Author Topic: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?  (Read 51720 times)

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Re: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?
« Reply #135 on: February 25, 2009, 12:51:00 PM »

Offline ssspence

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put your money where your monuth is cordobas. pledge to c's blog that you will in fact turn of the TV every time moore comes in the game, not to be turned back on until grande and cornbread indicate he's been taken out by doc.

My english is not very good, but what part of "I appreciate players like Moore" and "he's going to be helpful because he adds some depth and offers a different dimension from the bigs we have" you didn't understand? He's replacing POB, for Christ sake. Moore is a legit NBA player, POB was never close to that.

Again, I'm not 12 years old anymore to be so emotionally invested into individual players or to believe every Celtics player is flawless. One day, you'll get this ;)

cool. then let this silly thread die. thank you.

Why? Because you can't understand how can anyone say Moore is not a good shot-blocker, or rebounder, or defender now that he signed with Boston? Stop reading it if it bothers you so much.

no because i'm feel really badly for whatever company or insutition that pays you or counts on you for your time. no one in the world should have the leeway to repeat themselves indefinately and without interest about mikki moore in this fashion.

count your posts dood. it's pretty scary. now go make urself useful, do something else for a while, take a day off celticsblog. it'll do us all good.

Mike

(My name is not Mike)

Re: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?
« Reply #136 on: February 25, 2009, 12:52:50 PM »

Offline Mr October

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Wow, this thread is a mess. You'd think Moore was a more controversial signing than Marbury!!  :D

I'll pipe in. PJ Brown brought consistency, toughness and length to the team. But he also had lots of warts due to being over the hill. Moore has more speed and mobility.

Moore is better on offense, worse on defense compared to Brown. Moore is not a good shot blocker. Can he block shots? Sure. But he isn't above average or even average at it. Neither was PJ.

Re: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?
« Reply #137 on: February 25, 2009, 12:54:47 PM »

Offline crownsy

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Wow, this thread is a mess. You'd think Moore was a more controversial signing than Marbury!!  :D

I'll pipe in. PJ Brown brought consistency, toughness and length to the team. But he also had lots of warts due to being over the hill. Moore has more speed and mobility.

Moore is better on offense, worse on defense compared to Brown. Moore is not a good shot blocker. Can he block shots? Sure. But he isn't above average or even average at it. Neither was PJ.

you know, i dont really remeber PJ being that good on D, though he was by no means bad. i loved how when he was beat he would nearly decapitate the guy and make him shoot FT's, but he got beat alot that i remeber.

The nice thing was as a vet he knew he had 6 fouls he wasent going to get to use, so the guy had to earn his points  ;D
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Re: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?
« Reply #138 on: February 25, 2009, 01:01:31 PM »

Offline Mr October

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Wow, this thread is a mess. You'd think Moore was a more controversial signing than Marbury!!  :D

I'll pipe in. PJ Brown brought consistency, toughness and length to the team. But he also had lots of warts due to being over the hill. Moore has more speed and mobility.

Moore is better on offense, worse on defense compared to Brown. Moore is not a good shot blocker. Can he block shots? Sure. But he isn't above average or even average at it. Neither was PJ.

you know, i dont really remeber PJ being that good on D, though he was by no means bad. i loved how when he was beat he would nearly decapitate the guy and make him shoot FT's, but he got beat alot that i remeber.

The nice thing was as a vet he knew he had 6 fouls he wasent going to get to use, so the guy had to earn his points  ;D

I agree. He made good use of those 6 fouls and helped protect the paint. Yet he was a huge drop off from Perk at the 5. But he was a solid upgrade over Powe and Baby. This wasn't PJ Brown from 1998 or even 2004. This was a very stiff 2008 version of Brown that we lost.

I'm glad he helped us win last year. But it isn't like we lost a Bill Walton or Alonzo Mourning -esque big off the bench.

Re: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?
« Reply #139 on: February 25, 2009, 01:02:41 PM »

Offline winsomme

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Wow, this thread is a mess. You'd think Moore was a more controversial signing than Marbury!!  :D

I'll pipe in. PJ Brown brought consistency, toughness and length to the team. But he also had lots of warts due to being over the hill. Moore has more speed and mobility.

Moore is better on offense, worse on defense compared to Brown. Moore is not a good shot blocker. Can he block shots? Sure. But he isn't above average or even average at it. Neither was PJ.

you know, i dont really remeber PJ being that good on D, though he was by no means bad. i loved how when he was beat he would nearly decapitate the guy and make him shoot FT's, but he got beat alot that i remeber.

