Tag Archives: Andre Iguodala

Today’s Best NBA Stories

– Celtics Prep for Thunder’s Lengthy Zone (from Marc D’Amico, celtics.com):

” Oklahoma City, without the services of Durant and Russell Westbrook, is using its big men to its advantage this season by playing much more zone defense than it has in the past. In previous seasons, the Thunder played man-to-man defense almost exclusively. This season, according to the Celtics’ basketball operations group, they have played about 30 percent of their defensive possessions with a zone concept.

They’re zoning a lot more,” Brad Stevens said on Monday, “because they’ve got Lance Thomas playing the 3, and then they’ll even play (Serge) Ibaka, (Nick) Collison and (Steven) Adams or Perk (Kendrick Perkins) together.”

Each of those guys possesses a wingspan that nears or surpasses seven feet, and their imposing characteristics don’t end there.

“When you say bigs – real, real bigs,” Stevens commented following Tuesday’s practice. “They’re big and they’re long and athletic.”

Any combination of three of Oklahoma City’s big men can combine to be a dominant force at the bottom of a zone.

“That baseline zone is – if you’re stagnant, they’ll eat you up because of their length,” Boston’s coach added.”

Read it here:  http://www.nba.com/celtics/news/sidebar/prac-111114-celtics-pre-thunders-length-zone

– ‘Sixth man’ still comes with stigma among NBA players (from Sam Amick, USA  Today):

” As NBA player blueprints go, you’d think Manu Ginobili’s would be more popular.

Wildly talented scorer accepts a reserve role early on, then blossoms into one of the best super subs in the history of the game en route to winning four championships and earning more than $100 million over his 13-year career. But the sixth-man stigma, it seems quite clear, remains.

Just ask the Oklahoma City Thunder, who lost James Harden two years ago, in part, because he had no interest in following in Ginobili’s footsteps and now have a similar quandary with young guard Reggie Jackson leading into his free agency next summer. Or the Phoenix Suns, who have point guard Isaiah Thomas making $28 million over the next four years to play that role yet spending his days dreaming of being a starter. Or the Cleveland Cavaliers, who so badly need young Dion Waiters to embrace his recent reassignment and become an impact player off the bench. Or the Golden State Warriors, who convinced veteran small forward Andre Iguodala to play the sixth man role but are well aware he would prefer to start.

Yet in this era in which the “Big Three” model is hailed as the only path to championship prominence, the more subtle role of a sixth man can often make or break a team’s title hopes as well.”

Read it here:  http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nba/2014/11/11/sixth-man-stigma-manu-ginobili-andre-iguodala-isaiah-thomas/18883329/

– Paul Silas, NBA Lifer (from Jonathan Abrams, grantland.com):

” Reflections on guarding Bill Russell, coaching LeBron James, and calling Michael Jordan “boss” from the player and coach whose career has spanned six decades”

Read it here:  http://grantland.com/features/paul-silas-nba-career-boston-celtics-st-louis-atlanta-hawks-phoenix-suns-denver-nuggets-seattle-supersonics-charlotte-bobcats-lenny-wilkens-dave-cowens-bill-russell/

-Gregg Popovich Says It Was ‘Easy to See’ Steve Kerr Would Become Coach (from Jacob Bourne, Bleacher Report):

“Steve was a no-brainer,” Popovich said before the Spurs’ Nov. 11 matchup with the Warriors. “There are certain guys on your team that you know have an intuitive feel for the game. They’re also natural leaders and good people. They communicate well, have great work ethics and high intelligence. He had all that stuff. It was pretty easy to see.”

Read it here: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2264566-gregg-popovich-says-it-was-easy-to-see-steve-kerr-would-become-coach

– On Trevor Ariza, the Rockets and the concept of ‘fit’ in the NBA (from Evan Clinchy, Hardwood Paroxysm):

” And yet, two weeks into the NBA season, I find myself not only doubting the above statement, but also questioning the very definition of the term. What makes one basketball player superior to another? Is it ever something that can completely, 100 percent be measured, as we’re so often lobbied to believe in this era of analytics, or will there always be at least a little room for doubt and debate? Is merit always about the mathematics, or does it sometimes lean more toward psychology?

