Tuesday, January 31, 2012

NBA News 2012: An Even More Dominant LeBron

MIAMI, FL - MAY 31:  LeBron James #6 of the Mi...MIAMI, FL - MAY 31: LeBron James #6 of the Miami Heat is double-teammed by Jason Kidd #2 and DeShawn Stevenson #92 of the Dallas Mavericks in the first quarter in Game One of the 2011 NBA Finals at American Airlines Arena on May 31, 2011 in Miami, Florida. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)In a match-up of two equally skilled players, individual defense is primarily a function of being longer, stronger and faster than your opponent. There are a small handful of All-NBA caliber players with a skill-set comparable to LeBron; there isn’t a player in the world who can compare with him athletically.

The Bulls, with three of the best interior defenders in the NBA in Joakim Noah, Taj Gibson and Omer Asik and excellent perimeter athletes in Derrick Rose and Ronnie Brewer, became an elite team due to a defense unrivaled in terms of length and intensity. In the first quarter Sunday, LeBron made them look like the Toronto Raptors.

To stem the bleeding, Tom Thibodeau resorted to a 2-3 zone, abandoning his team’s calling card in an effort to keep LeBron out of the paint. Erik Spoelstra had an easy counter: shifting LeBron to the high post, where his height and court vision allowed him to pick apart the defense and find Joel Anthony at the rim.

However, LeBron’s athleticism and playmaking ability are known commodities.

What should concern the rest of the NBA was the post-game he displayed. His inability to play with his back to the basket has long been his most glaring weakness: Dallas exploited it in The Finals last season, putting increasingly smaller defenders, from the 6’7 Shawn Marion to the 6’5 DeShawn Stevenson and the 6’4 Jason Kidd, on him as the series progressed.

Against Chicago in the second half, he took turns abusing Hamilton and Brewer, facing them up and blowing by them from the elbow, baseline and the low-post. But with 5:00 minutes left in the fourth quarter, the Bulls had crawled back in the game, trailing Miami by only two points.

LeBron received the ball with a 26-year-old 6’7 225 wing with a 6’11 wingspan and a 40’ vertical defending him, and as he began posting up, no help came. So he patiently dribbled the ball five times, bull-dozing Brewer back feet at a time for an easy lay-up at the front of the rim.

To understand how well Chicago will have to play to defeat the Heat, compare the super-human acrobatics the 6’3 Rose uses to score in the lane against Miami with LeBron’s casual demolition of Brewer. The return of the 6’8 220 Luol Deng, the second rated small forward in the high school class of 2003, will help, but he’s not nearly enough.

While LeBron’s lack of a championship has made his game and character media punching bags, a perimeter player has never bested him in the playoffs. The common theme has been a dominant 6’11+ big man capable of controlling the paint defensively --  Tim Duncan in 2007, Kevin Garnett in 2008 and 2010, Dwight Howard in 2009 and Tyson Chandler in 2011.

As great as Rose is, he’s operating on the same plane of the game as LeBron. When Miami needed a stop in the 2011 Eastern Conference Finals, they stuck a 6’9 275 player fast enough to keep Rose in front of him without giving him space for his jumper, and that was that.

Dallas, in contrast, had a 7’0 low post scorer (Dirk) with a release point LeBron could not challenge and a 7’0 center (Chandler) capable of meeting him at the rim. The Mavericks, who treated Mike Bibby like a traffic cone all series long, were perfectly constructed to exploit Miami’s only two weaknesses, yet they barely won one of the tightest Finals in NBA history.

A year later, the Heat are much improved. They have the same starters, but instead of running out players like Bibby, James Jones, Erick Dampier, Zydrunas Ilgauskas, Jamaal Magloire, Juwon Howard and Carlos Arroyo in the regular season, the first four players off their bench are a healthy Udonis Haslem and Mike Miller, free agent acquisition Shane Battier and rookie Norris Cole. Cole, an athletic 6’2 175 guard, gives them someone to match up with players like JJ Barea, whose ability to blow by Miami’s point guards in the Finals made him an unlikely folk hero and an even unlikelier $20 million from Minnesota in the offseason.

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Friday, January 20, 2012

NBA News 2012: Durant, Westbrook "Rift" Ends with Westbrook's New Deal

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - MAY 23:  Kevin Durant #35 ...OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - MAY 23: Kevin Durant #35 and Russell Westbrook #0 of the Oklahoma City Thunder react in the first half while taking on the Dallas Mavericks in Game Four of the Western Conference Finals during the 2011 NBA Playoffs at Oklahoma City Arena on May 23, 2011 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
There had been multiple he-said/he-said reports about a potential rift between Oklahoma City Thunder stars Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook that some said could drive a wedge down the middle of the top contender in the Western conference. On Thursday however, Thunder general manager Sam Presti effectively put an end to the rumors by committing $80 million over five years to OKC’s dynamic combo guard.

The extension makes firm statements for both camps. Under the new “Derrick Rose exemption” negotiated in the new CBA, a player who meets specific milestones during the duration of their rookie contract can be rewarded with up to 30 percent of said team’s salary cap the following season. Westbrook, who met the criteria, was eligible for such a raise, however as Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoosports.com writes, “Westbrook gets an extension that pays him 25 percent of the Thunder's cap and preserves space that allows the franchise to construct future deals for James Harden and Serge Ibaka.”

Sam Presti might be one of if not the best GMs in the NBA, and it’s highly doubtable that he would award Westbrook such a lucrative deal if there was a rift between he and the Thunder’s perennial MVP candidate, Kevin Durant. Likewise, it’s highly unlikely Westbrook — who is scheduled to be a restricted free agent this summer — would not receive close to the same offer from any number of teams next offseason. If Westbrook was truly unhappy with Durant and his role in the Thunder’s organization, perhaps he wouldn’t have been so inclined to accept the haircut the Thunder were offering.

http://thefanhub.com/posts/detail/276895/Durant-Westbrook-Rift-Ends-with-Westbrooks-New-Deal

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