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Archive for January, 2011

Daily Link: Prokhorov’s Pen Pal

January 4th, 2011 5 comments

The Record’s Al Iannazzone has had some interesting correspondences lately, including one with Nets billionaire owner Mikhail Prokhorov. In an e-mail to Iannazzone, Prokhorov reiterated his goal to be a championship contender and believe with time, that dream will come true:

“The great thing about sports is you can have an underdog that with time becomes a winner. We no longer have a losing mentality, and that is a huge step for the Nets.

“My dream is for kids in Russia and China and Brazil to have pictures of our players up on their walls. … Maybe being an outsider lets me bring something fresh to the team and the league.”

As I’ll get to later today, while I respect Prokhorov’s lofty goals, I’m starting to question this team’s current core of being capable of being built around. There are a number of players on this team who are playing like they hardly belong in the league and those who do have actual talent are dealing with the dubious honor of being the best players on some very very awful teams. I don’t really have solutions, but if this team is going to win in 5 years, I suspect there will be very few holdovers, if any, from this current roster.

Categories: Daily Link

Monday Musings – January 3rd

January 3rd, 2011 1 comment

 

This Man Could Make a Clutch Shot

Welcome to 2011 Nets fans and my first Monday Musings of the new year. It was another awful week for the Nets and just like that they are back on a five-game losing streak. The worst sign of this particular losing streak is that aside from the Bulls game on NYE, none of these games have been competitive. I’m not even going to get into the disaster in Minnesota the other night, because it’s almost hard to believe that they got blown out in the second half by the T-Wolves.

The aspect of this team that I’m going to focus on today is the lack of a clutch scorer. If you all remember I wrote about this in one of the game recaps during the preseason and hoped that a guy like Travis Outlaw could step up and fill this role. He had made a few game-winners for the Blazers and I had some false sense of optimism for him. Well I know when I’m wrong and this was clearly one of those times. Outlaw has been a huge disappointment this season, most notably his pathetic shooting percentages. He is currently at just a 38% clip from the field and 32% from the three-point line. So while the team needs a player to take big shots, it’s hard to blame Avery for not going to him.

The Nets two best players are Devin Harris and Brook Lopez. There is no issue about that. But I don’t think of the word clutch when either guy comes to mind. Brook should be a player the Nets go to down the stretch and they have tried at times this season (against the Lakers when he actually made some good moves against Pau Gasol), but he has the tendency to fade too many times in games. He is still a very young player but one thing I’d like to see from Brook is for him to go to Avery Johnson in the final minutes and demand the ball. The guy has strong post moves and most importantly he can get to the free throw line. He shoots over 80% from the charity stripe, which is always a good thing down the stretch.

Now when we come to D. Harris, he is clearly the guy on the Nets that can most create a shot for himself. He can break guys down off the dribble, hit an occasional jump shot and also get to the free throw line. But the problem with Harris is that he’s been inconsistent throughout the season, especially with his shot attempts. One game he’ll take 25 shots and the next he’ll only take 12. If the Nets are going to be successful, he needs to take anywhere from 15-20 shots per game. Currently he and Brook are averaging just over 27 field goal attempts per game. Here is an idea. Take some attempts away from Mr. Outlaw and Jordan Farmar and give them to the team’s best players.

All of this talk about clutch players and making big shots makes me think about a Net of the past: the one and only Vince Carter. Did VC have a great career with the Nets? No. Did he fade in crunch time during the Cleveland Cavs playoff series? Absolutely. But the one thing I will always say about Carter is that he could hit a big shot in the regular season. Whether it was a dunk against the Raptors or a 35-footer against the Hawks, he had the tendency to make the dramatic shot. Sometimes fans don’t realize the impact of a player until he’s gone and Carter is one of those guys. He never brought the Nets close to a championship, but he did hit his fair share of big shots during his New Jersey career.

