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Archive for January, 2010

Chris Douglas-Roberts Tweets Back

January 14th, 2010 6 comments

The Nets have another player who’s taking his frustrations out in 140 characters or less.

After receiving some unflattering press from some of the beat guys at practice today, Chris Douglas-Roberts has been reacting on Twitter for the past two hours, taking on the media and the “fake” fans who have been spreading “hate” about CDR.

The reports CDR appears to be responding to came from the Star-Ledger’s Dave D’Alessandro and the Daily News’ Julian Garcia earlier today. In both reports, Garcia and Dave D. asked why CDR’s shot attempts are down.

“It’s a different offense. It’s a different scheme. It’s a different system. So things are a lot different. It’s as simple as that. Things are a lot different now.”

That sounds innocent enough, but both reporters appeared to be reading into CDR’s quotes today.

Read more…

Categories: Uncategorized

Contest Update: We Are Still Taking Entries

January 14th, 2010 1 comment

Guys, Tony has already got a ton of e-mails, but he is looking for some more to give away the tickets.  So remember e-mail Tony @ Tony.Maglio@NetsAreScorching.com with a question for his mailbag coming this Monday.  The best questions will be picked and if you are one of them you get two tickets to the Nets-Pacers game on Friday.

Categories: Uncategorized

Courtney Lee Revisited

January 14th, 2010 2 comments

A couple months back, we looked at Courtney Lee’s game by the numbers.  It was 17 games in, and what I determined from the numbers then, is that if Lee could improve his shot he would turn into a solid player.  Has that happened?  Well, now that we are 38 games in, I thought it would be nice to look at the numbers again.

Once again, all numbers are from HoopData.com.

Offensive Game

Courtney’s Usage Rate has actually dropped from game #17, and it is now sitting at 17.96.  Since game #17, Courtney Lee has turned the ball over a little more (Turnover Rate = 6.90% earlier in the year to 7.32% right now).  This is still a very good number as it is well below the league average (11.52%).  Courtney’s Assist Rate continues to rise with the increase in usage rate.  It has gone up from 13.04 in the beginning of the year to 13.56 now.  This is still slightly below average though.  The last number we looked at earlier in the year was Free Throw Rate.  Courtney’s Free Throw Rate after game #17 was.39.  Lee’s Free Throw Rate right now is .25.  The numbers make it look like he is settling for more jumpers instead of attacking the basket like he did in the beginning of the year.

Defensive Game

Lee’s steals per game has dropped slightly from 1.7 to 1.6 (still well above average = .7), his blocks are at the same number as they were at game #17.

Has Lee’s Shooting Improved?

Lee’s baskets are starting to get assisted on at a slightly higher level.  Lee has gone from having his baskets assisted on 53.3% of the time to 54.2%.  This means that he is forced to get his own shot slightly less, which means easier shots should be coming around.  Has that made him a better shooter?  At the rim, Lee’s % is slightly up, going from around 50% to 57.7%.  17 games in Courtney Lee was terrible inside 10 feet.  He was shooting it around 10% in fact.  Now, he has nearly doubled it, and he is shooting 20% inside 10 feet.  It isn’t as good as last year (30%), but it is improving.  From 10-15 feet, he has dropped from around 45% to 42.9%.  The last number I want to look at is his 3 point shooting percentage.  It has improved since last time we looked at it (around 30% before 42% now), but it is still well below the 60% he was shooting in Orlando.  The reason?  In Orlando he was getting a lot of open looks, looks that allowed him to jump straight up and straight down (remember how important that is).  In New Jersey, shots are tougher, meaning he will miss more.

The trend though is his shooting is starting to rise to levels around last year’s percentage (save for the 3 point percentage).  His PER has hovered right around where it was in the begining of the year.  It was 12.01 after game 17 and it is now 11.98.  I think the slight decrease in PER is due to the rise in turnovers.

Categories: Uncategorized

Thoughts on the Game: Nets Are Never Competitive

January 14th, 2010 4 comments

Brook and Yi

Hoopdata Box ScoreCeltics HubCeltics BlogReds Army

I feel like I’m writing a variation of this sentence at least once a week, but the New Jersey Nets played about as bad of a first half as can be imagined against the Boston Celtics last night.

From the first three-pointer Paul Pierce drained with about 12 seconds elapsed in the first, the Nets showed minimum effort on the defensive end. They allowed the Celtics to hit 11 of their first 12 shots including two wide open three-pointers for Brian Scalabrine, who was filling in for the fill-in, with Kevin Garnett and Rasheed Wallace both on the shelf for the C’s. While Scal will always have a place in my heart for his unbelievably clutch shooting against the Detroit Pistons in game five of the 2004 Eastern Conference Semifinals, I think his first half performance (11 points) just drove home how embarrassing this effort was for the Nets. By the end of the first half, the Celtics as a team were shooting almost 69 percent, and were up 36 points.

