Showing posts with label Erik Spoelstra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Erik Spoelstra. Show all posts

Thursday, February 14, 2013

NBA 2013: Efficient LeBron playing at highest level yet

Washington Wizards v/s Miami Heat December 18,...
Washington Wizards v/s Miami Heat December 18, 2010 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

After a recent Miami Heat practice in Washington, Ray Allen told the coaching staff he was skipping the bus ride and running back to the hotel.

LeBron James' ears perked up.

With that, the three-time NBA MVP went looking for his running shoes.

"LeBron said, `If you're going to do that, I'm going to do that too. I'm not going to be outdone by somebody else. I'm going to run,"' Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. "So he gets very competitive with things like that. If other people are working on their game, he takes notice."

That approach must be working. James' game -- already considered among the best in the NBA -- might be better than ever right now.

He's made 37 of his last 47 shots over his last 111 minutes, a torrid 79-percent clip. For the season, he's shooting a career-best 56 percent so far, easily on pace for the sixth straight season of improvement in that department. His 3-point shooting, at 42 percent this season, is much improved. He's shooting 70 percent inside the paint.

"I want to continue to push the button, continue to get better, maximize my potential and not waste an opportunity," James said.

The numbers go on and on. He's averaging 26.9 points this season. According to STATS LLC, only five players in NBA history have averaged that many points while shooting at least 56 percent over a full season. Maybe that's why Heat guard Dwyane Wade marvels when talking about James these days, saying "every year, it seems like he does the amazing."

"Numbers don't lie," James said.

At least, they don't in this case. After winning his third MVP award, second Olympic gold medal and first NBA championship, James said he wanted to get even better.

"It's kind of like, where is the bar for this guy? Does he have a bar?" Wade said. "And I'm glad that he's doing all this while he's in a Miami Heat uniform."

http://www.nba.com/2013/news/02/09/heat-lebrons-numbers.ap/index.html

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

NBA News 2013: Dwyane Wade Not Mad About Benching

Dwyane Wade of the Miami Heat (in black) dribb...
Dwyane Wade of the Miami Heat (in black) dribbles the ball against Toni Kukoc of the Milwaukee Bucks in a 2005 game. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Miami HEAT guard Dwyane Wade said Wednesday he has no ill will over coach Erik Spoelstra’s decision to sit him in the fourth quarter of Monday’s loss to the Utah Jazz.

In the 104-97 setback to the Jazz, Spoelstra decided to sit Wade and played forward Chris Bosh for just 40 seconds in the fourth quarter. The HEAT cut a 19-point deficit to two without their two stars before falling short.

Wade said Wednesday that he was frustrated about the loss, the HEAT’s sixth in the past 10 games, but there are no hard feelings over Spoelstra’s decision.

“It was the frustration of losing,” Wade said. “The fourth quarter was overblown. When I went to the bench, we were down 19 points and that team did a great job of coming back and making it a game. Obviously you want to play, but I could never get mad at my team coming back.”

http://www.hoopsworld.com/dwyane-wade-not-mad-about-benching/

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Friday, June 22, 2012

NBA News 2012: Durant, Thunder still right on time

English: Kevin Durant of the Oklahoma City Thu...English: Kevin Durant of the Oklahoma City Thunders at ARCO Arena. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Kevin Durant was not just happy to make it to his first NBA Finals. He wanted to win, as he made abundantly clear after it was all over. He had done the things champions do. He had not just worked incredibly hard in the lockout, but rallied his teammates to do the same. He had embraced the NBA's smallest market. He had resolutely not caved to media pressure to criticize his teammate Russell Westbrook for shooting too much. He had stared down the barrel of an 0-2 hole against the formidable San Antonio Spurs. He had put up huge playoff numbers -- 28.3 points, 7.2 rebounds, 3.7 assists, 1.2 blocks, 1.7 steals, 52 percent field goal shooting, 37 percent 3-point shooting, 86 percent from the line -- befitting the best scorer in basketball.

And it did not end, as he had intended, with a ring.

Durant says he was surprised how emotional Game 5's 121-106 loss to the Miami Heat made him. He said he could even see real strain in the faces of his parents. And he says he will take that experience and change … just about nothing.

And that's exactly how it should be.

"Whether we would have won or lost," Durant said, "I was going to come back this summer, everybody was going to come back this summer, and work extremely hard, win or lose."

