furnace
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This loss is completely and solely on Lawrence Frank.
Frank was out coached, period. Say what you want about Vince not taking over the game, not being aggressive, shooting only 4 attempts from the foul line. That is irrelevant. The Nets scored enough points to win.
Frank gets the blame because he did not adjust to Al Harrington.
Al Harrington not only scored 39 points: he was also partially responsible for Tim Thomas' 26. How is that, you ask? I will explain.
Harrington was a match up problem for Yi, Simmons, and Carter. He was too fast and too strong for all of them. If they played off, he would shoot mid range jumpers. If they played up, he would power through Simmons and Carter or break Yi's ankles.
How did Frank respond? He put Ryan Anderson on Harrington for most of the 3rd quarter. He also kept Anderson on him, after being taken to the hole time after time after time by Harrington.
I am not sure what Frank was thinking. Ryan Anderson has never been known as a great man defender, especially against someone stronger and faster. Isn't that what the Nets have Trenton Hassell for? If Hassell could guard Amare Stoudmire, why would he not be put in to guard Harrington?
Stopping Harrington with man defense means less rotation help, resulting in less ball movement for the Knicks, which in turn results in less OPEN shots for Tim Thomas.
Sure, there are other factors. Why wasn't Lopez in down the stretch? Why weren't other plays run to get Hayes, Vince, and Yi a few mid range jumpers off of 4 players collapsing on Devin? Why did 4 Nets run back on defense every time a jumper was shot and no one went in for the rebound?
The single biggest factor out of all of these, was Frank's strategy against Harrington.
Lawrence Frank needs to wake up.
Frank was out coached, period. Say what you want about Vince not taking over the game, not being aggressive, shooting only 4 attempts from the foul line. That is irrelevant. The Nets scored enough points to win.
Frank gets the blame because he did not adjust to Al Harrington.
Al Harrington not only scored 39 points: he was also partially responsible for Tim Thomas' 26. How is that, you ask? I will explain.
Harrington was a match up problem for Yi, Simmons, and Carter. He was too fast and too strong for all of them. If they played off, he would shoot mid range jumpers. If they played up, he would power through Simmons and Carter or break Yi's ankles.
How did Frank respond? He put Ryan Anderson on Harrington for most of the 3rd quarter. He also kept Anderson on him, after being taken to the hole time after time after time by Harrington.
I am not sure what Frank was thinking. Ryan Anderson has never been known as a great man defender, especially against someone stronger and faster. Isn't that what the Nets have Trenton Hassell for? If Hassell could guard Amare Stoudmire, why would he not be put in to guard Harrington?
Stopping Harrington with man defense means less rotation help, resulting in less ball movement for the Knicks, which in turn results in less OPEN shots for Tim Thomas.
Sure, there are other factors. Why wasn't Lopez in down the stretch? Why weren't other plays run to get Hayes, Vince, and Yi a few mid range jumpers off of 4 players collapsing on Devin? Why did 4 Nets run back on defense every time a jumper was shot and no one went in for the rebound?
The single biggest factor out of all of these, was Frank's strategy against Harrington.
Lawrence Frank needs to wake up.