These are the questions I turn over in my head as I watch the Rockets excel so far this season with Ariza, a theoretically “weaker” player, plugged into Parsons’ job. I start thinking not about stats, but about fit. Not about how talented either player is, necessarily, but about how they fulfill certain responsibilities and how they complement the strengths and weaknesses of the players around them.”

Read and view it here:  http://hardwoodparoxysm.com/2014/11/11/trevor-ariza-rockets-concept-fit-nba/

– Five problems plaguing the New York Knicks (from Shlomo Sprung, Sheridan Hoops):

“The New York Knicks have lost five straight games and are now 2-6 after wins over Cleveland and Charlotte in their first three contests. So what are the Knicks doing so poorly over the league’s first two-plus weeks?

Read it here:  http://www.sheridanhoops.com/2014/11/12/five-problems-plaguing-the-new-york-knicks/

Watch Anthony Davis Do A Little Bit Of Everything In Close Loss To Cavs (from Spencer Lund, dimemag.com):

Read and view it here:  http://dimemag.com/2014/11/watch-anthony-davis-everything-loss-cavs/

– As NBA Clock Starts on Andrew Wiggins, T-WolvesLearning What Makes Him Tick (from Ethan Skolnick, Bleacher Report):

Read it here:  http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2260178-as-nba-clock-starts-on-andrew-wiggins-twolves-learning-what-makes-him-tick

– Rudy Gobert Is Fulfilling His Defensive Potential (from Miles Wray, BBall Breakdown):

Read and view it here: http://bballbreakdown.com/2014/11/11/the-stifle-tower-utahs-rudy-gobert-is-fulfilling-his-defensive-potential/

More player updates:

– Jordan Hill: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2263367-jordan-hill-showing-los-angeles-lakers-that-hes-worth-the-money

– James Johnson:  http://sports.nationalpost.com/2014/11/12/toronto-raptors-james-johnson-is-spicy-and-crazy-and-also-good-at-defence/

– K.J. McDaniels: http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/deep-sixer/McDaniels-makes-case-to-be-Sixers-starter.html

– Ben McLemore: http://cowbellkingdom.com/offseason-work-for-ben-mclemore-paying-dividends/

Today’s Best NBA Preseason Stories

– Raptors’ coach Casey a keen strategist (from Ryan Wolstat, Toronto Sun):

” You grow every year as far as knowing the players. Every year I work to get better as a coach.

“Controlling the game, substitutions, how to handle timeouts … All those things.”

Read it here: http://www.edmontonsun.com/2014/10/27/raptors-coach-casey-a-keen-strategist

– Raptors embrace healthy attitude toward bioanalytics (from Dave Feschuk, the star.com):

” (Alex) McKechnie is the sports scientist who has been a Raptors assistant coach since then-GM Bryan Colangelo brought him aboard in 2011. Before that he spent most of a decade helping the L.A. Lakers win a handful of championships; Shaquille O’Neal coined McKechnie “The Resurrector” for keeping the once-oft-injured centre healthy in his prime.

Still, for all McKechnie’s experience, his NBA outlook was reshaped when the Raptors began practising and scrimmaging wearing Catapult GPS devices. The units, which are roughly the size of a smartphone and sit in a small pocket sewn into the back of jerseys, between the shoulder blades, transmit droves of data as they bounce along with the player. The devices can be used to measure an array of performance details that are vast in scope, from the average length of an athlete’s stride, to the height of his every jump, to the number of kilometres he logs in a given workout. Outfitted with an electric compass, the gizmos also measure the direction and orientation in which players move.

