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Can the PnR really be defended
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knicks1248
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7/30/2010  10:54 AM
http://www.theknicksblog.com/2010/07/30/amares-troubles-with-pick-and-roll/

This particular play is use by every single team in the league, some coaches like Sloan and MDA have perfected this play, and can run it from any area in the court.

It's the hardest play to defend hands down, yet soo many players get crucified for not being able to defend it, (or in this particular play with Amare) to lazy to do it.

If you don't pick up on that sht right away, your doomed, it only takes a split second, and u can forget about it. If the play wasn't so effective, coaches would hardly run it, yet the say your a lousy defender if you can defend it.

No matter where that play is run, in the streets, video game, NBA, overseas, if run correctly there's going to be a high rate of success, and there no defense that can stop it

Sounds very contradictive

ES
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Bippity10
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7/30/2010  11:14 AM
If guys are running the pick and roll effectively it is tough to stop. Coaches understand this. They also know that if the players are forced to switch it can create awful mismatches. That being said, when you are a coach you design strategies that are meant to minimize the effectiveness of the pick and roll(or at least make the opponent work harder). You can hedge hard on the screens to keep a Chris Paul type from turning the corner. You can double the ball to force the ball handler to pass the ball to a player that is less effective creating. You can switch on every pick when you have versatile defenders(or if your team keeps getting beat on the screens). Switch when some players are involved and fight through on others. You can drop below the screen and force a poor shooter to shoot.

There are a million more complicated strategies as well. Coaches don't get upset if you design a strategy, the players follow and it doesn't work. In that situation it's your job to come up with a better strategy. The problem comes in when you ask guys to fight through screens and they consistently drop below and give up jump shot after jump shot. Or you ask a big man to hedge hard and they consistently give a soft hedge or drop off before the guard is able to recover. These are the problems that guys like Amare and Nate Robinson and Shaq have had throughout their careers. Other teams know it and use it to their advantage. This is when players get crucified.

I just hope that people will like me
alphamale33
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7/30/2010  11:16 AM
russell was a master at this.

his arms were so long, and his rep so beastly, he'd stay with the pg doubled, and then quickly run over and block the f"n SHYT out of a guy .

The difference between , say, Ben Wallace and Russell is only 1 thing..BRAINS.

BRIGGS
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7/30/2010  11:19 AM
alphamale33 wrote:russell was a master at this.

his arms were so long, and his rep so beastly, he'd stay with the pg doubled, and then quickly run over and block the f"n SHYT out of a guy .

The difference between , say, Ben Wallace and Russell is only 1 thing..BRAINS.

No I would not lump Ben Wallace in as some kind of stupid player--quiet opposite he was a very good smart player for what he(actually great for 3-4 years) did and he has rings to prove it.

RIP Crushalot😞
knicks1248
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7/30/2010  11:38 AM
Bippity10 wrote:If guys are running the pick and roll effectively it is tough to stop. Coaches understand this. They also know that if the players are forced to switch it can create awful mismatches. That being said, when you are a coach you design strategies that are meant to minimize the effectiveness of the pick and roll(or at least make the opponent work harder). You can hedge hard on the screens to keep a Chris Paul type from turning the corner. You can double the ball to force the ball handler to pass the ball to a player that is less effective creating. You can switch on every pick when you have versatile defenders(or if your team keeps getting beat on the screens). Switch when some players are involved and fight through on others. You can drop below the screen and force a poor shooter to shoot.

There are a million more complicated strategies as well. Coaches don't get upset if you design a strategy, the players follow and it doesn't work. In that situation it's your job to come up with a better strategy. The problem comes in when you ask guys to fight through screens and they consistently drop below and give up jump shot after jump shot. Or you ask a big man to hedge hard and they consistently give a soft hedge or drop off before the guard is able to recover. These are the problems that guys like Amare and Nate Robinson and Shaq have had throughout their careers. Other teams know it and use it to their advantage. This is when players get crucified.

IMO Going over the screen, deosn't exactly mean your fast enough to catch up to the ball handler, going under the screen means...well, it's almost always resulting in a mis-match.

If the ball handler gets in to the paint, and a guy comes over to protect it, his man is usually left wide open on the wing, and all you can do is pray he misses..Again there are a million options on the offense, but not on the defense.

ES
Allanfan20
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7/30/2010  12:13 PM
There's no way you'll be able to defend it successfully everytime, because while people scream out "FIGHT THROUGH THE SCREENS!!!" they don't realize just how difficult that is, even for someone as strong minded, physically fit and persistant as Tony Douglas. Sometimes you'll be able to get through them quick enough, and sometimes, no matter how hard you try, that screen is going to be even better than your effort, and that PG or SG will be gone. Hopefully, Tony and Raymond and perhaps Shannon Brown will be able to defend this more consistently then the Nates and Marburys and Duhons and Crawfords of the world. Goodness they were awful at it.

