Tag Archives: Julius Randle

Regular Season Day 4: NBA’s Best Stories

– Why do the Spurs win when shorthanded? It’s as simple as A-B-C (from Michael Erler, poundingtherock.com):

” The first person to get a ring was assistant Jim Boylen, not trainer Will Sevening. A little unusual, okay, but then came… General Manager R.C. Buford? Huh? What’s going on here? And then back to Chip Engelland. Then Chad Forcier.

And you realize they’re just going alphabetical for the coaching staff and front office. The order got to Pop eventually, but — and this is important — he wasn’t the final one. From him it went to Sevening and finally to Ime Udoka. None placed in any order of hierarchy or salary or importance.

Then came the players and the only question in my mind was whether Ginobili or Tony Parker would have the penultimate position ahead of Tim Duncan. I figured Leonard would be fourth-to-last in the traditional worst-to-best pecking order and I was just curious who would be second and third. The line started off with Jeff Ayres when I thought it would be Austin Daye but then when Marco Belinelli was the second one up, I realized it was the same alphabetical order for the players too, with Duncan getting his fifth ring after Boris Diaw and before Ginobili. For the record, Tiago Splitter got the final ring.

That’s the reason the Spurs win games when they’re missing players. Because they’re all treated
as equal cogs in the machine, none more vital than the other.”
shorthanded-its-as-simple-as-a-b-c
– Bulls and Cavs offer glimpse of East heavyweights (from Jeremy Wood, Sports Illustrated):
cleveland-cavaliers
– Too early to see the genius David Blatt will bring to LeBron, Cavaliers (from Jack McCallum,
Sports Illustrated):
”  So what will Blatt be able to do, or, more to the point, try to do?

• Play with pace. This seems simple, but NBA players, even great ones, sometimes especially great ones, tend to slow the ball down so they can be in control, reduce the variables that would keep them from getting the shot or controlling the action.

• Do myriad things with Kevin Love. Coaches drool when they get multi-talented big men — they are plenty of those in Europe, though not of Love’s caliber (or they’d be in the NBA) and there’s no better way to establish what Blatt calls “ball energy” than to move his big men in and out of the post. One thing he will do is encourage Love to sprint to the low box, not so much to score but to find open shooters when he gets it.

• Use more imaginative ways to get LeBron the ball, even if it ultimately leads to a familiar-looking isolation. Blatt was a master at that, using double weakside pindowns and misdirection, things like that.

• Spacing and movement. Every NBA team talks about those things, but the ones that succeed in achieving them have coaches who insist on them, talk about those principles every day. Blatt will be one of those.”

– Oklahoma City Thunder’s Defense Will Keep Them Alive (from Michael Pina, BBall Breakdown):
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– Damian Lillard, Trail Blazers look to find their way after loss to Sacramento Kings (from Joe
Freeman, oregonian.com):
“The Kings, much like the Thunder during the Blazers’ opening-night win on Wednesday, were
hell-bent on taking the ball out of Lillard’s hands and stifling the creativity and flair that make
Lillard electric. Every time he touched the ball, it seemed, the Kings’ big men aggressively
“showed” on pick and rolls, darting out from behind screens instead of sagging back and allowing
Lillard to dictate the play.

And as the Kings’ big men showed, their guards often added additional pressure, harassing Lillard with double-teams.

His only course of action throughout it all was to scramble and get rid of the ball, kicking it to the nearest teammate. It’s hardly the first time Lillard has encountered the defensive tactic, but it’s also rare that Lillard has been this out-of-sync over a two-game stretch, particularly with so many eyes watching. So far this season, Lillard has made just 7 of 23 shots (30 percent) and recorded seven assists.

So what’s next? Well, coach Terry Stotts and his staff will no doubt scheme around the defensive tactics, just as they’ve done in the past when Lillard has encountered this type of defensive tenacity.

Perhaps Lillard will have to hit his screening big man with a pass sooner when he’s blitzed, rather than waiting to navigate around the double-team. Or perhaps the Blazers can work the ball to Lillard using more handoffs, which would free him up to create in different ways. There are a host of counters.”

