Showing posts with label Steve Nash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Nash. Show all posts

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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Tuesday, December 25, 2012

NBA News 2012: Rediscovering Pau Gasol

Pau Gasol
Pau Gasol (Photo credit: Keith Allison)

Perhaps the key question this year for the Lakers is whether or not Pau Gasol can fit into Coach Mike D'Antoni's system and play alongside fellow big man Dwight Howard.

Gasol's best years were alongside Lamar Odom but Gasol has gradually been pushed further and further from the basket with the emergence of Andrew Bynum (and now Howard).

In the Lakers' 118-115 victory over the Golden State Warriors on Saturday night, the first game under D'Antoni with Steve Nash in the lineup, the team went often to Gasol in the high post.  The forward/center would watch for cutting players, looking first for the pass and then the shot (six assists total).

"It feels good.  From the elbow, from the post, there's some movement.  There's some action," said Gasol. "I will try to find the open guy and get easy looks from those positions."

It's a role similar to the one Chris Webber played in Sacramento when paired with center Vlade Divac.  With Howard more likely to be in the low post, it could be the way D'Antoni gets the most out of Gasol.

"That's a way," said Gasol. "It's a good way for us to have good spacing, to have movement and to find easy looks or good looks at least on offense."

Kobe Bryant is confident in Gasol helping to quarterback the offense.

"Oh, he's great at it. He's the best big in the league at it," said Bryant.  "We run the offense through him a lot and he makes plays for a lot of people, makes a lot of guys better because of that. Dwight can feast off of that."

Gasol looked uncomfortable earlier in the season.  Some of that had to do with tendinitis in both knees but he was admittedly searching in his initial role, trying to play as a stretch four.  It's still a work in progress but some rest (and the return of Nash) may help rejuvenate Gasol's season.

D'Antoni was happy with how his offense ran late in the game against the Warriors, despite Howard's foul trouble.

"A little bit better, better, much better," said D'Antoni. "We're going to have some bumps.  We're still not there. We're running better. Again, Steve's the best at running any offense you can design.  It had to get better."

Bryant said he's happy to shift to a role of scorer/finisher instead of the team's primary offensive initiator, a role he had to take on while Nash sat out seven weeks with a leg injury.

"You saw me and Steve in the last game, I just slid right off the ball and let Steve do what he does best," said Bryant.

The Lakers have resisted the urge to trade Gasol, instead opting to give this team's core a chance to prove itself.  Nash is another fan of what Gasol brings to the floor.

"I think that's something that should become a huge part of our team," said Nash of Gasol's play in the high post.  "His size, his ability to pass and shoot should be deadly in the elbows and at the foul lines.  Hopefully we can find a rhythm and timing together where he can really exploit that position where he's catching the ball with people trying to recover to him."

So far much of the Lakers' 13-14 record was the result playing through injuries.  Now that the team is nearer to full strength, D'Antoni has the opportunity to mix together a talented squad of players.

It's still not clear if the Lakers have the perfect combination of players.  Gasol is still playing far from the basket and will be relied on to hit jump shots instead of playing in the low post.

Defensively the Lakers have size but lack in speed and quickness, even if Howard is far more agile than Bynum ever was.  D'Antoni is still searching for a rotation to offset the team's flaws.

http://www.latimes.com/sports/lakersnow/la-sp-ln-lakers-rediscovering-pau-gasol-20121225,0,1630300.story

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Sunday, December 23, 2012

NBA News 2012: Is the Lakers biggest problem really Kobe Bryant? No.

Kobe Bryant
Kobe Bryant (Photo credit: Boixoesnois)

While Steve Nash and Pau Gasol were out, Kobe Bryant has carried the Lakers. He is leading the league with 29.5 points per game, scoring more points per game than he has since before Pau Gasol arrived as a Laker. Back when Kobe had to carry Kwame Brown and Smush Parker (remember they both started).

But the Lakers have struggled to a 12-14 record — and that is after a three game win streak.

