LeBron and JJ Redikk teaming up for a new podcast

Paper Boi

Veteran
Supporter
Joined
May 15, 2013
Messages
69,719
Reputation
23,868
Daps
457,961
Reppin
NULL
had these on while watching games today. podcast is actually dope though.

i know a lot of people hate lebron here, i wouldn't consider myself his biggest fan, but this one of the better and quite frankly more original nba podcasts i've ever heard and i've heard most of them. not just drama, transactions and hot takes.:ehh:
 

Red Money

Pro
Joined
May 24, 2022
Messages
1,560
Reputation
-23
Daps
2,292


Your line is tired breh. :mjlol:








That was because that was the only series in his career when a team focused the zone entirely on him while he still had prime Wade and Bosh to dump the ball to. Bron shot much worse against other great defenses in the 2007 Finals, the 2008 ECSF, the 2015 ECSF and the 2015 Finals, but he still kept shooting in those series because he had no other choice, his teammates sucked. And in every case except Chicago, it ended in an L anyway. In Dallas, he had a better choice with elite teammates and so he made the higher-% play. What's the point of playing with good players if you're not going to defer to them when they have a better shot?

How the hell would it have helped the team for him to score 22ppg on 35% like he did against San Antonio in 2007? He HAD to keep shooting in that 2007 series because his teammates were ass, but that didn't get them the win and it would have been even worse if he had tried that in Dallas. When the Mavs were there zoning up to 4 or 5 guys at a time to cover LeBron's lanes, it made more sense to swing the ball to Wade and let him cook one-on-one than to try to score against three guys and jack up a low-% shot.


There's no doubt that the Mavs definitely got in Bron's head and affected his game, but they did that with brilliant scheming and defense:

1. changing the primary defender constantly
2. zoning off his driving and passing lanes with 2-3-4 help defenders at once
3. daring him to beat them from outside before he was confident in that shot

They were elite against every primary ballhandler in that postseason. 32yo Kobe and the defending champs got swept in the WCSF with Kobe averaging just 23ppg on 46% shooting (22.7% from three).....why didn't Kobe shoot more? That was his lowest scoring total in an L since the Detroit debacle. 22yo Westbrook in the next series averaged just 23.6ppg on 36% shooting and 20% from 3pt and the Thunder lost in five.....would LeBron have been better off putting up numbers like that?

The Dallas series is a perfect example of how much scheming matters. That Dallas defensive scheme didn't just work against LeBron, it worked against EVERY hall of fame primary ballhandler the Mavs faced.


Bron was a multiple time MVP at that point and stans had him elevated.

Bron wasn't posting up and fading on the smaller guys...he didn't need driving lanes. Should have been bbq chicken for him. Bron got stuck on the perimeter too often. Everyone saw him and noticed it. Get ya ass in the post and force the hard double or cook them lil dudes....but he didn't.
 

Professor Emeritus

Veteran
Poster of the Year
Supporter
Joined
Jan 5, 2015
Messages
48,484
Reputation
18,753
Daps
193,241
Reppin
the ether
Bron wasn't posting up and fading on the smaller guys...he didn't need driving lanes. Should have been bbq chicken for him. Bron got stuck on the perimeter too often. Everyone saw him and noticed it. Get ya ass in the post and force the hard double or cook them lil dudes....but he didn't.


Bron's primary defender was Shawn Marion, he was only occasionally being guarded by "little dudes", and those possessions looked like this:

2JQ1wJC.jpg


qZZPGlk.jpg



It's possible that Bron could eventually figure out and break that defense, but that was why they switched constantly. Marion takes three possessions, then switch to Kidd for two possessions. Marion comes onto him again, but Terry takes a single possession. Stevenson comes in the game and goes four reps, then Kidd again. Even Chandler guarded him briefly.

Dropping a 22-foot post fadeaway is not the way to win the series. If he backs his defender down into that 12-15 foot range, he's going to be mobbed by the help defenders. (And besides all that, Bron could make that 12-foot fadeaway out of the post in 2011, but he certainly wasn't efficient with it like he later became). Help defense also has everyone else's driving lanes covered, so he could swing for a three, but Bron's starting teammates were HORRIBLE from 3pt range that series (Bibby was 5-17, Wade was 7-23, Bosh and Anthony didn't make a 3 all series). What good is it to draw the double when your teammates are a combined 12-41 from 3pt range for the entire 6-game series? The bench was better (Chalmers was 14-35, Miller 7-18, House 3-8, Haslem didn't take any), but one of Spolstra's many failures in the series is that he rode too many non-3pt shooting players like Wade, Bosh, Haslem, Bibby, and Anthony on the court that series and so the Mavs only had to worry about 1-2 shooters at any one time.
 
Top