Archive

Posts Tagged ‘Ryan Anderson’

Nets Yearbook: 2008-2009 Season

August 4th, 2011 1 comment

The 2008-09 season was an era of great transition for the New Jersey Nets, as they moved away from being a perennial playoff contender into a rebuilding team that was more focused on stockpiling assets like younger/cheaper players, draft picks, and veteran contracts that were set to expire before the much bally-hooed “summer of LeBron” in 2010.  Right before the 2008 NBA Draft, the Nets traded fan favorite Richard Jefferson for the underachieving Chinese import Yi Jianlian and Bobby Simmons. After this deal, only Vince Carter remained as part of the vaunted “big three” of VC, Jefferson and Kidd.

It also is a personal favorite season of me in an odd way. The play of Devin Harris and Brook Lopez gave me hope that despite what the pundits were saying, the Nets were well set headed into 2009-10 and beyond. Guess it goes to show how little I actually know about basketball!

Anyway, the Nets had a strong draft, grabbing Lopez and PF Ryan Anderson in the first round, and Chris Douglas-Roberts in the second. During free agency, the traded cash considerations for veteran PG Keyon Dooling to back-up Devin Harris, who was acquired at the trade deadline the season before in the Jason Kidd blockbuster.

With their young nucleus of Harris and Lopez, and the veteran leadership of VC, the Nets were a surprise team through the season’s first three months, hovering around the .500 until the middle of January. Harris’ play in the first-half of the season (21.8 points, 6.5 assists) made the Kidd-trade look like a lop-sided affair in the Nets favor, while Carter seemed to embrace his veteran leadership role, hitting numerous game-winning shots and reportedly evolving as a locker room leader. Harris was selected to his first all-star game.

But a five-game losing streak in the  middle of February, pushed the Nets towards the back of the pack, and injuries started to mount, most notably to Harris and Yi. A second five-game losing streak in March sealed the team’s fate, putting them at 30-44. They finished the season 4-4 and stood in 9th place in the Eastern Conference with a 34-48 record; making it the second consecutive year the team didn’t make the playoffs.

Read more…

Categories: Nets History

Draft Retrospective – Top 5 Best Non-Lottery

June 23rd, 2011 7 comments

The Nets have had a hard enough time over the years getting picks right when they were in the lottery, so putting together a “top” list of non-lottery picks is a lot tougher than it should have been. Hopefully when the Nets pick at No. 27 tonight, their selection has a career in New Jersey/Brooklyn more in line with one of these five players rather than past non-lottery picks like Sean Williams, Marcus Williams, Yinka Dare and Mile Ilic:

Honorable Mentions: Tate George (22nd pick, 1990), Rex Walters (16th pick, 1993), Antoine Wright (15th pick, 2005), Josh Boone (23rd pick, 2006).

No. 5 – Brian Scalabrine: “Veal,” gets points for his longevity in the league, and for his prominent role it what might have been one of the greatest Nets games in recent memory. In a critical game 5 of the 2004 Eastern Conference Semifinals between the Nets and the Detroit Pistons, Scalabrine was forced into playing 23 minutes when four members of the Nets frontcourt – Kenyon Martin, Jason Collins, Rodney Rogers and Aaron Williams – had fouled out. Scalabrine responded with 17 points, including four three-pointers in the triple overtime victory against the Pistons, giving the Nets a 3-2 series lead. If the Nets had only sealed the deal in game 6 in New Jersey, Scalabrine would probably be an even bigger part of Nets folklore.

As it stands, for most of his four-year Nets career, Scalabrine was the 12th man on the bench, though he did play a more prominent role in 2004-05, when he started in 14 games and averaged 6.3 points on 4.5 rebounds. Picked 35th overall (second round) in 2001, Scalabrine’s Nets and general NBA career is at least more distinctive coming out of the second round, than numerous first rounders picked by Nets President Rod Thorn during this era.

No. 4 – Ryan Anderson: Anderson, taken with the 21st pick in 2008, is actually putting together a very solid NBA career for himself as a back-up stretch four. The problem is he’s doing it for the Orlando Magic after the Nets front office threw him in for the deal that unloaded Vince Carter for Courtney Lee and the expiring corpses of Rafer Alston and Tony Battie. Anderson, the throw-in, has probably been the best player since the trade went down, putting up a PER of 18.15 and 19.09 during his two seasons in Orlando, while establishing himself as a solid shooting big-man and a good enough rebounder who fits in perfectly with Orlando’s “spread the perimeter for Dwight” offense. Meanwhile, a case could be made that Anderson should have been given more of a shot in New Jersey, averaging less than 20 minutes his rookie season while the Nets coaching staff and front office continually shoved Yi Jianlian down the fan’s throats. While Yi is never going to evolve into the next Dirk, Anderson is looking like a mirror image of Troy Murphy (before he came to Jersey and his career went to pot).

