A: I agree with your analysis. Yes, I appreciate in the wake of the NBA Finals against San Antonio how everyone is pointing to the Spurs' success in playing a five-man game. But I also know for years that just about every coach has preached such an approach (just as every coach says at the start of camp that their team will run). The reality is that invariably you wind up needing isolation scores, when the defense pushes you late in the clock and you have to have one player getting it done on his own. During the Finals, Wade could not beat his man off the dribble, which put that much more pressure on an all-or-nothing LeBron approach. Now Wade has to produce in such a role, with the apparent hope that Danny Granger can provide some of that off the bench, as well. Lament all you want the tendency of NBA teams to lapse into one-on-one play, but sometimes the defenses are so good at blowing up set plays that one-on-one becomes the only option as the clock winds down.