Chandler Mike said:On the same lines as what George said, I LOVE what Larry Brown did with playing Shaq straight up.
Other teams double him, and then he kicks the ball outside for the three pointer, which is what kills them.
Larry is taking everyone else out of the game, besides Kobe, and making Shaq make his shots and free throws.
Gotta love it...worked like a charm last night. And I think having to guard Rip Hamilton made Kobe a little tired...thus affecting his shot.
Can't wait to see game 2.
Mike
F-Dog said:I don't think Phil Jackson will make any major adjustments tomorrow--as in the Spurs series, he'll probably wait one more game to make sure Detroit's game 1 performance wasn't a mirage. The main things he'll try and work on are Kobe's unselfishness and the team's energy.
(It looks like Kobe wants a finals MVP more than a championship at this point.)
One thing I expect (eventually) is more minutes for Kareem Rush, possibly in a big lineup with Devean George and Kobe. The Lakers will want to match Kobe on Prince, so he can make plays off the ball and save his energy for offense; George and Rush seem like the best defenders left for Billups and Rip, respectively. The Lakers might even go four guards to try and dare one of the Wallaces to attack the mismatch.
Payton has a fork sticking out of his back, Malone is choking as expected, and Fisher seems to be hurting, which is a major problem for the Lakers if he doesn't recover. The Lakers are hurting right now and the Pistons aren't, so LA might have a tougher time than in the Wolves series.
elindholm said:I didn't see the game, but from the looks of the box score, this seems like one of the few cases where the Kobe-bashers really do have evidence on their side. O'Neal shot a very high percentage from both the field and the line, while Bryant indulged in a brickfest. I think if you had asked 100 random fans what the outcome would be if O'Neal got 34 and 11 on 13-16 and 8-12, with Detroit scoring "only" 87 points, at least 95 of those fans would assume an easy Laker victory.
The Lakers will try to go into O'Neal more, but realistically, he's not going to do much better than last night's numbers. During the season, he was at about 0.9 points per shot, meaning that to get 34 points he'd need roughly 37 or 38 shots -- not a mere 28. He could easily get 10 more shots in Game 2 and post numbers that are no better.
I still consider it inevitable that the Lakers will win the series, but I confess it will be interesting to see how.
George O'Brien said:The straight up defense took away the Laker's three point shooting: 3 of 13 won't get it done (Kobe was 1 of 6
arthurracoon said:
The Lakers had ONLY ONE wide open three point attempt, which they made.
That was unlike other games I've seen where the Lakers players are left open over and over again.
ASUCHRIS said:Anyone else derive great pleasure from Corliss Williamson making Rick Fox look like a bitch?