If the droves of data can be daunting to digest, McKechnie soon emerged with one surprising takeaway. According to the Catapult numbers captured during Raptors scrimmages, some 80 per cent of movements were performed laterally or backwards. Only 20 per cent of athletes’ collective movement was of the forward variety. McKechnie beckoned Gary McCoy, Catapult’s senior applied sports scientist, to have a look at what he’d discovered.

“Alex says to me, ‘All our conditioning is done going forward. We don’t train laterally or backwards,’” McCoy recalled. “Alex said, ‘That’s the first change we’re going to make.”

Read it here: http://www.thestar.com/sports/raptors/2014/10/27/raptors_embrace_healthy_attitude_toward_bioanalytics_feschuk.html

– Nikola Mirotic: Internationally Known, Locally Respected (from Robert Mays, grantland.com):

” From Montenegro to Chicago, Nikola Mirotic is following a path first traced by the Bulls’ original super-Euro, Toni Kukoc. Will he find championships like his forerunner?”

Read it here: http://grantland.com/features/nikola-mirotic-chicago-bulls-toni-kukoc-pau-gasol/

– Roy Hibbert: ‘I had to change’ after playoff struggles (from Candace Buckner, USA Today):

” Hibbert can be gracious with a guest, but distant. Contemplative and patient, yet still aloof. Seven years into the NBA and Hibbert has learned to gird himself. Against the gawkers. Against the keyboard critics. But to survive the nightmare through last season’s playoffs, Hibbert needed to build up an even greater wall.

So when he put up more zeroes than a pitcher throwing a no-hitter, he cut off everyone. Not even the best man for his wedding could get him on the phone.

Hibbert plummeted, hard and fast. But he began to recognize a truth: when you’re 7-2 and north of 290 pounds, a DNA lottery winner who could dunk as an adolescent and emerge as the focal point of a championship contender’s defensive identity, your problems are not physical.

“The only person who could fix this whole mess that I got myself into,” Hibbert says, “is me.””

Read it here: http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nba/pacers/2014/10/27/roy-hibbert-indiana-playoffs-struggles-paul-george-injury/18034391/

– Could the Jazz Be This Year’s Suns? (from Brett Koremenos, grantland.com):

” The top and bottom of the NBA are relatively predictable. We have a pretty good sense of who will be good (Spurs) and who will be bad (HINNNNKIE). The fun happens in the middle. A year ago, the Phoenix Suns broke up the regular-season monotony and entertained the hell out of us. Heading into this season, we can only hope another team can bolt from the middle class and capture our attention.

If you’re looking for candidates, turn you eyes toward Salt Lake City.

The reason for hope in Utah isn’t what it’s putting on the floor, but the guy running things from the bench.”

Read and view it here: http://grantland.com/the-triangle/could-the-jazz-be-this-years-suns/

– Wiggins ready to excel at both ends of the floor for Wolves (from Jerry Zgoda, Star Tribune):

Read it here: http://www.startribune.com/sports/wolves/280603642.html?page=all&prepage=3&c=y#continue

– Markieff Morris relies on mid-range shot (from Paul Coro, azcentral.com):

” For some teams, getting the ball to a big man posting up can lead to high-percentage scoring.

The Suns did not have much of that last season, making up for that void with easy points on fast breaks. That has not changed much this season, with Markieff Morris still looking like the Suns’ only frequent post-up threat, and it is not even his strength.

Morris’ post-up game progressed last season and became a much bigger part of his offense as the season went on, but it is his midrange game that makes him most effective.’

Read it here: http://www.azcentral.com/story/sports/nba/suns/2014/10/27/phoenix-suns-markieff-morris-jeff-hornacek-nba/18035495/

– Lakers’ Julius Randle shaped by mentors’ tough love, endless support (from Mark Medina, L.A. Daily News):

Read it here: http://www.dailynews.com/sports/20141027/lakers-julius-randle-shaped-by-mentors-tough-love-endless-support

– Three Sides to This Story (from Scott Cacciola, NYTimes.com):

” The triangle. It means different things to different people. To most, the triangle is simply a three-sided shape. But the triangle is versatile. It is a musical instrument. It is a romantic entanglement. And it is a drafting tool for architects. Name another polygon that can do all that.

