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  • #31
    MixxAOR wrote: View Post
    Just realized once our FG% increases our OREB will naturally drop lol
    Well, sure, but if our OREB% stays consistent that's still a huge win.
    twitter.com/dhackett1565

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    • #32
      Code:
                                                
      Rk                      Player Pos  Tm TS%V
      1                   Seth Curry  SG PHI .758
      2                  Rudy Gobert   C UTA .754
      3               Richaun Holmes   C SAC .735
      4                 JaVale McGee   C PHO .721
      5                Jarrett Allen   C CLE .716
      6                 Kemba Walker  PG NYK .683
      7            LaMarcus Aldridge   C BRK .682
      8                 Nikola Jokic   C DEN .681
      9              Carmelo Anthony  PF LAL .679
      10                 Eric Gordon  SG HOU .669
      11            Montrezl Harrell   C WAS .669
      12            Domantas Sabonis   C IND .664
      13                Kevin Durant  PF BRK .663
      14                John Collins  PF ATL .661
      15          Karl-Anthony Towns   C MIN .656
      16                 Mike Conley  PG UTA .651
      17               Mikal Bridges  SF PHO .649
      18             Anfernee Simons  SG POR .649
      19               Norman Powell  SF POR .644
      20               Deandre Ayton   C PHO .642
      21             Harrison Barnes  PF SAC .639
      22               Georges Niang  PF PHI .639
      23                Myles Turner   C IND .638
      24               Nassir Little  SF POR .634
      25                Jakob Poeltl   C SAS .632
      26                  RJ Barrett  SF NYK .631
      27                    Mo Bamba   C ORL .627
      28                 Buddy Hield  SG SAC .627
      29                Jimmy Butler  SF MIA .622
      30             Pat Connaughton  SG MIL .622
      31       Giannis Antetokounmpo  PF MIL .621
      32                  Damion Lee  SG GSW .620
      33             P.J. Washington  PF CHO .617
      34    Kentavious Caldwell-Pope  SG WAS .616
      35                 Cody Martin  SF CHO .616
      36                   Ja Morant  PG MEM .616
      37          Wendell Carter Jr.   C ORL .614
      38                 Zach LaVine  SG CHI .614
      39                Desmond Bane  SF MEM .611
      40              Gordon Hayward  SF CHO .611
      41                Luke Kennard  SG LAC .611
      42                Franz Wagner  SF ORL .611
      43                 Alex Caruso  PG CHI .609
      44               Dwight Powell   C DAL .609
      45           Bogdan Bogdanovic  SG ATL .606
      46                 Jeremy Lamb  SF IND .606
      47               Tobias Harris  PF PHI .605
      48                  Trey Lyles  PF DET .604
      49               Stephen Curry  PG GSW .602
      50                 Paul George  SF LAC .602
      51                Steven Adams   C MEM .601
      52                Jaylen Brown  SF BOS .598
      53                Cole Anthony  PG ORL .596
      54                 Patty Mills  PG BRK .594
      55           Jonas Valanciunas   C NOP .593
      56              Draymond Green  PF GSW .591
      57                Aaron Gordon  PF DEN .590
      58                 Bam Adebayo   C MIA .589
      59               Miles Bridges  PF CHO .589
      60                Jusuf Nurkic   C POR .589
      61              Furkan Korkmaz  SG PHI .588
      62                 Cam Reddish  SF ATL .588
      63            Bojan Bogdanovic  PF UTA .586
      64                  Chris Paul  PG PHO .586
      65              Scottie Barnes  PF TOR .585
      66                 Ivica Zubac   C LAC .582
      67               DeMar DeRozan  SF CHI .580
      68                 Tyler Herro  SG MIA .578
      69                Tyrese Maxey  PG PHI .577
      70                 Joel Embiid   C PHI .576
      71                James Harden  PG BRK .569
      72                  Alec Burks  SG NYK .568
      73               Terrence Ross  SG ORL .568
      74               Grayson Allen  SG MIL .564
      75                LeBron James  SF LAL .564
      76                    Naz Reid   C MIN .564
      77              Christian Wood   C HOU .562
      78               Evan Fournier  SG NYK .561
      79                Derrick Rose  PG NYK .561
      80                Clint Capela   C ATL .559
      81                Kelly Olynyk   C DET .559
      82     Shai Gilgeous-Alexander  PG OKC .558
      83              Isaiah Stewart   C DET .558
      84                 George Hill  SG MIL .557
      85                 CJ McCollum  SG POR .557
      86                  Al Horford   C BOS .555
      87                  Lonzo Ball  PG CHI .554
      88               Kent Bazemore  SF LAL .551
      89           Spencer Dinwiddie  PG WAS .551
