Jump to content


Toggle shoutbox Shoutbox Open the Shoutbox in a popup

@  2016Champions : (23 July 2013 - 12:07 PM) "Overall, when a qualifying defender is within 5 feet of the basket, the NBA shoots 57.2% of its attempts close to the basket; however, when Dwight Howard was the interior defender this number dropped to 48.2%"

2010-11?
@  2016Champions : (23 July 2013 - 12:06 PM) Weird, I can see John Eby's daily on the front page but not in the forum. I was wondering which season the Kirksberry study was in reference to.
@  2016Champions : (22 July 2013 - 09:13 PM) I'm not sure, but I think this is Chandler Parsons blocking DeMarcus Cousins: https://vine.co/v/hKnZuWQ7qLK
@  Ostrow : (22 July 2013 - 08:22 PM) He was my first thought as well, but he was so good offensively.
@  CC. : (22 July 2013 - 08:05 PM) Well there's Kevin McHale haha. 6th man of the year twice, Of course he wasn't just strictly a defensive player, but he did star in six all defensive teams, which ain't too bad right
@  Ostrow : (22 July 2013 - 07:50 PM) I love me a Asik, he's just a weird type of player for a 6th made. I'm trying to think of great 6th men who came of the bench and basically were only defensive players.
@  CC. : (22 July 2013 - 07:48 PM) And yeah I don't see Asik as that 6th man Harden once was, but he still anchors that defense for 48 minutes, and for a team like the Rockets...they need it and that's fine for me as a '6th man'
@  CC. : (22 July 2013 - 07:45 PM) I honestly have kept OKC as the 1st, until now that I'm finding out Martin left haha. I'd go with the Spurs now
@  Ostrow : (22 July 2013 - 07:41 PM) Who sounds like your one seed out of curiosity? I mean our 6th man isn't great for that role. Obviously Asik is good, but not your stereotypical 6th man sparkplug scorer off the bench
@  CC. : (22 July 2013 - 07:18 PM) So that leaves OKC with Reggie as their 6th man? Hmm that doesn't sound like 1st seed to me
@  redfaithful : (21 July 2013 - 09:15 AM) 3 team deal with Bucks, OKC got rights to Szymon Szewczyk, drafted 2003...
@  Ostrow : (21 July 2013 - 07:25 AM) sign and trade. they didn't want to pay him
@  RollingWave : (21 July 2013 - 03:48 AM) they got Luk Ridinour for him I think
@  CC. : (21 July 2013 - 01:18 AM) Wait what happened to Kevin Martin? OKC got only a second round pick for him?
@  timetodienow... : (20 July 2013 - 02:55 AM) guy*
@  timetodienow... : (20 July 2013 - 02:54 AM) Yeah, I can see that. The dude is my favorite irrational confidence guys.
@  2016Champions : (20 July 2013 - 02:52 AM) I do see the reason for comparison though, both capable scorers and defensive liabilities.
@  2016Champions : (20 July 2013 - 02:51 AM) Nate wouldn't have accepted the flimsy contract we gave Brooks. Brooks is nothing more than an emergency 3rd string, where as Nate is looking for more than that.
@  timetodienow... : (20 July 2013 - 02:15 AM) What are you guys' thoughts about bringing in Nate Robinson? I wondered why the Rockets signed Brooks when Nate was still available.
@  timetodienow... : (20 July 2013 - 01:59 AM) Cousins isn't consistent enough for that. I ranked them on a post if you want to comment there.

Photo

The Rockets Daily - July 19, 2013


  • Please log in to reply
10 replies to this topic

#1 Red94

Red94

    Advanced Member

  • Administrators
  • 469 posts

    Posted 19 July 2013 - 03:35 AM

    New post: The Rockets Daily - July 19, 2013
    By: John Eby

    I-10 Rivals - NBA.com's Blogtable weighs in on whether Houston has a chance to leapfrog San Antonio next year. Skepticism abounds. Lang Whitaker says it best:

    Quote:

    I think Houston will be pretty good and will probably finish in the top half of the Western Conference, but I learned many years ago to never bet against the San Antonio Spurs. The Spurs are the Jason Vorhees of the Western Conference — every time you think they’re out, they return and just keep coming after you.