Read it here:  http://www.oregonlive.com/blazers/index.ssf/2014/11/damian_lillard_trail_blazers_look_to_find_their_wa.html

– Lakers empower Lin, and he responds (from Baxter Holmes, ESPNLosAngeles):

Read it here: http://espn.go.com/blog/los-angeles/lakers/post/_/id/40265/lakers-empower-lin-and-he-responds

– News from Friday’s NBA Action (from Stephen Babb, Bleacher Report):

Read and view it here: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2252085-suns-show-depth-is-their-secret-weapon-and-other-news-from-fridays-nba-action

– A new basketball generation comes of age in Canada (from Scott Howard-Cooper, nba.com):

” It was 1995. One expansion team began playing in Vancouver, the Grizzlies, and another debuted across the country in Toronto, the Raptors. The NBA was never the same.

Eighteen years later, in 2013, the No. 1 pick in the Draft, Anthony Bennett, was a Canadian. So was No. 1 in 2014, Andrew Wiggins. Several others from the Great White North arrived the same way, many as lottery choices: Kelly Olynyk, Nik Stauskas, Tyler Ennis and Dwight Powell. That was soon after Tristan Thompson went fourth in 2011 and Andrew Nicholson was the 19th selection of 2012.

Canada as an overnight basketball sensation is not so overnight. Sixteen, 17, 18, 19 years — that is no coincidence. It is exactly a generation of boys growing up with the NBA in their country.”

Read it here: http://www.nba.com/2014/news/features/scott_howard_cooper/11/01/international-influence-canada/

– Pelicans’ Austin Rivers welcomes what lies ahead (from Jimmy Smith, NOLA.com):

“There’s not that many players’ sons who play in the league,” Rivers said. “So I think it’s an honor. I think it’s special that I’ve been able to do so far what I’ve done. I’m just getting started. I haven’t scratched the surface yet. That’s how I look at it. As far as the scrutiny, I mean I could pick and point fingers, but you look at the top players and the scrutiny they get . . . . look at LeBron.

“For me to be able to whine about that would be kind of silly. I don’t even look at it at the end of the day. Everybody has their problems and issues. Guys who don’t have a famous last name, a lot of guys had to grow up in a rough area and make it out. I didn’t have to do that, but I had a last name and I had that burden. Everybody in life has their own burdens and that was mine. It hasn’t been anything.””

Read it here: http://www.nola.com/pelicans/index.ssf/2014/10/pelicans_austin_rivers_continu.html

– Breaking Down Russell Westbrook’s Hand Injury (from Jeff Stotts, instreetclothes.com):

Read it here: http://instreetclothes.com/2014/10/31/breaking-russell-westbrooks-hand-injury/

– Breaking Down Julius Randle’s Tibia Fracture (from Jeff Stotts, instreetclothes.com):

Read it here: http://instreetclothes.com/2014/10/29/breaking-julius-randles-tibia-fracture/

More player updates:

– Alex Len: http://www.brightsideofthesun.com/2014/11/1/7142041/phoenix-suns-alex-len-just-scratching-surface-of-potential

– JR Smith: http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/basketball/knicks/smith-shows-fits-triangle-finding-open-man-article-1.1995227

– Kentavious Caldwell-Pope: http://www.cbssports.com/nba/eye-on-basketball/24777975/qa-kentavious-caldwell-pope-hoping-for-a-fresh-start

– Channing Frye: http://www.nba.com/magic/frye-expects-be-more-effective-second-game-back

– Blake Griffin: http://www.nba.com/2014/news/features/scott_howard_cooper/11/01/blake-griffin-still-developing-game/index.html

– Al-Farouq Aminu:  http://www.star-telegram.com/2014/10/31/6248988/tyson-chandler-singing-aminus.html?storylink=addthis#.VFUJHoI_N7w.twitter

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/

Latest NBA Preseason Notes and News

– Paul Pierce, Wizards buy into Randy Wittman’s team defense concepts (from Jorge Castillo, Washington Post):

“One-on-one defense, that wins defensive awards,” Pierce said Monday when asked about the supposed defensive drop-off without Ariza, “but team defense wins championships.”

