- Joined
- Oct 5, 2008
- Messages
- 127,042
- Likes
- 147,635
- Points
- 115
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I wonder if the whole NBA ran the fewest posts ups ever as a league last season.The Blazers ran the fewest post ups of any team in NBA history last season.
I wonder if the whole NBA ran the fewest posts ups ever as a league last season.
If we had Nate at the helm running this team, I'd have no hope...
Forgot the guy who will be his biggest crutch... Big Al Jefferson.I think you misspelled ruining...
I'm curious to see what happens with Nate in Indy this season. If he runs his same old, boring, predicable, iso heavy, grind it out system, they might actually do OK during the regular season. They have guys who are capable to scoring on isos in Paul George and Monte Ellis, and the ridiculously slow pace will limit opponents scoring opportunities.
Forgot the guy who will be his biggest crutch... Big Al Jefferson.
The Blazers ran the fewest post ups of any team in NBA history last season.
Yep.To all the morons in the national media who said Turner is a poor fit with the Blazers because he's not a great 3-point shooter:
""Catch and shoot and getting quality looks is really important for every team in the league," Stotts said. "So if we can get Dame and CJ a few more looks like that I think it makes it easier for us."
Lillard shot 41.6 percent on catch and shoot three-pointers last season compared to 34 percent on pull-up attempts while McCollum shot 43.9 percent on catch and shoot threes and 39.2 percent when pulling up off the dribble from deep.
With shooting threats spotted up on the perimeter, Turner will get more room to operate off the dribble where he's most comfortable."
This is pretty much what most posters have been saying here since the Turner signing was announced. Getting Dame and C.J. more catch and shoot opportunities will improve their efficiency. while having them spacing the floor will make it easier for Turner to do what he does best. How is that not a great fit? It maximizes all three players' strengths.
BNM
Yep.
The cluelessness of the national media is downright stunning at times. I just went back over a few of the offseason grade articles, and am appropriately stunned by the overwhelming negativity with regard to the Evan Turner signing. I'm seeing grades like F+ and D+ and articles calling it the worst move by the Blazers and maybe even the worst off season move in the entire league. All because Evan Turner only shot .241 3FG% last season.
Hello national media, you missed the fucking point. We already have three guards who all shoot the 3 well in Damian Lillard, C.J. McCollum and Allen Crabbe. We don't need a 4th. That would be redundant. Understand? We don't need more of what we already have. Understand? We need someone to help those three guys get more wide open catch and shoot opportunities. Do you understand what this even means?
Lillard, McCollum and Crabbe, and pretty much every other shooter in the league, knocks down a much higher percentage of their 3-pointers in catch and shoot situations than they do off the dribble. That's a fact that's easily proven thanks to today's advanced stat reporting.
If you've been paying any attention at all the last two years, you may have heard of a guy named Steph Curry. He's been winning MVP awards and setting 3-point shooting records. Curry has always been an excellent shooter, but over the last two seasons, he's taken his shooting to an unprecedented level. How did this happen, you ask (again why were't you paying attention, it's your job - supposedly)?
Three seasons ago, under Marc Jackson, Steph Curry was a traditional NBA point guard with a good outside shot. He was his team's best scorer, but also their primary ball handler and distributor. That's a lot of work for one player. He had a nice little season, but nowhere near MVP level. The Warriors won 51 games and got bounced in the 1st round of the playoffs. As the primary ballhandler, Curry handed out 35% of his teams total assists. He had 666 assists and no one else had more than 263.
Enter Steve Kerr and Steph Curry playing off the ball. Kerr realized two things that Jackson did not. First, all that work was wearing Curry down, Second, Curry, like most everyone else, shoots a significantly higher percentage off catch and shoot situation with his feet set, than he does pulling up off the dribble. I'm not saying Curry is a bad shooter off the dribble. He's not, but he's far better off the catch than he is off the bounce. So are Damian Lillard, C.J. McColuum and Allen Crabbe.
Comparing Curry's last season under Jackson to his second season under Kerr, the differences are astounding. Curry went from borderline all star to unanimous MVP. His assists went down from 666 to 527. He was second on the team in assists and was now only responsible for 22% of his team's total assists. His 2FG% jumped from .509 to .566 and his 3FG% increased from .424 to .454. Before you think those numbers aren't that impressive, consider this, Curry scored over 500 points more (2375 vs. 1873) last year than he did in 2013-14, while playing 146 fewer minutes. His made 3-pointers jumped from 261 to 402. He led the league in scoring while playing less than 32 MPG. He also led the league in TS% and PER for the first time. His points/36 jumped by a full 8.0 from 23.7 to 31.7. That's a huge leap in scoring and efficiency for a guy who was already considered one of the best shooters in the league.
