Mediocre Man
Mr. SportsTwo
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We force fed LaMarcus in Utah and won.
No we didn't, we fed LA the ball within the offense. It's a huge difference.
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We force fed LaMarcus in Utah and won.
People keep saying the Rockets have been playing so well lately, but their wins in their last 10 games have been against Cleveland, Sacramento, Memphis, Sacramento, Golden State, LA Clippers, Washington and Toronto. Sorry, but that's nothng to get excited about. Houston is a crappy team, and we should have beat them like we did. I didn't look at records, but I would bet all of the teams they beat had a worse record than the Rockets.
No we didn't, we fed LA the ball within the offense. It's a huge difference.
I think, in his mind, he has no other choice? Nate's big problem is that he likes to have 1 guy be the man, and run things through him. This happened in GS after the Blazers won 3 in a row at home sharing the ball and letting the guards handle the offense. In the game at GS we were force feeding Aldridge the ball and it hurt us. Hopefully Nate continues to just get out of the way
People keep saying the Rockets have been playing so well lately, but their wins in their last 10 games have been against Cleveland, Sacramento, Memphis, Sacramento, Golden State, LA Clippers, Washington and Toronto. Sorry, but that's nothng to get excited about. Houston is a crappy team, and we should have beat them like we did. I didn't look at records, but I would bet all of the teams they beat had a worse record than the Rockets.
Who was that 1 guy in Seattle that he ran the team around?
Ray Allen. Before that as a player, his offense went through Shawn Kemp, and Dale Ellis before that, when the Head Coach was Bernie Bickerstaff. Most of McMillan's Sonic teams heavily counted on one guy to score.
McMillan has limited creativity, but is conforming more this year to what his critics want. He's temporarily lost without Roy, so he's trying what those around him (critics, Bickerstaff, Andre Miller) want. We shall see whether he returns to form next season.
Before that as a player, his offense went through Shawn Kemp
You're looking at box scores.
As for whether he isolated, don't picture him as an Amare, always receiving passes near the basket. Kemp received passes from overrated PG Payton about 20 feet out, and had to dribble to the hoop. He isolated a lot.
Just like Aldridge averaged almost as many points as Roy, but we all knew who was top dog in the last clutch minutes. McMillan's psyche was formed by Bernie's mantra, "Get it to Dale." Ellis was nothing before and after he had Bickerstaff as coach, when he averaged something like 24 ppg for a few years. They thought of Ellis as a superweapon like a nuclear cannon. All he could do was catch and shoot.
Ray Allen. Before that as a player, his offense went through Shawn Kemp, and Dale Ellis before that, when the Head Coach was Bernie Bickerstaff. Most of McMillan's Sonic teams heavily counted on one guy to score.
Man, you have a very selective, biased and inaccurate memory. Those Bickerstaff coached Seattle teams that featured Dale Ellis, Tom Chambers and Xavier McDaniel
Ray Allen. Before that as a player, his offense went through Shawn Kemp, and Dale Ellis before that
Again highly inaccurate. First, Nate NEVER coached Kemp in Seattle. That was Paul Westphal and George Karl...Which is irrelevant anyway, since Nate was not the coach of those teams.
And even when Kemp was there, he never averaged 20ppg and rarely lead the team in scoring.
Just like Aldridge averaged almost as many points as Roy, but we all knew who was top dog in the last clutch minutes.
For a typical game, the aftergame stats appeared balanced, because Kemp was on the bench in foul trouble a third of the game.
the opponent had to focus on him, freeing his teammates to get stats almost equal to his, so the illusion is that he wasn't the big wheel.
And even when Kemp was there, he never averaged 20ppg and rarely lead the team in scoring. The offense ran through Gary Payton and both Payton and Detlef Schremph scored as much, or often more than Kemp. Kemp got many of his points off alley oops and fast breaks courtesy of Gary Payton. He was not their "go to guy" and the offense did not run through him. Those Karl and Wesphal coached Sonics teams rarely had any player average over 20ppg, but usually had three, or four players average between 15 and 20ppg. They had very balanced scoring and were never dependent on a single guy to generate their offense.
