Evan Mobley Archives | Swish Theory https://theswishtheory.com/tag/evan-mobley/ Basketball Analysis & NBA Draft Guides Thu, 07 Mar 2024 18:19:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://i0.wp.com/theswishtheory.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/Favicon-1.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Evan Mobley Archives | Swish Theory https://theswishtheory.com/tag/evan-mobley/ 32 32 214889137 Shootin’ Sam Merrill’s Emergence https://theswishtheory.com/nba/2024/03/shootin-sam-merrills-emergence/ Thu, 07 Mar 2024 18:19:15 +0000 https://theswishtheory.com/?p=10454 Some guys need a shot. So many NBA-level talents hardly get a chance, and second chances are even harder to find. Making the most of that chance can change the fortunes of a player or a team in a big way. Sam Merrill was once a 24-year-old rookie taken with the last draft pick, one ... Read more

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Some guys need a shot. So many NBA-level talents hardly get a chance, and second chances are even harder to find. Making the most of that chance can change the fortunes of a player or a team in a big way.

Sam Merrill was once a 24-year-old rookie taken with the last draft pick, one who struggled to find a consistent role in Milwaukee. Even though he was delivering on his primary college skill, shooting the cover off the ball, he couldn’t stick. Merrill bounced to Cleveland by way of Memphis entering last year, managing 59 total minutes this past season. It felt like he had run out of chances.

Sam stuck around for an end-of-the-bench role this year, and the opportunity arrived. Cleveland was hit with an injury to star guard Darius Garland in mid-December. That setback (and a 13-12 record) felt like a potential early-season knockout for a team pushing further toward contender status.

Then Sam Merrill entered the rotation and started blasting.

Garland missed 19 games, and Cleveland managed a 15-4 record in no small part due to Merrill’s contributions. Sam let almost eight threes per game fly over his 22 MPG across this stretch. The Cavs had a new lease on their season, and Merrill had a new lease on his career. He’ll be needed even more with news of Evan Mobley’s fresh injury.

I love a good specialist, and I wanted to explore how Merrill’s strap has bought him another shot in this league, plus how coach JB Bickerstaff’s playcalling has augmented his skill. So let’s get into it.

The Mechanics

There are a lot of physical components that go into a good shooter. Squaring your body necessitates good footwork, high-level coordination, and the strength to generate momentum for the shot. To get a good idea of a shooter’s skill, looking at release speed and range are strong indicators.

Sam Merrill has a lightning-quick release:

He’s also more than capable of extending beyond the line when needed:

Quick release and deep range are important tools in what comes next. So many of these plays we’ll see would not be possible without these skills. Let’s start with the simple stuff.

Relocation Maestro

Movement is a necessity for off-ball shooters. Filling space behind drives, moving off of nail help, relocating across the baseline, or just staying busy while actions flow around you. There are many ways for Merrill to make an impact as a relocator, and he delivers:

Another relocation trait I look for is knowing when to lift from the corners to press an advantage. Merrill is quite adept at evacuating his spot at the right time to create a better passing lane and shake his defender.

Merrill also has Curry-esque moments of frantic off-ball movement that leave his man grasping for air:

The quick release and heady sense of movement have produced incredible catch-and-shoot results. Merrill sits at 45.2% on catch-and-shoot jumpers, good for a 67.8% eFG. It’s one of the best marks in the league, with prodigious volume to boot (12.4 threes attempted per 75 possessions).

That skill alone at 6’5″ would make him a viable rotation option. The play calls he enables for Cleveland take him to a new level of utility.

Off-Ball Screening

With a player able to fly off screens in either direction, you can layer extra problems for the defense onto existing actions, or call them as the initial action. There’s nothing like a pindown for a shooter with Merrill’s catch-and-shoot talent:

You can run them wide (when Merrill starts from the corner) or narrow (wing to the top of the key) and the result is the same. It puts the help defenders in a tough situation. Pindowns move toward the initial ballhandler, usually not a player the defense is keen to help off from. With the speed of the action, it’s hard to organize the help from the backside, putting a heavy burden on the defending big. However, if they choose to blitz or rise to the level, it opens up a potential slip if the shooter hits the big over the top. Decisions, decisions.

