Showing posts with label Mike D'Antoni. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mike D'Antoni. Show all posts

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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Saturday, December 29, 2012

NBA 2012: Lakers see a difference in their game with Steve Nash

English: Bryant hangs from the rim after one o...
English: Bryant hangs from the rim after one of several slam dunks during the pre-season game, Tuesday night, at the University of Hawaii. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

With the way Kobe Bryant was gushing about what it's like to play next to the great Steve Nash after the Los Angeles Lakers 100-94 win vs. the New York Knicks on Tuesday, it was natural to wonder if Bryant ever caught himself watching his fellow future Hall of Famer with admiration.

"I ain't watching (expletive)," Bryant said with a laugh as he sat at his locker. "I'm looking to get open."

It's only two games with Nash and the Lakers at full strength, but what a difference a two-time MVP makes. Nash, who returned to hit a game-winner at Golden State on Saturday after being out since Oct. 31 with a left leg injury, followed up that 12-point, nine-assist outing with a 16-point, 11-assist effort in which his poise and presence were major factors late against the Knicks. One thing is clear already: Nash changes everything for Bryant and his teammates.

After so many years spent either being asked to carry too much of the offensive load or doing it of his own, Bryant finds himself with luxuries he has never had before. The options are many, chief among them a pick-and-roll with Nash and center Dwight Howard that has Bryant often left alone – no typo there – on the wing. And that, far more than a five-game winning streak that won't mean much if this season goes South again, is the part that should still scare Lakers' foes the league over.

"I get a rebound (and) I'm looking for him, running the floor," Bryant explained afterward. "If he's penetrating or whatever, I'm looking for an angle to back-cut somebody, or coming off a screen, I'm always just looking for crevices to get open because I know he'll find you."

For all the attention paid to the Bryant-Howard pairing and all its similarities to the Bryant-Shaquille O'Neal days of old, Bryant-Nash is where it starts for the Lakers.

"It's like (Michael) Jordan having (John) Stockton, or (Scottie) Pippen, (a player who) can facilitate and allows him to do what he does. I haven't had that throughout my career," Bryant said. "I've played with some great off-guards like (Derek) Fisher and (Ron) Harper and so forth, but I've never played with a point guard of his caliber that can manipulate the defense and put you in positions to be successful and organize the floor. It's great."

Nash helped stave off a late Knicks run with a stepback jumper with 1:47 remaining that put the Lakers up 96-91 and would turn out to be enough. He missed a floater in the lane with 1:11 remaining that was followed by a J.R. Smith three-pointer which cut the Lakers' lead to 96-94, but the Knicks got no closer from there. After tallying a season-high 31 assists against the Warriors, the Lakers had 22 against the Knicks. For the season, they rank 20th in the league with an average of 20.9 per game.

"It allows me to do what I do naturally, which is put the ball in the hole," Bryant said. "At the end of the games, I've had to bring the ball up, initiate the action, get it back, then look to score. Now you put me in a position where I can put a lot of pressure on a defense because I'm in a striking position. So now when Dwight's rolling to the rim or Pau (Gasol) is rolling to the rim, I'm on that backside and they've got to make a choice...It just puts everybody in the positions to do what they do best. He's the best at organizing offense. I'm the best at scoring. Dwight does what he does. Pau does what he does. He just fits."

While wins vs. the Washington Wizards, Philadelphia 76ers, Charlotte Bobcats and Golden State Warriors had certainly been steps in the right direction for the Lakers, this was easily their most impressive win thus far. The Knicks (20-8) not only entered with the league's fourth-best record but with a need for a win after dropping two of their last four.

"It gives you a chance to win every night," Lakers coach Mike D'Antoni said of Nash. "It keeps your energy up and calms everybody down.

"Everybody is getting the ball and getting into the flow. It feeds and it builds. Just like a snowball, it keeps getting bigger."

http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nba/lakers/2012/12/25/los-angeles-lakers-new-york-knicks-kobe-bryant-steve-nash/1791187/

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Wednesday, December 26, 2012

NBA News 2012: Jim Buss is frustrated with Lakers production, too

President Barack Obama makes remarks at servic...
President Barack Obama makes remarks at service event with 2010 NBA Champion Los Angeles Lakers at the THEARC Boys and Girls Club in Washington, District of Columbia. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Jim Buss is just like every Lakers fan, frustrated by the 9-13 start, the lackluster defensive rotations, the lack of any team identity, the injuries and more.

