Showing posts with label LeBron James. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LeBron James. Show all posts

Monday, June 24, 2013

NBA News 2013: Are We Witnessing an NBA Dynasty in the Making for the Miami Heat?

Logo of the NBA Finals.
Logo of the NBA Finals. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Three NBA Finals appearances. Two titles. A 66-win regular season. A 27-game winning streak.

That's quite a collection of accomplishments for any team over any period of time. For the Miami Heat, that's three years of work. Hard work. Blood-sweat-and-tears-type work.

But does it constitute a bona fide NBA dynasty? If not, what more must LeBron James and company do to establish their run as one of the greatest pro basketball has ever seen?

Those are difficult questions to answer, especially without a clear-cut definition of what constitutes a dynasty. Back in October, Grantland's Bill Simmons took a crack at it—while also taking a jab at Bleacher Report, ironically enough—and came up with just four teams that unequivocally qualify for the sport's most coveted label:

—The George Mikan-era Minneapolis Lakers, the NBA's first dynasty, who won five titles in six seasons.

—The Boston Celtics of the Bill Russell vintage, who won a whopping 11 championships in the span of just 13 seasons.

—Magic Johnson's "Showtime" Los Angeles Lakers, who cracked the Finals nine times and won five titles therein between 1980 and 1990.

—Michael Jordan's Chicago Bulls, who strung together two separate three-peats in an eight-year period.

Aside from those teams, Simmons included Larry Bird's Celtics, Tim Duncan's San Antonio Spurs, and the Shaquille O'Neal-Kobe Bryant Lakers as second-tier "dynastenders."

He took the time therein to loosely articulate what a "high-end dynastender" actually is ("a team that contends for a solid decade while winning somewhere between two and four titles"), but at no point did Simmons explicitly describe what makes a dynasty a dynasty.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1680222-are-we-witnessing-an-nba-dynasty-in-the-making-for-the-miami-heat
Enhanced by Zemanta

Saturday, June 22, 2013

NBA News 2013: LeBron James Wins 2013 NBA Finals MVP

NBA player LeBron James answers questions duri...
NBA player LeBron James answers questions during a press conference after a preseason practice session Sept. 28, 2010, at the Aderholt Fitness Center at Hurlburt Field, Fla. The Miami Heat used the fitness center for their week-long training camp. James is a forward for the Heat. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
LeBron James has been dogged by nay-sayers throughout most of his career, even after winning his first NBA championship last season.

Now that he's secured his second straight Bill Russell NBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award, it'll be a little bit harder to knock him.

LeBron James earned the prestigious honor after posting 37 points, 12 rebounds and four assists in the Miami Heat's 95-88 Game 7 win over the San Antonio Spurs. The Heat's Twitter feed congratulated their superstar after the announcement:

Overcome with emotion when receiving the award, James noted how far he's come throughout his career, per Pardon the Interruption's Twitter feed:

In a series full of adversity for James, it was only fitting that his series-closing moment was one for the ages.

With the Heat ahead 90-88 with a little over a half minute remaining in Game 7 of the 2013 NBA Finals, LeBron James was dribbling about 35 feet out from the basket, draining the shot clock in an effort to suffocate the San Antonio Spurs' comeback bid.

He then took a high screen from Mario Chalmers, darted to the right elbow and raised for a jumper as Tony Parker and Kawhi Leonard gave chase. The shot touched nothing but nylon.

James, the man who was once deemed incapable of having the fortitude to thrive in "clutch" situations, had just hit the most clutch shot of all—one that clinched his team's NBA championship. Manu Ginobili turned the ball over for the Spurs on the next possession, James coolly knocked down two free throws after a subsequent foul and the celebration was on in South Beach.

Thursday night's win gave the Heat their second NBA championship of the "Big Three" era, a win that capped one of the best NBA Finals in history. James, again, came up big when his team needed him most.

His 37 points came on 12-of-23 shooting, including a 5-of-10 performance from beyond the three-point arc that seemed impossible this time a year ago. For the series, James averaged 25.3 points, 10.9 rebounds and seven assists per game.