Will the Nets losing streak still be ongoing when I write this next Monday? Well the Nets have another one against the Bulls at home this week, then at the Wizards and back home to the Rock for the Bucks. None of those are easy wins (let’s be honest, there are no easy wins for this team right now) but they better get at least one of them. After Saturday’s game against Milwaukee, they go out West for four straight that they could easily lose. The last thing I want to see is this team start losing 10 games in a row again…

Categories: Monday Musings

Acquiring ’Melo Is About More Than Basketball

January 3rd, 2011 40 comments

Will this be the face of the Brooklyn Nets?

There is a certain ideal that the NBA should aspire to embrace. If only circumstances existed which the game could be appreciated for what it is — athletic competition at the highest level, without all the meddlesome stigmata that preclude the sport from reaching its full potential.

It was Oscar Robertson who said, “I think that basketball players should get the job done no matter how it looks on the screen.”

Unfortunately, today’s NBA falls short of that ideal. Whereas any NBA professional should be celebrated for being better at basketball than 99 percent of players worldwide, those who don’t stack up to the best of the best are identified as losers, the butts of fans’ jokes on a daily basis. It doesn’t seem like that is what James Naismith envisioned for the game all those years ago.

Certainly the commodification of basketball is a significant factor in this regard. No longer is it actually possible to play a game without financial consequences, and those players and teams who generate the greatest revenue are more notably heralded in the eyes of fans.

Moreover, the media plays a prominent role in this selective glorification, as the teams that separate themselves at the top of the league inherently garner more media attention than those that cling to the bottom. But the media are just doing what is necessary to satisfy their readership, viewership, etc.

Therefore, at its core, this concern is driven by what the fans want to see, and the fans are drawn to the teams and players who play the best.

That’s why the league ends up with incredible events like LeBron James’ Decision and the coup of free agents in Miami. The fans want to see what they haven’t seen before — some awesome occurrence that entertains them.

As a result, teams are faced with the struggles of standing out from their counterparts to hoard their share of notoriety. The ones that succeed enjoy a wealth of fame. The ones that don’t are subject to an indefinite period of obscurity.

That’s where the New Jersey Nets come in. Mired in a 9-25 campaign on the heels of their 12-70 disaster last year, the Nets are the Toby Flendersons of the NBA: they might have something good to offer, but no one really cares enough to find out what it is. Still, they face the taxing process of undoing all the wrongs done during Bruce Ratner’s ownership tenure.

The discourse is particularly timely in the shadow of LeBron’s recent comments that the league could benefit from contraction (which, as it happens, is compatible with the fans’ thirst for bigger and better things) and that the Nets and Minnesota Timberwolves are primary candidates to go first. As for who goes first out of that pair, maybe Saturday night’s drubbing settles that dilemma.

From the business perspective, the Nets have made all the right moves. Ratner’s out and Mikhail Prokhorov’s in; he’s about as intriguing as an NBA owner can be without getting arrested — only he has been arrested.

They persisted in the plans to get a new arena off the ground in Brooklyn, springing them from the soulless pit in the Meadowlands. And when they found out that was two seasons away, they found a provisional solution in Newark.

And the marketing has been effective, too. Complementing the “It’s All New” theme were brilliantly devised reversible jerseys for the fans and new uniforms, although there were blunders along the way (e.g., Brett Yormark’s rebuke of a fan who showed his displeasure with the team by donning a paper bag on his head).

Knowing anything about basketball will enable you to understand that succeeding in business decisions is not enough to make your team a standout in a professional league. Another key aspect is, you know, having the talent to compete.

The Nets aren’t there yet. After missing out on the cream of the crop in last summer’s free-agency class, the signings of Johan Petro, Anthony Morrow, Jordan Farmar, and Travis Outlaw were seen as stopgap solutions — they would be pieces of a larger future puzzle.

That puzzle came much closer to completion this August, when the Nets reportedly came within striking distance of a four-team deal of bringing that mysterious Carmelo Anthony character to New Jersey in exchange for No. 3 draft pick Derrick Favors.

