Posts Tagged ‘Ben Gordon’

Understanding how the Pistons were demolished by the Bulls last night

Tuesday, January 10th, 2012

This is the Box Score and the Play-By-Play for last night’s game between the Detroit Pistons and the Chicago Bulls.

This is the GameFlow Chart.

When you look at the different combinations Lawrence Frank used at the Point Guard and Off Guard positions in this game:

PG OG Start Time End Time Duration Differential
Knight Gordon Q1, 12:00 Q1, 03:02 08:58 -9
Bynum Gordon Q1, 03:02 Q1, 01:31 01:31 +5
Bynum Daye Q1, 01:31 Q2, 08:49 04:42 0
Knight Daye Q2, 08:49 Q2, 06:26 02:23 -5
Knight Gordon Q2, 06:26 Q2, 05:18 01:08 +1
Knight Wilkens Q2, 05:18 Q2, 01:10 04:08 -1
Bynum Wilkens Q2, 01:10 Q2, 00:00 01:10 0
Knight Gordon Q3, 12:00 Q3, 04:37 07:23 +2
Knight Wilkens Q3, 04:37 Q3, 00:04.4 04:32.6 0
Bynum Gordon Q3, 00:04.4 Q4, 08:01 04:03.4 -9
Knight Gordon Q4, 08:01 Q4, 04:00 04:01 -6
Knight Daye Q4, 04:00 Q4, 00:00 04:00 -2
TOTAL 48:00 -24

 

PG OG +/- MP Total +/- Total MP
Knight Gordon -9,+1,+2,-6 08:58,01:08,07:23,04:01 -12 21:30
Bynum Gordon +5,-9 01:31,04:03.4 -4 05:34.4
Bynum Daye 0 04:42 0 04:42
Knight Daye -5,-2 02:23,04:00 -7 06:23
Knight Wilkens -1,0 04:08,04:32.6 -1 08:40.6
Bynum Wilkens 0 01:10 0 01:10

 

PG OG Total +/- Total MP
Bynum [Small] Daye [Big] 0 04:42
Bynum [Small] Wilkens [Ave] 0 01:10
Knight [Small] Wilkens [Ave] -1 08:40.6
Bynum [Small] Gordon [Small] -4 05:34.4
Knight [Small] Daye [Big] -7 06:23
Knight [Small] Gordon [Small] -12 21:30

you should get a clear picture of a main reason Detroit lost this game by a margin of 24 points … and it isn’t because:

A. Carlos Boozer [PF] was a 1-man wrecking crew; or,
B. The players on the Pistons roster, as a whole, simply are not “good enough” to compete effectively with a team that has an overall “talent level” like Chicago.

Lawrence Frank is a good NBA head coach who actually knows what he’s doing.

Hopefully it doesn’t take him too long to figure out a workable solution to Detroit’s rotation problem at the guard positions, whenever Rodney Stuckey is not available to play.

Will Bynum filling proper role with Pistons, at last

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012

There has been a very good reason why the Detroit Pistons have under-achieved for the last few seasons:

———————————————

Will Bynum currently out of Pistons’ rotation

Pistons coach Lawrence Frank has chose to go with a three-guard lineup of Rodney Stuckey, Ben Gordon and Brandon Knight as of late. That has left Will Bynum out of the rotation.

Other than the final three minutes in the loss at Boston on Dec. 30, Bynum has not played in the Pistons last three games.

“It’s hard,” Frank said. “Will’s a very, very good player. He’s obviously a guy we see as a game changer, especially on the offensive end. Someone who … is one of our better pick-and-roll players. But it’s hard to play three point guards, especially cause outside of Rodney our guards are small.

“Will’s definitely going to have his day in the sun. He’s going to help us win games, but right now this is where we’re at.

“Especially with a new coach and a new system the one thing I’ve said to the group and I also say to myself is, ‘Flexibility.’ We don’t have all the answers right now. Will we feel is part of the solution. We’ll just see how it all fits.”

Bynum played nearly 13 minutes in the season opener, finishing with six points on 1 for 5 shooting, three assists, three rebounds and two turnovers. Bynum did not play in the home opener against Cleveland, played the final 3:25 at Boston on Dec. 30 and did not play in the Pistons win over Indiana on New Year’s Eve.

Even though Bynum hasn’t been playing, Frank still feels he can be a part of the team’s success.

“Even when you’re not playing you can contribute and part of that is being a good teammate, being involved, especially as a point guard you should really be engaged in the game,” Frank said. “Everyone on this level can play. A lot of it is about opportunity and combinations on the floor. What may be your lineup today could be different a week from now, could be different a month from now. Really the guys play determines how much they do or do not play.

