Showing posts with label Frank Vogel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frank Vogel. Show all posts

Thursday, March 7, 2013

NBA News 2013: Old Style Pacers Are Built To Contend

Pacers Paul George
Pacers Paul George (Photo credit: IsoSports)

Last season, Indiana Pacers head coach Frank Vogel’s “smash-mouth basketball” took the surprising Pacers to the Eastern Conference Semifinals, where they led the Miami HEAT two games to one before dropping three in a row to the eventual NBA champions. This year, Indiana is back stronger, tougher and nastier than ever and proving that last season’s 52-win pace was no fluke.

“[The Pacers] are big time,” Toronto Raptors head coach Dwane Casey said. “Tough, physical, nasty – they play playoff basketball every night. They are not into up and down, up and down. They just try to come down and carve you apart. They hit, bang and bump you. Any time they get a chance, they bump you to get you off your constitution a little bit. Anything to rattle you physically and legally, they put their hands on you. Just like playoff games are played and they play that style each and every night.”

Vogel assumed the reins midway through the 2010-11 season from Jim O’Brien and took a losing program to the playoffs that April. He had a philosophy that matched the talent then-president Larry Bird had assembled. Vogel wanted a big team that played tough defense and rebounded.

“When I took over, I felt this was the style that was winning in the playoffs at the time,” Vogel said. “We have seen some teams that have gone small, like Miami and Oklahoma City last year, have succeeded at the highest level, but when I took over it was [Andrew] Bynum and [Pau] Gasol in L.A., [Kevin] Garnett and [Kendrick] Perkins won it, and [Tyson] Chandler and Dirk Nowitzki won championships. So I like playing with two bigs and winning the defensive rebounding battle and then trusting the pass offensively. So that’s the style we are trying to play and hopefully it wins at playoffs. If you don’t have the players to do that then you have to adjust and play whatever style your personnel dictates, but give Larry Bird credit for putting together a team that can play this style.”

The Pacers made immediate improvements in their defensive ratings with Vogel running the show, improvements that have continued into this season. Currently the Pacers lead the league in rebounding differential at plus 4.7 boards per game and hold opponents to a league-worst field goal percentage of 41.5 percent.

“For us it starts on the defensive end,” David West said. “We are trying to win as many games as possible. We are in a tough playoff race. We understand that our defense is going to give us a chance. We are aggressive defensively. We play together defensively and try to protect the rim and guard the three-point line and force teams to score over us.”

The Pacers play this style with pride. It has become the team’s identity and something they can hang their hat on every night. This level of defensive intensity isn’t common throughout the NBA, but the Pacers have the size and depth of talent to make it work. Former All-Stars Roy Hibbert and West are backed up by the seven-foot Ian Mahinmi and Tyler Hansbrough. The return of Danny Granger to the lineup just adds to this team’s depth.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/old-style-pacers-are-built-to-contend/

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Friday, November 16, 2012

NBA News 2012: Granger's importance

Indiana Pacers logo 1990–2005.
Indiana Pacers logo 1990–2005. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

There has been a lot of talk in recent years about Danny Granger’s true importance to the Indiana Pacers. As the Pacers rose from the wreckage of four-straight Lottery appearances, Granger became the default No. 1 on a balanced roster built around depth and continuity.

Just nine games into the season, Granger’s value has been revealed to a team that was projected to be among the Eastern Conference elite. He is expected to miss a total of three months with a knee issue. A midseason return can’t come soon enough for the Pacers.

Despite a youthful roster, Frank Vogel’s crew featured a plodding offense (19th in pace) that scored 104.6 points per 100 possessions (ninth) in 2011-12. That may have been a product of the compressed 66-game schedule combined with the team’s depth and athleticism. From 2007-08 to 2010-11, the Pacers ranked 19th, 15th, 26th and 22nd in offensive rating. They are supposed to be a defensive-minded team with an average offense.

Without Granger, the Pacers' offense has been horrible.

The Pacers are scoring just 95.5 points per 100 possessions, better than only the 76ers and winless Wizards. They have maintained a very slow pace (89.8 possessions per 48 minutes, 28th in the league), but their effective field goal percentage has dipped significantly. They rank dead last in eFG% (.433), down from .475 in 2011-12.

Vogel took the ball out of Granger’s hands a bit last season with the addition of George Hill and David West, as well as the emergence of Paul George and Roy Hibbert. His usage rate hit a three-year low of .261, still the highest among the team’s rotation players over the full season. Leandro Barbosa beat him out by a few percentage points as the lead guard off the bench following a midseason trade.

The coaching staff has had to distribute more than a quarter of the team’s possessions in the wake of Granger’s absence. He entered the league as an athletic, defensive-minded wing player, but his improved range allowed him to become a fringe All-Star and pseudo-franchise player.

There have been questions about Vogel’s play-calling and the invisibility of Roy Hibbert after signing a big contract, but Granger’s injury is clearly the team’s biggest problem. Indiana was 11.7 points per 100 possessions better with Granger on the court last season.

He was one of three Pacers to post more than eight WARP in 2011-12. He contributed 8.5 wins above replacement player, ahead of Paul George (8.2) and slightly behind Roy Hibbert (8.7). When news broke that Granger would miss significant time, the belief was that Hill, George and Hibbert would absorb his touches and as emerging talent they would do so effectively. The reality is that their effectiveness has taken a hit.

George had a True Shooting percentage of .555 last season, but through the first two weeks of the season that number has dipped to .479. His usage rate has jumped from .195 to .208.

Hill has seen his usage jump from .173 to .209 without Granger. He posted a TS% of .557 in his first season with the Pacers, but that has dropped to .494 in the early stages of this year.

Hibbert, who came into the season with the highest expectations, has actually used fewer possessions (.212 to .192). His TS% has dropped from .539 to .391. He is averaging fewer than two free throws per game despite a career-high 4.1 offensive rebounds per game. His block percentage (6.1%) is also a career-high, but his numbers of the defensive glass have fallen considerably.

Nine games is a fairly small sample size over the course of an 82-game season, but the panic button is within sight. With just three wins, they are in the bottom third of the NBA despite stellar defense. They have also played just two clubs that qualified for the playoffs last spring, making their record even more alarming.

It is also worth noting that they have already played six games that were decided by five points or fewer, an extremely high rate and performance in those games typically regresses to the mean. The schedule will only get tougher after a rather vanilla first two weeks, especially with the absence of the even more appreciated Granger putting everything into question.

The trio of George, Hibbert and Hill has had time to adjust to basketball without Granger. They now need to step up with increased importance or suffer the consequences. For the team, those concerns relate to playoff status. Hibbert and Hill, they have their multiyear deals, but George is next in line. Instead of increasing his value, his play sans Granger might reduce it.

http://basketball.realgm.com/blog/224513/Granger%E2%80%99s_Importance_Becomes_Clear

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