The deal imploded, but the speculation didn’t and still hasn’t. And the debate rages on as to whether ’Melo is worth surrendering the beaming-with-potential Favors.

The two camps have their respective advocates, and those contingents are largely entrenched — it’s no easy to feat to sway a Favors supporter to an Anthony supporter and vice versa.

Barring a ludicrous scenario in which the Nets could reel in Anthony without sending either Favors or Brook Lopez the other direction, here’s an alternative to either of those camps, or, rather, the ’Melo camp with a caveat.
The typical argument focuses on whether the Nets will perform better in the long run with Anthony and whoever else comes to the team or with Favors and the products of the draft picks that change hands in the deal.

This alternative argument, instead, concerns whether trading for Anthony could remove the laughingstock tag that has branded the franchise all these years.

Opponents might argue that the improvement of the basketball team and the improvement of the franchise go hand in hand, but is that really the case? Consider the Nets over the past decade.

The Nets were once good, if you can recall, and not that long ago, either. In fact, they played in back-to-back NBA Finals in 2002 and 2003. But if you asked NBA fans who the Lakers and Spurs beat those years, likely a surprisingly small percentage would know it was the Nets.

Meanwhile, the Nets were settling with half- to three-quarters-full arenas when they were sparring with the likes of Shaquille O’Neal, Kobe Bryant, Tim Duncan, and David Robinson in June.

The Nets’ best attendance days? Those came after the team’s blockbuster trade from Vince Carter — and no one could argue that any of the Nets’ teams from 2005 to 2008 were better than the squads in 2002 or 2003.

That’s because the Eastern Conference Champion squads were plain and boring, winning games with stingy defense and fundamentals but without a star personality. Carter’s Nets were known for their astonishing athleticism on the wings and 30-point performances aplenty.

For further comparison, take the pulse of the league today. The New York Knicks are 18-14 and the Oklahoma City Thunder are 23-12. Most would say the Thunder are the better team, but who do you hear more about? Who has the reputation indicative of a better franchise? That has to be the Knicks.

Yes, Kevin Durant is on the Thunder, which, according to this argument would suggest a star can’t always propel a franchise to notoriety. Durant’s skills are undeniable, but he doesn’t have that star personality, that swagger, that many of the league’s best have.

And in Los Angeles, there is this fellow named Blake Griffin. You might have heard of him. By most measures, the Clippers still can’t compete with many of the NBA’s teams. But that doesn’t stop them from making a new name for themselves, courtesy of Mr. Griffin. At the beginning of the season, the Clippers couldn’t buy a sellout. Since December 8, they’ve had three.

Carmelo Anthony is the kind of player that can follow in Carter’s footsteps and get the Nets on the road to notoriety. Immediately, the Nets would have a marketable personality in the United States — not just one in China with Yi Jianlian.

He would give borderline fans a reason to turn on the TV and hope for something thrilling, just like Clippers viewers are doing because of Blake Griffin.

But it’s not like he’d just turn the Nets into the Brooklyn Globetrotters. The Nets would be markedly better with Anthony on the floor, even though they might not be in the long run if they only acquired him. And they wouldn’t be a championship team, either.

With that said, such a trade would get the Nets to the point where meaningful acquisitions would be possible. Last season’s free-agency bonanza showed that the Nets are just too flawed to be a desirable destination for any half-decent player. Anthony’s presence would undoubtedly change that.

Maybe Favors and whomever else the Nets draft would be enough to do that a few years down the road, but what if Favors busts? What if the Nets shoot blanks in the next few drafts? After all, Rod Thorn’s gone. That’s a few years of wasted time.

It is impossible to predict how either of these courses of action would play out right now. But even if trading for ’Melo turns out to be the worse basketball move, it will still be a great step in putting the uncharted Nets lands back on the NBA map.

