Darkwing Duck
Well-Known Member
But Ty continues with Ol' Jer's method of forcing square pegs into round holes.
Yeah, Ol' Jer never had his bigs shoot 3s or have his guards post up. NEVER.
But Ty continues with Ol' Jer's method of forcing square pegs into round holes.
Yes, you have a point. But shouldn't a player also take it upon himself to make changes to his game that will punish opponents for defending a certain way? Early in Karl Malone's career, defenses would let him have that wide open 15-20' shot all game long, so guess what, Karl realized what his weaknesses were, worked on that outside shot and made defenders pay for not respecting his outside shot. Yes, Corbin is a ****ty coach, no argument here...but Hayward needs to take more initiative to improve his game. He know's what he has difficulty with, so the the next step is doing something about it. Is that too much to ask or expect from a player that believes he should be the highest paid on the team?Alternatively, the coach could set up plays to get him the kinds of shots he likes. But Ty continues with Ol' Jer's method of forcing square pegs into round holes.
I'll never understand that garbage either. I only started watching the Jazz in 03/04, but Jerry did a really good job during the Deron-Boozer years designing the offense to take advantage of the players' strengths. Sets to get Memo 3s, AK being utilized as a passer, Brewer using the baseline, Boozer in the high post and running PnR with Deron, Deron ISOs, Harpring off the curl and posting up, CJ Miles shooting 25-foot fade aways off screens (...). I'd argue Ty has done a decent job overall putting players in roles and using sets that maximize Jazz wins (the defense is another story, of course).Yeah, Ol' Jer never had his bigs shoot 3s or have his guards post up. NEVER.
What do you suggest?Alternatively, the coach could set up plays to get him the kinds of shots he likes. But Ty continues with Ol' Jer's method of forcing square pegs into round holes.
ZL: Being the no. 1 option has been tough for you so far. You sounded down during some interview I saw recently. Is it more draining than you expected? About the same?
GH: I just haven’t shot the ball as well as I wanted. It’s different. Guys aren’t leaving me that much. I’m getting different shots — shots that I’m not used to taking.
ZL: What kinds?
GH: Like we discussed earlier, a lot of teams are starting to do the center-field type of defense on the pick-and-roll, so you’re getting midrange floaters.
ZL: Those are tricky.
GH: Very tough. And those are shots I honestly don’t like taking. I’d much rather get other people involved, and when teams do that, they kind of force the guy coming off the pick-and-roll to make a decision and shoot. It’s just a two-on-two game, which is difficult on me. I’m just not used to shooting that shot as much.
Gordon, that's how the NBA works...other teams know what your weaknesses are and they will force you into taking shots you're not comfortable with? How do you combat this?...Gee, how about practicing these shots and/or developing a floater so teams have to reconsider how they defend you. Or, you could just continue playing video games instead. $12M+/year rests in the balance...your move.
I'm also confused. Where do you see in his on court performance that he's improving on these types of shots? The proof is in the pudding...just like we know Jeremy Evans improved outside shooting wasn't a result of sitting on the couch eating doritos all summer right?I confused. Where in the interview does he say that he's not practicing these shots??? Or do you have inside information that we are all lacking?
Yes, you have a point. But shouldn't a player also take it upon himself to make changes to his game that will punish opponents for defending a certain way? Early in Karl Malone's career, defenses would let him have that wide open 15-20' shot all game long, so guess what, Karl realized what his weaknesses were, worked on that outside shot and made defenders pay for not respecting his outside shot. Yes, Corbin is a ****ty coach, no argument here...but Hayward needs to take more initiative to improve his game. He know's what he has difficulty with, so the the next step is doing something about it. Is that too much to ask or expect from a player that believes he should be the highest paid on the team?
I'm also confused. Where do you see in his on court performance that he's improving on these types of shots? The proof is in the pudding...just like we know Jeremy Evans improved outside shooting wasn't a result of sitting on the couch eating doritos all summer right?