Picture Pages: Everyday I'm Shuffling (And Chinning) Comment Count

Brian

Ace pointed out a basketball coaching site yesterday that had a bunch of Beilein stuff and one thing led to another and this happened, because apparently this is just what I do.

Trying to see stuff in a basketball game was an interesting change of pace, since even with my Analytical Goggles on there's a lot of stuff that just seems to happen because players are good or not good. This aspect of football is obscured somewhat. A lot of coaches say The Expectation Is For The Position with a straight face—I don't think you've ever ever heard a basketball coach drop that.

Anyway.

The initial post Ace pointed out was a couple sections of Michigan's offense called "chin" and "shuffle" in which the center moves out to the free throw line and acts as a low-pressure fulcrum connecting two halves of the floor.

What struck me about chin/shuffle is how they use the center as a conduit, opening up space without putting undue pressure on what's usually the least skilled offensive player on the floor. Meanwhile, the other four positions rotate through a variety of spots, eventually becoming interchangeable parts looking for the half-step they need to attack or shoot instead of reset.

Michigan runs a variety of looks off of this, each of which probes the defense for an easy bucket before reverting to a high ball screen on which the guy receiving the screen has three options.

I set to watching the NC State game again to find examples of how this works, and came across an example of the two-post offense getting Morgan open underneath for two (eventually).

Setting The Offense

This is a bit of an oddity since it's a two-post lineup but the principles are the same; here the offense will work around the lack of a three-point threat from one of the wings thanks to a busted NC State defensive assignment.

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The above is the on-court equivalent of this:

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For reasons unexplained the document consistently calls the two-guard in this offense a "trailor" instead of a "trailer" or I guess a "tailor". Supposition: he is a trailer who is suppose to tailor some offense. YEAH

So here the post has "flashed" but McGary just kind of set up at the line as Burke brought the ball up the court. The things in the document are an idealized version of the real world, I find. For instance, in one of the ways the offense starts is by dumping the ball to the center and then having the point and "trailor" cut to the basket.

The document:

Once 5 catches the pass, 1 and 4 [ed: the "trailor" yes I will eventually have to either fix that or drop the quote marks] SPRINT backdoor to the block. 5 looks for either 1 or 4.

Real life is dang perfunctory relative to an all-caps exhortation to SPRINT. The document does admit a bit later that "It is not common for either player to be open of [sic] this cut" and asks the 2—Morgan in this play—not to be "robotic". On this play the initial movements of Burke and Hardaway are soft jogs to their spot.

On this play Michigan is running "shuffle" instead of chin. Shuffle looks like chin when they start the play, but starts like this:

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dotted line is a pass

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Once Morgan receives the pass, Burke and Hardaway jog to the spots they're supposed to get to…

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…and McGary extends to the top of the key to receive a rote pass from Morgan. No one has made a decision yet.

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Meanwhile, a conveniently-timed graphic notes that eight minutes into the game Hardaway has more points than the rest of Michigan combined. Naturally he is going to receive lots of defensive attention. The guy checking Hardaway is CHECKING HARDAWAY in his brain.

McGary now has a rote pass to make of his own, this one a swing to Stauskas.

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"5 pops high, 3 reverses through the 5 to 2," sayeth document

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Hardaway sets a "shuffle screen" on Morgan's man; Hardaway's man is looking at that graphic and going "oh man I better check Hardaway"; Morgan gets hand-wavingly wide open underneath the basket.

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Stauskas dumps it down; Morgan misses, gets his own rebound, and finishes.

Meanwhile, Michigan has already executed the next part of the play with McGary screening whoever shows up on Hardaway.

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If NC State had covered Morgan appropriately this was likely to be a quality three-point look for Hardaway.

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"5 [McGary] sets the down screen for the 4 [Hardaway],
4 comes off the screen looking to shoot or curl it for a mid-range jumper.
2 [Stauskas] looks for 4.
After the screen 5 can look to slip to the basket or straight cut the FT line. 2 looks either for the lob[!] or at the elbow."

As it is, it's a layup for Morgan, eventually.

Things And Stuff

There aren't really many player takeaways on a short open layup that Morgan misses, gets back, and puts back. If we're trying to figure out some things about how Michigan runs offense, a lot of these broad early strokes are going to be off, as well. But…

A lot of the early movement in the offense is the process of getting into a play. On this play Michigan makes three passes and sends four players in motion before anyone has a decision to make. When Michigan dumps it to the center and then runs around and whatnot they're not really expecting to get a shot out of that, they're just moving into a variant of one of their standard looks.

Whoever is open is open. In half-court sets the guy who gets the ball is just going to be the guy who is open until nothing works and Burke has to create or die off a pick and roll.

Probe, reset, probe, reset. This is not a good example because Michigan just gets a quick easy bucket, but the document suggests the rhythm you can pick up watching Michigan play sometimes as situations happen over and over on the same possession as Michigan searches for the edge. 

Comments

UMmasotta

December 14th, 2012 at 12:47 PM ^

Please keep doing this. As a guy that never played organized ball (or unorganized, for that matter) growing up, my basketball IQ has dramatically increased in the last five minutes.

 

One or two plays picture-paged per game will eventually make me not basketball-dumb. Hooray!

 

1464

December 14th, 2012 at 12:50 PM ^

For reasons unexplained the document consistently calls the two-guard in this offense a "trailor" instead of a "trailer" or I guess a "tailor". Supposition: he is a trailer who is suppose to tailor some offense. YEAH

Probably confused by the fact that it is correct to write 'debtor' or 'contractor'.

NCBlue22

December 14th, 2012 at 3:32 PM ^

The Beauty of this type of offensive set is that it has so many options and keeps the floor spread.  If the offense attacks correctly, one mistake by the defense gets an open look. 

As stated, if Morgan wasn't open, Hardaway was being set up.  Stauskas can blow by his man if he chooses (though not the top option).  If Morgan does not get the ball, he likely goes to the corner and allows McGary to roll into the post.  If neither of the above work, the ball goes back to Burke and probably a high pick and roll.  Also, on the first pass, if the wing defender is overplaying, Morgan (switch him with Robinson in your head) would backdoor cut and the whole lane is open.

I played in a similar offense in high school, except the two posts played a little closer in (one on block area and one on elbow/free throw line area). 

There are a lot of variations that can be run with different player movements to avoid the defense knowing what is going on.

This type of offense is about reading and reacting to the defense.  That is why it is a little surprising that the freshmen are playing so well...i.e. sometimes it just takes reps to feel comfortable with the floor spacing, movement, etc...

Overall, good analysis.  Hope to see more. 

borninAnnArbor

December 14th, 2012 at 4:43 PM ^

Another large part of the offense is the pick and roll. It seems like Morgan stays in the pick position much longer than McGary. Some times McGary does not even wait until the defender gets there before he takes off to the basket. Is McGary leaving too early, at a good time because his man is already out of position, or should he wait for contact?