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Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?

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  • #91
    Re: Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?

    Originally posted by PacersPride View Post
    Do you have any proof of this "instruction" per our coaches or is this as you stated only "opinion." So basically your saying the coaches instructed Hibbert not to rebound the basketball and only block out. Thats just absurd.

    Blocking out and rebounding are essentially the same action all in one. you dont just block out with no intent of rebounding. thats so far fetched as to the reason why roys rebounding #s were low i dont even want to bother explaining the variety of flaws presented in that argument.

    Again, i would like to know if there is any support to the claim hibbert was instructed to only block out from our coaches. not saying you dont have direct evidence, simply requesting the source.
    My only proof is the hours that I have spent rewatching this season's games, my friend. I'm not from the US so it would be quite impossible for me to have any kind of source inside the Pacers locker room. But I can watch the games as many times as I like and I can notice several patterns.

    When you see that some things happen consistently then you can guess that they are in fact coaching instructions.

    I'll give you an example. Lance Stephenson averaged only 3.9 RPG in the 12-13 RS. When the playoffs came around Vogel instructed Lance to go after rebounds aggressively (and that's something that Lance himself has confirmed). What was the result of this? Lance's rebounding numbers skyrocketed. He went from averaging 3.9 RPG in the RS to average 7.6 RPG in the Playoffs. What was the reason for this sudden change? It was a coaching instruction.

    No, I don't have any inside information. I never claimed that I did have inside information. What I do claim is simple. I noticed some patterns that happened consistently. Roy Hibbert would always block out. Come hell or high water, he would always try to find the opposition's best offensive rebounder and block him out. I spent several hours re-watching our games and looking at Roy's reaction after a shot went up and that's exactly what he did the vast majority of the time. He found the opposition's best offensive rebounder and blocked him out.

    If something is happening so consistently throughout a whole season then one of the two is happening.

    1) It's a coaching instruction and that's why it will keep happening without changing.

    2) The individual player is ignoring the coach for a whole freakin' season and refuses to follow his orders.

    What is more likely to be the case? Don't you think that if Hibbert was ignoring Frank's orders for a whole season then Frank would bench him? It didn't happen. Frank chose to stick with Hibbert even when he was playing awful and defended him from outside criticism. I really don't believe that he would do that for a player that ignored his instructions for a whole season.

    That's why I believe that it was a coaching instruction, my friend. Yes, it's only my opinion since I don't have any tangible evidence in order to prove it but it's also the only thing that makes sense.

    PS: I also think that you have misunderstood what I said. I never said that Hibbert is instructed to block out with no intent of rebounding. I simply said that he is instructed to block out instead of attacking the ball. There is a pretty big difference between blocking out and attacking the ball.

    Hibbert, Ian and West blocked out with the intent of rebounding. Lance, Paul and Scola attacked the ball. You are free to re-watch the games and notice that this was the general pattern.
    Originally posted by IrishPacer
    Empty vessels make the most noise.

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    • #92
      Re: Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?

      Originally posted by Infinite MAN_force View Post
      People who "hate stats" often rely on bad stats the most.
      This x1000000000000000. AMEN!
      Originally posted by IrishPacer
      Empty vessels make the most noise.

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      • #93
        Re: Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?

        Originally posted by Infinite MAN_force View Post
        I like to boil things down to a simple thought.

        People who "hate stats" often rely on bad stats the most.

        Rebounds per game is a ****** stat, that doesn't account for a myriad of circumstances, in regards to the actual effect or relevance it has toward winning a basketball game.

        Case in point:



        Yet players get destroyed for not reaching certain bad stat benchmarks, Roy will never be good enough for many unless he reaches the irrelevant benchmark of 10 rebounds per game, you know, because he's tall.

        Any time someone tries to introduce an advanced metric into the discussion, that tries to account for the bigger picture of what's actually going on, inevitably some push back in the form of "I just watch the games" comes into play. I think that's crap.

        If you think RPG is so otherworldly important, than stop talking about how you "watch the games". That's a stat. Assists per game? (How often are good winning passes not credited with the assist?) They are all stats, some better than others. In fact, the most simplistic ones usually aren't the best ones.
        The people you think "hate stats" don't really see a difference between what you consider to be "bad stats" and other stats that are considered "advanced stats"...which I assume you think are "good stats". Why they are "good stats" I really don't know, because they suffer from the same thing. They do not account for nearly enough things for most people to draw valid conclusions from them.

        That's really the issue. I respect stats and value the information they yield. The issue is the number of times I have seen them used to make invalid conclusion on this site. Time after time I have seen those conclusions shot down because the person using the stat had not been nearly thorough enough about other aspects of the game that might explain why the numbers look the way they do.

        So, my advice is just be careful about drawing conclusions. The fact Roy is a bad rebounder is not a myth. At 7'2" and with his length, he should be owning the boards. His issue is that he isn't quick or athletic enough and the man cannot stay on his feet. He cannot own the paint and to understand that does not take a single statistic.

        Comment


        • #94
          Re: Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?