No. 3 – Jason Collins: So I had to think long and hard here for a minute about the 18th pick in the 2001 draft because technically, “Twin” was selected by the Houston Rockets and then traded to the Nets (along with Richard Jefferson and Brandon Armstrong) for Eddie Griffin on draft day. While I waffled about including Collins for this very reason, he’s also one of the new non-lottery draft picks to play with the Nets in their rookie year and go on to have a very solid career with both the Nets and beyond.

Collins is never going to win any awards and his statistics are downright awful, but he’s one of the few players in this league whose positive contributions honestly can’t be found in a stat-sheet. Despite being 32 now, he’s still a very solid post-defender and was part of Atlanta’s “kryptonite” strategy against Dwight Howards in the playoffs this past year. He was with the Nets for seven years, making the playoffs in his first six, including back-to-back finals his first two seasons where he had to defend hall-of-fame caliber Centers in Shaquille O’Neal and David Robinson. And that was the extent of Collins role – go out there and defend that big guy. And he did a good job at it. Of course, it leaves you wondering how the Nets could have done if they had a Center who can hold his own in the post defensively, but actually put the ball in the basket, but that’s a debate for a different day.

No. 2 – Nenad Krstic: Krstic gets on this list for his nickname alone, “Curly,” but was also one of the few players taken by the Nets outside of the lottery who was evolving into a potential-all-star with the organization before a crippling knee injury derailed his career in 2006-07. Taken with the 24th pick in the 2002 draft, the Nets had to wait two years before Nenad joined the team, but he was worth the wait, starting 57 games for the team after the coaching staff admitted they were trying to work him into the rotation slowly. He was a huge offensive asset in his first playoff series in 05 against the Heat, averaging 18.3 points and 7.5 rebounds on 56 percent shooting. In his final season with the Nets, he was averaging 18.1 points on 53 percent shooting before injury ended things for him. He’s worked his way back into being a decent big man option for NBA teams, though he was buried on Boston’s bench during their playoff sputter this past season.

No. 1 – PJ Brown: The 6’11” Power Forward/Center out of Lousiana Tech University, has had, by far, the most accomplished NBA career of any non-lottery pick for the Nets. He was picked with the 29th pick (second round) in 1992 and sat out his first year to play in Greece. Brown played three solid seasons with the Nets, where he became known as a great rebounder and defender with a decent mid-range jumper. He started in 198 games, overall averaging 8.4 points, 6.4 rebounds and 1.37 blocks during his tenure in New Jersey. He also played in the inaugural NBA Rookie Game during the 1999 All-Star Weekend.

After leaving the Nets, Brown’s profile was raised when he joined the Miami Heat. He made the all-defensive second team twice during in Miami and may be best known by Knicks fans for flipping Charlie Ward and igniting a brawl during game 5 of the 1997 Eastern Conference Semifinals against New York. The brawl changed the course of the series, as a number of key Knicks players were suspended and the Heat came back from a 3-1 deficet to take the series.

Brown went on to spend the next chunk of his career in Charlotte/New Orleans. During the 2002 Eastern Conference Semifinals against the Nets, Brown averaged 8.6 points, 9.2 rebounds and 2 blocks a game against his former team. Brown finally won an elusive ring, along with Brian Scalabrine, on the 2007-08 Celtics team.

Also see the Nets top 5 worst non-lottery selections.

 

 

Categories: Fun Post

2008-2009 Season Review: The Rookies – Ryan Anderson

April 22nd, 2009 No comments

All this Lawrence Frank talk has got me off track, well now we are back on track…Welcome to the season review series.  Here we will be taking a look back at a few themes of the season and evaluate them.  In our second edition of the rookie reviews, we are going to be taking a look at Ryan Anderson.

If you would have told me that Ryan Anderson was going to start 30 games for the Nets this year, I would have been surprised.  Not because I didn’t like him as a player, but when he was drafted last year with the 21st selection, I pictured Ryan Anderson as more of a Steve Novak/Jason Kapono type of player.  Someone who would come in, shoot some threes, and come out.

However that wasn’t the case, Ryan showed a more complete game than anyone thought he had this year, and for the final 30 games he was starting as our 4 (some of it was due to the poor play of Yi, but Ryan played well enough to earn the starts).

In his 19.9 minutes per game, Anderson averaged 7.4 PPG and 4.7 RPG, but what impressed me most was his ability to improve his ball handling throughout the year.  Now he is far from being a great ball handler, but if you look at his early games where he would catch, face, and either shoot or pass you can tell that he has come a long way in that department.

