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The Lob That Clinched The Game

March 30th, 2010 2 comments

With the Nets up one point with 3:30 minutes left against the Spurs, I was unsure how the game was going to turn out.  A few times this season, the Nets have held leads late only to blow them and lose the game.  The reason this has happened in the past is because the Nets fail to get themselves easy baskets late.  As I was watching the game last night, I was worried the same thing would happen again.  To the relief of Nets’ fans, that isn’t what happened, and the Nets executed a real pretty lob from Devin Harris to Brook Lopez.  The Nets didn’t look back:

This play is actually a variation of a set that the Nets run very often (Under Little To Big Screen).  In the normal set that the Nets run, Brook Lopez gets a backscreen from a guard (this time Courtney Lee) and goes over it to post up on the block.  However this play includes a read option, according to Brook (when asked if the lob was planned), “We have been running that all year.  Yeah, it’s just a read.”  What Brook reads is his defender, Tim Duncan, and how he defends the screen.

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Thoughts on the Game: The Nets are Not the Worst of All Time, Thank You Very Much

March 30th, 2010 1 comment

Lee_Brook

AP Photo/Bill Kostroun

48 Minutes of HellPounding the RockView from the Couch

The 2009-2010 New Jersey Nets have been a lot of things: snake-bitten, lackadaisical, uncompetitive, underachievers, disappointing and unpredictable for starters. One thing they’re not, is the “Worst of All Time.” And on a totally personal level, that’s good enough for me.

Fans of teams like the Cleveland Cavaliers or Los Angeles Lakers will probably think it’s stupid and ridiculous that I’m so  relieved that after last night’s 90-84 victory over the San Antonio Spurs – a team the Nets haven’t beaten since 2002 when they were perennial playoff contenders – the Nets now have 10 wins, meaning they’re guaranteed to always be better than W.O.A.T. 1972-73 Philadelphia 76ers. Yes, they still have 64 losses with April remaining. That’s a lot. I don’t care. I didn’t sign on to be a Nets fan more than 20 years ago because I thought it was going to be a cake walk. But I also never expected the franchise I’ve followed through thick and thin, Beard and Benoit Benjamin, would have come so gut-wrechinngly close to being declared the worst team in NBA history. There have been a number of downright terrible teams in NBA history that are but a mere footnote now. But there’s only one W.O.A.T. The Nets are not it. Thank God.

And the way the Nets staved off infamy last night was equally refreshing. The Spurs were without Tony Parker and Manu Ginobli last night, but so what. That’s why they played the games. Nobody gave the Nets any in wins in November when they started out 0-18 with Devin Harris, Yi Jianlian, Jarvis Hayes and Courtney Lee missing a chunk of games. What about when the Nets were only able to dress 8 guys, three of which were Bobby Simmons, Eduardo Najera and Sean Williams? The Spurs are still a well-coached enough team, and have one of the greatest NBA players of all-time in Tim Duncan to not use their depleted roster as an excuse. Regardless, while Spurs coach Greg Popovich was clearly giving Duncan an extended rest in the third quarter, the all-star was on the floor during crunch time, when the Nets used a combination of solid defense, timely shooting, and terrific ball control, to outscore San Antonio 28-18 in the game’s final 12 minutes. There was nothing about that game that wasn’t earned for the Nets. The moment was there, and instead of settling for it bouncing off the front of the rim, they seized it and dunked it home.

The Nets had their working boots on early in this game. There was some chippiness from the bench as assistant coach Roy Rogers was apparently barking at the officials in defense of his prized pupil Brook Lopez. The Nets were shooting in the 30-35 percent range for most of the first half, and the Spurs were able to push their lead to double digits, but the Nets capitalized on 16-13 second quarter advantage, to keep the game within three at halftime. Then when the third quarter started, instead of going to sleep for 12 minutes as they’ve done so many other times before this season, they kept themselves with striking distance. It was the little things – like Yi Jianlian, who struggled offensively going 3-12 from the field with 8 points, drawing a charge with about 9 minutes left in the third when he drew a charge while SAS had a 5-on-4 advantage on offense. Or when the Nets successfully converted a two-for-one at the end of the third quarter, leaving just enough on the clock for Keyon Dooling to get a jumper off as time expired. In the first quarter, the Nets mistimed their final possession, not getting a good shot off, and leaving SAS with more than enough to stretch their lead to six.

But the shots were falling in the fourth. Terrence Williams, who has struggled with outside jumpers all season, drilled a three with 8:11 to tie the score at 72. Then, as the Spurs tried to pull away again, going up 5 with 6:09 left, Devin Harris hit a 9-footer and Yi Jianlian hit probably his biggest jumper of the season, when he sunk a 19-footer from the top of the key, putting the Nets up by 1. The Nets never looked back as TWill and Brook – who was tremendous down the stretch – hit two more jumpers to distance themselves from the Spurs.

The game was iced when Courtney Lee – the “nice guy” who’s inexplicably one of the most polarizing players on this team – made a fantastic defensive play on George Hill, fronting him as Tim Duncan struggled to get rid of the ball with the final seconds of the game ticking away. Duncan threw the ball away, but it was Lee’s seal of Hill, that made that play happen. Lee was also consistent on offense, going for 19 points on 7-13 shooting, but it’s those little plays that have earned him the trust of the coaching staff, and I hope the adoration of the fan base. Lee may not be a budding superstar, but he’s a very good, intelligent player who should have a role with this organization for the foreseeable future.

A few more thoughts after the jump:
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Categories: Thoughts on the Game

Nets on the Net: 3/30/10 Edition

March 30th, 2010 No comments

Dave D’Alessandro on the Nets win last night: The more pertinent development was that the Nets showed more resolve in the last five minutes than they had shown in the last five months, outscoring Tim Duncan’s team 18-7 down the stretch to post a stunning 90-84 triumph before 13,053 grateful witnesses at Izod Center.

Devin Harris shows some restraint in Al Iannazzone’s report: “We’re not going to jump through the roof because we won 10 games,” said Devin Harris, who played a terrific floor game with 17 points, nine assists and zero turnovers. “We don’t want to be a part of the worst team in history. It’s exciting to get 10 wins. Then again it is 10 wins.”

Julian Garcia gives the team credit for hanging in: More perspective: The Spurs (44-29) have been without star point guard Tony Parker (broken hand), and they were also missing Manu Ginobili (back spasms) last night. But they did have Tim Duncan (13 points, 12 rebounds) and former Net Richard Jefferson (16 points), the kind of firepower the Nets would most likely have wilted against not long ago. But aside from a brief stretch during which San Antonio took an 11-point lead in the second quarter, the Nets hung tough throughout until finally breaking through in the fourth quarter.

Adrian Wojnarowski sees the light at the end of the tunnel now that the Nets have 10: The nickel-and-diming will be done, and Prokhorov’s mantra will hit the Nets like a tsunami: For every idea they’ll have here – every coach they want to hire, free agent they want to lure, organizational staff with which they want to invest – the mantra from Prokhorov is this: What will it take to get it done?

Greg Popovich continues the trend of head coaches who are disgusted by their team’s loss to the Nets in the NY Times report.

Dave D. talks with various Nets regarding their reactions to Mikhail Prokhorov’s 60 Minutes interview.

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