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Film Study: Freeing Durant from Artest

I think we can all agree that Ron Artest did a terrific job on Kevin Durant yesterday. KD went just 7-24 from the floor and took eight 3-pointers, hitting only one. He took almost all jumpers, and never looked comfortable. A lot of it had to do with some visible nerves early in the game, but most of it was because of Artest just being a pest. He was disruptive in every way, pushing, pulling and grabbing Durant around every corner.

Here are five plays Durant was stopped and on the end, one successful trip down the floor.

OK, so let’s analyze a bit. The first play:

This play happened mid-way through the second quarter, after Durant had gotten off to a slow start. After OKC had swung the ball around the perimeter trying to find an open look, it came back to Durant. If you watch the play again, notice how Artest bodies up KD. Durant couldn’t move an inch without Artest touching him. The Thunder likes to try and run Durant around screens to give him space, but Artest didn’t allow KD to move without resistance. So the ball comes back to KD and with the shot clock running down, Nick Collison comes to set a pick. Artest does a smart thing making Durant use the pick and thus funneling KD right to a waiting Andrew Bynum. But look how much attention there is on Durant. Kobe is roaming, waiting to help. And even Derek Fisher has sagged into the lane waiting to step up if Durant gets to the rim.

Here, the Lakers get busted for a defensive three seconds, but I wanted to include it to try and illustrate, how tightly Artest glued himself to KD’s side. OKC loves to try and free Durant by running him off a “faux” screen and then trying to bust an unsuspecting defender with a good hard pick on the curl. You see Jeff Green give a small shiver just to rub Artest off and give Durant a little space to run. KD comes all the way around and tries to run off a Krstic pick. It’s not that great and Durant catches the ball a few steps behind the 3-point line. The set isn’t bad because with Durant on the wing, he’s iso’d on Artest and Krstic has spaced the floor well. But notice how Kobe is again just playing rover. He gets caught for a three-second violation, but because Thabo is no threat, KD essentially had a second man shadowing him the entire game.

I thought this might have been the worst offensive set in the game. OKC goes with some kind of double, back-to-back post here with Collison receiving the ball just steps away from a posting Durant. We’ve seen OKC run this before where Nick pivots and feeds Durant on the block. So why does this one look so messed up? Because Artest has moved KD off the block and well out away from the lane. So as a result, KD is standing right next to Collison. Therefore, everything is blown up, Westbrook has to come get the ball and even still, OKC can’t get the ball to KD because of an excellent hedge by Lamar Odom. The ball ends up with Harden on the wing who is indecisiveness and hesitant and ends up virtually throwing it away. Just a real cluster.

Another excellent job by the Laker defense funneling KD into trouble. A really good screen by Ibaka gets Durant the ball with room to operate. Finally, a little air from Artest and his nasty hair. Collison comes and sets another pick on Artest, and KD tries to go at the rim. Artest does an excellent job getting through the pick and then Bynum steps up as Artest recovers. Just excellent help defense. And you’ll notice again, a third Laker (Kobe) is hovering nearby for extra help.

Just a case of KD settling a bit. There’s a lot of time on the 24, and he tosses up a deep 3. Now I almost don’t blame him. He got a good screen from Collison and for once, had some breathing room and a good look. So he took it. Normally, I have no problem with this shot and really here, I still don’t. But it just felt forced a bit. If he knocks it down, then it’s a great pull and a big shot to get both him and the team going. But since he missed it, it just seemed like a force.

I wanted to put this one in on the end, because it’s a good example of Durant catching the ball in an area he could work with. Artest doesn’t force him off the block and KD gets a clean catch. The help defense is slow and KD gets into the lane with ease and knocks down a fairly routine jumper. This a way we’ve become accustomed to seeing Durant score. He got the ball in space and used his height and length to gain a little distance for a clean look. There was no Andrew Bynum running at Durant for a challenge and Pau Gasol was late helping. More of this please.