It has led some people to say, “Kobe Bryant is shooting too much.” He is back to being a ball hog and that is what is holding the Lakers back.

I think those people are wrong — Kobe is playing as many minutes but taking fewer shots per game than either of the Lakers most recent title years. With Nash out, the playmaking has to fall to him because you can’t let Chris Duhon do it. But that is different than being an inefficient gunner.

Still you hear it — “Kobe is shooting too much.” And it’s not just fans. This is an assistant coach from another team, speaking to Chris Broussard if ESPN (the story is behind their pay wall).

Thing is, who else on that roster (with Nash out) do you want to handle the ball? Darius Morris?

I think this scout hits the nail more on the head.

“Watching the Lakers play the Knicks this year was hard to watch because the other Lakers were just so bad. It was like Kobe was trying to do all he could just to keep that game close. And hey, if Dwight’s not going to try his butt off and if other guys aren’t going to try their butts off, then I’m going to give the ball to the guy that’s going to go for it, and that’s Kobe. I don’t think it’s that Kobe doesn’t trust his teammates; it’s just that he trusts himself more. A questionable shot by him still might be better than a good look for one of those other guys.

That has always been Kobe — he trusts himself to make plays more than he trusts anyone. If other guys are not knocking down shots early he will do it. The only question was always was he hitting shots and efficient or was he a gunner? This season has been his most efficient in a long, long time.

But it is no different than Kobe from any of the Lakers title years, particularly the most recent. He is who he is.

Let’s see what Kobe and the Lakers look like with Steve Nash in the lineup, then we can discuss what needs to change. But through it all, Kobe is not.

http://probasketballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/12/19/is-the-lakers-biggest-problem-really-kobe-bryant-no/

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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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Saturday, August 25, 2012

NBA News 2012: Are the Los Angeles Lakers Dependent on Kobe Bryant Staying with Team?

English: Kobe Bryant, Lakers shooting guard, s...English: Kobe Bryant, Lakers shooting guard, stands ready to shoot a free throw during Tuesday nights pre-season game against the Golden State Warriors. Bryant was essential in bringing together a large point gap late in the second quarter, after the Warriors took the early lead. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
The Lakers should be fine without Kobe Bryant, so long as Dwight Howard's back is fixable.

They have positioned themselves well for the distant future, even if they have an incredibly pricey immediate future. In the 2014-15 season—when Kobe's current deal runs out—Los Angeles has no money committed. Between now and then, recent moves have ensured that they stay competitive.

Kobe Bryant is always a captivating presence, but in this season, it's especially true.

It's a transitional year for Kobe, as he must hand over the reins of the Los Angeles offense for that offense to thrive. And though Bryant is among the smartest players in the league (a subjective judgment, based on his interviews), recent returns suggest he might be unwilling to make the necessary move.

He played well in the Olympic gold-medal game against Spain, but would often sling contested shots throughout the NBA playoffs. Last season, despite having Andrew Bynum and Pau Gasol as viable options, Bryant shot 23 times per game, the most since 2006-07. He also shot only .527 in true shooting percentage, less than the team average.

It's especially interesting that Kobe needs to let go because he's the NBA's highest-paid player.

Next season, he's set to make $27,849,149, and $30,453,805 in the season after that. You could be sympathetic to the Laker star, insofar as you can be sympathetic to someone making that much money. He's paid to be "the guy," and it might be hard to process the need for a lesser role under such circumstances.

But a lesser role is needed, as is a Kobe Bryant evolution.

The Lakers added Steve Nash, who has a history of running potent offense via the pick-and-roll. The "PnR" Nash action usually has to involve a big man, so as to stretch a defense. Perhaps you recall seeing this about 1,000 times over the course of Nash's seven-seconds-or-less reign of offensive terror.

To get Nash at his best, it likely means a heaping of plays that do not involve Kobe Bryant. For Bryant to be at his most helpful, the "off guard" must play off the ball.

