Showing posts with label Glen Davis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Glen Davis. Show all posts

Monday, February 28, 2011

NBA News 2011: NBA Retrospective DeJuan Blair

DeJuan Blair of the San Antonio SpursImage via Wikipedia
DeJuan Blair, 6-7, PF/C, San Antonio Spurs, 1989
8.5 points, 7.4 rebounds, 1.1 assists, 1.2 steals, 1.5 turnovers, 50% FG, 66% FT

Expected to be drafted in the lottery by most analysts in the 2009 NBA Draft, Blair surprisingly fell to the 37th pick due to concerns surrounding the long-term viability of his surgically repaired knees. As they've made a habit of doing in the past decade, the Spurs pounced on the opportunity by picking up Blair, who's yet to miss a game in his NBA career.

Outlook

Looking forward, it's hard to imagine Blair developing into much more than he currently is now, a strange thing to say for a player just 21 years old that is already starting for the best team in the league. The problem for Blair is the two areas where he shows the most capacity for improvement – post defense and mid-range shooting – are areas he has shown little to no learning curve in since he emerged on the national scene his freshman season at Pittsburgh. That said, there is precedent for hard-working big men completely reinventing segments of their game early in their NBA careers, with Glen Davis (post defense) and David Lee (mid-range shooting) being two recent examples.

In order for Blair to take his game to the next level and place himself among the league's most impactful role players, he's going to need to put in the work in those two areas, and all the signs suggest he has the requisite work ethic to do so. Regardless, even if he doesn't do that, he's already on the path to a very productive career, and he's in the perfect situation to put his unique talents to work, playing off San Antonio's Big Three. As long as he can remain healthy, Blair has already established a very high floor for the rest of his career., and is clearly one of the biggest steals in the draft over the past few years.



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Sunday, October 31, 2010

NBA News 2010: Comparing Rajon Rondo To Magic Johnson: A Legend in the Making?

BOSTON - MAY 17:  Rajon Rondo #9 of the Boston...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
While watching the Boston Celtics play the New York Knicks the other night, I could not help but think of Magic Johnson when I saw Rajon Rondo dish out 24 assists while putting up a triple double en route to a win.

There are, of course, many differences between the way Magic played versus Rondo’s game. For instance, Magic stood eight inches taller at 6’9” which allowed him to see over the defenses while playing point guard.

Magic was one of the few players in NBA history that could dominate all five positions on the court. With his larger stature, Magic Johnson developed one of the best post games of any guard to ever play. 

By comparison, Rajon Rondo’s game focuses more on speed as he is one of the quickest players in the NBA. Magic may have led the Lakers’ “Showtime” fast breaks but he was never known as one of the fastest players in the league.

While both players were known as ball thieves, Rondo plays a more suffocating style of defense than Magic ever did. Consequently Rondo has made the all-defensive team the past two years, a feat never accomplished by Johnson.

With his 6’1” frame, Rondo will never be the post presence that Magic was.

Despite these differences, the way Rondo ran the offense against the Knicks was certainly impressive. The way Rajon set up his teammates for easy looks at the basket was reminiscent of the way Magic made his teammates better.

Similar to Magic Johnson, Rondo serves as the engine that makes the Boston Celtics offense run. The Celtics have other great players and legends on the team, such as Kevin Garnett, Paul Pierce, Ray Allen, Glen Davis and Shaquille O’Neal.


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Thursday, June 10, 2010

NBA News 2010: Lakers out of gas? Celtics win Game 4

Boston Celtics vs LA Lakers Game 2 2008 NBA FinalsImage by Adam Pieniazek via FlickrBOSTON – It's Game 102 of the Lakers' season, so the Boston Celtics know full well who the Lakers have – and who they don't, as in the case of swollen-kneed Andrew Bynum most of the second half Thursday night.
So with the Lakers getting little from anyone not named Kobe Bryant or Pau Gasol, the Celtics took control in the fourth quarter of Game 4 of the NBA Finals for a 96-89 victory that tied the series, 2-2.
The Lakers' leading reserve, Lamar Odom was ineffective in Bynum's place and came away all too aware of how the Celtics had put forth a team effort that the Lakers didn't.
Boston reserves Glen Davis (18 points) and Nate Robinson (12) were energizers and bucket-providers in a game where both teams struggled to score in the first and third quarters. Also off Boston's bench, Tony Allen was cited as "phenomenal" by Celtics coach Doc Rivers; Rasheed Wallace was "unbelievable."
"You never know where it's going to come from," Odom said of the Celtics' game. "That's how you beat teams."
Boston's victory ensures there will be a Game 6 at Staples Center on Tuesday night. Game 7, if necessary, would be June 15 – again at Staples, where the Lakers were 9-0 in the postseason before losing Game 2 to Boston.
Lakers forward Ron Artest was so moved by teammate Derek Fisher's late-game performance to win Game 3 of the NBA Finals that he said of Fisher: "He's like an MVP-type guy." After the Lakers' Game 4 loss, they might be jumping to a conclusion that Bynum is the most valuable.
The Celtics breezed through the Lakers' Bynum-less paint for fourth-quarter points. The Lakers had a 62-60 lead after three quarters.
Odom failed even to do what he usually does on the boards while Bynum sat out: Odom got just one of his seven rebounds in his 22:10 of second-half play. The Celtics outrebounded the Lakers, 41-34. The team that has gotten more boards has won every game in the series.
Boston got three consecutive layups – two over Odom and one over Gasol – to take a 66-64 lead with 9:46 to play. Boston kept it coming thereafter, with a Robinson layup lifting the Celtics' advantage in points in the paint to a whopping 46-24 at the time.
Bryant finished with 33 points on 10-of-22 shooting. He made 6 of 11 shots from 3-point range, but he was kept on the perimeter of the Lakers' offense for the second consecutive game. He had seven turnovers and just two assists, and the Lakers might be wise to send him more to the post in Game 5, as they eventually did in the 2009 NBA Finals against Orlando, to create team offense.
Bryant ended the third quarter pleading with referee Greg Willard for a call after not being awarded any free throws all game to that point. He had pushed the Lakers forward with shooting sprees a couple times earlier in the game, but the Lakers needed one from him or better execution from his teammates to rally in the fourth quarter. When the interior of their defense collapsed, the Lakers really fell into a hole.
http://www.ocregister.com/sports/game-252928-lakers-bynum.html
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Tuesday, June 8, 2010

NBA News 2010: Fisher deserves the money, saves Lakers again

Luke Walton and Derek Fisher of the LA LakersImage via WikipediaBOSTON – After all that, that final kick, that fourth quarter, that impossible layup into the teeth of a Celtic avalanche...tears?
Think this game and this team mean much to Derek Fisher?
The Lakers' 91-84 Game 3 victory Tuesday and Fisher's late contributions to it nearly left him crying.
During an interview.
While still on the court.
On national television.
Fisher had to pause before speaking. Then he started but paused again. Finally he apologized for all the pausing and also for the feelings welling up inside him.
Neither apology was necessary, but that's Fisher for you. Doing the right thing so often this time of year.
"You know, I love what I do," he would say later. "And I love helping my team win. To come through again tonight for this team, 14 years in, after so many great moments, it's always quite surreal and quite humbling to experience it again."
On a team famous for its collective ego and flaming self-confidence, Fisher refreshingly possesses both without flaunting either.
"I think as you grow in this game...you start to recognize that being in this moment, on this stage, it's not a given," he said. "To have this opportunity just as a person, I don't think you ever want to look back in life and have any regrets about anything."
With each passing playoff performance, Fisher's doing his part to sell himself. The Lakers would be very wise to make that purchase. Again.
"He's a really terrific leader, we know that, in our locker room," Coach Phil Jackson said. "But his leadership on the court is just a solid presence out there."
Jackson continued speaking for several seconds before adding, "When he's got the opportunity to hit a key shot, it seems like he's always there and ready."
The Lakers have the finest closer in basketball in Kobe Bryant. Tuesday, their closer needed a closer. Jackson went with the lefthander.
Fisher, who hadn't reached double figures in the first two games, reached them in Game 3's fourth quarter alone.
And given that no other Laker would score more than four points in the fourth and that Bryant would shoot 1 of 6, Fisher's 11-point effort shined even brighter.
"He's been criticized quite a bit for his age (35 years old)," Bryant said. "It's a huge thrill for him and for all of us to see him come through in these moments. He's done it over and over and over again, so it's almost his responsibility to our team to do these things."
With the Lakers up one, Fisher hit a layup.
With the Lakers up two, he hit a short jumper.
With the Lakers up four, he hit a longer jumper.
With the Lakers up three, he hit a bank shot.
Are you starting to get the idea that Fisher was just slightly enormous in holding off Boston late? Well, that is the idea.
But then, with the Lakers up four again, Fisher hit his most memorable shot since 0.4 in San Antonio. Yeah, this one was that good, if not quite as dramatic.
After taking an outlet pass in the final minute, Fisher dribbled around Kevin Garnett near half-court, and then charged for the basket. Garnett, Ray Allen and Glen Davis approached in thunderous pursuit.
That's 20 feet, one inch of Celtic. That's 747 pounds of Celtic. That's enough to discourage most NBA players, nearly all of whom are larger than Fisher is at 6-foot-1, 210 pounds.
Fisher leapt toward the rim anyway, lofted the ball as softly as possible off the backboard and was clubbed in the head by Garnett.
Jackson called Fisher's decision to attempt to take the ball the distance "a very bold play."
"It was one on four," Jackson continued. "It was imperative that it goes in for us to win."
The ball went in, a foul was called and the game was over, 48.3 seconds before it was officially done.
So what, from his single greatest individual effort of the night, does Fisher remember most? Everyone else, of course.
"To see Pau's (Pau Gasol) reaction, and my teammates' reactions, that's why those moments feel so good to me," he said. "Hitting the floor didn't feel that good to be honest. But Pau's reaction and Lamar (Odom) and Kobe and what the guys were saying to me, that's why things feel so good."
So was there anything else? Only this: Remember how Allen destroyed Fisher and the Lakers with those long jumpers in Game 3? Allen, again with Fisher guarding him much of the night, was 0 for 13 – 0 for freaking 13! – Tuesday.
"It's like being a kid, man," Fisher said. "You just never get tired of that candy."
http://www.ocregister.com/sports/fisher-252522-lakers-hit.html
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