Erick Blasco Posted June 9, 2010 Report Share Posted June 9, 2010 Throughout the second half of Los Angeles’ 91-84 Game Two victory over the Boston Celtics, the Lakers offense struggled to work. Ray Allen played Kobe Bryant looser before Kobe initiated his attacks, allowing Bryant to take and miss many contested jumpers. Ray Allen was still able to crowd Kobe on his drives, but because of Kobe’s superior athleticism, still sank several contested, but not super-contested shots. Tony Allen, however, was able to crowd Kobe, and force him to designated help spots. Plus, with his strength, length, and quickness, Kobe had no daylight to drive and pull. Kobe didn’t help his cause by unleashing numerous bad shots. When the Lakers tried initiating their triangle, too many players were timid with the resulting mismatches that took place. Luke Walton failed to post guards with aggression. Ron Artest turned down wide open corner threes, Lamar Odom failed to penetrate when a lane opened up for him. As a result, too many Lakers had to make something out of nothing with the shot clock expiring. Sure, Odom had some success isolating the smaller Glen Davis, and Pau Gasol and Andrew Bynum had some marginal success in the post, but the quality of the Lakers’ shot attempts was atrocious. Naturally, Boston had a lot to do with this. Kendrick Perkins was able to defend Gasol and Bynum without much help, and Rasheed Wallace’s denial and post defense was nothing short of marvelous. Indeed, the past two rounds have seen Wallace play his best basketball since his 2004 Pistons days. No doubt, a lesser role on the team has relieved Wallace of the pressure of being “the guy,” and his play has piqued accordingly. Glen Davis gave up too much length, but he moved his feet well enough to affect several shots. With the Celtics punishing LA’s Batman, and too many Lakers standing around like helpless citizens, Robin was able to come to the rescue. The Lakers pulled a page out of Boston’s playbook, and ran 1-2 wing screens and handoffs involving Derek Fisher and Kobe Bryant that Boston couldn’t answer. Fisher missed his first shot but got a good look. Rondo get picked off by Bryant as Kobe handed off to Fisher. Paul Pierce snuffed it out and rotated to the paint, but Fisher calmly pulled up and shot over him. The shot simply rimmed out. Pierce sniffed it out the second time and rotated hard to Fisher. Fisher simply pulled up again and shot over him, this time making the hoop. The third time, the Celtics defended it well with Ray Allen stepping out far enough to allow Rondo to recover to Fisher. The Lakers swung the ball and Artest missed a three. The fourth time, Fisher turned the corner on Rondo who tried to swipe at the ball from behind. His gambles worked in Game Two when he ripped Kobe, but Fisher punished him in Game Three by sinking a short jumper. The fifth time, the Celtics finally decided to switch the screen, but Lamar Odom was able to isolate Davis for a drive and a layup. Fisher also displayed his toughness by sinking three short baskets in heavy traffic, including a late-game icer when he got clobbered by three defenders and still sank a plus-one basket. It was a smart tweak by Phil Jackson to call the 1-2 screen, and a valiant leap of faith by Kobe and PJ to put their trust in Fisher to create offense. It’s easy to praise Kobe for his four well-deserved rings, but it’s also easy to forget that despite Fisher getting up there in age and having zero athleticism, all he’s done over his career is make important shots during important moments of important games. With the stakes at their greatest, he proved that he’s still capable of coming through to win a Finals game. Fisher is still a winner of the highest magnitude, and Jackson is still an elite coach of the highest magnitude. As much as Kobe was responsible for the Lakers’ victory in Game One, the other Laker champions were responsible for their second victory in the series. Meanwhile the Celtics had their share of goats. Not Garnett, who had a prime-time game, though he’s still too soft on the boards. Not Tony Allen, whose quick-footed defense forced Kobe into terrible shot attempts, and whose timely cuts punished the Lakers when they forgot about him. Not Kendrick Perkins, who played as well as can reasonably be expected—1-4 FG, 11 REB, plus solid overall defense. Not Rasheed Wallace, who couldn’t find the range, but moved the ball and played excellent individual defense (though his help defense was late or non-existent far too often). Not Glen Davis, whose offensive activity made up for his defensive mismatches. No, the Celtics guards wear the goat horns. Rondo does for resorting to gambles on defense, and for not pushing the ball on offense. With Boston playing a halfcourt pace, the Lakers could set their defense and allow their length to swallow what the Celtics tried to achieve. Pierce does for a third straight offensive no-show. Even with Ron Artest saddled with early foul trouble, Pierce couldn’t dominate Luke Walton when the two were pitted against each other. Finally, Allen does for channeling his inner John Starks, a game after channeling his inner Michael Jordan—0-13 FG, 0-8 3FG, 2 PTS. When nearly all the stars had subpar performances, Fisher was able to steal a game that hung in the balance. The Celtics will remember that if the Lakers are able to win the series and send Boston fishing. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GamerGuy Posted June 9, 2010 Report Share Posted June 9, 2010 Good analysis, Erick. During that stretch of the fourth quarter, when the Lakers couldn't get ANYTHING going, Fisher answered the call. The emotion he displayed when interviewed at the end of the game almost made me teary eyed. The guy is a bona fide champion. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ChosenOne Posted June 9, 2010 Report Share Posted June 9, 2010 Once again on point analysis of the game by Mr. Blasco. I agree with everything you said Kobe took ALOT of horrible shots especially coming out of half time, and Fisher deserves alot more credit than he is being given right now for his performance in the fourth. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lemon Posted June 9, 2010 Report Share Posted June 9, 2010 It was a smart tweak by Phil Jackson to call the 1-2 screen, and a valiant leap of faith by Kobe and PJ to put their trust in Fisher to create offense. Rondo does for resorting to gambles on defense, and for not pushing the ball on offense. With Boston playing a halfcourt pace, the Lakers could set their defense and allow their length to swallow what the Celtics tried to achieve. I was surprised too by how much Kobe was willing to step back in the fourth quarter after relentlessly trying to find his shot throughout the first three quarters even to the point where he stole a pass from Shannon Brown. I was actually scared that he would continue his cold streak into the fourth quarter, but as time clocked down in the fourth quarter I was continually astonished by how much the team was deferring to Fish. Also, I agree with the Rondo analysis. Boston was successful when Rondo was pushing the ball, but he was hesitant in the fourth quarter. One play in particular, I remember he was just standing there waiting for a play. He was standing for what seemed like a good 10 seconds. I've seen him do the same thing previously with some success, but this time Boston needed to push. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Owner Real Deal Posted June 9, 2010 Owner Report Share Posted June 9, 2010 Bryant took a lot of bad shots, but he also had to take some of them with the shot clock drained. It was upsetting to see the guys look to Bryant to bail them out so much. Kobe shooting 10-29 is unacceptable, but so was the entire offense. No ball movement, and without looking at the assist totals, I'm sure Boston drilled us in that statistic. When we're moving the ball, we can be unstoppable on offense. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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