The Lakers have to squander someone's skills, just because they have so much talent. There is only one basketball, and the shot clock goes for 24 seconds—not infinity.

In the meantime, the Lakers do need some iteration of Kobe. While they must be less dependent on him than ever before, he's nearly irreplaceable when you consider L.A.'s wing depth.

Metta World Peace (yes, that is still his name) put up an 11.0 PER last season. He can create little offense outside of the open three-pointer and he shot a meager .296 on threes last year. And yes, I know he has a habit of hitting the big ones.

The Lakers must actually get themselves in such a position where Metta's pressure-impervious ways can help them first.

In short, Kobe fills a need in the short term, but they also need less of him.

It's a bit of a paradox and might increasingly be one as the next two years pass. But, if the Lakers can sign Dwight Howard for the next five years, they should be creating a team from a position of strength.

Dwight is quite the building block, as wishy-washy as he may be. The Lakers will eventually, in theory, begin an era of Dwight Howard, plus no other commitments. It's no assurance of future success, but it's an excellent place to start anew.

Yes, the Lakers are dependent on Kobe. No, they shouldn't be in the future.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1301665-are-the-los-angeles-lakers-dependent-on-kobe-staying-with-team 

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Thursday, August 23, 2012

NBA News 2012: Is the Princeton Offense a Good Fit for L.A. Lakers?

EL SEGUNDO, CA - AUGUST 10:  Dwight Howard sho...EL SEGUNDO, CA - AUGUST 10: Dwight Howard shows his new Los Angeles Lakers jersey after being introduced to the media as the newest member of the Los Angeles Lakers by General Manager Mitch Kupchak during a news conference at the Toyota Sports Center on August 10, 2012 in El Segundo, California. The Lakers aquired Howard from Orlando Magic in a four-team trade. In addition Lakers wil receive Chris Duhon and Earl Clark from the Magic. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
The arrival of two star players spells significant change for any team fortunate enough for such turnover, but on top of their changes in personnel, the Los Angeles Lakers have apparently decided to revamp their entire offensive system.

Mike Brown's stagnant system of a year ago appears to be on its way out, and the vaunted Princeton offense—as prescribed by former NBA head coach Eddie Jordan—is on its way in (h/t Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports). That transition in itself requires intense repetition and an entire change in the Lakers' philosophy of movement, all of which is complicated further by the need to maximize the value of both Steve Nash and Dwight Howard.

The Princeton offense is predicated on continuity, and in that regard, it's very different from the Lakers' Kobe Bryant-centric offense. It is also very different from the kind of ball control that Steve Nash is accustomed to and even the high screen-and-roll actions that empowered Dwight Howard in Orlando.

It's a system that requires discipline, commitment and constant movement, and in that regard, it actually isn't all that different from the triangle offense. One can pick out similar sideline triangle formations from within some Princeton patterns, a fact which bodes quite well for Bryant, the Lakers' role-playing mainstays and versatile pivot Pau Gasol.

But where does that leave Howard? The entry sequences to feed Howard in the low post should be effective enough, but things could get tricky if and when L.A. shifts into the "four high" formations that are typical in Princeton-style offenses.

As a means of keeping the bottom of the floor open for backdoor cuts, teams employing the Princeton offense often utilize four players along the perimeter—two at the top of the floor and two on the wings—while the nominal center assumes a spot at the elbow. That placement is both outside of Howard's wheelhouse and willingly shifts him to a space on the floor where he isn't a threat to shoot or, frankly, dribble.

Plus, Howard is a pretty decent passer, but nothing more. He won't be orchestrating an entire offense from the high post the way Gasol can, and thus he is resigned to setting back-screens for cutters and scoring on rolling cuts within those stages of the offense.

