Kobe on flopping:
“There’s a difference [between taking a charge and flopping]. We all know what flopping is when we see it. The stuff that you see is where guys aren’t really getting hit at all and are just flailing around like a fish out of water. That’s kind of like, where are your balls at?”
Classic Pau/Bynum struggle faces after 119-90 loss to OKC. via @jose3030
Look at these Lakers fans
Andrew Bynum drops 30 rebounds, and decides that he wants to rub it in Mike Brown’s face by demanding the ball for a three as the clock is running out.
JaVale McGee, you’ve met your match.
Keith Fujimoto of the wonderful Oakley & Allen is re-opening his online store for the next week or so, with all proceeds going towards charity. See details below.
(click image or HERE to order)
For the next week or so our online store will be back in effect.
New designs.
All proceeds will go to Steven Lebron’s running fund (learn about it here)
Hey yo! Didn’t we just give you one of these 5 days ago? It’s all good, because we give you our NBA All-Star Weekend review and pair it with a little Tiger, Tiger, Tiger Woods y’all!
Episode 6 Show Notes
Here are some thoughts from All-Star weekend:
Tickr Tape Episode 5 is here y’all! We’ll save you the show notes and just tell you that we went all in on Jeremy Lin.
Played 100 times.No player in the league this year has been presented in such an isolated view then Kobe Bryant.
A new head coach, a supporting cast that leaves much to be desired for (case in point: both Allen Iverson and Gilbert Arenas were linked to the team this week, and would’ve been an upgrade at the guard position for them) and two big men who are on the trading block and don’t seem part of the team’s immediate future.
Add to the fact that their Los Angeles counterparts completed a trade for Chris Paul that the Lakers couldn’t close (well, the league wouldn’t allow to be completed) and that’s a long list of things going against Kobe and his team.
And yet, as the Lakers fight for a playoff spot in this shorten season, Kobe remains everything we’ve come to know: amazing and frustrating all in the same breath.
He’s shooting as much as ever, with a reputation and five championship rings that insulates him from criticism that would otherwise be intensified on a team built around length and size in the post.
As the team struggles to find its offensive rhythm under Mike Brown, Kobe continues to do things his way, everyone else adjust accordingly.
There’s something strangely inspiring about all this. Even as watching Kobe this year feels as though he’s one man, and the other nine players are on a separate plane.
Kobe may be hurting the team’s long-term progress. But he’s also reasserting his individual brilliance with late game heroics such as the overtime win at Boston and his last minute masterpiece a few days later against Toronto.
He shoots too much. But he’s doing all this with a wrist injury few could play through. He’s ignoring his teammates. But without him, where would the Lakers be.
Amazing. Frustrating. The story of Kobe’s career.
The most revealing quote came after he passed Shaquille O’Neal on the all-time scoring list when he said: “I just want No. 6, man. I’m not asking for too much, man. Just give me a sixth ring, damn it.”
There’s two things to take away from that statement. First, Kobe knows he needs help, he knows the roster at the moment is good enough to get to the playoffs and have a puncher’s chance. When you have Kobe, you have the best puncher in the world. But at the moment, not much else. Kobe has reined in his selfish play in the past for the sake of winning, but only when he knows his teammates are good enough. Right now, there’s no desire to sacrifice his individual play for the greater good. That greater good doesn’t exist.
Second, Kobe is starting to recognize his basketball mortality. As his career winds to a close, he’s focused his goal on just one more championship. There are still years left on that body of his, but there will come a time when even dominating the ball on offense will not bring the same results. Just one more ring, that’s all that’s in Kobe’s sights. For now, he’ll craft another individually brilliant season for all the critics that thought the decline was coming. When the reinforcements arrive, and they will soon, we will see the final act of Kobe’s career. It’s going to be great theatre.
The Minnesota Timberwolves have celebrated very little since entering the league in 1989. Since moving on from the Kevin Garnett era, the team has spent its time stockpiling assets and undergoing a necessary rebuild.
One of the impediments to their resurgence has been general manager David Kahn, the man who drafted two point guards, Johnny Flynn and Ricky Rubio, when he was armed with two lottery picks, than went and signed another point guard in Ramon Sessions through free agency.
There has been no semblance to Kahn’s roster construction over the past few years, but seemingly out of randomness or just out of sheer quantity of moves made, he has pulled together one of the most promising young rosters in the league.
The remarkable transition by Ricky Rubio to the league has lifted a lot of pressure off Kahn. Also, Head coach Rick Adelman is the perfect man to mold this team into something more than just a collection of misfit talent. The Rubio, Kevin Love and Derrick Williams core should make the rest of the Western Conference landscape take notice very soon, as early as next season.
But the man that’s orchestrating all of this is the most dangerous man in the league. As the franchise turns the corner, Kahn threatens to be the one to blow it all up again.
Last week, much was made about the fact that Kevin Love settled for a four year extension with an opt-out option, the pros and cons were broken down in detail by Tom Ziller. While many of us believe that the Wolves have offended their superstar power forward through negotiation by not locking him up over five years, Kahn believes that he’s obtained long-term flexibility for the team, to possibly pursue a better player down the road should the contract not work out.
This is of course ignoring the fact that Kevin Love is in the argument for best power forward in the league.
It’s not the first time that the team has come under fire under Kahn for handling a delicate situation in the worst way possible.
When the season ended last year, David Kahn allowed the uncertainly of then head coach Kurt Rambis linger on for months before finally firing him in July. It raised eyebrows across the league as to how poorly the organization is run. Last week’s debacle with Love only cements that reputation.
So while the Wolves are building a young and exciting core, the organization should take a hard look at whether they have the right guy to make the necessary moves to turn this roster into the next Oklahoma City Thunder, or players like Love and Rubio will follow Garnett into another era of underachieving results and mis-management.
