Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

NBA News 2013: Andrew Bynum’s former high school administrators and coaches don’t get why he ‘act(s) like that’

Andrew Bynum of the Los Angeles Lakers.
Andrew Bynum of the Los Angeles Lakers. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Longtime Newark Star-Ledger columnist and possible Greatest Sportswriter Ever Dave D’Allesandro is always quick to trump up the merits of his Jersey Guys. The NBA is full of them, both in the playing and coaching ranks, and Andrew Bynum is still technically one of those Jersey Guys – even if he won’t play a single minute in a Philadelphia 76ers jersey during 2012-13.

Critics of Andrew Bynum aren’t hard to find. I rail against the guy constantly for his dangerous and stupid habits behind the wheel (driving on the wrong side of the road in order to illegally pass people, parking in handicapped spots while healthy), and others have gone after him for his iffy rehabilitation efforts or needless flagrant fouls. Dave D, in his latest column, dug a little deeper than that – talking to Bynum’s former high school coach and the athletics director of St. Joseph of Metuchen in order to draw up a little more dirt on a player who chooses not to be associated with his alma mater.

We’re all allowed the right to turn our back on whatever institution we choose – I live in the same town as the high school I graduated from and I’m not exactly pumping the red and black pom-poms of my Jefferson High School Bronchos. Andrew Bynum is a busy 25-year old professional that spent all but one of his seven NBA seasons playing out of Los Angeles, kinda far from Joisey, and his seventh season has been mostly confined to the Philadelphia 76ers’ rehabilitation center.

With that in place, how far do we have to go to find one person with anything nice to say about this guy?

We’ve spent all year piling on Andrew, and are hesitant to add to the chorus that Dave D describes as referring to Bynum as “a feckless clod victimized by his own negligence,” but this is also the gentleman that decided to take his skinned-up knees bowling last fall, possibly ending his season in the process.

Working at an NBA level with a lacking amount of cartilage in your knees is an incredibly painful situation, especially for someone Bynum’s height and weight. Still, it nearly goes without saying that he’s going to have to come through with an awfully impressive 2013-14 season (with whatever team signs him this summer) for us to re-think our perception that Andrew Bynum only maybe kinda sorta likes the game of basketball.

http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nba-ball-dont-lie/andrew-bynum-former-high-school-administrators-coaches-don-204123676--nba.html

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Saturday, March 9, 2013

NBA News 2013: Iguodala Still Not Satisfied with play

Andre Iguodala on November 23, 2010
Andre Iguodala on November 23, 2010 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Andre Iguodala has really been the glue to the team,” Andre Iguodala was saying Tuesday night in the visitors’ locker room. “Without him, I don’t know where they would be. I hope they realize that.”

It was a joke, another moment of good spirit in what was already a feel-good run by the Nuggets that stretched to six wins in a row with the 120-113 victory over the Kings at Sleep Train Arena.

That is the serious take-away, and not just from Tuesday. The Nuggets pretty much know where they would be without him, or at least what they would be had Iguodala not been acquired from the 76ers in the trade that sent Dwight Howard from the Magic to the Lakers and Andrew Bynum from Los Angeles to Philadelphia.

“We thought he would fit our system extremely well,” coach George Karl said. “I think he’s gone far above and beyond at the defensive end of the court of doing what we want him to do. I have been surprised at offensively, the speed of how we like to play has confused him at times. But it’s not a problem. It’s just something that he’s got to get better at. We’ve got to help him get better at it. And I think we are.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/iguodala-still-not-satisfied-with-stellar-play/

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Friday, March 8, 2013

NBA News 2013: Howard Could Have Missed Entire Season?

Washington Wizards v/s Orlando Magic February ...
Washington Wizards v/s Orlando Magic February 4, 2011 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Did Dwight Howard rush back into the Lakers’ lineup?

He had back surgery last April, was traded to the Lakers in August and started his comeback by playing two exhibitions in October. He tried not to second-guess it Tuesday a few hours before his 55th regular-season game.

