Spacing, spacing, spacing: how Kelly Olynyk's absence affects the Celtics' offense
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Spacing, spacing, spacing: how Kelly Olynyk's absence affects the Celtics' offense
http://www.celticsblog.com/2016/2/21/11081408/spacing-spacing-spacing-how-kelly-olynyks-absence-affects-the-celtics
Spacing, spacing, spacing: how Kelly Olynyk's absence affects the Celtics' offense
By wjsy on Feb 21, 2016, 8:00a 16
David Butler II-USA TODAY Sports
During the 13-4 stretch the Celtics had before the All-Star break, Kelly Olynyk was averaging a modest 12 points and 4 rebounds over 20 minutes a game, but those numbers don't tell the entire story. KO has been an analytics darling during his entire three-year career in Boston and this season has been no different. In those seventeen games, Olynyk lead the team in +/- at +8.5. He was shooting a very efficient 49% but leading the team in eFG% at 57.7% because of his 41.3% clip from behind the arc and he had a higher usage rate than Evan Turner, Marcus Smart, Avery Bradley, Jae Crowder, and Amir Johnson who all averaged more playing time.
Olynyk might seem like some strange statistical anomaly. He's not the most athletic player on the floor and on defense, he doesn't provide the stout rim protection expected from a traditional big man. However, his all around skill set and high IQ make him a crucial cog in Brad Stevens' read-and-react system.
With David Lee now bought out, Tyler Zeller looks to be the natural beneficiary of Olynyk's three week absence. The Celtics have been very good at relying on the next man up, but unfortunately, Zeller just isn't the same player as KO. Even though he's come on of late, Zeller is a finisher, specifically off the pick-and-roll and around the rim. Olynyk, on the other hand, can score from anywhere on the floor and can be an above average playmaker off the dribble. Ultimately, so much of it is about spacing. Check out these two sets from Friday's blow out loss in Utah:
https://giant.gfycat.com/MassiveActualBlackrhino.webm
Rudy Gobert was a problem for Boston all night and because Zeller is a natural roll man off the PnR, Gobert was constantly in the paint. Zeller sets a good pick for Thomas, but because TZ rolls (and doesn't pop to the three point line like Olynyk could), Thomas is dissuaded from driving and the paint is clogged for Sullinger's dribble drive.
https://giant.gfycat.com/DifferentWhoppingHoneycreeper.webm
Zeller initially sets a pick for Smart, but Marcus swings the ball to Jonas Jerebko and it eventually leads to a pick-and-roll with Evan Turner going to the rim. The problem is, Zeller has already brought Gobert into the paint and he can help on Turner's floater. He commits a shooting foul, but you can see how the spacing is affected without a floor stretching big.
https://giant.gfycat.com/SpeedyDarkGossamerwingedbutterfly.webm
Zeller is a fine replacement as the fourth big, but it's going to have an affect on the rest of the players. Driving lanes for Smart and Turner won't be as open and that might limit the amounts of kick outs for threes. Olynyk was such a linchpin of how the Celtics like to play. Thankfully, the Celtics only play 10 games over the next 23 days with 7 of them at home. Unfortunately, most of the teams Boston faces have big front lines where Olynyk's spacing could help.
bob
MY NOTE: In a Pace-and-Space offense, Kelly's skill sets make him very valuable. He isn't a great man-to-man defender but what he does for the offense, directly and indirectly by forcing their bigs to come out, makes up for it.
.
Spacing, spacing, spacing: how Kelly Olynyk's absence affects the Celtics' offense
By wjsy on Feb 21, 2016, 8:00a 16
David Butler II-USA TODAY Sports
During the 13-4 stretch the Celtics had before the All-Star break, Kelly Olynyk was averaging a modest 12 points and 4 rebounds over 20 minutes a game, but those numbers don't tell the entire story. KO has been an analytics darling during his entire three-year career in Boston and this season has been no different. In those seventeen games, Olynyk lead the team in +/- at +8.5. He was shooting a very efficient 49% but leading the team in eFG% at 57.7% because of his 41.3% clip from behind the arc and he had a higher usage rate than Evan Turner, Marcus Smart, Avery Bradley, Jae Crowder, and Amir Johnson who all averaged more playing time.
Olynyk might seem like some strange statistical anomaly. He's not the most athletic player on the floor and on defense, he doesn't provide the stout rim protection expected from a traditional big man. However, his all around skill set and high IQ make him a crucial cog in Brad Stevens' read-and-react system.
With David Lee now bought out, Tyler Zeller looks to be the natural beneficiary of Olynyk's three week absence. The Celtics have been very good at relying on the next man up, but unfortunately, Zeller just isn't the same player as KO. Even though he's come on of late, Zeller is a finisher, specifically off the pick-and-roll and around the rim. Olynyk, on the other hand, can score from anywhere on the floor and can be an above average playmaker off the dribble. Ultimately, so much of it is about spacing. Check out these two sets from Friday's blow out loss in Utah:
https://giant.gfycat.com/MassiveActualBlackrhino.webm
Rudy Gobert was a problem for Boston all night and because Zeller is a natural roll man off the PnR, Gobert was constantly in the paint. Zeller sets a good pick for Thomas, but because TZ rolls (and doesn't pop to the three point line like Olynyk could), Thomas is dissuaded from driving and the paint is clogged for Sullinger's dribble drive.
https://giant.gfycat.com/DifferentWhoppingHoneycreeper.webm
Zeller initially sets a pick for Smart, but Marcus swings the ball to Jonas Jerebko and it eventually leads to a pick-and-roll with Evan Turner going to the rim. The problem is, Zeller has already brought Gobert into the paint and he can help on Turner's floater. He commits a shooting foul, but you can see how the spacing is affected without a floor stretching big.
https://giant.gfycat.com/SpeedyDarkGossamerwingedbutterfly.webm
Zeller is a fine replacement as the fourth big, but it's going to have an affect on the rest of the players. Driving lanes for Smart and Turner won't be as open and that might limit the amounts of kick outs for threes. Olynyk was such a linchpin of how the Celtics like to play. Thankfully, the Celtics only play 10 games over the next 23 days with 7 of them at home. Unfortunately, most of the teams Boston faces have big front lines where Olynyk's spacing could help.
bob
MY NOTE: In a Pace-and-Space offense, Kelly's skill sets make him very valuable. He isn't a great man-to-man defender but what he does for the offense, directly and indirectly by forcing their bigs to come out, makes up for it.
.
bobheckler- Posts : 62229
Join date : 2009-10-28
Re: Spacing, spacing, spacing: how Kelly Olynyk's absence affects the Celtics' offense
Steve Bulpett
@SteveBHoop about 38 minutes ago
DEN coach Mike Malone on Olynyk: "I'd be lying if I said I wasn't happy he isn't playing today." Talked about matchup problems KO presents.
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bobheckler- Posts : 62229
Join date : 2009-10-28
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