“(With) Will, it’s not a lack of confidence, a lack of faith, a lack of belief or lack of ability. It’s just we have small guards and we’re not a good rebounding team. Defensive rebounding takes precedent and we’ll go from there. But Will will have his day.”

———————————————

and, the fact is … despite what certain so-called “stats gurus” might like to perpetuate throughout the blogosphere:

———————————————

Detroit Pistons Are Who We Thought They Were

Why the Pistons are Misbehaving

John Kuester was not the problem: Part 1

———————————————

… it’s had absolutely nothing to do with the overall “poor quality” of the players on their roster.

PS. Team Cohesion is a much bigger part of success and failure in the NBA than most observers understand, and by keeping Will Bynum completely out of the Pistons’ rotation … something which yours truly first recommended to Pistons fans, back in the summer of 2009, in a now-defunct thread concerning the proper use of Rodney Stuckey, Richard Hamilton, Ben Gordon and Will Bynum, at a fan-based site named “Detroit Bad Boys” … Lawrence Frank is demonstrating that he actually knows what he’s doing, as a competent NBA-level head coach, unlike John Kuester.

PPS. Btw … He who laughs last, laughs best. :-)

Ben Gordon is already looking forward to ‘learning’ from his new head coach

Wednesday, August 17th, 2011

For the benefit of those who think that Lawrence Frank is someone that will struggle to earn the respect of the veteran players with the Detroit Pistons, due to his lack of NBA playing experience:

———————————————

His Own Words: Ben Gordon on the NBA Lockout

Grantland: You obviously haven’t been able to talk to your new coach, Lawrence Frank, but what is your impression of him?

Gordon: “I have a lot of game experience playing against him when he coached the Nets and was a Boston assistant. He always seems to be very, very prepared, very meticulous and has an astute attention to detail. That may sound cliché for a head coach at this level. But I think it’s very important to know what your guys can do, putting them in the best situation possible. I think he’s very capable of that. He’s very defensive minded and that’s something our team lacked a lot last year. I’m looking forward once this stuff is sorted out to learning from him.”

Grantland: Last year was a tough year for the Pistons and the bottom hit with reports of players boycotting a shoot-around in protest of the former coach John Kuester. What’s the backstory behind that situation?

Gordon: “Last year, everything that possibly could have went wrong, went wrong. We had a lot of talent. There were a lot of issues in the front office, on the floor, with coaches, with players. It was just a mess. People from the outside looking in don’t realize how bad it was. It wasn’t conducive for playing basketball at a high level and it showed. It was pretty much what everybody saw. Some guys showed up to play. Some guys didn’t show up to play. Whatever point people were trying to prove by showing up or nothing showing up, those points were taken. Six guys showed up. Six guys played and a few other guys decided not to play that night. That was one of the uglier moments during the season. Moving forward, I don’t see that happening anymore. That was probably one of the lowest basketball moments I’ve ever been a part of. Because we’re all a team and we all shared that negative light. Regardless of who played that night, it was bad. But moving forward, I think the emphasis will be much different.”

———————————————

Best try thinking, again.

Train-wreck season rolls on for once proud Pistons

Saturday, February 26th, 2011

In the summer of 2009 yours truly made the observation that the 2008-2009 version of the Detroit Pistons had an on-going “internal” problem with their former head coach, Michael Curry, and the team’s core group of players who had been with Detroit during the successful run of the previous decade.

Essentially, this is what was said:

1. The Pistons had been unsuccessful, in large part … not because they had only “average-to-below-average” players on their roster, but … because the “average-to-above-average” players on their team had not been used appropriately by their head coach and such problems with their regular “rotation” would continue to be the primary cause of their failure, if the right head coach was not brought in by Joe Dumars/GM to address the situation moving forward.

2. Clear “Role Delineation” is a key component of a successful basketball coach’s job.

3. Fostering “Team Cohesion” is a key component of “Role Delineation” for a successful basketball coach.

4. An elite level basketball team that has several players who work best at the same position with a similar set of strengths and weaknesses needs to have their “individual roles” identified clearly by the head coach, in a way which establishes a clear hierarchy and allows their “best” players to receive the most playing time, on a consistent basis.

5. One way … of many different alternatives … to accomplish this type of “regular rotation” for the 2009-2010 Detroit Pistons, given their collection of Point Guards, Off Guards, Combo Guards, Guard-Forwards, Small Forwards and Combo Forwards would be to implement:

i. An exclusive 3-player rotation at the Point Guard and Off Guard positions;

in concert with,

ii. An exclusive 2-player rotation at the Small Forward position;

that looked something like the following:

STARTERS
PG, Rodney Stuckey
OG, Rip Hamilton
SF, Tayshaun Prince

KEY SUBS
PG-OG, Ben Gordon
SF, Jonas Jerebko [or Austin Daye]  

and, thereby, excluded Will Bynum [PG] – a talented player, in his own right – from the mix on a consistent basis.