Read it here: http://tinyurl.com/kqxxrnq

– Larry Sanders embraces opportunity to be a bigger part of Bucks offense (from Matt Velazquez, jsonline.com);

‘ In the system head coach Jason Kidd is trying to implement, the Bucks’ big men are going to be central to the offense. Kidd called Sanders the anchor of the Bucks’ defense but said he and the team’s forwards are going to have more control on the offensive end of the floor.

“We’re using our bigs to be playmakers,” Kidd said. “Being the quarterback is a part of it. Understanding that we play through our bigs — it doesn’t have to be on the box, but on the elbow.

“A lot of times the bigs don’t have that opportunity, but I think here we believe they can make all the right plays.””

Read it here: http://www.jsonline.com/sports/bucks/larry-sanders-embraces-opportunity-to-be-a-bigger-part-of-bucks-offense-b99365526z1-278305241.html

– Could Shavlik Randolph Be This Year’s Surprise Player For The Phoenix Suns? (from Sean Sullivan, brightsideofthesun.com):

Shavlik Randolph is probably the most overlooked player on the Phoenix Suns roster.  On a team that is loaded with top-end talent, quality role players, and promising young rookies, Randolph is one of only a few veteran players who doesn’t seem to have a clearly defined role as of yet, or a guaranteed spot in the rotation.

But could that change?

Read it here: http://www.brightsideofthesun.com/2014/10/6/6915449/could-shavlik-randolph-phoenix-suns-surprise-player-miles-plumlee-alex-len

– Oklahoma City Thunder: What makes Andre Roberson the clear favorite to start at shooting guard? (from Anthony Slater, newsok.com):

” He was pesky on defense, a nightmare on the glass and blew up pick-and-rolls all over the court. Throughout the Thunder’s Blue and White scrimmage on Sunday, Roberson flashed the unique skill set the Thunder loves so much – the score-off-others, defense-first approach that makes him the clear favorite to land the vacant starting shooting guard spot.

But more eye-opening – in the scrimmage that likely served as his most impressive public showing since joining the Thunder – Roberson looked to have improved on his most glaring weakness. He’s a shooting guard that can’t shoot. Or, at least, hasn’t been able to.”

Read it here: http://newsok.com/what-makes-andre-roberson-the-clear-favorite-to-start-at-shooting-guard/article/5349175

– Short night for Rose; strong debut for Mirotic (from K. C. Johnson, Chicago Tribune):

” Championship habits are built as much in October as they are in June, so a deeper team will certainly help balance Thibodeau’s proven formula of relentless attention to detail and win-everything mentality with making sure players are ready for what, on paper, could be a long haul.

“I don’t subscribe to the notion that (exhibition) games aren’t important, regular-season games aren’t important,” Thibodeau said before the game. “If you study winning and study guys who have won big, everything is important.”

Read it here: http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/basketball/bulls/ct-web-bulls-wizards-spt-1007-20141007-story.html

and more from KC: http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/basketball/bulls/chi-nikola-mirotic-shines-in-bulls-debut-20141007-story.html

– Why Pau Gasol Perfectly Complements Derrick Rose and Joakim Noah (from Andres Montero, Bleacher Report):

” Gasol brings one of the most versatile offensive games along with his high IQ. He’s capable of scoring in a variety of ways, from pick-and-roll to mid-range jump shots to a deadly post-up game that very few can defend.

Rose has never had someone in the frontcourt with this skill set, and Joakim Noah, an avid passer, may have the perfect partner for some high-low action.”

Read and view it here: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2222622-why-pau-gasol-perfectly-complements-derrick-rose-and-joakim-noah

– With Purpose and Perspective, Nets’ Kevin Garnett Enters His 20th Season (from Andrew Keh, NYTimes.com):

” If it is indeed Garnett’s last season in the N.B.A., he has every intention of making it a more productive one than last season, when he averaged career lows in most statistical categories and shot only 44.1 percent from the field.

