Originally posted by sly fly
I agree he's been a different player. Perhaps he's now just getting his timing down from the supposed summer layoff.
But, I can still see where the "trade Marion" talk has some validity. Personally, I'd have to have my socks knocked off if I were BC.
The ONLY problems I have with Marion is his court awareness. Too often I've seen him play with blinders on. Few examples...
- He'll give the ball up late on fastbreaks or to the wrong guy.
- He'll take an ill-advised jumper without exploring his other options.
- He'll forget who the "hot" guy is and end up taking the shot himself. He needs to be aware who's in the zone and keep feeding them (Marbury/JJ).
- Dribbles too much one-on-one. No need for him to dribble unless it's beating his guy off the pass or on the fast break.
Marion can do things no other player in the league can do. His game would go the next level if he ever made the game simpler for himself.
Is it Marion or is it the coaching?
1. Marion isn't the only Sun that has trouble running the break. They don't get their spacing right, make their passes too early, and fail to pass when the defender is in position. For a team that during training camp was supposed to be focused on running the break, it seems like the entire team still struggles with it.
2. I have been complaining about the excessive number of three point shots being taken by Stephon, JJ, and Shawn all season. Unless the coach takes away the green light, they will keep doing it. It is a team problem.
Last year he was much better shooting three's than he has been this year. I'm guessing that he has a slow release that means he is ineffective when guarded. It is up to the coaching staff to get him to make better shot selection.
3. Failure to get the ball to the "hot hand" has been an endemic problem for the team. Part of the problem is that the Suns offense has always focused on getting the ball to the open man, which is usually someone beyond the three point line.
Getting the ball to the open man is great if the open man is in position to do something with the ball. A lot of teams are able to score in spite of having a player who is not an offensive threat, because they work to get their best scorers open. The Suns have not really done that.
4. The entire Suns team dribbles sideways too much, not just Shawn.
The Suns offense under Frank Johnson was built around Stephon running the pick and roll/pick and drive plays. Most of his assists came off his drives to the basket to outside players in a position to take jump shots. Oppoents figured out that the Suns cannot run that offense against a zone, but FJ never adjusted. D'Antoni is trying to make up for a wasted training camp and mostly wasted first month of the season.
There are two philosophies of coaching. Design a system around the talents of the players or get players that fit the style of the coach. A key for the Suns is to get Marion (and you could substitute several other names) to focus on what he is best at, rather than what he feels like doing.