Archive for the 'Basketball' Category

What Happened to the Great Western Conference Playoffs?

The Western Conference playoffs start on Saturday. And I’m more disappointed than J.J. Redick’s life coach.

Two weeks ago it looked like this might be the most exciting Western Conference playoffs of all time. There were be 8 legitimate title contenders, seven potentially spectacular playoff series, and an exciting air of uncertainty. Now all that has changed.

It started with Golden State missing the playoffs. That left only seven real contenders (sorry Denver) and gave the #1 seed a huge advantage.

Then the Lakers (the one team who given the right circumstances could cruise to the Finals) locked up that #1 seed.

Then the Lakers were given the right circumstances—two relatively easy matchups (vs. Denver, vs Utah or Houston) and a conference finals opponent who will be tired and worn down.

In effect, those eight contenders were narrowed down to five (I’m short changing Utah and Houston, but they just won’t be able to beat the Lakers).  Four of those contenders were put on one side of the bracket. The Lakers were put on the other side. So while the Lakers can cruise to the Conference Finals, we have to watch meetings between Phoenix and San Antonio, Dallas and New Orleans, Phoenix and Dallas etc. that will come much to early in the post-season.

Yeah, it will still be better than last year’s Eastern Conference playoffs, but think of what could have been?

3 Comments »

Trent Johnson, Dodgeball Master

LSU’s new basketball coach has another talent

We can only home that someday there will be a mano-a-mano match between Jonson and Billy Madison to determine who’s #1 at injuring unsuspecting dodgeball participants.

No Comments »

D.U.I. (Dumb and Unsportsmanlike Infraction)

Oh, Melo, what were you thinking? It seems we are subject to some irresponsible action or legal infraction by a professional athlete every week, and this week’s spotlight falls on Carmelo Anthony. It is the timing of this one that makes it even dumber.

After beating the Rockets 111-94 on Sunday night to move just ahead of the Golden State Warriors for 8th place in the play-off hunt, apparently Melo thought it would be a good idea to go joy riding in the early A.M. Anthony was coming off an abysmal 3-14 performance with just 11 points to show for it. He had to rely on teammate Allen Iverson’s 33-7-7 game to help give his team a chance of making the last seed in the play-offs.  Luckily for Melo, the Golden State Warriors lost Monday night, meaning Anthony and Co. are going to the play-offs for the 5th straight year. I wonder if he saw this from the drunk tank, or if he had already been bailed out in time?

Carmelo Anthony has been in the national limelight since he carried Syracuse to a national championship and then got drafted 3rd, two slots behind (heir apparent to league stardom) Lebron James. But what has he done since? He has averaged 24.5 ppg and made the play-offs 5 straight years, but has yet to carry his team out of the first round. His play-off stats show that his scoring is lower than his career average (24.5 to 20.8), his assists are down (3 to 1.2) and his field goal percentage is almost 7 percent lower (46.2 to 39.5).

So what is he thinking? Instead of buckling up and getting some rest before a strenuous first round match-up with the Lakers (hottest team right now), Melo is off boozing and driving around interstate 25 late at night. With the West deeper than it has ever been, to have even a shot at making some play-off progress you have to be playing your best ball. As the so-called leader of the team, it seems Anthony has resigned himself to losing in the first round of the play-offs (again) and calling it a season. Way to be there for your team. This is the best supporting cast you have ever had (Iverson, Martin, Camby, etc.). I know it is a long shot to beat the 1st seed in the first round, but I remember a certain hyped-up Warriors team doing just that last year. The difference between 1 and 8 is not that big, but I guess Melo just does not have the fortitude, direction, or the drive to make himself a premier player in this league.

No Comments »

Roy Williams’ Catharsis

A lot has been made about Roy Williams’ rabid Jayhawk cheerleading on Monday night. Even given Williams’ Kansas background, it was surprising to see him so enthusiastic about the team which had just broken the hearts of his players. Many UNC faithful are not too pleased with their coach—-this article sums it up nicely—so why exactly did Williams do it?

The answer can be found five years ago when Williams decided to leave Kansas and Jayhawks fans around the world called him every dirty name they could think of. It’s clear that Williams never got over the hurt from the vitriol spewed his way. For the last five years he’s wanted Kansas fans to know how much the school meant to him, how much he cared for those Kansas players, and how difficult it was for him to leave. Unfortunately, he never really got a chance to show it.

On Monday night Williams got that chance, and he decided to take it regardless of the consequences. He knew his Kansas sticker would anger people at UNC—but he also knew that anger would likely be short lived. In his mind that was a small price to pay for an opportunity to reclaim 15 years of good feelings and do away with five years of bad ones.

