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Watch Houston's unstoppable play: Smith to Howard alley-oop set

Discussion in 'Houston Rockets: Game Action & Roster Moves' started by mcgrady33090, Apr 29, 2015.

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  1. J623_Rockets

    J623_Rockets Member

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    The NBA playoffs are about adjustment and exploitation; teams are constantly adjusting to opponent lineups and play calls, which will often feature combinations rarely seen in the regular season. Then they will try to repeatedly exploit weaknesses, putting the opponent in a disadvantaged position. One such example of exploiting an opponent weakness is how Houston took advantage of Dallas' lineups featuring two big men in the frontcourt, especially when Dirk Nowitzki or Amar'e Stoudemire (or both) is on the floor.

    To take advantage of the Mavs' defensive liabilities up front, the Rockets lifted a play I am very familiar with from the Phoenix Suns' old playbook: the "Elbow Get." Here's a breakdown of the play and how the Rockets ran against Dallas so adeptly and won the series.


    Elbow Get defined
    [​IMG]

    Elbow Get was originally designed in Phoenix to take advantage of the unique ballhandling and passing abilities of Boris Diaw and the elite, above-the-rim athleticism of Shawn Marion. As you can see from the diagram above, the bigs start at the elbows while the shooters fill the corners. The point guard hits the 4-man at the elbow then pins down for the wing in the strong corner. As soon as the 4 receives the ball, he goes into a middle pick-and-roll with the 5, who screens and rolls. As the 4 dribbles to the other side of the floor and the 5 rolls, the shooter coming off the pin down lifts up the now weakside 3-point line, giving the 4-man four distinct passing options (depending on what the defense does):

    • Throw the lob to the rolling 5 for the dunk
    • Hit the shooter in the strong corner (if his defender comes off him)
    • Hit the weakside fill shooter lifting up the line
    • Hit the weakside corner shooter

    When performed in concert, with rapidity, the play is difficult to stop because there are so many moving parts, making it difficult for the opponent to play help defense (the spacing is key here, as well). When the opponent has two true bigs in the lineup, it means one of them is put in the uncomfortable situation of guarding a ball handler going into a pick-and-roll rather than coming out of one.

    Houston's Elbow Get

    The Rockets run Elbow Get to take advantage of Josh Smith's above-average passing and ballhandling, something I noted could be of benefit to them when they first signed him in December:

    Smith does bring one strong offensive trait to the table, however: passing. He's made himself a threat by creating off the dribble and making plays for others, either out of shallow pick-and-rolls (particularly when the defense predictably sags off him) or off post-ups, where he can still overwhelm smaller defenders. He's not a quick playmaker -- the ball does stick in his hands -- but he more often than not will make the right play, provided he hasn't overextended himself into a tough situation. He also displays good awareness of where the double-team is coming from and makes the appropriate pass out.

    Combined with Dwight Howard's explosion, and pitted against the defensively challenged Mavs frontcourt of Nowitzki and Stoudemire, it's like shooting fish in a barrel.
    [​IMG]

    As you can see, Smith doesn't catch exactly at the elbow, and the pin-down/lift action from Pablo Prigioni and Trevor Ariza isn't executed crisply at all, but the general premise is true: The Rockets maintain spacing along the perimeter and allow the middle pick-and-roll to operate unhindered. As soon as Smith receives the ball, Howard sprints to set the screen, only to slip and dive directly to the front of the rim. Nowitzki and Stoudemire don't communicate well on the switch; J.J. Barea, Raymond Felton and Al-Farouq Aminu are all "hugged up" on their guys; and Smith delivers the perfect lob, which Howard finishes with authority. It's over in the blink of an eye.

    The lob is the most desired outcome, but even when the initial action is sniffed out and well defended, Houston finds a way to take advantage.

    [​IMG]

    Here, Dallas' frontcourt features the (comparatively speaking) more mobile Charlie Villanueva and defensive anchor Tyson Chandler. They execute the switch more smoothly, preventing Howard from the lob play, but now Howard has a "mouse in the house" -- a smaller player guarding him as he seals him in down low. Chandler does what he can to help, but Howard demonstrates excellent footwork with the up-and-under, drawing the foul. (Notice the slow execution on the weak side between Jason Terry and James Harden, but again, Harden achieves the desired spacing effect).

    How to stop the unstoppable

    Houston wisely exploited Dallas' defensive shortcomings, and it wasn't only on the front line. Let's go back to that first play with the Howard lob:

    [​IMG]

    While it's easy to surmise that the weakside defenders are discouraged from helping, that's a cop out. In the far corner, Felton is hugged up on Corey Brewer, who shot a frigid 23.1 percent from the left corner this season (18-of-78), so sagging into the paint wouldn't have carried the usual cardinal sin of leaving the strong corner to help. On the near side, Aminu is watching the play and seeing it develop; in an ideal world, he would have anticipated and flooded the lane to obstruct Howard from taking off unimpeded, but he's rightfully worried about leaving Ariza, a 42 percent 3-point shooter from the right corner. That's where Barea should have dropped back and played free safety between Ariza and Prigioni.

