Q-was-here wrote:SameOldNudityDrew wrote:Ok, I've got a minute, so I'll start brainstorming possible opponent "5 out" lineups.
Dallas
Luka
Dinwiddie
Bertans
Finney-Smith
Wood or Kleber
Golden State
Curry
Poole
Thompson
Wiggins
Porter Jr.
Denver
Murray
Bones Hyland
KCP
Porter Jr. or Gordon
Jokic
Clippers
Kennard or Norman Powell or Mann
Paul George
Kawhi
Covington
Batum or Marcus Morris
(man, the Clippers have a TON of outside shooters)
Portland
Dame
Simons
Gary Payton II or Shaedon Sharpe
Josh Hart or Nassir Little
Grant
(some question marks there, but you gotta imagine they'll add a stretch 4 at some point)
New Orleans
CJ
Troy Murphy III
Ingram (not a great outside shooter)
Zion (not a great outside shooter)
Valanciunas
(ok, that's a team that would have a really tough time going 5 out against us)
Memphis
Ja Morant
Tyus Jones or Zaire Williams (he'll get better this next year)
Brooks
Bane
JJJ
(Brooks and Ja are just average from deep, but that's still a good 5 man lineup)
At any rate, looking at those outside-shooting focused "5 out" lineups, what do you guys think about how we would match up against them with Rudy and KAT on the floor defensively? And on offense, how would you try to maximize our size advantage to punish them?
Well, I think this is the real soft spot and what critics of the trade will point to. How do KAT and Gobert defend these kind of "lineups of death" in the playoffs?
First off, we can potentially field our own 5-out lineup that ain't too shabby:
KAT
SloMo
McDaniels
Ant
DLO or whoever our PG will be
I realize that lineup doesn't include Rudy, but that's the beauty of having KAT, SloMo, and McDaniels. That's still a lot of length and ranginess that can do a bunch of switching and shot contesting. And then if Edwards can keep himself mentally dialed in, he really has the chance to be an elite two-way wing that can be really, really good defensively guarding 1-4.
Similarly, if Memphis decides to throw JJJ and Clarke out there, now we CAN play KAT and Gobert at the same time and keep those dudes off the glass. We have the size to go up against JoVal, Zion, and Ingram as well.
Yes, Q, I agree we can go 5 out, and I do think if teams go small against us, we should definitely suffocate them on the glass. There were some posts on pages 16 and 17 on which we were trying to constructively plan out how we would respond to teams going small in general, and I'm curious what you think about some of the ideas there.
I listed all these small lineups so we could get a better idea of how to game plan for specific teams. I don't have much fear of big teams obviously now that we have KAT and Rudy. The key question is when teams go small, how do we respond most effectively 1) on defense, and 2) on offense?
Defensively, I like that you mention Memphis, because if they go small with Clarke, I think that's not so much a problem because he's not really an outside threat UNLESS they start repeatedly running PNRs with Clarke and Morant (see more on that below). Otherwise, you just put Rudy on Clarke and let him sag off toward the paint if Clarke stays out by the 3 point line. I think that they
might be more of a threat offensively if they roll with Bane at the 4 because they'll all be able to shoot out there (I confused Tyus and Tre there!). In a case like that, would you put Rudy on their "worst" outside shooter, regardless of size (probably Brooks)? Would you go to a zone? And offensively, how could we punish them for having Bane as their second longest guy on the floor?
As for Golden State, I just heard Otto Porter Jr. left Golden State (I missed that when I made that list), so they'll have a tougher time putting out 5 outside shooters (unless they'll sign someone else, which they probably will). They could go small with Draymond, but he can't really shoot any more, so if they do go small with Draymond (which they did a lot this year) I think actually we could leave Rudy on him defensively and let him sag a bit. Actually, if they try to go small without Draymond, that's still a win because we'll have forced Draymond off the floor.
I'm actually not that worried about New Orleans in part because they can't really stretch the floor with Ingram and Zion that well. We can outsize them and outrebound them, and I don't think they'll really be able to stretch the floor against us well. Maybe if Ingram develops a better outside shot and the point-Zion thing returns. Although he can't really shoot from outside, so he's not much of a threat to shoot from the perimeter, Zion's quicker than Draymond, so I think it'd be tougher for Rudy to try to guard him on the perimeter, but I do think Ant and McDaniels could probably do it. If they try Jonas setting a bunch of picks for Zion, I think you could just have Gobert switch onto Zion because he's almost always going to the rim. In that case, I'd want to put McDaniels on Zion to start because if he switches off onto Jonas for the pick and pop, he's got the length to give him problems. I'll take long contested 2s with McDaniels on D.
I think the main team I'd be concerned about is the Clippers.
The more I think about it, the more I suspect that when teams go small, they'll try to relentlessly target Rudy in PNRs with the guy he's defending setting the picks, hoping to use their quickness to scramble our defense and either sneak past him to the rim (good luck), get a dump pass to the roll man (more likely) or (most likely), kicking it out to a perimeter shooter if the defense collapses. I hope we practice A LOT of defending pick and rolls from the perimeter with Rudy as the guy defending the dude setting the pick. It could be good offensive practice for some bench guys too. I can see JMac, Nowell, or Moore offensively initiating the pick and roll with KAT, Naz, or Minott (who could be a nice rim-crashing lob threat) to create a lot of practice opportunities for Rudy and DLO or Rudy and Ant or Rudy and McDaniels to defend the PNR together, just to help those guys develop the communication skills and instincts to defend that action when teams go smaller and quicker. They should also probably do that a lot in 5 on 5 scenarios so the rest of the defense learns to defend against the kickout for the perimeter shot as well.