Chicago Versus Miami Preview
	 
    
    
     
    Eastern Conference Finals
#1 Chicago (62-20) vs. #2 Miami (58-24)
Season series: Chicago, 3-0
Miami can win if...the Heat force a lot of turnovers that they convert into transition points. The Heat are an aggressive defensive team--particularly on the perimeter--but they can be vulnerable inside against patient, physical teams that do not panic and do not turn the ball over. LeBron James and Dwyane Wade are almost impossible to stop in the open court but elite defensive teams can at least slow them down in the half court by building a "wall" around the paint and forcing them to shoot jump shots.
Chicago will win because...the Bulls are a tough, physical, defensive-minded team that will seal off the paint and force James and Wade to make contested two point jump shots. The Bulls run excellent half court offensive sets and their big men can give the Heat some problems by attacking the paint for layups, dunks and offensive rebounds.
Other things to consider: When the Heat eliminated the Boston Celtics in five games they celebrated as if they had won the NBA title, prompting TNT's Charles Barkley to wonder aloud if the Heat realized that all they had done was win a second round series (contrast the Heat's reaction with how the Mavs responded to beating the Lakers and also keep in mind that the Celtics don't even raise banners for conference championships, a level of success that the Heat are still four wins away from attaining). If the Heat feel like beating the Celtics is equivalent to winning the NBA title and/or cleared the path to easily doing so then they are in for quite a shock; the Celtics are proud former champions but they are old and they lack the physical presence in the paint that they had before they traded Kendrick Perkins.
The Boston-Miami storyline captured the public's imagination but the Chicago-Miami storyline is at least as interesting in its own right; while many teams literally begged LeBron James to sign with them last summer, Derrick Rose reportedly told James that James could join the strong team that the Bulls were building or else the Bulls would defeat James if he went somewhere else. Rose is trying to lead his hometown team to an NBA title without the benefit of playing alongside a big name superstar but the Bulls are much more talented and deep than the national media is willing to admit (the national media have convinced themselves that only Kobe Bryant has a good supporting cast--though perhaps this year's playoffs have at least caused them to tentatively reconsider this idea--and that every other team is fatally flawed in some way); I would take Chicago's deep frontcourt as a collective unit over the Lakers' more touted frontcourt even though Pau Gasol is the most talented individual frontcourt player on either team.
LeBron James is a better all-around individual player than Derrick Rose but Rose has a finely tuned sense of exactly what his team needs for him to do; it sometimes seems like James is trying to prove a point or trying to accumulate particular numbers as opposed to simply making the right play, though he did perform brilliantly in the clutch (even if the "stat gurus" might not technically define what James did as "clutch") down the stretch of game five to eliminate the Celtics (which is exactly what 
I predicted James would do, though I thought that he would have to do it in game seven instead of game five). It would be deliciously ironic if Rose and his supposedly no-name supporting cast--a team very similar to the one that James left behind in Cleveland--beat the star-studded Miami Heat.
Have you noticed that almost nothing that has come out of James' mouth in the past year or so made any sense? From "taking my talents to South Beach" (is he going to Florida to party or to win a championship?), to calling a reporter's question "retarded" to belatedly apologizing for how he handled his "Decision" but then throwing his old teammates under the bus by saying that he "could not beat Boston by myself" (as if he were playing one on five or as if we are supposed to forget that 
he quit in game five versus Boston last season), James has repeatedly stuck his foot in his mouth. This does not invalidate his greatness as a player but it is just strange to watch/hear such nonsense after he spent the first part of his career seemingly hitting the right note every time he spoke publicly.
James appears to believe that star power alone wins in the NBA--he says that the success of the Celtics' star-studded team inspired him to join forces with Wade and Chris Bosh--but while star power is often important it is far from the only ingredient in a championship recipe; a championship team must be fully committed to defense and rebounding (contrast Chicago's multiple efforts in those categories with the lackadaisical performances offered in this year's postseason by nearly every Laker not named Kobe Bryant) and it must have players who can fill various roles in high pressure situations. James seems to think that he and Wade can take all of the shots, score all of the points and coast to a title. Their overpowering athleticism is indeed enough to win 50-plus games a season for the foreseeable future but only time will tell if it is also good enough to consistently beat elite teams in seven game playoff series.
Bosh is a versatile big man who can score in the post or hit the faceup jumper but James and Wade tend to take turns monopolizing the ball, relegating perennial All-Star Bosh into being little more than a Horace Grant-type power forward crashing the offensive boards from the weak side (Grant was a very good player but Bosh is a much more gifted and versatile scorer than Grant, even though the Heat only showcase Bosh's abilities on a sporadic basis). It is fascinating to observe the way that many members of the national media cover two similar stories in a vastly different way: whenever Pau Gasol's numbers go down, it is usually asserted that Kobe Bryant is selfishly shooting too much and not feeding Gasol the ball (Gasol played so meekly during this year's playoffs that the normally calm Coach Phil Jackson slapped Gasol in the chest to wake Gasol up, so even the biased media realized that Bryant could not be blamed this time for Gasol's declining numbers)--but, as I 
mentioned two months ago, Bosh and Coach Erik Spoelstra have been designated by the media as the scapegoats if the Heat do not win the NBA championship. Look at how many references there are to the Heat as "Two and a Half Men," as if Bosh somehow has been reduced not just from All-Star status but to something less than a full man. Bosh was a five-time All-Star and a 2007 All-NBA Second Team selection before he joined the Heat; he finished seventh in the 2007 MVP balloting. The assertion that he is not a legit, top 15 caliber player in the NBA is absurd but fits right in with the way that the media and "stat gurus" consistently denigrate the players surrounding James and Wade.
There has been a not so subtle shift in the media's  narrative about the Heat; before this season began, we were told that  James and Wade are arguably the two best players in the NBA and that  they would prove to be an unstoppable duo that would lead the Heat to  70-plus wins and multiple championships. The Heat had a good but hardly  dominant regular season, so now we are told that Bosh is some kind  of liability and that the rest of the roster--which has been upgraded  during the season with the addition of Mike Bibby, who had been the  starting point guard for a playoff bound team in Atlanta--is useless.  The excuses are already in place if the Heat lose and yet the groundwork  has also been laid to coronate James and Wade if the Heat win the title  (ESPN actually wasted part of a segment of a recent pregame show  entertaining the notion that James and Wade may be a superior duo than  Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen, a conversation that is at least six  years premature). Let's be perfectly clear: James is the best player in  the NBA, Wade is a top six player (Rose moved past him this season), the  Heat have enough talent to win a championship and if the Heat win a  title that does not instantly make James and Wade into superheroes.
After the Bulls beat the Heat will the media have to transform Rose into a superhero to explain how such an "upset" could happen?
Labels: Chicago Bulls, Chris Bosh, Derrick Rose, Dwyane Wade, LeBron James, Miami Heat
        