Rivalries are great for sports, especially in basketball. I grew up following the Knicks-Pacers rivalry, Knicks-Heat and anyone in the East versus the Bulls. Bad blood that develops over time is great for the game.
It looks like the Bulls and Pacers look to have nominated themselves as the most interesting rivalry at the moment.
The groundwork was laid last year in a first round match-up that was much closer than the final result, where Chicago won in five games.
Earlier this week, the Pacers handed the Bulls their first home loss of the season. And didn’t hide their satisfaction in doing so, which upset Bulls guard Derrick Rose: “I’ll never forget how they celebrated just from winning this game.I can’t wait to play them again.”
Looking at the rosters of both teams, this looks like a rivalry with staying power. The Pacers are on the rise in the Eastern Conference, with a young core group led by Danny Granger, Roy Hibbert and Paul George. For the Bulls, many don’t expect their real season to start until they play Miami in the Conference Finals.
The two teams look locked into a tight race in the Central Division, and as the bad blood continues to rise, it will definitely heighten the rivalry between the two teams to levels we haven’t seen since Reggie Miller and Rik Smits threatened to unseat Jordan, Pippen and Rodman from the throne.
So mark your calendars down for March 5th, when Indiana returns to Chicago for a rematch. And don’t be surprised to see these two teams match-up in the second round of the playoffs.
Everyone knew before the season that with the compressed schedule, players would take their time getting into game shape and injuries were bound to occur.
But they’ve been happening lately at an alarming rate.
Earlier in the year, the Atlanta Hawks lost Al Horford for likely the entire season. The Spurs are without Manu Ginobili for the forseeable future. Back-up point guard Eric Maynor of the Thunder was lost for the year. Andrew Bogut of Milwaukee is expected to be gone for up to three months. Andrea Bargnani is out indefinitely with a calf injury. Players like Dwayne Wade, Chris Paul and Carmelo Anthony have also missed games due to an assortment of injuries.
In any season, players getting hurt is just a normal part of the game. But in the compressed schedule, it does take on additional meaning and a different way for teams to manage them.
Players that are out for three months now aren’t missing just a portion of the season, they’re out for the whole thing. Also, nagging injuries don’t just mean a player misses a practice or two. When a team is playing four games in five nights, or six in eight, that means games missed.
And these games that the superstars are missing can quickly add up to losses that will push teams out of the playoff race.
Health will be a key factor in determining playoff seeding.
And maybe the most important takeaway is this: whatever Kobe Bryant is doing to play through his wrist injury is just incredible.
NBA superfan Jimmy Goldstein’s thoughts on the contrasting styles of Lakers and Clippers fans.
“I think that the Clippers are the most exciting team in the NBA right now, not the best team, but the most exciting team. The fan base, from what I’ve observed so far, seems to be an extension of what was here before. I don’t see celebrities here; I don’t see the so-called Westside crowd that you see at the Laker games. It’s a completely different crowd.”
When DeMarcus Cousins got sent home by the Sacramento Kings after requesting a trade. I laughed. We had reached a point where there was really no boundaries left on what a player was entitled to do. Insubordination is an offense in every workplace, you know, except for the NBA, where the term is just part of what a coach has to deal with on a daily basis.
I fully expected Cousins to return to the team within days. Not because of any insight into the situation, but just using common sense. Here was a player in his second year of his rookie deal. One of the few times a team really has control over its players. At his salary and based on his demand, the Kings weren’t going to get any value for a power forward with superstar potential.
Cousins did return as I expected. But I was surprised to hear that coach Paul Westphal was let go just days later. You can spin his firing anyway you’d like. The team was terrible during his tenure, never developed an identity and many of its younger players especially Tyreke Evans have regressed significantly.
But the timing of the firing makes the whole thing completely distasteful. A disgruntled player requests a trade, coach draws a line in the sand to take control of the situation. Player returns, the coach is let go. There’s talks of how this situation might empower Cousins, giving him the belief that his erratic behavior will be put up with. My response is: he’s already empowered. They’re all empowered. The players run this league, everyone else just fits in where they can. This includes coaches, general managers and even fans. We are at the mercy of these players.
Add this incident next to the Chris Paul trade fiasco on the growing list of troubling developments with the league since the end of the lockout.
To be continued.
Yes, this next point probably sounded better when I wrote it before the Raptors were embarrassed in back to back losses to New Jersey and Philadelphia over the weekend.
But things are changing in Toronto. Slowly.
You can put a 1,300 pound boulder in the locker room and use symbolism to get your point across, but this is a results oriented league, and I was skeptical how new head coach Dwane Casey would be able to get this group of personnel to play better on the defensive end.
While still early, and some bad habits have crept up in the last two losses, check out this statistical comparison to last year via Holly Mackenzie.
In addition, I’ve never seen Andrea Bargnani play a more complete game than he has to start the year. DeMar DeRozan has expanded his range and already has more three pointers than all of last year, and Jose Calderon has returned to being one of the most efficient point guards in the league.
Thoughts of playoffs and eventually contending for a champion are still far away. But I get the sense that things are starting to turn, and a cultural change to the Raptors is slowly shifting them into a team that is more respectable around the league.
You know about Kwame Brown’s story by now. The former number one overall pick by Michael Jordan, he’s never lived up to his potential and has been relegated to a journeyman in the league.
Somehow, size still pays in the league and he’s getting seven million dollars from the Golden State Warriors this year.
After a loss to his former team the Los Angeles Lakers on Friday, according to Los Angeles Times beat writer Mike Bresnahan, Kwame said this about the development of Andrew Bynum:
“I taught him everything he knows. I told him if you can score on me, you can score on anyone. I’m one of the better defenders in the league and we played vs. each other every day in practice.”
Discuss amongst yourselves.