Bip is right though. You'll need to develop new strategies, because not everyone is a wolf like Tony Douglas, and you'll especially need shotblocking. So while Amar'e may not be so keen at working against the PN'R, at least (Unlike David Lee) he has the ability to block shots if he can recover, and have Anthony Randolph and Turiaf get his back too, to send some away.

It will be interesting to see how this should pan out. Good thread.

“Whenever I’m about to do something, I think ‘Would an idiot do that?’ and if they would, I do NOT do that thing.”- Dwight Schrute
nixluva
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7/30/2010  1:29 PM
Now you know why we've been loading up on very quick n athletic players that can defend. The length we've added is also part of it. DW knows MDA needs bigs that can move and contrary to popular belief MDA knows a lot about D otherwise he wouldn't be so adept at beating them. This is probably the best defensive group MDA has had in terms of how he wants to defend. All these players fit the system on both ends.

It used to drive MDA crazy when Nate would go under the pick instead of fighting over! Now we've got a good group of guys who can move and recover very well. We should be solid against the PnR.

umynot
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7/30/2010  2:26 PM
nixluva wrote:Now you know why we've been loading up on very quick n athletic players that can defend. The length we've added is also part of it. DW knows MDA needs bigs that can move and contrary to popular belief MDA knows a lot about D otherwise he wouldn't be so adept at beating them. This is probably the best defensive group MDA has had in terms of how he wants to defend. All these players fit the system on both ends.

It used to drive MDA crazy when Nate would go under the pick instead of fighting over! Now we've got a good group of guys who can move and recover very well. We should be solid against the PnR.

Coach K said something very similar ......

preaches offense cause defense it all about hustle and commitment
D is something you have to be willing to do

Nash tried hard but was always tooo slow on D

So far Knick teams have had no willing defenders other then Gallo Chandler and Jeffries
Had no middle man

With Amare AR Turiaf and Drago think we will shock people on D

KNICKS on the way UP!!!
Bippity10
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7/30/2010  2:56 PM
knicks1248 wrote:
Bippity10 wrote:If guys are running the pick and roll effectively it is tough to stop. Coaches understand this. They also know that if the players are forced to switch it can create awful mismatches. That being said, when you are a coach you design strategies that are meant to minimize the effectiveness of the pick and roll(or at least make the opponent work harder). You can hedge hard on the screens to keep a Chris Paul type from turning the corner. You can double the ball to force the ball handler to pass the ball to a player that is less effective creating. You can switch on every pick when you have versatile defenders(or if your team keeps getting beat on the screens). Switch when some players are involved and fight through on others. You can drop below the screen and force a poor shooter to shoot.

There are a million more complicated strategies as well. Coaches don't get upset if you design a strategy, the players follow and it doesn't work. In that situation it's your job to come up with a better strategy. The problem comes in when you ask guys to fight through screens and they consistently drop below and give up jump shot after jump shot. Or you ask a big man to hedge hard and they consistently give a soft hedge or drop off before the guard is able to recover. These are the problems that guys like Amare and Nate Robinson and Shaq have had throughout their careers. Other teams know it and use it to their advantage. This is when players get crucified.

IMO Going over the screen, deosn't exactly mean your fast enough to catch up to the ball handler, going under the screen means...well, it's almost always resulting in a mis-match.

If the ball handler gets in to the paint, and a guy comes over to protect it, his man is usually left wide open on the wing, and all you can do is pray he misses..Again there are a million options on the offense, but not on the defense.

If I tell my guy to go under a screen I'm telling them to do so for a reason. If I tell them to go over the screen I expect them to go over it. It's part of the team defensive concept. Once a guy doesn't do what the coach asks, or does it "lazily" he screws up the defense for everyone else.

Listen Stockton and Malone ran the pick and roll to perfection for years and no one could stop them. That's why coaching is so overrated. If you have two great players running the pick and roll to perfection there is not a lot you can do. But again, scouts and coaches know this and are okay with this as long as you hustle and get in the right spots you will be okay. If you half asse it like our team has done for 4 or 5 years, you will get killed by it.

I just hope that people will like me
Bippity10
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7/30/2010  2:57 PM
Anyone ever notice how many times Jared Jeffries was left wide open when we ran the pick and roll. Other teams were doing this by design.
I just hope that people will like me
Bippity10
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7/30/2010  2:58 PM
BRIGGS wrote:
alphamale33 wrote:russell was a master at this.

his arms were so long, and his rep so beastly, he'd stay with the pg doubled, and then quickly run over and block the f"n SHYT out of a guy .