And, this all came about because Steve Kerr started playing Steph Curry off the ball more. The Warriors added Shaun Livingston to their back court and started using Draymond Green as a ballhandler to free up Steph Curry to play off the ball much more.
Newsflash: Evan Turner is a younger, better defending Shaun Livingston. Their advanced stats for last season are almost identical. Like Livingston, Turner is 6'7" and can guard bigger players. He has a good midrange game, but most of all, when Livingston is in the game Curry plays off the ball nearly 100% of the time. Please note: Shaun Livingston is a worse 3-point shooter than Evan Turner. He made a total of TWO 3-pointers last season while shooting .167 from 3-point range.
Yet, I have not read a single article in the national media telling us what a horrible fit Shaun Livingston is in the GSW system because he's a poor 3-point shooter that can't spread the floor. In terms of 3-point shooting Livinston is the anti-Splash Bro. Yet, he's been a GREAT fit in GSW who has helped Curry and Thompson elevate their games. Imagine that.
So, national media pundits, please explain to me why Shaun Livingston works so well in GSW's 3-point heavy system, yet Evan Turner is such a horrible fit in POR's similar system.
Livingston is proof that not every player on your roster needs to be a lights out 3-point shooter to benefit your team's overall 3-point shooting. I'm sure the detractors will point out that Turner will make 3x as much as Livingston this season, to which I counter that Turner is over 3 years younger, more durable, capable of playing many more minutes and guarding 3 positions. Livingston was picked up off the scrap heap as a player with a horrible injury history who was considered past his prime. He ended up being a great fit and a great bargain for GSW. Turner is in the heart of his prime without a similar injury history. He's not the bargain Livingston was, but that doesn't change the fact he will be, like Livinston in GSW, and great fit in POR that will help his teammates improve their scoring efficiency while also improving team defense, something Livingston doesn't really do.
Bad fit my ass. Turner is a great fit. I feel like I'm rapidly becoming a grumpy old man, but I can't stand these lazy national writers who overlook the obvious. And, it's not just Livingston in GSW. It was also Kemba Walker having a breakout season last year as the addition of Nicolas Batum at the SG position allowed Walker to play off the ball for the first time in his career. Advanced stats tracking is opening eyes and changing the way the game is played. If your best shooters shoot even better on catch and shoot situations, isn't the obvious solution to get them even more catch and shoot opportunities? It would seem so, yet that obvious conclusion is totally missed by the national media who have routinely panned the Turner signing.
BNM
The cluelessness of the national media is downright stunning at times. I just went back over a few of the offseason grade articles, and am appropriately stunned by the overwhelming negativity with regard to the Evan Turner signing. I'm seeing grades like F+ and D+ and articles calling it the worst move by the Blazers and maybe even the worst off season move in the entire league. All because Evan Turner only shot .241 3FG% last season.
Hello national media, you missed the fucking point. We already have three guards who all shoot the 3 well in Damian Lillard, C.J. McCollum and Allen Crabbe. We don't need a 4th. That would be redundant. Understand? We don't need more of what we already have. Understand? We need someone to help those three guys get more wide open catch and shoot opportunities. Do you understand what this even means?
Lillard, McCollum and Crabbe, and pretty much every other shooter in the league, knocks down a much higher percentage of their 3-pointers in catch and shoot situations than they do off the dribble. That's a fact that's easily proven thanks to today's advanced stat reporting.
If you've been paying any attention at all the last two years, you may have heard of a guy named Steph Curry. He's been winning MVP awards and setting 3-point shooting records. Curry has always been an excellent shooter, but over the last two seasons, he's taken his shooting to an unprecedented level. How did this happen, you ask (again why were't you paying attention, it's your job - supposedly)?
Three seasons ago, under Marc Jackson, Steph Curry was a traditional NBA point guard with a good outside shot. He was his team's best scorer, but also their primary ball handler and distributor. That's a lot of work for one player. He had a nice little season, but nowhere near MVP level. The Warriors won 51 games and got bounced in the 1st round of the playoffs. As the primary ballhandler, Curry handed out 35% of his teams total assists. He had 666 assists and no one else had more than 263.
Enter Steve Kerr and Steph Curry playing off the ball. Kerr realized two things that Jackson did not. First, all that work was wearing Curry down, Second, Curry, like most everyone else, shoots a significantly higher percentage off catch and shoot situation with his feet set, than he does pulling up off the dribble. I'm not saying Curry is a bad shooter off the dribble. He's not, but he's far better off the catch than he is off the bounce. So are Damian Lillard, C.J. McColuum and Allen Crabbe.