Except, he is part of the reason the Lakers are where they are — he’s the defacto owner now. He gets part of the blame.

In a text to Sam Amick of USA Today he simply sounded frustrated, like a lot of Lakers fans (just less angry).

“It’s very frustrating, because I think there are many little factors that are causing the issues that we’re having,” Buss wrote in a text message to USA TODAY Sports on Wednesday. “Nash, injuries, (a) new system. Like I said before, there are a lot of little ones, but the ones that figure to help the most would be Nash returning (and) Gasol returning and just playing together in a new system.”

Getting healthy certainly is the first step for the Lakers. As GM Mitch Kupchak has said, right now it is impossible to evaluate these Lakers because all the pieces aren’t there.

But the Lakers are a team without an identity, and if Buss wants to blame someone for that he can go find a mirror. The Lakers brought in two key new players in Steve Nash and Dwight Howard. They chose not to make a move with Mike Brown over the summer, bringing him back with a brand new offense installed during training camp. Then despite injuries that never allowed him to get his new offense running right, management moved to fire Brown and bring in Mike D’Antoni and his radically different offense and philosophy. On the fly with the season underway and injuries already hitting the roster.

And you wonder why this team has no identity?

The Lakers will start to find that identity at some point once they start to get healthy and the team plays together. The problem is the hole they dug themselves with the start will come back to haunt them when they play a lot of road playoff games.

http://probasketballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/12/13/jim-buss-is-frustrated-with-lakers-production-too/

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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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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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Sunday, October 31, 2010

NBA News 2010: Wilson Chandler Serving Notice

PHOENIX - FEBRUARY 13:  Rudy Fernandez #5 of t...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
Quick trivia question: Amongst the 2007 NBA draft class, name the three players with the highest career scoring averages though their first three seasons in the league.  I'll give you the top two – Kevin Durant and Jeff Green.  Third on that list is Wilson Chandler.  No surprise if Chandler's name wasn't on the tip of anyone's tongue. 

Over his first three seasons in the Association, Chandler flew mostly under the radar.  Even on his own team Chandler seems to sometimes get overlooked, or lost in the shuffle.  In the incessant Carmelo Antony trade rumors, Wilson's name is often bandied about as one of the pieces that could be headed to Denver.  Ditto for the reports that had Chandler getting shipped out of town as part of a deal to acquire Rudy Fernandez from Portland.

As if that wasn't enough drama to deal with, Coach Mike D'Antoni announced on the eve of the regular season that Chandler would be bumped to the bench in favor of newly-named starting shooting guard Landry Fields, an unheralded second-round pick out of Stanford.  Oh, and add in the fact that Wilson is attempting to work his way back to 100% health after undergoing offseason ankle surgery and a sports hernia operation.   

Yes, it has been an eventful few months for Chandler.  Dealing with this type of turmoil and instability would have pushed some players to the brink.  Many would have sulked or pouted or bemoaned the unfortunate turn of events.  We have certainly seen it happen before here in New York.  At the least plenty of players might have easily gotten rattled and let it negatively effect their game.  But Wilson Chandler is not most players.  He is known for a unique, laid-back temperament, and it has served him awfully well this year.   

Through the Knicks first two games of the 2010-2011 season, Wilson was averaging 20.5 points (on 50% shooting), 7 rebounds and 3 blocks.  Just as important and impressive has been his stellar defense.  During the second half on opening night, Chandler was asked to slow down the Raptors top gun, Andrea Bargnani, who went off for 18 points in the first two quarters.  Chandler did just that, as Bargnani was held to just four points in the second half.


