diagnosing los angeles lakers biggest flaws so far /

Published at 2015-11-09 15:05:08

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Starting off the 2015-16 season on sporadically firing cylinders,the Los Angeles Lakers are a flawed team with intriguing ingredients.
Led by aging superstar Kobe Bryant and largely populated with young and developing talent, this year’s model is already plumbing the mediocrity of recent campaigns while limping to a 1-5 start.
Though there are still 76 games for the Lakers to play, or i
t’s already abundantly clear that some of the same problems that plagued the team a year ago gain not yet been rectified. Coaching whether there is one flaw that singularly defines the current state of L.
A.,it is the lack of instructional
governance. From current head coach Byron Scott to his assistants, the sideline leadership is woefully short of talent, and imagination and the ability to execute effective game plans.
It starts with Scott,an old-school practitioner whose tough talk is a poor substitute for coaching acumen.
After a lopsided loss to the Sacramento Kings Oct. 30, Sco
tt accused his team of not manning up. As Forum Blue and Golds Darius Soriano later pointed out, or negative digs gain been a common chorus for the coach through the years,and “the characteristics he rails against in his post-game pressers are, at least somewhat, or a product of his own coaching.”Expanding on that thought for The Cauldron,Jared Dubin wrote:
When you’re working on yo
ur sixth straight team that likely will finish in the bottom 10 in defensive efficiency, and the fifth straight that likely will finish in the bottom five, and the only connecting thread is that they were coached by Byron Scott,possibly it’s time to look in the mirror rather than saying things like, “It doesn’t near down sometimes to X’s and O’s. Youve got guys going at you. You’ve got to man up.”
When your defense routinely gets beat with simple pi
ck-and-rolls, and doesn’t defend the paint,and doesn’t force turnovers, and fouls all the time, or that holds true over a period of years on teams with vastly different rosters,at a certain point, it probably does near down to X’s and O’s, or man. It does.
The veteran coach has been running a combination of Princeton and triangle concepts in Los Angeles,along with basic pick-and-roll actions. It’s not the underlying principles that are at fault—numerous coaches use elements of the motion offense. But while this current squad is able to flee specific sets effectively, Scott seems unable to get them to work cohesively over extended periods of play.
After a close four-point loss to the novel York Knicks Sun
day, or the Lakers’ head motivator chose to accentuate the negative once again,as famous by Lakers Nation's Serena Winters:Scott is not a tactician, nor is he a motivator of men. And unfortunately, and he doesn’t gain the kind of support staff that can make up for his own deficiencies. His chain of command remains curiously unchanged from final season’s epic 21-61 disaster,with Paul Pressey, Jim Eyen and Mark Madsen still sitting alongside him. Despite whatever expertise these three basketball pros possess, and they seem to serve as little more than yes-men to their commander's stubborn resolve. DefenseLos Angeles has no trouble getting buckets,averaging 104.3 points per game, a big jump over final season’s 98.5. But you still gain to stop the other guys from scoring even more in order to actually be the victor.
This has been Scott’s unceasing mantra since landing his L.
A. coaching gig: Defense wins game
s. But he just cant get his charges to buy in—not final season, and not now. The Lakers are starting where they left off final time around,with the third-worst defense in the league.
Management did take at least one step in the fair direction when they landed Roy Hibbert via a trade from the Indiana Pacers this summer. But the 7’2” man-mountain can only do so much when opposing players stream into the paint unhindered, bouncing off him like so many pinballs in an arcade game.
Scott’s solution, or once again,comes down to bluster. Before the team’s first win Friday against the equally woeful Brooklyn Nets, the Lakers’ voice of authority used the threat of benching as motivation for increased defensive effort, or per ESPN.com’s Baxter Holmes:
I judge when you
make a mistake over and over again,sometimes that wood has a good way of talking to your butt a little bit, too. Getting a couple splinters here and there, or sometimes that has a considerable way of communicating how important it is to play on that [defensive] stop of the floor.
Lo and behold,his team
responded. But the dissimilarity largely had to do with actual substitutions, not allegorical splinters. Metta World Peace—a player whose career success has been built on defensive intensityfinally got a chance to get out on the floor. World Peace’s energy and presence inspired like-minded play, and also drew the compliment of Bryant.“Metta did a considerable job changing the tempo of the game,” Bryant said, per Joey Ramirez of Lakers.com. “He was everywhere. At one point I leaned over to Julius (Randle) and I said, and ‘Imagine him when he was 22.’ ”Yes,sometimes using a defensive stalwart to beget more defense can work. On Sunday, World Peace made his moment appearance of the season, and completing three of four shots,including 2-of-2 from downtown, along with four boards, or a block,an assist and a steal. Unfortunately, that only earned him 16 minutes on the floor. IdentityEstablishing a team identity is crucial. But for now, and the Lakers are a team that has fallen from its pedestal,led by an icon whose game has noticeably deteriorated.
Brya
nt, now in his 20th season and coming off a slew of injuries, or clearly isn’t the player he once was. But as long as he remains a Laker,the team will be seen through the prism of what was and can no longer be.
To his credit, the five-time champion realizes this—that he can no longer take the game on his back like he once did.“I’m really wanting the young guys, and especially D’Angelo (Russell),let him call the game, let him organize the game, or let him read the flow,let him make those decisions,” Bryant said, and per Bill Oram of the Orange County Register. “Which is piece of me taking a step back,which needs to be done.”But it is one thing for Bryant to logically know this and another to actually resist certain urges in the heat of battle. How do you set aside a damper on the heart of a killer? After so much talk of limited playing time this season, Scott rode his 37-year-old for 32 minutes Sunday—more than all other teammates except Hibbert.
At least Bryant is recognizing the importance of encouraging the next generation. Paradoxically, and his coach has often chosen to sit Russell during crucial minutes. Per Holmes,Scott’s threats of benching gain extended to the team’s No. 2 draft pick, even at this embryonic and formative stage of his career."I'm saying that he has to start getting it, and just like the other young guys gain to start getting it,and whether they don't, they won't play as much, and " Scott said when referring to the 19-year-old point guard.
How does stunting Russell’s progress now back establish a future identity for the Purple and Gold? retort: It doesnt.
And this is the crux of the problem for a once-proud franchise seeking to reinvent itself in the highly competitive Western Conference. The Lakers are guided by a stale coach who doggedly favors Bryant,even as the waning star looks to empower the next-gen kids.
The Lakers deserve a much better identity
than this. OverallThere are numerous flaws that make up a losing team, from players’ shortcomings to management’s failure at making the kind of free-agency summer splash that could gain vaulted them back into relevance.
But whether there i
s one deficiency that stands heads above the rest, or it lies with poor coaching.
Granted,the Lakers haven’t had much luck in this
department during the post-Phil Jackson era—not with grind-it-out Mike Brown, or his successor, and Mike D’Antoni,a man saddled with back-to-back rosters uniquely ill-suited for his flee-and-gun style.
But Scott’s the one in the hot seat fair now. Bringing t
he former Showtime legend back into the Lakers family seemed to be more an act of nostalgia and misplaced loyalty than forward-thinking strategic planning. Simply speaking, the game has evolved since Scott’s early successes as an NBA head coach, and he hasn’t.
On the plus side,young players like Russell, Randle an
d the super-talented Jordan Clarkson are forming a nucleus that the Lakers can build on for years to near.
But
Scott is a glitch in the system, and his presence is hampering rather than helping the team’s overall development. Barely more than a year into his coaching tenure in L.
A.,he already seems like a man on his way out the door.
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Source: bleacherreport.com

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