The ability to shoot anywhere over decent-sized defenders, for one. You're never going to see Dragic or Bledsoe create space one-on-one for a 17-footer against a SG, which is something that pretty much any above-average SG can do.
I think Dragic is good at getting his shot off over taller players. Granted that has mostly been shown against MUCH taller players where his speed advantage is more of a threat. Bledsoe is still a head down drive to the basket player. I would love to see him develop that pull up 18ft jumper KJ had as a change up. I think with his speed it could be effective even at his height.
This is the stock theory for how the liability of small ball can be mitigated, but it almost never works in practice. After getting off to a surprisingly good defensive start last season -- possibly because Dragic was hurt -- the Suns returned to being one of the worst defensive teams in the league. There were a lot of reasons for that, but lack of backcourt size was certainly one of them.
While it may be a reason I don't remember that it was particularly significant. Dribble penetration and mistakes playing the pick and roll by recollection were much more significant factors.
Defense is nothing but a series of mitigation of advantage. There will always be excellent offensive players you are trying to stop in the NBA and great offense tends to beat great defense.
The other explanation is that the team lacks finishers. Dragic's 5.9 apg was fine by the standards of starting PGs, low but not horribly so (19th in the league, with the only non-PGs in front of him being James and Harden). I agree that Dragic is not especially good at setting up his teammates, and of course Bledsoe is far worse, but to me the lack of finishers is the bigger problem.
Good point. But as we have seen with Nash if average finishers are setup in a good position to finish it makes a huge difference. Hesitation by either player, bad spacing, and bad communication all can make even a successful offensive trip fail to record an assist.
On the other hand, as the Spurs have shown recently ball movement and player movement can negate the need for a tradition pass first point guard.
That said, the biggest problem on the team is on the defensive end, and it's a chain reaction from the two-PG set. Since neither Dragic nor Bledsoe can space the floor without the ball in his hands, you have to use forwards for that. A forward who plays soft on the offensive end will usually play soft on the defensive end too. So now you have soft-defense forwards in order to make up for the fact that neither of your guards can space the floor.
I think this is begging the question a little. It does not follow that forwards that space the floor on offense are necessarily soft on defense. Although, defense and consistent rebounding in the front court were significant issues for the Suns last year. They didn't get killed by Memphis last year because they had undersized guards.
I should put this another way:
If a fundamentally flawed defensive lineup works their asses off, they can become decent defensively.
If a fundamentally sound defensive lineup works their asses off, they can become excellent defensively.
A gimmicky small-ball lineup can, with hard work, become competent defensively, but they'll never be great. D'Antoni was satisfied with this, saying on many occasions, "If we can defend just a little, we'll be okay." But what happened was that when the opponent turned up their defense, the Suns' big offensive edge was neutralized. That's why, even during the Nash heyday, they couldn't excel in the playoffs the way they did in the regular season.
Again I am not really worried about a size mismatch in the back court I would be more concerned with rebounding efficiency in the front court which still needs attention.
In any event it is an interesting experiment and I think fun to watch the development under this GM and coach. I am less tied to an expectation of how it is supposed to be and just try to enjoy what happens. If they are winning and competing in the playoffs then success. I don't think there is one formula to a championship.
I could foresee a more traditional lineup in the years to come with.
Ennis
Goodwin
Warren
??PF??
Len
Until they can build the team they want they have to work with what they can get.