The nice thing was as a vet he knew he had 6 fouls he wasent going to get to use, so the guy had to earn his points  ;D

nobody got a free walk when PJ was in the game, that's for sure.

but it wasn't malicious like other dudes. It was just good hard-nosed playoff basketball....

Re: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?
« Reply #140 on: February 25, 2009, 01:06:43 PM »

Offline winsomme

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Wow, this thread is a mess. You'd think Moore was a more controversial signing than Marbury!!  :D

I'll pipe in. PJ Brown brought consistency, toughness and length to the team. But he also had lots of warts due to being over the hill. Moore has more speed and mobility.

Moore is better on offense, worse on defense compared to Brown. Moore is not a good shot blocker. Can he block shots? Sure. But he isn't above average or even average at it. Neither was PJ.

you know, i dont really remeber PJ being that good on D, though he was by no means bad. i loved how when he was beat he would nearly decapitate the guy and make him shoot FT's, but he got beat alot that i remeber.

The nice thing was as a vet he knew he had 6 fouls he wasent going to get to use, so the guy had to earn his points  ;D

I agree. He made good use of those 6 fouls and helped protect the paint. Yet he was a huge drop off from Perk at the 5. But he was a solid upgrade over Powe and Baby. This wasn't PJ Brown from 1998 or even 2004. This was a very stiff 2008 version of Brown that we lost.

I'm glad he helped us win last year. But it isn't like we lost a Bill Walton or Alonzo Mourning -esque big off the bench.

well i agree to an extent, but whether he was stiff or not stiff, he got the job done.....which is really the only important thing, isn't it?

personally, i could care less if Moore has had a less than stellar career up till this point when all is said and done. if he makes the plays, he makes the plays...

my bottom line is a matchup of him and Varejao. he is going to have to do everything in his power to keep that guy off the glass.

Pachulia was another pain in the neck from last year....

Re: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?
« Reply #141 on: February 25, 2009, 01:08:31 PM »

Offline Goldstar88

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The comments that I have read from older sources (stuff before his being waived) seemed to indicate that he's a decent defender.  My impression - and someone smarter can correct me - is that he's a fairly smart defender, a good team defender, although given how slight he is he's clearly going to be overpowered at times.  There was one commentator about the Kings' defensive woes that said "Moore can't do it all!"

He doesn't block many shots, I don't think he's really someone people are afraid of driving on.  Then again, the guys he's going to be splitting minutes with (Powe, Davis, and Scal) aren't exactly known as shotblockers either.

This may not be accurate, but I almost think of him as a taller Walt McCarty with less range on his jump shot.  Lots of hustle, lots of energy, not a lot of natural talent; awkward.  Someone that his teammates like and that fits right into the locker room.  Someone that busts tail every time he's on the court, someone that generally is in the right spot on defense but that can get pushed around.

The anti-POB; not much talent, but an overflow of hustle and hard work to get to where he is.

Sounds alot like a description of P.J. Brown. Lots of hustle and energy, Good locker room guy, bust his tail. Brown might have been a bit better on defense but this guy has a better offensive game and is 7 years younger. Moore is shooting 81% from the line, .521% from the field and is averaging half a turn-over a game. If he can play half way decent defense and give our bench a boost offensively hes a good pickup. D.A. cant just wait around wondering about Joe Smith who has said that hes not concerned with being bought out.
Quoting Nick from the now locked Ime thread:
Quote
At some point you have to blame the performance on the court on the players on the court. Every loss is not the coach's fault and every win isn't because of the players.

Re: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?
« Reply #142 on: February 25, 2009, 01:09:19 PM »

Offline drza44

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the problem BBall is that your opinion that PJ was a below average player for us is largely contradicted by experts all over the country.

maybe you have the straight scoop here and everybody else is wrong. I actually hope you're right because then it shouldn't matter too much not having him back this year (or someone who brings to the table the qualities that i believe he did).

anyway, just out of curiosity, as i'm not a huge stats guy, is there a source to check "opps PER" for the playoffs?

the gross +/- stat seems so dependent on the other players that it's hard to gauge individual performance off of that.

To answer your question, there is a source to check opponents PER for the playoffs.  Here is the link for the Celtics last playoffs: http://www.82games.com/0708/playoffs/0708BOS.HTM

That link points out that according to opponent's Production (a variation of PER) Brown was by FAR the worst player on the Celtics in last year's playoffs.  Opponent's PER isn't a very good stat, because it isn't very good at isolating good team defense from good individual defense.  But for Brown to be SO bad has some significance, even in a flawed measure.