Those rolls should work as well in the Princeton offense as they do in standard pick-and-roll fare, but setting Howard at the elbow doesn't at all allow him to capture a defense's attention or lure in additional defenders. Brown and Jordan—who is soon to be a Laker assistant—will be tasked with coming up with suitable flow alternatives. It's certainly not mandatory that one big be positioned in the high post for the Princeton offense to function as designed, but shifting Howard into more of a low-post/high-screening role—much like the capacity he served in with the Magic—could compromise some of the spacing that's crucial to the foundational cutting of the offense.

That kind of player movement is even more important for L.A. than it might be for another team running a Princeton-style system. Steve Nash and Jodie Meeks are the only above-average three-point shooters on the roster, making cutting and mid-range shooting the primary bases of all of the Lakers' spacing.

This particular offense has the potential to set up well-spaced post-ups and pick-and-rolls if all of the cuts and fills come in the proper rhythm, but the implementation of such a system won't come without a steep learning curve and inevitable growing pains. Things won't always be easy for Bryant or Howard or Gasol, but if the Lakers really can program the Princeton cuts, they'll strain the defense in ways that go well beyond the individual strengths of their top offensive players.

Yet it's worth wondering if a system designed to take the ball out of a single player's hands is truly a good fit for a team that could otherwise work through Steve Nash. The past two seasons have marked the only occasions since 2001 that Nash hasn't helmed a top-two offense in terms of points scored per possession, and even those two most recent campaigns placed an underwhelming Suns roster among the league's top-10 offenses.

The Princeton offense would be able to rely on some of the same playmaking strength that powered Nash's previous outfits, but it would also utilize him more as a perimeter shooter, cutter and floor spacer. It would lean on the versatility of players like Bryant and Gasol in order to establish a very balanced offensive framework, but in the process, it would also require players like Howard and Metta World Peace to step out of their comfort zones while Nash is made to be a more passive participant in the offense.

Nash's age clearly hasn't caught up to him in a way that would demand he phase out as a team's primary ball-handler, but he also hasn't had to helm an offense with such limited outside shooting. Perhaps that bit of contrast is what makes the Princeton offense—or at least the incorporation of Princeton elements—a fair middle-ground.

It's not as if L.A. couldn't run more typical high-screen action involving Nash and Howard even after installing this system, but rather that this particular framework would ideally replace some of the default isolation work that the Lakers so frequently reverted to last season.

From that perspective, this stylistic shift has decidedly less to do with Howard or Nash, and almost everything to do with Bryant.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1300520-is-the-princeton-offense-a-good-fit-for-the-new-look-lakers

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Wednesday, August 22, 2012

NBA News 2012: Dwight Howard or Pau Gasol, Who Should Be the Lakers' Second Offensive Option?

English: Pau Gasol boxing-out for a rebound.English: Pau Gasol boxing-out for a rebound. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Now that the Lakers have a fearsome foursome to bully the NBA with, there needs to be a pecking order within the team construct to give them consistency, offensive flow, and a plan of attack.

I think it’s fairly obvious that Kobe Bryant will remain the number one option on offense. Despite the tales of his demise and downward spiral, I still think his ability to score and scare the defense gives the Lakers a huge advantage in how they plan their attack. By having Kobe garner so much attention from the defensive focus, it should actually open up things for the rest of his teammates.

I know what you’re thinking: "but Kobe doesn’t pass."

He does and he doesn’t. He also doesn’t necessarily need to pass. Let’s say Kobe Bryant still decides he wants to take off-balance 20-footers over two defenders. I don’t believe most defenders on the perimeter can handle Kobe one-on-one. You almost always need to bring a second defender over to bother him.

By doing this, you’re leaving Pau Gasol and Dwight Howard battling the boards against inferior big man tandems while still being mindful of being outnumbered through the flight of that shot. But this isn’t about whether or not Kobe should be the first option on offense.

Should the second option be Dwight Howard or Pau Gasol?

It flip-flopped at various times last season, but Pau ended up cycling through being the second and third option with Andrew Bynum as the alternative. And the results were pretty much positive. The Lakers ranked 10th in the NBA in offensive rating.

In my opinion, the Lakers were at their best when they ran things through Pau to make plays for other teammates.

