Showing posts with label Andrew Bynum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew Bynum. 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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Monday, December 10, 2012

NBA News 2012: 76ers Bynum hopeful of return

English: Andrew Bynum playing with the Los Ang...
English: Andrew Bynum playing with the Los Angeles Lakers (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Andrew Bynum still has pain in his left knee that has kept him from making his debut with the Philadelphia 76ers.

Bynum is in pain when he walks or attempts even light physical activity, except for swimming. He had been recovering from a bone bruise in his right knee and injured his left knee while bowling last month.

The 7-foot center will have his knees examined again Dec. 20th and did not know if he'd need an MRI.

''Worst case scenario, it's another month,'' he said Monday night. ''Best case scenario, I can ramp it up.''

Bynum has not or practiced or played for the Sixers since he was acquired in the offseason from the Los Angeles Lakers. Bynum said his right knee has improved to the point where he might have been able to play. He was again listed as inactive for Philadelphia's game against Detroit with ''bilateral bone bruises.''

''There's nothing I can do about it,'' he said. ''It's arthritis in the knees. Cartilage is missing. That's not going to regrow itself. Maybe in the future, next three to five years, there may be something out there that really does help. Right now, it's kind of a waiting game.''

Bynum, 25, is in the final year of his contract and could sign a five-year deal worth more than $100 million in the offseason, if he's healthy. But his uncertain status could be costing the All-Star millions.

Bynum won two NBA titles in seven seasons with the Lakers. The Sixers were hoping he could help them become one of the league's elite teams.

He has tried not to think about the fact he might never play for the Sixers.

''I really think I'll be fine,'' he said. ''If my left knee gets better, and feels like my right, I'll be playing.''

Bynum announced in May, while still a member of the Lakers, that he was going to Germany in September for the Orthokine blood-spinning treatment in his knees that other professional athletes have sought. The Sixers announced before training camp that Bynum needed to delay his return to allow the effects of the Orthokine treatment to work.

The bone bruise in his right knee caused the Sixers to push the return date from training camp to the regular season and now possibly to midseason.

But the Sixers are still looking long term with Bynum, who's in the last year of his contract.

Bynum said the Sixers haven't really put pressure on him to return.

''I think initially,'' he said, ''but then I realized more of the pressure was coming from myself. I just had to kind of relax a little bit and let this time pass.''

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/76ers-c-bynum-hopeful-return-235128506--nba.html

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Monday, November 19, 2012

NBA News 2012: Bynum's setback

Andrew Bynum
Andrew Bynum (Photo credit: Keith Allison)

The Philadelphia 76ers fear All-Star center Andrew Bynum might have done additional damage to his knees while bowling, according to sources close to the situation.

Multiple sources told ESPN on Saturday that Bynum suffered an unspecified injury this month while bowling. On Friday, Bynum revealed that — on top of the issues with his right knee that could keep him sidelined until January — he also had suffered a “setback” with his left knee.

There are several activities that are prohibited in standard NBA player contracts, but bowling is not one of them. Bynum is known to enjoy bowling.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/source-bynums-setback-caused-by-bowling/

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Tuesday, August 28, 2012

NBA News 2012: Kupchak: We thought Howard deal was dead

EL SEGUNDO, CA - AUGUST 10:  Dwight Howard (L)...EL SEGUNDO, CA - AUGUST 10: Dwight Howard (L) is 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)Prior to the deal that sent Dwight Howard to the Los Angeles Lakers, you couldn't blame Mitch Kupchak for failing to land the MVP-caliber center. Apparently the Lakers GM had been attempting for months, back to the midpoint of the 2011-12 season, to turn any number of Andrew Bynum-led packages into a deal for the former Orlando Magic big man, but had been rebuffed by two different GMs (and, in a way, Howard himself). And after grabbing Steve Nash for a song and retaining the team's three All-Star level starters, nobody could criticize Kupchak for going on the family vacation he had committed to during the second week of August.

To him, the Howard deal was "over," as the Magic mulled their options. Apparently the relaxed trade restrictions on rookie forward Moe Harkless sent new Orlando GM Rob Hennigan over the moon, and the Lakers were able to make a massive upgrade from the league's second to best center in time enough for Kupchak to make that family holiday.