“Looking back on it, I could have sat out the whole season until now and starting playing now, but I just felt like we had such a great opportunity,” he said. “Some of these guys, their windows for winning are very small, and I just wanted to get back and try to do whatever I can to help this team, knowing that I wasn’t in great shape. My body wasn’t all the way there yet.”

http://www.hoopsworld.com/howard-could-have-missed-entire-season/

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Thursday, February 7, 2013

NBA News 2013: Dwight Howard Told By Lakers He Won't Be Traded

Logo of NBA club Los Angeles Lakers
Logo of NBA club Los Angeles Lakers (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Dwight Howard has been privately told on repeated occasions by Mitch Kupchak that the Los Angeles Lakers will not trade him, according to sources.

The Lakers have not directly asked Howard if he plans to re-sign with the Lakers, but sources the Lakers are "very confident" that he will remain with the franchise on a new contract.

Sources say Howard truly does not know what he will decide in the summer, but that he will definitely not ask to be traded.

Howard can become an unrestricted free agent on July 1.

http://basketball.realgm.com/wiretap/225977/Dwight-Howard-Told-By-Lakers-He-Wont-Be-Traded

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Thursday, January 3, 2013

NBA News 2013: Chris Paul doesn't focus on the what ifs

Los Angeles Clippers vs. Dallas Mavericks
Los Angeles Clippers vs. Dallas Mavericks (Photo credit: sarahr691)

The what-might-have-beens don't enter Chris Paul's mind anymore.

As his Clippers prepare for the latest Los Angeles turf war on Friday night at Staples Center against the Lakers team to which he was almost traded back in December of 2011, the point guard who has transformed one of the worst organizations in professional sports into a legitimate title contender wouldn't have it any other way.

"Never, ever – ever, ever," he told USA TODAY Sports emphatically on Wednesday night when asked how often he wonders what life with the Lakers might have been like before commissioner David Stern vetoed the deal with New Orleans back then for those infamous "basketball reasons." "

And why would he?

Even with the Clippers' losses at Denver and Golden State that followed their franchise-record 17-game winning streak, they have the league's second-best record (25-8) and are nine games ahead of this Lakers team that so many expected to dominate this season. And while Kobe Bryant responded to the latest Lakers loss by declaring that age was to blame for their woes – "We're old as (expletive)," he told reporters after they fell to Philadelphia on Tuesday night – Paul has continued this improbable push to turn the Clippers into champions.

"You can't back up any talk in January or December or nothing like that," Paul said of the matchup with the Lakers.

The game itself will come with some consequence, though, even if Clippers forward Blake Griffin said it was "just like any other game." The Clippers, who beat the Lakers without Steve Nash on Nov. 2, don't want to lose a third game in a row. The Lakers, whose fans so often point to the title count between the two organizations (16 to zero) as their ultimate defense, need a win like this to keep momentum moving forward after winning six of their last eight games.

"It's a big deal for us," said reserve small forward Lamar Odom, the longtime Laker who was traded to the Clippers during the summer. "What's most fun is to be here and to really see the change in (expectations), as far people expecting us to come out and play at a high level. That's fun."

Said reserve small forward Matt Barnes, who signed the Clippers in the summer after spending his last two seasons with the Lakers: "Any time you play an old team, and it's the talk of the town – Lakers-Clippers - it's going to be a fun one."

http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nba/2013/01/03/los-angeles-lakers-vs-los-angeles-clippers-chris-paul/1807855/

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Thursday, December 27, 2012

NBA News 2012: Jerry West: 'I've never worked a day in my life'

Jerry West ( NBA Logo)
Jerry West ( NBA Logo) (Photo credit: prayitno)

Jerry West was one of the greatest Lakers of all time, helping the franchise win its first title in Los Angeles in 1972.

West was the team's general manager who brought Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant together in 1996. Now he's with the Golden State Warriors with an ownership stake and a team that is suddenly looking like a playoff contender.

Speaking to Investor's Business Daily, West said of his love of basketball: "I've never worked a day in my life."

Of course the opposite is true, even if his line of work represents a lifelong individual passion.

"You need lofty goals," said West.  "Then cement it with a great work ethic."

West was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1979.  His likeness can be seen in the NBA logo.

"I've always been someone who has been very driven," West said. "I think my circumstances, how I grew up, hard work and work ethic are absolutely vital to any success that people might have regardless of what they might be doing."

http://www.latimes.com/sports/lakersnow/la-sp-ln-jerry-west-never-worked-a-day-20121224,0,7592876.story

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Saturday, December 22, 2012

NBA News 2012: Nash explains the Lakers' struggles in D'Antoni's system

Pau Gasol of the Los Angeles Lakers, Spain
Pau Gasol of the Los Angeles Lakers, Spain (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

For weeks everybody but Steve Nash has had a say on how he will change things for the Los Angeles Lakers once he finally returns from a broken left leg.

