Tag Archives: Shabazz Muhammad

Today’s top NBA Preseason Stories

– Latest replay review adjustments give NBA referees more leeway to change calls (from Eric Freeman, Yahoo Sports):

” …(A)ny basketball fan can attest that the league’s replay system needs some useful adjustments and changes to operate more smoothly. It’s not yet clear if the NBA’s new replay rules announced via press release on Thursday will meet those goals, but they at least provide us with some topics for discussion.”

Read it here: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nba-ball-dont-lie/latest-replay-review-adjustments-give-nba-referees-more-leeway-to-change-calls-015734068.html

Instant-replay tweaks, rules changes announced for 2014-15 (from Steve Aschburner, nba.com):

Read it here: http://hangtime.blogs.nba.com/2014/10/16/instant-replay-tweaks-rules-changes-announced-for-2014-15/

– Quin Snyder: To Board Or Not To Board (from Dan Clayton, saltcityhoops.com):

” The coach has been a little cagey in describing exactly what his philosophy is relative to offensive rebounding. We know his basic philosophy: protect against the fast break. But how much of an absolutist is he about ignoring opportunities on the offensive glass? The Atlanta Hawks team he just came from had just 603 field goal attempts result from offensive rebounds all last season, third least in the league. Is that indicative of just how little Snyder cares about rebounding on that end?

“Guys gotta get back right away,” Snyder said in describing some of the defensive improvements they need to make, especially in transition. “You probably sacrifice some of the offensive glass, but that doesn’t mean our bigs can’t still offensive rebound.

What he wants to cut back on is ball-watching guards who aren’t anticipating and getting back. Opportunistic offensive rebounds by the wings are OK, he says, just as long as it’s clear what the priority is. “We’re not asking them to leave before the possession happens, but we want our guards out… You know, we’re sacrificing a little bit of that (offensive rebounding) to get back.”

Read it here: http://saltcityhoops.com/to-board-or-not-to-board/

– How The Blazers Thrive With Mid-Range Jump Shots (from evansclinchy, blazersedge.com):

” NBA conventional wisdom holds that mid-range jumpers are bad. So how do the Blazers take so many and still achieve so much success?”

Read it here: http://www.blazersedge.com/2014/10/17/6987045/portland-trail-blazers-offense-jump-shots-wesley-matthews-nicolas-batum

– From Language Barriers to Leadership: Jose Calderon’s Journey (from Jessica Camerato, Basketball Insiders):

” Jose Calderon ran the ball up the floor and called out a play. His teammates, unsure of the directive, stood still. Nothing happened.

This was back in 2005. Calderon had moved from his home country of Spain to play for the Toronto Raptors in the NBA. He had mastered basketball in Europe. English, though, was another story. The point guard had knowledge of the language, but his accent and limited vocabulary made it difficult to communicate on the court.

“That was the problem in the beginning,” Calderon told Basketball Insiders. “A few times I just called plays and nobody moved because they didn’t know [what I was saying].”

” Nine seasons later, that initial transition is a distant memory as Calderon has developed into a reliable, veteran point guard on the New York Knicks. The person who was once unable to communicate plays is now revered as an on-the-court coach by his teammates and staff.

Read it here: http://www.basketballinsiders.com/from-language-barriers-to-leadership-jose-calderons-journey/

– Timberwolves trio went through weeks of hell with Navy SEAL trainer (from Phil Ervin, foxsports.com):

” Some members of Minnesota’s revamped roster, including Corey Brewer and Kevin Martin, worked with their longstanding trainers again this offseason. Center Gorgui Dieng spent much of his time in Minneapolis working out at the University of Minnesota. Nikola Pekovic was limited to the elliptical and the pool while recovering from an Achilles’ injury.

Muhammad, Anthony Bennett and Ronny Turiaf, though, took a trip to hell.

And they came back looking like this.

Matrisciano’s famed “chameleon training” — a series of unconventional, physically and mentally taxing evolutions geared toward adaptation and overcoming — has transformed the bodies of Blake Griffin, Zach Randolph, Aaron Afflalo, Gilbert Arenas, Navy SEALs, triathletes, wartime boxers and even pregnant women (with an altered regimen, of course). His reputation is translucent in NBA circles, his mystique burgeoned by the fact he doesn’t recruit athletes — “they come to me” — and dresses like a modern-day urban ninja when meeting face-to-face with the media.”