This type of regular rotation would have promoted very clear “Role Delineation” amongst the Pistons’ guards and forwards and enhanced “Team Cohesion”. 

Unfortunately, instead of doing this …

Last Season 

John Kuester [i.e. new head coach] juggled his players incessantly in the different Point Guard, Off Guard and Small Forward roles;

and,

This Season

The problem has only become worse with the inclusion of Tracy McGrady [PG-OG-SF].

Exhibit A - Prince and Kuester have words. Again.

Exhibit B – Pistons aren’t playing hard

Exhibit C - Hamilton at center of Pistons turmoil

Exhibit D

Pistons’ turmoil boils over, coach ejected in loss 

———————————–

Despite what you might have read - either, recently or over the last 2 seasons - from other “so-called” basketball analysts who rely primarily on stat-based metrics like “Wins Produced”, etc., to evaluate the abilities and relative worth of NBA players …

The main problem for the Pistons, since Larry Brown’s departure, as their head coach, has not been rooted in the ”below average” abilities of their players but the “poor fit” between their “best” players and the men Joe Dumars/GM has hired as their next 3 head coaches, i.e. Flip Saunders, Michael Curry and John Kuester. 

While these Detroit teams have been short of the sort of overall “talent level” required to compete successfully for a place in the NBA Finals, this is not the main reason they have plummeted down the Eastern Conference standings, since the trade of Chauncey Billups [PG] for Allen Iverson [PG-OG].

In relative terms …

Authentic elite level basketball coaches are a rare commodity.

When a given NBA team fails to hire one of these select individuals to lead their on-court operation, it should really come as no surprise, at all, if the players on their roster are not able to reach their maximum capacity, either, individually or as a collective unit.

Hopefully, Joe D. will be able to solve THIS on-going problem for the Pistons.

Poor coaching decisions have derailed the Pistons

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011

Looking at the way the Detroit Pistons have performed during their last 7 games:

DETROIT PISTONS ROTATION FOR THEIR LAST 7 GAMES

Game

1

 

2

 

3

 

4

 

5

 

6

 

7

 

 

 

Date

Jan14

 

Jan15

 

Jan17

 

Jan19

 

Jan20

 

Jan21

 

Jan23

 

 

 

Opponent

@ TOR

 

V SAC

 

V DAL

 

@ BOS

 

@ NJN

 

V PHO

 

@ ORL

 

 

 

W/L Result

W

 

W

 

W

 

L

 

L

 

W

 

W

 

AVE SCORE

Score

101-95

 

110-106

 

103-89

 

82-86

 

74-89

 

75-74

 

103-96

 

93-91

 

AVE

PTS

AVE

MP

Rotation

PTS

MP

 

PTS

MP

 

PTS

MP

 

PTS

MP

 

PTS

MP

 

PTS

MP

 

PTS

MP

 

STARTERS

McGrady

22

35+

 

0

9+

 

8

25+

 

5

36+

 

10

31

 

3

24

 

20

35

 

10

28

Stuckey

19

24+

 

19

29

 

20

30

 

15

28

 

14

28

 

11

29+

 

16

33+

 

16

29

Prince

9

34

 

21

37+

 

19

33+

 

13

38+

 

16

33

 

17

39

 

20

33

 

16

35

Wilcox

4

29+

 

7

22

 

8

23+

 

9

31

 

5

21+

 

6

19

 

4

15

 

6

23

Monroe

12

37+

 

11

37+

 

16

40+

 

13

34+

 

5

28

 

6

23

 

7

31

 

10

33

KEY SUBS – A

Bynum

6

12+

 

18

26

 

4

18

 

2

10

 

8

19+

 

12

21

 

0

14+

 

7

17

Gordon

11

24

 

16

31

 

11

28

 

10

20+

 

7

24

 

9

24+

 

16

21+

 

11

25

Daye

2

13+

 

2

12

 

2

14

 

4

9

 

5

19+

 

11

28+

 

20

34

 

7

18

Wallace

-

IN

 

-

IN

 

-

IN

 

-

IN

 

-

IN

 

0

24+

 

0

19

 

0

6

KEY SUBS – B

Maxiell

-

DNP

 

-

DNP

 

-

DNP

 

-

DNP

 

1

9

 

0

4

 

0

1

 

0

2

Villanueva

16

27+

 

16

34

 

15

22+

 

11

29+

 

0

10

 

-

IN

 

-

IN

 

8

17

LEGEND:

PTS – Points Scored; MP – Minutes Played; AVE PTS – Average Points Scored; AVE MP – Average Minutes Played; AVE SCORE – Average Score.

it should now be relatively easy for others to see that the main reason this team has wallowed in the bottom third of the Eastern Conference Standings, to this point this season, has been the relatively poor job done by John Kuester and the Lack of Team Cohesion his personnel decisions have fostered.

