crzymdups wrote:Vmart wrote:nixluva wrote:Vmart wrote:TPercy wrote:Vmart wrote:Time will tell how happy Melo is. MDA played a fast pace ran him out of town for a slower paced Woodson who catered to isoball. Hornacek likes motion from all his players. I don't think Melo is a motion offense player. I think Melo is just happy it's not Rambis. You see Rambis played with superstars in his career some of the best all time. He probably expected more from Melo but Melo quickly realized he wasn't anything close to Magic, Kareem or Worthy.
This guy is getting old and he wants to play a fast pace. Time will tell.
More recently, Melo has also shown his willingness to adapt. Passed the ball a lot more to get himself into a team philosophy and it helped.
That was the roll MDA wanted him to play a facilitator which lead to unhappy Melo.
That was a very bad reaction by Melo. I do think he has matured since then. I believe Melo will be fully behind this move and will support Horn fully. More importantly, the entire team should respond to an easier style of play that still has the same kind of ball and player movement but in an easier form to grasp.
Like I said I don't think Melo is a motion offense player. He moves only when the ball is in his hand he doesn't do Reggie Miller running off screens or cutting to the basket for easy baskets. He has slowed down a lot and you can see it. I don't know how you guys are speeding the game up for a player who is slowing down.
I'm guaranteeing a unhappy Melo by mid season.
Melo is one of the only guys on the team who sets good screens. It's hard to tell though because our guards are so bad at taking advantage of them. He freed up Calderon for countless mid-range jumpers this season though.
Melo got mad at MDA because when Melo went out with injury, MDA turned the team over to Lin and scapegoated Melo for the team's struggles pre-Lin. I think it was lame of MDA to do that and also lame how Melo reacted. They both blamed each other, when the real reason that team struggled was Amar'e and Melo were a terrible fit next to one another.
I think the real issue with the 15-16 Knicks was that we can't really have the big frontcourt on the floor for long stretches - Melo, KP, Rolo. Melo is essentially a 4 at this point. You saw last season as teams figured out they had to play the Knicks small that NYK played best when it was either Melo/KP at the 4/5 or Melo/Rolo 4/5. The big lineup of Melo, KP, Rolo won't work if teams go small.
I like Hornacek because I've seen him make good in game adjustments and counters and he designs smart small ball lineups and plays. Part of it though is roster construction. We need more 2/3 wings and I think one good point guard.
Part of Hornacek's challenge will be to convince Melo, KP, Rolo that the team will work best with only two of them on the floor at a given time. The big part of that will be convincing Melo he's best at the 4 at this point in his career. Melo is a perfect small ball 4 and KP is a perfect small ball 5. Rolo will be great to have around for specific matchups - the way the Warriors use Bogut.
If we add some pieces like Evan Turner, Brandon Jennings, Courtney Lee, Kent Bazemore - two of those four guys (and keep Dwill), I think they can be really good. I'd love to see them draft a 2/3 in the second round - Gbinije would be awesome and it seems like they are looking at those types. That'd be good - pay some FA vets to play those roles and bring in a kid or two to try to pop there, too. I suppose there's a chance Early comes back with an improved jumper and ready to contribute next season, but I wouldn't count on it.
The Knicks have a talented roster and could make the playoffs if coached right. I am so relieved Hornacek is here, because I think he can figure it out much better than Rambis ever would've.
This a good post, he does set good screens. I do think he can benefit from moving without the ball though to put more pressure on the defense. Problem is he can't guard anyone in the wing and he isn't big or strong enough to defend the post with any real success. He is very much a defensive liability, when he plays hard on defense every once in blue moon his offense becomes atrocious. He just physically can't bring it on both sides of the ball. So a speedier offense requiring even more movement probably won't benefit him.
I cannot teach anybody anything. I can only try to make them think - Socrates