Staggered pindowns are another way of putting the defense in a decision-making nightmare:

Do you force the man guarding Merrill to navigate two straight screens? Do you switch or try to blitz one of the screens? If so, who would do the switching/blitzing? This is nearly impossible to figure out in the brief time it takes for Merrill to get around the screens and get a shot off.

Exit screens are another simple yet brutally effective way to leverage Merrill’s off-ball shooting:

With a pass coming from the top, it’s nigh impossible for the big to switch the action and contest the shot without allowing a slip from the screening big. The passer from the wing would recognize this and find the big for a higher-value shot. Instead, the onus is on the chasing defender to get around the screen, one that allows time for the screening big to adjust the angle right up to the last second. Essentially, a good exit screen is entirely on the offense’s terms.

Cleveland has also grown to employ more complex off-ball actions to spring Merrill. This “twirl” variant is a fun way to throw a series of possible screening and shooting threats at the defense:

First it’s a stagger for Merrill, then he sets a “rip” screen for Niang and finally gets a downscreen from Tristan Thompson as Niang drives to put a bow on the action. The confusion leads to three Wizards converging on Niang’s drive and by the end, nobody is within spitting distance of Merrill as he takes the shot. Confusion and misdirection are often the best weapons in a coach’s arsenal.

The use of a “rip” screen as a misdirection has been very present in how JB Bickerstaff runs actions for Merrill. Shoutout to my friend and play-by-play master Joe Hulbert for identifying this one: “rip veer”:

Merrill setting a backscreen gives his defender pause, sagging back for a second as a big or wing moves through the screen. Then a second screener arrives to give Merrill a downscreen, popping him above the arc for a three, while the defender has to process this and recover around the screen. It’s a beautiful chain of events that puts the defense in a bind.

Not all of Merrill’s success has to come from off-ball movement and layers of deception. Simple actions on (or directly around) the ball have shown some efficacy as well.

Dribble Handoffs

What’s the first play that comes to mind with any shoot-first wing? A good ol’ dribble handoff. It’s becoming the bread-and-butter play for specialists like Merrill. Kyle Korver walked so that these shooters could run.

It’s effective for a few reasons. The screen after the handoff is usually closer to the handler, opening up the shooting window faster. Depending on the handoff big, the threat of the roll/slip combined with a fake handoff forces the defending big to pick a poison. This may necessitate drop coverage of a DHO, which a shooter like Sam Merrill will destroy consistently:

Drop also invites more layered DHO actions. I enjoy this pindown into DHO concept, which places undue burden on the chase defenders as Alex Len is not a blitz/level kind of big:

With the right defenders present, playing to the level of the screen or outright blitzing becomes an option against Merrill. Even a crisp show and recover can give him issues when he feels the shot is taken away. His production against these coverages is far more of a mixed bag.

Switching the action outright is another way to take away his shot from the jump. A bigger defender will have a larger radius to contest the shot.

This switching is largely enabled by Merrill’s lack of ability to counter with drives. Though this is an article on shooting prowess, it’s important to understand how the absence of viable counters affects this shooting ability. Teams have learned to sell out to deny the shot and risk his drives, knowing he is unlikely to make them pay going downhill.

Even with aggressive coverages, the purity of Merrill’s release and footwork skill can burn them even in the tightest windows:

Double-pitch DHOs act as a way for Merrill to feel out the coverage while still pressing the advantage against the defense. It serves to find a new angle for more separation while buying important time Merrill can use to his advantage:

The DHO looks are by far the most common usage for Merrill in direct actions, and he’ll have time to work on his counters against non-drop coverages. Though simple and with plenty of utility, it’s not my favorite direct action Cleveland has deployed for him.

Ball Screen Actions

Shoot-first wings or guards as ball screeners have been a fun league-wide development over the past several years. Though not as complex as Golden State’s actions for Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson or the Isaiah Joe screens in Oklahoma City, Cleveland is feeling out some Merrill screens as a tool for their primary offensive weapons.

A tidy pick-and-fade puts the defense at a quick disadvantage:

This guard-guard screening brings uncertainty to the defender on Merrill. Guards are less used to navigating screen actions from behind than bigs. When setting screens for Donovan Mitchell, a prolific driver and pull-up shooter, a switch or over must be navigated quickly so Cleveland’s All-Star guard doesn’t get open space. It’s difficult to do this while properly covering Merrill’s fade.

The guards assigned to Merrill are not going to be the cream of the defensive crop, especially when playing off of Mitchell and Garland. This is a simple and effective way to put subpar defenders directly in the action against their star creators.

Bickerstaff likes to add layers to this action, sometimes by adding a flare screen for Merrill after the initial screen:

Good luck switching and navigating that one properly.

Processing a screen from Merrill is already difficult enough for the players defending the action. If he ghosts the screen entirely into a fade, that processing window becomes even tighter.

Amazingly, Cleveland can get utility from an action where everyone knows what Merrill is going to do. Is he going to roll to the rim or slip? Absolutely not. That man is fading. And still, it creates enough matchup difficulty that the defense cannot properly contain him.

Wrapping Up

With news of Evan Mobley‘s injury, Cleveland will once again find themselves in heavy need of Merrill’s talent. Their bigger forwards will have to slide down positionally, only furthering the need for his shooting off the ball to create space.

Under contract for one more year, it feels all but guaranteed that he has earned a place on the team going forward. Even if Merrill fails to grow beyond a pure shooting specialist, it’s a strong enough talent to keep him a place in the league for years to come. Both Merrill and the Cavaliers have reaped the benefits of this second chance, and I’m stoked to see him fight for a playoff rotation spot down the stretch of Cleveland’s most exciting season since LeBrexit.

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The Most Interesting First Round Series: Cavs vs. Knicks https://theswishtheory.com/analysis/2023/04/breaking-down-the-most-interesting-first-round-series-cavs-vs-knicks/ Thu, 13 Apr 2023 21:28:50 +0000 https://theswishtheory.com/?p=6068 A Scheme and Strategy Breakdown of the Cavaliers Offense and New York Knicks Defense The upcoming series between the Cleveland Cavaliers and the New York Knicks is projected to be one of the closer ones. In this series, I do schematic deep dives on either team, and explore the hypothetical questions that I believe to ... Read more

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A Scheme and Strategy Breakdown of the Cavaliers Offense and New York Knicks Defense

The upcoming series between the Cleveland Cavaliers and the New York Knicks is projected to be one of the closer ones. In this series, I do schematic deep dives on either team, and explore the hypothetical questions that I believe to be the key points of interest for the opponents.

Cleveland Cavaliers Offensive Scheme

Empty Side

The Cavaliers run a three-out two-in offense with heavy motion from their guards. They push empty side pick-and-rolls as much as any other team in the NBA. They’ll push these early in transition.

Part of optimising their two inside big men is by rotating them as the empty side screener, though you’re more than likely going to see Mobley as the screener and Jarrett Allen in the dunker spot when they run this. Their overall philosophy in early offense is optional ball screens, giving Mitchell and Garland structure but not robbing them of freedom. The presence of Jarrett Allen at the dunker spot gives them easy buckets if the defense is collapsed. He’s in the 90th percentile for half-court scoring efficiency.

Wedge Action

One of the Cavs’ most common actions out of their base offense is running wedge actions. This is simply an angled screen to the baseline. They run these for Evan Mobley to give him a chance to post-up or attack off the catch. Here they run Wedge Action to generate a look for Evan Mobley. He turns the ball over on this play (I’ll get to those issues later), but they get him in space on an empty side with ease.

The Cavaliers don’t do this as a one-shot type play though, they have many other options and counters from it. Here they run ‘wedge roll’ which is as it sounds. They then flow straight into a pick-and-roll.