How will he make Pau Gasol better? How will he make Mike D'Antoni's offense flow? How will he ease the burden on Kobe Bryant?

Fixing just one of these issues would help tremendously because while he's been out, it's been hard to even find where to start diagnosing exactly what ails the Lakers.

But with his return now in sight, potentially as early as Saturday against the Golden State Warriors, Nash has opened up a little about what he's seen while watching the Lakers play these past six weeks without him.

Hint: It hasn't been a pretty sight.

"We got in a rut there where we lost our confidence and we weren't playing with any fire or spirit or energy," Nash said Tuesday morning. "We weren't a proactive team defensively and our defense slipped. But when you're going through this transition with a new coach and new players and no training camp, we get a little down when we didn't play well and I think we lost our energy defensively."

At the offensive end it hasn't been much prettier. D'Antoni often speaks about looking for "energy" on offense, that if his system is being run correctly, the ball should move freely and find the natural weaknesses in the defense. His tone is usually philosophical, like he's speaking in a language only he is fluent in right now.

Tuesday Nash expounded on all that, and offered what is quite simply the best explanation I've heard for how and why the Lakers have struggled to implement and adjust to D'Antoni's system so far.

"The wings have to get to the corner to create space," Nash said. "The bigs have to run their man to create separation, and when they can get out quickly to create separation, when they can get a piece of their guy and get out quickly to the basket and when we create an advantage and that point guard is guarded by the big, then the flow opens up.

"But if we don't get any separation from our men, we don't set good picks, and we don't get off the pick quickly, then they can just slide through and cover us and we're back to 5-on-5.

"I think that's a dangerous position for our team because we don't create easy shots for each other and we have to take long, guarded shots which ends up killing our defense because then they run out on them. We need to get it going downhill a little bit, open up their defense and make them scramble a little bit to make room for our bigs down low and our point guards."

Yeah, there's a reason D'Antoni's been jonesing to get this guy back.

http://espn.go.com/blog/los-angeles/lakers/post/_/id/35095/nash-explains-the-lakers-struggles-in-dantonis-system

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Friday, December 21, 2012

NBA News 2012: Lakers' future hinges on Howard

English: Los Angeles Lakers Kareem Abdul-Jabba...
English: Los Angeles Lakers Kareem Abdul-Jabbar with Boston Celtics Robert Parish and Kevin McHale late 1980s (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Decade after decade, generation after generation, there have always been certain things Los Angeles Lakers fans could count on. They know their ownership is trying to win, win now and win big. And as 16 championship banners will attest, the franchise knows how to get there, and money will not be an obstacle.

The Lakers have risen and fallen during the Kobe Bryant years, as almost any franchise will do over the course of 17 seasons. But you can judge a franchise by its peaks and valleys. For Los Angeles, that's meant five more titles at the apex, and a floor of a single sub-.500, non-playoff season. In terms of their association with sustained, high-level team success, the only peers Bryant has in contemporary professional sports are Derek Jeter in baseball and perhaps Tom Brady in the NFL.

Now 34, Bryant has spent half of his natural life in a Lakers uniform and 17 years into his career he's carrying as heavy a load as ever, and doing it well. Despite the early struggles of his controversy-plagued team, Bryant leads the NBA with a 29.5 scoring average that only begins to tell his story.

Bryant's PER is the highest it's been in five seasons and is at a level he's reached in just three other seasons. He's putting up a career-best .602 true shooting percentage while using a third of the Lakers' possessions, and he's doing it while playing the most minutes in the league. It's a level of volume and efficiency that few players ever reach, and he's doing it after 17 years of pounding up and down the hardwood.

Current evidence to the contrary, Bryant can't keep going like this forever, not at this level. Oh, he can probably play for a long time to come if he wants to just exist or to chase Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's career scoring record, but as he eventually enters his mid-30s, it's impossible to imagine Bryant easing into an elder-statesman, glue-player role like Jason Kidd has filled in recent seasons. And then there is the specter of Michael Jordan in a Wizards uniform to serve as a cautionary tale. No, when Kobe can no longer be Kobe, he'll walk away. He's suggested that will be the case.

