advertised. He doesn't have the mobility, especially laterally, that he once had. But he is smart on the court. He understands angles and he anticipates plays effectively. He's also long and he has quick hands, so a lot of times he disrupts plays even when his man has sped past him.
Webber is often criticized for his inability to defend on the pick and roll play. Chauncey Billups had something to say about that.
"Everybody makes too much of a big deal about that," Billups said. "It's five on five out there, man. And there is no big man in the game that can stop the pick-and-roll -- maybe Ben Wallace could and one or two others -- but the pick and roll is the worst play to defend for any team. If I am running the pick-and-roll and I get a center stepping out on me, I don't care who it is, he's not going to stop me from doing what I need to do. That stuff is overrated, man."
Q. How much of the offense does Webber know right now?
A. Billups said they have had to take about five or six steps back in order to let Webber catch up. And by all accounts, Webber's picking things up quickly. So far they have been operating with both Webber and Rasheed Wallace on the elbows. There are a bunch more sets that involve them in high-low deployments that I haven't seen them try yet. Those are going to be deadly, you would think. Both Webber and Wallace can shoot it from the top and both are excellent passers.
I was really struck by the last part of the article:
I'm glad Webb decided to end his career in Detroit, and I'll always have just a little ache in my heart for what might have been.
Webber's finally had some time to practice. The next week should about show what he's capable of in Detroit. We had to use really dumbed-down plays the last couple of games because Webber had zero time to learn the playbook.
I'll see if I can't throw an update or two this way whenever something significant happens on the Webber front.
Right now anyway, Webber has impressed on all accounts. He's always had a tremendous fan-base here, albeit he left many of them on bad terms over the Fab 5 scandal. But he's being received a lot better now than he would have been even 5 years ago.
I think one issue is going to be encouraging webber to shoot a little more than he is currently. He's passing up a lot of open shots trying to set up his teamates, which is good and all, but it wouldnt kill him to knock down an open 15-footer to keep the defense from playing him for the pass.
Thanks for the "insider's take". We would love to get updates on Cwebb whenever you can throw them our way, I know many of us still follow him closely, and all of him (well, ALMOST all) wish him the best.
I think Webb will shoot more as he relaxes. Right now, I think he is trying to fit in the role he has been given. He wants to make it clear that he is not in Detroit to be the #1 scorer or run up the stats sheet, he wants to help his team win.
Is there a Detroit message board similar to kingsfans.com that you frequent?
Well, like you said, Webber was a little more offensive-minded tonight:
7-9 shooting, 19 points, 6 rebounds, 3 assists.
He really should have had about 7 assists. We blew three wide open layups off his passes. Guys arent quite used to him yet.
Webber does seem to make the other 4 starters play much better. He repeatedly set our guys up at various points in the game.
Webber seems to take a liking to rasheed wallace, who was Webber's bag boy rookie in washington. He likes to throw above-the-rim lobs to him a lot like he did to howard back on Michigan.
I think one issue is going to be encouraging webber to shoot a little more than he is currently. He's passing up a lot of open shots trying to set up his teamates, which is good and all, but it wouldnt kill him to knock down an open 15-footer to keep the defense from playing him for the pass.
Webber with another great game tonight: 8/12, 17 points, 6 rebounds, 6 assists, and 4 steals.
He's shooting just under %60 from the floor as a Piston. He's getting wide open shots because of all the attention paid to our guards, and it's really starting to click. Webber is knocking down open shots with regularity.
Antonio McDyess made his first 8 shots tonight, mainly because webber kept getting him open jumpers and layups. All 5 starters shot over %50 as well.
Unlike the last couple of week, guys are starting to convert on webber's passes.
I'm really excited to see what he does against LA on thuersday.