Sometimes the mere threat of the option is enough to give them more cushion on pick-and-rolls. Here Darius Garland flows straight into a pick-and-roll and essentially ignores Okoro attempting to set the wedge screen for Allen, with the help defense occupied by the potential of this action.

Teams are hyper aware of the Cavaliers’ wedge actions and they fear them because empty side actions are the main way they try and ease spacing concerns. The play below illustrates a nice counter the Cavs have for it.

You see the Pacers sitting under Okoro for two reasons. One is because they don’t really respect him as a shooter, but the premiere reason is that they expect the wedge roll action to come. Garland sees this and pitches it to Mobley and Okoro screens Garland’s man as they flow into Delay Chicago action. It’s great offense and shows JB Bickerstaff’s attention to detail.

Flex and Rip Concepts

I’ve labelled this “flex concepts” because the Cavs don’t run the entirety of the flex offense, but they like to move their guards through the paint in screen-the-screener type actions which is the absolute epitome of what the flex offense is all about.

On this play, the Cavaliers don’t create an advantage out of the wedge action I mentioned above…

…so they pitch to the screener and go into a pick-and-roll with Darius Garland eventually setting a flex screen to get Evan Mobley to the low block. They initially didn’t get Mobley good post position but showed a multi-faceted approach to get it on a counter.

Such things don’t exist in Basketball analysis to my knowledge, but if there was a heat map that tracked players movements, I’m almost certain that the Cavaliers guards would touch the paint off-ball more than any other team due to their flex and rip concepts. These guards are deployed off-ball moving through the paint very regularly.

https://twitter.com/JoeHulbertNBA/status/1643065171349237762?s=20

I enjoyed this play shown below.

They pitch to Isaac Okoro, but watch Donovan Mitchell and Darius Garland. They flow into an initial ‘floppy’ action (a double screen set for someone to emerge from the paint). After it doesn’t get an opening, Garland cuts to the other side on the flex scissors action and Okoro hits Evan Mobley for the dunk.

If one play summarised Cleveland’s Philosophy it’s this: these guards work for their touches out of flex concepts. This ties in with Bickerstaff’s overall philosophy. He loves the chin offense which is why he’s a perfect fit to coach a team with two bigs.

They often run these plays to try and alleviate spacing concerns. Mobley-Allen isn’t a great perimeter spacing duo as of now. So basic spread concepts aren’t really going to reap rewards. Here the Cavaliers run some flex action before flowing into an empty side pick and roll.

If you’re trying to get a big line-up to work, your guards have to do their due diligence off the ball as you ideally want to maximise the big men as elbow hubs. The Cavaliers do a great job of this when they run ‘Rip’ Action such as below. Rip action is merely a player back screening then receiving the ball.

https://twitter.com/JoeHulbertNBA/status/1643336740810248196?s=20

With Ricky Rubio healthy, these sets have even more of a ceiling for the Cavaliers because his processing speed is borderline generational. Here they set up a Cross Screen for Lamar Stevens and Donovan Mitchell comes off a pindown after setting the cross screen, but Rubio sees the defense tilt away from Caris Levert in the corner and they get an easy look.

Pistol

Any team with two elite guards is going to run pistol action. While I wouldn’t call this Cleveland’s absolute staple, it’s another way they can create empty side actions and give high value touches to their lead guards. Below is the absolute most basic luck and their typical structure out of it.

Both of their lead guards in the same action. They go into a pick-and-roll. The opposite side spacing has their small forward and then Jarrett Allen at the dunker spot. They bail out to him on this play and he hits the floater. He’s in the 62nd percentile for efficiency on these shots so it will be intriguing if teams live with this one and possibly sell out elsewhere.

They also use pistol to flow into delay action and to generate empty side actions like in the play below.

They look as if they’re going to flow into Delay Chicago after the initial pistol exchange. Instead, Levert cuts all the way to the weakside and they go into an empty-side pick and roll. Teams often blitz these so Mobley’s rolling can be highly fruitful on these actions.

Here things get a little more exotic, as they run Pistol Rip Empty Hawk.

