I cannot help but to feel disappointed after our first game, coaching wise.
I thought we were done with the whole switch everything routine, which was clearly the most obvious problem of our team, and Ime went on and put that stupidity on steroids.
We have exceptional defensive players on our team, especially one-on-one, why are we making this conscious decision to shoot ourselves in the foot.
You just cannot win with this strategy or lack of strategy, because it is the most lazy plan to defend a team.
So we will just end up with Durrant or Giannis picking us apart after being switched on by our undersized guard. Great plan.
Please stop the switches and play actual defense!!!!!
Sounds like Ime addressed this question...
Jay King: Ime Udoka said switching is “the major scheme” the Celtics have put in during training camp. It will be one of their schemes moving forward, but he said they “over emphasized” it during the preseason opener.
Sounds like they "over emphasized" it in the preseason game. It looked to me that they were switching a little differently. That they went into an almost zone like posture as the pick was a approaching and then collapsed right back into man after the switch was completed. I think this was designed to protect better against the after-pick roll or the pop.
We are not the only team that does this but I agree, at times it seems we concede the switch too easily. The other team then has the match up they want and they go to work, forcing us to double or whatever. As I said, all the teams do this though.
Not the ones that want to win a chip…
Except that Milwaukee, Toronto and Golden State all have utilised switching defensive schemes a lot.
Fans are watching the ball, not the defense. So they’ve got ideas about NBA defense that are a ways away from the reality of it.
Here’s a better way to look at switching: players who are versatile, who can switch, make your defense more resilient. That’s why they’re so prized in the modern game.
It’s not a question of whether switch-frequent schemes are better or worse; the question is turned around from the reality of it. The more a team can switch, the better its defense.
Picks get the offense mismatches. Players who can switch neutralize them.
Gouki88 mentions Toronto, which is shaping up as the most switchable team in the league. Building a contender is about more than that, of course, so they’re not a test case for switching yea or nay. As I say, it’s the wrong question.