Melo to LA......

spider705

Light skin, non ADOS Lebron hater!
BGOL Investor
I don't think you fully understand how 'switching' works. :dunno: (At least how the Rockets do it, that is.)

I think you keep assuming that every single time a 'switch' occurs.... it ALWAYS FAVORS the Offense.... But it does not. :smh:

As I said earlier... 'Mismatches' work in both directions. :yes: Just depends on 'who is left guarding who'.
Sometimes (when you switch) YOU will have the 'defensive advantage' on certain players, depending on where they are on the floor.

Because not everyone 'is a threat to score' (at ALL times) if they catch the ball in certain spots on the floor.

Watch the 2 videos, below....
  • Some guys don't dribble as well as others.
  • Some guys are not as aggressive as others.
  • Some guys can't shoot well from the outside.
  • Some guys make bad decisions if they have to dribble too long.
  • Some guys don't take advantage of blatant mismatches in their favor.
It all depends on WHERE they catch the ball... and WHO is standing right in front of them. :yes:

The Rockets switch A LOT. :yes: And they create mismatches all over the court. Constantly.
Sometimes switching benefits the offensive player.... sometimes switching benefits the defensive player. (keyword: sometimes)

It's not as one-sided as you seem to think it is. :smh:





Granted, losing Ariza was detrimental... but he's not the ONLY guy on the Rockets who can 'switch' and still have a 'defensive advantage' at times. :smh:
So losing one single player is not going to ruin their whole system. :smh:

However... losing someone like CAPELA would have a 'much bigger impact' on their 'switching' style of defense... than losing Ariza, in my opinion. :yes:

But the Rockets STILL have the personnel to keep defending this way. :yes:
Even if they get Melo.

Just saying.

We ain't losing Capella.
Tillman Fertita already said they matching WHATEVER offer sheet he signs.
 

34real

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
no,never unless he changes the way he plays,chuck was right him and how he'll never lead a team to a championship;his best chance was when he was with denver.
 

grownazzblakman

Rising Star
Platinum Member
We ain't losing Capella.
Tillman Fertita already said they matching WHATEVER offer sheet he signs.
^^ This. Agreed. Exactly. They would be crazy to let him go.

I think if they ever 'made the mistake' of letting Capela go... the Rockets would HAVE to change up the whole way they play defense.
No more switching, continuously. :smh: Just my opinion.
 

BrownTurd

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
The warriors are champions when you join champions you buy in or get out.

Warriors more than likely have no interest in Melo
If he came he'd strictly be a bench player there's nowhere you could say he could start and I don't think melo believes he's in the pure bench role at this point in his career

He could go to Miami or Philly and start and produce well in those systems
 

DADDY4HOES

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
The game has evolved to a smaller, quicker style and Melo holding he ball doesn't fit in. Prediction: Between Melo and Doc's son...the Clippers will never be shyt
 

Gazoo

The Big Brain
Registered
Wherever he goes he needs to do a David Robinson and focus on other aspects of his game.
 

Complex

Internet Superstar
BGOL Investor
Houston's fucking up

and Capela is pissed at Houston trying to low ball him. No team really has money to offer him and offer sheet though. IMO Dallas should have done one with him and tried to get him instead of 30 year old no offense Jordan.

Capela might do a one year deal and try and become a unrestricted free agent next year when a lot of teams have money and fuck Houston's future all up.

Houston's defense is going to drop next year, so I guess they feel Melo can help their offense. Houston plays a lot of one on one ball and kicking out to an open shooter, so Melo might be ok for that.
 

BronxBomber

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Melo is a liability to any team in the hunt for a chip. No way if Im in contention do I pick him up. Its a wrap....
 

KunningLinguist

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
If Melo is going to be going the David West route and chase rings he should sign with the Rockets. Also Melo is about getting paid, he's not taking less to play w/ Lebron

do you understand what buy out means?

he'll get most of his cash from OKC....so whoevers he signs with will get him for the low
 

ak_rep

Rising Star
Registered
Yeah Houston's not looking too cool at the moment. A smaller roster. May have to plug in a Jerami Grant type into the starting lineup.:dunno:
 

Llano

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
This been a bad off season, we lose 2 key defenders & now we lack depth at small forward. I don't like the MCW signing either. I guess Melo already gave Morey the heads up he's coming to Houston once he's officially released
 

shaddyvillethug

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
This been a bad off season, we lose 2 key defenders & now we lack depth at small forward. I don't like the MCW signing either. I guess Melo already gave Morey the heads up he's coming to Houston once he's officially released
Don’t bet on it
 

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
https://www.si.com/nba/2018/07/23/carmelo-anthony-signs-houston-rockets

The Houston Rockets will sign veteran forward Carmelo Anthony, Marc Stein of the New York Times reports.

Anthony spent last season with the Oklahoma City Thunder after being traded from the New York Knicks.

On July 19, the Thunder traded Anthony to the Atlanta Hawks in a three-team deal, and then Atlanta eventually waived him so he could hit the open market.

According to the report, Anthony's free agency won't happen before next week while the trade to the Hawks becomes official.