    Surprisingly, John Schuhmann made what may have been the weakest argument against Houston's improvement:

    Quote:

    The Rockets can get there, but it will take more than the addition of Dwight Howard, because they already had a great defensive center with Omer Asik. For the Rockets to improve 10 or more spots from 17th in defensive efficiency, they will need improvement on the perimeter.

    Daryl Morey has gone on record several times saying that when Asik was on the floor, Houston was a top-10 defense, and that the problem came when Houston couldn't play an elite defensive center. Howard eliminates that problem. Hopefully Asik's and Howard's remarkable durability continues.

    Rules They Are A-Changin' - Overshadowed by the most predictable mascot change in the history of professional sports, was the fact that the NBA Board of Governors changed several rules. Three changes in particular will certainly have an impact on the Rockets next year.

    From ESPN:

    Quote:

    They voted to expand the use of instant replay to include reviews on block/charge calls in the restricted area, better known as the "no-charge zone." Officials now can stop the game to check and see if a defender was in the restricted area on such a call.

    I'd call this a general positive for the Rockets, since with Asik and Howard guarding the rim the team will rely more on blocks than charges for defensive stops, unlike back in the Battier/Scola days. It also might give Howard a teensy bit more freedom while playing in the post or rolling to the rim, as he doesn't usually get the benefit of the doubt on those calls. Next:

    Quote:

    Officials also will be able to use instant replay to review whether a player had started his shooting motion on shooting fouls, and whether a foul was committed before a ball was inbounded.

    There's a potential problem for Harden on the shooting foul issue if refs decide that getting slapped on the arm while he's gathering his dribble for a layup counts as a shooting foul, but it seems like this is really designed to curtail the Kevin Durant/Kevin Martin rip-through move. Next:

    Quote:

    It will now be a violation and automatic turnover if an offensive player stands out of bounds and doesn't immediately return to the floor. This addresses a recent trend in the league of players standing out of bounds under the basket in an attempt to pull defenders out of position or hide from the defense. There will be no penalty for extenuating circumstances such as injuries or saving a loose ball.

    Well, this could hurt in two ways. First, corner three-point shooters occasionally trick the defense into spreading out too far by standing out of bounds, which is a useful ploy for giving extra space to post players or pick and rolls. Second, the nearly impossible task of creating an offense where Asik and Howard could co-exist just got harder. How, you ask?

    Check out this post from Mike Prada at SBNation on last year's Denver Nuggets, and scroll down to point no. 3. Now watch this play:

    And Prada's comment afterward:

    Quote:

    What better way to hide your cutters than to station them off the court? And if the Thunder's defenders are so concerned about the cutters that they'll follow them out of bounds, you end up with easier isolations. It's just one of the many ways the Nuggets mask their lack of shooting in half-court situations.

    Surely this is the kind of play that would be handy in a shooting-deprived Howard-Asik lineup. But now it's illegal.

    A Different Kind of Dwightmare - Kudos again to 2016Champions for bringing up this tremendous article from Clutchfans, in which MIT Sloan genius Carl Fudge breaks down how devastating the Harden-Howard PnR combo could be. He also points out several of Howard's strengths that clearly differentiate him from Asik, including this one:

    Quote:

    Perhaps Howard’s favorite way to score is off the lob. As a 6’11” athlete with a 40” vertical jump, Dwight can go up two and a half feet above the rim to catch and dunk balls that few other players can even touch. While the Clippers have owned the term “Lob City” in recent seasons, there will be plenty of alley-oops in Clutch City too.

    Alley-oops are much more than SportsCenter eye-candy in this case. Houston's guards forced countless passes into Asik's feet or into defender's hands last year because everyone knew the stone-handed Turk was incapable of converting alley-oops. While many players can execute textbook two-dimensional positioning while defending the pick-and-roll, only a handful of athletes have the hops to contest a lob to Howard (and out of those, really only Serge Ibaka and Larry Sanders are elite overall defenders. Condolences to JaVale and DeAndre).

    Golden Oldies - Rumor has it that Houston is pursuing Mike Miller and Marcus Camby. ESPN reports that Miller may be turned off by Houston's depth on the wings, while Camby is likely to sign because he called H-Town home. Either player would be a good signing--Miller as a clutch veteran sharpshooter or Camby as an insurance policy on Asik and Howard.