Similarly, Brown and Baby were battling neck-and-neck for worst on-court/off-court +/- in the playoffs, far and away beyond the next worst Celtic (who, by the way, was Posey).  Again, there are flaws in any stat, and one of the misleading things here is that most of the time Brown/Baby were in the game in place of KG (just like Posey was often in in place of Pierce), so of course the team would generally be better with them off the court since that generally corresponds with the times that the 2 best players were on the court.  On the other hand, the fact that Brown was so much worse than Powe (who also got quite a few minutes with similar teammates) is another indication to me that on the whole he wasn't as effective as his reputation suggests.

As Budweiser pointed out, many (both here and in the media) are making their judgments on Brown's effectiveness based upon a few of his highlight plays that stood out and not as much upon the less spectacular areas where he frankly wasn't what he used to be.  Brown had the vet mindset and toughness to be effective in certain key times when I wouldn't have trusted Powe or Baby, but I think his value would have been less this year on a team where everyone has championship experience after having been through several postseason wars.

Instead, this year where the big man rotation lacks is that there just wasn't enough length and diversity.  Powe and Baby are both essentially 6-7/6-8 power forwards that are good rebounders and nifty offensive players in the paint.  And that is effective against many teams, when used in conjunction with the other team strengths.  But against certain teams, or when Garnett is unavailable, neither Powe or Baby could perform the needed functions.  They absolutely aren't long enough to effectively face a Lakers team where everyone is 6-10, long and athletic.  They absolutely can't shoot well enough to spread the floor against good teams when KG isn't available, which led directly to the recent Lakers/Jazz losses once KG was gone and Pierce kept driving/kicking to Baby who couldn't knock down the shots.

This year, Moore's skillsets are IMO more needed than Brown's.  He really is a mobile, hustle help defender.  He really can knock down a jumper when left wide open.  In the times I've seen him (mostly against KG), he really has shown the toughness to not back down and to perform under pressure.  Simmons uses the term "homeless man's" to describe a much worse facsimile of a player...well, whatever the step below homeless man is, that's what Moore is to Garnett.  He's a blind homeless man's version of Garnett, able to perform at a 9th-man level some of the things that Garnett does at a superstar level...and really, our bench needed that.  I would have preferred Joe Smith (who has the same positives, but more-so), but I definitely think Moore gives our bench something that it lacked and helps seal up the glaring need this team had for another capable big man.

well if you're right, drza, then we should be fine. I hope you are.

the difference i would say is that PJ was really the 7th man....and you are replacing a 7th man with a 9th man...

personally, i feel like players that don't play tough get exposed in the playoffs. Hopefully, Moore is up to the challenge.

You're right in that I think where we differ is PJ's role.  The way Doc used his bench in last season's playoffs wasn't conducive, IMO, to having 7th or 9th men.  There were basically a top-6 who were going to play every game, then a bottom 6 that he played at need based on matchups.  

If anything, I'd say Posey was the 6th man, the PG was the 7th man (made up of some combo of House and Cassell) because it was responsible for generating offense in the second unit, the big men were the 8th/9th men (some combo of Brown/Baby/Powe) because they were primarily there just to spell the starters/play tough/not be a negative, and Allen was a 10th man because he hardly ever played.  

My memories of Brown last season were that he was generally pretty bad physically, but that he made the most of what he could do and found ways to help the team where he could.  But he was too slow to make consistently great rotations and he wasn't athletic enough to do much on the glass.  He was able to hit some big shots, able to use some vet tricks and toughness to make himself a defensive irritant at times, and his last 2 minutes against the Cavs in Game 7 kept the postseason alive.  But defensively and overall impact-wise, I think Brown was much more replaceable than his reputation seems to suggest.  

Re: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?
« Reply #143 on: February 25, 2009, 01:14:58 PM »

Offline Mr October

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well i agree to an extent, but whether he was stiff or not stiff, he got the job done.....which is really the only important thing, isn't it?

personally, i could care less if Moore has had a less than stellar career up till this point when all is said and done. if he makes the plays, he makes the plays...

my bottom line is a matchup of him and Varejao.
he is going to have to do everything in his power to keep that guy off the glass.

Pachulia was another pain in the neck from last year....

Speaking of Varejao... you know what really bugged me in last year's series with Cleveland? It was watching Varejao and our random backup big both flop at the same time!!  :o

It looks so pathetic to watch 2 hulking dudes falling to the floor after a little contact. Moore will bring some more flopping to the team. Sadly it works within the silly foul rules of this game.  ::)

Sorry to go off topic... Flop-ejao really gets me sometimes. Oh well, fight flops with flops....