As for rebounds, the Nets allowed the Celtics to grab offensive rebounds on their first two misses of the game. Considering the Celtics hit so many shots to start, the Nets didn’t grab their first defensive rebound until the 3:38 mark of the first quarter. The Nets were so incompetent, that even when they grabbed a rebound, it resulted in a turnover. With about a minute left in the half, Brook Lopez grabbed a defensive rebound off the Kendrick Perkins missed free throw, and Rajon Rondo snuck around Brook’s blindside and grabbed it like it was a planned handoff. Overall, the Nets were outrebounded 47-36 for the game.

The Celtics were able to bully the Nets in the paint. At the 6:33 mark in the second, Kendrick Perkins was so far into the post on Yi Jianlian he could have made the basket blindfolded (he settled for a sweet little baby hook from the circle). A few minutes later, the Celtics were able to match-up Glen Davis on Yi. Big Baby got the ball in the post and dribbled for a few seconds just so he could get perfect position on Yi who was totally helpless defensively. Davis then swished the turnaround. For the game, the Celtics outscored the Nets 56-26 in the paint.

The Nets were equally hapless offensively, shooting 32 percent for the first half and 37 percent for the game. Brook Lopez, who finished with a solid 18 points, 10 rebounds and 4 blocks, was forced into a number of tough shots early by Perkins, getting blocked by Boston’s center on his first attempt of the game, a tough 11-footer. Barely 3 minutes into the game and Brook was already settling for 20-footers and missing, a clear sign that he had about enough of trying to post up.

Devin Harris, who returned from his wrist injury, was having a hard time staying with Rondo defensively, allowing him to get into the lane at will and distribute 14 assists in 29 minutes. Offensively, Devin willed himself to 15 points on 5-13 shooting. He was particularly reckless in the first quarter, tossing up two no-chance-in-hell layup attempts in an attempt to draw the foul.

The Nets came out fired up in the second half, going on a 10-0 run early and outscoring the Celtics 29-19 in the third, but after falling down 36 in the first half, they were never a real threat. They were just playing for pride at that point, and considering they still lost by 24 points while Boston was resting its starters down the stretch, even a prideful Nets team, is a bad one.

More thoughts, if you dare, after the jump.

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Categories: Thoughts on the Game

Fan On The Couch Ticket Giveaway – 10 Winners

January 14th, 2010 8 comments

Tony Maglio been blessing us with his great comedy for a couple weeks, now, he is going to bless you guys with something else.  Tony has offered up 20 lower level tickets (that’s all we know about them right now), and all you have to do is e-mail him a question for his upcoming Fan On The Couch mailbag that he will have this week.

Your questions don’t have to be about Nets’ basketball either.  It could be sports related, entertainment, politics, whatever and if your question is one of the 10 Tony picks, you win two tickets to see the Nets play the Pacers Friday.  Also make sure you include your name and your phone number in the e-mail, so Tony can notify Will-Call of who will be picking up the tickets.  The winners will be e-mailed at 2, and we will have a post announcing the winners.  Remember Mark’s Tony’s e-mail is Tony.Maglio@NetsAreScorching.com.  Good luck guys, and a big thanks goes out to Tony for offering these tickets up.

Categories: Uncategorized

Nets on the Net: 1/14/10 Edition

January 14th, 2010 1 comment

Devin Harris apparently “lost it” in the locker room during halftime yesterday: Such an inept performance – the Nets trailed by 16 after the opening quarter and were outscored by 20 in the second – prompted Harris to throw a fit in the locker room – a rare occurrence, according to teammate Chris Douglas-Roberts, who suggested that such outbursts may be exactly what the Nets need.

Shawne Williams, per Nets Basketball on Twitter yesterday: “I came in today, and they said they’re going to give me a chance. So I’ll just try to seize the moment and step up.”

Al Iannazzone talks trade values and roster overhaul with the team: “Nothing is guaranteed,” Harris said. “We know that coming into the situation. We’re in an awkward situation. Obviously we’re trying to create as much cap space as we can for next year, but we’re still trying to be competitive and end the year on a good note.

Brian Scalabrine reminisces: “I still have a picture of that, red wig and everything. Those were good times around here,” Scalabrine reminisced Wednesday night before the Celtics — with that big, goofy redhead starting for Boston at power forward — laid a drubbing on the 3-35 New Jersey Nets with a 111-87 victory.

According to Fred Kerber, the Nets (thankfully) don’t want to be the worst team ever: “We want to try to win as many games as possible. That’s what we’re here for. We’re not here to just stand around. We want to try to win games,” said Thorn, the team president whose financial handcuffs seemingly have been removed – witness, for starters, the $200,000 added this week by the addition of Kris Humphries and the $800,000 more in salary Shawne Williams, who they’re keeping, makes over Sean Williams, who they’ve already pushed off the roof.

