Tag Archives: josh smith

Today’s Top NBA Preseason Stories

– How Stan Van Gundy Is Helping Josh Smith (from Michael Pina, bballbreakdown.com):

With Stan Van Gundy now serving as Detroit’s head coach, the time for excuses is over. Van Gundy is one of the league’s brightest leaders, and as likely a coach as any to help get Smith’s career back on track, hopefully to the point where he is a long-term partner beside Andre Drummond. The preseason has not been all pretty – not that any preseason ever is – but in it, there have been a few things from Smith that suggest his second year with the Pistons could be far more successful than his first.

Watching Detroit in their three preseason games, the first and least surprising thing that jumps out is Van Gundy’s unwillingness to play Smith, Greg Monroe, and Drummond together. One of the three has started each game off the bench, with three different front-court combinations in the starting lineup. This is clearly a smart thing to do, and incredibly beneficial to Smith in particular, whose playmaking ability can be unleashed with another shooter on the court.

Read and view it here: http://bballbreakdown.com/2014/10/13/how-stan-van-gundy-is-helping-josh-smith/

And read David Aldridge’s Q & A with SVG in yesterday’s Morning Tip (NBA.com):

http://www.nba.com/2014/news/features/david_aldridge/10/13/morning-tip-nba-media-rights-deal-effect-on-contracts-andrew-wiggins-as-minnesota-timbewolves-savior-qa-with-detroit-pistons-stan-van-gundy/

– 33 Crazy Predictions for the NBA Season (from Zach Lowe, Grantland.com):

” Kevin Durant’s injury is the latest reminder that preseason predictions are folly. Too many unknowns will emerge between now and June — injuries, ownership changes, firings, inexplicable slumps, and X-rated Twitter escapades.

Predictions are also fun! It’s useful to comb new rosters, league trends, and burbling scuttlebutt, and suss out things that could happen over the next 10 months. You’re mostly going to be wrong, especially on the ultraspecific calls, but it’s a good way to take in the wider NBA landscape and hazard some funky educated guesses.

Herewith, our third annual 33 Crazy Predictions for the NBA Season”

Read Zach’s predictions here: http://grantland.com/the-triangle/33-crazy-predictions-for-the-nba-season/

– Raptor Lucas Nogueira (from Stephen Brotherston, Pro BBall Report):

” When the Toronto Raptors traded John Salmons earlier this summer, they received a young unsigned former first round draft pick back in addition to the veteran Lou Williams. The long lanky center Lucas ‘Bebe’ Nogueira is a potential shot swatting machine who looked good as a reserve in Spain’s top league, however, a serious nagging groin injury has left him not quite ready to play for the Raptors in preseason games. Fortunately, his return to action shouldn’t be very far off.

“I can warm up,” Nogueira said. “This is the worst experience of my life. Warm up with the team, do everything and the coach sees you, but I see the doctors and the doctors say, no you can’t play.

“I think for me, this is the best and worst experience. The best because this is my dream coming true, the first year in the NBA and worst because I can’t help my team.”

Read it here: http://probballreport.com/lucas-nogueira-is-not-quite-ready-to-play-for-the-raptors/

– Role switches for Warriors’ duo produce promising results (from Rusty Simmons, SFgate.com):

” The Warriors returned home early Monday morning from a week in Southern California, where they went 3-0 and were applauded by their head coach for being further along than he expected two weeks into training camp.

That hasn’t stopped Steve Kerr from continuing to tinker with his lineup. Harrison Barnes replaced Andre Iguodala in the starting lineup for Sunday’s 41-point preseason win over the Lakers, and the new-look rotation just might stick for a while.

The move accomplishes two major things: First, it gets Barnes into the starting five, in which he thrived in the 2013 playoffs. Second, it allows Iguodala to act as a backup ball distributor until Shaun Livingston returns from toe surgery — a timeline that Kerr believes could stretch a week or two into the regular season.

Read it here: http://www.sfgate.com/warriors/article/Role-switches-for-Warriors-duo-produce-5820333.php

And, the same subject, covered by Drew Garrison (SBNation) here: http://www.sbnation.com/nba/2014/10/14/6971291/golden-state-warriors-andre-iguodala-bench-steve-kerr

– Harrison Barnes Scouting Report (from Rafael Uehara, BBall Breakdown):

” As a rookie, Harrison Barnes had a promising season as an important part of a Golden State Warriors team that was tied 2-2 with the San Antonio Spurs heading into game five of the Western Conference semifinals. However, be it because of Andre Iguodala’s addition changing his role or some other unknown reason, Barnes’s second season was a comparative disaster. Other than on-ball defense and transition scoring — aspects he can be easily effective in due to his physical profile and by playing hard — Barnes was found wanting in all other areas of his game.