      90            Tim Hardaway Jr.  SG DAL .551
      91                  Kyle Lowry  PG MIA .551
      92                 Evan Mobley  PF CLE .551
      93                Monte Morris  PG DEN .551
      94             Malcolm Brogdon  PG IND .550
      95               Jalen Brunson  PG DAL .550
      96               Anthony Davis   C LAL .549
      97                 Will Barton  SG DEN .547
      98                Chris Duarte  SG IND .547
      99              Andrew Wiggins  SF GSW .547
      100                LaMelo Ball  PG CHO .543
      101             Justin Holiday  SF IND .543
      102             Darius Garland  PG CLE .542
      103              Julius Randle  PF NYK .542
      104             Alperen Sengun   C HOU .541
      105              Collin Sexton  SG CLE .540
      106                 Jeff Green   C DEN .538
      107             Brandon Ingram  SF NOP .536
      108           Donovan Mitchell  SG UTA .536
      109              Lonnie Walker  SG SAS .534
      110            Kelly Oubre Jr.  SF CHO .533
      111              Derrick White  SG SAS .532
      112                 Trae Young  PG ATL .529
      113            Duncan Robinson  SG MIA .528
      114            Khris Middleton  SF MIL .527
      115           DeAnthony Melton  SG MEM .526
      116            Markieff Morris  PF MIA .526
      117               Daniel Theis   C HOU .525
      118                 OG Anunoby  SF TOR .519
      119               JaeSean Tate  SF HOU .518
      120              Fred VanVleet  PG TOR .517
      121            Dennis Schroder  SG BOS .516
      122                 Kyle Kuzma  PF WAS .513
      123             Devonte Graham  PG NOP .512
      124          Tyrese Haliburton  SG SAC .510
      125                  Raul Neto  PG WAS .509
      126             Reggie Bullock  SF DAL .508
      127              Devin Vassell  SF SAS .508
      128                Luka Doncic  PG DAL .507
      129               Josh Jackson  SF DET .507
      130             Gary Trent Jr.  SG TOR .505
      131                 Joe Harris  SF BRK .502
      132               Jerami Grant  PF DET .501
      133                Jae Crowder  PF PHO .499
      134            Dejounte Murray  PG SAS .499
      135           Kevin Porter Jr.  PG HOU .499
      136            Anthony Edwards  SG MIN .497
      137              Nicolas Batum  PF LAC .496
      138               Devin Booker  SG PHO .495
      139                Josh Giddey  SG OKC .495
      140                Cory Joseph  PG DET .495
      141                 Malik Monk  SG LAL .495
      142              Mason Plumlee   C CHO .495
      143             T.J. McConnell  PG IND .493
      144                Ricky Rubio  PG CLE .489
      145          Russell Westbrook  PG LAL .485
      146                Jalen Green  SG HOU .484
      147             Keldon Johnson  SF SAS .484
      148            Lauri Markkanen  PF CLE .483
      149                 Kevin Love  PF CLE .481
      150               Jayson Tatum  SF BOS .479
      151          Jaren Jackson Jr.  PF MEM .478
      152               Jordan Nwora  SF MIL .475
      153              Luguentz Dort  SF OKC .474
      154               Jordan Poole  SG GSW .474
      155                 Saddiq Bey  SF DET .471
      156           Kenrich Williams  SF OKC .470
      157               Bradley Beal  SG WAS .468
      158              Malik Beasley  SG MIN .468
      159             DeAndre Hunter  SF ATL .465
      160             Nikola Vucevic   C CHI .465
      161               R.J. Hampton  SG ORL .463
      162             Damian Lillard  PG POR .461
      163              Darius Bazley  PF OKC .458
      164               Terance Mann  SF LAC .455
      165            DAngelo Russell  PG MIN .455
      166              Kyle Anderson  PF MEM .452
      167            Davion Mitchell  PG SAC .441
      168                Jalen Suggs  PG ORL .439
      169               Eric Bledsoe  PG LAC .436
      170   Nickeil Alexander-Walker  SG NOP .433
      171            Cameron Johnson  PF PHO .433
      172            Jordan Clarkson  SG UTA .431
      173        Dorian Finney-Smith  PF DAL .425
      174                DeAaron Fox  PG SAC .425
      175               Marcus Smart  PG BOS .425
      176         Michael Porter Jr.  SF DEN .414
      177              Frank Jackson  PG DET .411
      178             Reggie Jackson  SG LAC .409
      179          Immanuel Quickley  PG NYK .406
      180              Chris Boucher  PF TOR .405
      181                  Ish Smith  PG CHO .401
      182         Kristaps Porzingis  PF DAL .397
      183           Precious Achiuwa   C TOR .388
      184              Killian Hayes  PG DET .380
      185              Kevin Huerter  SG ATL .338
      Provided by Basketball-Reference.com: View Original Table
      Generated 11/3/2021.