          Originally posted by Nuntius View Post
          My only proof is the hours that I have spent rewatching this season's games, my friend. I'm not from the US so it would be quite impossible for me to have any kind of source inside the Pacers locker room. But I can watch the games as many times as I like and I can notice several patterns.
          I'm reasonably certain that Vogel or someone from the team expressed this at some point.
          "Danny Granger is one of the top players in the league. To move Danny, you better get a lot back." - Larry Bird

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          • #95
            Re: Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?

            Originally posted by cgg View Post
            I'm reasonably certain that Vogel or someone from the team expressed this at some point.
            They did during or right after the 12-13 playoff series with the Heat.

            Comment


            • #96
              Re: Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?

              Originally posted by cgg View Post
              I'm reasonably certain that Vogel or someone from the team expressed this at some point.
              I would not at all be surprised. If so, I agree with the way he is being used. If Andrew Bynum had been our C, the instructions (IMO) would have been different and Lance would not have had to lead the team on the glass.

              Comment


              • #97
                Re: Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?

                If I am looking forward to nothing else this season, which I pretty much am not, I am just looking forward to the hopeful end of Roy Hibbert excuses or bad play. One way or the other this season he should either be able to put it all together and at least have a consistent season or his defenders should be able to see that anything short of his own injury is pretty much just excuse making if he has another off kilter season.

                Wait, nevermind I just now thought that this isn't really true. If he does falter will they then use the excuse that he has to much pressure put on him because Paul & Lance are no longer here?

                For the record Roy IMO isn't a bad rebounder, however he is not a good rebounder either.


                Basketball isn't played with computers, spreadsheets, and simulations. ChicagoJ 4/21/13

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                • #98
                  Re: Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?

                  Originally posted by Peck View Post
                  If I am looking forward to nothing else this season, which I pretty much am not, I am just looking forward to the hopeful end of Roy Hibbert excuses or bad play. One way or the other this season he should either be able to put it all together and at least have a consistent season or his defenders should be able to see that anything short of his own injury is pretty much just excuse making if he has another off kilter season.

                  Wait, nevermind I just now thought that this isn't really true. If he does falter will they then use the excuse that he has to much pressure put on him because Paul & Lance are no longer here?

                  For the record Roy IMO isn't a bad rebounder, however he is not a good rebounder either.
                  You make some very good points. As a 7'2" C who protects the rim incredibly well and has very long arms, I would expect more rebounds than 6.6...less than 3 other starters. But if he can actually get back to his 2011-12 production, you have to grade him at about a B or at worst a C. I do think he came close to flunking last year though.

                  Comment


                  • #99
                    Re: Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?

                    Originally posted by BlueNGold View Post
                    You make some very good points. As a 7'2" C who protects the rim incredibly well and has very long arms, I would expect more rebounds than 6.6...
                    And you did get more than 6.6 RPG in the rest of his Vogel-led career. Let's not act like the last season is what we should expect from him in the future. It's pretty clearly an anomaly.
                    Originally posted by IrishPacer
                    Empty vessels make the most noise.

                    Comment


                    • Re: Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?

                      Interesting...I always thought it was by design given the high number of rebounds that George and Stephenson got per game. Stephenson was our best player we had at putting pressure on the defense during a fastbreak situation, and Paul George wasn't that far behind him. We didn't have the best half-court offense in the league, so (to me) it only made sense to take advantage of Stephenson and George's skills in the open court when possible. Hibbert was a better offensive rebounder than he was a defensive rebounder, because of how close he played to the rim. We wasn't the traditional PF/C grabs the rebound then waits for the PG to come get it team...if that was case, then this forum would be in an uproar about how we "never run the ball". I don't care about Roy's overall RPG as long as he's hitting the offensive glass. The ATL series was particularly frustrating, because they basically nullified Hibbert in every way. The one thing he COULD have done (offensive rebounding), he was horrible which was why I was so anger with his game during the playoffs. He was "alright" against Washington and Miami. However, I thought the team as a whole fell apart.
                      Last edited by ksuttonjr76; 08-25-2014, 05:03 AM.


                      Remember when we could have gotten 1-2 solid players and a possible Top 3 draft pick in the 2017 NBA Draft by trading away Paul George?

                      Comment


                      • Re: Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?

                        Originally posted by BlueNGold View Post
                        Dikembe didn't seem to have a problem rebounding and he wasn't that terribly athletic. He was tough enough to control the paint and long enough to grab rebounds while at the same time defending the rim. They are not skills that have to be mutually exclusive.
                        MJ didn't have Lance's problems. So let's start *****ing at Lance for not peforming like Jordan. Logical consistency FTW.
                        Just because you're offended, doesn't mean you're right.” ― Ricky Gervais.

                        Comment


                        • Re: Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?

                          Originally posted by PacersPride View Post
                          Do you have any proof of this "instruction" per our coaches or is this as you stated only "opinion." So basically your saying the coaches instructed Hibbert not to rebound the basketball and only block out. Thats just absurd.