The award is James' second consecutive finals MVP, another crowning in a career full of them for the game's best player. He's just the third player in league history along with Russell and Michael Jordan to win back-to-back MVPs (regular season and finals) and NBA championships, another piece in James' ever-growing legacy.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1680205-lebron-james-wins-2013-nba-finals-mvp-award
Enhanced by Zemanta

Friday, June 21, 2013

NBA News 2013: Heat beat Spurs for second straight NBA title

Dwayne Wade shooting a free throw for the Miam...
Dwayne Wade shooting a free throw for the Miami Heat against the Milwaukee Bucks, December 14 2005. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Victory in Game 7 brought more than another crown for LeBron James and the Miami Heat. It validated the team and its leader, forever cementing their place among the NBA's greats.

For the vanquished San Antonio Spurs, it simply compounded the misery of a championship that got away.

James led the Heat to their second straight title, scoring 37 points and grabbing 12 rebounds in a 95-88 victory on Thursday night in a tense game that was tight until Miami pulled away in the final minute.

Capping their best season in franchise history -- and perhaps the three-superstar system they used to build it -- the Heat ran off with the second straight thriller in the NBA's first championship series to go the distance since 2010.

Two nights after his Game 6 save when the Heat were almost eliminated, James continued his unparalleled run through the basketball world, with two titles and an Olympic gold medal in the past 12 months.

"I work on my game a lot throughout the offseason," said James, who was MVP for the second consecutive Finals. "I put a lot of work into it and to be able to come out here and (have) the results happen out on the floor is the ultimate. The ultimate. I'm at a loss for words."

James made five 3-pointers, defended Tony Parker when he had to, and did everything else that could be expected from the best player in the game.

The Heat became the NBA's first repeat champions since the Lakers in 2009-10, and the first team to beat the Spurs in the NBA Finals.

"It took everything we had as a team," Dwyane Wade said. "Credit to the San Antonio Spurs, they're an unbelievable team, an unbelievable franchise. This is the hardest series we ever had to play. But we're a resilient team and we did whatever it took."

Enhanced by Zemanta

Sunday, March 10, 2013

NBA News 2013: LeBron James’ Historic Season

English: Lebron James: Washington Wizards v/s ...
English: Lebron James: Washington Wizards v/s Miami Heat December 18, 2010 Italiano: Lebron James Camera: Canon EOS-1D Mark IV License on Flickr: CC-BY-SA-2.0 Flickr tags: LeBron James (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

For the last decade, we’ve wondered what LeBron James would look like when he reached his prime. Once his potential and upside were distant memories and James peaked, how good would he be? At 28 years old, we’re finally finding out. Not only is James the best player of his generation, he may go down as one of the greatest players to ever step onto a basketball court. This isn’t hyperbole. This is fact.

After leading the Miami HEAT to an NBA championship, winning a gold medal and taking home regular season and Finals MVP honors last year, James still found a way to take his game to another level this season. He has an incredible arsenal of weapons that allows him to pick and choose how he’s going to dominate each opponent he faces. He scores, passes, rebounds, defends, leads and, ultimately, wins. James may not be very good at announcing free agency decisions, but good luck finding many other weaknesses.

This season, James is averaging 27.3 points, 8.1 rebounds and 7.3 assists. He is shooting 56.8 percent from the field and 41.1 percent from three-point range. He shot 64.1 percent in February, becoming the first player since Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in March of 1983 to shoot at least 64 percent from the field for an entire month with a minimum of 200 field goal attempts. He also became the first player in NBA history to record six consecutive games with 30 or more points and 60 percent shooting from the field.

James is currently having the most productive season of any player in NBA history, according to Player Efficiency Rating, a stat that measures a player’s per-minute performance by weighing their positive and negative contributions. Michael Jordan holds the highest single-season PER after recording a rating of 31.89 in 1987-88. Wilt Chamberlain’s highest PER was approximately 31.84 in 1962-63, but it’s difficult to calculate since the league didn’t keep track of turnovers, blocks, steals or offensive rebounds. Legends like Abdul-Jabbar, Magic Johnson and Larry Bird never had a single-season PER higher than 30.

This season, James’ PER is 31.94. If he can continue to play at this level in Miami’s 27 remaining games, this will go down as a historically great year for James. This has become an annual dance for James. In 2008-09, he was on pace to break Jordan’s single-season record for much of the year, but finished at 31.69. Last year, James had a PER of nearly 35.0 at one point in the season, but eventually came down to earth and topped out at 30.80.

However, James has been seemingly unstoppable this season. After winning back many of the fans that turned on him as well as his first NBA title last season, James has had the weight of the world lifted off of his shoulders. For the first time since being labeled a phenom out of high school, James isn’t feeling the crippling pressure that comes with being the next big thing or a ring-less superstar. As a result, he has delivered an unforgettable season.