      Scottie is no. 65

      Comment


      • #33
        Kagemusha wrote: View Post

        Kudos to Nurse for implementing this defensive method. I think he stole a trick or two from Kawhi as well. That fun guy not only brought us a chip, he also influenced us in many ways.
        The league changes in officiating also helps us on defense so far.
        Getting down in to a defensive stance is defense 101, you can't move backwards or side to side effectively otherwise, you can't keep the opponent in front of you - you can't play defense

        Comment


        • #34
          DanH wrote: View Post
          I don't know that it's a new philosophy. It might be the first time a team has been able to accomplish it to this degree though.
          All bunch of 6'9" guys with super long arms & high energy/motor have anything to do with it?

          Comment


          • #35
            LJ2 wrote: View Post

            That's exactly what I'm talking about. The entire Raptors approach seems focused on generating additional shots as a way to get an advantage. My goodness once our non shooters learn to shoot we will lay waste to the NBA. Okay I might be getting carried away....but I'm excited.
            Scary, isn't it

            Comment


            • #36
              golden wrote: View Post

              The question is if it's a sustainable strategy.... because there is an potential flaw on largely relying on turnovers and OREBs as a way for your team to win in the margins: the success of that approach can be largely out of your control. If the opposition coach decides to make taking care of the ball, boxing out, gang rebounding and getting back in transition a top priority, then those are all coachable problems that can be corrected.

              You can already see this approach catching teams off guard in the regular season, but if you have to play the same team back-to-back, they'll remember how they got punched in the mouth and play harder & smarter the next time. Playoffs could really expose that strategy, so you still need super-talented guys who can get buckets (i.e. eFG%) in the half-court.
              1. Is it sustainable? Why not? A whole lot of new guys learning new system. What happens in 30-40 games when they get the hang of it?
              2. Opposition coaches will adjust. How? Maybe?
              I'm sure they "encourage" players not to turn the ball over anyways.
              You may have to change strategy all together. You dump the ball in the middle to say Sabonis -too many busy hands all over. What else? I guess more contested 3 pointers.
              Box out & gang rebound. OK -but no fast breaks for you either.
              Get back in transition. -Guess who wins a fast break race between say Gobert & Achiuva? Randle & Barnes? Embiid & Birch? See where this is going? Especially when you consider To can roll out 10-12 guys. There is no chance Gobert or Randle or Embiid can sustain that pace for 35 mins. Sure those guys will have an edge on offense for a while, but there is a price to be paid.
              We have a small number of solid offensive players that happened to be good on D too (Siakam when back, OG, FVV, Barnes, Trent). Rest -cause chaos on D with busy hands, steals, OR, fast break. When you get tired -take a break.
              Somebody earlier mention "Mr fun guy" - def a good pattern to follow on D

              Comment


              • #37
                "mo shats" is not a new idea

                (but it is a good idea)
                Last edited by KHD; Thu Nov 4, 2021, 07:36 AM.

                Comment


                • #38
                  Yes.

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    big boi wrote: View Post

                    Getting down in to a defensive stance is defense 101, you can't move backwards or side to side effectively otherwise, you can't keep the opponent in front of you - you can't play defense
                    You know there's a whole lot more to just getting down to defensive stance.
                    If it's that simple, why isn't every team successful on defense?

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      One thing I hated about Casey's defense was this bend but don't break attitude. Nah we don't bend anymore.

                      Pause.
                      Only one thing matters: We The Champs.

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Kagemusha wrote: View Post

                        You know there's a whole lot more to just getting down to defensive stance.
                        If it's that simple, why isn't every team successful on defense?
                        Of course. It's the basics, I think I alluded to that.

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Raps won the FG attempt stat again in their last game against Washington (88-78 for the good guys). Washington won the rebound battle though. I wonder if Nurse would experiment with both Achiuwa and Birch in the line up in small stints to see if there is a worthwhile impact on rebounds. Doubt it with both Scottie and Siakam returning soon, but it's early in the season so a good time to try these things out.

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            I think this is the only thread that is kind of related. This is not a new trend but I feel like Raptors are attempting a lot of more long twos. This is just eye test for now. But I feel like a lot more players are given a green light to shoot long twos.

                            Only one thing matters: We The Champs.

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              MixxAOR wrote: View Post
                              I think this is the only thread that is kind of related. This is not a new trend but I feel like Raptors are attempting a lot of more long twos. This is just eye test for now. But I feel like a lot more players are given a green light to shoot long twos.
                              For better or worse it's the shot that's been available to them. Our half court-offence doesn't generate much spot up 3's, or bigs rolling to the basket (or popping). It's Fred, Trent, OG and Barnes probing around the FT line and hosting from there. That's alright cuz all these guys are comfortable with that shot now, but they need something else other than dribble-handoffs in the perimeter and OG iso's in order to get the opposing defence chasing more often.

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Raps won the FG attempt battle again (TOR 87 - BRK 79), but lost the rebounding and turnover stats. Mostly just came down to not being able to keep Brooklyn's FG% down.

                                Chalk it up to Siakam's return throwing guys off a bit? Alvin mentioned a couple times during the game that the defense looked off and guys were either slow rotating or not rotation at all.

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