1 Comment »

Roy Williams Wins the Title!!!…oh wait

Congratulation to the Jayhawks. And congratulations to Bill self for winning despite nearly throwing the game away by inexplicably switching to a zone defense. For 28 minutes Kansas had been playing terrific defense. Derrick Rose was ghost, and the entire Memphis offense consisted of Chris Douglas-Roberts taking difficult jumpers. Kansas was wearing them down and had the game in control.

So what did Self do? He decided he had to contain Douglas-Roberts and went to a Box-and-1. It contained Douglas-Roberts, but it also let Derrick Rose play 4-on-4 against a zone. It woke Rose up and he took over the game. Fortunately for Self, Memphis’ free throw shooting woes (remember those?) caught up with them.

Other thoughts…

—This is the 2nd straight year all four Final Four teams could be considered “great basketball teams.” I can’t remember the last time that happened. It’s like somehow by not letting teenagers play in the NBA, David Stern has raised the level of play in college basketball.

—Kudos to Billy Packer for calling out Memphis for repeatedly running high screens for Derrick Rose. Kansas would just double Rose and because the screener wasn’t a shooter, there was nothing Rose could do to create a good shot. Fortunately for Memphis, Self decided to change defenses.

—I loved the post-game comments from John Calipari. He took blame for not having his team ready for overtime, while also admitting they did all they could and believed the game was won. Rarely do you see that kind of candor in that situation.

2 Comments »

Get a Grip

Rumors have been circulating for weeks that the NBA has been considering raising the minimum age in which players can declare themselves eligible for the NBA draft. Well, it appears that in the next couple of days NBA commish David Stern and NCAA president Myles Brand are going to announce that the minimum age, set at 19 (or after one year of college) in the collective bargaining agreement of 2006, will be raised to 20 (or two years of college). A seeming victory for those protecting the integrity of the game (and certainly a victory for college basketball, who can now hold on to their stars another year). But I have to say, while Stern might have the best interest of the NBA at heart, this really is unfair to all those young, talented athletes who are forced to enter college.

Forced to enter college? Unfair? Well, yes. Consider the fact that the only people this is affecting go to college as a springboard to the NBA. Why go to college? The only reason president Brand cares about this issue is because the NCAA markets and makes money off of these athletes. He does not care about the well-being or education (scoff!) of these athletes. These athletes have to sacrifice millions of dollars for the benefit of the NCAA. Considering the risk of injury, you might potentially cost these athletes their career.

For those talking about the sanctity of the NBA, what about the sanctity of college? Since when did college become a place you go to for a year, just to leave for your professional ambition afterwards? These kids are training for the NBA, not for graduate school. There is no incentive to go to class, or be a productive member of the college community at all (sans the sports program). It is a waste of space and resources for these athletes to be forced to attend college.

How is it fair (or even legal) to deny someone who is clearly qualified for the professional level and millions of dollars in salary (not to mention endorsements) their opportunity? These people stand to make millions, and the NBA is telling them no? If a team is willing to take a chance on them, I do not see how an organization can deny them the ability to declare themselves for the draft.

People always bring up the issues of the sanctity of the game, how the integrity was being ruined by the influx of high school players. This is a way overstated excuse. Look at the drafts of the last five years. 2003-2005 were the last drafts in which high school seniors were eligible for the draft. The number of high school seniors taken in these drafts was 3, 7, and 9 respectively. Out of 60 picks each year. Less than 11% of all NBA draft picks. And 6 of these players were taken within the first 10 picks, meaning these were superstars without the need of a year in college (which only could have served to hurt their draft status). This is who the NCAA is targeting to get to stay in college. These are the superstars they want to exploit for an extra season.

In the two years post-collective bargaining (and the implementation of the 19 year old minimum), 6 freshman have been selected in the top 10 (1 in 2006, and 5 last year). This is a marked increase from the 4 freshman selected top 10 from 2003-2005. No one can deny that Oden and Durant were NBA ready after their freshman year (in the case of Oden, even more so.) All the NCAA is trying to do is take these freshman (some of whom would have left after high school), and force them to be poster boys for two years (in which these athletes could be making millions).

Finally, the attention that NBA draft receives for whisking away younger and younger athletes is greatly disproportionate to other sports. This is the breakdown of draft picks for the four largest sports:

NBA - 60
NHL – 211
NFL – 265
MLB – 1,453

Yeah. The NBA does not come within a 1/3 of hockey in terms of drafting young people. And let’s not mention MLB, which drafts 16 year olds from Curacao and high school seniors by the truck load. Like the NBA, the NFL has an age policy. The NFL is also full of 340 lb linemen who try and kill each other every day. The NBA is a finesse game where an 18 year old can dominate (hello, Lebron James). The NFL is too physical and big for high school seniors to come close to even competing, let alone dominate.