Comparing Curry's last season under Jackson to his second season under Kerr, the differences are astounding. Curry went from borderline all star to unanimous MVP. His assists went down from 666 to 527. He was second on the team in assists and was now only responsible for 22% of his team's total assists. His 2FG% jumped from .509 to .566 and his 3FG% increased from .424 to .454. Before you think those numbers aren't that impressive, consider this, Curry scored over 500 points more (2375 vs. 1873) last year than he did in 2013-14, while playing 146 fewer minutes. His made 3-pointers jumped from 261 to 402. He led the league in scoring while playing less than 32 MPG. He also led the league in TS% and PER for the first time. His points/36 jumped by a full 8.0 from 23.7 to 31.7. That's a huge leap in scoring and efficiency for a guy who was already considered one of the best shooters in the league.
And, this all came about because Steve Kerr started playing Steph Curry off the ball more. The Warriors added Shaun Livingston to their back court and started using Draymond Green as a ballhandler to free up Steph Curry to play off the ball much more.
Newsflash: Evan Turner is a younger, better defending Shaun Livingston. Their advanced stats for last season are almost identical. Like Livingston, Turner is 6'7" and can guard bigger players. He has a good midrange game, but most of all, when Livingston is in the game Curry plays off the ball nearly 100% of the time. Please note: Shaun Livingston is a worse 3-point shooter than Evan Turner. He made a total of TWO 3-pointers last season while shooting .167 from 3-point range.
Yet, I have not read a single article in the national media telling us what a horrible fit Shaun Livingston is in the GSW system because he's a poor 3-point shooter that can't spread the floor. In terms of 3-point shooting Livinston is the anti-Splash Bro. Yet, he's been a GREAT fit in GSW who has helped Curry and Thompson elevate their games. Imagine that.
So, national media pundits, please explain to me why Shaun Livingston works so well in GSW's 3-point heavy system, yet Evan Turner is such a horrible fit in POR's similar system.
Livingston is proof that not every player on your roster needs to be a lights out 3-point shooter to benefit your team's overall 3-point shooting. I'm sure the detractors will point out that Turner will make 3x as much as Livingston this season, to which I counter that Turner is over 3 years younger, more durable, capable of playing many more minutes and guarding 3 positions. Livingston was picked up off the scrap heap as a player with a horrible injury history who was considered past his prime. He ended up being a great fit and a great bargain for GSW. Turner is in the heart of his prime without a similar injury history. He's not the bargain Livingston was, but that doesn't change the fact he will be, like Livinston in GSW, and great fit in POR that will help his teammates improve their scoring efficiency while also improving team defense, something Livingston doesn't really do.
Bad fit my ass. Turner is a great fit. I feel like I'm rapidly becoming a grumpy old man, but I can't stand these lazy national writers who overlook the obvious. And, it's not just Livingston in GSW. It was also Kemba Walker having a breakout season last year as the addition of Nicolas Batum at the SG position allowed Walker to play off the ball for the first time in his career. Advanced stats tracking is opening eyes and changing the way the game is played. If your best shooters shoot even better on catch and shoot situations, isn't the obvious solution to get them even more catch and shoot opportunities? It would seem so, yet that obvious conclusion is totally missed by the national media who have routinely panned the Turner signing.
BNM
Mic drop. This needs to be sent to every national writer who makes draft grades and preseason previews. In fact I will use this to further explain and back up the ET signing to all my uneducated friends who have been arguing Evan turners value to this team.The cluelessness of the national media is downright stunning at times. I just went back over a few of the offseason grade articles, and am appropriately stunned by the overwhelming negativity with regard to the Evan Turner signing. I'm seeing grades like F+ and D+ and articles calling it the worst move by the Blazers and maybe even the worst off season move in the entire league. All because Evan Turner only shot .241 3FG% last season.
Hello national media, you missed the fucking point. We already have three guards who all shoot the 3 well in Damian Lillard, C.J. McCollum and Allen Crabbe. We don't need a 4th. That would be redundant. Understand? We don't need more of what we already have. Understand? We need someone to help those three guys get more wide open catch and shoot opportunities. Do you understand what this even means?
Lillard, McCollum and Crabbe, and pretty much every other shooter in the league, knocks down a much higher percentage of their 3-pointers in catch and shoot situations than they do off the dribble. That's a fact that's easily proven thanks to today's advanced stat reporting.