Read it here: http://www.foxsports.com/north/story/timberwolves-trio-went-through-weeks-of-hell-with-navy-seal-trainer-093014

– Film Study: The Nets new offense (from Reed Wallach, netsdaily.com):

” With a roster built around perimeter scoring threats and one offensive force in the paint, the Nets should be swinging the ball around the three-point line, cutting off the ball to get easy eight footers, and then pounding it into Brook Lopez for easy finishes. It may have taken the fourth coach in three seasons in Brooklyn to realize it, but it seems as if Lionel Hollins has figured out how to get the Brooklyn Nets efficient offensive looks.

Read and view it here: http://www.netsdaily.com/2014/10/16/6990349/film-study-the-brooklyn-nets-new-offense

– Bulls Update (from Joe Cowley, Chicago Sun-Times):

” Mike Dunleavy might be moved to the new-look bench crew. Don’t call it a demotion; it might have to be done out of necessity.

With newcomers Nikola Mirotic and Aaron Brooks still finding their way with that second group, coach Tom Thibodeau has been kicking around the idea of promoting first-round pick Doug McDermott to the starting lineup so that Dunleavy can help stabilize the bench, which was outscored 38-24 by the Hawks, including an 11-4 run in the second quarter that put the Bulls in a hole for most of the game.

“I don’t want to overlook what Mike’s done, either,’’ Thibodeau said of the switch. “Mike has shot the ball extremely well. He helps that first unit function well, so I’m not locked into it.

“As I said, that’s the great value of Mike — he’s started before, he’s come off the bench, he’s comfortable in both roles. We’ll see how it unfolds.’’

– Warriors’ Ognjen Kuzmic showing how he belongs (from Rusty Simmons, SFGate):

“He’s got a lot of tools. He just needs the time and the belief. It’s exciting to watch his growth,” Kerr said. “He doesn’t really know how good he can be yet. As he gains experience and confidence, I think he’s going to be really good for us.”

Read it here: http://www.sfgate.com/warriors/article/Warriors-Ognjen-Kuzmic-showing-how-he-belongs-5828630.php

Kerr finally gets his chance with Curry (from Scott Howard-Cooper, nba.com):

” (Kerr) was the Suns general manager in June 2009 and wanted Curry in the draft. Badly. There was phone call after phone call between Kerr and Riley, his Warriors counterpart. There were internal conversations among Phoenix management about the risk of trading 26-year-old Amar’e Stoudemire coming off three consecutive seasons of at least 20 points and eight rebounds — and the risk of keeping Stoudemire with free agency a year away and growing health concerns.

The Warriors were very interested, intrigued by the chance to get the known of a proven power forward over the uncertainty of a scoring point guard from mid-major Davidson. They also really liked Curry and, in fact, doubted he would be on the board when Riley picked seventh. Arizona’s Jordan Hill was the fallback, probably for both sides, for the Suns if a deal had been arranged and for Golden State to keep if no deal was in place.

It got close, but never imminent. The Warriors were not going to trade for Stoudemire unless he at least showed strong likelihood of re-signing as a free agent the next summer, and Riley had yet to so much as ask the Suns for permission to have the conversation. And if Golden State and Stoudemire did talk, the result would have been the same. He was not going to commit to anything at that point other than showing up, playing hard and keeping an open mind about the future, an understandable stance that almost certainly would have ended the talks bouncing between Phoenix and Oakland.

The Warriors took Curry seventh and he turned into a star. The Suns kept Stoudemire one more season and 23.1 points and 8.9 rebounds and played it right to not get into a bidding war with the Knicks in 2010 free agency.

And….

The Warriors ended up hiring Kerr to coach. To coach the entire roster, obviously, but with Curry as the best player and one of the main attractions of choosing Golden State over the option of working for long-time friend and coaching mentor Phil Jackson with the Knicks.”

Read it here: http://hangtime.blogs.nba.com/2014/10/16/kerr-finally-gets-his-chance-with-curry/

– The Lakers must embrace their youth movement (from Ben R, silverscreenandroll.com):

” Following a bizarre offseason in which the Lakers essentially struck out on all of the major free agents and signed almost no one of consequence, they are left with an oddball mix of young players and veterans that has to be managed well for any measure of team success.”

