I have heard every year for the past 15 plus years under various coaches that the celtics want to run this year and push the pace, it never happens, so I don't pay attention to it anymore.
so true.
most every team that says or thinks they want to play at a "fast pace". ultimately doesn't understand or commit to what it takes to play at a "fast pace".
playing fast break basketball imo is the easiest way to win. getting easy baskets is the easiest way to win.
tommy heinsohn's not lying when he would talk about green and pierce adding another 10 pts. to their game if guys would get them the ball on the wing early before the D sets up. but it's a mind-set. playing fast break basketball, it has to start in the off-season with the players and their conditioning and as a team mind-set in training camp. and it can't just be done in certain spots, it has to be done on every possession, even on made baskets.
teams that want to play this style have to be the best conditioned players in the league in order for it to work. but the other key is defense and defensive rebounding. defensive rebounding is the reward you get for having a good defensive possession and how most fast breaks occur.
the steve nash era Suns were the closest this generation got to the Celtics and the show time lakers but they weren't the defensive team that it took, it was a mind-set with them and they may have been well conditioned but their defense hurt them.
another thing I find with these teams that want to play this style that they do wrong is they think every possession starts with the PG, they'll get a rebound and look for the PG instead of just looking up-court to whoever is up there.
so playing "fast pace" has just become something teams say to get people excited(because people know this is actually difficult to defend, it's exciting, and it's the easiest way to win) but most never fully commit to what it actually takes.