A look at how a team comprised of all D-Leaguers could probably beat the Nets and the NBA’s other bottom dwellers right now.
Categories: Uncategorized

Quick Recap: Boston Celtics 111, New Jersey Nets 87

January 13th, 2010 1 comment

So the Nets put up their weekly turd, dropping their sixth straight and getting blown away at home by the Boston Celtics 111-87.

  • The Celtics, despite missing Kevin Garnett and Rasheed Wallace, weren’t screwing around tonight, scoring 38 points in the first quarter, and hitting 9 of their first 10 shots. They shot 69 percent in the first half, compared with 32 percent for the Nets.
  • Brian Scalabrine had 11 points in the first half. Did he ever do that with the Nets?
  • Brook Lopez was a bright spot for the Nets scoring 18 points (5-12 shooting), grabbing 10 rebounds, and blocking 4 shots.
  • Yi Jianlian chipped in with 19 points on 6-12 shooting, hopefully temporarily ending the discussion about him and Brook Lopez coexisting. Remember folks, it’s the rest of the roster that’s the problem.
  • Playing with an injured wrist, Devin Harris muscled his way to 15 points and 6 assists. His PG counterpart Rajon Rondo had a pedestrian 11 points and 14 assists (yawn).
  • Paul Pierce, who I still saw enough of back in 2002, led all scorers with 24 points.
  • In his Nets debut, Kris Humphries scored 9 points on 1-8 shooting, but he got to the FT line 10 times (hitting 7) and he grabbed 8 rebounds (5 offensive).
Categories: Uncategorized

Game 38 Preview Vs. Boston Celtics

January 13th, 2010 27 comments

Before we get to the game preview, a quick little NetsAreScorching note.  We have been getting a lot more commenters (which is in fact awesome), and this is leading to a lot of different comments with a lot of different opinions and viewpoints.  There has been a little quipping back and forth between commenters.  We just wanted to remind you to check out the commenting constitution (link up top).  While we love having awesome Nets’ discussion, we don’t want to have petty arguments and such in our comments.  Thanks guys.

Onto the game, the Nets are coming off some good performances, and if you are going to beat the Boston Celtics, this is your best chance.  Both Kevin Garnett and Rasheed Wallace are out, and Marquis Daniels (averaging about 6 PPG) is also out.  Brian Scalabrine is starting for the Celtics, that is a bit of a downgrade from the Garnett/Wallace combo.  Onto the match-ups:

Devin Harris vs. Rajon Rondo

Rajon Rondo is an incredible player.  He is so fast and athletic that he can get into the lane and do whatever he wants when he gets there.  He is also a factor when it comes to getting offensive boards, so he will definitely be a pain in the ass.  One quick note on Devin, yesterday when he was asked why he is playing when he calls himself about 80% he said something along the lines of I owe it to the team to play.  Yes, he might not be a true point or a vocal leader, but this guy is definitely a guy that leads by example and every team needs that.

Advantage:  Rajon Rondo

Courtney Lee vs. Ray Allen

Here is a perfect example of why the Celtics are so dangerous.  Normally I could see Lee switching off to cover Rondo while Devin would go cover the 2-guard.  You can’t do that with the Celtics, because Ray Allen is just as dangerous as Rondo, so Lee needs to stick with him.

Advantage:  Ray Allen

Chris Douglas-Roberts vs. Paul Pierce

Paul Pierce has been hurting as of late, but he is still a great player, and when he gets the ball on the elbow, he is almost unstoppable.  CDR’s lack of size against guys like Pierce worries me, but it hasn’t really hurt him in the past.  I am hoping that can continue.

Advantage:  Paul Pierce

Yi vs. Brian Scalabrine

I would love to see “New Yi” go up against Garnett (it definitely would have lead to a fight), but Yi has a bit of an advantage against Scalabrine.  If Yi starts making his shots, Scalabrine is going to have to come out on him, and this is where new aggressive Yi will take over.

Advantage:  Yi

Brook Lopez vs. Kendrick Perkins

Brook is coming off of a big game, but I am worried he might be held in check tonight.  Kendrick Perkins is the exact guy who gives him trouble.  Perkins is a strong and tough player who is able to get Brook to catch the ball outside his comfort range.  I would actually like to see the handoff play the Nets run used a lot tonight, because that will force Perkins to concentrate on something else besides just pushing Brook out of the lane.

Advantage:  Push – Note:  I don’t think Perkins is as good as Brook, but Perkins can limit him to the same production that Perk will give the Celtics.  Does that make sense?

Categories: Uncategorized