Tag Archives: Julius Randle

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– Is Kidd-Gilchrist’s shot fixed? ‘Well, it’s going in a lot more’ (from Rick Bonnell, Charlotte Observer):

” The question comes up weekly, daily, almost hourly whenever the Charlotte Hornets are discussed:

Will small forward Michael Kidd-Gilchrist ever have a reliable jump shot?

Kidd-Gilchrist, a third-season pro who turned 21 last week, would just as soon talk about the great condition he’s in entering training camp or his excitement over new teammates Lance Stephenson and Marvin Williams. But he knew the question was coming Monday and he was ready with an answer.

“Does it feel that different? Well, it’s going in a lot more,” Kidd-Gilchrist said with a big grin. “I believe in the process. I started in April and it feels great.”

shot-fixed.html
-How the Portland Trail Blazers Can Improve Their Defense (from Willy Raedy,
blazersedge.com):
” How might the Blazers go about improving their defense and how much improvement should we
expect? It all starts with the pick and roll”
defense-stats-video-weakside-transition-pick-roll

– As Trail Blazers’ training camp opens, CJ McCollum and Will Barton begin battle for rotation spot (from Joe Freeman, oregonlive.com):

” There was a heavy dose of kumbaya Monday in Tualatin, where the Trail Blazers opened a weeklong training camp with two workouts at the practice facility.

Wesley Matthews proclaimed that the Blazers’ were so far ahead of where they have been the last couple of seasons, “I feel like we’re in January right now.” LaMarcus Aldridge spent a chunk of his media availability praising the Blazers’ newest additions, Chris Kaman and Steve Blake. And owner Paul Allen, who watched the first practice while sitting courtside next to general manager Neil Olshey, was borderline giddy.

“There’s a great vibe around the team, I think, with the continuity, with the success we had last year,” Allen said after the Blazers’ morning workout. “I think we still feel like we’ve got more to prove.”

But lurking in the background behind all the glee was a fierce battle for playing time by two of the hungrier young players on the Blazers’ roster. The starting lineup is rock-solid. Kaman and Blake have essentially locked up backup roles at center and point guard, respectively. So only two — perhaps three — rotation spots are up for grabs in training camp, most notably at backup shooting guard, where second-year lottery pick CJ McCollum is in a neck-and-neck competition with the self-proclaimed “People’s Champ,” Will Barton.

Make no mistake, it’s a healthy, hearty competition between two players who respect each other. But it’s a competition nonetheless”

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

– Goal in Pistons’ first practice was hustle on defense (from Vince Ellis, Detroit Free Press):

” The reason for focus is simple — Van Gundy has identified that as the No. 1 defensive priority after watching tape of all 82 games last season — a season that ended with a 29-53 record and extended the team’s streak of missing the postseason to five seasons.

“First of all, that’s something any team can do well,” Van Gundy said. “It really doesn’t take anything other than a commitment to do it and great effort.

“I think one of the things you always want to attack as a coach — or as a team — are the things you can control, and that’s something totally you can control on a night-to-night basis.”

Read it here: http://www.freep.com/story/sports/nba/pistons/2014/10/01/detroit-pistons-getting-back-defense/16518921/

– The One Thing Holding Andre Drummond Back from Reaching His Full Potential (from Ian Levy, Bleacher Report):

” Andre Drummond is far from a finished product, but there is one hole in his game that dwarfs all others—free-throw shooting.

Drummond made 41.8 percent of his free throws last season. Only one player in NBA history has posted a worse mark in a season with at least 300 free-throw attempts—Wilt Chamberlain.

Drummond‘s free-throw shooting was similarly bad as a rookie

Read and view it here: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2214950-the-one-thing-holding-andre-drummond-back-from-reaching-his-full-potential

– KCP gets SVG’s endorsement for his D, willingness to be coached (from Keith Langlois, pistons.com):

 “You always look at players first to their strengths, where can a guy be great,” Van Gundy said about his second-year shooting guard, the No. 8 pick in 2013. “I think he can be an elite defender in this league at the two guard and we’ll look for that every night. I think he is a high-energy guy who can get up and down the floor and attack the basket in transition. Those two things have got to be his foundation.” “

Read it here: http://www.nba.com/pistons/features/kcp-gets-svgs-endorsement-his-d-willingness-be-coached

– Thibodeau, criticized for running Bulls into ground, remains defiant (from Joe Cowley, suntimes.com):

” The Bulls’ front office never has admonished coach Tom Thibodeau for the way he paces his team.

