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MAVERICKS FALL TO CLIPPERS AT AAC
MAVS LEAD SERIES 2-1

The Mavs did not bring their “A” game to this one, squandering a 19-point early lead, and stumbling to a ten-point deficit at the end. 


GAME STORY

The only new injured player reported among both teams was Serge Ibaka, who has apparently been struggling with a back problem. Rick went with the starting lineup that had been working for him — Luka, THJ, DFS, KP, Maxi.  The Clippers rolled out Jackson, PG, Kawhi, Zubac, and Morris,  inserting Reggie as point guard in lieu of Beverley. 

FIRST QUARTER

Luka opened the scoring with a Dirk-style fadeaway over Zubac, following it up with a three from downtown, and another from the sideline. A Clippers timeout less than three minutes in saw Batum come in for Zubac. Hardaway and Luka responded with two threes. KP got on the board with an and-one, then fired up a three. Dallas was out to a 20-6 lead at 7:36. Kleber opened his account with a three. KP swatted away a Jackson shot. Hardaway skipped to a PUJIT. DFS tipped in a Luka miss. It looked like it was going to be the Mavericks night. 

Rondo and Mann came in at around the 5:00 mark (Rondo to a chorus of boos), and the Mavs bench began filtering in. Brunson slid to the basket to score over Batum. Dallas fell apart at the seams, and their 19-point lead slipped to 5 at 1:55. Luka came back in at 1:31. 

The game took a schoolyard turn when Beverley entered. It took only a few seconds for he and Luka to get into it. Double techs were issued. WCS went up for a hard foul on Mann. The play was reviewed, and the foul was upgraded to a Flagrant One. Mann’s freebies and a subsequent Zubac bucket brought the Clips to within one. Richardson followed with a shot in the paint. The first quarter concluded with a 34-31 score line in favor of the Mavs. The buzzer was a welcome break, as the Mavericks appeared to be on the verge of falling for the Clippers' baiting tactics and losing their cool.

SECOND QUARTER

Brunson banked in a three to follow a George bucket. Kawhi responded with a triple of his own. Luka hit a step-back over Zubac, and then angled in a leaner off the glass. Luka took his first free throws at 9:45, and missed both. The starters were back in at 8:10, with the score 44-40.  Neither side was showing any enthusiasm for defense (unless you want to count the cheap shots from the Clipper guards on Luka). 

PG gave the Clips their first lead of the game at 6:45 with a three. Brunson re-took it with a three of his own. After the Clips tied again, Maxi hit a corner three. The teams continued to exchange baskets. The Mavs took a timeout facing a 50-53 deficit. 

The chippy play continued, as Terence Mann tripped Luka, and both ended up on the floor. THJ tied the game with a three at 3:33. Reggie hit two threes in the last couple of minutes. A Luka fadeaway brought the deficit within two, and the quarter closed with the Mavs trailing 61-63.

For the first half as a whole, the real killer was the Clippers’ 14-0 run in 101 seconds toward the end of the first quarter. Kawhi and George combined for 40 of the Clips’ 63 points, and hit 18 of their 22 attempts. LA shot an unacceptable 76% inside the arc, and outscored Dallas 28-14 in the paint, with the Mavs offering very little in the way of resistance. The Mavs had 12 threes on 54% shooting from deep, but even the treys did not make up for the Clippers’ constant parade to the basket. Luka was the only Mav in double figures, with most of his teammates not shooting well, and the Mavericks losing the rebounding battle 14-21. The Mavericks appeared lucky to be down only two points, and it was clear that the Mavs were going to have to pick up their defense if they hoped to stay in this contest. 

THIRD QUARTER

A couple of minutes in, Luka was called for his third foul for jumping into PG on a three-point attempt at the end of the shot clock, bailing George out on a fizzling possession. Doncic dramatically dropped to the floor in dismay after pleading with the refs. The play was reviewed, and the foul was determined to be on the shot. Luka returned the favor with a four-point play.  He tied the game with another three, but the Clips quickly responded. The Mavs looked a bit discombobulated, as the next few possessions featured back-to-back turnovers, in addition to a possession where four tip-in attempts all failed to hit the mark. The Clippers took their largest lead of the series that far when PG free throws gave them a five-point edge, and they soon increased their advantage to seven. Nick Angstadt tweeted that the Mavs had an appalling 134 defensive rating to that point. 