Ryan is a tweener and can play either the 3/4 but he has weaknesses in both spots.  If he were to play the 3, he is a little too slow to cover the quicker wing type players and when he plays the 4, most nights his lack of size leads to mismatches.  In my opinion, he needs to either work on his speed or his strength this offseason so he can break out of that tweener mold and have a set position.  I personally would love to see him playing the three next year that way we could have Vince Carter move back to the 2 (But this all depends on who we draft, if we draft a 3, Ryan will see most of his time at the 4 again this year).

Categories: Uncategorized

2008-2009 Season Review: The Rookies – Brook Lopez

April 21st, 2009 No comments

Welcome to the season review series.  Here we will be taking a look back at a few themes of the season and evaluate them.  In this first edition we will be talking about the Nets rookies.

rookies-reading

Yes I am going to be using this picture every time I mention these three rookies.  The Nets’ rookies were a real bright spot this season.  All three made significant contributions during the year (Brook Lopez throughout the season/Ryan Anderson towards the second half of the season/CDR towards the tail-end of the season), which is something that usually doesn’t happen (especially when you got a second rounder thrown in there).  I am going to be looking at them one by one.  In this post, I am going to be looking at Brook Lopez.

Brook Lopez

Brook Lopez is every one’s number two Rookie of the Year this year.  I knew he was going to be a great player, but I thought it was going to take a year or two.  False.  Brook has been a dominant force on both ends of the court.  In my mind he is a franchise type center.

Lets look at his numbers.

  • Brook played in every Nets’ game and averaged 30.5 Minutes Per Game.  Brook scored 13.0 PPG (11th among NBA centers/6th among rookies) and averaged 8.1 RPG (14th among NBA centers/2nd among rookies).  Add in his 1.8 BPG (9th among all NBA players) and you have the complete package.

What he did well?

  • He didn’t foul.  Brook only averaged 3.1 fouls per game.  With a guy who gets as many blocks as Brook did (especially as a rookie) this is a great thing.  Compare this to Greg Oden, the guy who was supposed to be the defensive stopper among rookies.  Greg had 3.9 fouls per game in about 10 minutes less time.  In terms of blocks per foul, Brook averaged 1.02 blocks per foul.  Greg Oden had 0.45 blocks per foul.  This can be attributed to his knowledge of the game, solid footwork, and fantastic timing.
  • He was fantastic from the line.  Yes, I said fantastic.  Brook shot 79.3% from the line (10th among NBA centers).

What he needs to improve on:

  • Crashing the offensive boards. Of his 8.1 rebounds per game, only 2.7 are on the offensive side.  If he gets that number up to around 3.5 or 4, it would be fantastic.  Now I think this comes with experience.  The more shots you see go up, the better you will be at reading the bounces off the rim.  He can also spend some time this offseason watching some tape and seeing how defenders boxed him out this year, then he can work on some techniques that will help him grab more boards.
  • He needs to expand his range. Let’s take a look at his shot chart.

Brook's Shot Chart

  • Brook was 333-549 from right under the basket.  Which is real good, but look at the number of shot attempts he got away from the basket.  He only took 303 (35% of his shots) attempts away from the basket, and only hit 106 of them (34.9%).  If I can pick up on this, teams are going to be able to as well.  Teams are not going to let him catch it as deep as he has been, and they will try to force him to make his catches farther away from the basket.  This offseason I really want to see Brook expand his range.  I am not even talking foul line extended, I am talking like 8-10 foot range (Think Yao), and if he does that, he will be pretty hard to cover.

The outlook for next year

Brook has the ability to become a 20-10 guy next year, and that is no exaggeration.  I really think that this will happen.  Over the year Brook has displayed a work ethic that shows me he will work hard this upcoming season to improve the flaws in his game.

Categories: Uncategorized

Brook Lopez and Ryan Anderson At Comic-Con

April 18th, 2009 No comments

Ed Note: I know I haven’t been putting out my normal work-load the past two days, so that is why this weekend I am going to hit you guys with a bunch of fun videos.  We will be back on schedule with the regular content on Monday.

Brook Lopez is a big comic book fan, so the Nets thought that it would be a good idea to send him and his best friend on the team, Ryan Anderson to New York City’s Comic Con.  This was a little while back, but I just came across this video…enjoy guys (The Nets are calling this video The Brook and Ryan Show episode 1 – so  expect some more of these…awesome)

This best part of this video was seeing how starstruck (he was at a loss for words) Brook was in front of his favorite comic book artist.  It’s funny because in my opinion, most people would be starstruck in front of him.

Categories: Uncategorized

Bad Behavior has blocked 3982 access attempts in the last 7 days.