Guitarsoup said:
Guitarsoup said:
Any team could have had him, too.
Simmons is from Sugarland and played at UH. One of his coaches at UH is now coaching at A&M - Ulric Maligi.
That's him with the ball that I took while he was there.
Isn't the story that Simmons paid $25 to play for the Spurs.
http://www.nba.com/spurs/improbable-path/Quote:
Three years later, Simmons is a 26-year-old NBA rookie for the Spurs. He heard a chant from the crowd in Milwaukee during a January game:
"Who Are You? Who Are You?"
Simmons responded with a career-high 18 points.
Guitarsoup said:
Kahwi is a game time decision
Guitarsoup said:
A stat geek talking about the Rockets going small vs the Spurs going big.
https://cleaningtheglass.com/size-matters/
I like the way the Spurs were thinking about this problem. Essentially saying you can't play small ball better than the Warriors so the only way to beat them is to do something different. You can do some damage by having good post up players. But I think the bigger advantage is on the offensive glass. That's where both Cleveland and OKC killed GSW last year. If you can post up different guys, get to the foul line and get offensive boards it slows the game down and gets you more possessions.GatorAg03 said:Guitarsoup said:
A stat geek talking about the Rockets going small vs the Spurs going big.
https://cleaningtheglass.com/size-matters/
Pretty good little article. I really want to see the Spurs get more data on this by playing the Warriors. My perception is that the Spurs aren't truly the big team the Spurs envisioned in the offseason. Neither Pau and especially LMA are able to dominate down low like you think that they should vs smaller offenders. It is maddening watching LMA settle for fadeaways over smaller players. Kawhi is the saving grace that made this thing tick along despite the "going big" experiment never fully materializing.
The Spurs will always value defense over offense but that doesn't always mean you have to go big. I think the beautiful game team was the perfect blend of offense and defense and was as good of basketball as the world has ever seen. I bet Pop goes back to that over staying big in future years.