I don’t think it’s back to the drawing board time for OKC. These are sets the Thunder has used all season and KD led the league in scoring using them. There’s nothing brilliant or innovative about them. Most of them rely on Kevin Durant being awesome at basketball, which most of the time he is. He’s great because he can hit tough shots over anyone, and if he makes three or four of those, he’s got a great game in his pocket and OKC is right in it. So I don’t expect much to change, but the Thunder need to be a little more conscious with the screens for Durant and also KD needs to be aggressive at the basket and not settle for easy jumpers.

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Fesenko's 1-1 defense last season was not good, so either he got better or they got better picking when to use and not use him.

Utah's defensive data suggests Fesenko is very tough to score directly on (at least for back-ups) and team defense was way better with him on than off. Surprisingly team offense was better too.

He is not great or a clear call but I'd still watch and think about him.

If this is Mullens job, is it his next season or the other after or the one after that? I have no idea based on the 56 minutes they gave him in the NBA. Does he get 250 next season? 500? Would that really show much or develop him that much? When could you expect to turn to him in the playoffs?

For me, the game wasn't lost by Durant, and based on the production of others, I don't see how he could have won it. These plays just illustrate to me how vitally important it is for the roll players to step up; only one did (Westbrook). It's crazy how many analysts have said that if Durant hit's a few of the shots he usually makes, they're right in it. The same can be said for Kristic/Green/Harden/Thabo. That quartet shot an identical 7-24 from the field as Durant (helped by 3-5 by Nenad... the other 3 were 4-19. Ouch!!). THAT'S where they need those extra baskets if they're going to stay with the Lakers. Durant went 7-24 because of the attention the entire Lakers team was giving him; those guys hit 7-24 DESPITE the extra room afforded to them by Durant. Westbrook lit it up thanks in part to this extra space. When are those other guys going to similarly take advantage??? And since when was Harden worse than Brown/Fisher/Farmar??? He was terrible. He played like he hadn't touched a basketball in 3 yrs or something. And unless this changes, we have non hope...

If you think Ibaka will handle that role giving up 20, 40, even 60 pounds in a few of these cases right now, ok lets see more of it. If he is going to get to 245+ soon, ok lets see that too.

You need somebody to cover Bynum, Yao, Nene, Oden, Haywood/Dampier and a few more on top teams in the east too.

Actually you probably need 2 to be safe.

Krstic is one for now. Deciding on the second should have size as a pretty significant criteria.

Depending on how he does in the playoffs I would not rule out Krstic opting out. If he did I'd think a dozen teams would at least consider him.

With Mullens there and a Presti 1st rounder, I doubt Fesenko gets a truly serious offer from the Thunder but to take the other side of it and present the case for him:

He isn't that strong on the defensive glass but he is good on the offensive glass.

For a bench big he has a moderate usage rate and does ok.

His turnovers aren't terrible.

Last season he had a real strong strong block rate. He has the capacity, if it is channeled correctly.

His foul rate is high but he has made progress on it every year.

He is one of the 10 tallest and one of the 5 heaviest in the league and is mobile.

You can say different things about this but he has gotten to play 20+ only 4 times in 3 seasons. Utah has had guys in front of him but he hasn't forced their hand either.

He'd be a gamble. Maybe somebody can better connect with and get more of him than Sloan. Or maybe not.

I'd avoid Fesenko. He's already 23 years old, he fouls at an alarming rate, doesn't finish well at the rim, doesn't hit his free throws (40% career). He doesn't even rebound that well to be honest.

He seems pretty lazy. Like a guy who hasn't worked on his game since he got to the NBA.

ah okay... i missed that one... haha thats funny though! lol... theres a reason why he scores like 2points a game and does not get any playing time.

Fasenko was the ass clown that bricked two (2) dunks against us, was about to punch Collison and flipped off the crowd. He is a douche.

Hey everybody watch Fesenko tonight! He is starting in place of Okur.. He is an absolute beast... well size wise not so much in the way he plays.. He could be a good pick up for us. He would be super cheap and he is a big body that the coaching staff can teach and mold.

Being top 4 in the west might be an attainable goal soon, but of course that is far from the ultimate goal and total (but still wise) spending will matter even more in getting to that ultimate goal.

The Thunder paid out somewhere near $68 million last season before getting to cut it back by at least $10 million this season (more after Harpring insurance). Will they go back to $68 million or go higher? How quickly and regularly?