Assuming his back is okay, Dwight Howard is a lot better offensively then most people realize. And they will realize it this season when he gets the most coverage he’s ever seen. Despite being the only real offensive option to run the schemes through in Orlando, Dwight was still incredibly efficient with his possessions.

He ranked 95th in the NBA in points per possession with a 0.96 (which is really good). Considering he had over 1000 possessions in which he took either a shot attempt, ended up at the free throw line or turned the ball over, having that kind of usage rate and still approaching a full point per possession used is incredible.

The three best ways to utilize Dwight are by posting him up (55th in the NBA), rolling him in a pick-and-roll (2nd in the NBA and 74 percent from the field), and having him cut to the basket (17th in the NBA and 83.3 percent from the field).

Some people still seem to confuse Dwight Howard not having great touch with not having a post game. They are not the same thing. Dwight’s footwork in the post is pretty incredible. His feet are quick and nimble, getting him into great position when combined with his agility.

The problem for Dwight is that he has a hard time establishing deep post position because his base is so small. He doesn’t have a big butt or tree trunks for legs to root himself onto the block against defenders. He counters this by quickly moving through his post moves, but it can leave him at a bit of a disadvantage.

This is a move we see Dwight make a lot. He’ll go from the post position to facing up against his opponent. This is simply to get his defender to guard against the drive, leaving him a lot of room to get his spin move off. Once he does this, he does a great job of squaring up his motion to get off a good hook shot.

Guys without post games can’t spin to the baseline and put up a hook with their weak hand. Dwight doesn’t have a feathery touch, but he does have the ability to get off good hook shots with both hands, using a variety of different footwork to get into position for the shot.

It’s pretty obvious why he’s so devastating on the pick-and-roll. Throw it anywhere and he gives you a highlight. He has very good hands and can catch low passes, high passes, and lob passes before finishing with a thunderous dunk.

The same goes for when he’s cutting to the basket off of dribble penetration from a teammate. As soon as the defender leaves him some room to move toward the basket, he’s attacking in a straight line and signaling for the lob. And the beauty of lobbing it to him is it takes a fighter jet in the arena to prevent him from finishing the play.

The important thing to note on those last two highlights is that was Jameer Nelson making those passes to him. Replace him with the penetrating ability, scoring threat, and passing acumen of Steve Nash. Hold on—all of the blood just rushed away from my brain.

OK, I’m ready to continue.

As good as Dwight is on offense (and he’s very good), I still think Pau Gasol should be the second option. It’s not that I think Pau is a better player than Dwight, it’s just that Pau Gasol is the most skilled big man in the league today. He can score from every angle on the court. He’s better in the post than Dwight (21st in the NBA with 0.95 PPP on post-ups) and with his passing ability, he can make plays that few other big men can create.

On plays when Kobe isn’t initiating the scoring opportunities, a pick-and-roll with Steve Nash on the strong side or top side of the floor with Dwight Howard lurking from the baseline seems impossible to stop.

This play isn’t a pick-and-roll, but it shows exactly how you can’t game plan against Gasol as a moving target receiving the ball in the lane. His touch passing and vision are second to none at the big man position. Kevin Garnett used to be that guy, and once upon a time Chris Webber and Vlade Divac thrived making these plays. But as of right now, there’s Pau Gasol and then everybody else.

With Pau and Dwight on the court, the Lakers can do something nobody else in the league can by running the set through Pau. They can run a pick-and-roll with just their big men. Pau is a good enough dribbler and definitely a good enough passer to pull it off. If the defense sinks in to protect against the pass to Dwight, Pau can take the ball all the way to the basket. Otherwise, he can drop it down to Howard for an easy score.

By using him in the high post as the initiator, you can run players off of him as a screen and if the defense doesn’t dig down to protect against the pass, Pau will find his teammate for a layup.