Read it here: http://www.silverscreenandroll.com/2014/10/16/6854305/to-experience-success-this-season-the-lakers-must-embrace-their-youth

– Who is new Nets coach Lionel Hollins? (from Lou DiPietro, yesnetwork.com):

Despite four decades of NBA success, Hollins’ resume is not well-known by many

Read it here: http://web.yesnetwork.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20141017&content_id=98722350&oid=36318

– Outside shooting, no longer lost art, has regained NBA’s respect (from Associated Press):

Read it here: http://www.sfgate.com/sports/article/Outside-shooting-no-longer-lost-art-has-5828096.php

– Hard Cap 201: Graduate Hard Caponomics (from Daniel Leroux, midlevelexceptional.com):

” The NBA’s soft cap provides the system with a volatility and nuance that other North American sports leagues just cannot match. The current Collective Bargaining Agreement combines a lack of prohibition on excessive spending with some pretty substantial penalties so franchises that choose to be aggressive can do so but at a great cost, as we saw last season with the Brooklyn Nets.

As I discussed in the introduction to the NBA’s hard cap, the league has created a smart system to prevent teams from gaming the system too much. To briefly recap, there are certain tools for building a team that franchises over the luxury tax apron cannot use, most notably acquiring players via sign-and-trade and using either the full Non-Taxpayer Mid-Level Exception or the Bi-Annual Exception. To close a potential loophole, the current CBA forces teams that utilize one or more of these pieces to stay under the apron for the rest of that league year, creating a narrow hard cap that will affect more than one-third of the NBA’s franchises this season.

That introduction laid the groundwork for the consequences and functional purpose of the hard cap but the real fun comes from how it actually works.”

Read it here: http://midlevelexceptional.com/2014/10/17/advanced-hard-cap/

– Jeff  Van Gundy Has Quick Fixes to Speed Up NBA’s Slow Finishes (from Mitch Lawrence, NBCNewYork.com):

“…(N)umerous timeouts down the stretch of playoff games, in particular, also mean bringing games to a screeching halt, making them culprits, along with TV replays and the customary inordinate number of fouls. The last two minutes of games can last a lifetime.

“When you’re coaching, you really don’t notice it as much,’’ Van Gundy said. “But when you watch it on TV, it is just beyond comprehension.’

I know people are saying, ‘Well, we can’t cut a timeout, because it’s going to cost us money.’ But you know what? Look at this next TV contract we have and look how it’s going to make everybody plenty of money. How about we go with the concept of giving back to the fan? By cutting a timeout, we’ll be doing that and we would also be helping to keep the flow of the game going.’’

And some additional player updates:

– Otto Porter: http://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/wizards/wizards-otto-porter-seeing-role-more-clearly-in-second-season/2014/10/16/d30aeeaa-5575-11e4-809b-8cc0a295c773_story.html

– Jeff Ayres: http://www.expressnews.com/sports/spurs/article/Ayres-eager-for-expanded-role-5828521.php#/0

– Kentavius Caldwell-Pope: http://www.freep.com/story/sports/nba/pistons/2014/10/17/detroit-pistons-kentavious-caldwell-pope/17424825/

– George Hill: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2233419-the-reinvention-of-george-hill-is-critical-the-to-indiana-pacers

– Phil Pressey: http://www.bostonherald.com/sports/celtics_nba/boston_celtics/2014/10/phil_pressey_shows_he_belongs

– Greg McDermott: http://www.csnchicago.com/bulls/korver-hopes-mcdermott-has-similar-experience-thibs-bulls

– Jimmy Butler: http://www.csnchicago.com/bulls/bulls-confidence-grows-so-too-does-jimmy-butlers-game

– Dwight Howard: http://hangtime.blogs.nba.com/2014/10/17/hakeem-howard-is-ready-for-an-mvp-type-season/

– Shabazz Napier: http://www.hothothoops.com/2014/10/17/6991981/miami-heat-point-guard-decision-easy-one-shabazz-napier-rookie

– Devyn Marble: http://www.basketballinsiders.com/devyn-marbles-looks-to-make-noise-in-rookie-season/

Latest NBA Preseason News and Much More

– Why Cleveland Cavaliers Defense Can Be Better Than You Think (from Grant Hughes, Bleacher Report):

” LeBron James, Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love, but that doesn’t mean we should discount this title contender’s potential on the other end.

To be fair, it’s easy to see why the consensus says the Cavs will be elite on offense: Irving is a ball-handling maestro, Love is the game’s most prolific floor-spacing big and James is the most complete offensive force in basketball.

Blindfold those three, and they’ll still figure out how to get the Cavaliers offense into the top five by the end of the 2014-15 season.

The Cavs have an embarrassment of secondary offensive riches as well. Mike Miller is still nails from deep, Shawn Marion can still cut and swoop like a man 10 years his junior and Tristan Thompson, limited as he is, can clean up the mess on the offensive glass.

