This guy from Ringer points out what we all know; teams leave Aminu wide open so we are always playing 4 against five. He suggests trying to always have a third shooter in there; either Hood or Curry. Makes sense since it feels like they have been our two most efficient scorers; why not play them more? Although he talks about Aminu; actually he suggests a small ball lineup that leaves Harkless out. Collins (or Kanter), Aminu, Lillard, CJ and Hood or Curry. He points out that, at least in this series, a lineup with Lillard and Collins does very well. He considers Collins a shooter which I guess is true, although not a very good one, right? also he would foul out if he played any more.
I think Aminu would guard Jokic, which I think would be OK; I haven't really seen Jokic muscle anyone.
Here is his whole spiel:
Denver Is Making Sure Dame Time Is Off Schedule
During the long regular season, teams do little or even no preparation game to game. There’s not enough time to practice and implement a game plan like an NFL team
game. There’s not enough time to practice and implement a game plan like an NFL team can over a full week, or a baseball pitcher can for his next scheduled start. Individual player weaknesses and tendencies receive less attention and can often go ignored. In the playoffs, however, every flaw is under a microscope and teams will prepare to exploit them. On Sunday, the Nuggets beat the Trail Blazers to tie the series 2-2, and once again, Damian Lillard wasn’t hitting his usual deep 3s and daggers.
Denver has limited Lillard all series, holding the All-NBA point guard to 27.3 points per game with a 55.1 true shooting percentage, down from 33 points and 62.4 percent last round. Gary Harris has done well fighting over screens in order to breathe down Lillard’s neck on his pull-up jumpers, and Nikola Jokic has been serviceable dropping to the paint to deter Lillard from getting to the rim. Jokic has help, though.
The Nuggets are treating Al-Farouq Aminu like he doesn’t exist when he spots up in the corner and clogging the lane for Lillard’s drives. In both clips above, Aminu is wide open only because his defender, Paul Millsap, is plopped in the paint to halt Lillard’s drive. The Blazers’ spacing in the second play is poor regardless because Moe Harkless is in the left dunker’s spot rather than spotting up behind the 3-point arc. That reflects one of Portland’s biggest issues: a lack of reliable shooters at the forward spots.
Harkless has shot 32.6 percent from 3 in his four seasons and playoffs with the Blazers, while Aminu shot just 35.7 percent over that same time frame. While they aren’t liabilities like Andre Roberson or Tony Allen, the Nuggets have been willing to give up those shots to those players if it means containing Lillard.
One lineup tweak the Blazers could make is using a small backcourt of Lillard, C.J. McCollum, and Seth Curry or Rodney Hood more frequently. That would give Portland a trio of shooters and Aminu, alongside a shooting center in Zach Collins, or another non-shooter like Enes Kanter. The Blazers have had some success in doing this: They have outscored the Nuggets by 17.8 points per 100 possessions when Lillard is on the floor with Collins, and they get outscored by 7.3 when Lillard is paired with Kanter. Though the sample size with Collins is only 39 minutes, it would be worth trying more considering its promising results so far.
Much like in the clip above from early in Game 4, Aminu could instead hang around the dunker’s spot, where he would be available for dump-off passes and ready to attack the offensive boards:
Or Lillard could simply start hitting perimeter shots again. They’re available, and he’s taking them. But Lillard has hit just 25.7 percent of his 3s and just 35 percent of his midrange attempts this series. During the regular season, Lillard hit 36.9 percent of his 3s and 46.1 percent of his midrange attempts. The NBA playoffs often require major system changes, as we’ve seen in these playoffs, but a lot of the time, it just comes down to which team performs at the higher level. The Blazers and Nuggets are tied at two games apiece, despite Lillard’s underperforming. If Dame Time hits soon, Denver will be the team in need of an adjustment.
https://www.theringer.com/nba/2019/5/6/18530803/nba-playoffs-adjustments-second-round