The stark reality for the Pistons this year is that …

There has always been more than enough legitimate NBA talent on-hand for Detroit to compete effectively for a lower tier playoff position in the Eastern Conference … as long as their head coach doesn’t muck it up by:

I. Refusing to settle on one of many different possible solid 8-9 player rotations;

and,

II. Creating a series of needless internal conflicts with the best players on the team.

… in contrast to what you may have been told by certain ‘stats gurus’ who think that the Pistons’ main problem has been rooted elsewhere. 

Where the Pistons re-vamped rotation dismantled the Raptors

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

As was mentioned here yesterday …

If John Kuester is not going to settle on a specific rotation for the Pistons this year, then, Detroit will most likely drop to the bottom of the Eastern Conference standings.

However, it would be a serious mistake in Basketball Judgment for anyone to think that the chief reason for this type of precipitous decline in the fortunes of this franchise is due to the overall poor quality of the players on their present roster.

Detroit Pistons [10-19] 115
TORONTO RAPTORS [10-19] 93
Complete Game Info

Despite the fact that the Raptors went into last night’s game with a depleted line-up …

Jerryd Bayless [Out - illness]
Sonny Weems [Out - injured]
Peja Stojakovic [Out - injured]
Reggie Evans [Out - injured]

and were forced to use already-injured starters Jose Calderon [PG] and Andrea Bargnani [C] for copious amounts of minutes – even though they were both playing poorly - and were forced to play the final 26:43 without the services of their starting PF, Amir Johnson [who sufferred a re-occurrence of his on-going trouble with back spasms] …

The specific rotation which the Pistons used in this game is but one example of what can happen when a team’s players have a solid understanding of their respective individual roles, and their head coach uses them in combinations that actually make a good deal of sense from an Individual Match-up perspective.

If you take a look at the “Substitution Chart” from last night’s game:

Time

Team

PG

OG

SF

PF

C

Start

End

Diff

T-Mac/Tot

2nd Q

Det

Bynum

Hamilton

McGrady

Maxiell

Monroe

30

32

-1

 

7:49

TOR

Calderon

DeRozan

Kleiza

Davis

Bargnani

30

33

+1

2 pts/4

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Det

Bynum

Hamilton

McGrady

Maxiell

Monroe

32

38

+6

 

07:06

TOR

Calderon

DeRozan

Kleiza

Johnson

Bargnani

33

33

-6

2 pts/6

[01:00]

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Det

Stuckey

Hamilton

McGrady

Maxiell

Monroe

38

44

+3

3 pts/9

06:06

TOR

Calderon

DeRozan

Kleiza

Johnson

Bargnani

33

35

-3

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Det

Stuckey

Hamilton

McGrady

Villanueva

Monroe

44

48

-1

2 pts/11

04:11

TOR

Calderon

Barbosa

DeRozan

Johnson

Bargnani

35

40

+1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Det

Stuckey

Hamilton

McGrady

Villanueva

Maxiell

48

51

+3

0 pts/11

03:11

TOR

Calderon

Barbosa

DeRozan

Johnson

Bargnani

40

40

-3

 

02:43

Time-out: TOR/Regular [Det 51, TOR 40]

 

Det

Stuckey

Hamilton

McGrady

Villanueva

Maxiell

51

55

0

2 pts/13

02:43

TOR

Calderon

Barbosa

DeRozan

Kleiza

Bargnani

40

44

0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Det

Stuckey

Hamilton

McGrady

Villanueva

Wallace

55

62

+7

2 pts/15

01:44

TOR

Calderon

DeRozan

Wright

Kleiza

Bargnani

44

44

-7

 

[01:23.6]

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Det

Stuckey

Hamilton

McGrady

Villanueva

Wallace

62

62

0

0 pts/15

00:20.4

TOR

Calderon

Barbosa

DeRozan

Kleiza

Bargnani

44

44

0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Det

Stuckey

Hamilton

McGrady

Villanueva

Wallace

62

62

0

0 pts/15

00:03.0

TOR

Calderon

Barbosa

DeRozan

Wright

Bargnani

44

44

0

 

Legend:
Bold
– Player was substituted into the game; Italics – Player was moved to a new position; T-Mac/Tot – Points scored by Tracy McGrady during this shift/Total points scored by McGrady in the game to that point; [] – Shift duration of a specific 5-man unit.

