Showing posts with label Jermaine O'Neal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jermaine O'Neal. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

NBA News 2011: First Round's Most Underrated

Arron Afflalo of the Denver NuggetsImage via Wikipedia
Whenever a round of the playoffs begins predictions are filled with the names of the stars. Stars, in the long-term, determine a team's success and failure with their play. However, they can't do it on their own, even if they sometimes think they can.

This list is a discussion of those other players, the ones who need to step up – either now or again as their series wears on – in order for their team to successfully reach the second round. Without further ado, these players are your Underrated Keys to the First Round.


  1. Toney Douglas, New York Knicks
  2. Mike Conley, Memphis Grizzlies
  3. Carl Landry, New Orleans Hornets
  4. Nic Batum, Portland Trail Blazers
  5. Jermaine O'Neal, Boston Celtics
  6. Arron Afflalo, Denver Nuggets




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Thursday, March 3, 2011

NBA News 2011: Andrew Bynum: In 2 Years, Will He Be the NBA's Best Big Man?

Andrew Bynum playing with the Los Angeles LakersImage via Wikipedia
Is Andrew Bynum on his way to becoming the most dominant basketball big-man in America?  I believe he is.

If he can stay healthy, then the lake is the limit.  He’ll roll as far as the mighty waters will carry him.  He’s been showing flashes of dominance since he was 18 years old.

I saw him swatting Kendrick Perkins’ shot into the crowd during the last game against Boston in Beantown.  I believe Bynum’s play prompted Danny Ainge to find other options at center—even though Shaq and Jermaine O’Neal are there.

Bynum’s defense forced the Celtics to make roster moves in hopes of contending with him in the Finals.  I can see Ainge waking up in a cold sweat after seeing visions of Bynum’s steady progression to a dominant force.

By the time the NBA Finals roll around this year—Ainge was probably thinking—Bynum will be a one man wrecking crew in the lane.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/625618-andrew-bynum-in-2-years-will-he-be-the-nbas-best-big-man


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Sunday, September 19, 2010

NBA News 2010: Boston Celtics 2010-2011 Preview

Kevin GarnettImage by Keith Allison via Flickr
Top Offensive Player: Rajon Rondo.

Top Defensive Player: Kevin Garnett.

Top Playmaker: Rajon Rondo.

Top Clutch Player: Everyone.

The Unheralded Player: Jermaine O'Neal.

Best New Addition: Avery Bradley.


Strengths

When the Celtics need a defensive stop, they usually get it. Rivers' club is still among the best in the league on that end of the court. Boston isn't shabby when it comes to shooting either (56.4 true shooting percentage ranked fifth in the leagued last year). Obviously, this team's best attribute is its experience. Shaq brings four (corrected, thanks to Ian Alexander Casey) more championship rings into a veteran locker room. These guys have been there before and know what to expect.


Weaknesses

Boston's offense was surprisingly mediocre last season. Sure, injuries played a major role, but the Celtics still averaged just 105.4 points per 100 possessions (tied for 13th). Shaq isn't any better at defending the pick and role, and even though the team retained Nate Robinson, there still isn't a true point guard option besides Rondo. Age and injuries are as much a part of the Celtics these days as Lucky or Red's cigar. The team will just have to continue to manage them as they've always done.


Can the Celtics compete with Miami's Big Three?

Even if Boston's Big Three can't hang with Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh and LeBron James, the HEAT will be hard-pressed to match the Celtics top 12 players. Boston has more than enough solid guys to fill a roster and manufacture trades – things Pat Riley could struggle with in Miami. The HEAT have a lot of talent, but this game has proven time and time again that talent isn't everything.


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Tuesday, September 7, 2010

NBA News 2010: Are the Boston Celtics Too Old To Win an NBA Championship?