“LeBron, he’s so big and strong and powerful,” said Philadelphia 76ers head coach Doug Collins after a recent loss to the HEAT. “I mean, he decides whether he wants to be a passer or a scorer. The plays he makes are incredible. He’s an amazing player. … That team, when they go to LeBron at the four, is impossible to guard. You can’t guard him.”

His stat lines seem unreal, but these are not typos. Take last night’s double overtime win against the Sacramento Kings, for example. James recorded 40 points, 16 assists and 8 rebounds. Few players can impact one aspect of a game the way that James can impact all of them. He truly is a triple-double threat each and every night.

“He has simply made all of his weakness into strengths,” said one NBA scout. “He’s Magic and Jordan in body and mind right now. What impresses me most about James, and this is going back to last year, is that he’s no longer afraid of greatness. He’s comfortable with himself and his decisions. I credit Pat Riley for that exponentially. On the court, his game continues to expand, but it’s his jump shooting ability from all angles that has improved dramatically, especially in fourth quarters.”

James has received heaps of praise this season, to the point that his accomplishments blur together and his greatness is somewhat taken for granted. However, down the road, we’ll likely look back on these years as the LeBron James era and relive many of the spectacular moments throughout his career. James is to this generation what Jordan and Chamberlain were to theirs, and the numbers back that up.

Even if James isn’t considered the best NBA player of all-time when all is said and done, he’ll still belong in the conversation of once-in-a-generation legends that changed the game, dominated on a nightly basis and helped redefine greatness.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/nba-pm-lebron-james-historic-season/

Enhanced by Zemanta

Monday, February 18, 2013

NBA News 2013: Irving takes James’ role as Cleveland king

Kyrie Irving
Kyrie Irving (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Had Kyrie Irving considered the scope of this stage he starred on, his All-Star weekend coming-out party may have never come to pass.

The eyeballs come from all angles and in record numbers in the NBA these days – people in 215 countries watching in 47 languages on televisions and tablets and laptops and the like. Irving, this 20-year-old prodigy who joined incredible company in becoming the seventh player to be an All-Star before his 21st birthday, is now a major player in this game that goes way beyond the game.

The business of basketball is booming these days, and the one-man brands of players like Irving are built in times like these. The Cleveland Cavalierspoint guard thrilled the masses in the Rising Stars game on Friday, won the three-point contest on Saturday and was ready to enjoy his newfound elite status in his first All-Star game on Sunday. All the while, the counter-intuitive notion that Miami’s LeBron James could return to Cleveland as a free agent in the summer of 2014 continued to grow, in large part, because Irving’s talent is tantalizing enough to make the Akron, Ohio native seriously consider going home again.

“He’s unbelievable,” James said about Irving’s coronation as new king of Cleveland. “He’ll be (among) the top two, top three best point guards in the league. He’s headed there already.

“He’s doing some great things right now. They should be excited about having him in Cleveland.”

Irving, who was voted in by the fans despite the Cavaliers’ 16-37 record, was synonymous with excitement all weekend long.

His ankle-breaking moves against Detroit’s Brandon Knight were the talk of the town on Friday night, and he was the star on Saturday night as well. During the championship round of the three-point contest, and with a jumping James cheering him on courtside, TNT commentator Kenny Smith said on the telecast, “This dude is trying to make a statement, man.”

http://www.hoopsworld.com/kyrie-irving-takes-lebron-james-role-as-cleveland-king/

Enhanced by Zemanta

Thursday, February 14, 2013

NBA 2013: Efficient LeBron playing at highest level yet

Washington Wizards v/s Miami Heat December 18,...
Washington Wizards v/s Miami Heat December 18, 2010 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

After a recent Miami Heat practice in Washington, Ray Allen told the coaching staff he was skipping the bus ride and running back to the hotel.

LeBron James' ears perked up.

With that, the three-time NBA MVP went looking for his running shoes.

"LeBron said, `If you're going to do that, I'm going to do that too. I'm not going to be outdone by somebody else. I'm going to run,"' Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. "So he gets very competitive with things like that. If other people are working on their game, he takes notice."

That approach must be working. James' game -- already considered among the best in the NBA -- might be better than ever right now.

He's made 37 of his last 47 shots over his last 111 minutes, a torrid 79-percent clip. For the season, he's shooting a career-best 56 percent so far, easily on pace for the sixth straight season of improvement in that department. His 3-point shooting, at 42 percent this season, is much improved. He's shooting 70 percent inside the paint.