This season 12 teams won 50. 4 won 55. The only real difference for them is playoff seeding. That is pretty important but you can't totally control circumstances and the difference is worth a lot in some cases and not much on others.

Still only 4 teams will get out of the first round in the west. Any little edge can have a large impact.

Last season the top 4 in the west spent close to $81 million each on average.

To be clear, my statement about Webster was based on regular season data. Since he was injured last spring, we don't know much about his playoff performance yet. Same for Harden, actually.

By season average stats there isn't much to favor Webster over Harden. But there are a few things though. If you want him, I assume it would be for his size and the better inside finishing and perceived ability to get, take and make big shots in the playoffs? I can understand that as the stats support those statements. But I don't Portland lets him go (at least in the very near term, before next deadline or summer 2011) and I doubt that is where Presti will spend more, if they do.

I would love to have Martell Webster on our team.

I could / should have added that I assumed a return to health for Roy and Oden. That is not a safe assumption given recent history, but I'd still guess it will happen.

They are a top four team if healthy. Greg Oden and Brandon Roy are both question marks as far as I'm concerned. And Marcus Camby won't last forever.

They're still a playoff team without Roy / Oden which is scary.

Harden-Durant-Green has been dynamite this year (winning at a rate of about (+14 per 48 minutes). Westbrook and Collison seem to work well with those 3 in general too. The full 5 man lineup isn't runaway successful but it is nice enough positive and might be the way to spread the floor.

I guess Paul Allen believes that spending can make a difference. They were probably going to be a top 4 team next season anyways but I'd say this would cement it and I am not sure where to rank them in that top 4 yet.

Jared M :Whenever Kobe is helping out like that there has to be a way for whoever Kobe is supposed to be guarding to cut to the basket or find an open space on the court for an easy shot.If it is Sefalosha he needs to cut to the basket for some easy shots. I have seen him make some good layups and he is pretty good at making those type of shots. And if he does that he could get bynum or gasol a few cheap fouls becuase they tried to come help and try to recover.
There are a few times when Kobe was on Green where he should have stepped down to the free throw line or somewhere close. Durant can get him the ball take one or two dribbles and he could get

I agree. But I think KD also needs to relax more and find these players when they're open. There were two plays in a row in the fourth where kobe sagged all the way into the lane to help on KD, leaving uncle jeff at a perfect 45 from KD waiting in the corner. Both plays, Durant shot over 3 defenders and missed with no foul call. On any other day, he would've found green and it would've been 3 points and the thunder trotting back down the court, but he was so tense and eager to make something happen, he took some somewhat uncharacteristic shots.

@IceOrEnder
That second one was a completely ridiculous call. They barely call moving screens anymore and he barely moved on the 2nd one. Maybe Jackson put a bug in the refs' ears.

@justin
He actually had a couple of those last game - bricks. The fact is, the Lakers treated everyone not named Durant like a D-league player, and for the most part, that's how they played.

But to beat the Kobe recovery they will have act decisively- cutter and passer.

He is not the reliable knock the 3 pt ball guy that some wing defenders are, but they aren't necessarily the long athletic, good finisher he is.

Jared is right about how they should have Sefolosha respond to the Kobe drift off.

Krstic didn't seem to be involved enough. When he's in the game, we should be running PnP stuff and getting him mid range looks to keep Bynum out of the paint a little more.

Sorry, that wasn't a complete thought.

I meant to say that IF all those things would happen then KD could get free of Ron off of ball movement too. He's doing a moderate job of freeing himself off of screens already.

@justin

Yes, but Jeff and James have to show that they can score more than 10 points between the two of them (with the defense ignoring them both) before the scheme changes.

I think that IF Krstic gets his jump shot going, and IF Green will join Russell in attacking the rim, and IF James can shoot from the arc, then that defense will loosen up and KD can get his shots.

Sam had a great year the only problem with him is that even though he's a veteran I don't think he qualifies as 'veteran leader'.

A cheaper option who would be good for an Etan Thomas role only he plays would be Erick Dampier.

Haha. Dalembert can be our outside threat and defensive stopper. Sweet

Sam Dalembert is the answer to every problem.

@IceOrEnder
Wow that's really your only complaint? The dude sets brilliant screens all game every game. And with our stupid repeatedly run durant off hundreds of screens every possesion it's surprising he doesn't he called for mroe.

I agree. He's exactly what we need. Your boy Dalembert still could be a fit. We need a defensive 5 and a shooter. I wouldn't mind seeing us sign a guy like Heinrich.

I kinda have to think the players and coaches were caught off guard by LA's defensive intensity. They simply do not D up like that during the regular season. The Thunder seemed to have no gameplan for the pressure on KD. The criticism that KD didn't pass enough when double/triple/quadruple teamed is a little unfair as there was almost no movement on the other side of the court when he was in those situations. I'm thinking they will plan for that a little better in game 2 and without the early 15 point lead LA got from the shock factor of their surprising defensive intensity in Game 1, the Thunder are in Game 2 wire to wire.

@Jax Raging Bile Duct

Few teams blatantly ignore the rest of our team the way the Lakers did though. Dallas did it. Portland tried to at times.

Usually other teams will at least sort of respect Jeff Green, or James Harden on the perimeter. It's not new for teams to ignore Thabo.

Are Collison's moving screens not starting to outweigh his charges taken? I'm getting tired of wasted possessions because he can't keep his body stationary and feet set.

Using screens is really the only way we'll free KD up right now. It's the only way he's gotten free all year.

If KD played for Orlando, and the defense knew that KD had the option to pass to D12 on the block, or any number of 3 point snipers sitting along the arc, then he would be free a lot. But, since there are so few offensive threats on the court with KD, the defense can play 3 on 1 for a large part of the game and get away with it. We don't have the offensive personnel to force a defense to be honest.

Ball movement will only work IF we can get easy shots at the rim as a result. No one really cares if a wide open Jeff Green gets a pass from a triple-teamed KD, unless Green suddenly hits 3 in a row or gets to the rim 3 times in a row. Ball movement for the sake of ball movement isn't a threat. Get to the rim.

Portland just extended Marcus Camby for 2 years $25 million.

LOL. That first picture epitomizes the whole game. Every Laker player is on KD's side of the court. Amazing.

It really is the way Kobe was allowed to roam that put that defense in place. Artest certainly did a good job, but he could really just run around everything with impunity. KD wasn't going to pass (a problem he has) and in the end even if he got around Artest there would be 2 more players ready to stop him again. An issue with our offense that has always been present is that Durant does not make for a good decoy (like a Manu, Kobe, or even Lebron can be). If he doesn't have the ball, it only takes one guy to keep the ball away from him. If he has the ball, you can double or even triple team him and 90% of the time he's not going to pass to a player who will actually shoot or be in position to shoot.

andrew :
The only way KD will be effective this series is if our 2-guard can knock down jumpers. KD is not capable of beating 3 layers of defense to get to the basket and score. We have to open it up a bit for him.

If Harden can get comfortable and get hot from the 3. That would free up some space for Durant too.

any easy five to ten foot shot. He is taller than Kobe so he most of the time he could still make it even if Kobe recovers from rovering on Durant.... sorry that was a lot!

Whenever Kobe is helping out like that there has to be a way for whoever Kobe is supposed to be guarding to cut to the basket or find an open space on the court for an easy shot.
If it is Sefalosha he needs to cut to the basket for some easy shots. I have seen him make some good layups and he is pretty good at making those type of shots. And if he does that he could get bynum or gasol a few cheap fouls becuase they tried to come help and try to recover.

There are a few times when Kobe was on Green where he should have stepped down to the free throw line or somewhere close. Durant can get him the ball take one or two dribbles and he could get

The only way KD will be effective this series is if our 2-guard can knock down jumpers. KD is not capable of beating 3 layers of defense to get to the basket and score. We have to open it up a bit for him.

Trackbacks

  1. [...] The Imperial: Ron Artest hounded Kevin Durant last night, but perhaps we can glean from that game what the Thunder can do to free their superstar up. [Daily Thunder] [...]

  2. [...] –The Daily Thunder has a detailed video breakdown on how Artest limited Oklahoma City forward Kevin Durant in Game 1. [...]