The 34-year-old Anthony opted in to a $27.9 million option earlier in the offseason.

Oklahoma City explored trade possibilities with Anthony where he would be sent as an expiring contract and have his deal waived so he could hit free agency, according to ESPN.com's Adrian Wojnarowski. This route relied on Anthony waiving his no-trade clause, which Wojnarowski reported Anthony agreed to do to facilitate his exit.

Wojnarowski also reported that before the trade, Oklahoma City allowed Anthony the chance to meet with perspective teams during the NBA Summer League in Las Vegas, and he met with the Rockets and Heat.

The 10–time All–Star averaged a career-low 16.2 points a game and shot 40.4% percent from the floor, also the lowest in his career.

Anthony can provide a steady third scoring option for the explosive Houston offense, led by NBA MVP James Harden and perennial All–Star point guard Chris Paul.

In 15 seasons, Anthony has averaged 24.1 points a game, but has only reached the conference finals once in his career.
 

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
The Rockets' All-Out Pursuit of the Warriors Hits a Roadblock

The 2018 Western Conference finals may well be remembered not for what it was, but for what it could have been. Less than a year in the making, the matchup was a culmination of Houston’s all-out effort to topple the unbeatable Warriors as most of the league either actively or tacitly conceded defeat. And yet, the seven-game series lacked some of the intrigue that felt forthcoming all season long. Andre Iguodala missed the last four games with a left knee sprain, Chris Paul sat out the final two with a strained hamstring and strategic matchup hunting corrupted some of the artful and surgical flair with which the two teams played all season. Still, these Rockets pushed Golden State as hard as it had been pushed in the Kevin Durant era. Had a handful of things broken the other way, it might be Golden State facing a critical offseason.

Instead, Houston is scrambling to remain in contention with a group that may have already reached its peak. The financial realities of contending in the NBA hit the Rockets hard this summer. With Paul and James Harden on max deals and Ryan Anderson’s hefty contract still on the books, the team had no room to retain Trevor Ariza—lured away by Phoenix for one year and $15 million—or Luc Mbah a Moute, who returned to the Clippers on a one-year, $4.3 million contract. Even with Clint Capela still unsigned, the Rockets are a pricy bunch.

Teams with so little margin for error can hardly bear to lose players so integral to the fabric of their roster, especially under Mike D’Antoni, who is reluctant to go deep into his bench. The Warriors, through brutal exploitation of their opponents’ weaknesses, limit the pool of players that can even stay on the court in the playoffs. Mbah a Moute and Ariza were among those that could survive the gauntlet, and the Rockets are thin on replacements. James Ennis, who inked a two-year deal with Houston after Ariza’s departure, is a fine stopgap on the wing, but may leave teams with higher expectations wanting. Gerald Green will be punching well above his weight in anything more than a microwave bench role, while expecting playoff-caliber minutes from De’Anthony Melton sets a high bar for a rookie that proved so little at the college level.


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Ronald Martinez/Getty Images
After rumors of mutual interest between the Rockets and Carmelo Anthony swirled for weeks, if not months, the mercurial star will sign with Houston, according to the New York Times' Marc Stein. But while Anthony offers a nice scoring punch, he’s hardly a panacea. With virtually all of the offense routed through Harden and Paul, the Rockets simply don’t need what Anthony brings to the table as much as they need tough, versatile defenders. Few wings combine defensive versatility and shooting—the essential pillars of Houston’s strategy—as effectively as Ariza and Mbah a Moute. Chiefly, they were vital components of the Rockets’ switch-heavy scheme. The Rockets posted a top-three defensive mark with Mbah a Moute on the court; during the playoffs, their defense was almost 11.5 points per 100 possessions better with Ariza on the floor than with him off. Both are strong, physical defenders with plus wingspans. Mbah a Moute routinely hounded wings and jostled with bigger players while Ariza makes even the league’s best perimeter scorers work for everything.



It’s here that Anthony and the Rockets clash ideologically. Throughout his career, Anthony has mostly shown a lack of engagement on defense and an unwillingness to accept anything less than a star’s workload on offense. Despite their offensive limitations, Ariza and Mbah a Moute were self-aware, and filled specialized roles buoyed by Harden and Paul’s playmaking. Anthony, meanwhile, subsists almost entirely on having the ball in his hands and occupies areas the Rockets actively avoid; an isolation by Harden or Paul is a fundamentally different proposition than one by Anthony. Every possession he soaks up by nodding and jabbing is one not orchestrated by an elite facilitator, and he isn’t efficient enough to justify a primary role.



Mbah a Moute and Ariza helped give the Rockets balance. They were low-maintenance support players without delusions of larger roles, but threatening enough to be paid their share of attention. Only Eric Gordon made more triples than Ariza off of passes from Harden, while Mbah a Moute had the most efficient offensive season of his career last season. Perhaps those marks offer hope for Anthony’s fit. Stylistic differences notwithstanding, Anthony has the skills to be weaponized in D’Antoni’s offense. But a team that challenges the Warriors must be cogent and stable in all areas. Given the changes they’ve made, the Rockets will have to prove once again that they’re that team.
 
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