DoctorBombay
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Senior year Andy Rautins was a beast at the top of the zone. Kadary was definitely top 5 though.Triche was veryyyyy underrated also
Senior year Andy Rautins was a beast at the top of the zone. Kadary was definitely top 5 though.Triche was veryyyyy underrated also
I think a helpful oversimplification when judging how guards defend in the zone, is to divide them into 4 categories.
1) Guys who play good positional D and who also create a lot of turnovers.
2) Plays good positional D but doesnt create many turnovers.
3) Doesn't play good positional D, but makes up for it by creating a lot of turnovers.
4) Doesn't play good positional D or force many turnovers.
The fourth group is usually the domain of freshemn and most freshmen fall into it.
I think of GMac as the best example of group three. He was undersized and was never going to be a blanket defender, but he understood the zone really well, knew when he should take chances on going for a steal and got a lot of them. Enough to be a nusciance that offenses needed to worry about.
Triche is the perfect group 2 example. He understood the zone from day 1. Was tall and strong and always in the right place, but didn't steal the ball often.
For group 1 Ill give you my defensive Mount Rushmore (for the zone) ... Heart, Rautins, MCW, Gbinije.
I would put Richmond in group 3 (though the elite side of group 3). He got tons of steals, but didn't understand the rotations well and gave up a ton of open shots. There are, of course really good reasons for this. His team had no preseason and only about half the regular season practice time that a normal team gets. And at the end of the year when he should have been figuring everything out, instead he was hobbled by a knee injury. I have little doubt he would have jumped up to group 1 had he stayed. But just judging from productivity and not potential, Richmond doesn't touch the top 10 defensive SU guards.
It’s funny - as soon as I saw your Four Quadrants ranking system, my very first thoughts were:
RoboTriche is the poster boy Q2.
GMac ditto for the Q3.
Triche was an artisan master craftsman zone defender.
You could see it in how he shaded and hedged, he never went under a screen, and was more than physical enough to never get moved out of position.
Textbook.
But - he didn’t get a ton of steals.
GMac was never gonna be a plus defender, but he was brilliant at knowing when to gamble for a steal.
Guys like Dion & Cooney were also good at this - baiting the offensive player into thinking an ‘easy’ pass was there, then lunging for the steal, and taking it the other way for a thunder dunk.
So is this a post 1995 Mount Rushmore?It's a fun exercise, I do it with all our players. Not everybody fits neatly into a group (Richmond is one of those guys, and Flynn is too) but I think it's a helpful though imperfect thought experiment.
I'd put Dion and Cooney both into tier 1. There might be room for a tier 1 that has guys like Cooney, Dion Jardine and then an extra level above that for the Mount Rushmore guys. If you do that Howard is kind of a borderline tier 1/Mount Rushmore guy.
I like Sims, Battle, Duany as tier 2 guys.
Flynn is interesting because he got lots of steals but mostly from pressing. He was a tier 1 guy when we pressed and a tier 4 guy when we played zone.
Yes. Too hard to compare say, Stevie Thompson with Mike Gbinije. They were both elite defenders who played both forward and guard but game was so different and their responsibilities were so different that the comparisons kind of stop there.So is this a post 1995 Mount Rushmore?
Quadir Copeland, please.
I think a helpful oversimplification when judging how guards defend in the zone, is to divide them into 4 categories.
1) Guys who play good positional D and who also create a lot of turnovers.
2) Plays good positional D but doesnt create many turnovers.
3) Doesn't play good positional D, but makes up for it by creating a lot of turnovers.
4) Doesn't play good positional D or force many turnovers.
The fourth group is usually the domain of freshemn and most freshmen fall into it.
I think of GMac as the best example of group three. He was undersized and was never going to be a blanket defender, but he understood the zone really well, knew when he should take chances on going for a steal and got a lot of them. Enough to be a nusciance that offenses needed to worry about.
Triche is the perfect group 2 example. He understood the zone from day 1. Was tall and strong and always in the right place, but didn't steal the ball often.
For group 1 Ill give you my defensive Mount Rushmore (for the zone) ... Heart, Rautins, MCW, Gbinije.
I would put Richmond in group 3 (though the elite side of group 3). He got tons of steals, but didn't understand the rotations well and gave up a ton of open shots. There are, of course really good reasons for this. His team had no preseason and only about half the regular season practice time that a normal team gets. And at the end of the year when he should have been figuring everything out, instead he was hobbled by a knee injury. I have little doubt he would have jumped up to group 1 had he stayed. But just judging from productivity and not potential, Richmond doesn't touch the top 10 defensive SU guards.
what tier will he be?
No one has come along since to even be in the same conversation. He was the only lock down defender at guard we have had.Ummm, if Eddie Moss isn’t leading the discussion, it’s not worth having.
I always do.Speak for yourself
Jason Hart would definitely be "in the same conversation"No one has come along since to even be in the same conversation. He was the only lock down defender at guard we have had.
You know who Quadir's game doesn't remind me of at all?oh wait ok this thread is just for naming former players
Bingo. I hate hate hate when people try to imply that getting steals and blocks automatically means you are good defensively. I truly think they have never played competitive basketball. Bruce Bowen hardly ever got steals but was damn near the best on ball defender I’ve ever seen (slightly dirty but...) and you have Javale McGee in seasons putting up elite blocks but is legit one of the worst defenders I’ve ever watched.Getting steals at the top of the zone is not indicative of being a good on the ball defender. They simply are not the same thing. AI was great at getting steals but nobody would ever say he was a good on the ball defender. It would be different if all the steals cam from picking the ball handlers pocket instead of anticipating passes from other players and intercepting them. Both are great players but indicate different abilities. I always pictured a great on the ball defender as a guy that could just harass a ball handler into either a mistake or just giving the ball up, not even mentioning limiting the ability to get a shot off. Some guys, like MCW, can be both.
Good call on Bowen...I would also put Ron Artest(or whatever he calls himself now) right there with him.Bingo. I hate hate hate when people try to imply that getting steals and blocks automatically means you are good defensively. I truly think they have never played competitive basketball. Bruce Bowen hardly ever got steals but was damn near the best on ball defender I’ve ever seen (slightly dirty but...) and you have Javale McGee in seasons putting up elite blocks but is legit one of the worst defenders I’ve ever watched.