TP to "thestackshow", great post.
I simply do not buy the "we just aren't a good rebounding team..." and the "we just don't have good rebounders..." lines.
For me, and with respect to everyone who disagrees, that is the biggest line of BS I've heard in a long, long time.
Sow me a guy 4-6 inches taller than me and 2 pounds heavier than me, and I'll show you how to box him out all night, all week. It is not rocket science.
Length, strength & athleticism are part of the equation - I'll give it a "very generous" 30 % of the ability to rebound well.
The other 70%, and for me, more like 80 to 90% is about mental toughness, determination, aggression, desire and discipline.
We "do not" box out. Shot goes up, we turn around and look at the rim, guys walk by us.
A 6' 6" guy can box out can box out a 6' 10 guy all night. You're only talking about 4 inches.
Occasionally we do it. You'll see Pierce lay a body on Boozer of some other PF, get his position, and then actually jump when the ball comes and lo and behold he comes down with the ball...
Against San Antonio, I watched the monstrous Avery Bradley, who was out of position when San Antonio shot the ball, muscle his way in on Stephen Jackson and actually lay Jackson on his back out of bounds under the rim. Bradley didn't get the rebound but I think "we" did.
What's Bradley? 6'2", 180 pounds soaking wet?
Stephen Jackson - let's go 6'8", 218 pounds.
So Bradley's only giving up 6 inches and about 40 pounds.
Look, Bradley obviously won't win every single rebounding match up with SJax. But if all our five guys were consistently laying a body on their guys, we still wouldn't be the best rebounding team around, but we'd be a lot, lot, lot better.
Rebounding is like defense, it has to be a commitment, mentally and physically. It's the "dirty work" and the good rebounding teams embrace it mentally and get after it. The bad rebounding teams are lazy in the rebounding department.
It's about toughness, physical and mental, and that is what Doc was talking about after the Chicago game and why he was so p---ed off.
Rebounding is about heart and toughness, far more than it is about length and strength.