Of course, this is a man who is thanking the GM that just sent him Dwight Howard. Even without that, GMs will never criticize each other on record, so just take Mitch's words with a grain of salt. Especially when this column appears as if Hennigan was tapping his foot and counting the days until a deal for Harkless (a rookie who has yet to play an NBA game) was made league-legal.

Kupchak was right to believe that Howard was going to re-sign with the team following the creation of his status as a 2013 unrestricted free agent, but the Houston Rockets should have been nearly as confident had Orlando accepted their deal for Howard. So should have been the Philadelphia 76ers (who ended up with Bynum) even before Andrew's presser with the team last week. The sheer amount of money that incumbent teams can throw at their free agents establishes that confidence well in advance.

It's noble for Kupchak to publicly praise Hennigan, a GM nearly half his age, for various reasons. Chief among them, obviously, is the unwritten code of on-record conduct between GMs. Second is the part that tells you that Magic CEO Alex Martins (a person with no basketball history entering his ascension to that position in 2011-12) may have had more to do with this deal than is being let on.

There's also the part where Kupchak says things that are far from incorrect. Hennigan did take his time. He did narrow things down, negotiate, and deal with several teams.

We — and we're not alone in the NBA community in this criticism — just think that Orlando could have taken more time (we're still five weeks removed from Howard having to show up to camp), narrow things down further (Houston, perhaps, and more cap space for 2013 instead of 2014 along with better draft picks?), and deal with different teams. The Rox, again, or actually grabbing Bynum from Los Angeles and putting the onus on Andrew to turn down tens of millions of dollars to leave that team as a free agent in the summer of 2013.

Though we're great fans of Pau Gasol, it's easy to understand why a rebuilding team in Orlando didn't want a player over 30 making nearly $20 million a year to start over with. We like Harkless, and aren't as down on Nikola Vucevic as others. Orlando's eventual Howard deal didn't change much, though, and it didn't affect much in terms of the team's eventual flexibility.

That's for another, possibly spurred on by the words of former Magic coach Stan Van Gundy, column. For now the focus is on Kupchak — a GM who has had incredible fortune and good luck, but has also put himself in the position to have such great luck (by agreeing with Jim Buss to draft Bynum, and by smartly trading Caron Butler in his prime for Kwame Brown because he knew the Memphis Grizzlies would want Kwame for Pau Gasol so badly).

Bad jokes aside, Kupchak has delivered a roster that, while flawed in parts, should be rightfully regarded as the championship favorite even after Miami's impressive run to the title last June. We're aware that the shot selection was dodgy, the defense lacking, and the bench was awful last season; but that's why you trade for Steve Nash, Dwight Howard, and sign Antawn Jamison and Jodie Meeks. Kupchak, in ways that can't be dismissed because his owners are willing to pay more, has done a brilliant job.

http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nba-ball-dont-lie/lakers-gm-mitch-kupchak-dwight-howard-deal-thought-160921284--nba.html
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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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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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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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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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Monday, August 13, 2012

NBA News 2012: The Los Angeles Lakers are about to acquire Dwight Howard, because the NBA is the best/worst

Washington Wizards v/s Orlando Magic February ...Washington Wizards v/s Orlando Magic February 4, 2011 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)Only in the NBA could a deal that has been rumored to go down for nearly a year slap us all across the face with such force. With such surprise, such weirdness, leaving us this astonished. Dwight Howard is finally going to the Los Angeles Lakers barring a last-minute NBA-styled glitch, Yahoo! Sports' Adrian Wojnarowski was the first to report on Thursday, and because this is the NBA the deal raises more questions than answers.

Save for, of course, "who's going to be in the NBA Finals next June?" That's been more or less taken care of, with this transaction. The Lakers will meet the Miami Heat 10 months from now, unless something goes terribly wrong, or someone screws up badly.

What we're left to do now is judge whether or not someone representing any of the four teams involved in this deal have screwed something up, badly. The Orlando Magic, a team that features a GM that has been in place for nearly as long as LeBron James has been an NBA champion, just shifted the entire focus of this ridiculous league back to Los Angeles, and away from James' Miami Heat. As if Los Angeles' month-old deal for one of the greatest point guards in NBA history wasn't enough.

The Magic, apparently, had to do something. Rumors abound that CEO Alex Martins put GM Rob Hennigan's feet to the fire, in a very un-San Antonio Spurs-like move, to get the deal done. We understand why the Magic's ownership group wanted nothing to do with the possibility of bringing Dwight Howard into camp in October, and we're also aware that bad luck and bad timing made it so no other deal for Howard was going to manifest itself between now and then, or now and February's trade deadline.

That is, of course, assuming you've forgotten all about the Houston Rockets and that team's myriad assets and draft picks. It is fine to forgive the Magic for not wanting to turn into those Rockets, all full of front office potential but nobody to dance with, but it's also just fine to criticize the Magic for not doing better. Even Brooklyn's final offer, as reported by Woj and made (sadly for Magic fans) in the first weeks of Hennigan's tenure, seems like the better deal — Brook Lopez at an appropriate price, one year of Kris Humphries at an inappropriate price, MarShon Brooks, and four unprotected first-round picks. Room to grow, with a 7-footer that can walk, chew gum and hit jump hooks at the same time.

In place of that, after a month and a half of nonsense, the Magic will receive Andrew Bynum Pau Gasol Arron Afflalo, Al Harrington, Nikola Vucevic, rookie Maurice Harkless, three first-rounders from various sources and a second-round pick. We dig Vucevic. We respect Afflalo (when he isn't attempting his Adrian Dantley impersonation). We know that Harkless has potential and that Harrington can help a good team. It's not a haul, though. It's a result.

In Orlando's defense, Bynum may not have signed an extension with the team (though we doubt that). Pau Gasol's game is to be adored, but not on a rebuilding team. There were reasons to fret, but this is what this Orlando's ownership deserves after hemming and hawing with former GM Otis Smith for years, and then waiting a month and a half after its season ended to find his replacement. The Magic should have known, the minute Dwight Howard lied to himself and Orlando and bought into his 2012-13 player option, that Smith's replacement needed to be lined up the second the Magic were knocked out of the postseason.

(The Lakers? They get Dwight Howard for Andrew Bynum. Love Bynum's game, think he was underutilized for years with Los Angeles, but they got Dwight Howard. They also still have Kobe Bryant, Steve Nash and Pau Gasol. I have a word count to think about, and you've seen basketball games.)

The Denver Nuggets pick up Andre Iguodala in the deal, and you'll pardon some modern-era Twitter-speak, but Andre Iguodala is just about the most Denver Nuggets player in the NBA. He's a great talent that doesn't excel in any one area save for being fantastically brilliant at playing the game of professional basketball. Like all Nuggets, he can't be counted on to win a game or playoff series by his lonesome, but he will repeatedly put you in a great position to win a game or playoff series while filling in wherever needed. He is also the only part of this potential 14-player deal (once all draft picks are accounted for) that will be playing for a gold medal in London over the next three days.

Denver loses a first-round pick plus Afflalo and Harrington in the process, but it'll also shave off over $11 million in 2014-15 salary with this deal. The Nuggets might be biding their time with all these "pretty good" players, but the team and the NBA's trade market hasn't exactly offered up many star-styled players to be tempted by and chased after. Someday, not everyone will play in Los Angeles, Miami or New York. Apparently Denver will be ready to pounce on that eventual, and much hoped-for, era.

The Philadelphia 76ers are harder to understand, save for the part about where they traded for an angry and presumably willing to please All-Star center that was born a few months after Shelley Long left "Cheers."

We've rightfully regarded the 76ers' offseason as a disaster to date, but the team has wing depth enough to fill in Iguodala's spot with good enough scorers, and we've all been spared the indignity of a team that was a game away from the Eastern Conference finals deciding to start Kwame Brown and Spencer Hawes in the same frontcourt. There's no plan in Philly, save for grabbing a bunch of players that can play right now under a coach that can really draw up plays (if not make sound personnel decisions regarding minutes and lineups), and we can't fault the 76ers for hopping into this big mess.