                          Blocking out and rebounding are essentially the same action all in one. you dont just block out with no intent of rebounding. thats so far fetched as to the reason why roys rebounding #s were low i dont even want to bother explaining the variety of flaws presented in that argument.

                          Again, i would like to know if there is any support to the claim hibbert was instructed to only block out from our coaches. not saying you dont have direct evidence, simply requesting the source.
                          This is indicative of the sacrifice of this team," Vogel said. "A lot of times, (the bigs), they're sacrificing themselves to wipe out the best rebounders on the other team while the guards come back and get the numbers.
                          "It's a sacrifice," Vogel continued, "more than anything."
                          http://www.indystar.com/story/sports...ounds/4988905/

                          Next.
                          Just because you're offended, doesn't mean you're right.” ― Ricky Gervais.

                          Comment


                          • Re: Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?

                            Most here are not surprised that was the strategy. In fact, Frank had a good strategy and it showed last year as we often won the battle on the boards. But it was the strategy because Roy couldn't defend and rebound at the same time because he was being pulled out of the paint. Gone are the days when many teams allow Roy Hibbert to clog the lane. He's just too good at defending the rim and drawing charges.

                            There are a couple related questions. How many teams can draw him away from the bucket resulting in his rebounds going down? Also, how much will Roy gamble by staying near the paint? These are going to be huge questions this coming year. I bet he stays home a bit more because teams will be getting by our porous perimeter defense and his presence will be more important than ever. That means some teams are going to be lighting him up from 3.

                            Comment


                            • Re: Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?

                              Originally posted by BlueNGold View Post
                              Most here are not surprised that was the strategy. In fact, Frank had a good strategy and it showed last year as we often won the battle on the boards. But it was the strategy because Roy couldn't defend and rebound at the same time because he was being pulled out of the paint. Gone are the days when many teams allow Roy Hibbert to clog the lane. He's just too good at defending the rim and drawing charges.

                              There are a couple related questions. How many teams can draw him away from the bucket resulting in his rebounds going down? Also, how much will Roy gamble by staying near the paint? These are going to be huge questions this coming year. I bet he stays home a bit more because teams will be getting by our porous perimeter defense and his presence will be more important than ever. That means some teams are going to be lighting him up from 3.
                              I'm okay with letting Roy/Mahinmi defend the paint and stay within 5 feet of the basket while letting Teams light Hibbert/Mahinmi ( a Center ) from the 3pt line.

                              Does it mean that there will be some Teams ( like the Hawks with Antic and the Cavs with KLove ) that will try to pull Hibbert away from the paint and succeed?

                              Yeah. But dems da breaks. The Pacers with Hibbert/Mahinmi and the rest of the NBA with Centers that aren't exactly great at defending the perimeter will have the same problem.

                              If you want to look at it as a weakness in Hibbert's game, that is fine and a part of his game that Teams can exploit. The good thing that the majority of the NBA doesn't have Centers that have a decent to solid Mid-Range to 3pt game.

                              I will live with Hibbert's limited perimeter and mid-range defense if it means that he stays near the paint and anchors the defense. The Pacers were ranked 1st in not allowing points for the last 2 seasons....mainly because of the way the defense is designed and ( dare I say ) because of the defensive anchor that both Hibbert and Mahinmi provide along with the way that the rest of the lineup is setup to collapse to the paint.

                              In the end, it's a trade off that the Pacers and pretty much any Team with slow footed Centers will have to make.

                              Also.....I'm not sure if it's a gamble ( or specifically a choice by Hibbert to make ) where he decides to actively chase the guy he's defending out to the perimeter. Shouldn't the Player ( whether it is Hibbert, PG24 or West ) be doing what the Coach tells him to do when it comes to how he is supposed to defend on the Team level? I've always thought that the defense is predicated on Players being responsible for doing "A, B and C". I'm guessing that Hibbert/Mahinmi's job is to not venture too far away from the paint but to try and contest mid-range / perimeter shots to the best of their ability when the situation presents itself.

                              Something to also consider is that we have to rely more on GH, Solo, Miles, West , Watson ( ) and Stuckey ( ) to help prevent and limit dribble penetration. Hopefully, they all continue to show signs of providing good Team Defense.
                              Last edited by CableKC; 08-26-2014, 03:39 AM.
                              Ash from Army of Darkness: Good...Bad...I'm the guy with the gun.

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                              • Re: Myth Buster: Is Roy Hibbert A Bad Rebounder?


                                Coaches and players say all sorts of hype to the media. you cant be bleeping serious to put all the stock of that strategy into one snipet from the indystar. go ahead and buy into that nonsense all you want.



                                all this topic is a damn pissing contest. anyone who believes roy is an adequate rebounder @ 15 MILLION is living in fantasy land.



                                i expect were going to delve back into this topic in great detail once the season rolls around. again, the only STAT that really matters is 15 MILLION.

                                And roy sucks at rebouding for that rate. once the season rolls fully expect to see this topic revisited per each game.


                                i watch roys performance with an eagle eye and thats all i really need. again, this topic will be revisited this season in greater detail.

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