Also, this offense that Stevens is playing is just awful and will never succeed at this level of play. He needs to do something to get the ball into the hands of the players that will optimize his chances of scoring. This offense and its desire to put the ball in everyone's hands and generate points through creation from anywhere was designed to be a losing offense in the NBA. I wonder if Stevens installed this offense this year on purpose to lose more games and the full playbook will be introduced next year.
Ditto that. I love Stevens. I hate the offensive system we have been using most of this season.
Meh, I think this is the wrong attitude to have.
Stevens is trying to put in place an offensive system that will serve this team in the long run. It doesn't fit the personnel we have right now, but the personnel we have right now stinks. You could create the perfect offense for this team and it would still stink, and half of these guys will be gone in a year or two, so why bother?
It doesn't make sense to me to focus on "getting the ball into the hands of your best scorers" when those guys are Jared Sullinger, Jeff Green, and whichever of the high-usage gunners is in the game (Crawford / Bayless / Bradley). It's not like we're talking about high level weapons here.
Ball movement, spreading the floor, and finding the open man are important principles. Furthermore, the teams that win at the highest level in this league generally play at a slow pace and hunt out high percentage looks in the half-court. Again, the personnel currently on the roster isn't very good at that. But I trust Ainge to find the kind of pieces that can thrive under Stevens' tutelage.
I agree, however, that the policy of resting players at every opportunity has definitely interrupted the team's flow and probably prevented the team from winning as many games as possible. Again, however, seeing as this season is more or less like one long pre-season, that doesn't concern me too much.
I'm interested in seeing certain pairings get maximum minutes together -- Olynyk and Sullinger, Rondo and either of the two young big men -- but I'm of the opinion that there isn't a four man group here that is likely to be around long-term, so the lack of extended playing time together for them doesn't worry me.
I do wish so many minutes weren't being given to guys with no future here, especially now that the trade deadline has passed. Bass and Wallace should get no more than 15 minutes a game, if you ask me (Wallace obviously has a 'future' here, but hopefully he'll be relegated to street clothes as soon as next year).
With all due respect, but I think my 'attitude' about this is fine. The system measurably stinks. You are caveating and rationalizing around results here.
Blaming the players only works to a point. This roster has several players who have histories of shooting at higher efficiencies. Rationalizing that he is putting in a system in place for some hypothetical 'future players' is silly. How does putting it in now benefit them?
Oh wait - my guess is that it will benefit them in the sense that Stevens will (hopefully) have learned that this system doesn't work in the NBA.
"Ball movement, spreading the floor, and finding the open man are important principles."
This is the NBA. A more important principle is
creating an open man. Run actual plays. Variations of pick and roll is run by pretty much every good team for a reason. And for god's sake: USE YOUR BEST PLAYERS MORE THAN YOUR LESSER ONES!!!!
At any rate, there are definite signs that my faith in Stevens is not misplaced. Over the last half month -- notably since he made his OWN comments about needing to make better usage of Green, the USG% profile for this team has dramatically altered from what it was for most of the season. Green (27.3%) and Rondo (26.3%) both have USG% up where you would expect in a normal team. Obviously, that's with Bradley out so maybe that won't persist. But we can hope.
My suspicion is that the crappy style of offense we ran for most of the season probably has more to do with lacking a real point guard than anything else.
I agree with your comments about wanting to see more minutes with certain lineups.
Last year, as the season ended, most everyone would have pointed to the foursome of Rondo, Green, Bradley & Sullinger as the 'core' of the future for the Celtics. And then we drafted Olynyk.
So far, this entire season, we have seen that 'core four' play together all of 85 minutes.
So far, this entire season we have seen the 5-man unit of RR+AB+JG+KO+JS a grand total of: 9 possessions.
I, personally, would like to see a little bit more of those guys together. I don't think we have really learned anything yet about whether that's a core for the future or not.