There was a big difference in the way in which he was used. Barnes spent 1318 of his 2058 minutes in his first season in five-man lineups that had all of Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and David Lee in them. Once the Warriors acquired Iguodala, however, head coach Mark Jackson installed the veteran in Barnes’s place and designated the 21-year-old as the leader of his second unit. A second unit is a mostly outdated concept, as it is now widely understood that the best way to manage your rotation is by staggering minutes in order to always have one of your best players on the court and limit the drop-off in production once you substitute. Jackson, however, was not much of a forward thinker in that department.”

Read it here: http://bballbreakdown.com/2014/10/12/harrison-barnes-scouting-report/

And Harrison Barnes Q & A at nba.com: http://www.nba.com/warriors/news/media-day-qa-harrison-barnes

– Jarrett Jack finds ‘new beginning’ in Brooklyn (from Mike Mazzeo, EspnNewYork):

” During the 2012-13 playoffs, Jarrett Jack was unstoppable.

He averaged 17.2 points and 4.7 assists in 35.5 minutes per game for the Golden State Warriors while shooting 50.6 percent from the field. The 12-game stretch represented the best stretch of basketball Jack has played during his 10-year career.

He parlayed that postseason success into a four-year, $25 million contract with the Cleveland Cavaliers, but struggled to produce on a young team which quickly found itself in rebuilding mode.
The Nets, who coveted Jack dating back to last season’s trade deadline, acquired him in a three-way deal over the summer — which enabled Cleveland to bring back superstar LeBron James with its extra cap space — with the hope that he can rediscover his sparkplug scoring ways off their bench.

Jack believes he’s primed to have a big year in Brooklyn. “No question,” he said. “With the combination of the system and then the players that draw so much attention themselves, it allows opportunities for all of us to be successful.””

Read it here: http://espn.go.com/blog/new-york/brooklyn-nets/post/_/id/20774/jack-finds-new-beginning-in-brooklyn

– Replacing Bradley Beal will be a team effort for Washington Wizards (from Jorge Castillo, Washington Post):

Read it here: http://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/wizards/replacing-bradley-beal-will-be-a-team-effort-for-washington-wizards/2014/10/13/9f714c1e-5319-11e4-892e-602188e70e9c_story.html

– Bulls’ Tom Thibodeau envious of Spurs’ model   (from Mark Strotman, csnchicago.com):

” A main theme of Tom Thibodeau’s messages to his team this preseason has been preparing, practicing and playing as if it were the regular season.

And the way the Bulls head coach sees it, if the defending champions are doing it, it’s probably a good idea to follow suit.

“I’m watching San Antonio and they’re going after it,” Thibodeau said prior to the Bulls’ Monday night contest against the Denver Nuggets. “(Tony) Parker, (Tim) Duncan are playing huge minutes right off the start. I think that’s a sign of their readiness to start the season.”

Read it here: http://www.csnchicago.com/bulls/bulls-tom-thibodeau-envious-spurs-model

– Bulls, Nuggets draft-night trade paying off for both sides  (from Mike Singer, csnchicago.com):

” There’s only been a small sample size, but the draft-night trade between the Bulls and Nuggets has seen positive returns for both parties.

The Bulls acquired Doug McDermott, the 11th pick, in exchange for Nos. 16 and 19, which became 6-foot-11 center Jusuf Nurkic and Michigan State guard Gary Harris. When Harris was chosen at No. 19, he said he already knew that he was headed to the Nuggets, despite wearing a Bulls hat as he crossed the stage.”

Read it here: http://www.csnchicago.com/bulls/bulls-nuggets-draft-night-trade-paying-both-sides

– Payton Continues to Show Plenty of Promise (from John Denton, nba.com/magic)

” In a matter of seconds on Monday night, rookie Elfrid Payton showed off the rare combination of skills that made the Orlando Magic fall in love with him in last June’s NBA Draft and eagerly anticipate his future.

However, in a game-turning fourth quarter, Payton’s strong start to the night was undone when he was forced to stomach a hearty taste of reality.

It is merely the preseason and plenty of growing pains are undoubtedly ahead, but Payton showed promise in the first start of his professional career. If there were any nerves, the 20-year-old didn’t show any in the Magic’s 99-97 loss to the Hornets at Time Warner Cable Arena.”

Read it here: http://www.nba.com/magic/payton-continues-show-plenty-promise

– The Playmaking of Shabazz Napier and James Ennis  (from Couper Moorhead, heat.com):

” Youth with potential is a great thing to have in any context. But as soon as that youth is on your roster, the discovery process begins.