Garland receives the ball from Mitchell. Mobley backscreens for Mitchell then comes up to set the screen (this creates the same advantage as ram action). They flow into an empty-side pick and roll and Mitchell cuts through the paint and comes off a double stagger which is Hawk action. It’s another illustration of Cavs guards moving off-ball, but also creating empty side actions out of multiple scenarios.

They run the same play against the Blazers here. This time Garland dribbles towards the empty side when he sees Nurkic in drop. The Hawk action occupies the defense and Garland scores the layup.

They also mix some ‘veer’ action into their pistol offense. This involves a screen for a ball handler, with the screener then darting elsewhere to set an off-ball screen in the same action or motion. Here they run it against the Orlando Magic.

On this occasion they do it to try and attack Bol Bol on the empty side pick-and-roll with a step up screen. Sometimes though they just do it to free up a shooter and create an advantage for Garland or Mitchell such as here.

Good offenses mesh all of their concepts together. I noted earlier how the Cavs like to use their guards on flex and rip concepts, here they tie this together with pistol.

They have the initial pistol action with Mitchell then going straight in a double drag action. This is deception for ‘rip’ action for Darius Garland who comes off a screen, then sets a backscreen of his own before darting for an open three. It’s a great example of how the Cavaliers Empty Side and Inside to out guard cutting concepts all meshing.

Ram

The Cavs also like to run ‘ram’ action, where a screener comes off a screen before screening for the ball-handler. They like to do this mixed with different secondary actions as a way of trying to freeze or occupy defenders. This is as they don’t have natural outside spacing with Mobley and Allen. They’ll often run this more against teams who play drop coverage. They run it here against the Rockets.

Mitchell is the initial screener for Jarrett Allen, and then exits to the perimeter off an Evan Mobley screen. The execution will need to be more flawless in the playoffs but the logic is to occupy the defense in a way Evan Mobley just being stationary on the perimeter wouldn’t occupy it.

They’ll often run it if they have smaller line-ups too such as here against the Orlando Magic.

This time, the exit action occupies the help defense the whole way, and Darius Garland essentially walks into an easy bucket when his man gets caught on Evan Mobley’s screen. It’s one of their most common concepts.

Here, they run a ‘small’ variant of Ram action with more inverted philosophy.

Donovan Mitchell this time receives a screen from Jarrett Allen and then Ghost Screens for Darius Garland. Allen chases it immediately and Garland once again walks into a wide-open bucket. They’ll use this ‘Ram Short 77 Ghost’ to try and force switches.

On the play below, they use it in a way that raises hypothetical questions about the action.

They have Jarrett Allen be the on-ball screener, and Evan Mobley executes ‘Short’ Action which is a cut to the strongside. Notice how it freezes the defender and Allen can get a free lane because of this as the Ram gave him some extra room at the beginning of the play.

The hypothetical question they will have to answer in the Knicks series is whether they’re better with Allen or Mobley as the on-ball screener. Allen is more likely to have Mitchell Robinson on him and he may feel comfortable playing free safety in that scenario. But Robinson is extremely disruptive at the level of the screen so having Allen as the screener might create more difficulties for the offense. They’ll likely mix things up, but this will be interesting to monitor.

My good friend Bowser also clipped another play similar to ram, known as ‘New Zealand’ Action.

This involves a ram screening action on the empty side. This may be something they go to in the playoffs if things stagnate with their more common actions.

Double Drags and Horns

Like any team trying to maximise a big frontcourt, the Cavaliers optimise Double Drags, and I think they’ll run these more in this series than usual. This is largely because a double screening action can put real strain on Tom Thibodeau’s defensive scheme as they prioritise defending the paint so may leave shooters open if the Cavs opt to use a guard in the action. They also quite commonly switch 4-5 so the Cavaliers may get some matchups they like. Here, they run ’77 Small’ with Donovan Mitchell ghost screening. Darius Garland then puts Dillon Brooks in the torture chamber.

The Cavaliers have done a great job mixing in these ghost screens. Here on this play against the Heat, Mitchell ghosting creates chaos.