And no player has complained to the media over the years about a heavy workload.

Yet training camp opened Tuesday at the state-of-the-art Advocate Center, and Thibodeau’s status as an elite coach in the league is still in question because of the perception that he runs his players into the ground.

Thibodeau bristles when the subject is brought up.”

Read it here: http://www.suntimes.com/sports/basketball/bulls/30202575-579/thibodeau-criticized-for-running-bulls-into-ground-remains-defiant.html

Rose gets shooters, not shot creator (from Steve Aschburner, nba.com):

” Almost from the day Derrick Rose arrived, the Chicago Bulls have sought a second shot-creator to ease his workload and pose as a secondary threat when the defense stymies their explosive point guard.

Six seasons in, they still don’t have one. Call it the curse of Keith Bogans or something.

What the Bulls do have, though, as camp opens on the 2014-15 season is a squadron of shooters unlike any in recent memory at United Center. None of them is likely to put the ball on the floor and make something out of nothing the way Rose and a few other rare talents in the NBA can.

But as far as putting it in the air to great acclaim — spotting up on the perimeter or cutting-and-catching for opportunities near or beyond the arc –the Bulls have upgraded considerably.”

Read it here: http://hangtime.blogs.nba.com/2014/10/01/rose-gets-shooters-not-shot-creator/

– Suns GM McDonough feels centers’ play has risen (from Paul Coro, azcentral.com):

” Over the summer, conversations about the Suns centered on guards — the one it took nearly three months to bring back, the one they added, the one starring for Slovenia and how they will coexist this season.

All the while, Suns General Manager Ryan McDonough saw something else that makes him not so guarded about his centers. He said the team’s best internal improvement has come at center with Miles Plumlee and Alex Len.

“Miles and Alex, to me, look like different players than what you saw mid-April when our season ended,” McDonough said after watching a month of voluntary Suns pickup games at US Airways Center.”

Read it here: http://www.azcentral.com/story/sports/nba/suns/2014/10/01/suns-gm-ryan-mcdonough-centers-miles-plumlee-alex-len/16518433/

– Boston Celtics practice notes: Brad Stevens focusing on ‘pace and space,’ (from Jay King, Masslive.com):

” The Boston Celtics held their first two practices Tuesday, giving Stevens an opportunity to unveil some changes he devised. One of them: He plans to deliver information more quickly. “I thought I was too gradual last year,” he said. Another: He increased the focus on “pace and space.”

“There are going to be tweaks and changes, there are going to be certain things that are really stressed over others,” Stevens said. “But the bottom line is that we’re going to start trying to be faster with more emphasis on pace and space. And faster’s maybe not the appropriate term, but the right pace all the time, a very consistent pace all the time that we need to play with

Read it here: http://www.masslive.com/celtics/index.ssf/2014/09/boston_celtics_practice_notes_9.html

– Etorre Messina: An Exquisite International Tongue (from Ken Rodriguez, nba.com/spurs):

” The first thing you should know about Ettore Messina is that he is a man of many tongues. He can speak with Marco Belinelli in Italian, chat with Manu Ginobili in Spanish, joke with Tony Parker in French, banter with Gregg Popovich in Russian and communicate with everyone else in perfect English.

The second thing you should know: Messina owes his globetrotting career as a coach to a man who knew nothing about basketball, his late father, Filippo, a lawyer in Venice, Italy. If not for Filippo Messina, a gentleman with no interest in sports, Ettore would not be a Spurs assistant. If not for the father, the son may have never left Italy.”

Read it here: http://www.nba.com/spurs/features/exquisite-international-tongue

Transition period begins for Nets overseas import Bogdanovic (from Tim Bontemps, NYPost.com):

” The Nets may have a team full of big names familiar to NBA fans, but perhaps the most intriguing player on the roster is one few people here ever have seen play.