Music to the ears of anyone who wants to see the Oklahoma City Thunder win -- because when you have things working like they are working in Oklahoma City, it's not about how mighty an improvement you can make to open the championship window. The window is wide open. Now it's about how long it can stay that way, how many consecutive days you can keep doing the right thing.

Just keeping it together, for these Thunder, will be enough, and Durant isn't making the slightest hints about flipping the script.

"I wouldn't want to play with anybody else," he says. "I wouldn't want to play for any other city. I'm just blessed to be part of this organization, and hopefully we can get back."

A scene that says a lot about the Thunder franchise: In the hotel gym the other day, a player was being coached -- loudly, boisterously, and with much loving attention -- through a workout. He didn't have one member of the Thunder training staff working with him, he had three. After all, it's the middle of the NBA Finals.

But here's the thing: The player was backup point guard Eric Maynor, who isn't set to play again until late summer after missing all but nine games of the season with a torn ACL. Even a player who didn't matter at all to the Finals was a huge priority in the Finals.

Maynor, who played 22 games with the Utah Jazz before joining the Thunder midway through his rookie season, says he can't imagine why anyone would ever want to play for another team, this being one that really cares about him as a person more than getting a win.

Who'd want to change that?

"Aggressively boring."

That's the phrase that has been rolling around in my head as the Finals coaches, Miami's Erik Spoelstra and Oklahoma City's Scott Brooks, meet the media day after day.

Russell Westbrook has been about as electric as a player can be in these Finals -- a walking storyline. Watch him fly around the court with an invisible jetpack, embarrassing all who would defend him. Watch him make critical errors, embarrassing himself. They say LeBron is "Hollywood as hell," but this guy is all plot.

And yet, to any question about Westbrook, Brooks rolls into a canned ham of a story about how he loves Russell, how Russell never misses a practice and about how the team would never be where it is without him.

Brooks and Spoelstra are as quotable as monks, and it goes beyond not wanting to provide bulletin board material to the other team.

By and large, what both coaches have to say is what Durant is already living: Do the right thing, even when it seems like the wrong thing. Eventually you'll probably get good results.

http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/post/_/id/46332/durant-thunder-still-right-on-time

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Tuesday, June 19, 2012

NBA News 2012: Heat's ugly win just fine with James

The Miami Heat lineup might be dominated by three of the NBA's biggest stars, but not all of their victories in the NBA Finals are going to be pretty to watch, says LeBron James.

"I don't give a damn how we get four (wins). We can win 32-31," James said on Monday. "We can win any type of game. We can win a gritty game, a high-paced game, but we take every game as its own."

The Heat took Sunday's game 91-85 over Oklahoma City to grab a 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven championship series.

James led Miami with 29 points and 14 rebounds in a game dominated by defense, turnovers and mistakes. Dwayne Wade added 25 points and Chris Bosh had 10 for the Heat.

"We don't go into a game saying this is what type of a game it's going to be," James said. "We go into a game saying this is how we're going to play.

"We're going to be aggressive. We're going to try to control the rebounding, have low turnovers and we're going to try to get some good shots up and get to the free-throw line.

"And at the end of the day then we'll give ourselves a good chance to win."

Miami is only two wins shy of their first NBA title in six years, and the first since bringing together their marquee trio last season, and the Heat will have the luxury of hosting the next two games.

History is on their side because 29 of the 34 NBA Finals that were tied after the first two games have been won by the club that won game three as the Heat did.

Three-time league Most Valuable Player James is still chasing his first NBA title, but don't think he hasn't done his homework on how other teams got there.

"Listen, I know the history of the game," James said. "You've got to have superstars and stars to win a championship.

"You've got to have a great coaching staff and a great organization. But as many as (Michael) Jordan won, he had a great supporting cast around him. As many as (Larry) Bird won, he had a supporting cast. As many as Magic (Johnson) won, he had a supporting cast, same with (Tim) Duncan.

"I understand that you can't do it by yourself. You've got to have guys around you, great players around you, then you've got to have role players."

Unlike his first year in the league, James' can play any style. At times he makes the game looks easy, like he's floating across the floor. At other times he is at his menacing best -- elbows flying, head jerking from side-to-side as he muscles in another lay-up through heavy traffic in the paint.

James was at his grinding best on Sunday, powering through the Thunder defense for off balance lay-ups, tap-ins and dunks.

