NBA where Miracle happens

March 29, 2011

Kobe Bryant: The Longest Tenured Laker

Filed under: NBA Stars — Tags: — admin @ 9:30 am

kobe bryant

kobe bryant

With L.A.’s win over New Orleans on March 27, Kobe Bryant became the longest tenured player in Lakers history.

Bryant has now appeared in 1,094 games for the Purple and Gold in his 15 seasons dating back to 1996-97, surpassing the 1,093 games played by NBA legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Bryant also holds the franchise mark for most games played in the postseason (198).

In his storied NBA career, Bryant has averaged 25.3 points per game to climb all the way up to 6th on the league’s all-time scoring chart. He’s also contributed 5.3 rebounds, 4.7 assists and 1.5 steals while winning five championships and two Finals MVP awards, plus being named to All-NBA teams in 12 straight seasons, All-Defensive teams 10 times, and an All-Star starter 13 straight times with a record-tying four All-Star MVP’s.

March 22, 2011

LeBron James, Michael Vick, Ben Roethlisberger Have Improved Public Images Thanks To Winning Seasons

Filed under: NBA Stars — Tags: , , — admin @ 10:25 am
lebron james mami heat

lebron james mami heat

Back in the summer of 2010,  LeBron James, Michael Vick and Ben Roethlisberger each had a negative image in the eyes of the public.
James made the wrong call in hosting The Decision, an hour-long event on ESPN that revealed where he would be bringing his talents in the upcoming season. Vick was still receiving heavy scrutiny after spending nearly two years in jail for his connection to a dogfighting operation, while Roethlisberger was suspended the first four games of the NFL season for violating the league’s personal conduct policy. However, the three star athletes managed to improve their image since then.
According to CNBC.com, the Q Scores Company has revealed that the public holds a more positive image of James, Vick, and Roethlisberger since the summer. The likely reason behind their improved status with the public? Winning.
The Heat haven’t been dominating with its big three as much as originally expected, but the team has flirted with first place all season, and James’ numbers have him heading for a third straight MVP have helped lower his negative perception.
Last year, Q Scores ranked Vick as the athlete with the most negative image, but after his terrific 2010 season — one in which he set career highs in passing yards, passing touchdowns and quartberback rating — the percentage of people that thought he had a negative image dropped from 61 percent to 49 percent. The Eagles had a 8-3 record in the regular season with Vick starting.
Additionally, Roethlisberger improved his positive image by nearly 35 percent after a 9-3 regular season record and carrying his Pittsburgh Steelers to the Super Bowl for the third time in six years.
Roethlisberger, Vick and James may be seeing their positive stock rising in the public eye, but there are other athletes who are slowing sinking into a negative light. Both Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens have received a significant amount of negative attention due to their mix-ups with performance-enhancing drugs, and their numbers aren’t increasing anytime soon.

March 1, 2011

Should Kobe Bryant Guard Point Guards More Often?

Filed under: NBA Stars — Tags: — admin @ 10:20 am
kobe bryant

kobe bryant

Defending point guards has long been an issue for the Lakers. Derek Fisher is a good defender is several ways – he’s a bulldog fighting through screens, he’s still a master at drawing offensive fouls, and there are few players I’d trust more as the last man back in a 2 on 1 or 3 on 1 situation for the opposition – but man on man/on an island defense against the PG’s of the NBA is an area where Fisher struggles.

And there’s no shame in that. This is a golden era for point guard with names like Paul, Williams, Rose, Westbrook, Rondo, Nash, and Parker on the docket on any given night. You throw in less established/young players like Curry, Lawson, Brooks, Jennings Evans, and Wall or veteran leaders like Kidd, Billups, Harris, Nelson, Baron, Miller, and Calderon and there’s really not a night off for guys what have to defend this position.

The fact is, though, that the Lakers must do better when defending these players. PER isn’t a perfect stat, but it is a very good all encompassing one for measuring a player’s efficiency (mostly on offense). The league average PER for PG’s is 13.74 (per HoopData). Derek Fisher allows PG’s to sport a PER of 19.7 every night. Steve Blake allows a PER of 17.9. For comparisons sake, Paul Pierce has a PER of 19.5 and Danny Granger has a PER of 17.9. Both of those players are recent all-stars at their respective positions and the Lakers allow PG’s to perform at that level of efficiency nearly every night.

The question then is what do the Lakers do about it?

In certain instances, the Lakers have found a solution. They use Kobe Bryant to defend PG’s. Just yesterday Kobe marked Russell Westbrook whenever they shared the court. Since the 2008 Finals he’s been deployed the same way against Rajon Rondo. Throughout his career he’s been used to guard Jason Kidd, Deron Williams and Tony Parker in stretches and if the Lakers need a stop or want to switch up their scheme, I wouldn’t doubt if we see this tactic resurface. So, should the Lakers go to this more often?

Answering that question isn’t as easy as you might think. First, the cons:

Kobe is older now and can’t be expected to chase around the waterbug PG’s of the league. Having to do this will force him to expend energy that is better directed towards offense.
Kobe’s never been the best player in fighting over screens and the P&R is the predominant set that PG’s use in order to initiate offense when they’re the best player/playmaker for their team.
Kobe is known to wander on defense and some of these PG’s represent the better shooters in the league.
Now, some pro’s:

Kobe, when engaged, is still one of the better perimeter defenders in the league. He’d need to be engaged if guarding the opposing PG and thus we’d see higher quality D.
Kobe’s a master of using angles in basketball and his ability to funnel ball handlers is a given direction is an underrated part of his individual defense.
Kobe has very good size and thus can lay off PG’s while still being a defensive presence in contesting shots and passes.
By putting Kobe on the opposing PG’s the opposition must account for Kobe on defense in a different way than their normal game plan would dictate.
That last point, to me, is a major plus in the argument for this to happen. One of the smarter writers out there is Zach Lowe at SI’s the Point Forward. Here’s a note he made about Russell Westbrook and the Thunder offense from yesterday’s game in his Monday Musing’s column:

The Thunder were clearly confident that Westbrook could attack Kobe Bryant on pick-and-rolls, and they ran that play to death in the first half. And you could see Durant becoming frustrated; at one point during a Westbrook-dominant stretch, Durant came open at the top of the arc as Westbrook dribbled on the wing, and he began hopping and waving his arms to get the ball.  Westbrook didn’t pass, and Durant stopped hopping, deflated. Having two great players is fantastic, obviously, but the Thunder are still figuring out how to find the tricky balance between a scoring point guard and a scoring wing player.

And this is from a column Zach wrote following the last Lakers/Celtics game:

And if you look at every Boston possession over the last five minutes of the game, you’ll see that the Celtics had essentially given up trying to run their normal offense against this strategy. The Celtics took the ball out of Rondo’s hands and had their veteran players initiate the offense down the stretch. The Lakers, in other words, turned the point guard into a finisher rather than a creator, and Boston’s offense is built around Rondo serving as the creator.

You see, when the Lakers put Kobe on the opposing PG, an adjustment occurs. The Thunder tried to attack him more often and thus went away from their scoring champion SF (who, if fully disclosing, was being handcuffed by Ron Artest) in order to try and get baskets. Meanwhile, the C’s inverted their entire offense by having Pierce initiate and Rondo become the spot up shooter. Ultimately, neither of these approaches worked and the Lakers – who have been using this tactic against these teams for the past year (or more) – won both games and have also defeated both teams in last year’s playoffs.

So, it’s obvious that this is a technique that works. Should the Lakers go to it more? Do the pros outweigh the cons? I don’t have a definitive answer here and there are other considerations not mentioned (is there a non offensive threat for Fisher/Blake to guard?) but this may be an issue that needs further exploring. I know that Phil is big on roles and that disrupting the defensive identity of the team may not be needed at this point in the season, but if the Lakers end up facing elite PG’s in the playoffs (which is almost a given) don’t be surprised if we see this switch occur. After all, it wouldn’t be the first time.

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