Don’t forget Dion Waiters, who could use a lesson in restraint but is a tough cover nonetheless.

We get it; Cleveland is going to score.

It might be pretty darn good on D, too.”

Read and view it here: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2224018-why-cleveland-cavaliers-defense-can-be-better-than-you-think

– Rebounding is key to Cavaliers’ plans (from Matthew Florjancic, WKYC):

” According to Blatt, rebounding is a tactical part of the game, and it is something he looks forward to developing with his players.

“The good thing and the fortunate thing is rebounding, particularly on the defensive end, is very, very tactical and a very clear-cut science,” Blatt said. “You box your man out, either to allow your teammates to take the ball or you box him out and go get it yourself.

“Offensive rebounding, there is a tactic behind it, but it has a lot to do with your nose for the ball, your ability to read where the ball is going to fall, and your relentless effort in going after the ball. I think we’ve got a few guys like that. That’s an art. It’s not necessarily tactically planned. We’ve definitely got guys that can just go get it, and they did.”

Read it here: http://www.wkyc.com/story/sports/nba/cavaliers/2014/10/07/rebounding-is-key-to-cavaliers-plans/16876939/

–  Two young Timberwolves hope intense training regimen helps reshape careers (from Andy Greder, twincities.com):

”  After a rookie season that included time in the NBA’s Development League, Muhammad was ready for a change. So was teammate Anthony Bennett, another highly rated rookie who struggled during a long, injury-plagued first season in Cleveland after the Cavaliers made him the No. 1 overall pick in the 2013 NBA draft.

The Wolves suggested “Chameleon Training,” an intensive regimen under trainer Frank Matrisciano. Muhammad, Bennett and veteran reserve center Ronny Turiaf signed on. Muhammad dropped 20 pounds in five weeks and showed off his washboard abs on social media. Bennett, a 6-8 power forward, dropped 7 pounds to 243.

The most challenging task?

“Everything,” said Bennett, who spent three weeks in the program. “I can’t pick out one thing. It was intense.”

Read it here: http://www.twincities.com/sports/ci_26681194/two-young-timberwolves-hope-intense-training-regime-helps

– Amar’e Stoudemire feels like forgotten man with Knicks, wants to get back to his ‘dominant self’  (from Peter Botte, New York Daily News):

” Derek Fisher called the 6-11 forward ‘invaluable’ to what the team is trying to do in the triangle offense. Stoudemire says his ‘body feels great’ after a few injury-plagued years.”

Read it here: http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/basketball/knicks/forgotten-amar-stoudemire-rebound-difficult-year-article-1.1966569

– Hawks high on Muscala’s development (from Chris Vivlamore, myajc.com):

” In 20 NBA games, Muscala averaged 3.8 points and 2.6 rebounds in 10.7 minutes. He spent much of his summer working out in Atlanta and coach Mike Budenholzer has noticed a difference — but there is still work to be done.

“There is a little bit of a calming and confidence-type growth,” Budenholzer said. “He plays so hard, which is a huge skill. It sounds easy but it’s important, and it’s going to allow him a chance to be good. You also have to have a confidence and a poise when you are playing really hard, which is not easy and it kind of counterintuitive. I think he’s calmed down a little bit. He’s confident. He knows how to play hard and how to still function on the court and get positive things.

“Playing without fouling, screening, he still has a lot of areas in understanding the nuances of the offense and ball movement and trusting the system and the teammates. He’s still got a ways to go.”

Read it here: http://www.myajc.com/news/sports/basketball/hawks-high-on-muscalas-development/nhdcQ/

– There’s a method to Thibs’ madness (from Nick Friedell, ESPNChicago):

” There are 5.3 seconds left in overtime of an otherwise meaningless preseason game against the Detroit Pistons, and Tom Thibodeau is coaching as if it were Game 7 of the NBA Finals. With his team down by two points, the Chicago Bulls head coach is screaming at little-used second-round pick Cameron Baristow to deny the basketball.

“Five! Five! Five!” Thibodeau barks at the officials while holding five fingers in the air.

The ball is inbounded just before the officials blow their whistles. The Bulls have to foul. Pistons big man Greg Monroe hits his free throws and pushes the lead to four points with just 0.9 seconds left. Game over, right?

Not for Thibodeau.