"I want to continue to push the button, continue to get better, maximize my potential and not waste an opportunity," James said.

The numbers go on and on. He's averaging 26.9 points this season. According to STATS LLC, only five players in NBA history have averaged that many points while shooting at least 56 percent over a full season. Maybe that's why Heat guard Dwyane Wade marvels when talking about James these days, saying "every year, it seems like he does the amazing."

"Numbers don't lie," James said.

At least, they don't in this case. After winning his third MVP award, second Olympic gold medal and first NBA championship, James said he wanted to get even better.

"It's kind of like, where is the bar for this guy? Does he have a bar?" Wade said. "And I'm glad that he's doing all this while he's in a Miami Heat uniform."

http://www.nba.com/2013/news/02/09/heat-lebrons-numbers.ap/index.html

Enhanced by Zemanta

Saturday, January 19, 2013

NBA News 2013: LeBron James the youngest to reach 20,000

English: Wizards v/s Heat 03/30/11
English: Wizards v/s Heat 03/30/11 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

LeBron James, 28, became the youngest player in the history of the NBA to score 20,000 points when he hit a floater in the lane late in the second quarter at Golden State on Wednesday night at Oracle Arena.

In a symbolic reminder that he is the farthest thing from a one-dimensional scorer, James – who has been assaulting the record books since he was drafted first overall by Cleveland in 2003 out of St. Vincent St. Mary High School in Akron, Ohio – also surpassed the 5,000-assist mark against the Warriors. By doing so, he joined a club that – according to Basketball-Reference.com – has a total of 13 members. James surpassed the 5,000-rebound mark last season, and is now one of 11 players in the 20,000-point, 5,000-assist ,5,000-rebound club.

Thirty-eight players have reached the 20,000-point mark in all, with seven of them active (including James’ 37-year-old teammate, Ray Allen, who entered play with 23,336 points). James’ 5,000th assist came midway through the first quarter, when he found Dwyane Wade for a dunk that put the Heat up 8-7.

His scoring was versatile as always – a converted alley-oop via Wade from midcourt early, a three-pointer atop the key late in the first quarter that stretched the Heat’s lead to nine, and a stepback 17-footer that gave him 17 points and put Miami up 41-29 with 4:24 remaining in the second quarter.

James – who was the youngest player to be drafted No. 1 overall in 2003 at 18 years old, the youngest to win Rookie of the Year, and the youngest to score both 1,000 and 10,000 points – has long since cornered the market on becoming the youngest player in the game’s history to achieve such feats. He is marching past the milestones in what is already a remarkable career.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/lebron-james-the-youngest-to-reach-20000-points/

Enhanced by Zemanta

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

NBA News 2013: Dwyane Wade Not Mad About Benching

Dwyane Wade of the Miami Heat (in black) dribb...
Dwyane Wade of the Miami Heat (in black) dribbles the ball against Toni Kukoc of the Milwaukee Bucks in a 2005 game. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Miami HEAT guard Dwyane Wade said Wednesday he has no ill will over coach Erik Spoelstra’s decision to sit him in the fourth quarter of Monday’s loss to the Utah Jazz.

In the 104-97 setback to the Jazz, Spoelstra decided to sit Wade and played forward Chris Bosh for just 40 seconds in the fourth quarter. The HEAT cut a 19-point deficit to two without their two stars before falling short.

Wade said Wednesday that he was frustrated about the loss, the HEAT’s sixth in the past 10 games, but there are no hard feelings over Spoelstra’s decision.

“It was the frustration of losing,” Wade said. “The fourth quarter was overblown. When I went to the bench, we were down 19 points and that team did a great job of coming back and making it a game. Obviously you want to play, but I could never get mad at my team coming back.”

http://www.hoopsworld.com/dwyane-wade-not-mad-about-benching/

Enhanced by Zemanta

Friday, December 28, 2012

NBA 2012: LeBron James says he will never enter the Slam Dunk Contest

English: LeBron James playing with the Clevela...
English: LeBron James playing with the Cleveland Cavaliers Español: LeBron James con los Cavaliers (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

For years, fans have dreamed of watching LeBron James — one of the most athletically gifted and remarkable in-game dunkers the NBA has to offer — compete in the Slam Dunk Contest at the league's annual All-Star Saturday Night festivities. And for years, from James' thrilling early days with the Cleveland Cavaliers through his heel-turn move to the Miami Heat to his redemptive title-and-Finals-MVP-winning 2012, we've found ourselves disappointed by the King's decisions to decline.