PG was called for his fourth on a blocking foul drawn by Willie, causing George to retire to the bench at 3:48. Another delay occurred after the play when Terence Mann did an Oscar-worthy Swan Lake impression, sinking to the floor as if he were dying after a brush with Willie's  arm. The play was reviewed for a hostile act, and a T was called on Willie for a “physical taunt.” Really? The quarter ended with the Mavs down 86-89. The Mavs did not produce a field goal in the last 4 minutes. 

FOURTH QUARTER

Luka had an abridged rest to start the frame, checking back in at 8:25, and immediately scoring. A Brunson triple brought the Mavs within three, resulting in a Clippers timeout. Sadly, at 6:23, the LA lead was back to eight. Mavs were having a hard time getting anything going. 

Kawhi gave his team their biggest lead so far at 10 points with 5 minutes remaining. Maxi answered with a three. Maxi then bit on a pump fake by Kawhi, sending Leonard to the line, where he of course hit both free throws. Luka threw a bad pass, turning the ball over. Rondo fouled Luka at 3:54, but LD missed both attempts. Morris hit a corner three, and was called for a taunting foul after the shot. The Clips feasted on threes from the left corner all night. KP hit the technical free throw, but the Mavs were facing an 11-point deficit with less than 4 minutes left. 

Maxi turned the ball over trying to give it back to Luka after a handoff. Morris fouled out at 2:52. The Clips challenged the foul call, and were unsuccessful. Batum replaced Morris. Luka drew another foul, and split another pair of FTAs. Kris missed a wide open three.  Jackson hit another trey from the dreaded left corner. Brunson fouled Kawhi after letting 18 seconds run off the clock. KL continued the Clips’ perfect performance from the line. Luka hit a three, but by then the hole was just too big. KP fouled Rondo after letting 18 seconds go by. Coach Lue waved his deep bench onto the court for the last 16 seconds, and the buzzer mercifully sounded. 


STATISTICS

We might as well start with the shooting stats. Mavs went 38% on twos, 51% on threes, and 67% on FTAs.  Clippers numbers were 69/42/94. Mavs point differentials were -26 on points from twos, +21 on points from threes, and -5 on made free throws. Despite the Mavs getting 10 more shots up, and shooting very well from range, the Clippers overwhelmed them with their inside game. 

The Clips had a 46-24 advantage in PIP, and a 12-4 margin in fast-break points. Dallas had a 17-6 edge in second-chance points, and a 13-7 lead in offensive rebounds. 


PLAYERS

DONCIC.  Luka accumulated 44 points, 9 rebounds, and 9 assists in 39 minutes on the court. He was amazing, but a one-man offense was not enough. 

KLEBER. Maxi had a 14-1-1 line, on 5-9 shooting. He had the unenviable assignment of guarding Kawhi, who was pretty much unstoppable. 

BRUNSON. Jalen had 14 points in 22 minutes in his role as sixth man. Although he had a normal offensive night, he gave up a lot on the defensive end, and had a team-worst -19 plus-minus. 

HARDAWAY.  Tim had only 12 points, was 4-14 from the field (4-6 from three), and pulled down 6 rebounds. He was part of the group that got somewhat shot-happy after building a big lead, and subsequently, there didn’t seem to be any concerted effort to involve him, with the offense being very heliocentric on the night. 

PORZINGIS. It was a very disappointing night from KP on both ends of the court, or so it seemed to me. He had only 9 points on 3-10 shooting. The Clips made liberal use of small lineups, and KP was for the most part unable to take advantage of the mismatches. He grabbed only 3 boards, and admitted after the game that he needs to make a bigger effort on the offensive glass. Defensively, it appeared to me that he was almost a disaster. I don’t know what else to say. Dang. Would love for someone to show me that I am wrong. 

DFS. Dorian had 7 rebounds and tried to do some defensive work, but had only 6 points and was 3-10 from the field. We know he is capable of much better on either end. 

BENCH. Richardson, Willie and Powell combined for 9 points, 5 boards, 2 blocks, an assist and a steal, and were a collective -14 in a total of 32 minutes. Willie was the most impactful of the three, backing up KP. 

CLIPPERS. Kawhi and Paul George had a spectacular night, combining for 65 points on 24-35 shooting. In addition. Morris and Jackson totaled 31 points between them, with Morris going 6 of 9 before fouling out. Rondo was pretty effective on Luka, and we might see more of that matchup as the series progresses. 


OBSERVATIONS

Carlisle noted that, with the Clips going so small, the Mavs should have been much better on the boards (they were out-rebounded 33-39). He added that it was clear that defense was the most important problem. 