Re: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?
« Reply #144 on: February 25, 2009, 02:00:00 PM »

Offline winsomme

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the problem BBall is that your opinion that PJ was a below average player for us is largely contradicted by experts all over the country.

maybe you have the straight scoop here and everybody else is wrong. I actually hope you're right because then it shouldn't matter too much not having him back this year (or someone who brings to the table the qualities that i believe he did).

anyway, just out of curiosity, as i'm not a huge stats guy, is there a source to check "opps PER" for the playoffs?

the gross +/- stat seems so dependent on the other players that it's hard to gauge individual performance off of that.

To answer your question, there is a source to check opponents PER for the playoffs.  Here is the link for the Celtics last playoffs: http://www.82games.com/0708/playoffs/0708BOS.HTM

That link points out that according to opponent's Production (a variation of PER) Brown was by FAR the worst player on the Celtics in last year's playoffs.  Opponent's PER isn't a very good stat, because it isn't very good at isolating good team defense from good individual defense.  But for Brown to be SO bad has some significance, even in a flawed measure.

Similarly, Brown and Baby were battling neck-and-neck for worst on-court/off-court +/- in the playoffs, far and away beyond the next worst Celtic (who, by the way, was Posey).  Again, there are flaws in any stat, and one of the misleading things here is that most of the time Brown/Baby were in the game in place of KG (just like Posey was often in in place of Pierce), so of course the team would generally be better with them off the court since that generally corresponds with the times that the 2 best players were on the court.  On the other hand, the fact that Brown was so much worse than Powe (who also got quite a few minutes with similar teammates) is another indication to me that on the whole he wasn't as effective as his reputation suggests.

As Budweiser pointed out, many (both here and in the media) are making their judgments on Brown's effectiveness based upon a few of his highlight plays that stood out and not as much upon the less spectacular areas where he frankly wasn't what he used to be.  Brown had the vet mindset and toughness to be effective in certain key times when I wouldn't have trusted Powe or Baby, but I think his value would have been less this year on a team where everyone has championship experience after having been through several postseason wars.

Instead, this year where the big man rotation lacks is that there just wasn't enough length and diversity.  Powe and Baby are both essentially 6-7/6-8 power forwards that are good rebounders and nifty offensive players in the paint.  And that is effective against many teams, when used in conjunction with the other team strengths.  But against certain teams, or when Garnett is unavailable, neither Powe or Baby could perform the needed functions.  They absolutely aren't long enough to effectively face a Lakers team where everyone is 6-10, long and athletic.  They absolutely can't shoot well enough to spread the floor against good teams when KG isn't available, which led directly to the recent Lakers/Jazz losses once KG was gone and Pierce kept driving/kicking to Baby who couldn't knock down the shots.

This year, Moore's skillsets are IMO more needed than Brown's.  He really is a mobile, hustle help defender.  He really can knock down a jumper when left wide open.  In the times I've seen him (mostly against KG), he really has shown the toughness to not back down and to perform under pressure.  Simmons uses the term "homeless man's" to describe a much worse facsimile of a player...well, whatever the step below homeless man is, that's what Moore is to Garnett.  He's a blind homeless man's version of Garnett, able to perform at a 9th-man level some of the things that Garnett does at a superstar level...and really, our bench needed that.  I would have preferred Joe Smith (who has the same positives, but more-so), but I definitely think Moore gives our bench something that it lacked and helps seal up the glaring need this team had for another capable big man.

well if you're right, drza, then we should be fine. I hope you are.

the difference i would say is that PJ was really the 7th man....and you are replacing a 7th man with a 9th man...

personally, i feel like players that don't play tough get exposed in the playoffs. Hopefully, Moore is up to the challenge.

You're right in that I think where we differ is PJ's role.  The way Doc used his bench in last season's playoffs wasn't conducive, IMO, to having 7th or 9th men.  There were basically a top-6 who were going to play every game, then a bottom 6 that he played at need based on matchups.  

If anything, I'd say Posey was the 6th man, the PG was the 7th man (made up of some combo of House and Cassell) because it was responsible for generating offense in the second unit, the big men were the 8th/9th men (some combo of Brown/Baby/Powe) because they were primarily there just to spell the starters/play tough/not be a negative, and Allen was a 10th man because he hardly ever played.  

