I don't even know how I would start to approach it, hypothetically.

The Warriors are unquestionably the greatest regular season team of all-time.AbeVigodaLive wrote:1. The Warriors average 32.0 assists. The next team is only at 24.7 assists.
2. Go back to trolling Amerikka or cuck faggots, Clevetown. Basketball appears to be too complicated of a topic for you to understand.
3. GSW is on pace to be arguably the best offensive team of all time.
4. Don't look now... but they're up to 7th in defensive efficiency, too. That's the area everybody was worried about.
Bush4Ever wrote:How would you all gameplan against their offense?
I don't even know how I would start to approach it, hypothetically.
I thought about that a bit last night and couldn't come up with anything. They all move so well, shoot so well, pass so well that they look unguardable.Bush4Ever wrote:How would you all gameplan against their offense?
I don't even know how I would start to approach it, hypothetically.
Invent a time machine and bring back Jordan-Pippen-Harper-Rodman... full court pressure, shut down the passing lanes, help defense/rotations; hold them to 105-110 PPG and hope you have enough Offense of your own to outscore them.Bush4Ever wrote:How would you all gameplan against their offense?
I don't even know how I would start to approach it, hypothetically.
Stop living in the past bro...thedangerouskitchen wrote:Invent a time machine and bring back Jordan-Pippen-Harper-Rodman... full court pressure, shut down the passing lanes, help defense/rotations; hold them to 105-110 PPG and hope you have enough Offense of your own to outscore them.Bush4Ever wrote:How would you all gameplan against their offense?
I don't even know how I would start to approach it, hypothetically.
thedangerouskitchen wrote:Invent a time machine and bring back Jordan-Pippen-Harper-Rodman... full court pressure, shut down the passing lanes, help defense/rotations; hold them to 105-110 PPG and hope you have enough Offense of your own to outscore them.Bush4Ever wrote:How would you all gameplan against their offense?
I don't even know how I would start to approach it, hypothetically.
With all (very much) due respect to the 1996 Bulls, they never had to defend a team with the dimensional problems (i.e.-spacing) the Warriors present.thedangerouskitchen wrote:Invent a time machine and bring back Jordan-Pippen-Harper-Rodman... full court pressure, shut down the passing lanes, help defense/rotations; hold them to 105-110 PPG and hope you have enough Offense of your own to outscore them.Bush4Ever wrote:How would you all gameplan against their offense?
I don't even know how I would start to approach it, hypothetically.
Ya, well, he did say hypothetically.denali4eva wrote:Stop living in the past bro...thedangerouskitchen wrote:Invent a time machine and bring back Jordan-Pippen-Harper-Rodman... full court pressure, shut down the passing lanes, help defense/rotations; hold them to 105-110 PPG and hope you have enough Offense of your own to outscore them.Bush4Ever wrote:How would you all gameplan against their offense?
I don't even know how I would start to approach it, hypothetically.
'96 Bulls wouldn't be a top 5 team in today's league.thedangerouskitchen wrote:Invent a time machine and bring back Jordan-Pippen-Harper-Rodman... full court pressure, shut down the passing lanes, help defense/rotations; hold them to 105-110 PPG and hope you have enough Offense of your own to outscore them.Bush4Ever wrote:How would you all gameplan against their offense?
I don't even know how I would start to approach it, hypothetically.
zombiesonics wrote:'96 Bulls wouldn't be a top 5 team in today's league.thedangerouskitchen wrote:Invent a time machine and bring back Jordan-Pippen-Harper-Rodman... full court pressure, shut down the passing lanes, help defense/rotations; hold them to 105-110 PPG and hope you have enough Offense of your own to outscore them.Bush4Ever wrote:How would you all gameplan against their offense?
I don't even know how I would start to approach it, hypothetically.
That's why full court pressure would be so important... similar to how they guarded Magic / Lakers in the 91 Finals, to the point where LA had trouble getting their Offense set, and when they did there was already 15-18 seconds run off the shot clock. Also the Bulls were exceptional in the half-court at playing the passing lanes (with their size/quickness/length) and rotating / helping.Bush4Ever wrote:With all (very much) due respect to the 1996 Bulls, they never had to defend a team with the dimensional problems (i.e.-spacing) the Warriors present.thedangerouskitchen wrote:Invent a time machine and bring back Jordan-Pippen-Harper-Rodman... full court pressure, shut down the passing lanes, help defense/rotations; hold them to 105-110 PPG and hope you have enough Offense of your own to outscore them.Bush4Ever wrote:How would you all gameplan against their offense?
