June 14, 1998. Game 6 of the NBA Finals. The Chicago Bulls trail the Utah Jazz 86-83 with 41.9 seconds remaining. What happens next is the most famous offensive sequence in basketball history — and it starts, as all things did in Chicago, with the triangle.
Phil Jackson doesn't call a play. He doesn't need to. The triangle is running. Michael Jordan catches the ball on the left wing in the triangle's initial formation — three players in triangle positioning on the strong side, two stretching the weak side. Jordan reads John Stockton helping off Scottie Pippen in the corner. He drives baseline, draws the help, and could kick to Pippen for an open three. Instead, he pulls up for the iconic mid-range jumper that gives the Bulls their sixth championship.
But here's the part the highlight doesn't show: Jordan had four clean options on that possession. The triangle created all of them. He chose the most difficult one because he was Michael Jordan. Any of the other three would have produced a high-percentage shot. That's the triangle. Not a play. A system of options. And after 11 championships, it deserves more than the dismissal it gets in the analytics era.
The Most Misunderstood Offense in Basketball
The triangle has a reputation problem. Critics call it outdated, too complex, and incompatible with modern basketball's emphasis on pace and three-point shooting. The New York Knicks' disastrous implementation under Phil Jackson (2014-2017) seemingly proved the triangle was a relic — an offense that required Jordan and Kobe to function and failed without them.
This narrative misses a critical distinction: the Knicks failed because they lacked the personnel and commitment to run the system properly, not because the system was flawed. Running the triangle with players who can't read defenses is like running a spread offense with a quarterback who can't throw. The system isn't the problem. The execution is.
How the Triangle Actually Works
The triangle is not a set play. It's a decision framework. At its most basic level, it creates a triangle formation — typically the center, a wing, and a corner player on one side of the court — while placing two players on the weak side. The initial set looks simple. What makes it devastating is what happens next.
Every player in the triangle has defined options based on how the defense reacts. The entry point is usually a pass from the point guard to the wing, followed by the point guard cutting or relocating. From this initial action, the system offers 7-8 different options:
- Post feed: If the center's defender fronts, the wing can lob or bounce pass into the post
- Wing isolation: If the post defender helps, the wing attacks 1-on-1 with spacing
- Backdoor cut: If the wing's defender overplays the passing lane, the corner man cuts backdoor
- Skip pass: If the strong side is congested, the ball swings to the weak-side players for an advantage
- Pick-and-pop: The center can step to the elbow for a mid-range jumper
- Split action: Two players can screen for each other off the ball to create shooting opportunities
The offensive players read the defense and make decisions — they don't wait for a play call. This is what made the triangle so devastating with the Bulls and Lakers: Jordan, Pippen, Kobe, and Shaq could all read defenses at an elite level. The system gave them framework and spacing while allowing them to exploit whatever the defense gave them.
"The triangle is democracy in offensive basketball. Every player has the ball in meaningful situations. Every player makes decisions. The best players make the best decisions, and the system rewards that." — Tex Winter, creator of the triangle offense
The Analytics Alignment Nobody Mentions
Modern basketball analytics emphasize three offensive principles: spacing, ball movement, and shot quality. The triangle, designed decades before the analytics revolution, embeds all three.
Spacing: The three-player triangle on the strong side naturally maintains 15-18 feet between players — the mathematically ideal distance for creating driving lanes while keeping passing angles open. This wasn't an accident. Tex Winter studied spatial relationships on the court the way modern analysts study shot charts. He arrived at the same conclusions fifty years earlier.
Ball movement: The read-and-react structure means the ball rarely sticks. Each player who receives a pass has immediate options: shoot, drive, pass to a cutter, or swing to the weak side. The offense flows through reads rather than stalling in isolations or waiting for screens. Average time of possession in a well-run triangle offense: 6-8 seconds. That's faster than most modern motion offenses.
Shot quality: The triangle creates high-percentage looks through player movement and defensive reads. Post-ups against smaller defenders. Open mid-range jumpers from the elbow. Backdoor layups against overplaying defenses. The shot types have changed — the modern version would produce more threes — but the principle is timeless: read the defense, attack the weakness, create quality shots.
The Three-Point Adaptation
The most common criticism of the triangle is that it doesn't generate enough three-point attempts. In a league averaging 35+ threes per game, this seems fatal. But the triangle can adapt — and already has.
The Golden State Warriors' motion offense — which produced the most three-pointers in NBA history during their dynasty — shares fundamental principles with the triangle: read-based decision-making, constant player movement, and spacing that creates open shots. Steve Kerr played in the triangle under Phil Jackson. He didn't copy it in Golden State, but he built on its philosophical foundation.
The key insight: the triangle isn't anti-three-point. It's anti-predetermined. It wants players to take the best available shot based on what the defense provides. In today's NBA, that best available shot is frequently a three — and the system accommodates that naturally. Move the corner position behind the arc. Extend the wing to three-point range. The triangle's geometry shifts, but its read-and-react logic stays identical.
The Personnel Problem (And Why the Knicks Failed)
The triangle's greatest strength is also its most significant barrier: it requires players who can read defenses, make decisions, and execute multiple skills. There are no "stand in the corner and shoot" roles. Every player must pass, cut, screen, and score from multiple spots.
This is why the 2014-17 Knicks failed so spectacularly. Their roster included specialists — spot-up shooters, isolation scorers, players who excelled in one role — rather than the multi-skilled decision-makers the system demands. Carmelo Anthony, the team's best player, was a historically great isolation scorer but an unwilling passer who disrupted the read-and-react flow the triangle requires.
Running the triangle with players who can't make reads is like giving a chess board to people who only know checkers. The equipment is there. The capability is not.
The Modern Descendants
The triangle as a complete offensive system may not return to the NBA in its pure form. But its DNA is everywhere:
- Denver Nuggets: Jokic-centric offense runs through a hub player making reads from the post — the triangle's core concept with a modern point-center
- Golden State Warriors: Motion offense with read-based decisions, constant movement, and democratic ball distribution
- Boston Celtics: Five-out attack that creates the same spacing principles the triangle codified decades ago
- Oklahoma City Thunder: Multiple ball-handlers making reads in a flowing system that rewards basketball IQ
Eleven championships. The foundation for every modern motion offense. A system whose principles — player empowerment, defensive reads, natural spacing, and flowing ball movement — are embedded in every successful NBA offense of the 2020s.
The triangle didn't die. It evolved. And the teams winning championships today are running its ideas whether they realize it or not.