Instead of worrying about something more pertinent (like rearranging playoffs so we don’t have disproportionate talent in one conference, or teams slacking so they actually get lower seeds), David Stern is fixing a problem that does not exist. The number of people this affects is minimal… a handful of 18 year olds a year. For the NCAA and Brand this means millions (you saw the hype for Michael Beasley during tournament time… imagine if he could be in the tournament twice?). For the kids this rule is denying, it also means millions.

No Comments »

The Great Eastern Conference Tank Job

Gregg Oden and Kevin Durant are no longer awaiting the winners of this year’s draft lottery, but hey, that’s no reason for Eastern Conference teams to not tank the end of the season.

Take a look at the standings. There are only two teams still trying to win. The Hawks—because they’re securing the final playoff spot, and the Celtics—because they don’t know how to relax and rest themselves for the post-season.

The rest of the conference could care less whether they win. The big battle is between Atlanta, Toronto, and Washington to not finish 5th and draw a matchup with Cleveland. On Wednesday the Wizards blew a 10 point 4th quarter lead and lost at home to Milwaukee. On Saturday the Sixers, who are the hottest team in basketball, lost at home to Altanta. Not to be outdone, the Raptors lost back-to-back games to Charlotte and New Jersey.

You can’t blame any of them. There are three Eastern Conference teams nobody wants to play. Cleveland, Boston, and Detroit. A team that finishes 5th will likely have to play all three of them. Finishing 6th or 7th means a team can play no more than two of them.

The teams at the top of the conference are similarly disinterested in winning. Orlando, Detroit, and Cleveland are all locked into their seedings. The Cavs only care about Lebron liking his new teammates, the Pistons are concerned with unleashing superstud Rodney Stuckey on the rest of the NBA, and the Magic are just sitting back and watching Dwight Howard dunk.

Finally, there’s the bottom of the conference, which is engaged in a much less publicized battle to land Michael Beasley or Derrick Rose. The good news is nobody can compete with Miami’s lineup of Blake Ahearn, Earl Barron , Chris Quinn, Joel Anthony, and Kasib Powell, and so the tanking hasn’t been too apparent.

5 Comments »

Sweet Sixteen Ponderings

—Foget Luc Richard Mba a Moute and Kevin Love, last night’s game made it clear the key to the UCLA defense is Darren Collison and Russell Westbrook. Once both of them got four fouls the Hilltoppers started scoring at will. It means either they’re both great defenders, or they were prevented from taking their usual liberties with hand-checking regulations.

—How about that Xavier game? Thirteen lead changes in the last 10 minutes. Four more in overtime. Twenty-Three straight minutes of seemingly do-or-die possessions. This Xavier team has played more high intensity minutes than any team in the tournament. I was at their first round game against Georgia and the atmosphere was extremely tense for almost the entire 2nd half. Their 2nd round game was close throughout. And then you have this game. Who knows whether it will end up being good or bad for them. There is a chance it will lead to one of those “we can’t lose” mentalities and I think those are generally a good things (see: Wildcats, Davidson or Hiltoppers, Western Kentucky).

—It’s so hard to come back against North Carolina because they run the whole game. That’s what makes them dangerous. In order to come back from a 10+ point deficit a team needs to hit shots, get stops, and then run back the other way. Teams can’t do that against UNC because when they hit a shot the Tar Heels run right back at them. And UNC is better at it than everyone else. The pace becomes too frenetic, and the trailing teams runs out of gas before they can really push the ball up the floor.

The big question for the Tar Heels has been whether they’re a dominant enough offensive team to make up for their defensive deficiencies. That was the case in 2005. Right now I’d have to lean towards saying yes, but they still have three more games against three very good defensive teams.

—I hate to say this, especially after yesterday’s rant about cliches, but Tennessee just seemed soft to me. They got pushed around. Louisville just powered through the their defensive pressure. In hindsight it looks like Tennessee was simply the best team in a bad conference who was overrated because they played their best game of the season in their biggest game of their season.

No Comments »

Derrick Rose and Plush Velour Couches

It’s official. The state of Tennessee does not want you gambling on the NCAA Tournament with furniture. Last December a Memphis furniture store held a promotion promising to repay customers for up to $1500 of furniture if Memphis won the National Championship. Not so fast

Attorney General Robert E. Cooper issued an opinion last week stating that it is illegal for a business to conduct a promotion that requires a purchase when that purchase is induced by speculation that a person may receive partial or full rebate, depending on a particular team winning the NCAA tournament.

But wait, there’s more. The store now says Cooper approved the promotion before they went ahead with it. I predict in the end the only ones who get screwed are the consumers. Those poor, innocent people who just wanted something to tie the room together and were conned into spending extra in support of the Tigers.

1 Comment »

More Sean Singletary

Here’s some streaming video of what I was talking about

No Comments »

« Prev - Next »