The Mavs started the game with great intensity and effectiveness, building a 19-point lead. When Luka went out in the first, the lead melted away in the course of a few minutes. Luka felt that the collapse was a combination of taking bad shots and relaxing a little too much with a lead. Dallas never really recovered from that stretch, looking on the edge of losing their composure more than once. KP admitted that it had been an emotional roller coaster, and it may have been a struggle at times to keep their feelings under control. The Clippers were clearly trying to get under their skin, and the tactic seemed to work, at least to a degree. 

The bench units tended to drag the team down, and one would hope that they could at least begin to hold their own during the minutes they are on the floor. 

The Mavs hit very well from three, and we know they can score on the Clips. However, their defense was extremely poor, and there were stretches where they couldn’t buy a stop. The defensive performance down the stretch was also very bad. ESPN ran a video segment post-game illustrating the Mavs’ poor decision-making and miscommunication during the last few minutes. Yikes.  

I feel like the Clips gave us their best shot, and definitely looked the better team after the first eight minutes or so. Congrats to Ty Lue on his adjustments, and to his players for executing so well.

It’s Carlisle’s move now. The defense has to be much better if the team is to capitalize on their first two wins. This loss was not just on KP, but the Mavs really need to get more out of him. If not, I think it will be very difficult to advance. Imho, the offense needs to get back to being at least somewhat less Luka-dependent. If Luka is the only guy who scores very much or takes many shots, the game becomes way too predictable for the opponent. Of course, the “others” need to be able to make their shots at a respectable clip, and you can’t win on many nights when KP, DFS, and THJ combine to go 10 of 34 (29%) from the field. 

This match was more like what I think most of us were expecting when the series started. It’s only one loss, and the Mavs are still in the driver’s seat. But it’s a shot across the bow, and the Mavericks had best take heed, if they can. 

The two teams meet again on Sunday in Dallas. 
Watching that game I was seeing more 2 shots than pushing the ball for layups and dunks. That was eye test, so I decided to look up the shot charts for games 1, 2 and 3. 

Game 1:
https://www.nba.com/game/dal-vs-lac-0042...ame-charts
20 shots outside the restricted area and inside the 3 line.

Game 2:
https://www.nba.com/game/dal-vs-lac-0042...ame-charts
24 shots outside the restricted area and inside the 3 line.

Game 3:
https://www.nba.com/game/lac-vs-dal-0042...ame-charts
32 shots outside the restricted area and inside the 3 line.


In games 1 and 2, I see the restricted area is filled up with X's and O's. Game 3 there are a few. Either the Clippers stopped them from going to the hoop, or the Mavs stopped trying, or some combination of both. I just remember even Luka jacking up more jump shot 2's than the previous 2 games and thought it a bit odd.

The other big thing is FT accuracy. WTF is going on with that?
I remember growing up we lived in a big neighborhood that had 1 central pool and park area. In that front park area, there was a large field where we would play pickup football. Our problem every game? There was one guy in the neighborhood that was so much better at quarterback than anyone else, so his team always won. Eventually we decided in games where he showed up he would always be the designated QB.

I wish JRich could be our designated FT shooter!!!!!!!
(05-29-2021, 10:53 AM)ItsGoTime Wrote: [ -> ]In games 1 and 2, I see the restricted area is filled up with X's and O's. Game 3 there are a few. Either the Clippers stopped them from going to the hoop, or the Mavs stopped trying, or some combination of both. I just remember even Luka jacking up more jump shot 2's than the previous 2 games and thought it a bit odd.

The other big thing is FT accuracy. WTF is going on with that?
Thanks for posting the shot charts. 


I think a key part of the Clippers' defensive strategy was to keep the Mavs out of the paint, and it largely succeeded. Arguably, to the point where the Mavs lost some of their will to battle inside. Dallas often made the Clips pay with excellent three-point shooting, but got very few easy baskets. 

The Mavs completed 12 of their 18 free-throw attempts. All the misses were by Luka. A conundrum, to be sure.
https://preview.redd.it/pvtci88l33271.png?width=778&format=png&auto=webp&s=6de0d498ef73bb2bc2b77638ee1d8dfa9da62ee0
Also last night it was apparent that we need a good defensive assistant coach...
(05-29-2021, 12:29 PM)ClutchDirk Wrote: [ -> ]https://preview.redd.it/pvtci88l33271.png?width=778&format=png&auto=webp&s=6de0d498ef73bb2bc2b77638ee1d8dfa9da62ee0

Take note whom the top 3 players in def rating are. Those numbers are bad, but they're better than the other guys'.
(05-29-2021, 12:29 PM)ClutchDirk Wrote: [ -> ]https://preview.redd.it/pvtci88l33271.png?width=778&format=png&auto=webp&s=6de0d498ef73bb2bc2b77638ee1d8dfa9da62ee0

Wow, that is one horrifying chart.
It took me a while to look at the game flow.  Not much to glean.  We died any time DFS sat and we got killed any time Rondo was in the game.  MacMahon apparently noticed the same thing.