Garnett said he wanted to be more assertive on the offensive end this season. Last season, he made it clear that he knew he was not a primary scoring option on the team. But Garnett revealed during this preseason that his role last season, beyond simply being diminished, was not clearly defined in his mind. He said he did not always know how he fit into Coach Jason Kidd’s system.

His teammates noticed his hesitance.

“I think, last year, Kevin turned down a lot of shots,” said Deron Williams, the Nets’ starting point guard. “I think he felt like he was just trying to be a team guy. But being a team guy doesn’t mean turning down shots. I think he knows he can score the ball, he can be aggressive, and I think that’s what he’s going to look to do this year.””

Read it here: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/07/sports/basketball/with-purpose-and-perspective-nets-kevin-garnett-enters-his-20th-season.html

– Patience key for Nerlens Noel after rocky Sixers debut  (from Jimmy Toscano, csnphilly.com):

” One thing that is very clear with the Sixers and Noel: They are preaching patience. While Noel would love nothing more than to take the NBA by storm, it’s apparent that he’s a long ways away from that moment. Perhaps tonight was that wake-up call for him after getting his first real action against NBA players.

“I think this is going to take a while,” Brown said. “And it’s not an insult to anybody; it’s just reality. The summer league and NBA are worlds apart. They are worlds apart. And there has to be a real patience that we have, that I have with him, and we help him. He hasn’t played basketball for a long time, so any weight of expectation is unfair. It’s going to take time, and time he will get.”

Read it here: http://www.csnphilly.com/basketball-philadelphia-76ers/patience-key-nerlens-noel-after-rocky-sixers-debut

– Nerlens Noel a work in progress (from Sean Deveney, Sporting News):

“He leaves his feet, he gambles, he is above the rim whenever he wants to be, he jumps twice easy,” Brown said. “We want to tap into his athletic gifts where I am happy to turn this into a track meet, thinking we have an advantage. I think there is a quickness advantage at times where he can just catch and go on people and be at the rim in one dribble. I want to encourage him to be fearless on the weak side. I don’t care how many illegal defenses he gets called for. I don’t care. Those things, we want to give him the freedom to just let his athletic gifts shine and polish him up as he gets older and he understands NBA basketball a little bit better.”

Read it here: http://www.sportingnews.com/nba/story/2014-10-06/sixers-nerlens-noel-debuts-brett-brown-sam-hinkie-acl-kentucky?iadid=NBAFront_DL_2

– Despite its promise, Michael Carter-Williams is not focusing on the future (from Michael Kaskey-Blomain, philly.com):

“All I can do is control what I can control,” Michael Carter-Williams emphasized at Media Day last week. “I can’t control when [Joel] Embiid is ready to play. I can’t control when Dario [Saric] comes over here. My main focus has to be on the guys that are playing.”

Read it here: http://www.philly.com/philly/sports/sixers/Despite-its-promise-Michael-Carter-Williams-is-not-focusing-on-the-future-.html

– Strengthening the Weakside: The Key to the Blazers’ Defensive Improvement (from Willy Raedy, blazersedge.com):

” Last year, the Blazers’ weakside defense was well…rather weak. How can they go about strengthening it and what would that mean for the season?”

Read and view it here: http://www.blazersedge.com/2014/10/6/6897193/portland-trail-blazers-strengthening-weakside-defense-key-blazers-defensive-improvement

– Trail Blazers’ Meyers Leonard embracing ‘hybrid’ role as nontraditional center (from Joe Freeman, oregonian.com):

” It was hardly a headline-grabbing moment, but if you listened carefully enough to LaMarcus Aldridge speak last week during the Trail Blazers‘ media day, he divulged a not-so-little secret about the team’s center of the future.

He might not be a center at all.

“Meyers is a center?” Aldridge said, referring to Meyers Leonard, when a reporter inquired about the Blazers’ unique trio of centers. “I thought he was a power forward.”

As the No. 11 selection of the 2011 NBA Draft continues his evolution from project to productive big man, it’s becoming more and more clear that his mix of athleticism, shooting, speed and passing ability make him perfectly suited to be a “stretch four” rather than a traditional center. At the very least, Leonard is becoming a “hybrid” big man who can play a little power forward and a little center, depending on matchups and lineups.”