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Monday, September 13, 2010

NBA News 2010: New York Knicks 2010-2011 Preview

Amar'e StoudemireImage via Wikipedia
Top Offensive Player: Amare Stoudemire

Top Defensive Player: Ronny Turiaf

Top Playmaker: Raymond Felton

Top Clutch Player: TBD

The Unheralded Player: Timofey Mozgov

Best New Addition: Amare Stoudemire


Strengths

Offense. Mike D'Antoni knew what he was getting in to when he signed on as Knicks coach two summers ago. Over his first two years in NYC, he was basically getting paid to stay sane and not complain while the roster was completely gutted. Despite the fact that the Knicks were, for the most part, awful, there were plenty of excuses which helped deflect criticism away from the head coach. However, after a major overhaul this offseason, that is no longer the case. D'Antoni has a deep roster, a star power forward, a solid starting PG, and plenty of energy and youth all over the floor. In short, D'Antoni finally has the ingredients to cook up some satisfying dishes. Now the chef has to earn that big pay check. D'Antoni's calling card has always been as an offensive mastermind. With sufficient pieces in place, the pressure is on D'Antoni to produce.


Weaknesses

Defense. As mentioned above, the Knicks have consistently been among the league's worst defensive teams under D'Antoni. Use the quantitative measure or metric of your choice (opponents FG%, PPG allowed, steals, or blocks, etc.) and you'll find the Knicks near the bottom of the heap. Correspondingly, New York has lost far more games than they have won. D'Antoni's game plan will be to outscore his opponents, we know this; but that job will be exceedingly difficult if he can't get the necessary stops in big spots. Throughout his coaching career, D'Antoni has bristled at the notion he doesn't pay enough attention to defense and has refused to hire a de-facto 'defensive coordinator' to help him shore up that end of the floor. During his first two years in NYC, when losing was more or less expected/accepted, and potential free agents and the surrounding controversy dominated all Knicks-related headlines, D'Antoni's defense (or lack thereof) didn't receive much attention/criticism. That grace period has expired. It's up to the head coach to put a winning product on the floor – and part of that success will be determined by this team's commitment to guarding the other team.


Will the Knicks find a way to add Carmelo Anthony to the mix?

Even before news of the infamous 'Chris Paul wedding toast' broke, Knicks fans had been hoping Donnie Walsh would be able to pair another superstar(s) alongside Amar'e Stoudemire and form a superpower worthy of challenging LeBron and his buddies down in Miami. New Yorkers' greatest hope of immediately transforming the Knicks into instant contenders would be by acquiring forward Carmelo Anthony, who has purportedly expressed a strong interest in playing for the Knicks. Despite abundant rumors, a deal is unlikely at this point, as Denver is currently restructuring its front office. However, the threat of losing Anthony as an unrestricted free agent next summer is very real (ask the folks in Cleveland); thus, if Carmelo forced the Nuggets hand, it could lead to a contentious situation at February's trade deadline. Obviously, it is something New York will keep a close eye on…


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Tuesday, September 7, 2010

NBA News 2010: Will the Knicks Take a Step Towards Respectability?

Mike D'Antoni, coach of the Phoenix Suns, duri...Image via Wikipedia
The Knicks spent years systematically destroying their roster for the opportunity to free more cap space for the summer of 2010, so they could take their best shot at landing LeBron James. While they couldn't snag LeBron, they did end up signing Amar'e Stoudemire away from the Suns, Raymond Felton from the Bobcats and sign-and-traded David Lee for Anthony Randolph, Ronny Turiaf and Kelenna Azibuike. 

If Stoudemire can remain healthy, the Knicks do have some serious scoring options, from STAT to Randolph to long-range marksman Danilo Gallinari and Stoudemire does already have experience in Mike D'Antoni's high-octane offense. That's a big if when you're talking about Amar'e, though.