For long-suffering fans of the Knicks, though, the triangle has come to mean something much more — a source of hope after 41 years without a championship.”

Read it here: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/28/sports/basketball/ny-knicks-dust-off-phil-jackson-triangle-offense.html

– Anthony Davis keeps rising (from Ted Lewis, theadvocate.com):

“Anthony Davis is not just on the rise,” said Oklahoma City Thunder coach Scott Brooks, who has his own MVP in Kevin Durant. “He’s there already.”

Read it here: http://theadvocate.com/sports/pelicans/10620644-148/face-of-the-franchise-the

– Why DeRozan could be the most important Raptor (from Michael Grange, sportsnet.ca):

Read it here: http://www.sportsnet.ca/basketball/nba/why-demar-derozan-may-be-the-most-important-toronto-raptor-ever/

– Why Toronto Loves Amir Johnson (from Zach Salzmann/Gad Elmaleh, ballnroll.com):

“It’s a privilege to play in this league,” Amir Johnson tells us when we interview him after a recent pre-season game. “I work on my craft every day, all the time.”

The hard work that Amir undoubtedly puts into his game is on show every night to fans of the Toronto Raptors.”

Read it here: http://ballnroll.com/exclusiveaccess?post=1463

– Rockets GM Daryl Morey builds beyond nerd stereotypes (from Sam Amick, USA Today):

Read it here: http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nba/2014/10/27/jeremy-lin-dwight-howard-daryl-morey-rockets-lakers/18023323/

– Advanced NBA metrics, Wizards Coach Randy Wittman do not agree (from Jorge Castillo, Washington Post):

Randy Wittman is a self-described old-school basketball lifer. The Washington Wizards coach appreciates the sport’s history and is openly reluctant to accept drastic change to the game — as exhibited by his recent opinion on the NBA’s experiment with shortening games. The throwback mentality also has manifested itself in how his team operates offensively.

At a time when advanced metrics have infiltrated the NBA, statisticians have concluded “long twos” — outside the paint, inside the three-point arc — are the least efficient shot in basketball. Wittman admits he is not one for numbers.

“We’re going to take open shots,” Wittman emphasized. “If a team wants to give us mid-range open shots, we’re going to take them. I’m going to tell a guy that has a wide-open 15-foot jumper to take three steps back and shoot a three? I’m not going to do that.””

Read it here: http://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/wizards/advanced-nba-metrics-wizards-coach-randy-wittman-do-not-agree/2014/10/27/f72ff8a6-5e1d-11e4-91f7-5d89b5e8c251_story.html

– Magic See Defense as a Key to Escaping the Cellar (from Dick Scanlon, theledger.com):

Read it here: http://www.theledger.com/article/20141027/news/141029422

– Phoenix Suns’ keys to success: Rebound, don’t turn over the ball (from Craig Grialou, arizonasports.com):

Read it here: http://www.arizonasports.com/41/1778163/Phoenix-Suns-keys-to-success-Rebound-dont-turn-over-the-ball

– Tyson Chandler back where he belongs (from Tim McMahon, ESPN):

Read it here: http://espn.go.com/blog/dallas/mavericks/post/_/id/4703416/tyson-chandler-back-where-he-belongs-and-is-beloved

– Kerr’s Warriors speak same language: Winning (from Jon Gold, tucson.com):

Read it here: http://tucson.com/sports/basketball/college/wildcats/kerr-s-warriors-speak-same-language-winning/article_98d06f55-12fa-5f47-91a3-a31208a9b674.html

– Line-up Love: Golden State Warriors (from Ben Dowsett, Bball Breakdown):

Lineup rotations are vital, perhaps the most critical element of a given coach’s responsibilities. And while all elements herein are crucial, of paramount importance are the high-volume line-ups who set the tone for their teams. We want to delve deeply into these big minutes units, from the very best to the very worst – what makes them so good (or bad), and what separates them from others? Today is Part One of Line-up Love, looking at a Golden State Warriors starting line-up that was among the league’s very best last season.

