InGameStrategy
Well-Known Member
Maybe the same way that Fes does it in the later quarters even though he doesn't score much. The impact of having a player in the middle controlling the paint is underestimated, and many NBA champs have a center that aren't big scorers.Maybe I'm missing something; but while I'll concede that the defensive effort from the start has not be stellar the last 4 games; the far greater problem is The Jazz can't put the ball in the damn basket in the first half.
Points at end of First Half
v GSW - 39
v LAC - 39
v Miami -29
V ORL - 35
How is Fes going to solve this problem or better yet how will he impact it if he starts?
Rarely has the impact of Fesenko (or a player like him) been more apparent than last night. No doubt, his one minute in the first half was a negative--logging two fouls, one a stupid loose ball--but he more than made up for it in the second half. Dwight Howard was clearly not accustomed to the repeated bodying up that Fes inflicted, and it played a role in Howard committing his fourth and fifth crucial PF and being benched for most of the rest of the game. And of course I'm going to attribute some of AJ's higher intensity in Q4 to Fes (and others, too) turning it up a notch or two. Intensity can be contagious. And if you're wanting more scoring, Fes has potential to produce more. He showed his own form of the Weezie last night.
Even I'm not sure that starting Fes is the best option. I think that he's better as an enforcer off the bench for 6 to 10 minutes per half--especially if Utah isn't in or near the penalty--and more if he does better than the alternative.