I was watching the game last night and several of us were racking our memories to determine if the Hack-a-Shaq strategy has ever worked for an opponent. I couldn't think of a single instance in the playoffs, which is obviously when it is most used, when it has worked.
I wasn't a math major, but even I can comprehend that if Shaq shoots 8/22, or 36%, like he did last night, the opposition would rather have that then the team shooting in the mid-40's or higher.
But if Shaq shoots somewhere around his career % of 50%, it's not even close to being a sound strategy. At that point, you are essentially conceding a 50% FG% to the Lakers, then on top of it, you are allowing the Laker D to get all set up and wait for your offense. That reason alone makes it a stupid strategy. To beat the Lakers you've got to run on them. Obviously age/fatigue are one of their weaknesses. Plus, in the case of the Wolves, a jump-shooting team, they need some transition buckets, whether it's catching the D recovering and popping a jumper on them when they're not ready, or better yet, some fast break buckets in the paint.
I just don't see it as an effective strategy for ANY team, but especially the Wolves. Hack-a-Shaq, combined with Minnesota's unwillingness, or inability to even try to score in the paint kept Minnesota in perpetual team foul penalty situations with the Lakers hardly having any. Not good.
So, can anyone remember a game where it worked?