He decides to use a 20-second timeout to draw up a play that results in a long-range jumper for second-year man Tony Snell. The Bulls lose 111-109, but as usual, Thibodeau has drained every possible learning moment out of the game. He has shown his team one more time that every step counts. There are no wasted teaching moments for a team that wants to win a championship”

Read it here: http://espn.go.com/blog/chicago/bulls/post/_/id/20298/theres-a-method-to-thibs-madness

Road To Recovery: Warriors Wing Brandon Rush (from Warren Shaw, Dimemag.com):

” In this installment of our Road to Recovery series we catch up with Brandon Rush from the Golden State Warriors. He’s been a very good role player throughout his career who owns a 40 percent career average shooting from deep. But now he wants to carve out any niche the Warriors may need without any real agenda of his own.

After playing just 38 games with the Utah Jazz last season in an attempt to recover from the ACL injury that robbed him of all but 2 games in 2012-13, Rush is back playing for the Dubs despite being traded from them the previous summer. He took some time after a Warriors practice to discuss with us his rehab process, his troubles in Utah, why he returned to Golden State and all that is in store for him as the NBA season draws near.”

Read the Q & A here: http://dimemag.com/2014/10/road-recovery-warriors-wing-brandon-rush/

– Elfrid Payton impresses as Magic open preseason with 108-101 OT win over Heat (from Josh Robbins, Orlando Sentinel):

” “I thought he had great composure on the floor, and I love watching him play,” Magic coach Jacque Vaughn said. “He has just a great feel for who to get the ball to, when to get into the paint. He did a great job tonight of just orchestrating and being a leader on the floor.””

Read it here: http://ht.ly/CpLt7

– George Hill’s aggressive play fuels Pacers (from Candace Buckner, indystar.com):

” The start of any Indiana Pacers season would not be complete until a story is written about point guard George Hill embracing his aggressive side. The regular season rite of passage should include all the favorite components such as teammates adding their insight as to how the Pacers are a different squad when Hill goes off, and even the subject himself stating how a boost of confidence precedes his rare takeover moments.

So here comes the inaugural “George Hill played aggressive” script.

…(I)f Indiana expects to compete when the games begin to matter, this plot twist must be more than the sporadic filler.

More than any other time in his Pacers career, Hill has to make aggressiveness a habit. He can’t just show this side – scoring on a variety of pull-ups, floaters and putbacks – every now and then. The absence of last year’s starting wings, Lance Stephenson and Paul George, have left craters in the Pacers’ system. However, Hill can help fill the void by playing as he did Tuesday night, reacting instinctively to the rhythm of the game for his own shots while still helping his teammates get looks.”

Read it here: http://www.indystar.com/story/sports/nba/pacers/2014/10/07/indiana-pacers-george-hill-aggressive-for-a-start/16893071/

– K. J. McDaniels a pleasant surprise on defense in the early going (from Jake Caplan, Philly.com):

” I feel like I do [surprise opponents with my shot-blocking ability],” (KJ) said after yesterday’s practice at Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, where the team readied for tonight’s preseason game against the Charlotte Hornets at the Wells Fargo Center. “They’re not expecting a ‘two’ guard to go block shots, but I feel like I’ve got to have my teammates’ back, so I go out there and do whatever I need to.”

” And most importantly is guard your man, be tenacious defensively. And I think that that is in [McDaniels]. If we wants to know where his bread is buttered, that’s where it is, is on the defensive side.”, said Coach Brett Brown

Read it here: http://www.philly.com/philly/sports/sixers/20141008_McDaniels_a_pleasant_surprise_on_defense_in_the_early_going.html

– There’s nothing abnormal about the Jazz (from Gordon Monson, Salt Lake Tribune):

” There’s transition basketball, transition defense and transition offense, and then there’s transitioning a team. That’s what the Jazz are doing here. They themselves are in transition. Everything is moving from the old to the new: new season, new coaches, new schemes, new priorities, new players, new lineups, new rotations, new hopes, new ways of thinking, new ways of playing, new ways of being.”

Read it here: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/jazz/58498666-87/story.csp

– Marcus Smart wise beyond his years on defense (from Chris Forsberg, ESPNBoston.com):

” “I think he’s capable of helping us a lot,” Bradley said. “He puts pressure on the offensive player every single time down the floor, and he doesn’t gamble. That’s crazy because he’s young, and a lot of young guys like to gamble. He just plays great, solid defense.” ”

Read it here: http://espn.go.com/blog/boston/celtics/post/_/id/4714898/smart-wise-beyond-his-years-on-defense

– Biggest Adjustments Detroit Pistons Must Make This Coming Season (from Jakub Rudnik, Bleacher Report):

” After their fifth consecutive season with 30 or fewer wins, the Detroit Pistons are certainly looking to make big adjustments for what they hope will be a turnaround season.

