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Archive for August, 2011

Quick ‘Cap: Bogdanovic Scores 27, Leads Croatia To 84-79 Victory Over Finland

August 31st, 2011 No comments

Bogan Bogdanovic scored 27 points, including five consecutive three-pointers in the second half, as Croatia held off a surprisingly tough Finland team 84-79.

Bogdanovic showed off an advanced offensive repertoire. Along with six three-pointers, Bogdanovic scored on cuts to the basket, created his own shot out of the post, leaked out in transition for a dunk, and knocked down his free throws. Finland’s defense – though certainly not NBA-level – was scrambling all game, and Bogdanovic hit his share of shots late with a hand in his face. Bogdanovic grabbed his fair share of rebounds and remained active on defense, picking up two steals and hounding Finland’s sharpshooters in the second half.

Finland isn’t NBA-level competition – the team was woefully undersized against Croatian centers Ante Tomic and Luka Zoric – but if today is any indication, Bogdanovic certainly has a little Paul Pierce in him. He’s got a long way to go to before he can call himself the Truth, but BoBo got to his spots and made his shots all game.

Croatia’s next scheduled game is tomorrow against Macedonia at 2 P.M.

Categories: Uncategorized

Nets Draftee Bojan Bogdanovic to Play at 2 P.M. Today in Eurobasket 2011

August 31st, 2011 No comments

Bojan Bogdanovic will suit up for Croatia today as they take on Finland in the preliminary round of FIBA Eurobasket 2011 at 2 P.M. EST. As with all FIBA Eurobasket games, Croatia-Finland will be freely available for viewing on ESPN3.

This is Croatia’s first game of Eurobasket, and they’ll be playing at least five games (and likemy more) in the next week. Jay Aych of The Painted Area and Sebastian Pruiti both predict Croatia to move on to the next rounds.

The NBA lockout may have left us mostly without basketball on this side of the world (though not entirely), but if you’re a hoops junkie, don’t miss out.

Categories: Daily Link

Jordan Farmar: Failure To Launch

August 31st, 2011 No comments

by Sandy Dover

Jordan Farmar is a curious case to me. He’s long had the capabilities to play, the talent to succeed, and the ability to stay relevant in a game that makes stars as quickly as it makes mincemeat. But why can’t he break through? I have not seen the star prospect of yesterday in Bruin blue do work in the Prudential Center of present.

I remember his sophomore season at UCLA, his declaration for the NBA draft, and his value as a borderline first-round prospect. How? How was he so good at doing what he did? Phil Jackson preferred big point guards, but nonetheless he gave Jordan the opportunity to display his talent in his God-given package. A guy about 6’2” and around 180 lbs was more like B.J. Armstrong than Scott Pippen or Ron Harper, but I saw the talent.

Los Angeles was his home, and he broke out in his second season. Maybe it was when he decided to cut the trademark pompadour. Was it holding him back on the Forum’s blue & gold floor? Doubtful, but I remember dunks, quick cuts to the basket, and a confidence in his jump shot I hadn’t seen since his Final Four days.

For some reason, Jordan languished in 2009 and again in 2010, but not before making his declaration of entitlement to being the Lakers’ starting point guard next to Kobe Bryant. Of course, just saying it wasn’t enough — he changed his jersey number from 5 to 1 — but he’d become the fifth-best starter on the team had he earned the job over Derek Fisher anyway, so what was the point? Besides, anyone that saw Jordan’s pitifully average 2008-09 season knew he wasn’t taking anything away from The Rock. Not his starting job, not his Nikes, not anything. He secretly sulked and tried to hide his discontent on the bench when the gold gang won their second consecutive title, but his time was up.

Jordan could’ve stayed when he wanted, but he said he had to “move on”. That he liked being home in his native Los Angeles, but that he had to explore other opportunities. Good for him! The sad thing is that he ended up in New Jersey. Not that there’s much wrong with New Jersey, but if you’re going seek greener pastures, let your property at least have the sod laid down, right? Your better opportunities were going to come behind Devin Harris, a former All-Star point guard and an even higher-caliber player than the guy that kept beating you for a starting spot in L.A.?

