Much of the Nets' breakdown in game two was caused by a spirited Bulls’ defense and an increase in minutes for maniacally-motored Joakim Noah. But the Nets played in a way almost perfectly suited to fail against the Bulls defense.

Let’s breakdown where the Nets went wrong.

An imaginary line, drawn down the center of the court from one rim is called the “help line” and it splits the court into two sides: the side with the ball and the side without. The Tom Thibodeau-led Bulls defense is predicated on flooding the ball side with their four help defenders in the paint, which takes away driving lanes. The defender guarding the ball tries to force the ball handler to dribble into a numbers-down situation, where two or more Bulls defenders can guard the person with the ball.

A key antidote to this smothering defensive style is something the Nets lacked in game two, ball movement. Stagnation with the ball on the perimeter allowed the Bulls to load up their defensive efforts and make the Nets offense become very predictable. This static offense came to a noticeable head in the Nets’ two for 19, 11 point third quarter.

Any time an offense can get the ball to cross over the help line either via pass or dribble, it causes all five defensive players to shift and thus, opens up driving lanes, causes missed rotations and other opportunities for offenses to attack.

Swinging the ball from side to side is important for any basketball offense, but even more so against these modern day NBA defenses that load up on the ballside, like the Chicago Bulls.

The Nets used a stationary offense in the game-deciding third quarter. Watch the clips below from six Nets possessions in the third quarter and pay particular attention to how many passes are made each possession and how many sides of the court the Nets hit (how many times the ball crosses the help line).

In each of these clips you’ll see a trend: not much passing, the ball sticking to one side of the court, late shot clock situations and finally a bad shot.

Here's four potential fixes:

  1. Put more shooters on the court. For those watching the TNT telecast you had to have heard Steve Kerr remarking how the Nets are playing “three on five” offensively when both Gerald Wallace and Reggie Evans are on the court, which is true to a certain extent. Neither of those players are threats to score from deep and thus allow the Bulls defenders guarding them to sag further into the paint, clogging things up for the Nets even more. Playing shooters like C.J. Watson, Jerry Stackhouse, Keith Bogans or perhaps even Mirza Teletovic more, may give the Nets more room to operate or make the Bulls pay for stacking their defense to one side.
  2. More play design. Compare the below play with the slogfest of plays that was shown above.

    Both of these plays came from the third quarter, but you can see the difference in both ball movement and man movement in these sets. You will also notice the improved shot quality the Nets got as a result.

  3. More transition. As I wrote a few weeks ago, the Nets are facing a set and ready Bulls defense far too often. Looking for more opportunities to run off misses and makes will help the Nets create easier opportunities.
  4. Make the most of these off days. With two days off since game two, the Nets have ample time to iron out any offensive issues. It’s now up to P.J. Carlesimo and the rest of the of the Nets’ coaching staff to highlight examples through film and emphasize ball movement in practice -- so that come game time the players will ping the ball around the court more.

 

The Brooklyn Nets found out their opponent in the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs in the fourth quarter of a 103-99 regular season finale win over the lowly Detroit Pistons: by virtue of a New York Knicks victory over the Atlanta Hawks, the Chicago Bulls solidified the fifth seed and will travel to Brooklyn to take on the fourth seed Nets on Saturday.

Late Wednesday night the NBA released the schedule of the Nets/Bulls series:... MORE →

 

With a 98-92 Atlanta Hawks loss at the hands of the New York Knicks, the Brooklyn Nets will officially face the Chicago Bulls in the first round of the Eastern Conference Playoffs.

With both teams at 44-37 entering Wednesday night and the Bulls owning the tiebreaker with the Hawks, the Hawks only had a chance to play the Nets in the first round if they won and the Bulls lost. The loss seals their fate as the sixth seed, and they'll play the Indiana Pacers in the first round.

The Nets lost the season series to the Bulls, losing three of four games. The Nets ended the season

The Nets are the fourth seed, meaning they'll have home-court advantage against the Bulls in the first round. The first two games will be at Barclays Center, along with games 5 and 7, if necessary.

* * *


Sign up for The Brooklyn Game's free daily newsletter by clicking here.

 

In John Hollinger's playoff odds simulator, the Nets have a 1.4% chance of winning the NBA title. So you're telling me there's a chance?!

OK, 1.4% is not a very good chance, but considering there's a team named the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference, a 1.4% chance isn't too shabby. You may also look at it this way; there is about a 1.4% chance that LeBron James quits the game of basketball right before the playoffs start in order to pursue a career in professional baseball. In addition, there is about a 1.4% chance that Russell Westbrook gets arrested by the fashion police and is held in fashion jail until the NBA playoffs come to an end.

As explained by ESPN.com, here is the way in which the odds are calculated:

Hollinger's NBA Playoff Odds are based on the Hollinger Power Rankings, designed by John Hollinger.

The Hollinger Power Rankings are a measure of each team's performance in the season so far.

Based on those rankings, each day the computer plays out the remainder of the season 5,000 times to see the potential range of projected outcomes. The results reveal the most likely win-loss record for each team -- and what the odds are for each team to make the NBA playoffs, win the NBA title, win the lottery, and so on.

Other teams in the Eastern Conference fair a bit better than the Nets' 1.4%, but not by much. The New York Knicks are given a 2.4% chance at winning the title while the Indiana Pacers are given a whopping 10% chance.

As for the NBA Finals? Hollinger's odds give the Nets a 5.6% chance to make the Finals and an 13.8% chance to win the Atlantic Division. The Heat meanwhile, are given a 53.2% chance of making it back to the finals and a 26.8% chance of winning the NBA title. The OKC Thunder? Surprisingly, they're given a 29% chance to win the title.

For more on how the system works and what it means, see Hollinger's explanation.

 

The 40-28 Brooklyn Nets have clinched their first playoff berth since the 2006-2007 season Thursday night, thanks to a collapse by the Philadelphia 76ers, who blew an eight-point lead with under three minutes left to lose to the Denver Nuggets, 101-100.... MORE →

 

Brooklyn Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov promised a Nets championships within a "maximum" of five years after he took over the franchise in 2010.

Before that can happen, the Nets will have to make the NBA playoffs for the first time since the 2006-07 season, when the Jason Kidd-led Nets lost in the Eastern Conference Semifinals to the LeBron James-led Cleveland Cavaliers in six games. James would go on to carry the Cavs on his back for his first career Finals appearance after discarding the Nets in Game 6 at the Izod Center. (The Nets gave out "In Kidd We Trust" shirts that night in May 2007. They lost 88-72.)

The five seasons without a playoff appearance -- tied for the longest drought in franchise history(1986-91) -- puts the Nets at third on the active drought list alongside the Golden State Warriors.

That dubious streak may end as soon as tonight. According to the Nets PR department via a @NetsonYes tweet, the NBA has confirmed that the Nets clinch a playoff spot with a Philadelphia Sixers loss tonight in Denver against the Nuggets.  At 40-28, the Nets currently own the fourth seed in the Eastern Conference, one game behind the Knicks for the Atlantic Division lead with 14 games remaining for Brooklyn.

@Nets_PR would have tweeted out the information, but as Devin documented this week, the Nets have shut down the account. #RIP