Major changes in the front office, coaching staff and roster already guarantee this team looks much different than it did a year ago. Stan Van Gundy takes over as team president and head coach, and he has already begun reshaping the team to fit his preferred style of play with the acquisitions of six new players.

But there are still a good number of holdovers in the team’s core, and they’ll need to combine with the newcomers and make big on-court changes in order to have a chance at making the playoffs in the spring.

There’s new talent in Detroit, as well as a top-tier head coach. But will this team come together and embrace what it needs to do to be successful?”

Read it here: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2224401-biggest-adjustments-detroit-pistons-must-make-this-coming-season

And two more on the Pistons, including takes on last night’s games:

Read them here:

http://www.freep.com/story/sports/columnists/drew-sharp/2014/10/08/pistons-exhibition-opener-chicago-drew-sharp/16894517/

http://www.detroitbadboys.com/2014/10/8/6945369/greg-monroe-josh-smith-bench-stan-van-gundy

–  Nuggets must bank on Kenneth Faried (from Mark Kiszla, Denver Post):

”  What’s most amazing about Faried isn’t the spring in his legs or 24/7 energy. It’s a relentless urge to shock the basketball world. He came into the NBA as a rookie in 2011 with one definable skill: rebounding. His defense on the floor was shaky. Other than a dunk, his offensive repertoire was nonexistent. At this time a year ago, rookie Nuggets coach Brian Shaw seem stumped as to how to utilize Faried as anything more than an energy guy off the bench.

But Faried averaged 18 points and 10 rebounds down the stretch last season, then found a roster spot on Team USA, where the most valuable thing he gained was not gold but the trust of Mike Krzyzewski, the most-respected basketball coach on the planet. The two most-powerful words in coaching are: good job.

Coach K told Faried: “Hey, you can do anything, Kenneth.”

 

“I think Kenneth is an underrated offensive player. He’s a guy who is starting to get comfortable with getting his own shot on the block with a hook of his left shoulder, and not just being a player whose points come off transition,” Nuggets general manager Tim Connelly said.”

Read it here: http://www.denverpost.com/kiszla/ci_26683359/nuggets-must-bank-faried

– Glimpse of new Warriors emerges  (from Monte Poole,  CSNBayArea.com):

” The early play was more choppy than impressive. But once the teams settled into a rhythm and simply played basketball, a glimpse of the new Warriors began to emerge.

They will be, a very, very different team on offense.

That’s what first-year head coach Steve Kerr has promised, and some of those differences were highly visible in his unofficial debut, a 112-94 preseason win over the Clippers on Tuesday night at Staples Center.”

Read it here:  http://www.csnbayarea.com/warriors/rewind-glimpse-new-warriors-emerges

– Andrew Wiggins: An NBA Scouting Report (from Rafael Uehara, BBallBreakdown.com):

Read and view it here: http://bballbreakdown.com/andrew-wiggins-scouting-report/2014/10/07/

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

“I feel that trying to coach with a very long lens is important,” Brown said. “I see daylight here in this program. Michael’s three-point shot, Nerlens’ progression at the foul line, Tony Wroten’s assist-to-turnover ratio, all those types of things are development things that are our measurements this year. That’s our report card and it’s done with a very long lens.”

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

– Rockets Bench (from Jonathan Tjarks,  Pattern of Basketball):

” One of the main points of interest for me in the Rockets-Mavs preseason game on Tuesday was all the new players on Houston’s second unit. Of the nine guys who came off the bench for them, five were not in the NBA last season and one of the ones who was (Troy Daniels) spent most of the year in the D-League. After losing Omer Asik and Jeremy Lin, a few of those guys are going to have to play big minutes for them this season.

There’s only so much you take away from a pre-season game, obviously, particularly the first
one of the year. The refs were calling fouls almost every possession – it was a sloppy game
with no flow and it was hard for anyone on either team to get in a rhythm. I was at the AAC
and it was still difficult to be totally focused on what was happening on the court. So take
this with a grain of salt, but here are my first impressions of all the new guys in Houston.”
Another take on Rockets’ rotation players (from Jonathan Feigen, Houston Chronicle):
rush-search-for-rotation-players/#27356101=0
– Knicks Reverse Course on Defense (from Chris Herring, Wall Street Journal):
” Coach Derek Fisher insists that only one player, Carmelo Anthony, has a guaranteed spot in
the starting five. And Fisher has been mum on whether he prefers a traditional lineup over
the small-ball system that has worked for the Knicks in the past couple seasons.