That would be Bojan Bogdanovic, the 6-foot-8 swingman who the Nets took with the first pick of the second round in 2011 — only for him to spend the next three years playing for Fenerbahce Ulker, one of Europe’s top teams, in the Turkish League. But when the 25-year-old’s contract with the Istanbul club expired this summer, the Nets gave him a three-year deal for roughly $10 million to finally bring him to Brooklyn.

Now the acclimation process has begun, starting with the first few days of training camp and an immediate taste of what NBA life is like.”

Read it here: http://nypost.com/2014/10/01/transition-period-begins-for-nets-overseas-import-bogdanovic/

– Nets’ Mason Plumlee Seeks a Double Bounce in His Offense (from Andrew Keh, NYTimes):

” Two dribbles of a basketball could help determine whether Mason Plumlee becomes the player he would like to be in his second professional season.

Plumlee, 24, is at that intriguing stage of an N.B.A. career, when all of one’s raw talent has been put on display and the only questions that remain involve how it might be shaped and built upon. The months between seasons are when a player adds new facets to his game, and the Nets and their new coach, Lionel Hollins, have challenged Plumlee to become a greater scoring threat.

The two dribbles are essential to that.”

Read it here: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/01/sports/basketball/nets-mason-plumlee-seeks-a-double-bounce-in-his-offense.html

– Lionel Hollins wants Brook Lopez getting back to basics (from Devin Kharpertian,
thebrooklyngamecom):
” …(F)or now, Hollins is content yelling at him until the season starts. “I don’t know if you heard
me holler at (Lopez) to get in the paint, but I still want him to be where he’s supposed to be as a
seven-footer,” Hollins said after Tuesday’s practice.”

– Could Chris Douglas-Roberts Be Dark-Horse Small Forward Answer for LA Clippers? (from Michael Pina, Bleacher Report):

Chris Douglas-Roberts and the Los Angeles Clippers sort of need each other. 

The player, a 27-year-old journeyman who’s drifted in and out of the NBA since first entering it as a 40th overall draft pick in 2008, is coming off a statistically unimpressive breakout season with the Charlotte Hornets.

Douglas-Roberts did not post career-high per-game numbers last season. He wasn’t the third-, fourth- or fifth-most important player on his own team, and he didn’t score a single point in nine of the 49 games he took the floor. 

But the latter half of that campaign was far and away the most significant stretch of Douglas-Roberts’ pertinacious career.

He grew into one of Charlotte’s most efficient players, specializing as a three-point marksman who seamlessly fit in as a noticeable cog for one of the league’s more consistent defensive units. And for this, the Clippers, a team with championship-or-bust expectations, snatched him up on a one-year, league-minimum contract.”

Read it here: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2216264-could-chris-douglas-roberts-be-darkhorse-small-forward-solution-for-la-clippers

– Kerr’s Brain Trust: Getting to Know Alvin Gentry and Ron Adams (from Adam Lauridsen, mercurynews.com):

” No one — not even Steve Kerr — knows yet what type of coach Kerr will be.  But when you look past Kerr on the Warriors’ bench, there are two known commodities.  Alvin Gentry and Ron Adams are among the most respected assistant coaches in the game, and their skills complement each other.  At least for the immediate future, Kerr will be spending as much time learning about how to coach basketball as he will teaching others how to play it.  The collective decades of experience that Gentry and Adams bring to the bench should provide a rock-solid foundation on which Kerr can build his own style.”

Read it here: http://blogs.mercurynews.com/warriors/2014/10/01/kerrs-braintrust-getting-to-know-alvin-gentry-and-ron-adams/

– Embiid happy to have mentor on board (from Jake Kaplan, philly.com):

” WHEN WORD leaked this summer of the other players involved in the three-team Kevin Love/Andrew Wiggins trade, Joel Embiid texted his mentor seeking confirmation.

Yes, the reports were indeed true, Luc Richard Mbah a Moute verified.

“It was kind of weird because it’s like, ‘Wow. Really, this is happening?’ But it’s exciting at the same time,” Mbah a Moute said this week before the start of 76ers’ training camp. “I never thought that [Embiid] would be in the NBA this quick, let alone be my teammate. It’s kind of weird and exciting at the same time, but I’m looking forward to it.”