[/url]
Tim MacMahon

@espn_macmahon
[url=https://twitter.com/espn_macmahon]

·
4h
(05-29-2021, 03:11 PM)DanSchwartzgan Wrote: [ -> ]It took me a while to look at the game flow.  Not much to glean.  We died any time DFS sat and we got killed any time Rondo was in the game.  MacMahon apparently noticed the same thing.

[/url]
Tim MacMahon

@espn_macmahon
[url=https://twitter.com/espn_macmahon]

·
4h

Well, then, that's easily fixed. Just play them both the whole game.
I would never have taken Luka out of the game on a streak like that in 1st quarter. And for that matter the whole starting unit. If that continued for half a quarter more, it was a complete knockout. I do understand he needs to sit and rest. But you manage the game and sit your superstar on other occasions, for instance when he is not a streak like that. If that blood shed continued, the game was over at halftime. Literally 3-0. The sport, like any other, is about momentum. You dont mess with that and invite the opponent back into the game, into the series. That being said, im happy overall with our head coach. But when you got your opponent down on their knees, you finish the job early and get the win.

EDIT: Ive seen all Lukas games since he was a Maverick. That was his best streak of any game he has had before being taken out in 1st quarter. He was a man posessed to knockout the opponent somewhere in 2nd quarter. Much like Mike Tyson or Mohamed Ali ending games at will early or whenever they wanted. Rick when you see Luka play like that wanting to take out the opponent early, dont take him out please.
The atmosphere was electric last night.  Nice job Mavs fans.   Playoff games take a lot out of me.  Boy are they stressful, but fun.  

KP needs to be better, period.  Although, sometimes seeing how players react to adversity gives you a better glimpse of what you have.   I was really interested to see how some of our players would react to playoff basketball.   Some of the guys are performing to my expectations.   Still some tough games left though.

Playoff basketball series are tough to win, and they get tougher to win the further they go.   It can be a wild roller coaster ride. What I saw last night, I personally feel the Mavs are the slight underdog even as they are up 2-1.   

Mavs cannot allow Leonard and George to shoot such a good percentage and allow their others guys to hit shots as well.   Not sure there is an easy answer though.

This is true for most teams, but especially the Clipps.   They are a great front running team.   When they are up by 6, the basket can look like the ocean.   The Mavs need to really force pressure on the clipps.   Not sure this team, outside of Luka, is set to do this by attacking the rim.   The Clipps very well may produce in the clutch, but the more pressure you put on them to execute late, the better for the other team imo. 

Playoff basketball is so fun.    The Clipps took the Mavs big shot early and were the better team the 3 remaining quarters.   Lets see if the Mavs can answer the Clipps strong play.
My own recipe, to win the next game, and this series, is to focus on PG. Not Kawhi. But PG. Look, Kawhi can't be stopped, he is going to score and be effective in any situation, no matter how much or little you double team him. You can double Kwhi all game, he will not score, but involve the teammates, then we could stop double team him in lets say 4th quarter. What would happen. Nothing, Kawhi would not get cold, he would instantly break down any single matchup. The guy has no memory, and you mentally cant impact this player. He is a cold blooded, even maybe a robot literally. We have to live with him splitting many single matchups and live by that.

PG, on other hand. He is a player that has hot and cold streaks. He, if doubled, for serious streches of the game, not getting baskets, he can get really cold. PG is not a robot, he is a soft human being. This player, can be impacted psychologically in a game by the opponents and their strategy. He has a memory. He is every bit outstanding as Kawhi in terms of skill set, physically, but mentally is very far from Kawhi.

Every game we won against Clippers, it was games where PG was cold and made a lot of misses. You can count the games in this series, but also last season. On other hand, every game we lost, PG was productive and effective, and got in a streak.

