作者RonnieBrewer (Red Dunk)
看板UTAH-JAZZ
標題The 1-5 pick-and-roll: your common household appliance
時間Sat Aug 21 22:24:13 2010
The 1-5 pick-and-roll: your common household appliance
By Kevin Arnovitz
AUG 19
2:35PM ET
Denver assistant coach Adrian Dantley didn't have a particularly triumphant
2010 postseason. Dantley was handed the first chair after head coach George
Karl took a leave of absence to receive cancer treatment, but the Nuggets
were outwitted during their first-round series against
Utah and promptly
bounced from the playoffs a year after taking the Lakers to six games in the
Western Conference finals.
For all the trouble Dantley had maintaining tactical control over his squad
in the series, he had a knack of boiling down complicated questions with
plainspoken wisdom.
After Jazz point guard Deron Williams shredded the
Nuggets with a high pick-and-roll attack, Dantley was asked to evaluate his
big men's pick-and-roll defense. Dantley thought about the question for
a second, then rubbed his cheek before explaining that NBA big men were
uniquely unsuited to defending the pick-and-roll. That's the whole point.
That's the reason almost every team in the real runs a high pick-and-roll 60
or 70 times per game. And Dantley wasn't about to publicly kill his front
court for not having the coordination or footwork to backpedal against one of
the most capable point guards in the world.
A couple of months later, Vinny Del Negro emerged as a top candidate for the
Los Angeles Clippers' head coaching vacancy. One of the criticisms commonly
leveled at Del Negro was a lack of offensive creativity in Chicago. Naysayers
pointed out that the Bulls ran a predictable series of middle pick-and-rolls
for Derrick Rose and little else, but Del Negro's defenders would tell you
that it would've been malpractice for him not to run a high screen for Rose
almost every time downcourt. Since the Bulls had few other offensive assets
on the floor, a
1-5 pick-and-roll for Rose was far and away the unit's best
opportunity to score on a given possession, even though the big men for
Chicago rolling to the hoop lacked offensive polish.
Maybe Del Negro's supporters have a point. Rely on the high pick-and-roll
exclusively as Del Negro did, and you're obtuse. But ride it to success, the
way Stan Van Gundy has in Orlando in recent seasons, and you're a genius. Few
teams have gotten more mileage out of a high screen from its center for its
point guard at the top of the floor -- or the 1-5 pick-and-roll -- than the
Magic have with Jameer Nelson and Dwight Howard.
Using FastDraw, Eddy Rivera of Magic Basketball has diagramed some of
Orlando's primary sets predicated on the 1-5 pick-and-roll, and has linked
to a corresponding video for each play.
( 戰術連結 http://tinyurl.com/2be45v3 )
A suggestion: Watch each clip twice. On first viewing, take a look at the
primary action -- how Nelson and Howard (and often Rashard Lewis with a
staggered screen) initiate the screen-and-roll. But on the second viewing,
watch what's happening off the ball, especially after the defense collapses
on Nelson. That's what separates Orlando's execution from lesser teams.
It's important to note that talent plays a role. For instance, Orlando has
uncommonly good shooters spaced along the perimeter at the 2, 3 and 4
positions. But good teams, even in the absence of knockdown shooters from
long distance, can still manufacture quality offense off the ball in these
sets. It generally requires smart reads, something you see when
Boston runs
stuff up top for Rajon Rondo, or when
San Antonio utilizes the high screen
for its ball handlers.
Now that you've seen the offense in action, take a look at Sebastian Pruiti's
manual at NBA Playbook on how to defend the pick-and-roll. Pruiti looks at
traditional methods for defending the pick-and-roll -- hedging and switching.
But the most interesting element in this primer focuses on
Tom Thibodeau's
aggressive tactic -- blitzing the point guard off the action, something more
and more teams are doing. One NBA coach told me last season that the frenetic
trap or "blueing" the screen (an attempt to get between the point guard and
the pick man to force the point guard sideline) is really a NBA defense's
only option against the league's young speedsters.
"Penetration is what kills
you in the half court," the coach said. "Keep the guy out of the paint and
you have a fighting chance."
( 連結2 http://tinyurl.com/2ga4y5x )
Sounds well and good, but a blitz leaves the back side of the defense
vulnerable. They essentially have to zone up in a 3-on-4 scheme, something
that requires heady defenders who know how to make smart decisions in a snap.
Most NBA offenses can swing the ball around the floor in a flash, even
against pressure. Unless there's a defender who can quickly rotate onto the
open man or pick up the weak side cutter (which, in turn, means that another
defender must rotate onto that defender's man), there's likely to be a
breakdown.
As the Lakers and Celtics worked their way through the bracket last spring,
it became increasingly clear that we don't pay enough attention to a player's
skills as a team defender after the initial action (most frequently a high
screen-and-roll). Here's where I believe guys like an aging Jason Kidd, Luol
Deng, Andre Miller or
Kyle Korver get short shrift. None of these players can
be fairly regarded as a lockdown defender, but you have to watch a lot of
film before you see them make an ill-advised decision late in a possession,
long after the base defense has broken down.
http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/post/_/id/
19313/the-1-5-pick-and-roll-your-common-household-appliance
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