/20141001_Embiid_happy_to_have_mentor_on_board.html
– What the Pacers can learn from the Spurs (from Candace Buckner, Indystar.com):
” Watching Game 3 of the 2014 NBA Finals felt like attending a master class on the art of
offensive basketball taught by the San Antonio Spurs. You didn’t have to be a pass-first purist or
an NBA fanboy (girl) to appreciate the Spurs’ blazing hot shooting start and overall artisan’s way
of offensive execution.
Naturally, the victors will gain imitators, and now consider the Indiana Pacers followers from
afar.In some ways, the Spurs have replaced the Heat as Indiana’s most studied opponent.”
the-spurs/16524203/
– Julius Randle ready to learn and earn with the Lakers (from Drew Garrison,
silverscreenandroll.com):
” Julius Randle wants to learn under Kobe Bryant’s wing and earn his way as a Laker.

“I don’t want anything given to me. Starting in the NBA, you have to earn that,” Randle told ESPN LA radio during Lakers media day, “You have guys who have earned that here, and that’s something I’m going to have to earn.”

“When things are given to people that’s when I see things kinda’ collapse for a person.”
kobe-byrant-media-day
– Will J.R. Smith and the Knicks embrace the spot-up? (from Joe Flynn,
postingandtoasting.com):

As J.R. goes, so go the Knicks.

Over the past two seasons, this statement has proven inescapably, terrifyingly accurate. He may not be the engine that drives the Knicks, but his ebbs and flows as a player have usually mirrored that of the team as a whole.

To understand J.R. is to understand the Knicks, particularly on offense. Carmelo Anthony is going to excel regardless of how much the other four guys are contributing — we learned that lesson all too well last season. J.R., on the other hand, is a player with very clear strengths and weaknesses, and those strengths and weaknesses just so happen to be shared by many of his teammates. They become magnified in J.R. due to his tendency to dominate the ball…and his tendency to blow everything completely out of proportion.

It’s not enough to merely call J.R. a good spot-up shooter who struggles on pull-up jumpers. The man went way beyond “good” last season — he was an elite spot-up shooter. The guard occasionally known as Earl ranked 10th in the NBA in total points and ninth in points per game off catch-and-shoot jumpers. Among the 25 most prolific catch-and-shoot scorers, he ranks second to Kyle Korver in effective field goal percentage.

It’s not enough to merely call J.R. a good spot-up shooter who struggles on pull-up jumpers. The man went way beyond “good” last season — he was an elite spot-up shooter. The guard occasionally known as Earl ranked 10th in the NBA in total points and ninth in points per game off catch-and-shoot jumpers. Among the 25 most prolific catch-and-shoot scorers, he ranks second to Kyle Korver in effective field goal percentage.”

Read it here: http://www.postingandtoasting.com/2014/10/1/6852489/2015-questions-1033-will-the-knicks-embrace-the-spot-up-jr-smith

– Better defense, rebounding a must for Rockets’ power forwards (from Jonathan Feigen, Houston Chronicle):

” After roughly two hours of the first practice of Rockets training camp, the theme was made clear: Defend and rebound.

A few other topics were touched on, but the instructions about defense and rebounding were far more specific than just mentioning they are sort of important. And before long, Rockets coach Kevin McHale’s answer to almost everything included the words defend and rebound.

What must the Rockets do to improve?

“Defend and rebound.”

How can the power forwards, vying for playing time, earn their way to the court?

“Defend and rebound.”

Read it here: http://www.houstonchronicle.com/sports/article/Better-defense-rebounding-a-must-for-Rockets-5792653.php?cmpid=twitter-premium&t=703899b6f4f992f472

– The Third-Year Decision: What Will These NBA Teams Do With Their Still-Developing Prospects? (from Zach Lowe, Grantland.com):

” These days, fewer and fewer NBA decisions are rubber-stamp jobs. Teams have become more careful on the fringes of the salary cap under the post-lockout collective bargaining agreement. That’s especially true for the teams that need to be choosy in picking up third- and fourth-year post-lockout options on their first-round picks; those fourth-year options carry giant year-over-year raises ranging from 26 percent for the top pick all the way to 80 percent for the bottom six picks. Some teams in the new NBA of flexibility and short contracts have so much cap room they can swallow those options without a care — just in case disappointing Year 4 guy figures it out.