    Got any sweet links or suggestions? Email them to [email protected] or message @EbyNews on Twitter.



    #2 2016Champions

    2016Champions

      Advanced Member

    • Members
    • PipPipPip
    • 2,252 posts
    • LocationVirginia, USA.

    Posted 19 July 2013 - 03:56 AM

    Anyone who hasn't read Carl Fudge's article really should, like Rahut said it's tremendous.

    Debates are destructive as they present one-sided opinions and demolish reasoned arguments, whereas discussions are constructive and encourage the expression of opinion.

     

    Debate is the death of conversation.


    #3 2016Champions

    2016Champions

      Advanced Member

    • Members
    • PipPipPip
    • 2,252 posts
    • LocationVirginia, USA.

    Posted 19 July 2013 - 04:03 AM

    By the way, George Karl was a genius at figuring out ways to score without spacing from shooters, but all his little tricks were snuffed out in the playoffs--food for thought.

    Edited by 2016Champions, 19 July 2013 - 04:06 AM.

    Debates are destructive as they present one-sided opinions and demolish reasoned arguments, whereas discussions are constructive and encourage the expression of opinion.

     

    Debate is the death of conversation.


    #4 ale11

    ale11

      Advanced Member

    • Members
    • PipPipPip
    • 545 posts
    • LocationMontevideo, Uruguay

    Posted 19 July 2013 - 04:11 AM

    If he is congratulating you, maybe you should get the name right, lol :D I have to grant you that it really is a great article



    #5 2016Champions

    2016Champions

      Advanced Member

    • Members
    • PipPipPip
    • 2,252 posts
    • LocationVirginia, USA.

    Posted 19 July 2013 - 04:24 AM

    My mistake, that's how I pronounce Rahat in my head so it just came out like that.

    Debates are destructive as they present one-sided opinions and demolish reasoned arguments, whereas discussions are constructive and encourage the expression of opinion.

     

    Debate is the death of conversation.


    #6 2016Champions

    2016Champions

      Advanced Member

    • Members
    • PipPipPip
    • 2,252 posts
    • LocationVirginia, USA.

    Posted 19 July 2013 - 04:36 AM

    Btw Carl Fudge just followed me on Twitter :D

    Debates are destructive as they present one-sided opinions and demolish reasoned arguments, whereas discussions are constructive and encourage the expression of opinion.

     

    Debate is the death of conversation.


    #7 Rahat Huq

    Rahat Huq

      Administrator

    • Administrators
    • 1,168 posts

      Posted 19 July 2013 - 11:41 AM

      Actually John Eby writes the Dailies.  



      #8 Stephen

      Stephen

        Advanced Member

      • Members
      • PipPipPip
      • 296 posts

        Posted 19 July 2013 - 02:44 PM



        Speaking of Jason,it appears Brooks is back.



        #9 ale11

        ale11

          Advanced Member

        • Members
        • PipPipPip
        • 545 posts
        • LocationMontevideo, Uruguay

        Posted 19 July 2013 - 04:27 PM

        Like Rahat said, I meant it because it wasn't him who wrote it :D



        #10 Jeby

        Jeby

          Advanced Member

        • Members
        • PipPipPip
        • 148 posts

          Posted 19 July 2013 - 04:39 PM

          Actually John Eby writes the Dailies.  

          Yeah, but I'll take the confusion as a compliment on my writing.

          By the way, George Karl was a genius at figuring out ways to score without spacing from shooters, but all his little tricks were snuffed out in the playoffs--food for thought.

          That's a very good point, although Houston would have the advantage of trotting out either shooting-heavy or center-heavy lineups to exploit match-ups in the playoffs--a luxury Denver didn't have.
          "Assets" -- Daryl Morey

          #11 myjohnlai

          myjohnlai

            Member

          • Members
          • PipPip
          • 14 posts

            Posted 21 July 2013 - 04:51 AM



            Alley hoop pass!
            Tyson Chandler and Jeremy Lin.
            I am looking more of this from the Rockets.






            0 user(s) are reading this topic

            0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users