The difference between , say, Ben Wallace and Russell is only 1 thing..BRAINS.

No I would not lump Ben Wallace in as some kind of stupid player--quiet opposite he was a very good smart player for what he(actually great for 3-4 years) did and he has rings to prove it.

Yeah, I'm not quite sure how Ben Wallace got lumped into that. Ben is an extremely bright on the court player.

I just hope that people will like me
nixluva
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7/30/2010  3:05 PM
umynot wrote:
nixluva wrote:Now you know why we've been loading up on very quick n athletic players that can defend. The length we've added is also part of it. DW knows MDA needs bigs that can move and contrary to popular belief MDA knows a lot about D otherwise he wouldn't be so adept at beating them. This is probably the best defensive group MDA has had in terms of how he wants to defend. All these players fit the system on both ends.

It used to drive MDA crazy when Nate would go under the pick instead of fighting over! Now we've got a good group of guys who can move and recover very well. We should be solid against the PnR.

Coach K said something very similar ......

preaches offense cause defense it all about hustle and commitment
D is something you have to be willing to do

Nash tried hard but was always tooo slow on D

So far Knick teams have had no willing defenders other then Gallo Chandler and Jeffries
Had no middle man

With Amare AR Turiaf and Drago think we will shock people on D


I really like the job DW did. I said before the FA period that DW was going to go after 2 way players and he did just that. These are guys you don't have to ask to give effort on D. Also when you think about the makeup of the roster, I don't think we've aver had this many guys that have the length, hops and timing to avg more than a block a game like we've got now. Amare, AR, Turiaf, Chandler, Gallo, Timo, heck even AZ and Felton will block a shot now and then.

Which also leads to another point I thought of. Have we ever had a team this athletic? We've got so many guys that can be the highlight of the night that everyone of our games may have 3 entries. Amare, AR, Chandler, AZ and if we get Brown are all guys that have ridiculous hops. Heck even Gallo will throw it down on you. Turiaf and Timo can even get in on the action. All the way down to Felton, who can posterize guys. This is one of the most athletic teams in the league. Almost everyone has solid athletic ability.

nyk4ever
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7/30/2010  3:24 PM
alphamale33 wrote:russell was a master at this.

his arms were so long, and his rep so beastly, he'd stay with the pg doubled, and then quickly run over and block the f"n SHYT out of a guy .

The difference between , say, Ben Wallace and Russell is only 1 thing..BRAINS.

this couldn't be further from the truth. is ben wallace a bad offensive player? yes. is he a horrible foul-shooter? yes. but the man is one of the brightest defensive minds i've seen play basketball. he knows exactly how to fill space and play angles. your statement is ridiculous.

"OMG - did we just go on a two-trade-wining-streak?" -SupremeCommander
Bippity10
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7/30/2010  3:40 PM
nyk4ever wrote:
alphamale33 wrote:russell was a master at this.

his arms were so long, and his rep so beastly, he'd stay with the pg doubled, and then quickly run over and block the f"n SHYT out of a guy .

The difference between , say, Ben Wallace and Russell is only 1 thing..BRAINS.

this couldn't be further from the truth. is ben wallace a bad offensive player? yes. is he a horrible foul-shooter? yes. but the man is one of the brightest defensive minds i've seen play basketball. he knows exactly how to fill space and play angles. your statement is ridiculous.

The man had no talent with the ball to speak of. There are 10 year olds that have better skill then him. Yet the guy turned himself into one of the most valuable players in the league for a good spell. This was done through pure hustle and a very keen understanding of the game. I think alphamale was just looking to throw a name out there.

I just hope that people will like me
EwingsGlass
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7/30/2010  4:19 PM
Bippity10 wrote:
nyk4ever wrote:
alphamale33 wrote:russell was a master at this.

his arms were so long, and his rep so beastly, he'd stay with the pg doubled, and then quickly run over and block the f"n SHYT out of a guy .

The difference between , say, Ben Wallace and Russell is only 1 thing..BRAINS.

this couldn't be further from the truth. is ben wallace a bad offensive player? yes. is he a horrible foul-shooter? yes. but the man is one of the brightest defensive minds i've seen play basketball. he knows exactly how to fill space and play angles. your statement is ridiculous.

The man had no talent with the ball to speak of. There are 10 year olds that have better skill then him. Yet the guy turned himself into one of the most valuable players in the league for a good spell. This was done through pure hustle and a very keen understanding of the game. I think alphamale was just looking to throw a name out there.

And then he stopped doing roids... [is it just me or does he seem like a likely culprit?]

