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RE: Wallace has a short memory



Comments like this from Wallace seem to show his ignorance on what it takes
to win in the NBA. The point is your leader and makes everything happen. Can
you win without a good one? Of course, if you have a guy like Jordan,
Olajuwon, Shaq, etc.  Magic Johnson and Jason Kidd are two excellent
examples of points that were not big time perimeter offensive threats.

I do agree somewhat that if your point is not an outside threat it does
result in double teams on the shooters, but this is where the point needs to
break don the D taking it to the hoop and dishing off to the open man. A
thing good points do well is break down defenses and find the open man.

I am anxious to see Shammond get some playing time. I think he will be a
surprise and hope Bremer is a Derek Fisher type sleeper but only time will
tell.


John






-----Original Message-----
From: owner-celtics@igtc.com [mailto:owner-celtics@igtc.com]On Behalf Of
Berry, Mark S
Sent: Wednesday, October 02, 2002 12:47 PM
To: 'celtics@igtc.com'
Subject: Wallace has a short memory


Joe H. posted this quote from Chris Wallace:

"If your point guards can't shoot the ball, your offense
is in big trouble," Wallace said.

--- --- ---

Yep, New Jersey's offense was just destroyed by Jason Kidd. He can't shoot,
but he sure can run a basketball team. The more accurate statement is your
offense is in big trouble if the only options are one-on-one play from one
of two players or a last-ditch three-pointer from your point guard.

Mark Jackson... early Magic Johnson... Jamaal Tinsley... all the way down to
Avery Johnson... there are plenty of examples of successful point guards who
weren't great shooters. But I'd be hard-pressed to find a shooter who was a
great point guard. Don't get me wrong-there have been plenty of great point
guards who also were great shooters. But I can't think of a single
shoot-first guy who was a great point guard.

And like I posted yesterday, I don't think Antoine is the answer. He's a
nice complement to a real point guard, but he's not someone I want
initiating the offense. He thinks shot-first. I know he gets assists. So
does Stephon Marbury, but he thinks of his own offense first also and
doesn't make his teammates better. The offensive initiator has to think of
others first, whether it's the point guard or the point forward. That
doesn't mean they can't score-Magic scored, Isiah scored, Bird scored-but
they have to be willing to help others first. It's a subtle distinction in
description, but huge in execution. It's the reason Philly moved Allen
Iverson to shooting guard, and the reason Phoenix is experimenting with Joe
Johnson at point guard to get Marbury off the ball.

Anyway, if Wallace had said "if Obie's point guards can't shoot the ball,
Obie's offense is in big trouble," then I'd have to agree. He has
inefficient scorers and non-shooters at the other spots on the floor.
Putting another non-threat out there with Eric Williams and Tony Battie
makes it awfully tough. Of course, a true point guard would make threats of
those guys. But Obie doesn't coach that way.

By the way, I wanted to find out a little more about Obie's coaching
philosophy, so I went back and checked some University of Dayton basketball
records. You know Obie single-handedly destroyed that program, taking it
from a perennial postseason contender to single-digit wins in a matter of
four years. Anyway, Obie's UD teams hold almost every school record for
three-point attempts. They kept shooting more and more, and winning less and
less (after initial success in his first season). I hope history doesn't
repeat itself.

Mark
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