The key to winning series is not Kawhi. Luka and Kawhi cancel each other out to some extent. Its all about PG however. He needs to get doubled, and there is no way, we can allow for him to get hot, as we did in last game. Whenever he makes a basket, the next time he get the ball he needs to get doubled, so that he cant get in rhythm, that he needs. Once in a while you release that double team, and I bet you, he will get cold and make many misses. He has a memory, and if he has not had enough points in some time, he has a clear tendency to get cold and miss many shots and take bad decisions. His tendency here when cold, is also to force things, as he has the ego to want to get in a streak again and get points. Its here that he makes most of his inefficient efforts and costs the team. This is where we need to have PG, and we can impact him to get to this level.

Once PG is cold, we channel the ball to him, and double Kawhi. And let DFS take PG.

This strategy will enforce that towards end of the games, Clippers have a Kawhi double teamed unable to score, and a cold PG with space, also unable to score. This is what we want to get to. This is what we had in first two games.
Luka said that he injured his neck at halftime, and played through it in the second half. He was hoping massage and ice would leave him good to go. 

He is listed as questionable for Game Four. 

Yikes.
He'll play. Because if he doesn't, this series is tied 2-2.
1st quarter -  KP went 2-4 and 1-2 from 3  That's solid production and solid usage.
2nd quarter - 0-1  - When he came back in at 8:10, he got one shot at 5:36 and didn't get a shot the rest of the half.  I saw several times that Brunson passed him up on a normal rotation or went to the basket when KP had a wide open shot.
3rd quarter - 1-1 - He got a shot at 11:16 left in the 3rd...didn't shoot again until 10 minutes left in the 4th.
4th quarter - 0-4 - He got one shot at 10 minutes left, one at 6 minutes left and then missed a 3 pointer at 5:30, missed at 3 at 2:18

Look, it's pretty obvious that if you want him to produce, he's got to touch the ball on offense and as much as it effects the geometry or whatever on the court, he can't just sit there in the corner drawing KL away from the basket and then just heat up in the 4th.

He didn't start bad, but then they just went away from him and never really got back until the 4th when they were down and trying to come back.

You can say that's his fault, but as I've said many times, it's not the big man's job to get himself the ball and get his own shot...guards can do that, but he can't...the big man depends on the offensive set and the guards to get him the ball similar to how a WR is valuable when the QB and Offensive Coordinator put him in a position to be utilized.  

Yeah, KP is "weak-minded" because he can't just sit there in the corner doing nothing --- which is a hard place to come from, as a big man, to get offensive rebounds by the way -- and then just turn it on and score 12 in the 4th...which is what it would have taken for him to get to solid production.  He went 2 quarters with 2 shots and KP isn't a guy that turns down shots very often...in fact, he's been accused of being a black hole, so if he's only getting 2 shots in 2 quarters of play, then I would suspect that it's not because he's just turning down shots.

If he's not getting shots, that's coach and PG, just like if a WR isn't getting the ball, it's QB and Offensive Coordinator (if the WR can get open)...  If he has a lot of drops (missed shots), then I get it...absolutely.  BUT, if he's going long stretches in the game not getting a shot...

The same people blame KP for not giving them more, seem to be the same people who say that Luka can't do it by himself and needs some help.  To me, that's the same mentality as handing the ball off to a RB 50 times a game, not throwing a pass and blaming the WRs for not being helpful.  Yeah, they can block, but they block better when the ball comes there way...you can fuss at that or deal with the reality...same thing here.  That's my opinion.

I'm on record with being fine with trading KP, so I'm no KP fanboy, but I'm a realist that wants the Mavs to win, not just find a whipping boy to complain about so I can pretend to have some sort of control on the situation...I don't.  If he's sitting there with all this skill, stop acting like he's one of the Pipps and run the offense through him when Luka isn't on the floor, rather than the Brunson driving school that happens when Luka isn't out there.

I'm just sayin....I want to win like everyone else.  This is the better chance.
(05-29-2021, 04:36 PM)burekemde Wrote: [ -> ]My own recipe, to win the next game, and this series, is to focus on PG. Not Kawhi. But PG. Look, Kawhi can't be stopped, he is going to score and be effective in any situation, no matter how much or little you double team him. You can double Kwhi all game, he will not score, but involve the teammates, then we could stop double team him in lets say 4th quarter. What would happen. Nothing, Kawhi would not get cold, he would instantly break down any single matchup. The guy has no memory, and you mentally cant impact this player. He is a cold blooded, even maybe a robot literally. We have to live with him splitting many single matchups and live by that.