    Of course, such weakside gambling on odds wouldn't be necessary if the front line did its job. Either Nowitzki or Stoudemire should have noticed the set and dropped to prevent the roll (especially Stoudemire, who has run this exact play in Phoenix). In the other example (the Howard up-and-under that led to a foul), Villanueva makes a crucial mistake by not taking advantage of Howard's weak free throw shooting by immediately intentionally fouling; instead, he allows him to take two dribbles to the middle, upfake and then attempt a shot, opening himself to the risk of the three-point play. Even defensive stalwart Chandler makes the mistake of jumping out toward Smith after Howard has gone into his post-up, rather than sagging and forcing the kickout pass back to Smith, who shot 28 percent above the break this season (he was 0-for-1 from 3-point range at that juncture of the game).

    [​IMG]

    That's precisely what happens here: Nowitzki does a better job of executing the switch and fights Howard from running straight to the rim or the block, fighting him down the lane. Chandler doesn't jump at Smith; rather he sags back, simultaneously fronting Howard and daring Smith to take the low-percentage shot. On the weak side, Prigioni and Ariza finally execute the pin down well, but Smith doesn't notice. Remember the scouting report? Smith isn't Diaw, a point guard in a power forward's body, who anticipates plays and recognizes defensive breakdowns instantly. He's more methodical, and much more inclined to look for his own shot, no matter how inept it might be from the perimeter (even though an attack of the space given would have forced the Mavs' D to react). Chandler successfully baits Smith into taking the 3, which is an infinitely better option for the Mavs to concede.

    Ultimately, defending these types of plays comes down to several things: personnel (mobility, length and activity), preparation (players recognizing the play set, identifying the biggest threats) and, of course, communication. Dallas continued to trot out lineups that were missing two (if not all three) of those hallmarks, and in the end Houston exploited those holes and won the series.
     
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  2. bmd

    bmd Member

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    This is impossible. jtr told me the Rockets don't run any plays.
     
  3. napalm06

    napalm06 Huge Flopping Fan

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    Pretty interesting. As a fan I just see a bunch of dudes playing pick up ball. Always enlightening to learn about the nuances that are really going on.
     
  4. JayGoogle

    JayGoogle Member

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    I actually mentioned this int he gameday thread last night too, it was unstoppable and the main issue I have is we didn't run it enough. Especially when things got dicey.
     
  5. Mr. Clutch

    Mr. Clutch Contributing Member

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    Maybe it's unstoppable when Dirk is the defender
     
  6. linkz1993

    linkz1993 Member

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    This is why Orlando ( 2007 - 2011 ) was so good with Hedo Turkoglu and Rashard Lewis surrounding Dwight , very devastating in the pick in roll with Hedo with lobs or open threes
     
  7. clutz

    clutz Member

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    Typical trash from Rockets hater Amin Elhassan.
     
  8. awc713

    awc713 Member

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    I did not expect amin elhassan to write this article. He's is the biggest Rocket/Houston hater in the national media. Earlier this week he went as far as dissing Bun B, UGK, and the Houston rap game.

    For that reason, I cannot read this article. Anyone who does not respect UGK has an opinion not worth my time.
     
  9. Ismail

    Ismail Member

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    Someone with coaching knowledge, how is this much different than running Horns? The actions are similar (seem almost identical to me), no?
     
  10. rox4lyf

    rox4lyf Member

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    Wait, I thought some posters here said we don't run any plays. Its READ AND REACT dummy. :rolleyes:
     
  11. rockbox

    rockbox Around before clutchcity.com

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    One way to stop the play is to sag off Smith so much that he has to take a long two.
     
  12. Andrew Li

    Andrew Li Member

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  13. RockingRox

    RockingRox Member

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    That's what went through my mind too.

    In the 2nd round, be it Duncan/Splitter or Randolph/Gasol, Howard won't get as much easy. I hope Howard won't force his shots too much. There are always guys open beyond the arc. Throw the ball back out, either to re-post or to swing/swing and shoot three pointer.

    With Howard playing so dominantly, I hope the team find him more post-up chances.
     
  14. EightDoobies

    EightDoobies Member

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    This. Stephen Curry butt buddy.
     
  15. Nick

    Nick Contributing Member

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    Dallas adjusted by bringing the defender guarding the baseline 3 point shooter into the paint.

    Rockets would have countered by having to pass it out to that shooter (usually Brewer or Ariza), however they were also missing their fair share of wide open shots.

    Its still a very lethal combination... but if you run it all the time, teams will eventually be able to contain it.
     
  16. dachuda86

    dachuda86 Member

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    Expect the Rockets to run this until the Spurs destroy us in a game for trying it too many times... unless we wait to use it...
     
  17. Realjad

    Realjad Contributing Member

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    They don't. They have stated time and time again that all they run is pick and roll variations and don't have any 'set' plays
     
  18. cheke64

    cheke64 Member

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    When Harden plays point guard all this vanishes. Not a knock on Harden but the truth. You can make a compilation with Brewer slashing with the fast tempo. All of this happens when Terry or prigs is pushing it.
     
  19. cheke64

    cheke64 Member

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    We are our worst enemy. Staff might go Moreyball and make Harden at the pg and everyone is back at shooting 3 pointers.
     

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