Showing posts with label James Harden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Harden. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

NBA News 2013: James Harden enters break with Rockets hot

English: James Harden, a player for the Oklaho...
English: James Harden, a player for the Oklahoma City Thunder at ARCO Arena. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

James Harden’s head will be on a swivel long before the NBA All-Star Game finally tips off on Sunday.

As the Houston Rockets’ lone All-Star and the unofficial host of the festivities that will take place in his team’s town, he’ll be pulled a few dozen different ways for appearances, interviews, photo-shoots and — last but certainly not least — his job as a coach in the celebrity game on Friday. But considering his young-and-upcoming team is still in need of the sort of talent that will be in ample supply at the event, he’ll leave some time for the sort of recruiting effort that is tailor-made for this annual, star-studded scene.

“I’ll do a little bit of recruiting during the All-Star break, but my main focus is on just trying to get this team focused on every single game, every practice,” Harden, whose team has significant salary cap space that can be used this summer if they don’t do a major deal before the Feb. 21 trade deadline, told USA TODAY Sports on Sunday.

“I can’t worry about who we want to recruit and things like that. … For the most part, we’re trying to make the playoffs.”

http://www.hoopsworld.com/james-harden-enters-break-with-rockets-hot-recruiting/

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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, November 1, 2012

NBA News 2012: Harden, Rockets Agree Upon $80M Extension

English: James Harden (basketball) on defense ...
English: James Harden (basketball) on defense against the UCLA Bruins men's basketball team (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

James Harden and the Houston Rockets have agreed upon a five-year, $80 million contract extension.

Harden was acquired by the Rockets last Saturday in trade with the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Harden was the NBA's Sixth Man of the Year last season and also won a gold medal as a member of the United States' basketball team.

http://basketball.realgm.com/wiretap/224248/Harden_Rockets_Agree_Upon_$80M_Extension

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Wednesday, October 31, 2012

NBA News 2012: Harden Sought Trade Kicker In Extension Talks With Thunder

English: James Harden, a player for the Oklaho...
English: James Harden, a player for the Oklahoma City Thunder at ARCO Arena. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

During extension talks with the Oklahoma City Thunder, James Harden and his agent sought a 15 percent trade kicker.

Harden was entertaining taking less than a max contract, but wanted a financial incentive should the Thunder trade him.

The Thunder were offering Harden a four-year contract in the neighborhood of $53 million.

With the Houston Rockets, Harden will be able to sign a five-year contract.

http://basketball.realgm.com/wiretap/224232/Harden_Sought_Trade_Kicker_In_Extension_Talks_With_Thunder

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Monday, October 29, 2012

NBA News 2012: Harden trade shows it’s all about the money

James Harden, Serge Ibaka, Victor Claver, and ...
James Harden, Serge Ibaka, Victor Claver, and Pau Gasol (Photo credit: ctsnow)

In professional sports, it’s often about the money. And at the end of the day, the Oklahoma City Thunder didn’t have the money for guard James Harden.

So late Saturday, the Thunder, who lost to the Miami Heat in five games in last season’s NBA Finals, traded Harden to the Houston Rockets for guards Kevin Martin and Jeremy Lamb, two first-round picks and second-round pick. The Rockets received center Cole Aldrich, guard Daequan Cook and forward Lazar Hayward in the deal.

Harden, the 2011-12 sixth man of the year and a London Olympics gold medalist with Team USA, and the Thunder had been involved in talks about an extension, but the two sides could not find common ground. Instead of risk losing Harden as a restricted free agent after the 2012-13 season, the Thunder decided to make sure they got something in return.

“While I never like having to send out quality players like Kevin Martin and Jeremy Lamb, this trade gives us a chance to make an immediate impact on the future of our franchise moving forward,” Rockets owner Leslie Alexander said in a statement. “James Harden was part of Team USA’s gold medal team at the London Olympics and is one of the most skilled shooting guards in the NBA. James, along with the mix of young players we already have in place such as (guard) Jeremy Lin, (forward) Chandler Parsons and (center) Omer Asik give us a very solid group of young, talented players who will form the core of our team.”

The deal cuts to the heart of the plight of small- and mid-market teams such as the Thunder. Can they return all of their top players? Are they willing to have a payroll that surpasses the luxury tax and are they willing to pay the tax when they go over? The Thunder have more than $200 million tied up in salary for forward Kevin Durant, guard Russell Westbrook and forward Serge Ibaka through 2016-17.

Just before midnight ET, Durant tweeted, “Wow.”

http://www.hoopsworld.com/james-harden-trade-by-thunder-shows-its-all-about-the-money/

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Sunday, October 28, 2012

NBA News 2012: Oklahoma City Thunder trade should benefit Lakers

English: James Harden, a player for the Oklaho...
English: James Harden, a player for the Oklahoma City Thunder at ARCO Arena. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Oklahoma City Thunder and Houston Rockets pulled off a late offseason trade on Saturday that sent James Harden, Cole Aldrich, Daequan Cook and Lazar Hayward to the Houston Rockets for Kevin Martin, Jeremy Lamb and draft considerations.

Harden was a major factor in knocking the Lakers out of the postseason last May.

The move for the Thunder was more about economics than basketball.  The new collective-bargaining agreement includes increasingly punitive luxury taxes and Oklahoma City is already heavily invested in Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook and Serge Ibaka.

The move will probably benefit the Lakers should the two meet again in the postseason.

Harden is a capable shooter and defender. In the playoffs against the Lakers, he was able to drive into the paint to either score or draw a foul.  Certainly the Lakers will have their hands full with Durant and Westbrook in the future, but Harden seemed to be the difference-maker in the series.

On paper, the Lakers have improved over last year, with the additions of Steve Nash, Dwight Howard, Jodie Meeks and Antawn Jamison.  Of course, the Lakers have to prove they can win even a single game after dropping all eight in the preseason.

Injuries have slowed the team's development, but the Lakers will round into form as they get healthy and grow more comfortable in Coach Mike Brown's offense.

The Thunder are still a major threat.  Martin can also shoot and get to the line, but he's not close to Harden as a defender or playmaker. Lamb's game is actually similar to Martin's, although he's younger and more athletic.

In the short term, it would appear the Thunder have taken a step backward.  If the Lakers can come together and stay healthy, the road through the Western Conference might have gotten slightly easier.


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Friday, October 26, 2012

NBA News 2012: Durant, Thunder still chasing first NBA title

English: Kevin Durant of the Oklahoma City Thu...
English: Kevin Durant of the Oklahoma City Thunders at ARCO Arena. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Weeks after sobbing with his parents after Miami beat Oklahoma City Thunder four straight times to win the NBA championship, Durant was celebrating a gold medal with Team USA in London.

Now comes the task of trying to make up for that championship that was lost. Durant will have to lead an even younger Thunder squad back to the finals if he wants a different ending.

''It was just so tough to lose because I really thought it was our year. I felt we had a good run. We beat Dallas, San Antonio, the Lakers,'' Durant said, listing off Oklahoma City's playoff opponents from last season and the only teams that had won the West since 1998. ''I thought it was our time, but unfortunately it wasn't. Those guys came out and beat us, and it was tough to go through that.''

Television cameras caught Durant's reaction in the moments just after he stepped off of Miami's home floor for what normally would have been a relatively private encounter with his family. Instead, the whole world was able to witness the way Durant reacted, which he said was the same as it was when he was growing up.

''When you lose a tough series, there's no question it's heartache. You feel it for many days,'' coach Scott Brooks said. ''I've been around teams when you lose, the fingers are pointed and you look for blame. The thing that I'm proud of with our guys, I never saw that. Individually, nobody was outspoken. Nobody was behind each other's back.

''We understand that we had a great year but it's time to move on. It's time to focus on this season. Last year was a great experience, but it won't guarantee us an opportunity back there. We have to work for it.''

The Thunder still have the nucleus of the team that made it to last year's finals and to the Western Conference finals two seasons ago. Three-time league scoring champion Durant and fellow All-Star Russell Westbrook will once again be joined by Kendrick Perkins, Serge Ibaka and Thabo Sefolosha in the starting five with NBA Sixth Man of the Year James Harden coming off the bench.

Ibaka signed a four-year contract extension in the offseason, following Durant and Westbrook in committing to Oklahoma City long term but also drawing into question whether the small-market franchise would be able to afford Harden. The Thunder will need to go over the salary cap - and pay the luxury tax - to keep him unless they shed some payroll elsewhere.

Harden is at least in the mix for this year's run.

''We're young, we have all the talent in the world. The small things and attention to detail can take us even further,'' Harden said. ''I think offensively, we can score with any team in the NBA. We have just as much firepower as any team in the NBA. I think what's going to put us over to that next level is our consistent defense. We have spurts where we look very good. We have spurts where we look average. I think for championship teams, we need to be locked in every possession.''

Beyond their big six, some of the Thunder's pieces are changing. Veteran Nick Collison remains with the team and backup point guard Eric Maynor will be back after missing most of last season with a knee injury, but three locker room leaders - Derek Fisher, Nazr Mohammed and Royal Ivey - were allowed to leave in free agency.

In their places are relatively inexperienced replacements, including free agent center Hasheem Thabeet and first-round draft pick Perry Jones III from Baylor.

Fisher and Mohammed were two of the team's only three players who had won an NBA title. Perkins, who won one with Boston, is now the only one left to speak from experience about what it takes to win it all.

''I think we all understand what it takes to at least get to the finals, but I think the finals was overwhelming to a lot of us,'' Perkins said. ''I think we got caught up in just being in the finals and quit playing basketball.''

The Thunder have progressed - from out of the playoffs to a first-round exit to the West finals to the NBA Finals. Perkins said the bottom line was ''we didn't reach our goal.''


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Wednesday, July 11, 2012

NBA News 2012: Lou Williams to sign multi-year contract with Atlanta Hawks

BOSTON, MA - MAY 21:  Lou Williams #23 of the ...BOSTON, MA - MAY 21: Lou Williams #23 of the Philadelphia 76ers passes the ball as Kevin Garnett #5 of the Boston Celtics defends in Game Five of the Eastern Conference Semifinals in the 2012 NBA Playoffs on May 21, 2012 at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. The Boston Celtics defeated the Philadelphia 76ers 101-85. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
Lou Williams will reportedly sign a multi-year contract with the Atlanta Hawks, according to a tweet on Tuesday afternoon from Brian Windhorst of ESPN.com.

Williams took to Twitter on July 6 to let his fans know that he would not be returning to the Philadelphia 76ers, the team that drafted him 45th in the second round of the 2005 NBA Draft. Considered to be one of the steals from that draft, Williams spent his entire NBA career up until now in Philadelphia.

He was widely considered to be one of the top candidates for the NBA Sixth Man of the Year Award last year, which ended up being given to James Harden of the Oklahoma City Thunder. In 64 games off the bench last season, Williams averaged 14.9 points and 3.5 assists in 26 minutes per game. He made $5.3 million with the Sixers last season.


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Sunday, June 24, 2012

NBA News 2012: James Harden expects to stay in OKC

English: James Harden, a player for the Oklaho...English: James Harden, a player for the Oklahoma City Thunder at ARCO Arena. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
The reigning Sixth Man of the Year says he doesn't plan to be coming off anyone's bench but Oklahoma City's.

James Harden said Saturday that he "loves it" with the Thunder and expects a contract extension to be worked out between his agent and Oklahoma City general manager Sam Presti.

"They'll do a pretty good job of working it out," Harden said. "I'm focused on several other things right now. But when the time is (right), they'll figure it out and it'll be done."

In his third season, Harden averaged 16.8 points, 4.1 rebounds and 3.7 assists while coming off the bench for the Western Conference champions and proved to be a key piece for the young and talented Thunder.

Harden, 22, said he recognizes the Thunder are in a good place, as Oklahoma City features a nucleus of 23-year-old Kevin Durant who won the league's scoring title and 23-year-old point guard Russell Westbrook.

"This team is like a family," Harden said. "Like, we're really brothers. We hang out most of the time every single day. You won't find any other team like this. I love it here."

As of July 1, Harden, along with Serge Ibaka and Eric Maynor, will become eligible to negotiate extensions to their rookie deals. The Thunder already have signed Durant and Westbrook to long-term deals and some wonder if Oklahoma City will be able to keep all of its talent together. Harden, however, cites the unique togetherness of the team as a reason why he might take less money to stay in OKC.

"This is something special here," Harden said. "A dynasty is being built here. So we're winning, we're having fun and we're brothers. The other stuff, you can't buy it."

http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/8089834/james-harden-oklahoma-city-thunder-says-expects-sign-extension

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Monday, June 18, 2012

NBA News 2012: Thunder waste tons of chances in Game 3 loss

Russell Westbrook dribbling the ball during Ok...Russell Westbrook dribbling the ball during Oklahoma City Thunder vs Boston Celtics at TD BankNorth Garden. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
For the next two days, the Oklahoma City Thunder will lament plenty of things.

Missed free throws. More foul trouble. Late-game turnovers. And perhaps above all else, four bad minutes that went a long way to costing them Game 3 of the NBA Finals against the Miami Heat.

A 10-point lead coming down the stretch of the third quarter became a two-point deficit entering the fourth, and the Thunder simply couldn't keep overcoming mistakes in what became a 91-85 Heat victory on Sunday night. Miami now leads the best-of-seven championship series 2-1, with Game 4 back on its floor Tuesday night.

''We gave ourself a chance to win. That's what you want to do on the road,'' Thunder coach Scott Brooks said. ''The game was basically anybody's ballgame that fourth quarter.''

True. Except it probably should have not been that way.

Down by eight in the early going, the Thunder clamped down defensively to change the complexion of the evening, taking away the easy paths to the basket that Miami feasted upon in the first half and forcing the Heat to shoot from outside. It simply couldn't have worked better for the Thunder, with Miami missing 11 straight jumpers in one stretch and finishing 5 for 31 on shots taken from outside the paint for the game.

The Heat needed help to win. And the Thunder accommodated them, with mistake after mistake.

''This is not over,'' Thunder guard Kevin Durant said. ''It's not over.''

He repeated the words for emphasis. If the Thunder repeat the mistakes, then it might be over.

''Game 4 is crucial,'' Thunder guard James Harden said. ''It's the series. We don't want to be down 3-1.''

Durant finished with 25 points for the Thunder, who got 19 from Russell Westbrook and 10 points and 12 rebounds from Kendrick Perkins.

LeBron James led everyone with 29 points and 14 rebounds for Miami, which got a 25-point, seven-rebound, seven-assist effort from Dwyane Wade and 10 points and 11 rebounds from Chris Bosh.

''This team is not going away,'' Heat forward Shane Battier said of the Thunder. ''This is an evenly matched series. Literally every game has been decided by four or five possessions. We just want to be on the right side of those possessions when it counts.''

Like they were on Sunday night.

Derek Fisher's four-point play with 4:33 left in the third quarter capped an 18-5 run by the Thunder, who rendered most of the 20,003 people in the building silent during that stretch. Oklahoma City led 64-54, the scoreboard showing those numbers just 68 seconds after Durant went to the bench with four fouls and a mere 28 seconds after Fisher checked in to give Westbrook a rest.