If you've been paying any attention at all the last two years, you may have heard of a guy named Steph Curry. He's been winning MVP awards and setting 3-point shooting records. Curry has always been an excellent shooter, but over the last two seasons, he's taken his shooting to an unprecedented level. How did this happen, you ask (again why were't you paying attention, it's your job - supposedly)?
Three seasons ago, under Marc Jackson, Steph Curry was a traditional NBA point guard with a good outside shot. He was his team's best scorer, but also their primary ball handler and distributor. That's a lot of work for one player. He had a nice little season, but nowhere near MVP level. The Warriors won 51 games and got bounced in the 1st round of the playoffs. As the primary ballhandler, Curry handed out 35% of his teams total assists. He had 666 assists and no one else had more than 263.
Enter Steve Kerr and Steph Curry playing off the ball. Kerr realized two things that Jackson did not. First, all that work was wearing Curry down, Second, Curry, like most everyone else, shoots a significantly higher percentage off catch and shoot situation with his feet set, than he does pulling up off the dribble. I'm not saying Curry is a bad shooter off the dribble. He's not, but he's far better off the catch than he is off the bounce. So are Damian Lillard, C.J. McColuum and Allen Crabbe.
Comparing Curry's last season under Jackson to his second season under Kerr, the differences are astounding. Curry went from borderline all star to unanimous MVP. His assists went down from 666 to 527. He was second on the team in assists and was now only responsible for 22% of his team's total assists. His 2FG% jumped from .509 to .566 and his 3FG% increased from .424 to .454. Before you think those numbers aren't that impressive, consider this, Curry scored over 500 points more (2375 vs. 1873) last year than he did in 2013-14, while playing 146 fewer minutes. His made 3-pointers jumped from 261 to 402. He led the league in scoring while playing less than 32 MPG. He also led the league in TS% and PER for the first time. His points/36 jumped by a full 8.0 from 23.7 to 31.7. That's a huge leap in scoring and efficiency for a guy who was already considered one of the best shooters in the league.
And, this all came about because Steve Kerr started playing Steph Curry off the ball more. The Warriors added Shaun Livingston to their back court and started using Draymond Green as a ballhandler to free up Steph Curry to play off the ball much more.
Newsflash: Evan Turner is a younger, better defending Shaun Livingston. Their advanced stats for last season are almost identical. Like Livingston, Turner is 6'7" and can guard bigger players. He has a good midrange game, but most of all, when Livingston is in the game Curry plays off the ball nearly 100% of the time. Please note: Shaun Livingston is a worse 3-point shooter than Evan Turner. He made a total of TWO 3-pointers last season while shooting .167 from 3-point range.
Yet, I have not read a single article in the national media telling us what a horrible fit Shaun Livingston is in the GSW system because he's a poor 3-point shooter that can't spread the floor. In terms of 3-point shooting Livinston is the anti-Splash Bro. Yet, he's been a GREAT fit in GSW who has helped Curry and Thompson elevate their games. Imagine that.
So, national media pundits, please explain to me why Shaun Livingston works so well in GSW's 3-point heavy system, yet Evan Turner is such a horrible fit in POR's similar system.
Livingston is proof that not every player on your roster needs to be a lights out 3-point shooter to benefit your team's overall 3-point shooting. I'm sure the detractors will point out that Turner will make 3x as much as Livingston this season, to which I counter that Turner is over 3 years younger, more durable, capable of playing many more minutes and guarding 3 positions. Livingston was picked up off the scrap heap as a player with a horrible injury history who was considered past his prime. He ended up being a great fit and a great bargain for GSW. Turner is in the heart of his prime without a similar injury history. He's not the bargain Livingston was, but that doesn't change the fact he will be, like Livinston in GSW, and great fit in POR that will help his teammates improve their scoring efficiency while also improving team defense, something Livingston doesn't really do.
Bad fit my ass. Turner is a great fit. I feel like I'm rapidly becoming a grumpy old man, but I can't stand these lazy national writers who overlook the obvious. And, it's not just Livingston in GSW. It was also Kemba Walker having a breakout season last year as the addition of Nicolas Batum at the SG position allowed Walker to play off the ball for the first time in his career. Advanced stats tracking is opening eyes and changing the way the game is played. If your best shooters shoot even better on catch and shoot situations, isn't the obvious solution to get them even more catch and shoot opportunities? It would seem so, yet that obvious conclusion is totally missed by the national media who have routinely panned the Turner signing.
BNM
Mic drop. This needs to be sent to every national writer who makes draft grades and preseason previews. In fact I will use this to further explain and back up the ET signing to all my uneducated friends who have been arguing Evan turners value to this team.