 

- When the game changed dramatically in the Pistons favour.

and the Play-By-Play for the 2nd half of the 2nd quarter:

DETROIT PISTONS

 

TORONTO RAPTORS

 

07:49

Barbosa Substitution replaced by DeRozan 

McGrady Pullup Jump shot: Made (4 PTS) 

07:35
[DET 32-30]

 

 

07:18
[TOR 33-32]

Calderon 3pt Shot: Made (3 PTS) 

 

07:06

Calderon Violation:Kicked Ball 

 

07:06

Davis Substitution replaced by Johnson 

Monroe Running Layup Shot: Made (4 PTS) Assist: McGrady (1 AST) 

06:59
[DET 34-33]

 

 

06:43

Calderon Turnover : Bad Pass (4 TO) Steal:McGrady (3 ST) 

Hamilton Floating Jump shot: Made (7 PTS) Assist: McGrady (2 AST) 

06:37
[DET 36-33]

 

 

06:19

Bargnani Turnover : Bad Pass (2 TO) Steal:Hamilton (1 ST) 

McGrady Driving Layup Shot: Made (6 PTS) 

06:11
[DET 38-33]

 

Hamilton Foul : Personal Block (1 PF) 

06:06

 

 

06:06

Team Timeout : Regular 

Bynum Substitution replaced by Stuckey 

06:06

 

 

06:03

DeRozan Turnover : Traveling (1 TO) 

McGrady 3pt Shot: Made (9 PTS) 

05:48
[DET 41-33]

 

 

05:30

DeRozan Turnover : Bad Pass (2 TO) Steal:Hamilton (2 ST) 

 

05:27

Bargnani Foul : Shooting (1 PF) 

Hamilton Free Throw 1 of 2 Missed 

05:27

 

Team Rebound 

05:27

 

Hamilton Free Throw 2 of 2 (8 PTS) 

05:27
[DET 42-33]

 

 

05:14
[TOR 35-42]

Bargnani Driving Slam Dunk Shot: Made (7 PTS) 

 

05:01

Bargnani Foul : Defense 3 Second (1 PF) 

Hamilton Free Throw Technical Missed 

05:01

 

Team Rebound 

05:01

 

Hamilton 3pt Shot: Missed 

04:52

 

 

04:51

DeRozan Rebound (Off:0 Def:4) 

 

04:46

Johnson Running Layup Shot: Missed Block: Stuckey (1 BLK) 

 

04:46

Team Rebound 

 

04:42

Kleiza Driving Layup Shot: Missed 

Monroe Rebound (Off:0 Def:1) 

04:40

 

Stuckey Driving Layup Shot: Made (13 PTS) Assist: Monroe (1 AST) 

04:35
[DET 44-35]

 

 

04:24

Calderon Pullup Jump shot: Missed 

Maxiell Rebound (Off:0 Def:1) 

04:22

 

Maxiell Substitution replaced by Villanueva 

04:11

 

 

04:11

Kleiza Substitution replaced by Barbosa 

Villanueva Pullup Jump shot: Made (8 PTS) Assist: Stuckey (1 AST) 

04:00
[DET 46-35]

 

 

03:41
[TOR 37-46]

DeRozan Jump Shot: Made (8 PTS) Assist: Calderon (8 AST) 

McGrady Jump Shot: Made (11 PTS) 

03:20
[DET 48-37]

 

 

03:11
[TOR 39-48]

Bargnani Driving Layup Shot: Made (9 PTS) Assist: Calderon (9 AST) 

Villanueva Foul : Shooting (2 PF) 

03:11

 

Monroe Substitution replaced by Maxiell 

03:11

 

 

03:11
[TOR 40-48]

Bargnani Free Throw 1 of 1 (10 PTS) 

Hamilton 3pt Shot: Made (11 PTS) Assist: McGrady (3 AST) 

02:52
[DET 51-40]

 

 

02:43

Calderon Turnover : Bad Pass (5 TO) 

Team Timeout : Regular 

02:43

 

 

02:43

Johnson Substitution replaced by Kleiza 

McGrady Turnaround Fade Away shot: Made (13 PTS) Assist: Villanueva (2 AST) 

02:31
[DET 53-40]

 

 

02:13
[TOR 42-53]

Kleiza Layup Shot: Made (10 PTS) Assist: Barbosa (1 AST) 

Villanueva Jump Shot: Made (10 PTS) Assist: Hamilton (2 AST) 

01:56
[DET 55-42]

 

McGrady Foul : Shooting (1 PF) 

01:44

 

 

01:44
[TOR 43-55]

Kleiza Free Throw 1 of 2 (11 PTS) 

 

01:44

Barbosa Substitution replaced by Wright 

Maxiell Substitution replaced by Wallace 

01:44

 

 

01:44
[TOR 44-55]

Kleiza Free Throw 2 of 2 (12 PTS) 

Hamilton 3pt Shot: Made (14 PTS) Assist: McGrady (4 AST) 

