People look at the silliest things sometimes. Stop looking at points and blocked shots, or even just the rebounds.
Does the rebounds show you who had a great box out to allow that guy to get the rebound? Does the stat show you the amazing boxout that Hollins had late in the game to prevent the Hawks from getting another possession, and that allowed us another much needed offensive possession? What if the Hawks had gotten the ball back, and Hollins didn't successfully box out?
And this argument that everytime Hollins comes in, our lead goes down, a lot of the time that isn't even his fault. This wasn't even true in game 2, a very important game for us, where he ended up +5. Is it his fault that other guys gamble defensively, leaving a three point shooter open? When I see Ryan Hollins on the court, and he comes out on a defensive rotation, it's usually so [dang] aggressive and good, and you can tell it's preventing them from running their offense the way they'd like to, and that's enough if it means we keep the Hawks from going off as much as they normally would while we score the ball. It's even more crucial if while we aren't scoring the ball at all, that he's creating problems for them to run their offense.
When Hollins is out there, teams usually take the shots we want them to take. That's what I'm noticing.