by Fenix on Sun Mar 05, 2006 4:17 am
C: Marcus Camby
PF: Kenyon Martin
SF: Carmelo Anthony
SG: Ruben Patterson
PG: Andre Miller
I just finished watching the Detroit@Denver match, which was my third or fourth time I saw the Nuggets play this season and the first time since the trade for terrible duo of Patterson and Evans. As you already know, Denver won this one and I started to question myself if the Nuggets truly are a contender for the NBA title?
The roster Kiki has succeded to assemble looks pretty good on the court. Marcus Camby revived his career and is playing ball of his life, providing game-changing D with his rebounding and blocking. In this particular game you could really see the effect he has on the game, how players were actually scared of driving for easy layups because of his presence. On offense he isn't limited only with putbacks and alley-ops, but he added a dangerous but ugly looking midrange jumper. The offseason microfracture knee surgery hasn't limited as much of Martin's athleticism as I would it will and he still has great quickness and elevation on his dunks and there's always a chance that he'll punish you with a 17 footer if you don't defend him closely enough. Too bad both of these big men are made out of glass and you never know if they'll last untill the playoffs in one piece. Carmelo got himself fit and it really shows, especially athleticism-wise. He's still incosistent jump shooter, showed on several occasions that he's unwilling to pass the ball and plays passive defence. Patterson doesn't really deserve to be called a 'shooting guard' while he can't shoot, but is all hustle and energy. He's not integrated into Denver's halfcourt offense yet and the majority of points he gets are either putbacks or alley-oops. He can post his man up, though, as can Andre Miller, who posseses the right amount of passing ability and court vision to run the whole thing.
On the bench, you have Earl Boykins, who is smartly used by Karl and doesn't stay in game nearly enough to become a liability on D. Reggie Evans becomes the dominating rebounder once Camby leaves the court and is also underrated defender. Too bad he doesn't have Rodman's basketball IQ to be as effective as he was on both sides of the court. Najera is - like Patterson - pure energy. Derrmar Johnson is a decent backup SG and a great offensive talent. Too bad he never got his career moving.
Their offense relies on fast break opportunities, foorays to the basket, some post-up game and a lot of easy baskets caused by good off the ball movement of the players. But there's no one in the starting five (or on the bench, for that matter) who can shoot from any distance with reliability, and that is what haunts him for the past years. Their bench has no size and only Miller, Anthony and Boykins can consistently create their own shots, everything else goes through team offense, which is still a bit shaky.
The point of this thread is this question: will and can the Nuggets present a serious threat in the playoffs?
"Sometimes a player's greatest challenge is coming to grips with his role on the team." (Scottie Pippen, #33)