01:29
[DET 58-44]

 

 

01:16

Kleiza Turnover : Bad Pass (1 TO) Steal:Wallace (1 ST) 

 

01:13

Kleiza Foul : Shooting (2 PF) 

Villanueva Free Throw 1 of 2 (11 PTS) 

01:13
[DET 59-44]

 

Villanueva Free Throw 2 of 2 (12 PTS) 

01:13
[DET 60-44]

 

 

00:57.9

Bargnani Pullup Jump shot: Missed 

McGrady Rebound (Off:0 Def:2) 

00:56.8

 

McGrady Driving Reverse Layup Shot: Made (15 PTS) 

00:39.9
[DET 62-44]

 

 

00:22.9

Kleiza Turnover : Bad Pass (2 TO) Steal:Villanueva (1 ST) 

Wallace Turnover : Bad Pass (1 TO) 

00:20.4

 

 

00:20.4

Wright Substitution replaced by Barbosa 

 

00:03.8

Calderon 3pt Shot: Missed 

Team Rebound 

00:03.0

 

Team Timeout : Short 

00:03.0

 

 

00:03.0

Kleiza Substitution replaced by Wright 

Stuckey 3pt Shot: Missed 

00:00.6

 

 

00:00.1

Barbosa Rebound (Off:0 Def:1) 

End of 2nd Quarter

you should be able to see where exactly the Pistons dismantled the Raptors during two specific segments of the 2nd quarter AND used a different rotation than they have employed at any other point so far this season that looks like this:

DETROIT PISTONS’ NEW 10 PLAYER ROTATION

Pos

Player

Strengths

Weaknesses

STARTERS

PG

Stuckey

Big Guard who can score

Limited perimeter shooter

OG

Gordon

Good perimeter shooter

Small guard; limited defender

SF

Prince

Solid all-around skill-set

Lacks strength

PF

Villanueva

Good scorer

Intermittent rebounder; poor defender

C

Wallace

Good defender; good rebounder

Poor shooter; poor scorer

KEY SUBS

PG

Bynum

Good scorer

Small guard; limited defender; limited rebounder

OG

Hamilton

Big Guard; good scorer

Limited defender; limited rebounder

SF

McGrady

Good passer who can still score

Limited defender

PF

Maxiell

Good rebounder

Poor shooter

C

Monroe

Good passer

Lacks strength

RESERVES

OG/SF

Daye

Solid all-around

Lacks strength

PF/C

Wilcox

Good rebounder

Poor shooter

which allowed their team to take advantage of certain mis-match situations on offense, while limiting their exposure to disadvantageous mis-match situations at the defensive end of the floor.

Kudos to John Kuester. :-)

New ‘rotation’ pays immediate dividends for Kuester’s Pistons

Tuesday, December 14th, 2010

Well, well, well.

The Pistons’ re-vamped 9-man rotation looked like this, in tonight’s demolition of the Hawks:

DETROIT PISTONS’ NEW & IMPROVED
9-MAN ROTATION, AS OF TUE DEC 14 2010

STARTERS

PG

OG

SF

PF

C

Rodney
Stuckey

Rip
Hamilton

Tayshaun
Prince

Greg
Monroe

Ben
Wallace

KEY SUBS

PG-OG

SF

PF

PF-C

Ben

Gordon

Tracy
McGrady

Charlie
Villanueva

Chris
Wilcox

RESERVES

PG

OG-SF

PF

Will
Bynum

Austin
Daye

Jason
Maxiell

EXTRAS/OUTS

 

OG

SF-PF

PF

 

 

Terrico
White

Jonas
Jerebko

Dajuan
Summers

 

Atlanta Hawks 80
DETROIT PISTONS 103
Complete Game Info

It will be very interesting to see if Coach Kuester has the good “basketball sense” to stick with this ‘new & improved’ philosophy … or, at least, a close facsimile of it … for the balance of the season.

If he does:

1. He will finally be making a sound personnel decision and conducting his affairs like a solid NBA head coach;

and,

2. Any knowledgeable basketball observer should not be surprised, at all, to see the Pistons remain in contention for a lower tier playoff position the balance of this campaign;

in spite of what s/he may have been told before by so-called ‘stats gurus‘. :-)

———————————–

Related:

Detroit Pistons host the Atlanta Hawks: Where’s Your JOD Now? 

[ROTFLOLWKAS]

Curing what ails the 2009-2010 Detroit Pistons

Friday, March 5th, 2010

After losing their last 2 games against the Boston Celtics and the New York Kincks, it will be very interesting to see how the Detroit Pistons respond this evening, when they journey to Cleveland to take on the team with the top W-L record in the NBA.