I understand this too: NBA players have only a finite amount of time to make the most capital that they can, and it is in their best interests to earn. A salary upgrade from the Nets was a reasonable thing to entertain, but the irony is that Jordan’s replacement on the Laker bench, Steve Blake, was… well, Steve Blake, and the Lakers probably would’ve taken Jordan over Steve in a heartbeat!

Instead, the former Bruin languished with the Nets, just as he had done with the Lakers. Jordan began the season sitting behind Devin Harris, and ended it behind Deron Williams.

Now our hero is going to the land of his ancestors, to Israel. Possibly to get a starting role, but more importantly to continue to earn his living in the arena of professional basketball. It’s a winding road for the pompadoured one, and he still has the room to mature as a player, but I have to ask this: why has starting point-guardom eluded Jordan Farmar? And why has he failed to grasp it?

Sandy Dover is a published author, fitness advisor, and writer whose work has been featured and published by Robert Atwan’s “America Now”, U.S. News, Yahoo! and most prominently for SLAM magazine. You can find Sandy frequently via his SLAM San Dova Speak-Easy column and via his website.

Categories: Analysis, Guest Posts

Nets Are Scorching TV Episode 2: Interview with Sebastian Pruiti

August 26th, 2011 2 comments

For #NASTV’s second episode, we’re lucky enough to be joined by blogger rock star Sebastian Pruiti. For those of you living under a rock, Sebastian is (among many other things) the founder of this very blog, Nets Are Scorching.

Sebastian has since moved on to create and operate NBA Playbook, a blog that specializes in the X’s and O’s side of the game. You can also find his work at the Basketball Prospectus and the Basketball Jones once per week.

In Part One, we talk about Sebastian’s new position with the NBDL’s Fort Wayne Mad Ants, as well as Enes Kanter, Jonas Valuncias, and more European hoops. In Part Two, the focus is Nets basketball as Sebastian and I talk about Marshon Brooks’s potential impact on the Nets offense in his rookie season. Sebastian also sings praises of Brook Lopez.

Feel free to join in the conversation on twitter using the hashtag, #NASTV.

Part 1:

Part 2:

Categories: NAS TV

Nets Yearbook: Ranking the Power Forwards

August 25th, 2011 4 comments

Kenyon approves.

This week in Nets Yearbook, Mark & I rank the franchise’s top power forwards of all-time.


5. Armen Gilliam

Regular Season: 242 G, 3,611 points (14.9), 1,826 rebounds (7.5), 308 assists (1.3), 178 steals (0.7), 203 blocks (0.8), .492 FG%, .000 3P%, .773 FT%, 18.0 PER

Playoffs: 4 G, 42 points (10.5), 25 rebounds (6.3), 1 assist (0.3), 2 steals (0.5), 7 blocks (1.8), .441 FG%, .000 3P%, .750 FT%, 15.0 PER

Mostly a bench player in New Jersey, The Hammer nonetheless played 2 1/2 solid seasons in New Jersey, turning into a full-time starter at the end of the 1994-95 season. An efficient, effective player, Gilliam earned his nickname by playing physical ball each time out on the floor. One of my earliest basketball memories is of Gilliam, though it wasn’t pretty – when I was six, I attended this game, and two things struck me: 1) how easily Shaq handled the Nets quadruple-teams, and 2) how many threes Dennis Scott made. (It was a simpler time.) Gilliam did not exactly stick out (except as fodder for one of Shaq’s many dunks), and when you see the box score, you’ll understand why.

I’m not condemning Armen’s ability, though. He could definitely play. Once given the full-time starting position in 1996, he averaged career highs with 18.3 points and 9.1 rebounds per game. Unfortunately, Gilliam passed away this past summer at the age of 47 playing pick-up basketball in Collier Township, Pennsylvania. -D.K.


4. Jayson Williams


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Categories: Nets History

Magic CEO wants to increase incentive for stars to stay home

August 23rd, 2011 1 comment

Orlando Magic CEO Alex Martins wants to give a player’s home team an advantage in bidding for their services, according to Orlando mayor Buddy Dyer. If it is a sizable advantage, such as an extra $5 million per year, then this clause could be effective. That’d be great for the owners, not so much for the player’s union.

