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Green Machine Replay: Devin On WGAM!

March 2nd, 2012 No comments

In case you missed Devin on WGAM’s Green Machine the other day, you can check it out here.

Devin appears at the 21:15 mark, however we definitely encourage to listen to the entire broadcast if you have any interest in the Celtics. George and Chris definitely know their stuff and put on an entertaining show!

Categories: Uncategorized

TUNE-IN ALERT: Me, on WGAM The Game’s Green Machine

February 29th, 2012 No comments

What are you doing from 6:00 to 7:00 P.M. tonight? The same thing you do every week, listen to WGAM’s Green Machine radio show on the Boston Celtics, right? Well good news for you: I’ll be on their station tonight at 6:20, talking all things New Jersey/Brooklyn Nets with the brothers Papoulias. We’ll talk Brook, Brooklyn, Dwight, the friday matchup against Boston, and more.

Tune in at 6:20 to their online stream here (or on 1250 ESPN radio, if you’re in the NH area).

Categories: Uncategorized

Sundiata Gaines’ fourth-quarter numbers are better than Jeremy Lin’s, and frankly kind of amazing

February 18th, 2012 4 comments


Hidden deep in ESPN’s Weekend Dime, on a sidebar story about Jeremy Lin, is a chart of the league leaders in fourth-quarter PER (minimum 100 fourth quarter minutes). It’s got the usual suspects — Chris Paul naturally leads the league, Carmelo Anthony and LeBron James make appearances at fourth and fifth, and of course, good ol’ Jeremy Lin ranks third, right behind Sundiata Gaines.

Wait, what?

Yup, as it turns out, New Jersey’s third-string point guard is putting up a dominating 33.49 fourth-quarter PER this season, good for 2nd in the NBA. Here’s how he’s doing it. Read more…

Categories: Uncategorized

Nets are good at being BAD

February 16th, 2012 2 comments

The Nets have many BAD players.

John Hollinger is the NBA writersphere’s Stat-O-Matic: he sees a lane unfilled by statistical analysis, and pounces on it. Today he does so with what he calls the “BAD” rating (Insider), or “Below Average Dependency.” Using a formula based on Hollinger’s PER, he deduces how much of a negative impact each team’s BAD players have.

When judging by position, the Nets have by far the worst individual BAD positional rating in the NBA, at the putrid small forward spot: starring Damion James (6.2 PER), Larry Owens (6.1), Shawne Williams (5.1), and DeShawn Stevenson (3.8). (Feel lucky he didn’t include Keith Bogans, who’d add about 650 BAD points to the Nets’ total.) For comparison’s sake, adding the PER’s of all four players would still produce just the 20th-best PER in the league.

The Nets’ overall BAD rating ranks third in the league, behind the Lakers (who, outside of Bynum, Gasol, and Kobe, are almost exclusively BAD) and the Magic (with eight BAD players).

Categories: Uncategorized

Well, it’s about time: Anthony Morrow invited to three-point contest

February 13th, 2012 6 comments

Anthony Morrow has been invited to take part in the 3-point shooting contest, joining teammates Deron Williams, who will be a member of the Eastern Conference squad for the All-Star game, and rookie MarShon Brooks, who was selected to play in the rookie-sophomore game.
“I’m really excited, man — ecstatic,’’ Morrow said in a telephone interview this afternoon. “This morning my agent called me and told me they’re going to invite me. I’m really excited, and thankful for the opportunity.’’ After a slow start to the season, Morrow is hitting 42 percent from 3-point range.

Colin Stephenson, the Star-Ledger — Nets’ Anthony Morrow is invited to NBA All-Star Weekend 3-point shooting contest

Even with his slow start and “only” 42.3% shooting last year, Morrow is still second all-time in three-point percentage with a career mark of 44.30%.

Congrats, Ammo.

Categories: Uncategorized

Bogans undergoes successful surgery, out for season

February 13th, 2012 5 comments

The Nets announced today that recently signed shooting guard Keith Bogans underwent successful surgery on his fractured ankle and torn deltoid ligament.

Bogans suffered the injury against the Detroit Pistons on February 8th while trying to contest a Greg Monroe dunk. He played excellent defense in his short stint in New Jersey, including one defensive harassment against Carmelo Anthony that indirectly birthed Jeremy Lin.