He also is great at running those guys off of the attention he gets in the post. Here you have Steve Blake benefitting from confusion in the defense and Pau finding him for an open jumper. Now imagine Steve Nash spotting up for that jumper instead of Blake. Would the defense even leave Nash like that? And if they didn’t, wouldn’t Pau have an easy look at scoring the ball one-on-one?

Speaking of scoring, we’ve been discussing Pau’s passing ability, which helps open up the scoring chances for him in the post. A defense really can’t drop down and double him without feeling like he’s going to pick them apart with his passing.

Because you have to now worry about an agile Dwight Howard cutting from the weak side or Kobe spotting up for a jumper or Steve Nash being ready to drain a three, Pau should get more room to operate in the post. When he’s allowed to do this, his turnaround jumper is one of the best shots in the game. He can also adjust off the post defender and drop to the baseline for his patented left-handed hook.

And Pau is still quick enough to spin around his post defender and get to the basket for the strong finish. Some people seem to still label Pau with the “soft” label, and it’s just asinine. Gasol finishes around the basket as well as anybody, and he often goes up hard to finish plays.

Because of Pau’s versatility and the different ways he can kill the defense efficiently that Dwight can’t do, I’d definitely run Pau as my number two option more than Dwight.

Pau’s passing opens up his scoring and his scoring opens up his passing. He’s an underutilized weapon by the Lakers, who should be pounding the ball into him more to make things happen. Perhaps with Nash directing the offense, we’ll see this more and see how the team plays off of Pau controlling the ball.

It doesn’t mean that Pau has to average the second most shot attempts on the team or score the most points behind Kobe. It just means running him as the second option opens up everything for Dwight, Kobe, and Nash.

Remember how incredible Bynum looked last year receiving passes from Pau and  benefitting from the attention Kobe got? Now replace Bynum with Dwight, who put up better numbers while drawing the entire focus of the defense. If Dwight is dropped down to the third option on your team, he could put up the best offensive season he’s ever produced.

What’s scary is that the Lakers have so many options with what they can do on every possession. Run the ball through Kobe and have an advantage on the boards. Let Nash and Dwight or Nash and Pau run a pick-and-roll. Post up Pau. Post up Dwight. Post up Kobe. Run guys off of Dwight in the mid-post or Pau in the high post. Let Ron Artest take… never mind.

The Lakers offense has so many options of who can and should be the second option on any given possession that we should see a fast improvement in an offense that was already really good.

Let’s just hope they don’t forget one of their best weapons is Pau. Well, unless you’re rooting against the Lakers. Then you probably are hoping they have amnesia when it comes to what Pau can do in the half court.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1300219-who-should-be-the-lakers-second-offensive-option-dwight-howard-or-pau-gasol

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Tuesday, August 21, 2012

NBA News 2012: Why the Los Angeles Lakers Have the Best Starting Lineup in the NBA

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)
Three combined NBA MVP awards, 33 combined All-Star appearances, eight combined NBA championship rings and four combined Defensive Player of the Year awards make the starting lineup of the 2012-2013 Los Angeles Lakers the best in the NBA.

To put those 33 All-Star appearances among the starting five in perspective, the starting lineup of the Boston Celtics has 27 All-Star appearances, the Miami Heat’s starting five has 23, and the veteran San Antonio Spurs’ starters have 19.

Even before the Lakers’ impressive offseason—clearly the best offseason of any NBA team this summer—they sported an impressive core of Kobe Bryant, Pau Gasol and Andrew Bynum.

Now, with the additions of two-time MVP Steve Nash and three-time Defensive Player of the Year Dwight Howard, the Lakers are back to being serious championship contenders with the best starting five in basketball.

For the first time in over a decade, the Lakers have a true point guard. Even though Nash is at the tail end of his career at 38 years old, he’s still playing at an extremely efficient level. He led a supporting cast of role players to a .500 record last season, nearly leading the Phoenix Suns to an improbable playoff berth. Although Nash may no longer be considered a top-five point guard in the NBA, he’s certainly still among the top 10.