The Lakers' story this season really centers around Bryant. One title short of matching Michael Jordan, he's the one with the most at stake if the Lakers' season doesn't turn around.

http://insider.espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/8758641/nba-kobe-bryant-sake-lakers-make-work-dwight-howard

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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

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Monday, November 12, 2012

NBA News 2012: Lakers found fill-in for Phil Jackson

Los Angeles Lakers Wordmark
Los Angeles Lakers Wordmark (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The saga surrounding the surprising hiring of Mike D’Antoni, and not Phil Jackson, to be the Los Angeles Lakers’ next coach continues to unravel.

The story will remain front and center for now, in part, because D’Antoni isn’t even here yet. A recent knee replacement surgery is making travel difficult for D’Antoni, and team officials said he was trying to make the trip from his home in the New York area to Los Angeles by Wednesday in time to possibly coach against his old Phoenix Suns team Friday night.

Adding to the strangeness of Monday at Lakers camp in addition to D’Antoni not being there, the two most obvious Lakers who could put a positive spin on his hiring — Kobe Bryant and Steve Nash — had departed the Lakers training facility before news reporters were allowed in.

Nash won two MVP awards playing in D’Antoni’s system with the Suns and said in recent days that a reunion with his old coach would be fine by him.

Bryant chose No. 8 for his original Lakers jersey number because, when he was a kid growing up in Italy, where his father played in the pro league, his basketball hero was a crafty point guard named Mike D’Antoni, who wore No. 8 for one of the Italian league teams.

That left forward Pau Gasol, who never played on a team coached by D’Antoni, as the most veteran Laker available.

“Everybody had expectations, and they were all pretty high,” Gasol said at Monday’s practice of the feeling that Jackson was on his way back. “We understand what Phil brings to the table and how successful he’s been and what he means to the city and the franchise. But it couldn’t happen, for whatever reason, so we move forward. That’s what we do as professionals.”


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Monday, September 17, 2012

NBA News 2012: Beasley is working out with… Norm Nixon?

Wizards v/s Timberwolves 03/05/11Wizards v/s Timberwolves 03/05/11 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Michael Beasley has been getting ready for what he wants to be a redemption season. After struggling at every stop to live up to expectations or be efficient in his scoring, he is going to a Suns team that will need his points.

Every player says they are working out hard right now to be ready for training camp, and by all accounts Beasley had. But this note from Paul Coro of the Arizona Republic caught my eye.

Beasley has been working out with his mentor and personal trainer, former NBA guard Norm Nixon, in Los Angeles. Some onlookers have said that Beasley was the recent star of some traditional summer pro pickup games at UCLA.

Norm Nixon? He was the former Lakers point guard pushed aside so some guy named Magic Johnson could have the rock more, but he was a two time All-Star, two-time World Champ with the Lakers and most recently one of the studio show analysts for Clippers games (the other team he played for in the NBA).

Nixon was very professional as a ball player, and apparently he has taken Beasley under his wing, Coro reported earlier this summer.

It would not be the image of Beasley taking a stretching exercise class at Nixon’s Debbie Allen Dance Academy this morning in Los Angeles. His missteps are scenes far removed from how Nixon has become like a father to Beasley in the past year, taking him to his first plays, working him out and arranging trips they will take together to England and China.

It’s an interesting plan, to give Beasley structure and expose him to ideas, then see if he grows and matures. The question has never been Beasley’s talent, it was his passion and work ethic.

It’s that talent that makes Beasley a good gamble for the Suns (even at three years, $18 million total). But if he really matures under Nixon, that would be a steal.


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Friday, August 24, 2012

NBA News 2012: Dwight Howard Trade Will Make Pau Gasol Elite Again

LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 20:  Pau Gasol #16 ...LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 20: Pau Gasol #16 of the Los Angeles Lakers and the Western Conference dunks the ball over Dwight Howard #12 of the Orlando Magic and the Eastern Conference in the first quarter of the 2011 NBA All-Star Game at Staples Center on February 20, 2011 in Los Angeles, California. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
If they handed out an award in the NBA for being a class act, The Los Angeles Lakers' Pau Gasol would be this year's runaway winner.

Bruised and battered on and off the court and the subject of constant trade rumors for the better part of a year, the seven-foot Spaniard could finally let out a sigh of relief upon learning late last week that the Lakers had orchestrated a blockbuster deal to bring Dwight Howard to Los Angeles.