Bogans is slated to return for next season’s training camp.

Categories: Uncategorized

Why Jeremy Lin is gutwrenching

February 11th, 2012 8 comments


One week ago today, Jeremy Lin played his first game. Well, not really his first game, but his career started Saturday. That game came against the New Jersey Nets, who nearly locked up an upset against their cross-region rivals in Madison Square Garden for the first time since March of 2010, until Linsanity, Super Lintendo, and a million other puns that roughly translate to “how the f*** is Jeremy Lin doing this!?” took over in the fourth quarter.

I thought the Nets game was a fluke. I thought Lin took advantage of the Nets’ weak pick-and-roll coverage (which he did), exploited the holes the Nets allow at the rim (which he did), and after that brief bout of Nets destruction would immediately fall back down to earth (which he resoundingly didn’t). And, while watching the Nets-Pistons game last night, yet another uninspiring, uneventful, ultimately meaningless blowout loss, I found myself continually switching over to MSG at the hint of a commercial, to watch the Jeremy Lin show take off against the Lakers. And he didn’t disappoint, not even someone who has
no business liking Jeremy Lin.

Because, really, how can you not like Jeremy Lin? You may not like the uniform he’s donned, but there’s a certain magic in an undrafted rookie, previously cut by two teams, leading by far the most unsuccessful big-market franchise to four consecutive victories in spectacular, unflappable fashion, from their weakest position on the floor. Even if you hate that one of those came against the Nets, I can’t help but admire not just success, but league-wide shock in the face of fully tempered expectation.

I wish I hated him. I wish I couldn’t stand what he’s done. But I just can’t. I find the hysteria a little disturbing, if only because of things like this, but he’s done nothing but play fantastic basketball. Coinciding with the Nets’ recent slide, he’s relegated the New Jersey franchise to unquestionably second-class status in the region yet again. That I hate. But not him for doing it.

Here’s a list of players that at any point this season went on four-game streaks of 23+ points on 50% shooting or better each game: LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh, Kevin Durant, Kevin Love, Jeremy Lin. And Lin did it in his first four major-minutes games. He may never be a star, but he’ll never lose what he’s done this past week.

Tonight, the Nets take on the San Antonio Spurs, setting off a conscience war between my Nets fan side and basketball fan. I’ll be in the Prudential Center, cheering on with my dad in one of the upper sections. The tickets were a birthday present to him. And yet, deep in my stomach, there’s a pang of regret that I won’t be glued to my television, watching Jeremy freaking Lin take on Ricky Rubio in the battle of ridiculously fun young point guards and their now-ridiculously fun teams.

Nets players and personnel know that this isn’t the team they want, and it isn’t the one the fans want. It’s an awkward situation for an awkward franchise, waiting since the summer of 2010 for the other shoe to drop. Outside of Deron Williams and MarShon Brooks, the Nets haven’t had anything close to the excitement that Jeremy Lin brings the Knicks — and the national hysteria over Lin understandably far outstrips them both.

If the Nets display any type of cohesion, if Shawne Williams and Anthony Morrow start hitting his open looks, if Kris Humphries starts playing above the rim offensively, if Johan Petro sits, if MarShon Brooks looks like pre-broken toe MarShon Brooks, if the entire team suddenly stops leaving open looks at the rim to teams like the Pistons, then perhaps I won’t consider our patronage a sunk cost. But unless the wildly unexpected happens — perhaps more wild than Jeremy Lin breaking the NBA record for most points in a player’s first three starts since the NBA-ABA merger — I’ll probably be focusing more on the ticker than the court. And I hate that. But not Jeremy Lin, no matter how much I wish I could.

Categories: Uncategorized

MarShon Brooks breaks pinky toe, out indefintely

January 30th, 2012 8 comments

The Nets announced today that rookie shooting guard MarShon Brooks is out indefinitely with a broken pinky toe. This injury comes on the heels of Brooks’ sore left Achilles tendon, which caused him to sit out a week until playing limited time against the Raptors last night.

Brooks is now the third Nets player and projected starter to go down with a foot injury, after Brook Lopez and Damion James both required surgery to mend broken fifth metatarsals.

There is currently no timetable for Brooks’ return, and won’t be until he visits a specialist.


Categories: Uncategorized

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