But for teams with less projected cap space and bigger free-agency dreams, every dollar draws scrutiny. These are a few of the thorny fourth-year option cases across the 2012 draft board.”

Read and view it here: http://grantland.com/the-triangle/third-year-prospects-orlando-magic-austin-rivers-new-orleans-pelicans-maurice-harkless-andrew-nicholson/

– Is one trip to the free-throw line enough? (from Kevin Arnovitz, ESPN):

” Around last season’s All-Star break, preliminary chatter began among the league’s basketball operations folks and rule geeks about the prospect of reducing all trips to the free-throw line to a single foul shot. D-League president Dan Reed and Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey were the closest thing to co-sponsors of a bill. Nobody was proposing anything to be fast-tracked, but an imperative to figure out ways to shorten pro basketball games gave the idea some life as something to consider implementing in the D-League.

The concept was this: A player fouled in the act of shooting or in a penalty situation would attempt only a single free throw. If that player was shooting a 2-point shot or in a penalty situation at the time of the foul, the free throw attempt would be worth two points. If that player was fouled in the act of launching a 3-point shot, he’d go to the line for a single shot worth three points”

Read it here: http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/post/_/id/70581/hoopidea-is-one-trip-to-the-free-throw-line-enough

Cavs, Nets,Lakers,USAB,HOF,Analytics,3pt shooting

-Guy Rodgers enters HOF: the Big Payback (from Andre McCarter, iSportstimes.com);

” When Guy Rodgers is finally inducted into the Naismith Hall of Fame on Friday, August 8th, 2014 he will be the most unappreciated, under publicized and unknown player whose name will walk down the Hall of Greatness without the Fame until now.

Guy Rodgers is one of the greatest basketball players, a ball handling genius, to ever lace them up! There was nothing Guy Rodgers could not do with a basketball. Every possible move you have seen anyone do with the ball Rodgers could do, only smoother, faster and better, Rodgers was a basketball pioneer.”

Read it here: http://www.isportstimes.com/articles/11859/20140808/naismith-basketball-hall-fame-2014-enters-guy.htm

– Film Study: Can Lionel Hollins use Brook Lopez as Marc Gasol? (from Reed Wallach, nets daily.com):

Read and view it here: http://www.netsdaily.com/2014/8/7/5980261/film-study-nets-hollins-coach-Brook-Lopez-Marc-Gasol?

– Kevin Durant to withdraw from Team USA Basketball (from Darnell Mayberry, newsok.com):

”  Kevin Durant has been going non-stop for the past five seasons, playing in 388 of a possible 394 regular season games. He’s logged 15,064 minutes over that span, or 930 more than the next closest player. With another 73 playoff games since 2010, including three conference finals appearances in the past four seasons, Durant has played an additional 3,090 postseason minutes, third most in that stretch behind James and Wade. Durant also has been a fixture on the USA Men’s National Team since 2010, leading the team in minutes played in each of the past two international events. Toss in off-court commitments with sponsors such as meetings, commercial shoots, promotional tours and trips to Asia, his annual youth camp in Oklahoma, his skills academy in Washington, appearing at legendary playground leagues from New York to Los Angeles for pickup ball, attending award shows, filming a movie and actually working out and it becomes clear why Durant is finally drawing a line.”

Read it here: http://newsok.com/kevin-durant-takes-a-break-from-team-usa/article/5136839

– WAITERS A BETTER FIT THAN IRVING WITH NEW CAVS (from John Schuhmann, nab.com):

” The Cleveland Cavaliers are a brand new team. LeBron James is coming home and Kevin Love is coming soon.

The pair joins a roster that went 57-107 over the last two seasons, with a point guard that’s thought of as a star, other unpr http://hangtime.blogs.nba.com/2014/08/07/injury-blame-game-is-small-thinking/oven young guys, and a pair of centers that have dealt with injuries.