I'm baffled by their opinions as well. Did they not watch the series against golden state? In the last 15 games of the season and in the playoffs you saw major improvements in not only individual play but how the team was starting to gel and play within Terry's system. Two playoff series experience and another summer of bonding and they predict our regular season win total to increase by three? Absolutely crazy to me. I've watched every game last season along with probably every regular poster here and I feel as if 52+ wins and third in the west is where predictions for this team should start. I do really appreciate the slight though, just more fuel for the fire. And it's going to be fun watching all these water heads jump on our wagon about halfway through the season, while eating crow.The shear lassitude of the national media on the Turner signing is what I find most aggravating.
Last off season Neil Olshey replaced 4 starters with relatively unknown players, three of who were cast offs by their previous teams. Terry Stotts figured out how to make it all work - how to optimize those players' talents while covering for their weaknesses.
The result was an unexpectedly successful season that took nearly everyone in the national media by complete surprise. As a result Olshey and Stotts came in second in Executive of the Year and Coach of the Year voting.
I sort of get how the national media underestimated Olshey, Stotts and the team last year. What I don't get is how they can be similarly surprised two years in a row. Do they consider the success these two men and this team had last year purely a fluke?
It would seem so. Their analysis of the Turner signing starts and ends with the fact he is not a good 3-point shooter. It's like they think Neil and Terry are complete morons. I wasn't in the room, but I'm pretty sure, that at no point, did Terry turn to Neil and say, "you know what this team really needs is an overpaid guard who cant shot the 3".
So, there must have been some other reason the guys who came in second in EOY and COY decided to target Evan Turner. Sure, we missed out on Whiteside and Chandler Parsons. So, did a lot of other teams, but there were still a LOT of other free agents available when we signed Evan Turner. An inquisitive journalist would have asked, "Why did Olshey and Stotts target Evan Turner? What does he give them that they don't already have?"
Yet, I didn't see anyone in the national media ask, and attempt to answer, those questions. That's just plain lazy, and assuming Turner is a poor fit in Stotts' system because he's not a great 3-point shooter completely overlooks Turner's strengths, and how Terry Stotts can incorporate those strengths to make the team better as a whole. Basketball is still a team sport and this team proved last year that the sum can be greater than the whole of the parts. It's not about how good Evan Turner is individually. It's about how he can, and will, make this team better. The national media totally missed out on that.
BNM
I do really appreciate the slight though, just more fuel for the fire.
#TheyAs Dame would say, "Thanks for the motivation".
BNM
It's a little concerning for me that the says the midrange is the future of the NBA but he shoots less than 40% from midrange. I believe he did shoot quite well from the three in the 2nd half of the last season and I think Stotts wants him shooting more threes, not sure if he is buying in; I guess it's to early to know.
"Turner came to Portland essentially to become its version of Shaun Livingston. "
I swear to god, I did not see this article until AFTER I made my Shaun Livingston comparison!
It's a good article and not simply because the author agrees with me. It's a good article because he did his research.
BNM
I found these comments especially interesting:
“When you’re in the playoffs, sometimes the midrange is the only shot you really have,” Turner said. “Especially from the defensive mind of the coaches. I know here, we like to give up the midrange. And in other situations, other teams like to give up the midrange, [too]. They’re betting on the analytics of it."
"If there’s one part of the court where Turner is truly excellent, it’s in the post. Turner scored 0.99 points per possession on post-up attempts last season, which put him in the 84th percentile among all players, and behind only Kevin Durant, Arron Afflalo, Kawhi Leonard, and Andrew Wiggins among perimeter-oriented players with at least 100 possessions in the post."
I found these comments especially interesting:
“When you’re in the playoffs, sometimes the midrange is the only shot you really have,” Turner said. “Especially from the defensive mind of the coaches. I know here, we like to give up the midrange. And in other situations, other teams like to give up the midrange, [too]. They’re betting on the analytics of it."
"If there’s one part of the court where Turner is truly excellent, it’s in the post. Turner scored 0.99 points per possession on post-up attempts last season, which put him in the 84th percentile among all players, and behind only Kevin Durant, Arron Afflalo, Kawhi Leonard, and Andrew Wiggins among perimeter-oriented players with at least 100 possessions in the post."
So, maybe I just talked myself into agreeing with Turner. The midrange is the one area that is under exploited right now. If players start emerging on the scene that can consistently knock down that shot at > 50%, it will force defenses to adjust. Until then, the midrange jumper will remain wide open for the few players than can consistently make it. Which is why it can be such an effective weapon for a guy like Mason Plumlee. IF (big IF) Plums can consistently knock down that little elbow jumper, it will force opposing defenses to choose their poison.
BNM
