To me, the way you defend this is by playing a switching defense, which requires players that can guard multiple positions. It doesn't appear New Orleans did that very well!

CoolBreeze44 wrote:That's amazing. If I was building a team to try and defend an offense like that I would want long, agile players at every position. But probably the best way to counter an offense like that is to punish them at the other end to try to get them out of their comfort zone. Pound the ball inside and pound the offensive glass. You're going to give up some fast breaks, but I'll take that over letting them efficiently fire away from the 3 point line.
SameOldDrew wrote:Zone D is legal in the NBA right? Could a team conceivably design a zone defense that targeted those areas? It would be tough because the 3 point line covers so much space. But I'm curious what that might look like and if it could be effective?
SameOldNudityDrew wrote:Zone D is legal in the NBA right? Could a team conceivably design a zone defense that targeted those areas? It would be tough because the 3 point line covers so much space. But I'm curious what that might look like and if it could be effective?
CoolBreeze44 wrote:SameOldNudityDrew wrote:Zone D is legal in the NBA right? Could a team conceivably design a zone defense that targeted those areas? It would be tough because the 3 point line covers so much space. But I'm curious what that might look like and if it could be effective?
Drew, a matchup zone would have the best chance of succeeding against this. You need constant pressure on the ball.