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

– Stan Van Gundy’s offensive and defensive priorities (from Sean_Corp, detroitbadboys.com):

” The preseason is less about wins and losses and more about preparing your team for the regular season. With that in mind, it might be a good idea to consider Van Gundy’s offensive and defensive priorities. They’re no secrets — they are emblazoned on giant signs at the Pistons’ practice facility at the Palace of Auburn Hills.”

Read and view it here: http://www.detroitbadboys.com/2014/10/7/6934673/pistons-stan-van-gundy-offense-defense-priorities

– Julius Randle’s Lakers preseason debut was successful (from Drew Garrison, silverscreenandroll.com):

Julius Randle’s NBA career began with a bang as the rookie wowed the crowd at Valley View Casino Center with a thunderous dunk. It wasn’t all peaches and cream for Randle during his debut in the Los Angeles Lakers preseason victory, but he looked like the NBA-ready product the Lakers gladly selected with the seventh-overall pick in this past summer.

Randle sat in the Lakers locker room soaking in his NBA debut while the media frenzy in San Diego hung onto Kobe Bryant’s every word following his successful return to the game of basketball just down the hall. It’s hard to imagine a better way for a rookie to start his career than a powerful dunk, and Randle said he felt “pretty comfortable after that,” following the Lakers’ win.  For fans, it was a sight for sore eyes in need of youthful athleticism. For Randle, it was a “great way to break the ice.”

Read it here: http://www.silverscreenandroll.com/2014/10/7/6933863/la-lakers-julius-randle-debut-preseason-denver-nuggets

– Kobe Bryant thrives in post in preseason opener vs. Denver (from Drew Garrison, insidesocal.com):

” Once Kobe Bryant stepped on the court here at the Valley View Court Casino, he did not wow any fans with any spectacular theatrics.

OK, so his mere presence and starting lineup introduction sparked the 10,108 Lakers fans to cheer him with with the same intensity as a playoff game. But Bryant didn’t follow that up with any jaw-dropping plays that made you wonder how he defied gravity.

Instead, Bryant followed up on a hiccup that entailed an airballed jumper near the top of the key with a vintage performance that will serve a blueprint on how he will try to play out at least the two years remaining on his contract. The Lakers’ 98-95 preseason victory over the Denver Nuggets featured Bryant scoring 13 points on 5 of 12 shooting and dishing out five assists in 21 minutes, all mostly off of the Lakers’ star primarily operating in the post.”

Read it here: http://www.insidesocal.com/lakers/2014/10/06/kobe-bryant-thrives-in-post-in-preseason-opener-vs-denver/

– The Hornets should run more (off-ball)  screens (from Chris Barnewell, atthehive.com):

” Last year, Charlotte was pass-happy. They always moved the ball, if for no other reason than not letting it sit in one place. This was useful in wearing out the defense and creating lanes, but the team still struggled at shooting. This season, when they move the ball, they’ll now be free to let it fly from deep, which adds another asset to their offense. But why stop there? If you’re going to add the 3-point shot to your team, then go all in with it. Start throwing some off ball screens into that offensive package.

Watching the team last year, they liked running pick and rolls, but they didn’t run too many off-ball screens. The main reason for this was defenses didn’t consider their shooters enough of a threat to fight through the screens. They almost always went under them. Sometimes this worked out by creating an open passing lane, but more often than not it was wasted away the shot clock.

Now, they have legitimate shooting threats, a brilliant coach, and a huge threat down low to pull defenses away from the perimeter. Charlotte can now start a screen bonanza.”

Read it here: http://www.atthehive.com/2014/10/7/6905401/the-hornets-should-run-more-screens

– The Cavs Have All the Makings of a Title Contender (from Zach Lowe, Grantland.com):

Read it here: http://grantland.com/the-triangle/nba-windows-the-cavs-have-all-the-makings-of-a-title-contender/

– Cavs GM David Griffin must become a miner of diamonds in the rough (from William Bohl, fearthesword.com):

” Acquiring stars makes team-building a much easier task, but in no way does the presence of so many high draft picks mean the front office can rest easy. Now that the core of the team is presumably locked in for the long haul, Cleveland’s brain trust must concentrate on surrounding them with adequate role players. The problem, of course, is that three large salaries means the team will have to get creative in order to fill out the roster with useful players.”