 

But those questions will be merely academic if the Knicks can’t improve a defense that ranked 24th in the NBA last season with a puzzling system of switching and double-teaming at inopportune times. The Knicks didn’t add much, if any, individual defensive talent during the off-season, so they will have to build a new system if they want to improve defensively.

Guard J.R. Smith said the new plan is based on pressuring opponents toward the sidelines. “We’re going to push everything to the sideline and keep people out of the middle,” said Smith, explaining the biggest difference between Fisher’s philosophy and that of former coach Mike Woodson. “Last year, it was more about trying to force people to the middle of the floor.”

Read it here:  http://online.wsj.com/articles/knicks-avoid-middle-ground-1412728887

– The Sam Dalembert Problem (from Jonathan Tjarks, The Pattern of Basketball):
” The Knicks have a new coaching staff, a new front office and some exciting young players,
but when you really start to break down their roster, I’m not sure there’s much reason for
excitement. The problem starts upfront, where I think they will miss Tyson Chandler a lot
more than most people realize.

They are asking Sam Dalembert to replace Chandler and that will go about as well as it went

in Dallas, where Dalembert was a maddeningly inconsistent player who started but averaged
only 20 minutes a game and was often the least effective of their three-man rotation at
center. While there are still some things that Dalembert does well, one of the main reasons
for his inconsistency is that he’s only effective in certain match-ups.”
problem.html
– Chandler Parsons and  the Texas Love Triangle (from Marc Stein, ESPN):
” How the Chandler Parsons deal escalated the intensity of the Mavs-Rockets rivalry”
chandler-parsons-houston-rockets
– New Faces in New Places (from Basketball Insiders):
Southeast Division (from Cody Taylor):
Central Division (from John Zitzler):
– What Is A Cap Hold, And Why Might One Matter? (from Mark Deeks, BBall Breakdown):
” The calculation of a team’s cap space would, you would hope, be as easy as looking at their
owed contracts to both current and waive players, and subtracting it from the salary cap
amount for that year.

 

Nope, not close.

There are a few extra things that go into the determination of a team’s “team salary” amount, and by association that team salary amount’s proximity to the salary cap thresholds. And of these extra things, the most important, obvious and prevalent are things we know as “cap holds”. There are two types of cap hold – a free agent’s cap hold, and a draft pick’s cap hold.”

Read it here: http://bballbreakdown.com/what-is-a-cap-hold-and-why-might-one-matter/2014/10/06/

– The Most Consistent 3- pt Shooters In The NBA (from Arturo Galetti, BBall Breakdown):

” I gathered all the play by play data for last season. I looked at all the three point attempts for the season for each player and I divided them up into threes at less than or equal to 30 feet from the basket or heaves over 30 feet. I also looked at make streaks and miss streaks for those non-heave threes. Finally, I looked at the standard deviation of five shot samples for each player. I then worked out three base numbers:

  • Non-Heave 3Pt FG%: Percent of makes from three when the shot is 30 feet or less
  • Make/Miss Streak Ratio: Average numbers of consecutive non-heave makes divided by Average numbers of consecutive non-heave misses
  • Bad day 3Pt FG%: Non-Heave 3Pt FG% minus the standard deviation of the consecutive five shot samples for each player

I then used these numbers to build a composite ranking. If I keep it to just the players with at least 80 non-heave attempts for last season we get a very interesting looking top 30″

Read it here: http://bballbreakdown.com/the-most-consistent-shooters-in-the-nba-the-list-will-surprise-you/2014/10/06/

– Dajuan Wagner aims to play again in NBA (from Phil Anastasia, Philadlephia Inquirer):

” Lately, Wagner has done more than wonder about what might have happened had he stayed healthy. He has committed to an intensive workout program that he hopes will lead to a resurrection of his career at the age of 31.

A chiseled 200 pounds, the 6-foot-2 Wagner believes he has begun to regain the explosive athletic ability that was as much the source of his success in the sport as his jump shot, ballhandling and court sense.

After another training session on a recent afternoon at the Adrenaline Sports Performance facility in Cherry Hill, where he is part-owner, Wagner said he is determined to push himself to see if he can play again at the highest level of the sport – in the NBA.”

Read it here: http://www.philly.com/philly/sports/sixers

/20141008_Camden_s_Dajuan_Wagner_aims_to_play_again_in_NBA.html
 – The Shooting Hop (from Pro Shot Shooting System):

Analytics Evolution; Chris Copeland; Timberwolves Barometer

-From Dean Oliver at ESPN:

How numbers have changed the NBA

“Everyone is hungry for it — an impending landslide of data that tells us where every player and the ball is during every point in every NBA game. It’s a data set that answer these questions, among other things:

• Who can shoot a jump shot with defense in his face?

