BTOWN_HUSTLA
NOW BUZZ KILLINGTON
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Rudy can play 3 positions. So can Roy.
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MM I like your rotation.. however I dont think they will move Blake down to 14 MPG.. I could se maybe them cutting 4 MPG from Bayless to give to Blake and maybe 2 of those PG minutes from Rudy to give Blake 22 Bayless 18 and Rudy 28 total. Although I still think they would try and give Blake more minutes.
Did you guys watch the games last year when Nate put Rudy and Roy in the back court together? I really wanted to see this too, but left very underwhelmed. It was really bad. Rudy didn't seem to be able to do anything. Maybe they didn't execute well, but Nate did try it several times and it failed big time.
According to 82games, the Blake/Rudy/Roy lineup did pretty well, but I hate seeing Brandon wrestle with SFs the whole game.
I noticed it.
I wonder if anything would change if going into the season Rudy knew that was his role?
According to that link, Roy is better as a SF. It also says his PER at PG was 50.0
Blake, Roy, and Oden don't/won't run, that's 60% of our starting lineup.Okay..... Rudy is not being used to his potential, Oden can't get the ball to be the center he was billed to be, and Blake can't get everyone involved.
What we know is we have the second youngest team in the league that flat out needs to be pushing the ball in a west where the best teams are not getting any younger. Agreed? Lakers best player in now in his 30's, the Spurs are old, Dallas is led by a 34 year old PG so why aren't our Blazers using what should be our greatest advantage speed and deep rotation?
Simple....... got the wrong coach who wants to play slow down, half court hoops with a team of sprinters. Rudy, LA, Bayless, Outlaw, Blake should be running the west to death up and down the court. We are not mean enough, old enough, experienced enough, of a team to play slow down half court grind it out games with teams like San Antonio, LA or Denver. Not going to happen. We saw what Houston did to us and this offseason we added nothing to make that glaring situation any better.
So here's the REAL PROBLEM..... you've got a half court coach with a fast break team. Nate is a good coach for a team like the Spurs, Rockets, Celtics or Pistons, but his philosophy here is killing this teams strengths. Rudy is not going to be the asset we need with Nate calling these type of plays, for that matter either will Bayless or Oden.
Nate has got to change his coaching style or next year will be the exact same as this year except LA will absolutely kick our asses with addition of Artest and San Antonio will will not fold in the first round.
Please don't get me wrong... I feel Nate is a fine coach, just not for this team. He's four years to early!
He had one sweet one from Blake. But yes, I'm guessing we'll see less of those next year.I just realized that EVERY kick-ass ally-oop he got last season was from Sergio!
He had one sweet one from Blake. But yes, I'm guessing we'll see less of those next year.

According to that link, Roy is better as a SF. It also says his PER at PG was 50.0
I watched Rudy play with DKV Juventut and with Spain. The way we used him was not how he seems to play best. Rudy isn't Martell; while he can be a spot-up 3 point shooter, that's not his highest and best use. Rudy is a playmaker. He can handle the ball, is a good passer and can drive to the hoop or stop and pop. He moves great without the ball and is terrific about faking one way and cutting to the hoop backdoor.
I hope Nate watches more of Rudy playing international ball and figures out how to better use him next season.
I saw absolutely ZERO "stop and pop" last year. I expected it from him, but was disappointed with the result. How he was used was not the problem. How he executed was. He better be working on it because he had more than enough opportunity to demonstrate it. When he does master it, (and i believe he will) then his value on the court will go sky high. Because he does everything else you said well.
I think a lot of the stuff he did in Europe doesn't work against the better defenders in the NBA. When he looked like he was trying, he usually ended up pulling the ball back out or taking a bad shot.
Didn't Rudy start the last two playoff games and come up empty?
The stats say he's better at defending the 3 than the 2 as well...Roy is better at SF. The Blake/Rudy/Roy lineup was very potent. I'm just not sure the team wants to make that kind of change (seeing Roy as a starter at SF).
If I were tinkering with lineups, I would run:
Batum/Rudy/Roy/LMA/Oden as my starters. Rudy or Batum can try and stay with the PGs, Roy or Batum with the SF, Rudy just stays on the SG. This gives you loads of offensive potential, so you can afford to have Batum just distribute, defend and rebound.
Batum has at least as good of court vision as Blake and Bayless, and is a solid ball handler. As long as you could figure out a sytem where Batum/Rudy/Roy knew who was supposed to do what, I think that lineup would kick.
I don't know enough about the triangle offense, but it seems like Batum/Rudy/Roy would be perfect candidates as they can all shoot the three, all drive and all pass.
Obviously, there's a long, long way to go. But right now Rudy has a nice start on becoming the single greatest three point shooter in NBA history.
Just stop and think about that a little before you consign him to role player, bargaining chip, or a guy who should be happy to play 25 mpg forever behind Roy because Ginobili does it.
Rudy is the only guy on our team who stands a somewhat realistic shot at being The. Very. Best. Ever. at a career statistical category. And I think he knows it, and so does his agent. So can you really blame him for already grumbling about minutes next year?
That's an interesting perspective, but really seems more trivia. Production isn't measured in setting a specific (and pretty niche) record, but in how much you impact your team's chances of winning overall. If he never turns into an efficient, volume scorer or a great distributor or a great defender, or some useful combination of those, the fact that he may eventually break the three-point mark isn't terribly consequential.
If Rudy exactly duplicated last season every year for 17 seasons (the number of seasons Reggie Miller played), he'd break the record for all-time three-pointers but never be as good as Ginobili (because last season he wasn't as good as a healthy Ginobili). Three-pointers are useful as a tool to be a productive, dangerous scorer. They aren't an end, themselves.
Well, three point shooting is a subset of shooting. Shooting isn't an end in itself, either. (Unless you are Travis Outlaw. Zing!) The end is in winning. Whatever you do that furthers winning, even if it's spacing the floor by shooting threes accurately, is all that really matters. If he winds up being one of the very best ever at that skill set, I really don't think it'll be trivial.
