franco12 wrote:CrushAlot wrote:He is playing team ball. Gallo looked first at Fish for a time out and then gave the ball to melo. Melo is the man so that was the right move. I also think Fish not calling a time out was the right move. If Melo takes the shot there is no way that a foul is called so I am glad that he passed it.
I'm totally ok with how the game ended, how the play ultimately unfolded.
But, I thought once Gallo brought the ball over, he should have been the one to actually initiate a play. I just thought giving it to Melo at that time gave him too little time to make a play.
Again, I think our team needs more time to learn how to attack in situations like that - some of that is on Fisher to create set plays and explain where on how our system should position them to attack.
The Knicks already know what to and they followed the Transition Rules of the Triangle Offense. This involves filling spots and if you look at the video you can see that they went to fill both corners, the Wing 3pt spot and the top of the key 3pt spot. Melo then penetrated and drew defenders. He could've passed back to KP, Gallo or to Jose in that scenario. Manu had to give help since Melo was driving to the hoop and Melo chose Jose, which was the easiest pass and shortest 3pt shot.
What they did made perfect sense. My issue is that if we had a guard that had breakdown ability that could have been used rather than passing to Melo in that short amount of time. Gallo is not that guard and neither is Jose. Jerian is that kind of guard but he's not ready for that kind of crunch time decision making.
If you had a dangerous PG they would take the ball and Melo would move to fill one of the 3pt spots or low post spot and that guard would be driving and looking to score or dish.
We have to use Melo in that role because he's the biggest threat we have to get a shot and thus draw defenders. This team becomes that much more potent the second we have a guard who is equally a threat to drive and score. Doesn't matter if it's a SG or PG.