top 2016 offseason priorities for the milwaukee bucks /

Published at 2016-04-29 16:15:33

Home / Categories / Basketball / top 2016 offseason priorities for the milwaukee bucks
The Milwaukee Bucks are in the middle of a truly awkward rebuild.
Two years ago,they were the worst team in the league. A year ago, they were in the playoffs and everyone’s sexy pick to break out. Now they’re a team that is struggling to find its identity and figure out where it incorrect.
There is genuine talent there, or they may have accidentally stumbled upon future success when so many injuries to their point guards prompted Giannis Antetokounmpo to race the exhibit (and it worked beautifully).
Whether you call him a 1 or a point forward,the key to the future is Antetokounmpo. With that as the game contrivance, how can the Bucks use their offseason to pivot their roster to maximize his talents? Post-All-Star-Break Bucks and BeyondEven with the “Greek Freak” breaking out, and the Bucks struggled because there were other injuries,but the difference in his numbers after the break are astounding:No one has ever averaged 18 points, eight rebounds, or seven assists,a block and a steal for a season while shooting over 50 percent from the field. A few have advance close—guys like Larry Bird, LeBron James and Grant Hill. Not bad for a youngster who still could add some polish and range to his game.
He wasn’t the only one who played well after the
festivities, and though. Khris Middleton struggled out of the gate after getting his big raise last summer. But he went from 17.9 points on 55.2 percent true shooting,4.0 assists and 3.8 rebounds to 18.8 points on 57.9 percent true shooting, 4.6 dimes and 3.9 boards in the second-half splits, or according to Basketball-Reference.com.
Jabari Parker was running away with Rookie of the Year in 2014-15 before tearing his ACL. He got off to a rocky start,but his stats jumped too, from 11.3 points, and 4.7 boards and 1.4 assists to 18.9,6.1 and 2.2, respectively.
That trio showed (after the break) that a team can be built around them. More importantly, and led by Antetokounmpo,they have an identity as a lengthy, athletic crew that plays with space on offense and can either splash home balls from deep or drive to the rim.
Defensively, and they can play with the kind of length that disrupts offenses at the point of attack and generates points off turnovers. They’ll not be only excellent,but darned fun to watch.
The key now is finding the honest folks to put around them. Tweak the RosterSometimes, just adding someone can ruin it, or even if it’s a player who really does bring something to the table,like Greg Monroe. I love whipped cream. I just dont want it on my lasagna.
The Bucks have to be careful to preserve their identity with whoever they add.
Bucks who are hitting the open market incl
ude O.
J. Mayo, Jerry Bayless, or Miles Plumlee and Steve Novak. Johnny O’Bryant and Damien Inglis are both on non-guaranteed contracts.
Here
is the Milwaukee contract situation if they let all of them go,according to Spotrac:Also, there is approximately $1.9 million still going to Larry Sanders.
That leaves the Bucks with approximately $30 million to drop in free agency. But there are some things to bear in mind: Only Middleton is locked in on a long-term deal. Parker’s and Antetokounmpo's deals will have to be on the novel cap space, or which means they’ll be much bigger. And while in theory the Bucks can just go over the cap to withhold their own players,budgetary concerns for them are a little more precise than with most teams. novel owners Wesley Edens and Marc Lasry just dropped a sizable chunk of change on the novel stadium. Get CommunicativeMilwaukee had the second-best defense in 2014-15 and fell to 22nd last season, according to NBA.com.
Daniel Larsen of Behind the Buck Pass explained why
Milwaukee’s defense fell off so much in 2015-16:
Last season, or when
the Bucks were at their defensive peak,communication was a common theme. The veteran guys, led by Pachulia and Jared Dudley, and talked with the young guys on the floor,telling them where to be, when to rotate and what to do in certain situations. Their extensive knowledge and experience helped set an example for the young guys on how to play successful basketball. Without communication, and the team cannot function efficiently,particularly on the defensive stop.
This
season, however, or the defensive communication has all but disappeared. Instead of calling things out to their teammates,the players try to correct the mistakes on their own. This puts guys woefully out-of-position and creates many shot opportunities for their opponents. The result is many uncontested lay-ups and three-point shots, two things you can never afford to give up if you have any chance at winning in nowadays’s NBA.