While many Pistons fans are lamenting the atrocious state of their squad which was sitting at the top end of the Eastern Conference just 2 seasons ago … this corner of the blogosphere does not share a similar level of doom and gloom concerning the goings-on in the Motor City over the last 12 months.

If the Pistons’ everyday rotation/line-up was to look like this:

STARTERS
1. PG, Stuckey [32 MPG, best multi-dimensional PG with good size]
2. OG, Hamilton [32 MPG, best offensive Wing scorer with good size]
3. SF, Prince [30 MPG, best defensive/rebounding Wing player]
4. PF, Maxiell [26 MPG, best rebounding front-court player]
5. C, Brown [22 MPG, best interior defensive/rebounding player]

KEY SUBS
6. PG-OG, Gordon [32 MPG, best combination Guard with solid perimeter J]
7. SF, Jerebko [18 MPG, best defensive/rebounding back-up Wing]
8. PF, Villanueva [22 MPG, best perimeter-oriented scoring Big]
9. C, Wallace [28 MPG, best interior defensive/rebounding Big]

RESERVES
10. OG-SF, Daye [injury replacement minutes which would be a lot this yr]
11. SF-PF, Summers [injury replacement minutes which would be a lot this yr]

EXTRAS
12. PG, Atkins [DNP-CD]

OUTS [who should be package with another asset in exchange for an inside scoring Big]
13. PG, Bynum [amongst the very best back-up PG's in the NBA]
14. PF-C, Wilcox

what Detroit would find is that:

- the rhythm for their 3 principal Guards [i.e. Hamilton, Stuckey and Gordon] would be much improved
- the quality of their PG play overall would be more consistent [i.e. with Stuckey and Gordon, exclusively, running this team]
- their overall level of “Team Cohesion” would improve significantly
- their interior defense would be improved
- their Guard oriented Team Scoring output would be much improved

ROSTER COMPARISON FOR DETROIT AND CLEVELAND

Pos

PISTONS

RATING

Pos

CAVALIERS

RATING

COACH

 

Kuester

1

 

Brown

3

SUB-TOTAL

1

SUB-TOTAL

3

STARTERS

PG

Stuckey

3

PG

Williams-M

3

OG

Hamilton

4

OG

Parker

3

SF

Prince

4

SF

James

5

PF

Maxiell

3

PF

Jamison

4

C

Brown

3

PF-C

Hickson

3

SUB-TOTAL

17

SUB-TOTAL

18

KEY SUBS

PG-OG

Gordon

4

PG-OG

West

4

SF

Jerebko

3

OG-SF

Moon

3

PF

Villanueva

3

PF

Powe *

3

C

Wilcox *

3

PF-C

Varejao

4

SUB-TOTAL

13

SUB-TOTAL

14

RESERVES

PG

Atkins

2

PG

Gibson

3

OG-SF

Daye

3

SF

Williams-J

3

SF-PF

Summers

2

PF

Jackson

2

SUB-TOTAL

7

SUB-TOTAL

8

TOTAL

38

TOTAL

43

EXTRAS/OUTS

PG

Bynum #

4

OG-SF

Green

3

PF-C

Wallace

Injured

C

O’Neal

Injured

LEGEND: RATING – From 5 [highest] to 1 [lowest]; Pos – Position; * – Replacement for injured player; # – Valuable player who should be traded in a package with another asset, in exchange for an interior scoring Big.  

Contrary to popular belief, this year’s Pistons team actually has a good deal of solid NBA talent that is simply not being used properly by their head coach.

———————————–

PS. Just because Daye [i.e. talented OG-SF scorer] and Summers [i.e. talented PF-SF defender/rebounder] haven’t been given the opportunity to play a whole lot of minutes yet this season, Pistons fans should not make the mistake of thinking that either player has a lower long term ceiling than Jonas Jerebko, who has shown great promise thus far in the limited [but increasing] minutes he has received. Pistons fans were told in the summer that the player they were getting in Jerebko has REAL ability to become a solid contributor to a high end team in the NBA, as his career continues to develop. Few chose to believe what they were told at the time. Time has proven, once again, that they were wrong, and that what was said by yours truly was highly accurate. Well, the exact same thing also applies to Daye and Summers. As the next 2 years continue to unfold, what astute Pistons fans should begin to see more and more is that both of these young men have the capacity to develop into frontline contributors for Detroit, down-the-road a piece … provided that each one is eventually used properly by the team’s head coach who, unfortunately, should be someone other than John Kuester. Until Joe Dumars fixes his problem, in this regard, and identifies a proven high end NBA head coach [e.g. Jeff Van Gundy] who can lead his team properly, the abundant talent on this team is merely going to waste.