As far as the top of the high-volume line-up list goes, you will not find better bang for your buck than last year’s Golden State Warriors starting unit. The group of Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson, Andre Iguodala, David Lee, and Andrew Bogut saw 819 minutes of court time together last regular season, the fifth most of any five-man line-up in the league. But their quality likely exceeded even their immense volume, with this line-up posting a net per-100-possessions rating of plus-15.4 while they shared the floor – of 15 line-ups in the league that cracked 500 total minutes on the year, just a single other posted a plus-10 or better (a fun Charlotte line-up at plus-10.9).”

Read and view it here: http://bballbreakdown.com/2014/10/14/line-up-love-golden-state-warriors/

– Detroit Pistons And The Huge Experiment Gone Wrong (from Ben Dowsett, BBall Breakdown):

” Last summer, then-Pistons GM Joe Dumars decided to conduct an experiment. With proven post presence Greg Monroe already in town, alongside exciting and enticing sophomore lottery selection Andre Drummond in the Pistons’ frontcourt, Dumars added longtime Hawks forward Josh Smith in free agency for the hefty price tag of four years and $54 million. Despite the league trending heavily in a smaller, speedier direction, Dumars believed he saw something exploitable at his disposal in going the other way. Either that, or he struck out everywhere else and wanted to make a splash ASAP to try and force a return to Detroit’s mid-2000’s glory days in order to save his job. Certainly, it was one of the two.

Whatever the case, Dumars’s experiment failed badly. The team was an unmitigated disaster, starting 4-8 on their way to a 29-win season which could only match the previous year’s total despite the high-profile, high-cost additions of Smith and point guard Brandon Jennings. Any attempt to save his job was in vain – Dumars is now gone after a 14-year run in Detroit, and both head coaches he forced last year’s roster upon (Mo Cheeks and John Loyer) are in the same boat.

“Perhaps, though, the corner has been turned. Stan Van Gundy is on board now in the Motor City, and should provide the sort of top-down stability the franchise has been badly lacking since Dumars lost his mojo somewhere between 2006 and 2008 or so. He surely needs to.”

Read and view it here: http://bballbreakdown.com/2014/10/23/line-up-love-detroit-pistons-and-the-huge-experiment-gone-wrong/

– Opening Night Rosters (from Basketball Insiders):

Check them out here: http://www.basketballinsiders.com/nba-rosters-get-locked-in/

More player updates:

– Michael Carter-Williams: http://www.philly.com/philly/sports/sixers/20141028_Carter-Williams__second_season_could_be_a_defining_one.html

– Malcolm Thomas: http://www.csnphilly.com/basketball-philadelphia-76ers/malcolm-thomas-joins-sixers-focused-getting-boards

– CJ McCollum: http://www.oregonlive.com/blazers/index.ssf/2014/10/cj_mccollum_feeling_more_comfortable_searching_for.html

– Kyle Lowry: http://www.tsn.ca/talent/lewenberg-lowry-poised-for-all-star-sequel-to-breakout-campaign-1.118011

– Steven Adams: http://www.muskogeephoenix.com/sports/adams-could-be-the-x-factor-for-thunder/article_c24cf1be-5e5b-11e4-beea-237a5499334f.html

– Travis Wear: http://hoopshabit.com/2014/10/28/new-york-knicks-travis-wear/

Today’s Top NBA Preseason Stories

– Kobe Bryant Q & A (from Ken Berger, CBS Sports):

Read it here: http://www.cbssports.com/nba/writer/ken-berger/24767690/qa-with-kobe-bryant-quotes-that-didnt-make-the-cut