Buddy-Icon von Eric Kilby Cavs @ Celtics 10/28...Image via Wikipedia
The Boston Celtics are old. In signing Jermaine O'Neal and Shaquille O'Neal they certainly didn't make themselves any younger. On the other hand they have some key players that are relatively young in Rajon Rondo and Kendrick Perkins, and they went to the NBA finals last year. The question then becomes, are they too old now? For that matter, how old is too old?

Jordan took some time off to play baseball. Garnett played out of high school. We're learning that 35 isn't the same when you're talking about kids who came out of high school. When I looked at minutes, I found out that Garnett has played more minutes already than Jordan or Scottie Pippen did during their entire careers, and he's about 5,000 more than either had played during the finals.

Ray Allen also already has more minutes played than those two had when they won. Pippen will be about even with where they were at the end of the season. So, in terms of age they might not be too old, but in terms of minutes played by a nucleus of players, I don't know if there's a group with that many miles on its tires. 

In the end I don't know whether it can be said that they can't win, but it certainly is a valid question mark. Just because it hasn't been done doesn't mean it can't be done. But the fact it hasn't been done should indicate that history is against them.

A lot will probably depend on how much the Celtics can get from Rondo, and how well Perkins returns from his injury.


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NBA News 2010: Can the Celtics Eke Out Another Finals Appearance with Their Old Roster?

Buddy-Icon von Eric Kilby Cavs @ Celtics 10/28...Image via Wikipedia
Despite pushing the Lakers to Game 7 last season, we must keep last year in the past when examining this coming season. The Celtics effectively swapped Rasheed Wallace and Tony Allen with Shaquille O'Neal, Jermaine O'Neal and Delonte West, and thus, their team chemistry will be an experiment in-the-making entering training camp. 

More importantly, the Celtics' Big Three of Paul Pierce, Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett isn't getting any younger (they're 32, 35 and 34 years old, respectively). Throw in a 31-year-old Jermaine O'Neal and a 38-year-old Shaq, and you've got the starting lineup of the 2020 Seniors' League All-Star team. Can all of those All-Star appearances and miles on the legs combine to form one more championship effort for Boston?


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NBA News 2010: Who Has the Best Bench in the League?

ShaqImage via Wikipedia
Still, for teams battling injuries, there's nothing that helps more than having legitimate depth at each position. The Portland Trail Blazers managed to stay relevant last season despite constant injury trouble because of the depth they had; now, with everyone back healthy, Portland's bench will be one of the best in the league.  

When Kendrick Perkins comes back in February, the Celtics could also contend for the best bench in the league honor.  Shrek and Donkey will be joined by Shaquille O'Neal and Jermaine O'Neal, two former $100 million big men; Marquis Daniels, who's a year removed from averaging 13.6 points and 31.5 minutes per game for Indiana; and Delonte West, a defensively-minded guard who started his career back with Boston in 2004.


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NBA News 2010: Can Jermaine O'Neal Offer Anything to the Celtics Front Line?

Jermaine O'Neal playing with the Miami HeatImage via Wikipedia
Jermaine O'Neal is far removed from the days where he averaged 20 points and 10 rebounds a game, earning nearly $20 million/year for his efforts. In fact, two years ago with Miami, he appeared so lifeless on the court that people actually began mistaking him for a walking corpse. 

O'Neal revived his play somewhat last year, although he immediately reverted into walking corpse mode in the playoffs (4.2 points and 5.6 rebounds/game in the Heat's five-game loss to the Celtics).