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Friday, July 9, 2010

NBA News 2010: Knicks Convert Lee Into Randolph, Turiaf, Azubuike

Former Gonzaga star, current LA Lakers player,...Image via WikipediaAfter much speculation and hand wringing, the deal is finally done. No, this one is not about a King, leisure suits, or championships. Rather, two teams that haven’t made the playoffs more than twice in the last decade made a deal on Thursday that will substantially change the future of both franchises in the immediate as well as the long-term.
As it looks right now, the Golden State Warriors traded Anthony Randolph, Ronny Turiaf and Kelenna Azubuike for a signed and traded David Lee.
Randolph will be the most important player as far as New York goes, and his development is heavily clouded in uncertainty right now. Every once in a while we saw a flash of absolutely amazing play from Randolph, whether it was a short term thing like an amazing block with a sprint down for a dunk or a game where he put it all together. One of his biggest challenges will be deciding what his game is as a player since he has no bread and butter. He has the athletic ability and tools to be good at a wide variety of things, yet is the master of none for now.
If I’m Mike D’Antoni and the Knicks, I would be working with him on a reliable mid-range jumper on the offensive end and weak-side shot blocking on the defensive end: not the perfect complement for Amare that way, yet they are the parts of his skill-set that Randolph can get up to speed the quickest so he can contribute out there.
Azubuike is best as an effort rotation guy- he has the tools to be a very good defender and could thrive in a system where he only shoots open looks when the defense sags, sort of like a rotation player version of Trevor Ariza’s role on the 2008-09 Lakers team.
Turiaf is a strange fit in D’Antoni’s system, but is a very good defender and rebounder while also being a simply awesome teammate. This will come up more later, but there is no one more fun to have on the sidelines and the locker room than Turiaf, and he can be a valued contributor on the court as well.
Grade for the New York: B
For the Warriors, let’s start out with this: I like David Lee. He’s not a bad player, seems to play hard and appears to be a good guy. He is also the best player in this trade, as he should be in a 3-for-1. The problem here is that Golden State is paying him $13 million dollars a year and he is not even the second-best player on a team that could make the Conference Finals, which should be the measure of a $13M man in the current CBA, much less the worse one for players coming down the pike in 2011.
Unless the team moves both Andris Biedrins and Monta Ellis for expiring scrap (and they shouldn’t now), they have likely committed to a core of Stephen Curry, Ellis, Biedrins, and Lee for the next 3-4 years with zero cap flexibility until Steph Curry comes up for an extension in 2013.
What makes this move so depressing is that those four as the best players on a team likely does not even put the Warriors in the playoffs next year, much less down the line when teams like Sacramento gel and still have money to spend and the older teams on the list still haven’t declined enough for Golden State to overtake them.
One vision for this team would have been to get it to the new owner with a core of Curry, Randolph, Udoh (I guess), Turiaf, and Buike if he wanted to come for cheap. That team would have cost around $14M altogether and had the flexibility to either pull a Camby-esque deal or actually get a free agent. It also would have allowed the team to be patient and both stick it to teams while they had cap space a la Oklahoma City and wait for the right fits to come along (like OKC again or Portland). Alas, management has decided to go in a different direction.
They replaced those guys with David Lee who can spell defense, but hasn’t played a lick of it in at least the last six seasons. One remarkable thing about Lee is that I attended his best performance of last year (at Oracle where he dropped 37/20/10): the Knicks lost that game by 11 and Monta, Biedrins, and Randolph all did not play that night.
There is a distinct chance that this works out for Golden State, especially if they are willing to be more conventional and play Lee and Biedrins together for periods of time (and I’m sure we’ll see lots of Lee and Udoh as well). I just can’t shake the feeling that it was a gigantic mistake to take three guys on reasonable contracts who all made sense with a long-term vision of the team to overpay the ever-loving hell out of a single player who is good, but not great, on the offensive side and abysmal defensively. I hope I’m wrong with every fiber of my being.
Grade for Golden State: D+
As a final note, there is also some personal anguish here because as someone who covered the Warriors for much of last year, I saw what these guys, particularly Ronny Turiaf bring to the table off the court. We see a ton of media pub for the guys who are squeaky wheels or prima donnas, especially when they are more notable off the court. I did not get to spend much time with Randolph because he was hurt so much, but Kelenna and Ronny were both class acts that were great with the media, including yours truly while more importantly being great teammates. Seeing Turiaf interact with Curry was one of the highlights of my Warriors’ locker room visits and wish all three former Warriors the absolute best of luck going forward. Take care, fellas.
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