What does this potential mean?

How likely is this player to realize it?

From afar, two of Miami’s rookies might appear to fit into fairly typical molds. James Ennis the hyper-athletic wing who slashes to the rim and finishes on the break, and Shabazz Napier the super-quick point guard who makes a living scoring off the dribble. With enough efficiency and effectiveness, each is a useful player type to have in a rotation, particularly in combination with young, energized legs.

Just three games in their first preseason, however, it’s far too early to start worrying about slotting either player into pre-defined roles. This is especially true when each has already shown a more complete skillset than is to be expected in the early hours of the league’s marathon season, and part of that arsenal includes one of the most valuable, yet underrated, skills in the game: passing.”

Read it here: http://www.nba.com/heat/newsrecap/more-passing-grades

– Blazers’ Matthews enters final year of his contract (from Eric Gundersen, columbian.com):

” Nicolas Batum said Matthews’ defense against James Harden, who shot 37 percent against Portland in the six-game series, was “unbelievable,” saying he was the “maybe the best defender in the NBA” during the series.

While Portland’s shooting guard isn’t focused on winning NBA honors like being selected to the All-Defensive team, he’s certainly not bashful about his place in the league.

“I’m never going to be the type that gets gaudy numbers to make an All-Defensive team,” said Matthews before getting to his case.

“Do I think I’m All-Defense? Absolutely. I think I’m the best two-way two-guard in the NBA. But I feel like we need to be a good defensive team within the scheme of the game. We’re not out there gambling, trying to reach and get steals. That would put us in a bind if I don’t get it,” Matthews said.”

Read it here: http://www.columbian.com/news/2014/oct/13/blazers-matthews-enters-final-year-of-his-contract/

– Back at the Garden, a Different Knicks Team Is in Search of Chemistry (from Scott Cacciola, NYTimes):

” Fisher reiterated that he was not focusing on wins and losses. The preseason, he said, is an opportunity for him to experiment with lineups and rotations, and for the players to unearth some chemistry.”

Read it here: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/14/sports/basketball/back-at-the-garden-a-different-knicks-team-is-in-search-of-chemistry.html

– Rookie Rodney Hood and Utah Jazz have plenty of reasons to smile in his big debut (from Jody Genessy, Deseret News):

” Hood, whose birthday is Oct. 20, was terrific in his first taste of NBA action, which included his first minutes of the exhibition season and his first start because of a new injury to Alec Burks (right shoulder bruise).

“Clearly,” Jazz coach Quin Snyder said, “he had an impact on the game with his ability to space the floor.”

Read it here: http://www.deseretnews.com/article/865613075/Rookie-Rodney-Hood-and-Utah-Jazz-have-plenty-of-reasons-to-smile-in-his-big-debut.html

– Derrick Rose shows stretches of old self in Bulls win  (from Mark Strotman, csnchicago.com):

” It’s not all back for Derrick Rose, but the glimpses are becoming more frequent.

If the Bulls point guard showed flashes of his old self in the preseason opener a week ago and showed glimpses in a pair of games last week, it’s fair to say that Rose has graduated to showing stretches of his former self following his performance in Monday’s 110-90 win over the Nuggets.”

Read and view it here: http://www.csnchicago.com/bulls/derrick-rose-shows-stretches-old-self-bulls-win

– Bulls’ Jimmy Butler: ‘I’m not even supposed to be in the NBA’  (from Mike Singer, csnchicago.com):

” Jimmy Butler has always been a menace on the defensive end, but the fourth-year guard is starting to realize his immense potential on the offensive end as well. ”

Read it here: http://www.csnchicago.com/bulls/bulls-jimmy-butler-im-not-even-supposed-be-nba

– How Will Paul Pierce Fit in Washington? (from Bobby Karalla, BBall Breakdown):

Read it here” http://bballbreakdown.com/2014/10/08/how-will-paul-pierce-fit-in-washington/

– Michael Jordan becoming great owner, too, for Hornets (from Sam Amick, USA Today):

” As Michael Jordan knows better than anyone from his legendary playing days, one good season does not a reputation make.

Respect and credibility are built over time, with one’s career a compilation of the good, the bad and — as had been the case in Jordan’s post-playing life as an owner and executive — the ugly.

But nearly 15 years after his management-ownership career began with the Washington Wizards, has Jordan finally become an effective boss? It’s certainly starting to seem that way.”

