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Defending Tyreke Evans

With the Lakers in Sacramento last night to play the Kings, Tyreke Evans put up 25 points, 9 assists, and 11 rebounds.  Despite the near triple-double, I think the Lakers did a very good job defending Evans (most of the time).  The Lakers used Ron Artest (and Kobe a little) on Tyreke Evans, and he seemed to struggle a bit with them covering him.  Here is the breakdown:

  • With Ron Artest (and Kobe) Covering Evans – 17 points (on 5-12 shooting – 6 of 9 from the FT line), 6 assists, and 8 rebounds in 38:14.
  • With others (Jordan Farmar and Shannon Brown) Covering Evans – 8 points (on 2-3 shooting – 4 of 5 from the FT line), 3 assists, and 3 rebounds in 4:08.

The numbers show the difference (17 points on 12 shots vs. 8 points on 3), but I think what really shows the difference is looking at the highlights.

With Ron Artest On Him

With Ron Artest covering Evans, you had a big body that wasn’t going to let Evans bully him into the paint.  The result was a lot of dribbling on the outside:

Once Evans crosses half court, he takes 7 dribbles without going inside the three point line and then passes it to Spencer Hawes.  Now Hawes hits the three, but I think the Lakers would rather have Hawes shooting threes than Evans getting inside and creating havoc.  In fact, this was how the Lakers played Evans all night as they were determined to let the other players beat him:

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17
Mar 2010
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How The Lakers Free Up Kobe

With the game tied and 9 seconds left, everyone and their mother knows that Kobe Bean Bryant will be getting the basketball.  So how was he able to get free for a pretty easy (for Kobe) jumper?  Some great execution from the Lakers and some poor execution from the Raptors:

After Ron Artest inbounds it to Pau Gasol, he cuts backdoor while Kobe comes to the basketball.  The Lakers have run a play like this in the past, except instead of a backdoor cut, it was a backscreen set.  Phil Jackson chose not to go with the backscreen, and I think that is smart.  It prevents the Raptors from switching the cut and denying Kobe outright.  On the other side, Lamar Odom sets a back screen for Derek Fisher.

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10
Mar 2010
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Defending The Post

The Lakers-Nuggets game was a great game to watch, and with each team having a lot of players who can operate in the post you had a lot of post up opportunities.  This forced both teams to defend players posting up a good chunk of the game, and both teams did a very good job of it.

The first example comes from J.R. Smith when Kobe Bryant tries to post him in transition:

As Lamar Odom brings the ball up, Kobe takes J.R. Smith right into the middle of the lane, sealing him in the paint, and then calling for the ball.

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01
Mar 2010
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Good Lakers/Bad Lakers

In a span of two games in two days, we saw two different Lakers teams in the fourth quarter.  Two nights ago against Memphis, the Lakers executed brilliantly late, coming back and ending up with the win.  Last night against the Mavericks, the Lakers, failed to execute late.  The Lakers lost.  Maybe most surprising last night was Kobe Bryant failing to execute.  Kobe made a key mistake late, and it may have cost the Lakers the game.

First we are going at the Lakers’ game Tuesday night:

After a Rudy Gay block on a Kobe Bryant lay-up attempt, the Lakers now have the ball on the side.  Ron Artest is inbounding it and as soon as he gets it, Pau Gasol steps towards the ball and makes himself available.

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25
Feb 2010
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The Lakers Late Without Kobe

The Lakers have now played 4 games without Kobe Bryant, and last night’s game was the first close one out of those 4.  The Warriors tied the game at 89 with 4:37 left.  The Lakers then went out on a 7 point run, effectively putting the Warriors out of reach.  After Ron Artest made a foul shot, the Lakers went inside to Pau Gasol.  In fact, he went on to score the next 6 points.  The Warriors really had no answer (they tried using Ronny Turiaf) to defend Gasol, so the Lakers went to him time and time again:

Lamar Odom pulls down a rebound and brings it up court.  This is a pretty common sight if you are a Lakers’ fan.  Odom is a terrific rebounder, but he also has the ball handling ability to bring the ball up the court as well.

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17
Feb 2010
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Breaking Down Some Plays From Lakers-Spurs

When you have two of the best coaches in the history of the NBA going up against each other, you know there is going to be some good Xs and Os stuff to look at.  Turns out, they didn’t disappoint.

Spurs’ Pick & Roll

I know what you are thinking.  A pick and roll?  How is that good play calling?  Well, let’s take a closer look to see how good it is:

TP Pass1

Tony Parker gets the pick, not from Tim Duncan, but from Antonio McDyess.  Tim Duncan, as you can see is setting up on the low block.  The purpose of this play is to isolate Duncan’s defender, Pau Gasol.

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09
Feb 2010
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How The Bobcats Let The Lakers Off The Hook

Yeah, the title was an excuse just to post that video. Anyway, after Nazr Mohammed’s bucket with 1:38 left cut the lead to 1, the Bobcats were looking to get a stop to get a chance to win the game:

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04
Feb 2010
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The Play Before The Play

Last night’s Lakers-Grizzlies game was awesome.  You had Kobe’s quick three, two missed foul shots from Mike Conley, then a missed game winning three from Ron Artest.  With all of that action going on, it is easy to forget that the most important play was the one that happened right before the others I have mentioned.  That play is the Rudy Gay 3 that took the Grizzlies lead from 2 to 5:

Up by two, the Grizzlies are in no rush here.  They walk the ball up and kill 10 seconds before they even start their offense.  Mark Gasol cuts through, and right after the cut, Zach Randolph comes sets a screen for Conley.

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02
Feb 2010
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1 Possession, 2 Great Plays

Yesterday’s Lakers-Celtics game was a very good one.  You had both teams taking a sizable lead, only to see the other claw back and make things interesting.  The result was Kobe being very Kobe-like, hitting a very tough jumper with Ray Allen draped all over him.  The Celtics were now down 1 with 7.3 seconds left.  We are going to take a look at the play that followed Kobe’s shot, and what made it so fun to watch (at least for the partial observer) was that in my opinion everyone on the court did everything right.  Let’s take a look at the play after the jump.

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01
Feb 2010
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Breaking Down The Possession – The Weekend Of 1/23-1/24

There were two really good games with some nice execution late.  The first game that we are going to take a look at is the Lakers-Raptors game from yesterday.  The Lakers had the lead lake, but two plays for the Raptors that lead in fouls were able to help the Raptors get the win.

The Shooting Threat Of Bargnani

The great thing about being a great three point shooter is the way that the defense plays you.  Defenses need to close out hard because they respect the shot, and if you have an ability to attack the basket, this gives you a great advantage.  When you are a shooting threat from the center spot, it is even better, because you are usually matched up against guys who don’t really know how to close-out properly.

Here Pau Gasol is in help position as the pick and roll between Chris Bosh and Hedo goes on.  Hedo then makes the pass to Bargnani.

As Bargnani makes the catch, he doesn’t even need to pump fake, because Pau Gasol is already closing out on him real hard.  Bargnani rips the ball through and has Pau on his hip.  This gives him a lane right to the basket.

The help actually comes on time, but Bargnani is able to avoid it, take the ball under the basket, and hit the reverse lay-up while getting fouled.

The Play To Get Hedo Fouled

Here, the Raptors run a pick and roll late with the goal to isolate Pau Gasol on Hedo (because, as we talked about in the past, most teams switch any screens in the final moments of the game).

The pick gets set and the switch is made.  Hedo explores the right side, but there is nothing there, and he crosses over and goes back to the middle.

Hedo uses another screen from Bosh.  Here, the Raptors actually gave the Lakers a chance to switch back.  Pau and Ron Artest choose not to though.

Because they don’t switch the screen, Hedo is able to use is athletic advantage on Pau to get him on his hip.  He does just that and starts his drive to the basket.

Hedo gets into the lane and as he attempts a lay-up, he is fouled.  He knocks down the two foul shots and the Raptors come away with the win.

The next game that we arre going to look at is the Magic-Bobcats game from Saturday.  This was another good game (until it got into overtime), but instead of good execution, it was a defensive breakdown that almost cost the Magic the game

Outside Opening Inside

Before we get to the late game play, I just wanted to show what makes Orlando so dangerous.

As the clock winds down to end the quarter, Marcin Gortat sets a screen for Vince Carter.  Look how the court is spread out.  The Magic have 4 legitimate outside threats with the one center.  A great way to stretch the court out.

After he sets his screen Gortat dives to the basket.  This serves two purposes, the first is that it may suck a defender in and allow for an open shot.  The second purpose is that if/when the Magic shoot a three, Gortat diving to the basket makes himself available for an offensive rebound.

As Carter swings the ball to Jameer Nelson, there is a problem.  Stephen Jackson has to decide to go defend Rashard Lewis (who is wide open right now) or stay on Gortat.

Jackson chooses to go out on Lewis, leaving Gortat open.  Nelson makes a great look-away pass to get it to Gortat down low.

Gortat makes the catch in the paint with the defense on his back.  He is able to finish strong with the dunk.

The Defensive Breakdown

Now we get to the defensive breakdown.  This to me looks like a lack of communication either in the huddle or on the court (Maybe both).

This is a nice play run by the Bobcats.  Boris Diaw is going to quickly make himself available, and after the pass is made, Stephen Jackson is going to come off a backscreen set by Raymond Felton.

After Felton sets the screen, he is going to come and get a handoff from Diaw.  For the Magic, this is where the breakdown happens.  You can see Nelson pointing (and most likely yelling) to Vince Carter.  Nelson wants Carter to switch and cover Felton as he covers Nelson.

However, Vince Carter doesn’t here him (or chooses to ignore him), so now the Magic have two defenders on one, and Boris Diaw (it ends up being Diaw because the handoff turns into a screen, and that gets switched by Dwight Howard)  is going to be open.  In this hectic-ness, Carter and Nelson need to figure out who is going to go out on Diaw.  Instead of just one defender going out on Diaw, both do.

This leaves Stephen Jackson wide open under the basket.  Jackson is actually open for a really long time here, but Felton can’t see him, because Dwight does a good job of getting big and closing the court down.  He doesn’t allow for Felton to see how open Jackson is.

As Felton uses his speed to turn the corner, he is able to finally see Stephen Jackson who is still wide open.  Jackson shouldn’t still be this wide open, but again Vince Carter and Jameer Nelson can’t figure out who is going to run to Jackson.  Nelson, decides he is going to stay with Diaw, and this forces Carter to try and cover a longer distance to get to Jackson.

He is unable to do so, and Felton makes the pass to Jackson, and he is able to finish right at the basket, tying the game, and sending it into overtime.