Showing posts with label Yao Ming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yao Ming. Show all posts

Sunday, November 4, 2012

NBA News 2012: Time To Fear The Beard

Houston Rockets logo
Houston Rockets logo (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

This is what the Houston Rockets have been missing for years, ever since Yao Ming started missing long stretches of games with foot injuries.

Houston fans have known it, too, even if they haven’t put it in so many words. They have seen team after team make great plays and stay tough down the stretch of games, often falling short by a basket or two, a mere handful of points making the difference between a playoff berth and a trip to the lottery.

What the Rockets have been missing is a closer.

Every great team has one. In fact, every playoff team has one. It’s that one player who shrugs off the toughest of defensive schemes to make basket after basket to pull his team ahead for a win. The Oklahoma City Thunder have Kevin Durant, the Miami HEAT have LeBron James, the Dallas Mavericks have Dirk Nowitzki and the Houston Rockets have James Harden.

It’s early, of course, and there is a lot of basketball to be played, but through two games the Rockets have had a presence that left the team when Yao retired.

Harden scored 37 points in Houston’s season-opener against the Detroit Pistons, and in his encore performance he was even better. Unlike the Pistons, the Atlanta Hawks fought back from a 14-point deficit to take the lead late in the fourth quarter. That’s when Harden put the team on his back and scored 18 of his career-high 45 points in the final frame.

Harden didn’t do it alone, of course, but then the Rockets have never been a team to stand around and watch. Jeremy Lin had 21 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists, Omer Asik chipped in a career-high 19 rebounds and Marcus Morris scored a career-high 17 points off the bench.


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Thursday, April 21, 2011

NBA News 2011: Oden Factor

Greg Oden promotes literacy and the manga &quo...Image via Wikipedia
When the Portland Trail Blazers selected Greg Oden with the first overall pick in the 2007 NBA Draft, it was widely believed that he would be the final foundational piece to a team that would compete for championships for years to come. All-Star Brandon Roy was already turning heads and LaMarcus Aldridge was showing promise, as well. The Blazers had their big three and they were ready to make some serious noise in the Western Conference.

Still, the Blazers remain hopeful that at some point Oden will be able to take the court once again, and that he can be the center solution that they, like so many other teams, have struggled to find.

"We're hoping that Greg can come back and be that for us," Blazers GM Rich Cho tells HOOPSWORLD. "I think if you can have a dominant center like Dwight Howard or Yao Ming before he got hurt or maybe Bynum or Greg Oden when he was healthy, it gives you a lot more of an advantage up front. There's not a lot of those guys around, so if you can find one it gives you more of an advantage."

The Blazers may not have Greg Oden anchoring the middle and Brandon Roy has struggled to play through his injuries, as well, but the growth of LaMarcus Aldridge and the addition of Gerald Wallace got them back into the playoffs. The first two games of their first round series were extremely competitive, and rest assured the Blazers will give Dallas a fight now that the series resumes in Portland. Every team has setbacks, and the Blazers have had more than their share, but they're fighting through and looking to come out stronger on the other side.



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Thursday, January 27, 2011

NBA News 2011: LeBron, Wade lead East starters

2009 NBA All-Star Game Wallpaper (Kobe-LeBron)Image by RMTip21 via Flickr
LeBron James and Dwyane Wade of the Miami Heat are headed to the NBA All-Star game together, and Derrick Rose gave the Chicago Bulls their first starter since Michael Jordan.

They will be joined in the Eastern Conference starting lineup by Amare Stoudemire, who will become the first New York Knicks player to start in nearly two decades, and Orlando center Dwight Howard, the leading vote-getter in the conference with nearly 2.1 million.

The Lakers' Kobe Bryant earned his 13th straight All-Star selection for the Feb. 20 game at his home arena. He is one shy of the record held by Jerry West, Shaquille O'Neal and Karl Malone.

Bryant, a three-time MVP of the All-Star game, was the overall leading vote-getter with more than 2.3 million.

The other starters announced Thursday were Hornets guard Chris Paul, forwards Kevin Durant of Oklahoma City and Carmelo Anthony of Denver, and Houston center Yao Ming, who is injured and will be replaced on the roster by a player of commissioner David Stern's choosing.



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Wednesday, October 6, 2010

NBA News 2010: Lakers Could Make Bynum Role Player

Photo of Los Angeles Lakers Andrew Bynum.Image via Wikipedia
Lakers coach Phil Jackson says he could limit Andrew Bynum's minutes significantly if he is bothered by a knee injury for the four straight season.

Los Angeles could turn him essentially into a role player over the long-term if it will preserve his health.

Jackson hopes that they'll avoid such a scenario this season, but it's a possibility if he suffers another knee injury.

"We're hopeful that this is the time he's able to start playing consistently through a season," Jackson said.

"If not, we're going to have to look at Andrew as a short-minute guy, somebody like Yao Ming who's going to be limited in the amount of minutes he plays."


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Thursday, September 16, 2010

NBA News 2010: Rockets to limit Yao Ming's bone stress

Yao Ming playing against the Washington WizardsImage via Wikipedia
Houston Rockets center Yao Ming will not play more than 24 minutes a game next season in an attempt to limit stress on his bones, Rockets vice president and athletic trainer Keith Jones told the Houston Chronicle.

Under the plan, Yao will be strictly limited to 24 minutes, and he will even sit during crucial final-second possessions if he has passed the mark. If Yao plays fewer than 24 minutes one night, he will not be allowed more time in a later game.


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Tuesday, September 7, 2010

NBA News 2010: Who Will Be the NBA's Most Improved Player?

Aaron Brooks and Ben UrferImage by ctsnow via Flickr
This past season, in his first full season as a starter, Aaron Brooks ended up becoming the first Rockets player to win the award in franchise history, as he proved himself to be a legitimate NBA point guard. He bumped his season averages to 19.6 points, 2.6 rebounds and 5.3 assists per game this past season, leading the Rockets to a 40-win season despite Yao Ming's absence. 

Of all the annual awards, this may be the most difficult to project, as there's no telling how much work each NBA player put into his game over his summer vacation. If Derrick Rose added a reliable three-point shot to his arsenal, however, he could end up meriting consideration when we reach the end of the year.


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Thursday, September 2, 2010

NBA News 2010: Brazilian Import: Introducing Tiago Splitter To the NBA

Tiago Splitter warming up in the second game o...Image via Wikipedia
In the not too distant past, there was an influx of talented, highly-skilled, foreign NBA ready big men arriving on American shores ready to prove themselves in the best league in the world. The likes of Pau Gasol, Dirk Nowitzki, Yao Ming, Nene, and Andrew Bogut have become proven commodities for their respective teams, if not the face of their franchise. The combination of a lack of NBA ready big men born within our own borders, and the tantalizing prospect of finding the next Dirk Nowitzki or Pau Gasol, has seen NBA scouts scour foreign gymnasiums and playgrounds in search of the next international superstar.

Tiago is a prototypical Greg Popovich type of player, and will fit perfectly into San Antonio’s system. He adds much needed youth and depth to the Spurs frontline, and will make life much easier for Tim Duncan.

He has the ability on offense to hit the open jumper, finish inside with either hand, run the high-post offense with his remarkable pinpoint passing ability, set solid screens, and should excel in running the pick and roll with pick and roll extraordinaire Tony Parker.

On defense, Splitter will bump and grind until the final whistle, and fight for any and every rebound in his vicinity, much like his new teammate DeJuan Blair. While he is not a shot blocker, he is an excellent man to man defender, and his combination of speed and quickness will help on defensive rotations as well as defending the pick and roll. He seldom makes mistakes on this end of the court.


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