batum was checked out, kyle anderson is light years better at play making than turner or nurkic and superior at attacking the basket from above the key too IMHO. yes i would love to see a talent upgrade, but with our assets this offseason, it may end up being tweaking of the current roster, not dramatic change. some of plumlee's passing highlights are from game two of the clipper series when stotts made the adjustment to use him to attack the clips and we started seeing success. plumlee rebounding the ball and driving it up the floor was successful too. anderson does that a lot for memphis with the added bonus of him having a near 3:1 assist to TO ratio. some blasts from the past here to share.
“I think Plumlee's a guy who's good at reading,” McCollum told SI.com in January. “We do a lot of back screens and slips and stuff like that. He's good at making that backdoor pass.”
The most effective way to combat the trap, though, is to circumvent it entirely. At first that might seem impossible; Lillard and McCollum are Portland’s best shot creators, and the pick-and-roll is central to the way they generate offense. Stotts was able to tweak that balance beginning in Game 2 to feature fewer straight pick-and-rolls and more varied possessions for both Lillard and McCollum. There aren’t many NBA teams that could afford to take the ball out of the hands of their two best ball handlers (who double as the team’s two highest-usage scorers) mid-series and adjust course so smoothly. Portland is exceptional because Plumlee is, too—a rare big who, for stretches of this series, has effectively ran point:
the Blazers are not going to be able to cheap-screw their way out of this with a different role player. They need another elite talent who can run the offense while forcing the defense to react. They need a player good enough to punish unbalanced defenses, and they simply haven't had anybody like that to shoulder some of Dame's burden. That's the key