During his three MVP-caliber seasons with the Suns from 2004 to 2007 (within which Nash accumulated back-to-back MVP awards), the South African-born floor general led Phoenix to 177 regular-season wins.

If we estimate that the Charlotte Bobcats would have won nine games total had the NBA had a normal 82-game schedule last season (instead of winning seven in their 66-game season), it would still take the Bobcats 20 seasons to win as many games as Nash and the Suns did in three seasons.

Nash has simply made a living in the NBA by running an efficient offense, making all of his teammates better and winning games. If he’s given the same opportunity in Los Angeles, there’s no reason why that trend shouldn’t continue.

At shooting guard, ho hum, the Lakers have one of the best players in the NBA. Bryant has five rings to his name, two of which he won as the Lakers’ unquestioned alpha dog, and three more from when Shaquille O’Neal was on board.

Even though Bryant will turn 34 years old on August 23rd, he’s still the Lakers’ leader and is always hungry to win.

At small forward, Metta World Peace sticks out as the Lakers’ lone weak link in the starting five.

Even though World Peace hasn’t had his best NBA seasons in Los Angeles and his name change didn’t make him any more peaceful, he’s still a former NBA Defensive Player of the Year who prides himself on locking down opponents. Sure, he was rumored to be amnestied this summer, but at least the Lakers upgraded with the trigger-happy Antawn Jamison off the bench.

At power forward, Gasol has become one of the most underrated and underappreciated players in the entire NBA by a mixture of trade rumors, his “soft” label and a minor tendency to fade statistically in the postseason.

Even though Gasol’s stats (17.4 points and 10.4 rebounds per game) last season were seen as a down year, 90 percent of players in the NBA at his position would love to be able to call those numbers a “down year.”

Also, fans often forget just how dominant Gasol was in the NBA Finals in 2009 and again in 2010 when the Lakers won back-to-back titles. Over the course of those two series, Gasol averaged 18.6 points, 10.4 rebounds and 2.2 blocks per game. So much for fading in the clutch.

Finally, although he’s currently recovering from back surgery, Howard brings a dominant post presence that Lakers have gotten used to seeing over the decades (joining a list that includes Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Wilt Chamberlain and O’Neal).

Last season, Howard ranked No. 1 in the NBA in rebounds (14.5 per game), No. 2 in field-goal percentage (57.3 percent) and No. 3 in blocks (2.16 per game). He was the only player in the NBA to rank in the top five in all three categories.

Howard is simply a dominant interior presence who has already shown the ability to carry a team to the NBA Finals. He did so in 2009 with the Orlando Magic.

On paper, the Lakers have the best starting five in the game. But that’s the problem. Right now, the Lakers’ success is only reflected by names and numbers.

Nash and Bryant are getting up there in age, while Howard’s health is very much a question mark coming off of back surgery. Howard may not start the season healthy, and there’s sure to be some growing pains along the way (a la the Miami Heat when they first assembled their Big Three).

At the moment, we can only speculate as to what this band of superstars can do out on the court. Even so, this team’s championship odds are right up there with the Miami Heat and Oklahoma City Thunder.

If they fall short of winning the Larry O’Brien Trophy, the season will undoubtedly be viewed as a failure. But regardless of what happens at season’s end, this team will be fun to watch.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1301017-breaking-down-why-la-lakers-have-the-best-starting-lineup-in-the-nba

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Monday, August 20, 2012

NBA News 2012: How LA Lakers and Miami Heat Match Up

Washington Wizards v/s Miami Heat December 18,...Washington Wizards v/s Miami Heat December 18, 2010 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Each of the two regular season matchups between the Los Angeles Lakers and Miami Heat are bound to be exhilarating, as would a potential showdown in the 2013 NBA Finals. The teams are evenly matched across the board after the squads reloaded during the offseason.

L.A. added a talented point guard and center to its roster during the summer, immediately vaulting The Purple and Gold to the top of the Western Conference power rankings and in the same upper echelon of NBA teams that the Heat currently occupy.