Though the Knicks may be organised at the point of attack than Miami, they can still get beneficial switches and potentially get bigger defenders off Garland. It’s essentially they run these ‘small’ variants of double drag.

I love how high they set some of these double drag screens like they do here against Memphis.

The Cavs routinely have the second screener roll pretty quickly. Look how tough it is to defend. The Knicks will defend it in a similar way with trying to contain the drive. Expect to see the Cavs run a load of these.

As I’ve mentioned throughout this article, counters are important. On this play the Grizzlies try and get ahead of the action so Mobley rolls quickly and Darius Garland executes ‘get’ action which is receiving your own pass on a dribble handoff.

A key theoretical of the double drag comes with regards to Evan Mobley. The Knicks will almost certainly leave him open. They do with just about any popper in a double drag set. But Mobley needs to be aggressive. This is what will swing the series for Cleveland. Here against the Knicks he pops and takes Obi Toppin off the catch.

Though Toppin won’t see the floor often, it’s still an important play. He has to be willing to be decisive. Indecision kills offense more than inability at times. The Knicks will defend these double drags high and likely have Mobley’s man tag the roller. Hartenstein and Robinson will be containing the drive. He has to be decisive.

Cleveland also mixes in Horns Sets as a way of trying to keep the opposition center outside of the paint. Here they run a classic- Horns Ghost Flare.

Horns concepts are good because they can generate quick hitters for their elite guards while creating matchup problems. Using the gravity of their star guards early in actions just creates some incredible moments such as here where they mesh Horns and turn it into a Spain-Pick-And-Roll.

Spain Pick-And-Rolls are nightmarish anyway, and the Cavaliers mixing it with Horns is just excellent offense. It maximises the gravity of their guards and keeps bigs at the level. Spain PNRs can be particularly fruitful against the Knicks because it tests Tom Thibodeau’s philosophy of always having his low man tag the roller instead of defending the corner shot.

Cleveland also likes to use Ghost screens out of a Horns outline to generate favourable switches.

This will be particularly relevant in the Knicks series because Darius Garland can definitely get bothered by size, though it’s not a gigantic concern for me. Ghost screens in general are very good and they hold a big purpose for the Cavaliers.

The New York Knicks Defense

Now that I’ve looked at the Cavaliers diverse scheme, we should look at the New York Knicks defense. Per a source with Second Spectrum, the Knicks are 7th in the NBA in drop coverage frequency, and 2nd in at the level coverage. They rarely hedge or trap or play zone. They are aggressive at helping from the nail which is a staple of Tom Thibodeau’s defensive scheme. He prioritises defending the paint with a 5-man wall and expects his wings and guards to rotate to open shooters. The strong side defense looks something like this.

Note both corner defenders aggressively helping towards the paint. Hartenstein being up towards the level. Immanuel Quickley helping off his man to try and disrupt the roller. Some teams run teams off the three-point line with aggressive and close rotations. The Knicks escort you off of it at the top of the key then make your driving path as miserable as possible.

Here’s what the defense looks like in video form. Note how they’re in drop coverage on this occasion.

Note Julius Randle tag the roller, and then making RJ Barrett responsible for ‘splitting the difference’ between the two perimeter guys. Thibodeau’s wing defenders need to be instinctive, reactive and aggressive. Here the Knicks recover out to Darius Garland and force a shot they’re comfortable with from a structural perspective.

My general Hypothesis for this series is that empty side actions will decide the series. The Knicks love Empty Side Pick-And-Rolls for Jalen Brunson because the ‘counter punch’ out of it is baseline fadeaway jumpers, which might be Brunson’s strongest shot as his offensive ability off the planted pivot foot is elite.

Above I’ve mentioned how the Cavs love empty side actions and how the majority of their core actions can be to set up these empty side actions. It makes sense to explore how the Knicks defend these actions and ponder how fruitful they might be.

If the empty side action takes place on the right side and the screen is taking the guard towards the open side, they’ll generally be in ‘ICE Coverage’. This means they’re funnelling the play towards the sideline and essentially using the out of bounds line as an extra defender. It looks like this.