I don't even know how I would start to approach it, hypothetically.
Having to guard Curry 30 feet out, with multiple god-tier shooters, and a big who can put the ball on the floor and create presents a different set of problems compared to anything the Bulls had to overcome. Just from a floor spacing perspective, especially since they move so well without the ball.
I'm not saying they wouldn't be up for it, just that it is an entirely different.
thedangerouskitchen wrote:That's why full court pressure would be so important... similar to how they guarded Magic / Lakers in the 91 Finals, to the point where LA had trouble getting their Offense set, and when they did there was already 15-18 seconds run off the shot clock. Also the Bulls were exceptional in the half-court at playing the passing lanes (with their size/quickness/length) and rotating / helping.Bush4Ever wrote:With all (very much) due respect to the 1996 Bulls, they never had to defend a team with the dimensional problems (i.e.-spacing) the Warriors present.thedangerouskitchen wrote:
Invent a time machine and bring back Jordan-Pippen-Harper-Rodman... full court pressure, shut down the passing lanes, help defense/rotations; hold them to 105-110 PPG and hope you have enough Offense of your own to outscore them.
Having to guard Curry 30 feet out, with multiple god-tier shooters, and a big who can put the ball on the floor and create presents a different set of problems compared to anything the Bulls had to overcome. Just from a floor spacing perspective, especially since they move so well without the ball.
I'm not saying they wouldn't be up for it, just that it is an entirely different.
Not interested in debating Bulls vs. GS... just answering the question of how to defend the Warriors. But since you brought it up, the 96 Bulls (like this GS team) ddidn't need much of a bench because they were so top heavy 1-6/7, with the starters more than capable of going 40+ minutes a night (remember, this was the 90's... not today's league where you get accused of 'burning guys out' if they play 35 minutes a game).AbeVigodaLive wrote:thedangerouskitchen wrote:That's why full court pressure would be so important... similar to how they guarded Magic / Lakers in the 91 Finals, to the point where LA had trouble getting their Offense set, and when they did there was already 15-18 seconds run off the shot clock. Also the Bulls were exceptional in the half-court at playing the passing lanes (with their size/quickness/length) and rotating / helping.Bush4Ever wrote:
With all (very much) due respect to the 1996 Bulls, they never had to defend a team with the dimensional problems (i.e.-spacing) the Warriors present.
Having to guard Curry 30 feet out, with multiple god-tier shooters, and a big who can put the ball on the floor and create presents a different set of problems compared to anything the Bulls had to overcome. Just from a floor spacing perspective, especially since they move so well without the ball.
I'm not saying they wouldn't be up for it, just that it is an entirely different.
A few problems with that... including that the Warriors aren't so reliant on one player bringing the ball up the court.
It would be interesting to see how Luc Longley and Bill Wennington would be used in that series. They're a bad matchup with the Warriors. Depth would be an issue for the Bulls.
Jordan
Pippen
Rodman
Harper
Kukoc
Kerr
All would be fine on the court vs. the Warriors. But beyond them? Randy Brown can play some defense. Would Jud Buechler play a larger role because he could stretch the floor?
In any event... full-court pressure seems like a bad idea for the Bulls considering the shorter bench they'd have.
Wishful thinking doesn't make it so.Thedictator wrote:GS currently has a better offense, but their defense is worse...they are giving up more points than last year on defense and their bench scoring is way down
GS imo has the same problem as last year...Sure they will score a lot, win a lot of games against other teams but as soon as they run into a team that is healthy in the playoffs and they have only faced 2 in the last 2 years like (OKC last year should have lost) and Cavs that play defense, rebounds better and have damn near just as deadly of an offense they lose...Will Durant push them over the edge, that statistics say no...
Thedictator wrote:GS currently has a better offense, but their defense is worse...they are giving up more points than last year on defense and their bench scoring is way down
GS imo has the same problem as last year...Sure they will score a lot, win a lot of games against other teams but as soon as they run into a team that is healthy in the playoffs and they have only faced 2 in the last 2 years like (OKC last year should have lost) and Cavs that play defense, rebounds better and have damn near just as deadly of an offense they lose...Will Durant push them over the edge, that statistics say no...