I think you answered your question. I don't analyze tape the way you do, but as much as I don't agree with some of Corbin's decisions, you gotta believe that any coach has plays and plans for future direction of the playbook when players are ready.maybe it's best we run this one step at a time.
Agreed, vegas, but I think it's time to add some complexity with this group.
I don't recall much of this with Al Jefferson's group that should have been able to run it just fine. Maybe that was because Mo Williams sucked, and I don't remember the Devin Harris sets well enough.
Agreed, vegas, but I think it's time to add some complexity with this group.
I don't recall much of this with Al Jefferson's group that should have been able to run it just fine. Maybe that was because Mo Williams sucked, and I don't remember the Devin Harris sets well enough.
I think you answered your question. I don't analyze tape the way you do, but as much as I don't agree with some of Corbin's decisions, you gotta believe that any coach has plays and plans for future direction of the playbook when players are ready.
My eyeball test says that he has significantly shrunk the playbook to correspond with a high turnover of players, younger personel, and let's face it, the BBIQ of Stock, Horny and Malone was special.
@ primetime - that sounds like 1-4 with the old flex cuts (last night's video is unavailable on stats.nba.com). I've been trying to find video to copy but coming up short. RJ's 7th shot here and Favors' assist to Burks can be seen here and crappy .gif below. The Jazz were running similar sets early on trying to get Hayward some post-up looks.
I'm a fan of running more 1-4 through Favors. They've been going through Marvin and Evans since switching Kanter out of the starting lineup.
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There's plenty options to run on the other side, which is where the Jazz normally go with it. Sessions turns his back on the ball expecting a double pin down for Trey so he can switch if needed, and the Jazz capitalized on the mistake by timing things perfectly.
The way to stop this is running the two wings down the baseline so far that they have to go out of bounds and come back in before Favors can make that pass. It throws the timing off by allowing defenders to fight over screens and recover.
Fair enough - I'm just pointing out that the first two .gifs were illustrations of the Jazz offensive players communicating with each other to create scoring opportunities - good defense being beaten by better offense. The gif from this season just represents a defensive breakdown by The Bobcats - no one picked up the cutter. In most instances, good defense shuts this play down.
dleet
Running up your post count?