My memories of Brown last season were that he was generally pretty bad physically, but that he made the most of what he could do and found ways to help the team where he could.  But he was too slow to make consistently great rotations and he wasn't athletic enough to do much on the glass.  He was able to hit some big shots, able to use some vet tricks and toughness to make himself a defensive irritant at times, and his last 2 minutes against the Cavs in Game 7 kept the postseason alive.  But defensively and overall impact-wise, I think Brown was much more replaceable than his reputation seems to suggest.  

yeah, my feeling on the rotation was (especially from the EC semis on) 6th Posey, 7th PJ, 8th Eddie/Sam and then a peppering in of BBD and Leon depending on matchups.....

my memories of PJ were that when CLE tried to out-muscle us, PJ wasn't having it. did it show up in the stat sheet? no. but my feeling was that if we were even a smidge less tough off the bench, we would not have even made it to the ECF. (and that's why i worry now. I think we have less of that toughness and worry about that getting exposed in the playoffs.)

as for the rest of the series, especially the Finals, it was clear to me that DET and LA could not stay with us physically. That's really why i feel that CLE was the second best team in the playoffs.

Wasn't that the overwhelming feeling after the Finals -  that LA simply was too soft to hang with us.

that's how i felt anyway.

Re: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?
« Reply #145 on: February 25, 2009, 02:10:05 PM »

Offline BballTim

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  The consensus was Lakers in 5 or 6. So you're going to try and defend those predicted the Lakers would win?

  And a big difference between making predictions and analyzing something that actually happened is that it's easier to sound like you know what you're talking about when you're analyzing. Nobody knows what the stock market will do, but everyone can tell you why it did what it did.

the difference in predicting something and an analyzing something that actually happened is you are discussing concrete events.

maybe everybody can tell you what happened in the stock market (ie it went down), but the expertise is in explaining why it happened.

we all know the Cs won the Title. But you are in the minority, it seems to me, in assessing the impact that PJ had in that eventuation.

  Being in the minority doesn't intimidate me in the least, especially when you're trying to strengthen your point by calling everyone who agrees with you an expert.

Re: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?
« Reply #146 on: February 25, 2009, 02:12:35 PM »

Offline vjcsmoke

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If LA was considered soft last year, I think they've fixed that image this year.  In the games that LA beat Boston, they played quite physical and they got the better of the matchup 2/3 games.  They pose the biggest threat to Boston's repeat chances.

Mikki Moore just needs to be able to give us 10-15 quality backup minutes and 6 smart fouls a game to be useful.  And his height helps on defensive matchups where BBD or Powe would have been at a severe disadvantage.

Re: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?
« Reply #147 on: February 25, 2009, 02:22:49 PM »

Offline winsomme

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  The consensus was Lakers in 5 or 6. So you're going to try and defend those predicted the Lakers would win?

  And a big difference between making predictions and analyzing something that actually happened is that it's easier to sound like you know what you're talking about when you're analyzing. Nobody knows what the stock market will do, but everyone can tell you why it did what it did.

the difference in predicting something and an analyzing something that actually happened is you are discussing concrete events.

maybe everybody can tell you what happened in the stock market (ie it went down), but the expertise is in explaining why it happened.

we all know the Cs won the Title. But you are in the minority, it seems to me, in assessing the impact that PJ had in that eventuation.

  Being in the minority doesn't intimidate me in the least, especially when you're trying to strengthen your point by calling everyone who agrees with you an expert.

are they not experts? what point are you making here?

All i wanted know was if you were aware that the consensus opinion on PJ was that he was a key piece in us winning a Title...

Re: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?
« Reply #148 on: February 25, 2009, 02:24:33 PM »

Offline winsomme

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If LA was considered soft last year, I think they've fixed that image this year.  In the games that LA beat Boston, they played quite physical and they got the better of the matchup 2/3 games.  They pose the biggest threat to Boston's repeat chances.

Mikki Moore just needs to be able to give us 10-15 quality backup minutes and 6 smart fouls a game to be useful.  And his height helps on defensive matchups where BBD or Powe would have been at a severe disadvantage.

I agree they are playing much tougher this year. But the team i really worry about in that regard is CLE.

Re: Moore: good defender and shot blocker?
« Reply #149 on: February 25, 2009, 02:24:46 PM »

Offline BballTim

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put your money where your monuth is cordobas. pledge to c's blog that you will in fact turn of the TV every time moore comes in the game, not to be turned back on until grande and cornbread indicate he's been taken out by doc.

My english is not very good, but what part of "I appreciate players like Moore" and "he's going to be helpful because he adds some depth and offers a different dimension from the bigs we have" you didn't understand? He's replacing POB, for Christ sake. Moore is a legit NBA player, POB was never close to that.

Again, I'm not 12 years old anymore to be so emotionally invested into individual players or to believe every Celtics player is flawless. One day, you'll get this ;)

  It never ceases to amaze me how some people come to the conclusion that they're the only objective people here.

isn't that basically what you are doing with PJ?

I mean, how many people actually don't think that PJ was big for us in the playoffs last year and instead was a below average performer?

  You never disagree with people?