fishmike wrote:So I DVR the games. I rarely have the time to tune in live. Typically I will DVR the games, blow through the commercials, FTs, etc.. and it takes me about 50 minutes to watch the games. Lately I have been rewinding quite a bit and have been paying more attention to how the Knicks play.I know last year the Knicks were among tops in long 2s.
I havent checked this year where we stand. However I have been watching for these. It seems we never take long twos from a set position. They are all a result of rather than taking a contested 3, our guys will take a dribble, let the defender fly by and pull up for the uncontested 16-18 footer.
I see Jose, Lance and AA do this the most, although others do as well. When they do Clyde talks about passing on the 3 to take the shot THEY want.
Agree? Good shots? Bad shots?
I don't mind the wide-open mid-range or long 2. I don't love them and I'd much rather drive to the basket or get a good look at a 3, but sometimes those long 2s create space for the other stuff and keep the defense honest.
Sometimes we're getting good long 2s - Melo and KP take a bunch. Calderon and Afflalo, too. Fine with most of their shots.
But the kind of contested long 2s that Lance Thomas take because it seems like he's overconfident in his shot or has nowhere else to go... those feel like they happen too often.
I've noticed the trend particularly when we play a good defensive team like Atlanta, Cleveland, San Antonio, Miami - those are five of the seven losses right there. And they were good defensive teams forcing us into contested long twos - they shut down our ball movement, shut down a lot of the moving off the ball, shut down the paint - and we're left with mid-range Js or 3s that are usually pretty well covered.
Again, I think this is partly the good defensive teams forcing us into these shots - the shots are options in the Triangle, but they're like the "C" or "D" option, not the "A" or "B" options.
Anyhow, hopefully we can improve this, because being able to run your offense against good teams means being able to get the shots you want against them - not settle for what they give you.