You know I gonna spin wit it
DrAlphaeus
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7/30/2010  4:36 PM
Good thread, y'all. Reminded of this article from last year
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/20/sports/basketball/20pick.html

And here is the picture from that article, yikes.

Baba Booey 2016 — "It's Silly Season"
loweyecue
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7/30/2010  5:15 PM
Bippity10 wrote:
knicks1248 wrote:
Bippity10 wrote:If guys are running the pick and roll effectively it is tough to stop. Coaches understand this. They also know that if the players are forced to switch it can create awful mismatches. That being said, when you are a coach you design strategies that are meant to minimize the effectiveness of the pick and roll(or at least make the opponent work harder). You can hedge hard on the screens to keep a Chris Paul type from turning the corner. You can double the ball to force the ball handler to pass the ball to a player that is less effective creating. You can switch on every pick when you have versatile defenders(or if your team keeps getting beat on the screens). Switch when some players are involved and fight through on others. You can drop below the screen and force a poor shooter to shoot.

There are a million more complicated strategies as well. Coaches don't get upset if you design a strategy, the players follow and it doesn't work. In that situation it's your job to come up with a better strategy. The problem comes in when you ask guys to fight through screens and they consistently drop below and give up jump shot after jump shot. Or you ask a big man to hedge hard and they consistently give a soft hedge or drop off before the guard is able to recover. These are the problems that guys like Amare and Nate Robinson and Shaq have had throughout their careers. Other teams know it and use it to their advantage. This is when players get crucified.

IMO Going over the screen, deosn't exactly mean your fast enough to catch up to the ball handler, going under the screen means...well, it's almost always resulting in a mis-match.

If the ball handler gets in to the paint, and a guy comes over to protect it, his man is usually left wide open on the wing, and all you can do is pray he misses..Again there are a million options on the offense, but not on the defense.

If I tell my guy to go under a screen I'm telling them to do so for a reason. If I tell them to go over the screen I expect them to go over it. It's part of the team defensive concept. Once a guy doesn't do what the coach asks, or does it "lazily" he screws up the defense for everyone else.

Listen Stockton and Malone ran the pick and roll to perfection for years and no one could stop them. That's why coaching is so overrated. If you have two great players running the pick and roll to perfection there is not a lot you can do. But again, scouts and coaches know this and are okay with this as long as you hustle and get in the right spots you will be okay. If you half asse it like our team has done for 4 or 5 years, you will get killed by it.

Those two were the best of all time, but some credit goes to Jeff Hornacek too. His shooting earned enough attention from defenses.

TKF on Melo ::....he is a punk, a jerk, a self absorbed out of shape, self aggrandizing, unprofessional, volume chucking coach killing playoff loser!!
nixluva
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7/30/2010  7:30 PM
Felton, Amar'e & Gallo could be pretty good over the next few years I'm just really high on this team from a fit perspective. This is more of what MDA and DW wanted to have the last 2 years. If Felton can be not only effective in the PnR, but also in pushing the pace and spreading the ball, this team will be much more efficient than before and should be a pretty solid playoff team.
bishop
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7/30/2010  8:09 PM    LAST EDITED: 7/30/2010  8:10 PM
Tim Duncan in his younger days defended the pick and roll beautifully. I think lateral quickness, length, and most of all smarts are very important in slowing down the PnR. If Felton can continue last years shooting percentage, the PnR should be more deadly for the Knicks. Of course Gallinari and any other shooter will have a big effect(spacing) on how well the team is at succeeding at running the PnR.

Its such a simple play but very hard to stop effectively. Communication and team cohesion on the defensive end also go a long way in limiting the effectiveness of the pick and roll. Team defense is a big part of stopping it, rotating to the correct man, etc. I think its still the toughest play to stop though because it only takes one defender (ie. Nate Robinson or Marbury) to mess it all up.

Olbrannon
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7/30/2010  11:03 PM
I seemed to notice the Knick guards trapping just past mid-court when the ball was brought up in SL
Denying the passer his target. But yeah...quickness and length matter and the Knicks by most accounts
have better defenders. It's hard for a guard to defend if he feels like he is on an island and has no help.
Last year Gallinari, Chandler and Jeffries was not enough. I can't find it in me to count Lee. Nice break he
makes the All-Star team when someone has to sit out for an injury. Even nicer he gets traded for
for young talent.

SSOL ......lets see it. Better to get there before the defense.

Bill Simmons on Tyreke Evans "The prototypical 0-guard: Someone who handles the ball all the time, looks for his own shot, gets to the rim at will and operates best if his teammates spread the floor to watch him."
Can the PnR really be defended

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