– Wizards’ Coach Randy Wittman finally has a roster that’s not rebuilding (from Jorge Castillo, Washington Post):

Read it here: http://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/wizards/with-wizards-coach-randy-wittman-finally-has-a-roster-thats-not-rebuilding/2014/10/26/17d06e76-5d2c-11e4-9f3a-7e28799e0549_story.html

– Omer Asik and Defending the 2-Point Shot (from Jason Calmes, bourbonstreetcalmes.com)

Read it here: http://www.bourbonstreetshots.com/2014/10/26/omer-asik-and-defending-the-2-point-shot/

– Thaddeus Young gives Wolves solid veteran presence (from Jerry Zgoda,  startribune.com):

” Believe it or not, Timberwolves forward Thaddeus Young isn’t so old that he doesn’t remember what it’s like to be 19 and young (with a little “y”) in the NBA just like new teammates Andrew Wiggins and Zach LaVine.

It just seems that way.

He begins his eighth NBA season on Wednesday in Memphis, yet just celebrated his 26th birthday in June. It’s a juxtaposition that Young calls “kind of in between.” It’s also one that left many people asking Wolves basketball boss Flip Saunders why he’d swap a 2015 first-round draft pick obtained in the Kevin Love blockbuster trade for such an aged player, especially after Saunders obtained youngsters Wiggins and Anthony Bennett from Cleveland as the trade’s two other pieces.

“They’re acting like he’s 29 or 30,” Saunders said. “He’s not, and he’s a good player.””

Read it here: http://www.startribune.com/sports/wolves/280477442.html

Ty Lawson Shows How To Defend The Pick And Roll (from Coach Nick, BBall Breakdown):

” Coach Nick got on the court with Denver Nuggets Point Guard Ty Lawson to demonstrate the proper technique to defend the ball handler in the pick and roll. He utilizes both the turn and run and slide methods…”

Watch it here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1JFeFcyzTI

– Malone discusses roles of Nik Stauskas, Omri Casspi and Derrick Williams (from Blake Ellington, Sactownroyalty.com):

” We know who the Kings starters will be on opening night. But what about the role players? Michael Malone gave us a little insight into his thought process. ”

Read it here: http://www.sactownroyalty.com/2014/10/26/7074315/michael-malone-rotation

– A look at what’s new in the NBA this season (from Anthony Slater, newsok.com):

” Expedited replay reviews are just one of the changes the league has made.”

Read it here: http://newsok.com/a-look-at-whats-new-in-the-nba-this-season/article/5360559

-Sixers begin another season of roster roulette (from Keith Pompey. Philly.com):

“Usually you look at a roster and say, ‘I know this guy. He’s a legitimate NBA player,’ ” he said. “I’m looking at this roster, and I never heard of most of these guys. And the ones I heard of, I’m not sure if they are NBA players.”

Nor are the Sixers, but they are willing to find out.

The quest is to find defensive-minded, diamond-in-the-rough role players to place around lottery
picks Michael Carter-Williams, Nerlens Noel, Joel Embiid, and Dario Saric in the future.”
/20141027_Sixers_begin_another_season_of_roster_roulette.html
–  Celtics launching 3-pointers at record rate (from Jay King, masslive.com):
” Though the Boston Celtics launched preseason 3-pointers at a team-record rate, Brad Stevens
vows he never told his club to fire away.
“Not once,” he said recently.

But in so many ways, the Celtics outside movement started with Stevens. Their shot selection carries his fingerprints.”

Read it here: http://www.masslive.com/celtics/index.ssf/2014/10/boston_celtics_launching_3-poi.html

– Pelicans: Correctly Maximizing Rotations (from Oleh, thebirdwrites.com):

Read it here: http://www.thebirdwrites.com/2014/10/27/7070451/winning-moves-part-iv-correctly-maximizing-rotations

– Los Angeles Lakers coach Byron Scott is still all business (from Mike Bresnehan, LATimes.com):

Read it here: http://www.theage.com.au/sport/basketball/los-angeles-lakers-coach-byron-scott-is-still-all-business-20141027-11co9f.html

– Jared Sullinger starts over (from Mark Murphy, BostonHerald):

” If Jared Sullinger could review a loop of his 2013-14 season, detailing everything from his uneven performance to a souring attitude, he’d grimace. The Celtics forward shakes his head when talking about that time now.