One of any team’s worst nightmares is to lose their best player for nothing. When LeBron James and Chris Bosh left their small markets, the teams they left were devastated. The Orlando Magic are attempting to make that nightmare remain a bedtime illusion in the new CBA talks.

From the Nets’ perspective, this is a double-edged sword. If the Magic can incentivize Dwight Howard with ease, then this would pose an obvious problem to the Nets — but, a clause like this would give the Nets a huge advantage in retaining Deron Williams. That said, I doubt the players’ union will accept a clause like this unless the owners drastically reduce their other demands.

Categories: Daily Link

Nets Yearbook: Ranking the Small Forwards

August 19th, 2011 11 comments

Despite his short time in NJ, BK makes the list.

In this chapter of Nets Yearbook, I’ll be ranking the top 5 small forwards of Nets history.


5. Chris Morris


Regular Season (per game numbers in parenthesis): 510 G, 399 GS, 6,762 points (13.3), 2,918 rebounds (5.7), 1,015 assists (2.0), 784 steals (1.5), 468 blocks (0.9), .444 FG%, .307 3P%, .733 FT%, 15.3 PER

Playoffs: 13 G, 197 points (15.2), 74 rebounds (5.7), 19 assists (1.5), 20 steals (1.5), 18 blocks (1.4), .481 FG%, .283 3P%, .903 FT%, 19.5 PER

Morris was an average yet consistent small forward. The Nets used the fourth pick in the 1988 draft on Morris, and while he didn’t become a superstar, he did become a paragon of stability until he signed with Utah in 1995. Morris was a starter during most of his seven seasons in NJ and could be counted on for 10-15 points per game. Otherwise, he could rebound, shoot, and had a defensive rating of 106 (exactly average). However, he was most well-known as a dynamic high-flyer, participating in the 1989 dunk contest (placing last). He is also known for shattering the backboard against the Chicago Bulls in 1993.
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Categories: Nets History

Nets Yearbook: Ranking The Shooting Guards

August 18th, 2011 21 comments


In the spirit of Mark’s look at the franchise’s top 5 point guards of all time, in this edition of Nets Yearbook I’ll take a look at the top 5 shooting guards.

5. Otis Birdsong


Regular season (per-game numbers in parenthesis): 375 G, 317 GS, 5,968 points (15.9), 941 rebounds (2.5), 1,361 assists (3.6), 427 steals (1.1), .499 FG%, .267 3P%, .591 FT%, 14.5 PER

Playoffs: 16 G, 249 points (15.6), 40 rebounds (2.5), 60 assists (3.8), 29 steals (1.8), .438 FG%, .000 3P%, .536 FT% 11.4 PER

A former #2 overall pick, the Nets acquired Birdsong in 1981 in a sign-and-trade, and he more or less held down the starting position until the Nets waived him in 1988. Birdsong called the three certainties in life “death, taxes, and my jump shot,” and he wasn’t wrong – Birdsong shot over 50% in four of his seven seasons in New Jersey, leading the Nets in scoring twice despite suffering a fractured pelvis, broken shooting hand, and multiple injuries to his right knee and leg.

Fun fact: When the Nets traded for Birdsong In 1981, he became the first guard in NBA history to earn $1 million in a season.


4. Kerry Kittles


Regular season: 496 G, 455 GS, 7,096 points (14.3), 1,951 rebounds (3.9), 1,275 assists (2.6), 803 steals (1.6), 614 turnovers (1.2), .439 FG%, .378 3P%, .781 FT%, 15.9 PER

Playoffs: 54 G, 664 points (12.3), 195 rebounds (3.6), 116 assists (2.1), 87 steals (1.6), 52 turnovers (0.96), .424 FG%, .337 3P%, .742 FT%, 15.4 PER
A lifelong Net – I’m not counting his 11-game stint with the Clippers in his final season – Kittles made his mark as an excellent spot-up shooter and defender. Kittles is one of the rare players who amassed more steals than turnovers in every season of his career, a testament to his excellent hands on defense as well as his career-long lack of ball-handling duties. His game didn’t have many dimensions, but the eerily consistent Kittles played a key role in the Nets semi-dynasty from 2001-2003.
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Categories: Analysis