Sure, the inferred rationales were understandable — the competition has largely become a showcase for younger, lesser-known players; a star of LeBron's magnitude has more to lose in terms of reputation/public perception by posting an unimpressive showing in the contest than he has to gain by winning it; adding more All-Star Weekend work rather than getting rest where you can doesn't do you any favors in a season expected to extend into June, etc. But the heart wants what it wants, and since he entered the league with the top pick in the 2003 NBA draft, NBA fans' hearts have wanted to watch LeBron throw down in the midseason exhibition. Unfortunately, it's never going to happen.

After scoring 30 points in the Heat's 105-89 win over the visiting Utah Jazz on Saturday — his 29th straight regular-season game with 20 or more points (45th straight, including playoffs) and his sixth straight game without being called for a personal foul — James put the kibosh on any speculation about whether he'd take part in the dunk contest this February, or in any other year. From Chris Tomasson at FOX Sports Florida:

"No," said James, who turns 28 on Dec. 30. "It's over with. I'm getting too old for that. ... There were times when I wanted to do it. But I came into All-Star Weekend a few times banged up and I didn't want to risk further injury."

While there's been buzz about the prospect of James competing just about every year of his career, discussion reached a fever pitch back in 2010. With Dwight Howard and Nate Robinson going Superman and Lex Luthor in the '09 competition, James tossed his name into the ring for the '10 edition. Then, the following December, with the competition drawing nigh, James began to waffle, proclaiming the odds of his participation "50-50." Sure enough, when the 2010 Dunk Contest field was announced one month later, James' name was nowhere to be found.

The chatter was briefly revived for the 2012 competition, prompting one Oregon youngster to record an impassioned plea for LeBron to finally stop straddling the fence and actually get to dunking, but the song remained the same, as James steered clear of the 2012 event, which Jazz jumping jack Jeremy Evans won (somewhat underwhelmingly) by jumping over teammate Gordon Hayward and slamming two balls at once. James did tell ProBasketballTalk's Brett Pollakoff he might consider entering if the contest's winner won a $1 million grand prize; shockingly, NBA Commissioner David Stern didn't write a check on the spot.

http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nba-ball-dont-lie/lebron-james-says-never-enter-slam-dunk-contest-163834704--nba.html

Enhanced by Zemanta

Monday, December 24, 2012

NBA News 2012: LeBron James bikes to most of Heat home games

English: Lebron James: Washington Wizards v/s ...
English: Lebron James: Washington Wizards v/s Miami Heat December 18, 2010 Italiano: Lebron James Camera: Canon EOS-1D Mark IV License on Flickr: CC-BY-SA-2.0 Flickr tags: LeBron James (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Because an NBA game is not enough of a workout…

LeBron James — reigning NBA MVP, best player walking the face of the earth, Miami Heat franchise anchor — rides his bicycle to most home games. And practices. And shootarounds.

He had done this a little in the past but it has become the norm this season, reports Ira Winderman at the Sun-Sentinel. And if you think it wears him out, know that he rode in on Tuesday night and played 42 minutes putting up 22 points, 11 rebounds, seven assists and not one turnover.

James also said he got lights on his bike, for safety. Frankly, for safety Pat Riley would pay for a car to bring him to games. Heck, Pat Riley would drive the car to bring him to games safely. But James just wants to feel the wind in his face and let his fleet of expensive cars rest.

James bike looks to be a kind of hybrid — not a mountain bike, not a street racer, just something you’d own to get around on (TBJ has a photo).

Personally, I think he’d look good on an old beach cruiser with wide handlebars. But that’s just me.

http://probasketballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/12/19/lebron-james-bikes-to-most-of-heat-home-games/

Enhanced by Zemanta

Sunday, December 16, 2012

NBA News 2012: Superteam On Life Support

Ron Artest (far left), Kobe Bryant (center), J...
Ron Artest (far left), Kobe Bryant (center), Josh Powell (far right) of the Los Angeles Lakers and Rasual Butler (#24) of the Los Angeles Clippers during a 2009–10 NBA game. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Los Angeles Lakers aren’t the first “superteam” to open to lackluster reviews. The Miami Heat began the 2010-11 season with a 9-8 record; how bad would they have looked if one of their stars hadn’t been healthy? It’s not a perfect analogy, as Miami’s three stars were all in the prime of their careers while all four of the Lakers stars are dealing with significant injury issues. Nevertheless, if Los Angeles is going to pull off a similar turnaround, they’ll need to follow the same path.

