This is NOT a defense of dumping KT.
One of the things that has intrigued me is whether there exists a system for stopping Duncan. I think Suns fans have the opinion that it is just their tiny lineup that is why Duncan seems to kill the Suns every time they play. But in looking at the record, it seems that no one really does a good job.
Overall, Duncan shot 54.6%. What is more disconcerting is to look at the games when shot under 50%. I only found 20 games were he did not shoot well and Spurs still lost only 7 of them. Only three teams held Duncan below 50% more than once: the Rockets (1 and 1), Celtics (1 and 1), and Kings (Spurs won both).
Oddly enough, his worst game (by percentage)was against the Suns on Feb 1 when he went 6 of 18 against the small ball Suns in a game the Suns won 103-87. (KT did not play)
The conclusions are depressing.
1. No one can consistently stop Duncan from hitting a high percentage of his shots.
2. Holding Duncan to below 50% shooting helps to beat the Spurs, but only marginally (They won 65% of those games compared to 70% overall). At the same time, he shot over 50% in 17 of the Spurs losses.
3. Really tall guys like Yao, Zydrunas Ilgauskas, and Shaq have some kind of advantage in limiting Duncan.
Duncan has problems with international rules where many of his moves are called as traveling and he's not allowed to simply push people out of the way in the low post (which is further away anyway). But under NBA rules, he's a very very hard to defense.
One of the things that has intrigued me is whether there exists a system for stopping Duncan. I think Suns fans have the opinion that it is just their tiny lineup that is why Duncan seems to kill the Suns every time they play. But in looking at the record, it seems that no one really does a good job.
Overall, Duncan shot 54.6%. What is more disconcerting is to look at the games when shot under 50%. I only found 20 games were he did not shoot well and Spurs still lost only 7 of them. Only three teams held Duncan below 50% more than once: the Rockets (1 and 1), Celtics (1 and 1), and Kings (Spurs won both).
Oddly enough, his worst game (by percentage)was against the Suns on Feb 1 when he went 6 of 18 against the small ball Suns in a game the Suns won 103-87. (KT did not play)
The conclusions are depressing.
1. No one can consistently stop Duncan from hitting a high percentage of his shots.
2. Holding Duncan to below 50% shooting helps to beat the Spurs, but only marginally (They won 65% of those games compared to 70% overall). At the same time, he shot over 50% in 17 of the Spurs losses.
3. Really tall guys like Yao, Zydrunas Ilgauskas, and Shaq have some kind of advantage in limiting Duncan.
Duncan has problems with international rules where many of his moves are called as traveling and he's not allowed to simply push people out of the way in the low post (which is further away anyway). But under NBA rules, he's a very very hard to defense.
Last edited: