From what I am told, Facebook is pretty popular. Mark and I decided to cash in on this popularity and start a Facebook page for this site. If you have Facebook, you should probably join, we don’t know what we are going to use it for yet, but I am sure we can get some contests and stuff going over there. Here is the page:
Yeah, that’s right, I am going to be on WHEN Syracuse yet again (around 3:45), so if you are in the area, tune in. I believe they also stream it online, so if you are around a computer with speakers, check it out.
Fans of the game “Clue,” probably love a nice “whodunit.” In the case of the New Jersey Nets, there is a lingering mystery surrounding the question, “who killed Lawrence Frank?”
Frank’s dismissal was described by many as a “mercy killing,” but there must have been some malicious things going on behind closed doors that led to his ultimate demise. How else do you explain management bringing him back after last year and supporting Frank as his entire roster was decimated with injuries to start this season, only to turn around and fire him while the team was on the brink of matching the worst start to a season in NBA history? It’s no secret that most followers of the NBA think Frank got a raw deal in all this.
After reading a number of press reports that past 48 hours, I’ve been able to boil down the list of suspects to two. Both are high-profile individuals fully capable of killing a coach, and both have established motives. Let’s look at the evidence, shall we?
Disclaimer: Before we get started, this isn’t a post about Ryan Anderson. He will not be mentioned here, and I don’t expect to see his name in the comments. If you read this and still feel like telling me that Ryan Anderson is a better player, send me an e-mail, it is on the site. This is just an evaluation of Courtney Lee.
Onto Courtney Lee. The season is 17 games old. It is nearly a quarter over already, and I thought that now is as good as a time as any to take a look at Courtney Lee’s game. Oh and yes, I am in fact serious about the title by the way. Courtney Lee has been getting bashed by Nets’ fans for his poor performances, but I really do not know why. When I sit down and think about it, there are two reasons. The first, people tend to just look at the shooting numbers and the points. The second reason is that people have expected him to improve greatly from his rookie season right away (I fall into this group), not really taken into consideration he left a really good team where he was the 4th, 5th, or 6th option and went to a team that he is the third option where defenses focus on taking him away. Courtney taking Vince Carter’s (and in some fans eyes, being traded for him) roster spot probably has something to do with it too, no matter how unfair that is.
The numbers aren’t bias though, and what the numbers tell us is that if you exclude the shooting (don’t worry I have an explanation for this) Courtney Lee is doing everything else better than he was doing in Orlando. It isn’t because he is getting more minutes either. Through 11 games this year, Courtney is averaging the same minutes per game as he was in Orlando during the regular season (25.2 MPG).
All other data used in this post is from Hoopdata.com
When talking with reporters after Lawrence Frank was fired Sunday, Rafer Alston said that sometimes “players need to go” when a team is struggling as the Nets have. I hope Alston believes these sentiments, because coincidentally, Rafer would be the first person I would fire based on poor performance, with Bobby Simmons running a very close second.
Yes, Alston and Simmons have been that bad this season. These two players are so bad, they hardly resemble NBA players anymore, yet because of injuries, and coaching decisions, they both have logged major minutes all season, and have played a pivotal role in the Nets historically heinous start.