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Thursday, July 8, 2010

NBA News 2010: Celtics Re-Sign Ray Allen, Add Jermaine

Jermaine O'NealImage by Keith Allison via FlickrThe Boston Celtics are hoping to keep their window for another NBA championship open for at least two more seasons.
On Wednesday night, free-agent guard Ray Allen confirmed that he had agreed to a two-year, $20 million deal to remain with the Celtics. Allen’s agent, Lon Babby, indicated that the second year of the contract holds a player option.
The agreement with Allen comes on the heels of Doc Rivers’ decision to return next season and a forthcoming four-year, $60-plus million extension with Paul Pierce.
Celtics president of basketball operations Danny Ainge worked quickly to keep his team together and can now take his time courting complementary pieces to play alongside their core. We’ll talk more about that later.
Keeping Pierce in town was imperative for a number of reasons, both in terms of basketball and public relations, but retaining Allen may have actually been more important in the grand scheme of things.
Allen spreads the floor, giving Pierce and Rondo lanes to attack the basket and Kevin Garnett the ability to bang more effectively in the paint, as well as hit an elbow jumper, and gives Rivers an on-court extension of his coaching staff. He’s the most level-headed player in Boston’s rotation.
It’s no surprise that Boston lost to the Lakers in the Finals when you consider Allen’s play. He averaged 14.6 points on 36.7% shooting (including 12-for-41 from downtown) in seven games after scoring 16.3 points during the regular season and shooting 42.3% from three-point land during the first three rounds of the playoffs.
There is some concern that Pierce has already begun to decline and that he’ll be a shell of his former self at the end of his four-year deal, but there should be no such worries about Allen even though he’s more than two years older.
Allen’s True Shooting percentage in 2008-09 was 62.4%, the highest mark of his career, and his number this past season was the third-best he’s registered (60.1%).
His PER dropped to near the league average in 2009-10 (15.2), but he was still a plus-seven per 100 possessions for the Celtics. His consistency and health will continue to be key to Boston’s success as well. He’s missed just 14 games in the last three games (he’ll turn 35 years old later this month).
There are stark differences in their respective games, but Allen has gone down the same avenue as Reggie Miller. Allen is content as the third or fourth option in Boston as long as he’s close to a title, while Miller allowed Indiana’s younger guns (Jermaine O’Neal and Ron Artest) to take the reigns in the latter stages of his career.
Allen’s stroke is much quicker and more textbook than Miller’s and he has replaced him as the NBA’s best offensive player without the basketball and coming off screens.
This contract also ensures that Allen will overtake Miller as the NBA’s all-time leading three-point shooter while with Boston. Allen trails Miller by just 116 threes (2,560 to 2,444) and the mark will likely be his at some point after the All-Star break barring injury.
Grade for Allen: B+
If the Celtics were headed for a rough season, I could have seen Allen leaving for a mid-level exception deal with another contender, but Boston remains in the race to come out of the Eastern Conference yet another time, even with the constructing of a superpower in Miami.
Allen is the glue that keeps the Celtics together as a team rather than four individual stars, which is why he’s worth $20 million over two seasons.
Grade for Celtics: A
Ainge has to write a lengthy ‘Thank You’ note to owner Wyc Grousbeck, who gave him nice leash in the mid-2000s and has allowed him to spend freely to keep Boston’s core intact in addition to purchasing complementary pieces.
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A few hours after agreeing with Allen on a $20 million deal, the Celtics worked to fortify their bench by adding free-agent center Jermaine O’Neal.
O’Neal’s two-year deal is worth $12 million and will use up the full mid-level exception.
The decision to sign O’Neal is an eye-opener for three reasons: Rasheed Wallace will in fact retire, Boston won’t court Shaquille O’Neal and they are confident Tony Allen will be retained.
O’Neal himself is an enticing option. He seems like a perfect replacement for Wallace, but looked awful for a majority of Miami’s first round series against Boston. He’s really only one-fourth of the player he was at his peak with the Pacers and will turn a relatively old 32 in October.
Grade for Celtics: C
Simply put, O’Neal is a huge health risk for a variety of reasons. He’s far past his prime and is more of an injury-risk because of his own body than the amount of miles he’s accumulated.
Grade for O’Neal: A
He’s coming off a max contract that was a tremendous weight on his shoulders and he’s immediately closer to a title than he’s been in six or seven years -- if not ever.
http://celtics.realgm.com/articles/385/20100708/grading_the_deals_celtics_re-sign_ray_allen_add_jermaine/
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