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Seeing AL Objectively - SLCdunk article

This is high level troll, Geevee, but I'll keep going with it. You didn't answer what the alternatives are.

Didn't KOC trade Deron Williams for prospects and picks? Don't the Jazz have a new GM? With all the recent changes, it's well within the realm of possibility that this roster looks a lot different a year from now.

Trading with his back against the wall trying to squeeze value into it is obviously different than trading off assets for no return other than saving money & obtaining high draft picks.

Re: "NBA offenses require excellent iso players...": Even if your premise is correct (I'm not sure it is), Jefferson isn't an excellent iso player (or particularly dynamic to say the least), and I don't expect him to become one (I could be wrong). The low entertainment value of Jefferson ball AND the commitment to mediocrity a commitment to Jefferson would indicate would be enough for me to jump ship, quite frankly. No loss for you and yours, but a bridge I'd rather not cross..

The premise is correct. Talent is. I see the failed Nellyball experiment as a route around mismatches, but even that style requires a certain type of talent to compete.

I've always understood your side of the argument to be Jefferson is an excellent one on one player who fails when the double team comes because he lacks court vision & passing ability. You're handicapped if you think Jefferson is not one of the league's elite man to man scorers.

And the Jazz do own Bird Rights on Millsap.

Good correction. I meant he's UFA & can go where he chooses. How do you like the prospect of Millsap picking his starting role & the Jazz getting "stuck" with Jefferson?
 
GVC and NAOS doing solid work here... i especially agree with GVC saying that a team that is built around al is basically accepting mediocrity, and NAOS's theory that we'd get over the loss of al pretty fast.

franklin said this:

27 y.o. JefferSap are one of the top front lines in the league, statistically speaking, so why not work with that instead of bitching about their shortcomings.

so first of all, i totally disagree about us having one of the top front lines in the league. if we did, san antonio wouldn't have swept us specifically by attacking our front line on both ends of the floor. i think we have a decent front line, but jefferson is not a franchise standard-bearer and everybody in the NBA community knows it, which is why every ranking on the jazz mentions how limited we are because of jefferson.

now, replace 27 year old jeffersap with millsap-favors (average age 24) and i think you're chance of having a star are a lot greater.

all my angst about jefferson --ok, at least 75% of it-- is because he is holding favors back. we gave up an all-NBA talent in the hopes that favors would become the same, and now we're denying him that opportunity. favors' ceiling is MUCH higher than al's, but it's easier to accept al's safer-but-mediocre 19 points and 9 rebounds even if it doesn't make anybody around him any better.
 
When Popovich couldn't get what he wanted from Parker's relentless North-South action, then he got Al involved in PnR or defending Duncan in space. That equals death. Every mother ****ing time.

It was all-out destruction: front court and backcourt. We've tried to fix the backcourt. The front court is still manned by the guy with two left feet.
 
San Antonio ran the Jazz to death & Parker ate them up. That's all on the backcourt, dumb ***.

a) i'm not a dumbass
b) it's usually the loser of an argument that resorts to name-calling
c) watch the series again. parker had his way because pop had him in a PnR with whoever jefferson was guarding. if jefferson was guarding tim, then the PnR was with tim. if corbin tried to adjust to take al out of the PnR defense by switching al onto diaw, then diaw was the pick man.
 
I needed reminding myself, so here it is for everybody:

Frank isn't pro-Jefferson. He's just doubling down now that we appear to be stuck with him.
 
all my angst about jefferson --ok, at least 75% of it-- is because he is holding favors back. we gave up an all-NBA talent in the hopes that favors would become the same, and now we're denying him that opportunity. favors' ceiling is MUCH higher than al's, but it's easier to accept al's safer-but-mediocre 19 points and 9 rebounds even if it doesn't make anybody around him any better.

This is not disagreeing with your statement here Nerd. But How is it on Jefferson that Favors is getting held back. Isn't it Millsap that plays Favors preferred position? Don't Sap and Jefferson take about the same # of shots per game? I'm not a big Jefferson fan but having the "safe" 20 and 9 that Jefferson gives us isn't holding Favors back at all if Favors is playing most of the min at the PF. The problem is witch one of the 2 (Sap or Jeff) being out of the lineup gives us the best chance to compete and win while giving Favors the min he needs?
 
i've answered most of these contentions in this and other threads before, but here i go again....