When Miami lost to Boston on Opening Night in 2010, they started Joel Anthony and Carlos Arroyo next to their Big Three. Their bench went four deep -- Zydrunas Ilgauskas, Eddie House, James Jones and Udonis Haslem. Two years later, when they ran Oklahoma City off the floor to win their first NBA title, their “other” two starters were Shane Battier and Mario Chalmers, while Mike Miller, Norris Cole and Haslem were their primary reserves.

Over the course of two seasons, the Heat transformed themselves into a championship team. It started with their stars -- LeBron James became a post player, Chris Bosh embraced playing as a small-ball center and Dwyane Wade took a more secondary role in the offense. However, the contributions of the other five players in their rotation were just as essential; no team is going to win a title playing a number of below-average players significant minutes.

As they get healthy, the Lakers' four stars will need to tweak their games to mesh as a unit. However, if the rest of the rotation isn’t upgraded, it won’t be enough to get them out of the Western Conference, much less win a championship. The Lakers aren’t getting anything from their supporting cast on either end of the floor: right now, their only reserve with a PER over 15 is Jordan Hill.

It’s been the same problem for more than two seasons: the Lakers do not surround their star players with enough athleticism or perimeter shooting. Metta World Peace (33), Antawn Jamison (36), Steve Blake (32) and Chris Duhon (30) are well into the decline phase of their careers; they just don’t have the lateral quickness to play defense at a championship-caliber level. At the same time, defenses don’t respect the jumpers of any of their young guys -- Devin Ebanks, Darius Morris or Hill.

It’s a worst of both worlds situation. The Lakers don’t have enough floor spacing to elite offensively or enough team athleticism to be elite defensively. The result is a negative feedback loop: turnovers leading to easy fastbreak points, putting them in deep holes they have neither the offensive firepower nor defensive ability to dig themselves out of.

Even in his prime, World Peace’s inconsistent jumper would have made him an imperfect fit as the Lakers' fifth starter. In 2012, he’s become a spot-up shooter that opponents are content to leave wide open, hoisting 5.8 three-pointers a game as the Lakers play 4-on-5. When he does have the ball in his hands, he’s more likely to commit a turnover (1.9) than make an assist (1.8).

Perhaps the most telling play of the Lakers' ugly loss to the Knicks on Thursday came in the second quarter, when Carmelo Anthony easily went-around World Peace’s ball-hawking defense to get an open dunk. He needs to shift down the defensive spectrum and play as a small-ball 4 to remain effective. Los Angeles can’t win a title with him as the starting small forward, especially since Steve Nash and Kobe Bryant will need to be given the easier defensive assignments on the perimeter.

Without Nash or Blake, the Lakers have had to start Duhon at point guard. Unsurprisingly, that’s been a complete disaster. On defense, he’s an unathletic and undersized PG who can’t do anything to slow down guys like Raymond Felton or Russell Westbrook. On offense, he’s a non-entity who doesn’t need to be guarded, averaging only 6.4 points a game per-36 minutes played.

There aren’t many answers on their bench either. Hill is a solid backup center, but there won’t be many minutes for him at the 5 when Gasol returns. Jamison is about as effective as Steve Novak defensively, but he’s not nearly a good enough shooter to make up for it. Jodie Meeks is an excellent shooter, but he’s a one-dimensional player who brings nothing else to the table. Morris and Ebanks, while talented, don’t have to be guarded when they don’t have the ball in their hands, meaning the Lakers are essentially playing 3-on-5 whenever they’re in the game.

Here’s the good news: there are plenty of talented basketball players who aren’t in the NBA. It’s easy to see why Los Angeles doesn’t want to add any more salary: not only are they already paying two head coaches, but they have the highest payroll in the NBA. However, with so much money coming into their franchise, it’s crazy not to upgrade their roster immediately, not with Kobe, Nash and Gasol in their 30’s and Howard set to enter free agency at the end of the season.