• Who isn’t getting back on defense?

• Who draws the defense the most?

• Who makes effective drives to the basket?

This is SportVU, a product of Stats LLC that the NBA purchased to be used across every arena starting this season. It’s the culmination of a decade of the basketball analytics revolution, where different people, different methods and different data have advanced the status of basketball as a thinking man’s game.

But let’s back up a little bit.

Before the previous decade, much of basketball analytics focused on player valuation metrics — numbers that essentially ranked players from best to worst….

…The problem with player value metrics is that there is little to validate them”

…consider this quote:

“The information that appears in box scores, television graphics and many scouting reports often does a poor job of explaining a game.” — David Leonhardt, Jan. 9, 2005

… (The SportVU data) will tell stories in greater detail than has ever been done before. The data is now there to not only explain player ratings but also to provide information that has never been presented. Players who “draw the defense” can be quantified as ones who pass the ball after having two or more players around them. “Getting good spacing” can become a visualization illustrating which players control parts of the court. “On-ball defense” can be isolated to see how often a player defending the ball cuts his opponent’s chance of scoring.”

…”Every action on a basketball court is influenced by nine other players, not to mention a coach. For this reason, there is no ‘holy grail’ in basketball equivalent to baseball’s on-base percentage.” — Chris Ballard, Oct. 21, 2005

Read the rest of Dean’s story here:  http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/9980160/nba-how-analytics-movement-evolved-nba

-From Mark Monteith at NBA.com/Pacers:

Copeland Caught in a Different Kind of Traffic

“This isn’t what he signed up for, and you could forgive him for being bitter. How would you feel if you were hired to do a job, and then someone better than you was brought in to do it instead?

Chris Copeland, however, is willing to wait his turn. He spent six years playing with teams in Fort Worth, Texas, Spain, Germany and Belgium before catching on with the Knicks last season, so biding his team with the Pacers, a team that hasn’t yet figured how out to lose, isn’t the worst way to make a living.

He’s played in just four of the Pacers’ nine games, for a total of 10 minutes, 39 seconds, and has scored just nine points. Six of those points came in Friday’s 104-77 win over Milwaukee, when he hit both of his three-point attempts in the final 2:52. Given his lack of activity, and all the questions from fans wondering about it, those were enough to earn two standing ovations.

Standing ovations in garbage time would have been enough to embarrass some players, perhaps even leave them angry. Nobody, especially professionals, wants to feel like the classic end-of-bench guy who gets sympathy cheers from the fans. Copeland, however, seems sincere in his appreciation.

“It’s an honor,” he said of the crowd reaction. “This is one of those places similar to New York where people love basketball. For them to have your back is special.”

Read the rest here: http://www.nba.com/pacers/news/copeland-caught-different-kind-traffic

– From Britt Robson at minnpost.com:

Wolves barometer: Gauging the trends

“It is nine games into the 2013-14 season, a point where trends that are prevailing begin to take on the imprimatur of reality. For the Minnesota Timberwolves, whose 6-3 record extrapolates out to 54 wins over the course of an 82-game campaign, the trends have been mostly positive, with the added bonus of being enshrined in some stylistically crowd-pleasing basketball.

The Wolves are not only winning, they’re winning pretty, with the latest evidence being Wednesday night’s clinical dissection of Cleveland’s defense. Despite deploying its anemic bench players for the final 14 minutes of the game, Minnesota coasted home with a 124-95 victory.

Such a robust start to the season is a pleasant surprise, but hardly a “pinch me, I’m dreaming,” scenario. Most NBA pundits had the Wolves as playoff contenders. Few people, however, could or did imagine that Kevin Love would be the league’s de facto MVP at this stage, or that the Wolves would have the NBA’s fifth-ranked defense (in terms of fewest points allowed per possession) to go along with their fifth-ranked offense (points scored per possession).

So, how sustainable are these trends? No one knows yet, of course, but if you watch the games and analyze the numbers, your brain and gut intuition can hazard some educated guesses.”
Robson shares his take on these aspects of the Wolves trends 1)Love will continue his MVP-caliber play; 2) Lack of depth remains a problem; 3) The new wingmen will be very good — but less superhuman; 4) The Wolves team defense will remain legitimately good — but not among the five best in the NBA here: