Strategic Tendencies
Core NBA tactical principles for this team
Pick-and-Roll Actions
Ball screen actions remain the dominant source of offense in the modern NBA — managing coverages and creating advantages is central to every team's offensive plan.
Three-Point Spacing
Modern NBA offenses are built on three-point spacing — stretching the defense to create driving lanes and kick-out opportunities.
Switching Defense
Switch-capable rosters have become a priority — the ability to guard multiple positions reduces communication breakdowns and eliminates switch exploitation.
Pace and Transition
Transition basketball generates the highest-quality shots in the game — elite teams convert defensive stops into fast breaks to minimize half-court defensive preparation.
Second-Chance Offense
Offensive rebounding creates free possessions — teams that generate second-chance points consistently outperform their shooting percentages over a season.
Tactical Breakdown
Dundon’s Phoenix Slip Reveals a Marginal-Gains Blind Spot: Travel Logistics as Play-In Leverage
Early check-out isn’t a schematic problem by itself, but it directly touches the parts of the game that are most sensitive to fatigue and routine: transition defense, screen navigation, and late-clock execution. In a play-in, you’re typically living in two ecosystems—first six minutes (settle the game) and last six minutes (execute under pressure). Both are where travel friction shows.
Start with defense. If legs are even slightly flat, the first thing to go is point-of-attack containment. That turns basic high ball screens into advantage creation: the on-ball defender dies on the screen, the big plays in a deeper drop to avoid getting beat, and suddenly you’re conceding two options Phoenix thrives on—pull-up threes and pocket passes that force low-man rotations. When the low man is late, corner shooters get practice reps. When the low man overhelps, the dunker spot becomes a layup line.
Offensively, disrupted routine often shows up as early possessions that are “correct but slow.” Actions are called on time, but the cuts are a half-beat late and the second-side spacing is sloppy. Against a switching or late-switching defense, that kills the advantage chain: the first pick-and-roll creates a mismatch, but the rescreen arrives late, the shake to the slot doesn’t happen on the catch, and the possession devolves into a contested pull-up.
Latest Analysis
All analysis →Dundon’s Phoenix Slip Reveals a Marginal-Gains Blind Spot: Travel Logistics as Play-In Leverage
Portland’s owner cited March demand to justify an early hotel checkout before an April 14 play-in in Phoenix. The date error is small; the underlying process—sleep, timing, and routine—can swing single-elimination games.
Portland’s two-way travel freeze is a playoff tax on practice reps, scouting bandwidth, and in-series adjustment speed
Keeping two-way players home won’t change Portland’s active playoff rotation, but it quietly narrows the team’s day-to-day tactical toolkit: fewer high-intensity bodies for prep, fewer live reads for opponents, and thinner emergency coverage.
Portland weaponizes weak-side gravity as Toumani Camara’s 9 threes turn Brooklyn’s help rules into a 35-point avalanche
Camara’s career night wasn’t a hot-shooting fluke as much as a schematic stress test: Portland’s drive-and-kick map, early-clock pace, and disciplined spacing forced Brooklyn to choose between rim protection and corner integrity—and it chose wrong.
Concepts Used by Trail Blazers
Extracted from tactical analysis articles