This is not disagreeing with your statement here Nerd. But How is it on Jefferson that Favors is getting held back. Isn't it Millsap that plays Favors preferred position?

the 4 and the 5 are basically equivalent positions, especially in the jazz's sets. favors and millsap absolutely can be on the floor together. in fact, i would argue their skills complement each other more than favors and jefferson.

Don't Sap and Jefferson take about the same # of shots per game?

al: 18.2 FGA/36 and 1.12 points per shot. paul: 14.8 FGA/36 and 1.23 points per shot. so a) no, they don't take the same number of shots, b) at least paul is measurably more effective with the attempts he DOES take, and c) paul doesn't have to bring the whole offernse to a grinding hault to get his shot off.

(note: the team's PPS is 1.19, which means jefferson is well below average and yet is our main offensive staple.)

I'm not a big Jefferson fan but having the "safe" 20 and 9 that Jefferson gives us isn't holding Favors back at all if Favors is playing most of the min at the PF.

the problem with jefferson's 19 points (not 20) is that it takes him 17 shots to get there). you're right on rebounds, though, sap doesn't rebound enough to compensate for the hypothetical situation where al got abducted by aliens or traded for a new team masseur. however, both favors and kanter have a higher rebound % than al, and since any scenario where al is gone means more minutes for those two, i think we'd be fine.

and yes, jefferson hold almost everyone back (regardless of position, which matters less and less in today's NBA) because he's only effective in isolation post-ups where the ball goes to him and stops. it doesn't matter if you're a point shooting guard, that offensive philosophy DOES get in your way if you're anyone other than al jefferson.

The problem is witch one of the 2 (Sap or Jeff) being out of the lineup gives us the best chance to compete and win while giving Favors the min he needs?

i totally agree that this is the right question to be asking... and i have long since come to the conclusion that the answer to both part A and part B rhymes with daul dillsap.
 
the 4 and the 5 are basically equivalent positions, especially in the jazz's sets. favors and millsap absolutely can be on the floor together. in fact, i would argue their skills complement each other more than favors and jefferson.

al: 18.2 FGA/36 and 1.12 points per shot. paul: 14.8 FGA/36 and 1.23 points per shot. so a) no, they don't take the same number of shots, b) at least paul is measurably more effective with the attempts he DOES take, and c) paul doesn't have to bring the whole offernse to a grinding hault to get his shot off.

You really are clueless to how NBA offenses work, aren't you. This has gone from sad to pathetic.
 
i've answered most of these contentions in this and other threads before, but here i go again....
Thanks for answering again. I didn't want to sift through pages and pages of other threads to get your answers. So i'll rep you for taking the time.

One more thing that I know you have gone over (and because I respect your POV). From what I have seen of the offseason moves it that the reason they are building the offense around a player like Jefferson is that he is the only person the the team that commands a double team. And that is what you have to have to get the defense to move were you can get open looks. I remember the end of the Orlando game in OT were Jefferson scored in a one on one situation and forced Nelson to double the next time he got the ball in the post. Pass out to Harris swing to Hayward hits the 3. Next time Nelson doubles again pass out to Harris, another 3 game over. Jefferson seemed more willing to pass moving toward the end of the season and now that we have the shooters around him does this possibly take away the grinding halt in his game?

Video of the game I am talking about:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PdSmVxS_-Pc&list=UUtQaN8nRecAqzoqUQUvo9tw&index=28&feature=plpp_video

Jefferson was hitting that night. (so this isn't the case all the time) If you noticed the P&R with Favors were Harris hits him on the post worked because they were doubling Al even without the ball. Thats why Favors was able to walk to the rim. I don't know that this is the mold we want but is seems to me this game is what the FO is trying to accomplish with there moves.
 
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You really are clueless to how NBA offenses work, aren't you. This has gone from sad to pathetic.

maybe i'll check out basketball for dummies this weekend from the library. in the meantime, i'm going to operate on the assumption that the more points an offense produces, the better it is.

when i get to the part in the book about how i'm wrong and how it's better to channel more late-game possessions through a player that is less effective than most of his teammates, then i'll know as much as you and i can write my mom a letter. that will make her proud.
 
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