No idea his theory behind it but its not condusive to attracting attacking the rim type pg's
baron davis?
Maybe CR and his library of knowledge can fill us in and let us know if he ran something similar at UCLA back in the day.
Lav's UCLA Pgs - the first was Cameron Dollar - Cam DID attack the rim, but never finished - seemed like he ALWAYS passed out of penetration - of course, the offense had Charles O'Bannon, Toby Bailey and JR Henderson as attackers waiting for those passes - so the offense did get to the Elite 8. Cam, however, was injured quite a bit that year. His backup was starting SF Toby Bailey, who actually played the most at the 1. when Toby was at the point, yes, attack and finish at the rim. But Toby was also effective in the set offense as well - he led the Bruins with 155 assists (4.8 a game) that year (very underappriciated kid - finished at UCLA as #4 all time scorer, #6 all time assists, #8 Steals, #14 rebs).
The next PG was Baron Davis - sort of. Lav's ran essentially a double PG - as Baron and fellow 1998 frosh Earl Watson started from Day 1. Baron was unstoppable attacking the rim (remember, you likely never saw him at his best - that frosh season ended with a torn ACL, and he was NEVER the same player again) - But Earl was, if anything, stronger. Believe it or not, Earl was a pt FORWARD in high school. Made his living either dishing (9 assists as a hs senior) or banging underneath (14 rebs a game!). After Baron left, Earl became more of a feeding point than an attacking post - he had Dan Gadzuric, Jerome Moisio (lotto to Boston), JaRon Rush (best of the 3 Rush brothers - alcohol ended his career), Jason Kapono, and Matt Barnes to dish to. That continued with Lav's final PG - 6'5 Ced Bozeman. Boze had an injury plagued Bruin career - 7 surgeries in 5 years, including a knee surgery DURING his frosh year, an ACL after his Junior year, plus off-season hip and shoulder surgeries. He never really attacked the rim after his first 5 games as a frosh - that's when he went out for surgery. He had a healthy Junior year - and led the Pac 10 in assissts for Ben Howland's first Bruin team, then tore the ACL. He sat out a year, and Jordan Farmar took over the PG spot. When he came back, instead of b!tching, Ced asked what can I do to help the team. He was the starting small forward on the 2006 Bruin team that lost to Florida in the National Championship. He went on to set the D-League record for assists in a game (24), got called up to Atlanat, started 5 games before another injury. He's had a nice overseas career for the last 7 years or so. He came back to play in the D-Leauge a couple years ago - put up 18 pts and 9 assists a game. When he's done playing, I expect he'll be a solid coach someday.
Don't know if that answers the question. Lav's DOES go with what works with his talent on hand. It's one of the reasons he plays so many combinations and weird substitution patterns in the 1st half of a season. He seems to need to see players in game action more so than practice situations. It's a "drawback" you have to accept with Lavin as your coach. Players can earn PT in practice, but d@mn well better produce in games to keep it.