Detroit Pistons 23-24 Saison Thread - Monty's Madness


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Pistons Starting5:
Sasser
Ivey
Thompson
Wiseman
Duren

Paar Eindrücke zur erste Halbzeit, falls ich einpenne… .D

- Wiseman und Duran beide sehr aktiv, testen fröhlich ihre Offensiv-Skills, werfen ein sogar 3er, bisschen fancy Passing und versuchen sich in 1-vs-1 Situationen - manchmal kommt was bei rum, manchmal nicht. Defensiv teilweise auch recht wild, aber stark an beiden Brettern, oft an der Linie und ein paar Highlight-Plays dabei. Bekommen beide noch genügend Minuten, dürfte das jeweils im Double-Double enden.

- Ivey zu Beginn sehr rostig mit vielen TO‘s und wilden Aktionen, am Ende dann aber deutlich besser im Spiel.

- Thompson wirkt sehr abgeklärt, versucht nichts zu erzwingen und macht das solide. Wenig würfe, dafür paar nette Transition-Aktionen.

- Sasser mit Licht und Schatten, aber man kann schon erahnen warum Troy ihn wollte. Könnte echt ein Energizer von der Bank werden.

- viele TO‘s und wilde Pässe, wenig Shooting, Boeheim eine kleine Ausnahme.
 
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Twin-Towers :saint:

Hätte Ivey ihm ein bisschen häufiger den Ball in Transition gegeben, hätte die statsline etwas besser ausgesehen ;)
 

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Twin-Towers :saint:

Hätte Ivey ihm ein bisschen häufiger den Ball in Transition gegeben, hätte die statsline etwas besser ausgesehen ;)

Die Young Igoudala Vergleiche kann man auf jeden Fall sehen bei Ausar. Schon jetzt unser bester Perimeter Defender, paar echt gute Pässe dabei - quick decision making, passt auch gut zu Montys Spielweise, guter Rebounder - ( Ivey tatsächlich heute sehr eigenwillig). Klar wird viel vom Jumper abhängen wie gut er mal werden kann, aber das ist ja bei vielen das gleiche - trotzdem das macht Bock auf mehr, auch von den anderen Jungs, Duren mit 3er wäre ein Traum und würde viele Driving Möglichkeiten für die Guards eröffnen.
 

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Defensiv war mal wieder Tag der offenen Tür, aber „DurMan“ finde ich unter den Brettern irgendwie trotzdem amüsant…
:D


Pistons-Play of the Night (Thompson macht das bisher in Transition mehrfach so gut)


PS: Jabari hängt zu viel mit Green ab und macht den aufgepumpten SL-Macker mit Ansagen, Rockets-Rivalry rising…
:devilish:
 

Joe Berry

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Heart and Soul of the Team, ist jedes Jahr besser geworden und erst 22, guter Defender und seine Offense wird stetig besser.
$16 million is 11.76% of the 2023-24 cap.

11.76% of the 2022-23 cap is $14.54 million

11.76% of the 2021-22 cap is $13.22 million.

First year of the extension is 2024-25 so the % of cap will be lower than 11.76% as well.
Dazu letztes Jahr Teamoption, was will man mehr. Selbst wenn es für ihn nicht als Vollzeit Starter auf PF reichen sollte, toller Backup PF und C worst Case. Wenn der 3er allerdings konstant fällt ist das ein Steal für solches Geld, dann hätte man einen legitimen 2-way Player.
 
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Joe Berry

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EIGHT VIDEO CAMERAS, each shooting 240 frames per second, surrounded one of the three courts at Overtime Elite's state-of-the-art, 103,000-square-foot facility in Atlanta. Ten of the program's players, including two top-five picks in the recent NBA draft, were going through what looked to be a simple shooting routine: 25 free throws, 25 midrange jumpers, 25 3-pointers from the top of the arc.

This process has occurred twice now, first in January and again in May, as part of a partnership between Overtime Elite, a professional league for 16- to 20-year-olds that serves as an alternative for elite high school, NCAA or the G League Ignite, and Breakaway Data, a startup that has developed a biomechanics shooting lab inspired by Driveline Baseball, a data-driven performance training program that has been revolutionary in that sport.

Breakaway Data, which first worked with quarterbacks before expanding to other positions, had a similar setup in an ancillary gym as part of the NBA's tech summit in connection with the Las Vegas summer league.

Its cameras track the shooters' movements in 24 joint angles, creating thousands upon thousands of data points which are compiled in a five-page report for each player. The reports are a multicolored collection of graphs, charts and bullet-point insights that focus on three aspects of shooting: the set point (lower body), shot sequencing (path of arms and hands) and release point (elbow and wrist).

