A: I believe where teams fail is when they attempt to fit their players into systems rather than design systems around players. Exhibit A would be Phil Jackson foisting the triangle on an ill-suited Knicks roster or even David Blatt trying to import the Princeton offense to Cleveland at the start of 2014-15. With the Warriors, when you have Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson, you shoot 3-pointers. And when you have Draymond Green, it's a lot easier to get to the hybrid undersized approach, when you have such a versatile talent capable of defending opposing big men. So, no, the Heat (or most others teams) can't enter camp next fall and tell their players the plan is for a 3-for-all. Just this past season, Erik Spoelstra adjusted his defense to play to the strengths of Hassan Whiteside. Oklahoma City came awfully close to showing there are ways to compete with the Warriors without attempting to beat them at their own game. What I will say about the phenomenon that is the Warriors, though, is that there are worse approaches than starting from an approach with ball movement. It's about getting the best possible shots, with your roster dictating whether those shots are 3-pointers.