On one drive to the basket he resembled an American football running back, dropping his shoulder and plowing into the closest opponent, just enough to throw the defender off guard but not enough to be whistled for a foul.

Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said Monday that James isn't one of those naturally-gifted athletes who thinks he can get by on great athletic skills alone. He has tried to improve his game every year he has been in the league.

"The biggest evolution of great players is they always stay in constant state of being uncomfortable," said Spoelstra, the first Filipino-American coach in the NBA.

http://ph.sports.yahoo.com/news/nba-heats-ugly-win-just-fine-james-225849258--nba.html

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Sunday, June 17, 2012

NBA News 2012: Heat know what to expect from Thunder in Game 3

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - JANUARY 30:  Forward LeBro...OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - JANUARY 30: Forward LeBron James #6 talks with Dwyane Wade #3 and Chris Bosh #1 of the Miami Heat during play against the Oklahoma City Thunder at Ford Center on January 30, 2011 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
At this point a year ago, LeBron James and Dwyane Wade were using words like urgency and desperation.

And that's exactly what the Miami Heat expect the Oklahoma City Thunder to bring into Game 3 of this year's NBA Finals.

So far, this championship series has followed the same script as a year ago, with the home team winning the opening matchup, then falling in Game 2 to lose the home-court edge. Miami took the sting of that into Dallas last year and used it as fuel to win Game 3 - and the Heat will look to ensure that trend doesn't repeat itself when the title matchup resumes on their home floor Sunday night.

''You've got the two best teams in the league right now going against each other,'' Wade said Saturday, when practices resumed after a day off for both clubs. ''So it's going to be a very tough game, but we have to find a way to win it. And it's about taking, like I said, one possession at a time, one second, one minute at a time to make sure we reach our goal - and that's to win the game.''

A Game 3 victory assures nothing, a lesson the Heat learned the hard way last year. That win in Dallas was Miami's final victory of the season.

But there are certain truths that will come from the outcome Sunday night. The winner will have home-court advantage. The winner will be two games away from a championship. And the losing club will see what appears to be an already razor-thin margin for error in this series become even more precarious.

''We have no other choice,'' said Thunder star Kevin Durant, the league's scoring champion. ''We lost at home. Tough loss. We've got to get over it, get ready for a tough Game 3. You know, the series is going to be tough. We know that. We know that. You've just got to be ready. It's going to be a fun one.''

By now, the Heat aren't shy to say they're completely exhausted about dissecting what went wrong in last year's finals. Still, they know the importance of not letting one loss turn into another - because when that happened against the Mavericks a year ago, there was a parade in Dallas not long afterward.

''I don't know if we were any more motivated in Game 2,'' Erik Spoelstra said. ''What we were was angry about our performance in Game 1. ... You want to throw your best punches out there, and may the best team win. We didn't throw our best punches in Game 1.''

Add up the numbers from the first two games of the series, and it turns into something close to a statistical dead heat.

Both teams are shooting 47 percent. Both have made 14 tries from 3-point range (though Miami is shooting a better percentage). The Thunder have grabbed four more rebounds, the Heat whistled for two more fouls. The Thunder outscored Miami by 16 points in the paint during their Game 1 win; the Heat outscored the Thunder by 16 points in the paint during their victory in Game 2.

Of course, the only stat that really matters is the one that's identical: one win each, headed into Sunday.

And if the young Thunder were supposed to be rattled by losing the home-court edge, no one told them.

''We have all the right pieces, from the best scorer in the league, most athletic point guard in the league to the best shot blocker to the best post defender, best wing defender and our bench is one of the best,'' James Harden said. ''This is a perfect team. We are young guns. We get it done. It has to start in Game 3.''

Even their young-looking coach doesn't sound worried about the stakes the Thunder will face.

''I've seen all year long a group that's always committed, that always sticks by one another, that believes in the work that we put in,'' Scott Brooks said. ''And that's who they are. It's not going to change. They've always had great ability to bounce back after a tough loss and we expect the guys to come back (Sunday) night with better effort, better play and for 48 minutes.''

The Heat expect the same.

It's no secret that falling short last year has been a source of inspiration throughout this season for James and the Heat, and that continues even now.