Read it here: http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nba/hornets/2014/10/14/michael-jordan-charlotte-ownership-rich-cho-steve-clifford-bobcats-name-change/17237095/

Additional player updates worth perusing:

– Giannis Antetokuonmpo:  http://www.jsonline.com/blogs/sports/279042341.html

– Jusuf Nurkic: http://www.roundballminingcompany.com/2014/10/14/image-breakdown-nurkics-15-point-outbreak-vs-bulls/

– Jarnell Stokes: http://www.3sob.com/2014/october-2014/stoked-for-stokes/19081/

– Nikola Mirotic:  http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2229499-early-lessons-from-nikola-mirotics-preseason-with-chicago-bulls

– Eric Gordon:  http://www.nola.com/pelicans/index.ssf/2014/10/guard_eric_gordon_using_the_pr.html

– Jordan Clarkson/Jabari Brown: http://www.ocregister.com/articles/clarkson-638393-brown-season.html

– Mo Williams: http://www.startribune.com/sports/wolves/279084601.html

QOTD (from Turkish coach Dusan Ivkovic) re: the global problem in European basketball of talent moving to the NBA: ” I coached many players who succeeded in the NBA because they left at the right moment, with maturity and experience. Now, many leave too young and unprepared, then come back worse players than they when they left. They wasted time by being impatient.”

Today’s Top NBA Preseason Stories

– Nets could be more dynamic on offense under Lionel Hollins (from Mike Mazzeo, ESPNNewYork):

” Since becoming a Net in February 2011, Williams has shown flashes of being the player he was in Utah. But injuries, confidence issues and systems unfit for his style of play have prevented that from happening on a consistent basis.

So how will this new system change all that?

To figure that out, we enlisted the help of a former NBA scout. While the Nets have yet to play a preseason game, the scout has a thorough knowledge of X’s and O’s and watched Hollins coach in Memphis and Sloan coach in Utah.

This is an analysis on what could happen based on what has happened before.”

Read it here: http://espn.go.com/blog/new-york/brooklyn-nets/post/_/id/20682/nets-could-be-more-dynamic-on-offense-under-lionel-hollins

The Right Kind of Mistakes: Passing TOs & Offensive Efficiency (from Dan Clayton, saltcityhoops.com):

” How much does Quin Snyder want to play with the pass? He’d rather see passing mistakes than mistake-free isolation plays.

“Sometimes trying to make those passes doesn’t always give you the results you want right away,” the Jazz head coach said to SCH’s Andy Larsen, referring to a sloppy day of passing in practice. “(But) I like the unselfishness. I’d rather have us trying to make the right play and needing to get better at it than taking the other road and playing more as individuals.”

Read it here: http://saltcityhoops.com/the-right-kind-of-mistakes-passing-tos-offensive-efficiency/

– Jazz losses may stack up, but hopelessness won’t  (from Gordon Monson, sltrib.com):

” The Jazz kind of blew it a season ago. They had a leftover coach, a Jerry Sloan disciple, who a lot of people liked on a personal level in the last year of his deal who wasn’t on the same page as management. He was trying to save his job while the higher-ups were attempting to build for the future.

It was a contradiction.

That’s why guys like Richard Jefferson and Marvin Williams got as much time as they did, at the expense of younger players.

Those days are gone.”

Read it here:  http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/jazz/58504918-87/jazz-season-losses-players.html.csp

– Bruno Caboclo finding his fit with Toronto Raptors (from Josh Rubin, the star.com):

” Caboclo had his Raptors debut Tuesday night in 15 minutes of pre-season action against the Sacramento Kings. While he wasn’t a huge factor in Toronto’s 113-106 road loss, he still showed flashes of why the team took him 20th overall in this past summer’s NBA draft. Caboclo scored six points, nailing his first two three-point attempts. (He also took a nasty tumble after going up for a rebound.)

In halting but already-improved English, a smiling Caboclo said Thursday that he enjoyed his first taste of action, and that he wasn’t overwhelmed.

“It’s different, but I feel OK. It’s normal,” said Caboclo.”

Read it here: http://www.thestar.com/sports/raptors/2014/10/09/bruno_caboclo_finding_his_fit_with_toronto_raptors.html

From TSN.ca:  http://www.tsn.ca/this-season-will-be-about-learning-for-raptors-rookie-caboclo-1.103246

And from Stephen Brotherston at Pro BBall Report: http://probballreport.com/raptors-bruno-caboclo-is-not-2-years-away-from-2-years-away/

– Raptors want Jonas Valanciunas to become best defender in the league (from Eric Koreen, Nationalpost.com):

“One of the big focuses for us to advance in the playoffs is that he’s got to be the best rim protector — block shots, [legal] vertical [jumps] and being able to get over to that weak side early on any [dribble] penetration,” said Bill Bayno, the Raptors assistant coach who has worked extensively with Valanciunas. “At times he was great at it last year. … But we want it every night, 82 games.”