"I thought it was very informative," Overtime Elite product Amen Thompson, drafted fourth overall by the Houston Rockets, told ESPN. "Not everything works for everybody, but that [data] can't really be a bad thing. It can only help to get as much information as possible. I felt like that's what it gave us."

Thompson and his twin brother, Ausar, who was drafted one pick later by the Detroit Pistons -- prospects who project as stars if they develop as shooters -- didn't actually see the reports breaking down the biomechanics of their shots, much less study them.

That was intentional.

Sehr interessant.
 

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LAS VEGAS — Following a “time-honored tradition,” Team USA was summarily dumped Friday in a scrimmage against a collection of younger, up-and-coming NBA players.

On Day 2 of the American national team’s training camp for the FIBA World Cup, they were beaten soundly by the U.S. Select Team in a scrimmage of two, 10-minute periods. The Select Team, led by 2021 No. 1 pick Cade Cunningham, beat Jalen Brunson, Anthony Edwards, and the rest of Team USA, 47-39.

Statistics for the scrimmage were not shared with the media, but reporters were welcomed into the gym on the campus of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, to watch Cunningham dominate both periods, beating just about every guard who was in front of him off the dribble.

Jalen Green was effective against Team USA, as were Jalen Williams and Jalen Duren — who particularly bothered the World Cup favorites with his size.

“They handed it to us,” Team USA guard Tyrese Haliburton said. “The young guys did their thing today.”

“We lost,” Jaren Jackson said with a laugh.

“It’s a time-honored tradition of USA Basketball,” coach Steve Kerr said. “Everybody knows the Grant Hill, Bobby Hurley story from ’92. In 2019, for the last World Cup, the select team came in, kicked our butts, and that’s the whole point. You want to get great talent to come in and challenge you and that’s what the Select team did today.”

Indeed, Hill (who is now managing director for Team USA) and Hurley, at the time Duke teammates, were on a select team of college stars that was the only team to beat Michael Jordan’s Dream Team in any game in 1992 early in training camp.

Haliburton was on the U.S. Select Team in 2021 that beat the Americans in a scrimmage, prior to their eventual winning of gold at the Tokyo Olympics.

So, it’s not quite time to push the panic button yet. Team USA’s first exhibition game against an opponent outside of the USA Basketball family is at 10:30 p.m. ET Monday against Puerto Rico here in Las Vegas. Another scrimmage is expected with the Select Team on Saturday.

“The next day you come in a little chippier,” Team USA’s Brandon Ingram said.

The media was not let in until about midway through the first period, so reporters did not see who was on the floor for Team USA when the scrimmage began, but team sources told The Athletic that Ingram, Brunson, Mikal Bridges, Jackson, and Cam Johnson were the first five out there for the Americans.

Kerr declined to name who his starters were, but he said, “We didn’t have any intention of, like, ‘This is gonna be our starting lineup.'” Kerr said he asked his assistants in a meeting before the scrimmage to write down who they wanted to see in the first lineup. “We had like 10 lineups,” he said. “Gives you an idea that there’s really nothing set yet.”

Team USA’s second unit, then, for at least the first day, was Edwards, Austin Reaves, Haliburton, Paolo Banchero, and Bobby Portis. Walker Kessler and Josh Hart were the last two into the scrimmage. Edwards and Haliburton showed flashes of scoring, Brunson threw a couple of impressive passes, and Reaves splashed a 3, but otherwise, the Americans were victimized by some missed shots on open 3-point attempts and by a struggle to rebound.

As for Cunningham, the 6-foot-6, 220-pound guard looked fully recovered from the December shin surgery that kept him out for all but 12 games with the Detroit Pistons last season.

“He looked great,” Kerr said. “The injury is clearly behind him and it’s great to see him healthy. He’s a guy who can really control the game from the point guard spot with his size and physicality.”

Kerr said he asked U.S. Select Team coach Jamahl Mosley to run actions in which Cunningham would “do a little Luka (Dončić) impersonation” in high pick-and-roll and other actions in which the point guard dominates the ball.

Dončić, the Dallas Mavericks star who left Slovenia’s exhibition game against Greece on Friday after banging knees with an opponent, will face the Americans in a friendly game next week in Spain.

Cunningham, who said he decided to join the Select Team (which disbands after training camp ends Sunday) for “the experience, being around the best players in the league and learning,” also said he wasn’t surprised the Select Team gave Team USA fits.

“That’s what we came here to do,” Cunningham said.

“What I saw, the kid Jalen Duren and Cade Cunningham, they had really good chemistry today,” Ingram said. “Duren was really good on that board today, but we did some things offensively that we really like. Defensively we want to rebound the basketball a little better.”
 
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