And for James, one trend from last year is gone. In Game 2, he did what he was criticized for not doing against the Mavs - he closed the game, coming through twice in a one-possession situation. His bank shot with 1:26 left pushed Miami's lead to five, and his two free throws with 7.1 seconds remaining sealed Miami's 100-96 win.

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/heat-know-expect-thunder-game-200751147--nba.html;_ylt=AqiEf0JY2sKvI0E1cDNB9L.8vLYF

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Wednesday, June 13, 2012

NBA News 2012: Short Rotation Hurts Miami Heat

Miami HeatMiami Heat (Photo credit: Keith Allison)
When you’re paying your top three players about $48 million a year, your roster is not going to have a lot of depth. Such is the issue with the Miami Heat.

In Game 7 of the conference finals, Heat coach Erik Spoelstra got away with basically playing just six guys. That was enough to outlast the similarly shallow Boston Celtics.

But the Oklahoma City Thunder are not the Celtics in any shape, form or fashion. They’re younger, faster and deeper. And in Game 1 of The Finals, a 105-94 Thunder victory, Spoelstra couldn’t get away with playing such a short rotation.

Off the bench, the Heat got 34 minutes from Chris Bosh, 10 minutes from Mike Miller, and two minutes from Joel Anthony. Norris Cole and James Jones, who have each been in and out of the rotation in this postseason, did not play. The Heat said afterward that Jones was unavailable because of a migraine.

The lack of depth appeared to play a part in the Heat’s demise on Tuesday. After outscoring the Thunder 29-22 in the first quarter, Miami trended down. The second quarter was even. Oklahoma City won the third quarter by eight and the fourth quarter by 10, as the Heat seemingly ran out of gas.

“We know we have to have more production for sure,” LeBron James said afterward. “We’re going to have to have more guys in there to give me and D-Wade a rest. And Shane, Shane played a lot of minutes. But Spo will figure that out. We’ll be more conscious about it, just trying to get a minute or two here or there so we can finish strong. But I don’t think it was much of a problem tonight.”

Whether or not Bosh starts Game 2 probably doesn’t matter. With Bosh on the bench, the Heat got off to a great start. But Miami needs more than six contributors, especially against this opponent.

The question is, who will that other contributor be? Spoelstra didn’t seem to know after the Game 1 loss.

“I have to see who’s really available,” he said.

If Jones has recovered from his migraine by Thursday, he could be that guy. Miller is dealing with back issues and might not be able to play more than the 10 minutes he logged on Tuesday. Cole might be able to match up with Derek Fisher, but probably can’t get caught guarding Russell Westbrook.

Really, there’s nobody beyond the top six that Spoelstra knows he can rely on. At this point, going to his bench is just grasping at straws. And that could be an issue for the Heat throughout the series.

http://hangtime.blogs.nba.com/2012/06/13/short-rotation-hurts-heat-late/

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Monday, March 7, 2011

NBA News 2011: James Promises To Do Better

Dwyane Wade and LeBron JamesImage by Keith Allison via Flickr
For all the flexing and preening, the third-person proclamations and South Beach parties, LeBron James finally delivered these Miami Heat something pure and authentic in the privacy of the locker room: Full of emotion, he apologized for his big-shot, big-games failures and promised redemption.

“I told my team I’m not going to continue to fail them late in games,” James told reporters in Miami. “I put a lot of the blame on myself.”



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Friday, November 12, 2010

NBA News 2010: Heat folding under weight of season

'The Decision' & Miami is in a Frenzy!Image by xynn tii imagery. via Flickr
“In the last 48 hours, we’re getting to know each other,” Spoelstra said. “This is good. You need to face this adversity.

“You need to stumble.”

Yes, they’re getting to know each other. With two horrific losses within three days at American Airlines Arena, the Heat are mortified to find themselves fighting to stay above .500, and Spoelstra is getting to know his superstar, LeBron James(notes). Chris Bosh(notes) came and went, Dwyane Wade(notes) stood in the corners and watched. Most of all, James found himself in postseason shape, closing a loss to the Boston Celtics with a missed layup, two missed free throws and a corner 3-pointer off the side of the backboard.

The world’s bearing down, times are tumultuous, and James is the one Heat star in playoff form.

“For myself, 44 minutes is too much,” James declared. “I think Coach Spo knows that. Forty minutes for D-Wade is too much. We have to have as much energy as we can to finish games out.”

There you go, Coach Spo.


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