While the NBA is not a league in which teams should have to claw and scrape for credibility, that even Stephen Graham should have his due appreciation, it is an unfortunate reality that teams are faced with, and the problem sometimes seems irreconcilable.

For the Nets, the solution is ’Melo.

Categories: Analysis

Timberwolves 103, Nets 88: A Masterpiece of Incompetence and Cluelessness

January 2nd, 2011 12 comments
Darko Milicic shot

The good ol' "invisible defense" ploy by the Nets. ...Again.

Box ScoreA Wolf Among WolvesCanis Hoopus

Title credit given to NAS commenter calling all toasters, who summed up the game in six words just perfectly in a comment in our pregame open thread.

Truthfully, I don’t know where to start.

Maybe I should start by saying that the Nets at least locked Michael Beasley down, only allowing him to shoot 4-10 with six turnovers. Maybe I should revel in the fact that Kevin Love “only” had ten rebounds. Maybe I should note that the Nets were actually ahead after the first half, that Kris Humphries and Sasha Vujacic had great games, or that the Nets had 22 assists in the game – more than they’ve had in nearly a month.

Or maybe I should start by saying that there is no logical universe in which the Nets should have played as they did last night.

There is no logical universe where Johan Petro should attempt eight shots and Brook Lopez seven. Where Travis Outlaw leads the starters in shot attempts (unless he’s on fire – and he wasn’t). Where the Nets commit 19 turnovers, shoot more shots from the “long 2″ part of the floor (16-23 feet) than anywhere else, and are held to nine points in the third quarter against the second-worst defense in the NBA. Where the Nets, fresh into the new year, stamp their mark as one of the biggest laughingstocks in the NBA with an embarrassing loss to an awful basketball team.

Maybe I should talk about how Derrick Favors, with no athletic equivalent on the floor, played himself out of the game with five fouls and zero rebounds in just under twelve minutes. Or how Devin Harris shot 3-13 from the floor & turned the ball over four times against defensive matadors Luke Ridnour & Sebastian Telfair. Perhaps I should break down how in 30 minutes Brook Lopez made only three of his seven attempts, bested Devin’s four turnovers with five of his own, and only grabbed four rebounds with Darko Milicic as his primary defender. There is no logical universe.

Yet here we are, knee-deep in this absurdity.

Milicic looked more like a 2nd overall pick than ever last night, manhandling Brook Lopez to the tune of 16 points on 8-9 shooting in just 20 minutes of play. His array of hook shots, layups, and poise in the post in such limited time made me wonder if there was some Invasion of the Body Snatchers going on and Minnesota actually had Brook Lopez by accident. Darko made all six of his shots from within ten feet, missing only an 11-foot jumper late in the second quarter. The Nets had no answer for Darko Milicic. Let that sentence swirl around in your head for a while. I’m still not fully realizing it.

I keep going back to that third quarter. At the half, the Nets were ahead 55-54, thanks to Vujacic’s 16 in the first half. Let’s recap how the first six minutes went for the Nets on offense: Humphries miss, Lopez 3-second violation, Harris miss, Outlaw miss, Humphries offensive rebound, Outlaw blocked shot, Harris miss, Harris miss, Lopez turnover, Graham offensive foul, Vujacic turnover, Petro miss, Favors made layup.

To recap: It took six minutes and eleven possessions for the Nets to score a single point in the third quarter. This happened against a team that allows 111 points per 100 possessions, only better than the Phoenix Suns in the entire NBA. A one-point lead at the half turned into an eleven-point deficit. The Timberwolves never looked back.

If there’s any bright spot from last night’s game, it’s that Sasha Vujacic continues to be the most consistent producer this team has. He played a great game last night, leading the Nets with 22 points on 9-16 shooting in a team-leading 35 minutes off the bench. There were numerous occasions where he was on his feet while out of the game, cheering on his teammates from the bench. No one else on the Nets does that as much as he does, and I appreciate his passion. But when a team’s most passionate player is its sixth man, and that player is Sasha Vujacic, that team is in a lot of trouble.

