ABM
Happily Married In Music City, USA!
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http://blog.oregonlive.com/behindblazersbeat/2009/11/blazers_have_a_ploy_to_give_br.html
NEW ORLEANS -- By the looks on the faces of the Trail Blazers, coach Nate McMillan might as well have been speaking Chinese on Wednesday night in Minneapolis.
"Weak 25 ice" McMillan shouted from the sideline.
Steve Blake squinted at the coach and grimaced. Joel Przybilla threw up his hands in confusion. And Brandon Roy tilted his head up, his mind searching for the play.
Behind McMillan, scouts for three NBA teams scurried, flipping through diagrams and past play calls. There had been up to 50 play calls before that, and none had caused as much angst as this one.
The reason for all the confusion on the court, and the commotion within the scouting table, was that the Blazers had never run the play before.
"We all didn't know the play," Roy chuckled later.
The play was an isolation designed for Roy, with the center posting, then clearing out.
Turns out McMillan had talked about the play in meetings, but had never fully implemented the call into the Blazers' playbook.
"He must have thought we put it in already," Blake said, noting that he rarely, if ever, is stumped by a play call. "Coaches have mishaps too, just like players."
It was a subtle and early evolution of this year's Blazers: McMillan was beginning to implement a new wrinkle to the team's attack -- a series of isolation (or "ice") plays for Roy.
The idea is to make the Blazers' halfcourt offense more varied. With Roy, the Blazers had become so pick-and-roll dominated that they became predictable. Teams would routinely trap Roy in an effort to force him to either retreat from penetration or pass.
"They aren't even hesitating," McMillan said of the traps. "So we have to give him some space and let him operate."
Now, with the "ice" series, Roy will get the ball in different areas of the court and instead of having either Greg Oden or LaMarcus Aldridge come and set a screen for him, the entire Blazers team will clear out the middle of the court. This allows Roy to break down his man.................
............."Basically, we are saying we are open to the idea of letting me go one-on-one more," Roy said. "And hopefully this helps the team out, especially with Greg or LaMarcus cutting. It can get us easier baskets."
Interestingly, the new isolation plays are a throwback to Roy's second season. At that time, however, McMillan scrapped the plays because he felt it killed the team's movement because everyone cleared out and watched Roy go to work.
That's when he started putting the ball in Roy's hands more and started calling heavy amounts of pick-and-roll sets to get more people moving.
But now, with an older and more savvy team, McMillan feels Aldridge and Oden can read the spacing and make better cuts. Also, he has given Roy the freedom to call for a pick off an isolation....................


