Respect! Yes, Yao get respect from NBA coaches. The general consensus among NBA coaches is to send a second defender at Yao and force the Rockets to beat them from the outside. JVG better come with game plan to counter this strategy from the other teams. Rockets can't rely on perimeter shooting all the time because Rockets perimeter shooting is very inconsistent. The Raptors, who had hammered the Yao Ming-less Rockets 107-90 in Houston earlier this month, knew they had to figure out how to deal with the 7-foot-6 giant this time around. The general consensus among NBA coaches is to send a second defender at Yao lest he just make layups all night and force the Rockets to beat you from the outside. http://www.thestar.com/Sports/article/193092 The Rockets expect to see more defenses like that of the Phoenix Suns, who positioned two defenders on Yao Ming even before passes came inside, taking him from the game. "We're facing the 'disregard Ryan Bowen' Dallas strategy with Chuck (Hayes)," Van Gundy said. "It's happened to us before. You don't want Chuck's shot opportunities going way up and Yao's way down. You're playing to the strength of the other team. "Every team is going to start playing us similarly. We're going to have to adjust and adapt a little bit better." http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl...kn/4636099.html
Rasho Nesterovic holds his own against Yao Mar 17, 2007 04:30 AM Richard Griffin When the Rockets' huge centre Yao Ming is still fresh, he is perhaps the NBA's most dominant inside presence. But when he carries that big 7-foot-6, 310-pound body around the floor, running on fumes, as he did most of last night, he is just an ordinary Yao. "I don't think he's in the right shape yet after that injury," Raptors' hulking centre Rasho Nesterovic said, after bumping and grinding with the Chinese baller for 13 minutes at the start of the first and third quarters. "I'm sure once he's going to be completely fit and in good shape it'll be even tougher to guard him." The running of the Yao at the start of each half was Nesterovic's assigned task and to their credit, the refs let the big man do his job. The game within the game with the two giants banging was unbelievable. Rasho and Yao did everything but throw punches in eight early minutes of rock 'n' roll in the low post. Yao did throw a vicious elbow that connected with Nesterovic's ribcage in the first round ... uh, quarter. "You have to play him physical and try and tire him out," the 30-year-old Slovenian centre said of his exhausting night. "They let us play a pretty tough game. For a minute, it felt like a heavyweight fight. You try and make him as tired as possible so he's not going to make some easy shots that he would usually make. He's such a big presence under the basket. Not just a big body, but he knows basketball so good." It went unnoticed and unappreciated by the disappointed Raptor fans, but by the time Rasho was done working over Yao, the towering Rocket was bent over and holding the hems of his shorts gasping for air, but such is Yao's influence that even his panting, one-count-slower presence created space for other Rocket shooters. That's a star. "I try to prove something," Nesterovic said. "It's always a challenge, so I just try to do my best to do my job as good as I can to make his job as tough as possible." In just over 13 minutes on the court last night, all with Yao on his dance card, Rasho held the Rockets superstar to six points on 2-for-6 shooting, with three rebounds. In Yao's other 20 floor minutes, vs. Andrea Bargnani, Chris Bosh and the rest of the leaner, more athletic Raptor defenders, he scored 17 points, with nine rebounds. However, the die was cast early in this one. On this night, it was the supporting cast led by ex-Raptors Tracy McGrady, with 24, and Rafer Alston, with 23 points and nine assists, that foiled the Raps' strategy of physical attrition with Yao. When Nesterovic was doing his dirty work and the Rockets' all-world centre was still his freshest, in the first eight minutes, Houston built a 26-8 lead. There's no doubt that even though the result of the game proves how far the Raps have to go to join the league's elite teams, Nesterovic's head-to-head effort was business as usual. But this guy Yao's a superstar and he can influence events by his mere presence. When the Raptors rolled into H-Town and crushed the Rockets 106-90 back on Feb. 28, Yao was still days away from returning to the lineup. This time, on the road, the Rockets turned it around to win by 14. That speaks volumes of Yao's value. With the playoffs looming, just over a month away, the presence of Nesterovic, the Raptors' only version of a traditional NBA big man, takes on more importance. The playoffs are all about bashing big bodies like last night and since the likely first-round foes for the Raptors, as it currently stands, could be either the Bulls, with Ben Wallace, or the Heat of Shaquille O'Neal, Nesterovic's blunt talents will come into play. "We're going to definitely meet big people," Nesterovic agreed. "For many years, now, in a row, the teams with good big people are in the finals." Unfortunately, Nesterovic doesn't quite rank in the elite company of big men with Shaq and Ben Wallace and Tim Duncan, to give the Raptors that same historical edge, but in bringing it up, he clearly knows his NBA history. http://www.thestar.com/Sports/article/193057
When Rasho is your best big man, you will have problems. That's just one reason the Raptors will be first round roadkill.
Hate to break it to you, but our outside shooting is some of the most consistent in the league. It is about as good as any team could hope for. And really, when other teams clog the paint around Yao, the 3-ball is the best way to make them pay.
Hate to say it, but can they do it against the Dallas, The Suns, and Spurs of the world when everything on the line. Seattle had a nice set of 3 pt shooters a few years ago, but when they're shots stop falling the playoffs it was over with.
I do think our perimeter players are much better than did they last year, that's one reason that we are better this year. Our defense is much better too. When Yao gets fit we could run inside-out play in playoffs, and get out of first round. Don't worry, be confident!
Who cares what coaches think! What really matters is what players and coaches think. I hate when Yao gets a defensive rebound or a low post players (esp. point/shooting guards) swarm him because they know they can swap it from his hands. But when amare or shaq get the rebound they get back on the defensive end. When its a pass they move out the way. If theres one thing I could change about Yao is to give him a savage like attitude. So when he gets those low post passes he will SLAM the ball home for the easy 2 or foul. Instead Yao flicks it up there with finesse.
He doesn't slam the ball because he lacks attitude. It's because he lacks the physical means. You have to be more than just tall. He flicks the ball because he wants to get rid of it asap, or else he knows someone will strip him.
Yao will be in shape by the time the playoffs roll around and he will be able to dominate the way he was prior to his injury. The way other players are allowed to be physical with Yao can only speed up the process. I can't wait till Yao is taking the rim regularly. Also, the finger situation is being a hinderance to what Yao can do. You can tell because he is shooting is sometimes off and he is also shooting more left handed shots.
Had JVG allowed the JLIII for Rasheed Wallace trade to go down, we wouldn't be talking about this right now.
YES Yao gets respect by coaches and players around the league! NO Yao does not get respect by officials around the league! NO Yao does not get respect by many American NBA fans and I say american cuz im only talking about fans in US not in china or any other place!
Unconsiciously, Yao's image fits well with China's image in Americans mind: big, dull, monster, communist ... thanks to all the humanity struggles over last century. Yao is an intruder.
Who gives a damn how Americans think about China? Some of them Amricans are arrogant and ignorant, anyways (not the Rockets fans on this board, hehe)
Chris bosh is their best big man. Andrea Bargnani is their second best big man. Rasho is their best (basically only) centre, but raps really dont play with a centre dominated offence or defence.