Read it here: http://www.fearthesword.com/2014/10/7/6915493/david-griffin-must-become-a-miner-of-diamonds-in-the-rough

– Celtics benefit by Evan Turner multi-tasking (from Mark Murphy, bostonherald.com):

” He was the No. 2 pick in the 2010 NBA draft, and at his best Evan Turner has made that distinction sparkle.

More often, though, Turner’s draft status has been used against him. He never settled into a comfortable role in Philadelphia. And when the Sixers traded him to Indiana last spring, Turner got lost in the NBA’s most public soap opera.

He returned to the floor with the Celtics in last night’s 98-78 exhibition win over his former Philadelphia team, and Turner didn’t have time for the old stigma.

“Right now, I just want to earn my minutes, baby,” he said. “Other than that, it’s a lot of stuff I keep to myself and maybe I’ll write it in an autobiography.”

Well, not really. That so-called “stuff” has a lot to do with not finding his way to this point in the greatest basketball league on earth. The Sixers, mired in a rebuild that’s even further down the standings than the Celtics, weren’t a good fit. Neither was Indiana.

Turner, who led the Celtics with an impressive showing of 15 points, 10 rebounds and six assists last night, is hoping for a clearer plan under coach Brad Stevens. A very early sample tells him that he’s in the right place.”

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

– Ten guys you might not know (but should) as 2014-15 nears (from David Aldridge, NBA.com):

Read it here: http://www.nba.com/2014/news/features/david_aldridge/10/06/morning-tip-10-lesser-known-players-to-watch-in-2014-15-nba-media-partnership-analysis-paul-pierce-question-and-answer/index.html

-Celticsblog.com is hosting previews from top bloggers for each team n the Association.

First up, are the blogger previews for the Central and Northwest Divisions.

You can check them out here:  http://www.celticsblog.com/2014/10/5/6913631/nba-previews-2014-central-and-northwest-divisions

– Has the NBA’s biometric data tracking boom gone too far? (from Eric Freeman, Yahoo Sports):

” For nearly a decade, NBA cognoscenti have argued about the usefulness of advanced statistical metrics like Player Efficiency Rating and Win Shares. Recent advancements in the last few years, though, have made both sides in those arguments look relatively conservative. New optical tracking systems such as SportVU and biometric tracking systems like Catapult have allowed teams to measure players in terms of the efficiency of their on-court movement and their levels of exertion during practice. Franchises have more information on their players than ever before, which theoretically allows them to identify problem areas, improve more rapidly, and avoid preventable injuries.

Yet the expanding popularity of these systems has raised important questions about the ethics of teams tracking players to this extent. In a new feature for ESPN the Magazine, Pablo S. Torre and Tom Haberstroh dig into the issues at play and where teams may choose to track players next. It’s not so much about the limits of knowledge as what teams shouldn’t be allowed to find in the first place”

Read it here: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nba-ball-dont-lie/has-the-nba-s-biometric-data-tracking-boom-gone-too-far-070039861.html

– How the NBA’s New TV Deal Could Blow Up the Salary Cap (from Zach Lowe, Grantland.com):

Read it here: http://grantland.com/the-triangle/nbas-new-tv-deal-blow-up-the-salary-cap/

– Ten Things To Know About The NBA’s New TV Deals (from Steve Kyler, Basketball Insiders):

Read it here: http://www.basketballinsiders.com/ten-things-to-know-about-the-nbas-new-tv-deals/

And for those with access to ESPN Insider:

– Examining & Debunking some of the hype spouting from training camps across NBA (from Amin Elhassan & Kevin Pelton):

Read it here: http://insider.espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/11654878/debating-carmelo-anthony-really-underrated-other-superlatives-nba