And the continued rise of inverted spacing
By: Caitlin Cooper I @C2_Cooper
According to Cleaning the Glass, this is the exact definition of garbage time: "the game has to be in the fourth quarter, the score differential is greater than 25 points for minutes 12-9, greater than 20 for minutes 9-6, and greater than 10 for the remainder of the quarter. Additionally, there have to be two or fewer starters on the floor combined between the two teams." By that standard, despite leading by as many as 31 points for the game, and 20 during the final six minutes of action, the Pacers never played a second of garbage time against the Detroit Pistons on Friday, as all five starters stayed on the floor until the final buzzer. After giving up more points in the third quarter (45) than what the Pistons tallied in the first half (42), the decision to stick with the first five may have been born of squeamishness over potentially letting go of the rope or stridency as it applies to maintaining a sense of urgency.
At any rate, garbage time was non-garbage time -- not only by definition but also in function, especially with regard to the emergence of a specific, late-game stylistic trend and what it reveals about the developing chemistry between Tyrese Haliburton and Pascal Siakam -- or, rather, vice versa. For more on the continued rise of inverted spacing, let's return to the film room and look at what the Pacers had on hand to ensure that the game would be in hand.
Caitlin Cooper
2024-02-25 00:03:11 +0000 UTCCaitlin Cooper
2024-02-24 23:58:40 +0000 UTCCaitlin Cooper
2024-02-24 23:58:28 +0000 UTCmaninthebooth
2024-02-24 23:44:43 +0000 UTCBrad Cangany
2024-02-24 17:30:08 +0000 UTCNorma
2024-02-24 16:15:16 +0000 UTC