If the screen is set to the left side of the guard, the Knicks will mix up coverages. Here against the Wizards, they have Hartenstein drop so Kyle Kuzma just takes his man into the paint and hits the fadeaway.

Against the Cavaliers, empty side coverages can be complex and tricky because Garland and Mitchell are both incredibly shifty, and Allen and Mobley are such good screeners. Their ability to be unpredictable with the personnel can make a one size fits all scouting report difficult. I expect the Knicks to mix in some at the level coverages simply because Darius Garland is incredibly shifty off the dribble against drop coverage. Like what do you do with this?

Randle tries to drop and deal with Mobley, Barrett has to help away from Donovan Mitchell. Brunson isn’t active, and Jericho Sims is concerned about Jarrett Allen. Weirdly, Allen’s allergy to the perimeter can actually benefit the Cavs against Thibodeau’s strong side defense. He’s more concerned with Allen at the dunker spot than he would be with a corner shooter, philosophically.

This time, Hartenstein starts at the level of the screen. But once Garland gets a step on his man it’s close to over. Hartenstein is juggling being in the driving lane with mirroring the roll-man.

Note in this play how Quentin Grimes doesn’t really help off of Donovan Mitchell. Their approach to this will be intriguing because if you do help, even momentarily, you risk Mitchell being able to create off the catch and go like he does here. It’s generally clear though that a smaller guard on Garland without any nail help probably isn’t going to end well.

The Little Things- What the Cavaliers Can Do

Playoff series come down to micro adjustments more often than you might think. Here are a few things I think Cleveland can do to potentially make life easier for them.

The first, is setting higher screens. Given the Knicks like to be in ICE Coverage on these empty side actions, you can really cause havoc by setting the screens higher.

Note here that the entire empty side is genuinely empty. It’s because Randle has much more ground to cover in order to enforce the ‘No Middle’ ideology. Mobley also has more rolling room. I think high screens can genuinely really cause the Knicks problems in this series. I’d also attempt to get Randle and Brunson in actions as much as possible. Neither are awful defenders but they’re a step slower than their team-mates.

Here, the Cavaliers do the same with their ‘ram’ action.

Look at the gap between Grimes and his teammates before the action even happens. You could park a car in there. Mitchell makes Randle dance by faking the right drive, then makes Grimes dance before hitting the pull-up three. A good way to delegitimise nail help is to just set the action really far away from it.

Putting Donovan Mitchell or Garland in the actions as an off-ball threat should prove fruitful. I think their wedge set in particular could be a nice way to test if the Knicks want to trap. Here against Portland, the Blazers run wedge roll with Anfernee Simons setting the wedge screen for Nurkic.

Thibodeau wants to maintain structure above all else. No middle at all costs. Putting your best players in the action really tests this because your nearest help defender has to worry about a star moving off-ball. They could walk into good jump shots or just generally get the defense on the back foot with how they position guys.

Generally, I think pre-action is needed to really get at the Knicks. Make them work and force them to make quick decisions. Thibs wants teams to play slow against his defense. Something as simple as what Minnesota do here, would suffice.

The Wolves trigger the ICE Coverage with a quick pass to Mike Conley on the empty side. Gobert rolls, and when Randle tags, Conley hits Kyle Anderson who is able to manipulate the help defense to create a wide open three. Generally, forcing these nail help guys to be as reactive as possible is a good way of winning games. Generally, their target should be to get these with pre-action and higher screens.

In Summary

Overall, this might be the most interesting first round series of the NBA Playoffs. The Cavaliers offense is diverse and fluid, and the Knicks defense is really tough. Evan Mobley needs to be aggressive, and the Knicks help defense will need to be on point. The battle of the nail help defenders likely decides this series. I’m not meaning to underestimate the Knicks defense, it’s an immense unit. I just think there are ways Cleveland can attack it and that’s what I’ve tried to explore in this series. I hope you enjoyed.