It’s up to new head coach David Blatt to bring it all together on both ends of the floor. But it’s also on the players to make the necessary adjustments so that the whole isn’t less than the sum of the parts. The Miami Heat didn’t quite figure out their identity until the end of their second season together, and they didn’t have as many players who were used to having the ball in their hands.

Who’s taking a back seat?

The Cavs will now have four guys – James (5th), Love (9th), Kyrie Irving (13th) and Dion Waiters (22nd) – who ranked in the top 25 in usage rate last season. At least two of those guys are going to have to say goodbye to the basketball.”

Read it here: http://hangtime.blogs.nba.com/2014/08/07/waiters-a-better-fit-than-irving-with-new-cavs/?cid=nbacomsocial_20140807_29329966

– The Cavs And The Cav-Nots (from Jordan Brenner, ESPN, the Magazine):

” BY BRINGING LeBron James back home to Cleveland, the Cavaliers won the heralded 2014 offseason — and that was before today’s news that the Cavs have reached an agreement to acquire Kevin Love (although the trade won’t become official until August 23). But now the real work begins as rookie NBA coach David Blatt attempts to mold this team into a winning outfit for the first time since, well, the King’s departure in 2010. The fact that James is the NBA’s best and most versatile player gives the squad a host of options, but Blatt still needs to figure out what he has — and, more important, what he doesn’t. Here are six tasks awaiting Blatt & Co. that will determine the Cavs’ fate.”

Read it here:  https://espn.go.com/espn/feature/story/_/id/11292706/how-lebron-james-fit-cleveland-espn-magazine

– How will James, Irving, Love fit in Cleveland Cavaliers offense? (from DeAntae Prince, Sporting News):

” …(T)alent doesn’t always mean championships. The Cavaliers have three players with the tools to lead them to a successful season, but their approach will be just as important as their talent.

With that in mind, we will look at ways for Cleveland to highlight its best three players, along with a dive into Cavaliers coach David Blatt’s playook through footage from his Maccabi Tel Aviv days.”

Read and view it here: http://www.sportingnews.com/nba/story/2014-08-07/cavaliers-kevin-love-trade-lebron-james-kyrie-irving-nba-free-agency-andrew-wiggins

– INJURY BLAME GAME IS SMALL THINKING (from Fran Blinebury, NBA.com):

Read it here: http://hangtime.blogs.nba.com/2014/08/07/injury-blame-game-is-small-thinking/

– All Eyes on Julius Randle (from Drew Garrison, silverscreenandroll.com):

” Julius Randle’s big debut with the Los Angeles Lakers is months away, but the seventh-overall pick in the 2014 NBA Draft already has all eyes on him. After back-to-back summers of the Lakers missing on superstar talent, Randle stands alone as the new star draw in Los Angeles. His rookie season will be a hot topic of discussion year round, magnified and dissected on a routine basis.”

Read it here: http://www.silverscreenandroll.com/2014/8/8/5981263/la-lakers-julius-randle-rookie-season

– True Usage: Re-Imagining Offense With Multiple Credit Possessions (from Seth Partnow, nylon calculus.com):

” One of the biggest difficulties in the field of basketball analytics is how to assign credit to individual players. In fact, some of the most contentious arguments in the field concern the proper allocation of credit for things we know have value on the team level. Dean Oliver’s Four Factors tell us that rebounding is pretty important at the team level. But how much of the value gained by the team is properly assignable to the player who so happens to secure that rebound? While forcing a change of possession with zero points scored is a great outcome for the defense, it doesn’t meet even passing scrutiny to give the rebounder full credit. What of the guy who challenged the initial shot? Or the player who boxed his man out to allow a teammate to snatch the board? It’s an interesting conundrum, but arguing the final points rapidly reaches diminishing returns in the absence of better input data to study.”