All in all, in the long run it’s just one game. I know that. Sometimes teams have off nights, and the Nets certainly had one here. But an off night like this one – scoring 33 points in the second half, allowing one of the worst teams in the NBA to absolutely dismantle you – has got to be a tough pill to swallow for Avery Johnson & the rest of the Nets. As an observer, it’s a pretty tough one for me, too.

More thoughts after the jump.

Read more…

Categories: Thoughts on the Game

Pregame Open Thread: New Jersey Nets @ Minnesota Timberwolves

January 1st, 2011 23 comments

In what’s recently been dubbed the “Contraction Bowl” due to LeBron James’ infamous comments, the 9-24 Nets take on the 8-25 Minnesota Timberwolves tonight in Minnesota. Both teams look to kick off the new year a little better than they left it; the Nets lost 90-81 in yesterday’s afternoon game against Chicago while the T’Wolves lost to a Carmelo Anthony-less Nuggets team 119-113 on December 29th. This is the first game since the Nets played the Clippers in November that I fully expect a victory from the Nets, even though they’re not on their home turf.

Here are a few things to look out for in tonight’s game.

Control the pace. The Timberwolves, at 97.8 possessions per game, are the fastest team in the NBA – yes, even faster than the run’n'gun Golden State Warriors. The Nets, on the other hand, play a snail’s pace, at a 89.8 possessions per game – 28th in the league and a full eight possessions slower than the Wolves. While neither team has proven to be particularly good at the pace they’re accustomed too, there’s a good chance that whichever team holds the game closer to their system will come out with a victory.

Abuse the inside. Starting center Darko Milicic is listed as probable for tonight’s game. If that doesn’t tell you enough by itself, the Timberwolves are very thin at center and their star power forward Kevin Love isn’t known for his defense. If Brook can manhandle the inside against the T-Wolves, there’s not much they’ll have to counter with.

Control Michael Beasley. When Beasley scores under 30 points, the Timberwolves are 4-23. When Beasley scores 30 points or more, the Timberwolves are 4-2. The Timberwolves have only had one win when Beasley had an off game, and that was against Detroit. I know the Nets don’t exactly boast a lot of defensive depth at the 3 spot, but if Travis Outlaw can keep a hand in Beasley’s face throughout the night, the Nets should win this one.

For more info & analysis on the Minnesota Timberwolves, check out TrueHoop affiliate A Wolf Among Wolves.

Categories: Pregame Open Thread

More on Favors’ Start

January 1st, 2011 10 comments

It remains to be seen how much longer he’ll be with the organization, but over at Sports Illustrated’s Point Forward blog, I mention that the Nets and their fans should be happy with how Derrick Favors has looked the first two months of his NBA career, especially when compared to other teenage phenoms in their first two months:

Favors averaged 13.7 points and 11.1 rebounds per 40 minutes on 57 percent shooting. Garnett, who was 19 in his first NBA season, averaged 12.9 points and 7.3 rebounds per 40 minutes on 40 percent shooting in his first 31 games (KG also averaged 19.4 minutes per game). Howard, who was also 19 when he debuted with the Orlando Magic, averaged 12.3 points and 13.2 rebounds per 40 minutes on 51 percent shooting through his first 31 games. Stoudemire, who entered the league a year older than the other three, was by far the most advanced, averaging 16.1 points and 11.7 rebounds per 40 minutes on 46 percent shooting in his first 31 games. It’s also worth noting that Stoudemire and Howard were forced into larger roles right out of the gate (unlike Favors and Garnett), averaging more than 30 minutes per game.

Categories: Analysis, Daily Link

Thoughts on the Game: Bulls 90, Nets 81. 2010 is Finally Over.