So the best two Oklahoma City players were out of the game.

If the Heat were going to turn things around, it had to be in that moment. This is where that aforementioned help enters the picture. Battier and James Jones scored six Miami points 22 seconds apart - after both got fouled trying 3-pointers, on a night where the Heat could barely make anything from the outside.

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/thunder-waste-tons-chances-game-030415538--nba.html;_ylt=An7xzqQjONDtv1wJSSYL5lW8vLYF

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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: Sefolosha Does Double Duty Defense

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - JUNE 12:  Thabo Sefolosha ...OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - JUNE 12: Thabo Sefolosha #2 of the Oklahoma City Thunder dunks the ball against Dwyane Wade #3 of the Miami Heat in the second half in Game One of the 2012 NBA Finals at Chesapeake Energy Arena on June 12, 2012 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
There was lots of Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook, as usual, and the quick-strike transition baskets that we’ve all come to associate with the Thunder as their trademark. But more than anything else in Game 1, we also learned OKC can play some OKD.

And that defense started and ended with Thabo Sefolosha, who had the wonderful task of checking Dwyane Wade for much of three quarters, then LeBron James in the fourth. Imagine, a guy who isn’t even the best defender on his team, being asked to slow two players who represent roughly 80 percent of the Miami offense. And he took down both. Chop, chop.

“I told myself I can do this,” Sefolosha said.

This was a powerful opening statement by the Thunder, out-defending a better defensive team, essentially beating the Heat at their own game. Miami had 40 points in the second half, where they lost the lead, their grip and the game, 105-94. OKC protected the rim, which forced Miami to take jumpers that fell in the first half but whiffed in the second. When that happened, it was a wrap — both defensively and in terms of the final outcome. The loss will certainly send the Heat scrambling to find a way to adjust by Thursday.

“Our players demand (defense) out of each other and out timeouts are always about defense,” said coach Scott Brooks.

Defense. That’s what Sefolosha’s about, too. He’s quickly earning a rep for accepting any assignment, no matter the player. Last series, he silenced Tony Parker in the second half of Game 6 to clinch the West title. Then came Wade, who shot only four-for-14 in the first three quarters, and finally James, who missed four of his six shots in the fourth and never took over the game as promised. To summarize, Sefolosha went from dee-ing up a quick point guard to a slashing two-guard to the league MVP.

He never gave Wade or James much to work with and kept each player from getting into a groove. Most of their damage was done when Sefolosha was guarding the other. Sefolosha was supposed to stick with Wade in the fourth, but when Wade went to the bench early, Sefolosha switched to James and stayed. That allowed Durant, who was guarding James, to use more energy on offense, paving the way to 17 points in the fourth. It also kept James Harden, who usually replaces Sefolosha in the fourth quarter, on the bench.

“We love what Thabo does,” said Brooks. “He’s a tough-minded defender. He understands that he has to be able to guard every possession like it’s his last, and he does that.”

Not taking anything from his work on Wade, who in some instances was his own worst enemy, but Sefolosha was most impressive in the fourth on James. Remember, this is the James who vowed to go nuts in the fourth to make up from vaporizing last June. And the setting was perfect for James to do so: The score was tight, Wade was clearly struggling and meanwhile Durant and Westbrook were threatening to break the game open.

And yet, James managed seven points and a pair of buckets. Therefore, two reputations remained intact: James in the fourth quarter, and Sefolosha as a defender.

“We knew he and Dwyane would try to take over,” said Sefolosha. “We were thinking of ways to slow them down. I was pretty fired up to make a statement. It was a challenge and I like that kind of challenge. I take it as an opportunity to show the world what I can do.”

http://hangtime.blogs.nba.com/2012/06/13/sefolosha-does-double-duty-defense-for-okc/

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Saturday, May 12, 2012

NBA News 2012: LeBron James is the NBA’s Most Valuable Player

NBA player LeBron James answers questions duri...NBA player LeBron James answers questions during a press conference after a preseason practice session Sept. 28, 2010, at the Aderholt Fitness Center at Hurlburt Field, Fla. The Miami Heat used the fitness center for their week-long training camp. James is a forward for the Heat. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
All apologies for making this so stupidly simple, but this truly is a simple award. You give the Most Valuable Player award to the player that has played the best basketball during the regular season, and LeBron James clearly played the best basketball of any player in the NBA this year. This is why, according to the Associated Press, he will be awarded the MVP trophy on Saturday. Gotta get it in before the Indiana Pacers sweep LeBron's Miami Heat out of the playoffs, y'know.

To consider any other candidate was to be charitable to that runner-up at best. Other NBA players have had MVP-level seasons in terms of production, and there certainly have been several players this season that have been just about invaluable to their respective franchises, but James was so far and away the best player in the NBA that even L.B.J. fatigue -- James has won the award three times in four years -- couldn't sway the vote.

James averaged 27.1 points this season on just 18.9 shot attempts a game, which is nearly (by .1 of a shot) a career-low. To put that in perspective, Kevin Durant averaged 28 points on 19.7 shots a night, and Kobe Bryant managed 27.9 on 23 shots a contest — and we don't want to hear about Heat helpers in comparison to teams that feature Russell Westbrook, James Harden, Pau Gasol and Andrew Bynum. James also contributed 14.1 rebounds/assists and 2.7 steals/blocks, numbers that far outpace his contemporaries in whatever the hell position James plays these days.

http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nba-ball-dont-lie/lebron-james-nba-most-valuable-player-033257767.html;_ylt=Agkqkyow8RZYr8MCnS9RVSm8vLYF

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Friday, May 11, 2012

NBA News 2012: Is Mike Brown's Job on the Line in Game Seven?

LOS ANGELES, CA - DECEMBER 25:  Head coach Mik...LOS ANGELES, CA - DECEMBER 25: Head coach Mike Brown talks with Metta World Peace #15 of the Los Angeles Lakers during the game against the Chicago Bulls at Staples Center on December 25, 2011 in Los Angeles, California. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)Mike Brown's future with the Lakers could well depend on his ability to find solutions by Saturday night. I don't think the front office would make a coaching change even if they lose Game Seven. Brown is owed a lot of money under the deal he signed last summer, and for an organization already in cost-cutting mode, having to pay a second head coach while Brown's still on the payroll is an unattractive option. But I'll assure you of this: if the Lakers do fall in Game Seven, some nasty shit is going to come raining down. Bynum might demand a trade. Kobe might demand to be amnestied. Either guy might point to Brown and say, "It's him or me." If the Lakers don't advance, one of the Brown-Bynum-Kobe threesome will be gone next year. Maybe more than one. There's way too much talent making way too much money for a first-round exit, and how much more of Kobe's amazing career are people willing to see go to waste?

Making Brown's job easier in some respects but harder in others will be the return to action of Metta World Peace. He's done his time for clobbering James Harden. Now he returns to the lineup to replace the out-of-his-depth Devin Ebanks. MWP will finally give the Lakers someone to check Danilo Gallinari, who's been killing them on isolation plays. He'll have the freshest legs on the floor. And along with Kobe, he'll give Mike Brown a second player he can count on to compete with fire. But Metta hasn't seen game action in a couple weeks, and he's such a flaky dude you can easily imagine him looking totally out of sorts in his first game back. I can see him infusing the Lakers with much-needed defensive backbone. I can also see him shooting 1-for-7 with four turnovers.

All season long it's been impossible to get a read on this Lakers squad. At times they're the best team in the league. But just when you start believing in them, they become an unfathomable mess. Which version will show up Saturday? Your guess is as good as mine, and probably Mike Brown's as well.

http://www.silverscreenandroll.com/2012/5/10/3013625/is-mike-browns-job-on-the-line-in-game-seven
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