Originally Posted by
Pelicanidae
Yeah, I'm not a fan.
Obviously there's a time and a place for absolute freelancing, and sometimes it works. That's particularly true when everyone is clicking, people are having 'good days' in terms of making reads and recognising the defense, but those days aren't every day. Hell, they aren't even every quarter within the same day.
There needs to be some basic set of offensive plays that the guys are all familiar with that can be run either when things start sticking, or when a mis-match is recognised.
In at least two games now, we've had long stretches where we've been completely ineffective in the half-court because of a lack of off-ball movement and offensive versatility. When everyone's passing is on point, a free flowing offense can lead to those awesome sequences we sometimes have where the ball flies around and everyone gets touches and the opposing defense doesn't really know what to do: that's fun and it works. But there are other times where we just cannot make anything happen and within a framework within which guys can play, you end up with Lonzo taking pull-up midrange jumpers or Jahlil Okafor taking 15 foot push shots or Jrue having to just dribble into a wall and hope he can make something happen, and it's no good.
Even something as simple as having a few standard pick and roll sets with pre-planned off-ball motion would help a lot. There have been times in a few games where we've run a simple PnR action with Jrue or Ingram as the ball handler, and it's gotten us unstuck in bad situations, but despite having a good run there (either due to a mismatch, or - as in the Charlotte game - having an opposing guard who cannot defend the PnR) we just don't go back to it. Why? I hesitate to say it's because guys are trying to be unpredictable and run more free-flowing offense than the traditional PnR, but I wouldn't be surprised if that was at least an aspect of it.
Been largely disappointed with the lack of cutting so far, which would make sense if we're legitimately running a nearly zero-play offense. Cuts are something that, unless a player has great feel for, are planned/drawn up. Currently, cuts make up 5.8% of our offense, which is 18th in the NBA.
Right now, according to NBA.com, our offense is:
Cuts: 5.8%
Transition: 17.9%
Isolation: 6.2%
PnR Ball-handler: 16.8% (21st in the NBA)
PnR Roll-man: 4.2% (30th in the NBA)
Post Ups: 3.1%
Spot Ups: 23.9% (1st in NBA)
Hand-offs: 4.9% (19th in NBA)
Off Screens: 5.9%
Putbacks: 4.5% (21st in NBA)
Misc: 6.7
To me, that tells me that our offense isn't particularly unpredictable. If we don't get it in transition, we're either going to go for a spot up 3 or the ball-handler is going to try and score in the PnR. The roller doesn't really even get involved most of the time, we don't cut, we don't run dribble hand-off action, and we don't have the kind of shooters who run around screens.
There's a reason that despite the fact our pace is so high, allowing us to score a lot of points, our offensive efficiency is currently 14th in the NBA. It's about as average as it gets, because our offense is so simple, so predictable, and so plain that in the half-court, 49% of our offense comes either from spot up shooters or simple ballhandler creating for themselves. That's begging for the coach to mix things up a little.