January 1st, 2011 10 comments

 

Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images

Box ScoreBy The HornsBlog A Bull

The Chicago Bulls shot just 39.5% from the field and struggled throughout the game but it was still enough to get by the Nets today at the United Center. Unlike the last three games, the Nets competed in this one and had a chance in the 4th quarter to make it interesting. But it was only fitting that in the last game of 2010, they were unable to get to the winner’s circle.

The matchup of Devin Harris and Derrick Rose was one that I kept a close eye on in this game and honestly neither was very good. I’d certainly give the edge in the matchup to Rose (he had 19 points vs. Harris’ 10), but he was just 5-16 from the field and not his usual impressive self. Harris played alright and had nine assists, but he was 5 of 13 shooting the ball and barely got into double figures with ten points. So while Rose was not the reason the Nets lost, Harris didn’t do much to try and help his team win.

The game began pretty ominously for the Nets as they got down 7-0 early and Avery was forced to use a timeout less than two minutes in. But a strong sign of today’s performance was their ability to come back from deficits and quickly turn them around into leads. They led 15-14 after a TV timeout in the 1st quarter and the same scenario unfolded in the second. The Bulls went on a nice run and took an 11-point lead but the Nets quickly went on a run of their own to take a 43-42 lead late in the quarter. I wrote before the game about the losing mentality Avery Johnson was speaking of earlier today. However this was a very good indicator that things may be changing, though ever so slowly.

One thing I liked about today’s game was the performance of the team’s starting shooting guard and small forward, Travis Outlaw and Stephen Graham. They were both in double figures and shot the mid-range jumper very well. The best thing I saw from them was their aggressiveness. They were not hesitant to shoot and Outlaw had a few nice drives to the bucket, including the dunk pictured above in the second quarter. One puzzling thing from Outlaw was his free throw shooting. It was strange to see an 82% free throw shooter make 3 of 7 at the line, and with a game that was close throughout, those four points certainly could have mattered.

When we come to the team’s centerpiece, Brook Lopez, it was yet another puzzling performance. Brook came out with a very aggressive attitude from the field and scored nine first-quarter points. He was actually one of the only Nets who seemed to be awake when this game started. But he took only 11 shots in the game. While he got to the line 11 times (and most importantly made all 11), this was a game where I thought Brook could dominate. Without Noah in the lineup for Chicago, they really didn’t play a true center in the game except for four minutes from Omer Asik. But instead of putting up 30 points, we got that passive attitude from Brook again. It’s not to say that he didn’t have a decent game, but he could have done so much more.

Before the game I talked about the matchup of the Nets’ power forwards against the Bulls’ Carlos Boozer, and it wasn’t really a matchup at all. The Duke product had 20 points on 8 of 14 shooting and added 15 boards for yet another double-double. But the main problem was the inability for any of the three Nets big men (excluding Brook) to get something done. Kris Humphries, Derrick Favors and Johan Petro combined for just 12 points and 17 rebounds. Now if one of those guys had those numbers it would be one thing, but for the three of them to combine for that total was not enough. Avery Johnson went small a lot and played Travis Outlaw at the 4, so they didn’t play a ton of minutes. But even when the three of them were in the game, they didn’t produce at all.

Once again a common theme came to light in this one and that was the inability to execute on both ends of the floor in the final five minutes. They turned the ball over, took bad shots and committed offensive fouls when they had the ball and gave up wide open dunks on defense. This has too often been the theme of many Nets losses this season. I’m watching the game as a Nets fan and it’s 75-71 with about seven minutes remaining. And then all of a sudden I look up and it’s a nine-point spread with a minute left. The effort is good but I could only imagine how frustrating this must be for Avery Johnson.

So 2010 comes to an end, and not a second too soon for the Nets. The team is now 9-24 and seem destined for a spot at the bottom of the Eastern Conference. There were some good signs in this one but not a W. Have a good New Year’s Eve Nets fans, tomorrow it’s on to Minnesota where hopefully they can get 2011 started on the right track…

 

 

Categories: Thoughts on the Game

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