"That's big news," Gasol told Mike Bresnahan of the Los Angeles Times last Friday following Spain's eight-point victory over Russia at the London Summer Games. "That's huge.... It puts us in position to be a powerful team."

"I've been involved in so many talks and so many rumors. I feel relieved. I'm anxious and excited to be back with our team, fully committed, fully focused on just working extremely hard and helping our team as much as I can."

The thought of playing alongside the league's top defensive center in Dwight Howard has Gasol almost giddy with anticipation. Though he was sad to see his "friend" Andrew Bynum leave the team, Gasol is well aware that D12 may be the catalyst to help him regain his position as one of the NBA's premier offensive big man at the power forward position.

Take nothing away from Bynum, who emerged last season as an All-Star center with smooth post-up moves and the knack for pulling down large chunks of rebounds on the defensive end. Pau Gasol is still better off playing in the post next to Howard. Come on, who wouldn't be?

D12 scores the majority of his points close to the basket and will regularly attract double-teams, freeing Gasol for his forte, the short-to-midrange jump shot. In fact, because of their clashing skill sets, they will complement one another very well.

Howard is brute strength, great at picks, a beast on the boards. Gasol, who stands a few inches taller than his new teammate, is a finesse player, a point guard trapped in a seven-foot body. Perhaps the best passing big man in the league, Gasol will now have the freedom to do what he does best, even with the Princeton offense.

Endorsed wholeheartedly by Kobe Bryant after spending time in Las Vegas with former Sixers assistant Eddie Jordan, Mike Brown and management went out and got Jordan to run the new offensive scheme for the Lakers.

For all those "nervous Nellie, sky is falling" Lakers fans, expect the Princeton offense to be employed some of the time. If run properly, it will surely help players like Gasol because the ball moves from side to side with screens and picks, forcing defenses to chase rather than double- and triple-team a stagnant offense with set plays.  

Much of the pressure to make this all happen rests on second-year head coach Mike Brown. Criticized last year for not utilizing Gasol properly, Brown now has four future Hall of Fame players in his starting lineup including Steve Nash, one of the most gifted passing point guards to ever suit up.

With Howard and Bryant drawing so much attention, expect to see Gasol on the receiving end of numerous gems from Nash. He could easily average 20 points a game this season.

Can you imagine now if the Lakers had given up both Bynum and Gasol in order to get Howard?

Losing both big men would have been disastrous for this team—thankfully, cooler heads (Mitch Kupchak and Jim Buss, with some prodding from Kobe perhaps?) prevailed, and the Lakers pulled off one of their best trades since, well, since they traded for Gasol in 2008.

As good as Gasol has been, helping the Lakers win back-to-back titles in 2009 and 2010, having Dwight Howard in the frontcourt will bring out the very best in Pau.

Just look at the way he played alongside brother Marc in the Olympics; now imagine how free his game becomes when he has D12 clearing space and doing most of the dirty work inside.

In an 11-year career that has seen him average almost 19 points, nine rebounds and three assists per game, 2012-13 may very well turn out to be Pau Gasol's best ever.

And, he'll be able to thank Dwight Howard for much of that.


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Saturday, August 18, 2012

NBA News 2012: Bynum to go to Germany for knee procedure

Andrew Bynum of the Los Angeles Lakers.Andrew Bynum of the Los Angeles Lakers. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)Andrew Bynum, acquired last week by the Philadelphia 76ers from the Lakers in the four-team deal that sent Dwight Howard to Los Angeles, plans to have a nonsurgical procedure on one or both of his surgically repaired knees next month in Germany.

Bynum is expected to visit Peter Wehling, who founded the Center for Molecular Orthopedics in Dusseldorf, for joint treatment in which injections of the patient’s own blood are used to help speed creation of anti-inflammatory proteins.

Bynum has undergone surgery on both knees.

The procedure is gaining popularity with U.S. athletes though it’s not yet known to be available from American doctors. Former teammate Kobe Bryant, Grant Hill and Alex Rodriguez are known to have had the same procedure.

Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Terrell Owens had a similar treatment using platelet-rich plasma to promote rapid healing of his surgically repaired anterior cruciate ligament.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/nba-roundup-bynum-to-go-to-germany-for-knee-procedure/
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