They’ve been linked to Delonte West, who would be an absolutely perfect fit. A 28-year-old, 6’3, 180 combo guard with a 6’6 wingspan, he has the size, athleticism and defensive chops to match up with both backcourt positions. Offensively, he’s capable of running point, spacing the floor and getting his own shot off the dribble. Last season in Dallas, he was a two-way force with per-36 minute averages of 14 points, four rebounds and five assists on 46/35/89 shooting. He’s not currently on an NBA roster because of a long history of off-court issues, but the Lakers have the veteran leadership to keep him under control.

The Lakers need to think outside the box. How nice would Gary Neal, whom the Spurs signed out of Italy, look in Los Angeles? The only spot where it’s hard to find surplus talent -- the interior positions -- they have covered. They could add athleticism and scoring ability at the back-up shooting guard with Chris Douglas-Roberts, James Anderson or Bill Walker. Chris Wright or Derrick Brown, both 6’8+ wings who have played well in limited NBA minutes, would give them athleticism, length and defensive activity at the 3. Donte Greene or Justin Harper would give them an athletic stretch-4.

There are plenty of names out there; the Lakers need to do their due diligence and find some replacement-level basketball players. Going from below-average to average can be as big a jump as average to good or good to great. No coach is better than the personnel available to him, as the Lakers found out when scapegoating Mike Brown didn’t change anything. Mike D’Antoni is being paid $4 million a season; that’s money that would have been better spent on four $1 million a year players.

No matter what happens, the Lakers won’t win a title if Howard’s back doesn’t improve and he can’t figure out a way to knock down free throws. That, however, is mostly out of their control. What they can control are the players around him. When the Heat won their title, three of the nine players from their Opening Night loss (Arroyo, Ilgauskas and House) were out of the NBA while two more (James Jones, Joel Anthony) were bit players on their bench. Upgrading the back of your rotation won’t draw many headlines, but it’s a necessary step to building a champion, regardless of who your star players are.

http://basketball.realgm.com/blog/225024/Superteam_On_Life_Support

Enhanced by Zemanta

Sunday, November 18, 2012

NBA News 2012: Do Heat need Wade?

Washington Wizards v/s Miami Heat December 18,...
Washington Wizards v/s Miami Heat December 18, 2010 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Miami is 20-5 over the past three seasons without its All-Star shooting guard. The Heat beat the Denver Nuggets at the Pepsi Center for the first time in a decade Thursday while Wade watched from the bench because of a sprained foot. The Palm Beach (Fla.) Post reports Wade won’t play against the Suns, either, but does it matter? LeBron James runs the show for Miami. He and Wade form dynamic fast breaks, but in the halfcourt offense, Wade often seems useless because he’s the worst three-point shooter among Miami’s guards. Mike Miller and Ray Allen offer James perfect kick-out options on pick-and-rolls while also not demanding the ball or taking bad shots. Miami has a better per-minute point differential without Wade on the court, as shown by 82games.com. So it’s easy to see why the Heat keep winning without Wade.

But there’s a counterpoint: James can’t do it all the time. Even the best player in the NBA has bad nights and needs breaks. Wade remains among the best scorers and players in the league, and his own creativity allows James to take breathers. So the Heat do need Wade over the course of a season, even if they’re better without him over short stretches.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/tonights-nba-schedule-do-heat-really-need-dwyane-wade/

Enhanced by Zemanta

Friday, November 16, 2012

NBA News 2012: First Heat Win In Denver Since 2002

English: Wizards v/s Heat 03/30/11
English: Wizards v/s Heat 03/30/11 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Yes, the mighty Heat won for the first time in Denver since January of 2002 behind LeBron James’ 27 points, seven rebounds, 12 assists, a steal and three blocks on 11-of-23 shooting.  If you’re lucky enough to own LeBron, chances are you’re winning your league.  Bron hurt his shoulder last night, but played through it and I’m not concerned.  The big news is that Dwyane Wade was out with his foot injury, which he aggravated in Wednesday’s disastrous performance and we basically saw this DNP coming from a mile away.  Wade’s current problems include the foot, a jammed thumb and the surgically-repaired knee he’s playing on.  The Heat are off until Saturday at Phoenix and Wade looks like a game-time decision for that one.  Mike Miller started in his place and had 12 points, five rebounds and four 3-pointers in 24 minutes.  He might be worth a deep-league add if you’re desperate for 3-pointers, but I think I’d rather own Atlanta’s Kyle Korver in that instance.

http://www.rotoworld.com/articles/nba/41916/45/dose-knicks-stay-undefeated?pg=2
Enhanced by Zemanta