By “best,” one assumes that Bayno meant he wants Valanciunas to be the best help defender he can be.

“Best in the league,” Bayno clarifies. “We want him to be No. 1 in the NBA.”

Read it here: http://sports.nationalpost.com/2014/10/09/toronto-raptors-want-jonas-valanciunas-to-become-best-defender-in-the-league-we-want-that-as-a-goal/

– Fredette is off to a strong start in the preseason (from Darrell Williams, theadvocate.com):

” Guard Jimmer Fredette came to the New Orleans Pelicans with a lot to prove.

A good outside shooter, it’s sometimes difficult for him to get his shot off against defenders. And playing defense hasn’t exactly been his forte. On a team loaded with guards, his chances of making the Pelicans certainly was not a lock.

But after three preseason games, Fredette is staking his claim by what he does best. Having shown great range during a stellar college career at BYU, Fredette has shot 56.0 percent (14-of-25), including 53.8 percent (7-of-13) on 3-point attempts.

“There is not a lot of guaranteed things in this league,” Fredette said after Thursday morning’s practice. “You just need to go out there and work for your spot, especially as a free agent coming in. You have to work as hard as you can and make a name for yourself right away, try to establish yourself and what you’re going to do.””

Read it here: http://theadvocate.com/sports/pelicans/10486058-148/pelicans-jimmer-fredette-is-off

And from Nakia Hogan, nola.com:   http://www.nola.com/pelicans/index.ssf/2014/10/jimmer_fredettes_defense_will.html

– Backup role nothing new for Heat’s Shannon Brown (from Shandel Richardson, sun-sentinel.com):

” Shannon Brown is no stranger to the role.

Far from it.

So forgive him if he confidently snaps back to a question asking if he’s ready to fill the position as backup to Miami Heat guard Dwyane Wade.

Not a problem, says Brown. He’s done it before, and had success.

“If you look at my career, I got a chance to back up Kobe (Bryant),” Brown said Tuesday. “I just approach it every day as trying to get better. Dwyane is a great person to learn from, especially because he’s been here his whole career. He has three championships here. He knows what it takes to go out there and get the job done. I watch him and see how he does things.””

Read it here: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sports/miami-heat/fl-heat-main-1001-20140930-story.html

– Thunder: Pace and Tempo Key for Offense ( from Nick Gallo, nba.com/thunder):

“That’s something that is really important to how we play – pace and our tempo offensively and defensively,” Telfair said. “Those are the types of things that win games.”

Running up and down the floor just for the sake of racking up possessions and shots at the rim isn’t exactly the type of pace the Thunder is interested in generating. Instead, up-tempo basketball means putting the defense in uncomfortable positions because of execution and intelligence. Pitch-ahead passes along with well-timed and quick outlet passes can help the Thunder get across half-court early in the shot clock, leaving the team plenty of time to run multiple different sets. Those smart, early looks can also catch the defense sleeping and result in easy or uncontested looks at the rim.

“The first thing we’re taught is to set our defense,” Telfair said. “If we’re playing with a pace where we’re kicking the ball up and we’re always on the attack, it doesn’t matter which guy it is that we kick the ball up to. It just puts a lot of pressure on the defense to get back.””

Read it here: http://www.nba.com/thunder/trainingcamp_141009

– Footwork, balance, and a wide base are the keys to a consistent James Young (from Kevin O’Connor, celticsblog.com):

” According to (Coach Brad) Stevens, Young just needs to have a wider base on his jump shot, but he doesn’t want him to make too many drastic changes.

“When you’ve got a guy that’s that good of a shooter the worst thing you can do is get too mechanical,” coach Stevens explained. “You don’t want it him to become mechanical, he’s as fluid as fluid gets. So, the only thing that I’ve told James is have the right, appropriate wide base every time he catches it.”

Read it here: http://www.celticsblog.com/2014/10/9/6927607/footwork-balance-and-a-wide-base-are-the-keys-to-a-consistent-james-young-boston-celtics-nba

– How Defensively Dominant Can Boston Celtics Backcourt Be? (from Michael Pina, Bleacher Report):

The Boston Celtics head into the 2014-15 regular season drowning in deficiency: so much weakness, such low expectations. But one bright spot is their backcourt and, more specifically, how outright feared it could be on defense.

There are 2.5 major reasons why: Avery Bradley, Marcus Smart and Rajon Rondo. Despite being the best all-around basketball player (by far) of the three, Rondo resides as third in the pecking order here because his once-tenacious defensive tendencies have waned in recent years. 

Because he’s a human being, and human beings tend to run out of energy, Rondo is also burdened with far more responsibility on offense than the other two and can’t engage the same way they can. Nonetheless, the Smart-Bradley duo is a horror show.