It's only natural that a position-by-position breakdown of the two teams ensues.

Steve Nash was one of the two biggest offseason additions for the Los Angeles Lakers, and he gives the team a huge advantage over their Eastern Conference opponent in this competition.

While point guard isn't exactly a weakness for the Miami Heat, it's by no means a strength either. Mario Chalmers is the resident punching bag, even if he does play good defense and hit the occasional three-pointer.

Something tells me that Nash won't be the punching bag in L.A.

Even at his advanced age, Nash is one of the best facilitators in the NBA. Even if the offense is slower than it was in Phoenix and the ball isn't in his hands as often due to the Princeton Offense, Nash will still lead the league in assists, or at least come very close.

In what is perhaps the most intriguing matchup of all, the shooting guard battle between the Lakers and the Heat could end up coming down to health.

Kobe Bryant and Dwyane Wade are the two best 2-guards in the NBA by a wide margin, but not much separates them from each other.

Last season, Kobe put together one of the most overrated campaigns in the league. Even though he was up near the scoring lead—and might have won the scoring title if he'd played in the 66th game of the season—he was an extremely glorified volume shooter.

Part of that was due to necessity, but Kobe's low percentages devalued the points that he did manage to score.

Somehow, someway, these two rosters managed to stack up so that the Heat's best player matches up against the Lakers' worst member of the starting five.

Metta World Peace might be a solid defender, but if you think he's capable of slowing down LeBron James, then you need to take off the glasses that are causing your purple-and-gold-tinted vision.

While the man most recently featured in the news for throwing an elbow is capable of knocking down some three-pointers on kick-outs, he can't make nearly the same impact as LeBron.

James is the reigning MVP for a reason—he contributes in every facet of the game.

In another fairly close matchup, Pau Gasol and Chris Bosh will be battling for supremacy whenever the Heat and Lakers duke it out on the hardwood.

Both power forwards bring a lot to the table when it comes to the offensive side of the ball, but Gasol's versatility gives him the edge in this head-to-head showdown.

While Bosh can hit his fair share of mid-range jumpers, Gasol can do so as well. He also has incredible passing skills for a seven-footer. In the new Princeton Offense, Gasol will only thrive.

Bosh has the potential to take this matchup over if the Heat continue to utilize him as they did during the NBA Finals and the second half of the series with the Boston Celtics.

Joel Anthony might be a defensive specialist, but his defense is going to look downright offensive if he's left in single coverage against Dwight Howard.

The only knock against D12 here is that his defense isn't going to look very good. After all, you're only doing well on defense if you make a player perform at a lower offensive level than normal.

Other than Nash and Howard, Antawn Jamison was the biggest offseason acquisition for the Lakers.

Formerly with the Cleveland Cavaliers, Jamison is serving as the sixth man in this article regardless of whether or not he's actually the first player off the bench. Jodie Meeks might be the first to leave the pine, but Jamison is the best member of the second unit.

Even at 36, the power forward can still use his smooth stroke to knock down the triples. He'll do a lot of that as he leads the Lakers backups in scoring during the 2012-2013 season.

However, Jamison can't touch the level of impact that Ray Allen is going to make for the Heat.

Allen will primarily shoot threes for his new team, just like Jamison, but he's going to do so at a much higher level and significantly more often.

Basketball happens on a court, not just paper. Chemistry matters. Playing styles matter.

And obviously, the benches and coaches matter.

With that in mind, the Heat are still better than the Lakers, despite only holding the advantage at small forward in the starting five.

I'm not concerned with placing numerical values on the 10 starters, nor analyzing the gaps between the two players at each positional matchup.

Simply put, the Heat have a worse starting five on paper, better chemistry between those five players, a better sixth man, a better overall bench and a better coach.

Miami also happens to be the current resting spot for the Larry O'Brien Trophy and the Maurice Podoloff Trophy.

Until that changes, it's hard to imagine someone beating them out for the top spot.


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