That might have been one of the quietest 23-7-5 performances in recent memory — as a barometer, the career averages LeBron James are 22-6-7 — but what struck me most about Moses Moody is something Steve Kerr said postgame:
He’s shooting the lights out. The confidence, he’s maybe been our most consistent performer. His on-ball defense is top of the league against pick-and-roll and he’s such a great teammate. He’s there for you every night, the way he works. He’s so poised it’s really fun to watch Moses blossom and have such a good season. And there was a stretch in there for a month or so, maybe in December, where he cooled off, but I think this is the guy, who he is. He’s really a good shooter and good defender and somebody you can count on every night.
On-ball defense is top of the league against pick-and-roll. Wow! I went to go look up pick-and-roll defense on the NBA website, but I couldn’t find Moody’s name on the first page of any of the results as I sorted by a variety of columns.
I’m not even sure if you can really tie numbers to acumen that, to me, is more of an art than science. You just kind of know you’ve got the respect of the ball-handler or not, when you’re out there guarding him.
And so I don’t have anything to offer on Moody’s defense statistically, but I will say that anecdotally, the pick-and-roll defense seems to pass the eye test.
Certainly the offense is there. If you look at bkref.com and his last five games, I count 16-for-41 on threes and those five games are all double-digits in scoring, bookended by 25- and 23-point performances.
But yeah, the defensive barometer for a bonafide two-way wing is whether he can be the Number One point-of-attack defender against the other team’s primary playmaker and I’d say the torch has been passed from Andrew Wiggins to Moody adequately.
Now, I still have my little bouts of frustration on 1v1 point-of-attack (non-pick-and-roll), as you might know from our Watch Parties, but thinking back, I believe a lot of those are transition-related and Moses does not have the chase-down ability of Andrew that made Wiggs really special, even when beaten on the first step — guys in this era and pace tend to get beaten on the first step, anyways, so it’s kinda not as big a deal these days.
But bothering the pick-and-roll? Yeah, I can see Mo being effective on that, on the regular. Something to look out for, a nuance to digest during games, going forward.
Quickie related thing: At age 13, Moody had the same wingspan as Al Horford 🤯
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