It will also take a massive leap of faith, or giant bit of Philly-styled discomfort, for Bynum to pass on the money he can make with a maximum contract with the 76ers in the summer of 2013. He'll flirt and feint, but unless the Sixers really screw this up, he'll be a part of that team until he hits 30. All they have to endure is a few offseason months of Bynum pretending to be ticked off at the trade, a rough regular season where he flirts with every potential suitor's town, and the part in July of 2013 when his agent tells him how much money he can make in Philadelphia over how much money he can make in Dallas.

From there, with all those middle-class pretenders sadly filed away, we turn to the idea of Dwight Howard as a member of the Los Angeles Lakers. And how this will challenge your appreciation of this league.

http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nba-ball-dont-lie/los-angeles-lakers-acquire-dwight-howard-because-nba-135357490--nba.html
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Saturday, August 11, 2012

NBA News 2012: Howard goes to Lakers in four-team deal

English: Andrew Bynum playing with the Los Ang...English: Andrew Bynum playing with the Los Angeles Lakers (Photo credit: Wikipedia)Following a drawn out and at times tenuous process, the Orlando Magic have finally said goodbye to Dwight Howard.

The All-Star center has been officially sent to the Los Angeles Lakers in a complicated four-team, 12-player swap. The deal was consummated after NBA officials reviewed all aspects on Friday.

The Magic get guard Arron Afflalo and forward Al Harrington from the Denver Nuggets, center Nikola Vucevic and forward Moe Harkless from the Philadelphia 76ers, and forward Josh McRoberts and guard Christian Eyenga from the Lakers. They also receive a conditional first-round pick from each of the other three teams involved.

Philadelphia also ships guard Andre Iguodala to Denver, and receives center Andrew Bynum from the Lakers and guard Jason Richardson from Orlando.

Got it?

“A primary goal for our basketball team is to achieve sustainability while maintaining a long-term vision,” Magic general manager Rob Hennigan said. “We feel this deal puts us in a position to begin building in that direction. In addition to the six players joining our team, we will be in a position to maximize our salary cap flexibility in the near future, as well as utilize the multiple draft picks we have acquired going forward.”

The Lakers also received guard Chris Duhon and forward Earl Clark from Orlando, while Orlando receives five draft picks over five years.

Howard’s Lakers’ debut may have to wait, since he’s expected to miss the start of the regular season while he recovers from back surgery, sources told ESPN.com.

In a coup for the Lakers, they acquired Howard without giving up forward Pau Gasol.

“It looks like Superman has found a home,” Lakers star Kobe Bryant posted on his Facebook page. “I wish nothing but the best for Big Bynum. I hope he follows what was a great season last year with an even better one next year. I know LA is excited about the deal and rightfully so. The Lakers landed a piece that will hopefully carry the franchise long after I’m gone. I have spoken to Dwight Howard already and we are locked and loaded to bring back the title.”

For their part, Denver was thrilled to acquire the 28-year-old Iguodala. The 6-foot-6, 207-pounder has averaged 15.3 points, 5.8 rebounds and 4.9 assists in eight seasons with the 76ers.

“It’s not often you get the opportunity to improve your team by adding an All-Star player like Andre Iguodala,” Nuggets Executive Vice President Masai Ujiri said. “He’s an Olympian, a great defender and a great all-around player. We think he fits in really well with the type of system coach George Karl runs and the team we have here in Denver.”

Philadelphia was also happy to land Bynum, who grew up about an hour from Philadelphia, in Plainsboro, N.J. He could sign a three-year, $60 million extension this season or wait to become a free agent after the season and be eligible for a five-year, $102 million deal.

“We’re very excited to welcome Andrew Bynum, one of the league’s best, young centers, and Jason Richardson, a proven, respected veteran, to the Philadelphia 76ers,” managing owner Josh Harris said. “As we stated from the outset, our ownership group is committed to exploring every option available to us in order to improve our team. This trade is the culmination of a very active off-season, one that we believe positions the Sixers for success this season and for many years to come.”

http://www.hoopsworld.com/lakers-get-duhon-clark-in-howard-deal/
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