Read and view it here:  http://nyloncalculus.com/2014/08/08/re-imagining-offense-multiple-credit-possessions-true-usage/

And for those with access to ESPN’s Insider:

-The ‘more money for 3s’ myth (from Tom Haberstroh):

” This summer’s signings show 3-point revolution has not taken over FA market”

Read it here: http://insider.espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/11320713/nba-3-point-revolution-not-taken-free-agent-market

 

Paul George,Dirk,DeMarcus, A Bennett,Randle

– WITH TIME, WORK AND PATIENCE, GEORGE CAN RETURN TO HIS ALL-STAR SELF (from Jeff Caplan, NBA.com):

” The good for news George, an All-Star in each of the last two seasons, is that while the injury is rarely seen in basketball, it is a common sight among orthopedic surgeons. The procedure to repair it is also very common, according to Dr. T.O. Souryal, head physician for the Dallas Mavericks and a renowned orthopedic surgeon in sports medicine who is also president of the NBA Team Physicians Association.

“This is orthopedic surgery 101. They know what to do with an open tibia fracture,” Souryal said.”

Read it here: http://hangtime.blogs.nba.com/2014/08/02/with-time-work-and-patience-george-can-return-to-his-all-star-self/

–  DIRK STANDS TO BE EVEN MORE EFFICIENT WITH IMPROVED SUPPORTING CAST (from Bobby Karalla, mavs.com):

” Donnie Nelson and Mark Cuban have made it their mission for the past decade to surround Dirk Nowitzki with a capable supporting cast full of players who can fit in with the system and complement Nowitzki’s own strengths. The 2011 title team was an example of their finest work, as the front office gave Rick Carlisle everything he needed to construct a perfect offensive strategy that highlighted what those players could do as opposed to what they couldn’t do.

As Nowitzki prepares to enter his age-36 season, it’s becoming even more important not only for the front office to continuously add strong complementary players, but also for Dirk to apply less stress to his body.”

Read it here: http://www.mavs.com/dirk-stands-to-be-even-more-efficient-with-improved-supporting-cast/

– Julius Randle and Misusing Versatility (from Darius Soriano, forumblueandgold.com):

” We honestly know very little about how Julius Randle’s game will translate to the NBA level. Sure, we have our guesses, but that’s all they really are at this point — guesses. What we do know, though, is that Randle seems to possess a more versatile game than he was given credit for coming out of Kentucky.

” Randle, like other big men who possess some perimeter skills, are best maximized by pitting those skills against players who are not used to defending in space. Put a 6’10″ player on the perimeter and tell him to defend a like sized player who just so happens to be able to put the ball on the floor with skill and quickness and the advantage will almost always lie with the player who possesses the ball. Big players normally lack the needed lateral quickness to stay in front of such players. Add in the advantages that come with drawing that bigger defender away from the paint and the benefits to an offense only increase via better spacing for the entire team.”

Read it here: http://www.forumblueandgold.com/2014/08/01/julius-randle-and-misusing-versatility/

– DeMarcus Cousins Q&A (from Ailene Voisin, sacbee.com):

Read it here: http://www.sacbee.com/2014/08/02/6601062/ailene-voisin-a-qa-with-kings.html?

– The rebuilding of Anthony Bennett (from Zach Harper, CBS Sports):

” There isn’t really a way to sugarcoat the rookie season of 2013 No. 1 overall pick Anthony Bennett. He was one of the worst rookies in NBA history.

The forward for the Cleveland Cavaliers was the surprise of the 2013 NBA Draft when the Cavs took him with the top pick. With multiple other players rumored to be getting looks with the top selection, Bennett wasn’t looking like a possibility until his name was called. Fans, pundits, everyone started wondering if the Cavs knew something nobody else did. Was this scoring forward out of UNLV really going to be the best player in this draft?

His season was a disaster. He was bad if you measured him by traditional stats, he was bad if you measured him by advanced stats. A shoulder injury left him behind on his training and conditioning in the summer. After not playing in summer league, he showed up to training camp woefully out of shape. He was given chances here and there early on, but couldn’t hit a shot. He literally couldn’t hit a shot. He missed his first 16 attempts sprinkled over his first five games.

between ending up like every other player on that list of historically failing rookies and being the first player on that list to show it was an outlier to their career. There is a difference between being a bust and being able to consistently fill a role in the rotation for your team.

Bennett surprised us on draft night by being selected with the first pick. Let’s see if he can surprise us again.”

Read it here: http://www.cbssports.com/nba/eye-on-basketball/24647191/the-rebuilding-of-anthony-bennett