With Rondo sidelined due to a broken hand, Smart and Bradley were unleashed in Boston’s two preseason contests as the starting backcourt, hounding their assignments the entire length of the floor, transforming into their shadow’s shadow off the ball, contesting every single shot and making life a general nightmare.

Read and view it here: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2226310-how-defensively-dominant-can-boston-celtics-backcourt-be

– Can the Celtics play top-10 defense? (from Chris Forsberg, ESPNBoston.com):

” Back in late August, Avery Bradley suggested that the Boston Celtics had potential to be a top-10 defense in the upcoming season. The notion was met with expected skepticism — or laughed off completely — by pundits who were quick to note the team’s defensive regression to close out the 2013-14 campaign.

Boston did little to address its need for a rim protector this offseason and, still in rebuilding mode, it seemed unlikely that these Celtics would be among the defensive elite.

But two games into the exhibition season, it’s worth revisiting Bradley’s proclamation.”

Read it here: http://espn.go.com/boston/nba/story/_/id/11672910/can-boston-celtics-top-10-defense

– Steve Blake brings a new unselfish style to Trail Blazers’ bench (from Joe Freeman, oregonian.com):

” “He’s one of those guys where you can put him with any team in the league and he’ll play well,” Aldridge said. “He’s a very unselfish guy. He moves the ball. He makes plays for everybody else. When you have a guy like that, it’s easy to play with him.”

“We won’t be comparing him to Mo all year, but Mo came in to score and he created offense,” Blazers coach Terry Stotts said. “And that’s how he helped off the bench. Steve, I think, will be a very good defender. He’ll run the offense. He’ll get the ball where it’s supposed to be on offense. He’ll set up players. When he’s dribbling, they’re moving to open spots because they know he’s looking to find somebody. He’s not going to provide the scoring that Mo did, but I think he’ll provide other things.”

Read it here:  http://www.oregonlive.com/blazers/index.ssf/2014/10/steve_blake_gives_trail_blazers_a_new_unselfish_st.html

– Despite size, Brand back to guard traditional centers (from Chris Vivlamore, myajc.com):

” The Hawks, despite a roster with six other big men, needed someone capable of guarding the more traditional centers in the league. So, despite interest from as many as six other teams, Brand re-signed with the Hawks in the offseason.

The Hawks have Al Horford back as their starting center after he missed most of last season with a torn right pectoral muscle. The team has five other big men similar in their ability to play away from the basket. Although Brand is listed at 6-foot-9 and 254 pounds, his years of experience help him bang in the post with much bigger opponents.

“With Al back, I’m sure my minutes will shrink,” Brand said. “It will be more situational, but I don’t mind that. The game has changed over the years. There are less of those plodding big men in the post. I’m here to guard those guys.”

Read it here: http://www.myajc.com/news/sports/despite-size-brand-back-to-guard-traditional-cente/nhfq9/

– Chris Vivlamore (AJC.com) asked Hawks coach Mike Budenholzer the other day for a tangible difference between his first two camps. Budenolzer’s response:

“The most tangible thing that people can see on the court is how they play,” Budenholzer said. “They are playing instinctively. The ball is moving. They are doing things. We want to create a way to play and then they make plans within that. Obviously, there is some structure and spacing is important but when they start doing things instinctively you know you are there. I can see that tangibly. I can feel that they are just playing instinctively. I think we got to that at some point during the season but we were definitely not there at this stage last year.”

 – How the Milwaukee Bucks Can Become the NBA’s Most Intriguing Rebuild (from Grant Hughes, Bleacher report):

Read and view it here: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2226120-how-the-milwaukee-bucks-can-become-the-nbas-most-intriguing-rebuild

– Steph Curry Q & A (from NBA.com/warriors):

Read it here: http://www.nba.com/warriors/news/media-day-qa-stephen-curry

The Blake Griffin Post Up Problem (from Coach Nick, BBall Breakdown):

” Coach Nick breaks down Blake Griffin’s strange footwork in the post, and how it is effective in specific places and not so much in others.”

Read and view it here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wt-ykC6JQOM&feature=youtu.be&a

– Detroit Pistons find long-range threat can be effective even when errant (from David Mayo, mlive.com):

Read it here: http://www.mlive.com/pistons/index.ssf/2014/10/detroit_pistons_find_long-rang.html

(BI note:  The point in the headline applies as long as it isn’t Josh Smith firing away from beyond the arc.  SVG seems to have a good plan for dealing with last year’s disaster in that respect.)

– Van Gundy forced to play lineup catch-up (from Dan Feldman, Detroit Free Press):

” Stan Van Gundy is making up for lost time.

