Tyler
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- Sep 23, 2009
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Let Kobe shoot, he cant beat you by himself when he is taking shots away from the rest of the team.
Let Kobe shoot, he cant beat you by himself when he is taking shots away from the rest of the team.
You're missing the main point. The Suns are scoring easily because they're getting out in transition. They're getting out in transition more easily and often due to the zone.They were busting the zone, and doing just fine. Seriously, scoring STILL isn't an issue.
The issue is now, and has been all series long...defense. The Lakers D has been crap this entire series. Your zone is just making it hard to outscore you, but we are still scoring like crazy. It's the fact that we can't stop you that is killing us.
You are getting far too many points. I mention it in the initial post in this thread...simply trying to outscore the Suns isn't a sane strategy.
Reminder: Nothing much has still happened yet. However, I was hoping and expecting a split. Now I will have to be a bundle of nerves for Game 5.
Exactly my biggest worry hit here...the Suns had sustained runs and rode the crowd energy. Puts the Lakers back on the pressure side to hold home court.
The ONLY thing I'm truly upset about right now is wasting two sensational games by Kobe. Lakers bench should show up better at home, and the Suns bench should grip more.
Lakers should win game 5, and I don't want to hear Suns fans complain when the refs aren't as kind to the Suns next go-around. You got way more than your fair share of calls tonight. I was cracking up at times thinking what some of the more ref-complaining fans would have thought had the shoe been on the other foot. I had no problem in Game 3 with the free throws and such, but tonights refs were very much riding the emotion of the home crowd. Lakers fought through it well enough, but it was pretty transparent.
Also transparent, the way the Suns as a team were going after Fish...interesting to say the least. We'll see if it pays divendends down the line in the series, but it wasn't very hidden.
Good home stand, Suns fans.
Sorry to say, but we played horribly in game 3 and won. We played a lot better in this game, but that was just our bench, we had no stand-out players in this game like Amare's 42 (or Kobe's 35).
What surprises me the most is how effective our zone is. They couldn't solve it the entire game. THE. ENTIRE. GAME. That to me is the incredible thing. Then they switched it up late in the 3rd quarter, playing essentially a 2-2 zone with the 5th man sticking to Kobe wherever he went. I don't think I've ever seen that before at the professional level.
You're missing the main point. The Suns are scoring easily because they're getting out in transition. They're getting out in transition more easily and often due to the zone.
The Lakers are defending just fine in the halfcourt.
Suns coaching finally told players of Fisher's tactics: Charging hard into the pick/screen setters and bail refs to call moving screen; for the minimum hurt the screensetter hard. If the screen setter is not patient or firm enough in his stance, both are more likely to happen. But once they do it properly, Fisher becomes victim of his own tactic. But he can be proud of drawing opponents special attention to him.![]()
They were busting the zone, and doing just fine. Seriously, scoring STILL isn't an issue.
The issue is now, and has been all series long...defense. The Lakers D has been crap this entire series. Your zone is just making it hard to outscore you, but we are still scoring like crazy. It's the fact that we can't stop you that is killing us.
You are getting far too many points. I mention it in the initial post in this thread...simply trying to outscore the Suns isn't a sane strategy.
Yes, sticking Rolo's ass into him as he tries to get up is being firm in the screensetter's stance.
Please. Don't pretend you don't see it. It's working well, give credit.
If the Lakers win the series in game seven, nothing will have happened?
The old saying is, "Nothing happens until someone loses at home, or it's Game 7." Not that I believe in it, but that's the saying.
The old saying is, "Nothing happens until someone loses at home, or it's Game 7." Not that I believe in it, but that's the saying.