New York Post

FRESH APPROACH

Restart gave Vaughn a clean slate to help revive Nets

- By BRIAN LEWIS brian.lewis@nypost.com

Nets interim coach Jacque Vaughn has used the restart to restructur­e his system and reboot his team. The result has been a 5-2 mark going into Thursday’s regular-season finale versus Portland, tied for third-best in the bubble.

“We wanted to give the guys something they could hold onto that looked a little different, something you could press the refresh button on,” Vaughn said.

“[We] got to a position where we regrouped as a staff and said, ‘How can we put these guys in the best position to succeed with the personnel?’ … We really streamline­d things and really allowed players to play with confidence.”

The staff made changes on both ends of the court. The undersized Nets have been doing more switching and scrambling than under Kenny Atkinson.

“We’re not as much of a centerfiel­d team. We’re switching a lot more, playing a lot more aggressive­ly on the defensive end,” Joe Harris said. “We’ve been put in a position where we have to scramble around and sacrifice for one another, just more of a team approach versus the big and guard being on their own.”

Vaughn acknowledg­ed the Nets are, “not fearful of taking risk, whether that’s playing zone or trapping or being extremely aggressive and scrambling.”

The changes on the other end are even more glaring.

Playing without Kyrie Irving and Spencer Dinwiddie has left Caris LeVert as the only remaining isolation player. While he has excelled at the point, it’s forced an egalitaria­n brand of basketball — share or struggle.

“Caris is our only 1-on-1 player and we know for us to have success and play well offensivel­y we have to move the ball move ourselves and try to get out in transition and get easy baskets that way,” Harris said.

The emergence of Chris Chiozza, Tyler Johnson and Jeremiah Martin has allowed the Nets to keep multiple ballhandle­rs on the court. Their assist-to-turnover ratio has gone from 24th before the shutdown to third in the restart. Part of that is scaling back the system with so many newcomers.

“It’s the simplicity. We just play simple basketball. I feel like that’s what I like most about his coaching style,” Rodions Kurucs said.

“They’ve really taken to getting each other shots and getting into open areas, pushing the pace and just keeping things simple. If a guy’s open, they hit him,” Vaughn said. “Really, we’ve tried not to complicate this game of basketball.”

That includes being less draconian about their shot charts. Though they still value 3s and layups, they no longer treat lowervalue mid-range shots as anathema. They’ve seen those jump from 6.5 attempts to 9.9, and that freedom has bred confidence.

“The way defenses are playing, you’re going to have your ability to shoot midrange shots,” Vaughn said. “That balance of getting to your spot and being able to make the midrange shot allows you as a group to have confidence.” So has pushing the pace. LeVert has averaged 24.5 points and 10 assists the past two games at the point with Garrett Temple at off-guard, and he’s even operated some in the post. But pushing the pace has provided an early edge in the shot clock and spared LeVert taking a half-court beating.

“One of the biggest adjustment­s we made is playing faster . ... We’re having to make quicker decisions and play off the first pass, trying to score off simple things, quick transition,” said Jarrett Allen, also touching on another change: Vaughn himself, whose rapport-building has drawn raves.

“I’d say they’re two different people, just gelling well with the type of person … not saying [everybody] didn’t gel with Kenny,

I’m just saying it’s different with Jacque.”

 ??  ?? STYLE POINTS: The Nets enter their matchup against Portland 5-2 in the NBA’s restart, and Rodions Kurucs said interim coach Jacque Vaughn’s coaching style is a big part of Brooklyn’s success.
STYLE POINTS: The Nets enter their matchup against Portland 5-2 in the NBA’s restart, and Rodions Kurucs said interim coach Jacque Vaughn’s coaching style is a big part of Brooklyn’s success.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States