It’s a shame that he must, but it’s also why he has a job.

Last season, the Pistons started Josh Smith, Greg Monroe and Andre Drummond and gave that trio heavy minutes, even though the three bigs struggled to play together. The Pistons stunk because of it, though not enough to keep their top-eight-protected first-round pick. The strategy essentially cost Joe Dumars, Maurice Cheeks and John Loyer their jobs.

All the while, none of the three decision makers ensured that two of the three bigs played enough without the third — pairings that all worked.

Last season, the Pistons were outscored by 3.9 points per 100 possessions, according to nbawowy.com. However, when they played exactly two of their big three, they outscored their opponents. It didn’t even matter which two, just as long as it was two without the third.”

Read it here: http://www.freep.com/story/sports/nba/pistons/2014/10/10/detroit-pistons-pistonpowered/17024945/

– Kobe, MJ, Pippen told Melo to Be Patient in Triangle  (from The Hoop Doctors):

” …(I)f the Knicks’ first preseason bout against the Boston Celtics was any indication, they have a ways to go.

The ball kept moving, and everyone, including Anthony, made conscious effort to make the unselfish play. But they seldom made the right play. Sometimes they were passing too much. Most of the time, they were just out of sync. Once players caught passes, they didn’t seem to understand the off-ball movements of their teammates. Passes were to sent to places players weren’t. Players were visibly rattled and confused by the positioning of their teammates. It was, in all its 28-turnover glory, offensive chaos.

Things aren’t suddenly going to get better, either. And once they do, the Knicks have to worry about roster turnover. Signing new players this summer when they have cap space means they have to start the process all over again. It might be slightly easier since guys like Melo will have a year of triangle basketball under their belt, but the Knicks are due for an organic overhaul. Not to mention that one year in the triangle isn’t much.

So yes, Kobe, Pippen and MJ were right: Anthony needs to be patient.

Not just with his individual role inside the Knicks’ system, but with the results said system is supposed to generate over time.”

Read it here: http://bleacherreport.com/tb/df7JJ

(BI note: As Phil Jackson wrote in one of is books: “There’s no percentage in trying to push the river or speed up the harvest.  The farmer who’s so eager to help his crops grow that he slips out at night and tugs on the shoots inevitably ends up going hungry.”)

– Stuckey Ready for Fresh Start, New Identity (from Mark Monteith, NBA.com):

” Seven seasons into his NBA career, Rodney Stuckey’s role and reputation remain murkier than ever.

Is he a starter or reserve?

A point guard or a shooting guard?

A good guy or a troublemaker?

The case could be made for any of the above, and in fact already has been in Detroit, where Stuckey contributed to – or perhaps merely survived – a most peculiar set of circumstances.”

Read it here: http://www.nba.com/pacers/news/stuckey-ready-fresh-start-new-identity

Today’s Top NBA Preseason Notes and More

– Points of emphasis for NBA officials (from Darnell Mayberry, newsok.com):

” Illegal screens, traveling violations and the rule of verticality are the three points of emphasis the league has targeted in its continued push to improve the way the game is played.”

Read it here: http://newsok.com/oklahoma-city-thunder-notebook-points-of-emphasis-for-nba-officials-discussed-before-thunder-nuggets-game/article/5349876/

– Blake Griffin’s new jump shot should terrify the NBA (from Mike Prada, SBNation):

” The Clippers’ star hit his first six jump shots in the team’s opening preseason game, and a subtle change in his shooting motion explains why.”

Read and view it here: http://www.sbnation.com/2014/10/8/6946249/blake-griffin-jumper-clippers-breakdown

– Brett Brown sees daylight at end of 76ers’ dark tunnel (from Paul Flannery, SBNation)

” It may be years before the Philadelphia 76ers are able to compete with the rest of the NBA, but their coach has stayed optimistic through the long process. ”

Read it here: http://www.sbnation.com/nba/2014/10/8/6943417/brett-brown-philadelphia-76ers-coach-rebuild

– Dante Exum’s path to the NBA (from Aaron Falk, Salt Lake Tribune):

Read it here: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/jazz/58501347-87/exum-jazz-team-guard.html.csp

– Utah Jazz: Horns First Option And Attack At The 45 (from Clint Peterson, purpleandblues.com):

” In their preseason opener against the Portland Trail Blazers we saw many of the horns sets — and its variations — of the all-new-to-Utah offense that were put into place by Quin Snyder that we’ve been talking about quite a bit about here at PnB.

Since this is the first time the Jazz have ever used horns as their primary offensive set we’ll be doing a series of posts to familiarize you with some of its many options, as well as taking a look at the other offensive sets Snyder is using.