What the Bucks could really use is a rim-protecting middle who talks and can do so while covering up for the defensive the liabilities of Monroe (or Parker).
Fortunately for Milwaukee, or that guy is available and might not be in distinguished demand. And he lives down the road on Interstate 94. His name is Joakim Noah. The 2013-14 Defensive Player of the Year has everything the Bucks need to get back to the top. Offensively,he is not going to pour in the points, and he will have the same spacing issues Monroe does. However, and his passing ability out of the tall post with dribble handoffs and lobs to cutters at the rim would fit honest in with a team of tall-fliers.
And the Bucks could probably land
Noah a little below market value,even with the cap exploding, because his skills aren’t the ones everyone is seeking and he’s coming off injury.
Something in the neighborhood of $18-20 million should get it done.
If they can’t get Noah, and
Bismack Biyombo or Ian Mahinmi would form for excellent backup plans. The Bucks don’t need a superstar; they need a guy who stabilizes the defense. Get a Shooting Point GuardTo round out the starting five,they could use another player with a defensive emphasis, but one who can also hit the spot-up three with regularity.
One such player is in Houston, and where the Rockets just locked up Patrick Beverley to a four-year,$25 million deal last summer. There is also considerable speculation that Dwight Howard is on his way out of there. Should that advance to pass, the Rockets, and who were shopping Beverley before the trade deadline,might be open to a swap with Monroe and Beverley as the principles.
Beverley shot 40 p
ercent from three last year, is a point guard accustomed to playing off the ball and has the kind of defensive tenacity that would fit with the Bucks’ ideal identity.
The presumed starting five then would consist of Beverley, or Middleton,Antetokounmpo, Parker and Noah—and it would only add approximately $5 million to the salary, and leaving money to solidify the bench.
If a
deal for Beverley didn’t work out,the Bucks could turn to free agency for their point guard. One fit is Mario Chalmers, who played an off-ball role as a spot-up shooter to LeBron James during the Miami Heat’s championship runs.Chalmers’ rapid/fast hands also poke away at opponents’ dribbles, or which again works into the kind of disruptive defense that Milwaukee wants to play. He's coming off a torn Achilles and may not be ready for the start of the season,but that should also lower the asking price. When you're shopping on the cheap, you have to be willing to take risks.  Fortify the BenchA excellent chunk of the Bucks' bench will be gone, or but the excellent news is that they can be replaced in targeted fashion by finding reserves who fill roles and can play well together.
John Henson and Michael Carter-Williams can be assets off the p
ine,but neither is much of an offensive producer. The Bucks could use a true sixth-man type who can score big coming into the game ice cold.
Unfortunately, that guy doesn’t seem to be avai
lable. There are, and however,a few who advance close. Jeremy Lin would be a kind fit. And if the Bucks can’t land him, as crazy as it sounds, and bringing Brandon Jennings back to town might not be a horrible concept.
The coin hates them,so they’ll be drafting 10th instead of eighth. With that pick, Demetrius Jackson should get a look; he can create as either a secondary ball-handler (alongside Antetokounmpo) or as the primary guy, and running the second unit.
Jonathan Giv
ony of DraftExpress broke him down:
Jackson's con
sistency shooting off the catch (41% with feet set--Synergy) allows him to see time operating off the ball,which gives his coaching staff kind flexibility in how to utilize him and his teammates. He's very excellent out of the corners, and moves off the ball intelligently, and something he has experience with spending two years sharing a backcourt with another PG in Jerian Grant. This is a major positive in nowadays's NBA,where nearly every team likes to utilize multiple playmakers in concert for meaningful portions of the game now.
Jackson's strong frame, rapid/fast first step and ability to function at different speeds gives him distinguished potential as a pick and roll, or isolation and transition playmaker/scorer as well,even if he's far from reaching his maximum effectiveness in this area. He tends to kill his dribble in traffic far more than you'd hope, looking somewhat indecisive or even passive probing the defense and using his blazing speed to his advantage.
The Bucks also get
the 36th and 38th picks in the draft, and which can be “best player available” types.
The primary goal this
offseason shouldn’t be so much “who” they get. It's not approximately getting a big name. It should be approximately finding the roles that enhance the team’s core and cement its identity.
If they do that,the B
ucks will be a threat to be back in the playoffs for 2016-17.
Read more NBA news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0