Sullinger was the Celtics’ best player this preseason — a surprise as their most efficient 3-point shooter, their one dominant rebounder, their most balanced scorer. This fall marks a recovery after a tough second season that was, for Sullinger, a wake-up call.

“It was stuff I was doing on the court. Antics I don’t normally do, I was doing last year,” Sullinger said. “To get away from that I had to change my mindset and play better. Yeah I was surprised, because there were times when I was just out of line. Not out of line in the sense of acting crazy, but out of line because I was not myself. The more and more I watched film, the more I realized I can do better.”

Read it here: http://www.bostonherald.com/sports/celtics_nba/boston_celtics/2014/10/jared_sullinger_starts_over

– Gary Harris coming along nicely for Denver Nuggets (from Nate Timmons, denverstiffs.com):

“He’s not afraid,” said Nuggets head coach Brian Shaw. “He comes into the game and he’s in attack mode. There’s still some areas where he has to refine his skills. I’ve put him out there against Westbrook, and different guys that I’ve wanted to see how he’d defend and fair against them. There’s no backdown in him, that’s encouraging.”

Shaw is talking about rookie Gary Harris. The 6’4″ shooting guard out of Michigan State has been a pit bull on the defensive end for the Nuggets, both during games and in practices.”

Read and view it here: http://www.denverstiffs.com/2014/10/24/7039907/arron-afflalos-prote

– The Singular Greatness of Steve Nash (from Hal Brown, Nylon Calculus):

” A few days ago, it was announced that Steve Nash will be missing the entirety of the 2014-2015 NBA season after a flare-up of the nerve problems in his back. Given that Steve Nash has also announced that the 2014-2015 season would be his last in the NBA, this announcement was akin to retirement for the future hall of famer. Nash remains undecided about whether or not he will officially retire (i.e. whether or not he’ll waive his contract for this season), but it’s clear that his playing time is all over.

The revelation that Nash was no longer going to be an active member of the NBA landscape led to a great many thoughts in memoriam of Nash’s incredible career. We here at Nylon Calculus would feel remiss if we didn’t chime in on exactly how unbelievable a player Steve Nash was.”

Read and view it here: http://nyloncalculus.com/2014/10/25/singular-greatness-steve-nash/

Additional player updates:

-Giannis Antetokuonmpo: http://www.jsonline.com/sports/bucks/bucks-search-for-best-fit-for-antetokounmpo-b99378186z1-280472572.html

– Charlie Villanueva: http://www.dallasnews.com/sports/dallas-mavericks/headlines/20141026-sefko-charlie-villanueva-beat-the-odds-though-mavericks-rotation-still-hazy.ece

– Mason Plumlee: http://nypost.com/2014/10/26/mason-plumlee-ready-for-more/

– Andre Iguodala: http://www.insidebayarea.com/warriors/ci_26803548/golden-state-warriors-mend

– Hedo Turkoglu: http://www.ocregister.com/articles/rivers-639589-clippers-turkoglu.html

– Luol Deng: http://allucanheat.com/2014/10/27/luol-deng-still-adjusting-miami-heat/

– Tyrus Thomas: http://www.basketballinsiders.com/tyrus-thomas-determined-to-resume-nba-career/

QOTD (from Jack Armstrong, Raptors TV analyst re: JR Smith): ” He looks lost in the triangle offense. It’s not that complicated – you read and react. Classic example of a guy who had played on his ‘talent’ and clearly hasn’t figured out what the other nine guys on the floor are out there to do. Has solid scoring skills but has a hard time having it translate to team game.”