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Evan Mobley https://theswishtheory.com/scouting-reports/evan-mobley/ Fri, 21 Oct 2022 19:18:03 +0000 https://theswishtheory.com/?post_type=scouting-reports&p=3463 Meet Evan Mobley The Cleveland Cavaliers have a likely future All-Defense team member in Evan Mobley, while he is also just scratching the surface on his offensive upside. After taking Mobley third in the 2021 NBA draft, the Cavs implemented a twin towers defensive approach, with Jarrett Allen taking the more traditional big role as ... Read more

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Meet Evan Mobley

The Cleveland Cavaliers have a likely future All-Defense team member in Evan Mobley, while he is also just scratching the surface on his offensive upside. After taking Mobley third in the 2021 NBA draft, the Cavs implemented a twin towers defensive approach, with Jarrett Allen taking the more traditional big role as Mobley roved causing havoc with his long limbs and incredible hand-eye coordination. The degree of difficulty on Mobley steals and blocks was among the toughest in the league, immediately. With him able to stick seamlessly with wings, and Allen providing the home base last line behind him, the Cavs defense ranked in the top 10 despite being 25th the season before.

Tyler Herro tests the Cavs bigs

The Cavs have doubled down on this strategy by trading for Donovan Mitchell to rev up the backcourt even further while counting on Mobley and Allen to pick up the slack. Mobley will have his hands full, but with rapid reactive instincts and the smooth movement skills needed to cover entire swathes of the court with his 7’4” wingspan.

Meanwhile, the addition of Mitchell on offense should free up Mobley to continue to develop his offense game. Not to overstate his offense as a weakness – Mobley was fifth in points per game of all rookies – but getting more of a chance to create on his own seems on the table, and leveraging the combined playmaking threat of Mitchell and Garland can help unlock that.

Mobley is an excellent passer, but with poor perimeter shooting efficiency so far, does not always get the chance to showcase that beyond as a connector. In sets like the below from their opening game of the 2022-23 season, Mobley is able to use the threat of his length and capable ballhandling to threaten the rim downhill, opening up an easy kick opportunity. One imagines this type of opportunity and, similarly, short roll reps will be plentiful with opponents scrambling to cover the quick backcourt pairing.

Mobley fake DHO drive and kick

While the form looks smoothed somewhat after working on it over the offseason, gains there are likely to be gradual, and unlikely to earn hard close-outs. But he provides a lot of value as a lob threat as well, utilizing that wingspan again but also, perhaps an underrated quality for a roll man, perfect footwork and agility. Here, again from their opening game, Mobley receives a lob from Donovan Mitchell after slipping the screen (more on that later). Mobley’s speed gets him past his defender, Pascal Siakam, quite easily for the lob, but faces a contest at the rim as the lob falls a bit short of ideal accuracy. Unbothered, Mobley pumps in mid-air as he catches the lob, converting it to a lay-in as Scottie flies past.

Mitchell-Mobley PNR lob

But Mobley deciding not to go straight through Barnes for the dunk is significant as well, and points to one of the few sticking points with the 21-year-old’s game. Mobley is still quite skinny, even after adding some muscle from last season. This leads to inconsistent screens as well as occasional hiccups after not being able to keep his spot. Screening in particular will be important when playing with two PNR-heavy guards, and if he’s spending ample time chasing opponents on defense, the energy expense equation becomes tougher for the young big.

The Cavs have high expectations for Mobley, as show by their willingness to go all in on the current core by trading future picks for Donovan Mitchell. There may be growing pains as they adjust to the lopsided scheme, but have as good of a connecting, scheme-versatile big as they could ask in Mobley. Even getting a play like this once or twice a game would be huge for raising the Cavs’ ceiling, as opponents will struggle to sag off of the Cleveland guards.

Mobley stutter rip drive on OG Anunoby

As is obvious by his seamless rotations and rapid reactive passing, Mobley is a brainiac. Combine that with an immense athletic toolkit to work from, and odds are he’ll figure it out. It may only take refinement on the edges to get him into some serious accolade talk.

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