Specific reasons why the Pistons lost another winnable game

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

As a follow-up to yesterday’s take on the sorry state of the once-proud Detroit Pistons …

Detroit Pistons 104 [21-40]
NEW YORK KNICKS 128 [21-39]

Complete Game Info

———————————————

Coming off a tough loss on Tuesday night, at home against the Boston Celtics, Detroit played New York fairly even for the first 32 minutes of last night’s match-up at Madison Square Garden, and trailed by only 5 points at the 4:02 mark of the 3rd quarter, when John Kuester made the decision to replace Rodney Stuckey/PG with Will Bynum:

 

PLAYER SUBSTITUTION CHART

 

TIME

TEAM

PG

OG

SF

PF

C

Start

End

Diff

3rd Quarter

04:02

DET

Bynum

Gordon

Prince

Jerebko

Maxiell

73

76

0

 

NYK

McGrady

House

Gallinari

Harrington

Lee

80

83

0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

02:56

DET

Bynum

Gordon

Prince

Jerebko

Maxiell

76

85

-2

 

NYK

Rodriguez

House

Walker

Gallinari

Lee

83

94

+2

4th Quarter

12:00

DET

Bynum

Gordon

Hamilton

Jerebko

Villanueva

85

91

-1

 

NYK

Rodriguez

House

Walker

Gallinari

Lee

94

101

+1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

08:49

DET

Bynum

Gordon

Hamilton

Jerebko

Villanueva

91

93

-11

 

NYK

McGrady

House

Walker

Harrington

Lee

101

114

+11

LEGEND: Red ShadeNew York player substitution; Blue ShadeDetroit player substitution; Orange ShadeNew York player shifted to a new position.

What others should be able to glean from the Pistons’ performance last night … throughout the contest and, specifically, at crunch time … is that WHEN their coach, John Kuester, chooses to:

1. Use Will Bynum [23 MP] as the primary Back-up to Rodney Stuckey [26 MP], at the PG position, instead of Ben Gordon [OG-PG, 23 MP];

2. Use Rip Hamilton [33 MP] at the SF position, from time to time, in a “going small” 5-man unit, rather than exclusively at the OG position;

3. Use Ben Gordon as the primary Back-up to Rip Hamilton, at the OG position, usually in conjunction with Will Bynum/PG, giving the Pistons one of the “smallest” and least effective guard combinations in the league when it comes to defense and rebounding;

4. Use Jason Maxiell [30 MP] as his Starting Center, rather than Kwame Brown [3 MP in garbage time] … while operating beside Stuckey, Hamilton, Prince [33 MP] and Jerebko [33 MP];

5. Use Jonas Jerebko as his Starting PF, rather than starting Jason Maxiell at that position and then bringing Charlie Villanueva [15 MP] off the bench as his primary Back-up;

6. Use Charlie Villanueva as his Back-up Center, rather than starting Kwame Brown at that position and then bringing Chris Wilcox [DNP-CD] off the bench as his primary Back-up;

7. Not use Austin Daye for more than 10 minutes, as a secondary Back-up at the OG & SF positions, in a game where he was the only member of the Pistons who generated a “positive” plus/minus number [i.e. +6], while shooting 43% from the floor, shooting 100% from the FT Line, with 3 Rebs, a positive Ast:TO and 1 St;

and,

8. Not use DeJaun Summers [6-8, 240] for more than 3 minutes, as a secondary Back-up at the SF & PF positions, in a game where their opponent chose to start [and give critical amounts of PT to] a “going big” 5-Man Unit that looked like this:

Option 1

PG, T-Mac [6-8, 223]
OG, Bill Walker [6-6, 230]
SF, Danilo Gallinari [6-10, 225]
PF, Al Harrington [6-9, 250]
C, David Lee [6-9, 250]

Option 2

PG, T-Mac [6-8, 223]
OG, Eddie House [6-1, 180] 
SF, Bill Walker [6-6, 230]
PF, Al Harrington [6-9, 250]
C, David Lee [6-9, 250];

then, the Pistons are unable to compete successfully on Offense, Defense and in terms of Rebounding.

While others in the on-line hoops community are certainly free to assign blame to whomever they think is most responsible for the current mess in Detroit, as far as these eyes are concerned, the Pistons’ main problem this season is rooted in the poor decision-making of their head coach, John Kuester … i.e. in terms of how he is choosing to use his personnel … which has consistently resulted in awful performances similar to last night’s atrocious display in the 4th quarter.

—————————

PS. Those who have followed this blog for the better part of the last 2 years should be able to readily attest that a simple observation of:

“What Team X needs to do in order to turn around their fortunes is fire their head coach,” 

is not the usual reaction from yours truly. In this case, however, there’s a good deal of solid “NBA level talent” that is simply going to waste in Detroit.

Mis-diagnosing what went wrong for the Bucks last night

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010