It goes without saying that it’s also relatively new to many of the Jazzmen on the roster, so will take some time to become automatic as a unit. Nevertheless, they ran some very successful sets in their first official outing of the preseason.”

Read and view it here: http://purpleandblues.com/2014/10/08/utah-jazz-horns-sets-variations/

Nik Stauskas Exhibit Rare Offensive Knack, Comfort In Preseason (from Jack Winter, dimemag.com):

“O Canada! Hours after the Minnesota Timberwolves’ Andrew Wiggins wowed in his preseason debut, fellow countryman Nik Stauskas was similarly impressive in his second outing with the Sacramento Kings. Showing off the effortless shooting stroke and all-around offensive knack that made him a mid-lottery pick, Stauskas appeared a seasoned vet in the Kings’ exhibition win last night against the Toronto Raptors, scoring 13 points on just six shot attempts during a team-high 26 minutes of court-time.

Stauskas went 2-2 from deep last night, a wholly unsurprising development. He’s an absolutely breathtaking shooter, blessed with a quick, compact release and supreme balance that makes him a threat from almost anywhere in the halfcourt. Of the many reasons why we were more bullish on Stauskas than most, though, was his innate ability to move without the ball and underrated merit as a playmaker in his two years spent at Michigan.”

Read and view it here: http://dimemag.com/2014/10/video-nik-stauskas-exhibits-rare-offensive-knack-comfort-in-preseason/

– The Bulls Got Their Offensive Injection, But Will It Work? (from Moroton Stig Jense, BBall Breakdown):

” Despite their best efforts, of course, the Bulls did not get Anthony. Ultimately, they ended up with the aforementioned Gasol and Mirotic, alongside draftee Doug McDermott and free agent Aaron Brooks. As far as back-up plans goes, this was as good of a haul as was attainable.”

Read and view it here: http://bballbreakdown.com/2014/10/08/the-bulls-got-their-offensive-injection-but-will-it-work/

– Gasol, Bulls Are Confident Entering Season (from Alex Kennedy, Basketball Insiders):

Read it here: http://www.basketballinsiders.com/nba-pm-gasol-bulls-are-confident-entering-season/

– OKC: Five quick observations (from Anthony Slater, newsok.com):

Read Anthony’s ” five quick observations from the Thunder’s 114-101 preseason loss in Denver on Wednesday night” here: http://newsok.com/five-observations-from-the-thunders-loss-in-denver/article/5350026

– Andrew Bogut: Excited to commence his 10th season (from Andrew Bogut, Sportal.au.com):

” In his latest blog for NBA Australia, Golden State’s Australian centre Andrew Bogut looks back at his NBA career to date, and looks forward to his 10th season in the league.”

Read it here: http://www.sportal.com.au/nba/andrew-bogut-excited-to-commence-his-10th-season/hrmtfrnja2m41rl9gpds1f5te

– Detroit Pistons’ big-three starting rotation (from David Mayo, MLive.com):

” Stan Van Gundy hadn’t decided Wednesday how he might alter his perimeter rotation in the days ahead, but the intriguing decision of how to handle his big men will allow everyone equal opportunity in the days ahead, he said.”

Read it here: http://www.mlive.com/pistons/index.ssf/2014/10/detroit_pistons_big-three_rota.html

– How Will Paul Pierce Fit in Washington? (from Bobby Karalla, BBall Breakdwon):

” Paul Pierce’s term in Washington has technically started, depending on the significance you place on preseason games. As their biggest summer acquisition, he may be the key to the season, a season in which the Wizards appear poised to make a push.

After they lost Trevor Ariza to the Houston Rockets in the summer, Washington needed to add a wing who could at least in part provide the production Ariza contributed to last season’s surprisingly competitive team. Pierce, they deemed, was it. was almost lost among all the big-name small forwards on the market this summer – LeBron, Hayward, Parsons, etc – but his acquisition signaled that Washington is in this thing right here, right now.

The Wizards are going for it, and why not? There’s so much parity in the Eastern Conference beyond the Cavaliers and (maybe) Bulls that all it takes is getting hot for two weeks in May and, boom, you’re in the Conference Finals. Pierce has been there a million times, but can he bring the magic?

The big question which lingered after Pierce signed was just exactly how he was going to be deployed with the team.”

Read it here: http://bballbreakdown.com/2014/10/08/how-will-paul-pierce-fit-in-washington/

– How I’d fix the NBA (from Miles Wray, Hardwood Paroxysm):

“End the timeout scourge.”

Read it here: http://fansided.com/2014/10/08/hardwood-paroxysm-wed-fix-nba/5/