Probably the right place to put my thoughts on this, as I don't think it warrants a new thread, but it's around the weaknesses of the Spurs, particularly relating to a deep playoff run:
1) Inexperience - pretty self-explanatory. Even our vets don't have long playoff runs.
- Kornet played in 5 playoffs, 86 games total, averaging 8.6mpg. Only last year was an actual deep run with him playing meaningful minutes and he played 11 games at 16.4mpg. He won a ring with the Celtics two years ago too, so he has experienced it.
- Fox, one playoff series, a 7 game series at that, and he was VERY good vs. the Warriors. 27.4ppg, 7.7apg, 5.4rpg, 2.1spg. Not the most efficient on 42.4/33.3/75.6 shooting splits, but the entire Warriors defence was on him and he didn't shy away.
- Barnes, 5 playoffs, including winning it all with the warriors in 15. He played quite a bit too, 71 games total, 63 starts, 31.5mpg. The numbers aren't that great, but again, been there, which counts.
- Lunchlady - 5 playoffs, 48 games, 17.4mpg. He played quite well in the playoffs in 17, 18 and 20, but that was a long time ago.
- Bismack - 4 playoffs, and the only meaningful run was with teh Raptors in 16.
- Plumlee - 7 playoffs, a good run iwth Portland in 16, then I would say the only other meaningful ones were 18 with Denver and 23 with the Clippers.
Outside of Fox, none of these players are expected to be a major core of the team, Kornet and Barnes would likely get meaningful minutes though.
2) Tied to the point above, it is, who is the real leader of this team? On talent alone, it's clearly Wemby, but on experience, Fox would be the man. That said, he's been with the team for not that long, and seems to defer to Wemby at times. Barnes and Kornet are way too quiet, Biyombo doesn't even play much. Is Mitch doing that role? KJ is the heart, but is he the leader? I am not sure. Ultimately, if things get tough, who will rally the troops? I am guessing KJ and Fox will fill that role, but we will see.
3) I still have concerns about rebounding off Wemby forced misses. Yes, we are the best defensive rebounding team in the league, but I can see teams with multiple big bodied players (Knicks, Wolves, Cavs) giving us some trouble by rebounding Wemby-forced misses.
4) Teams who can pull Wemby out of the paint would be an issue for sure. Our entire defence revolves around Wemby, it's a hard nut to crack for the opposition, but if there is a team that can play five out (Nuggets, OKC, Celtics), Wemby could be forced outside of the paint and our soft underbelly would be exposed. Wemby can absolutely fly around and still cause havoc, but that is a lot of energy for him on defence and it could spell trouble for us.
5) Outside shooting. Despite us being on a decent run lately, I wonder what would happen when we go cold. The good news is that we have a deep team, which is why we are no longer spiteful against Vassell and KJ. They can have bad games (and they do) but the impact is minimal. But when they have good games, we are unbeatable. Vassell is inconsistent and I would love to see how he performs in a deep playoff runs, Barnes would be useful when he's hot, KJ shoots lower volumes and wide opened, Fox and Castle can catch fire once in a while but their strengths lie else where, Harper is pretty bad at this. Wemby, is actually the only guy, other than Vassell, I have some confidence in taking a 3 during crunch time.
6) Getting to the line. Calls in the playoffs are at a premium, it gives you easy points, it gives the players a breather, and most importantly, it puts the other team's players in foul trouble and that is that much more important when rotations are tight during playoff time. Good thing is we don't foul a lot, bad thing is we don't get a lot of fouls either (not bad, #10 in the league). We are #12 in the league in FTA and #10 in FTM (we are #17 in FT%), $11 in FTr and #9 in FT/FGA. We are not bad here, but see if we can adjust our expectations in getting to the line during the playoffs.
Feel free to add to this list.