PG, on other hand. He is a player that has hot and cold streaks. He, if doubled, for serious streches of the game, not getting baskets, he can get really cold. PG is not a robot, he is a soft human being. This player, can be impacted psychologically in a game by the opponents and their strategy. He has a memory. He is every bit outstanding as Kawhi in terms of skill set, physically, but mentally is very far from Kawhi.

Every game we won against Clippers, it was games where PG was cold and made a lot of misses. You can count the games in this series, but also last season. On other hand, every game we lost, PG was productive and effective, and got in a streak.

The key to winning series is not Kawhi. Luka and Kawhi cancel each other out to some extent. Its all about PG however. He needs to get doubled, and there is no way, we can allow for him to get hot, as we did in last game. Whenever he makes a basket, the next time he get the ball he needs to get doubled, so that he cant get in rhythm, that he needs. Once in a while you release that double team, and I bet you, he will get cold and make many misses. He has a memory, and if he has not had enough points in some time, he has a clear tendency to get cold and miss many shots and take bad decisions. His tendency here when cold, is also to force things, as he has the ego to want to get in a streak again and get points. Its here that he makes most of his inefficient efforts and costs the team. This is where we need to have PG, and we can impact him to get to this level.

Once PG is cold, we channel the ball to him, and double Kawhi. And let DFS take PG.

This strategy will enforce that towards end of the games, Clippers have a Kawhi double teamed unable to score, and a cold PG with space, also unable to score. This is what we want to get to. This is what we had in first two games.

That is not a bad strategy.   I would add that hopefully limit the easy looks for George plus free throws.    He got into a nice rhythm last night with some baskets in the paint.  I think my wish in a close game late in the fourth quarter that it is George taking the shots and not Leonard.  

Also, hopefully there is a middle ground of letting Leonard get his but not have him shoot 80 plus percent from the field.
They need more of a flow offense like in Dirk/JKidd days where the ball touches more hands. This is the conundrum with a superstar scoring PG. He can do great things, but when they guy who brings up the ball is also the scorer when he feels he needs to take the game over, the team can become one dimensional. 

Mavs need to move the ball, and it can always get back to Luka later in the shot clock. But, I want to see them make the defense move by swinging the ball from side to side more. Also, I think this would keep KP and the others more engaged. I imagine the Clips game plan was let Luka get his and limit others.

I love Luka, and not trying to criticize when he is playing other worldly shooting the ball, but Rick needs to dial up the flow offense, and Luka needs to trust it and his teammates a bit more.
(05-29-2021, 06:11 PM)TXBamanut Wrote: [ -> ]Yeah, KP is "weak-minded" because he can't just sit there in the corner doing nothing --- which is a hard place to come from, as a big man, to get offensive rebounds by the way -- and then just turn it on and score 12 in the 4th...which is what it would have taken for him to get to solid production.  He went 2 quarters with 2 shots and KP isn't a guy that turns down shots very often...in fact, he's been accused of being a black hole, so if he's only getting 2 shots in 2 quarters of play, then I would suspect that it's not because he's just turning down shots.

If he's not getting shots, that's coach and PG
Agree that KP didn't get very many good shots in this game, and, although the Mavs tried to force it into him a few times, they weren't in his best positions. 


In this particular game, I don't think that was limited to KP. What happened to the beautiful ball movement in the first two games? Seventeen assists on 38 made baskets -- SMH. Apart from the first few minutes, the offense appeared to be "Look around to see where Luka is, dump it to him, and then stand there while he works." Or, when Luka wasn't on, it seemed to be an every man for himself situation. 

I like your comparison to football, but the analogy isn't perfect. A max player in basketball really ought to be able to create his own shot, at least to an extent, and we have seen that KP is capable of doing that. 

I think the much more frightening aspect of KP's performance, in both this game and the big picture, is how much his defense has declined. I don't think this is necessarily an attitude problem. It seems to me that he just can't move as well as he used to -- at least, not for more than a few minutes at a stretch. 

Someone in the Mavs media orbit quoted a stat recently to the effect that ultra-tall players (over 7'1") are rarely able to play a majority of their games past 5-6 seasons. Their bodies just don't hold up under that kind of physical stress. I suspect that may be where we have landed with KP. 

I don't fault the Mavs for trading for him. But as it happens, I am afraid he has a shorter shelf life than they were expecting. I hope I am wrong. Also hope that he can still find a way to be effective in this series.
Luka's teammates aren't bad at creating shots because Luka dominates the ball, Luka dominates the ball because his teammates are bad at creating shots. Like, we have two seasons of evidence now that KP is basically incapable of creating a shot for himself.
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