Rastapopoulos
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Wes gets a mention as "one of the league’s meanest post-up wings".
Bet Boris Diaw wishes he were ten years younger - he'd be cashing in (even more). Maybe Batum just needs to eat more soft cheese and bulk up to back down.
This is why I can't get too excited about Meyers:
Multiple front-office gurus have whispered that post passing might become the NBA’s next great undervalued skill
Bet Boris Diaw wishes he were ten years younger - he'd be cashing in (even more). Maybe Batum just needs to eat more soft cheese and bulk up to back down.
This is why I can't get too excited about Meyers:
Going small-against-big risks murder on the glass, but there are ways to minimize that risk, and coaches are getting aggressive at turning an enemy’s lack of post-up skill into more of a liability. The adaptation has been cruelest for stretch power forwards who can’t really do anything but shoot. Coaches have basically played the Matt Bonner/Steve Novak/Mike Scott types off the floor by going small and sticking speedier wings on them — guys who can close fast on 3-pointers and dribble by them on the other end.
“If you’re a stretch 4 today, you’d better have a lightning-quick release,” says Daryl Morey, the Rockets GM.