    posted by David Friedman @ 2:47 PM
       

   
   
  
  
  
  
  
 
        
    
  
  
  
     
    
    
	 
	 Analysis of the All-NBA Team Voting
	 
    
    
     
    The NBA annually selects a 15 member All-NBA Team divided into three five man squads--and almost every year the selections don't quite add up, both literally (in terms of vote totals) and figuratively (I previously offered my take on discrepancies in the 
2009 and 
2007 editions of the All-NBA Team).
This year's First Team is not controversial (Dwight Howard, LeBron James, Kevin Durant, Derrick Rose, Kobe Bryant), though for the second straight year the media chose Durant while I would have selected Dirk Nowitzki. The Second Team consists of Nowitzki, Pau Gasol, Amare Stoudemire, Dwyane Wade and Russell Westbrook, while LaMarcus Aldridge, Zach Randolph, Al Horford, Manu Ginobili and Chris Paul earned Third Team honors. In addition to the Nowitzki-Durant swap, 
my All-NBA Team included Aldridge on the Second Team and listed Gasol as the Third Team center; I chose Tony Parker instead of Ginobili as a Third Team guard and my Third Team forwards were Blake Griffin and Kevin Love.
Unless there is a typographical error on the official NBA press release, this year the 119 media members on the selection panel combined for 120 First Team votes at center, 237 First Team votes at forward and 240 First Team votes at guard. The only guards who received First Team votes were Rose, Bryant and Wade--none of whom should be listed at any other position (though Bryant occasionally plays small forward)--so it is difficult to understand why there were two "extra" guard votes (119 media members voting for two First Team guard slots should produce 238 First Team votes, not 240). The discrepancy at center and forward is easier to explain; Stoudemire clearly received one First Team vote as a center and one as a forward. However, there is no logical explanation for how 119 voters combined for 597 total First Team votes (the total should be 595).
A funny "old school" story about the blurred distinction between center  and power forward happened back in the 1970s when the 6-7, wide bodied  Wes Unseld was the Bullets' nominal center while the 6-9, agile Elvin  Hayes (a collegiate center) was the Bullets' nominal power forward; Hayes told a reporter that the Bullets needed better play  from the center position but when the reporter repeated that remark to  Unseld he retorted that Hayes should know because Hayes is the team's  center! However, the Bullets were somewhat unusual--most "old school" teams had a clearly defined center and a clearly defined power forward. A few years ago, Shaquille O'Neal called himself "LCL" (the "Last Center Left") and he was prophetic to some degree. Howard is one of the few legitimate back to the basket, traditional centers; most NBA big men are hybrids whose skill sets/body types represent a blurring of the line between center (historically the biggest player on the team and someone who operated predominantly in the paint) and power forward (historically the second biggest player on the team and someone who could rebound in the paint but also step out to shoot the 15 foot jump shot). Players like Gasol, Stoudemire and Tim Duncan often are the de facto centers for their respective teams yet they are more mobile than traditional centers and they face the basket on offense more frequently than most traditional centers used to do.
The strange thing about this year's All-NBA Team is that Horford received designation as the Third Team center even though he is essentially a power forward and even though the Hawks' best lineup this season (as seen during the playoffs) shifted him to power forward. Why honor Horford when Griffin and Love clearly had better seasons? Both Griffin (22.5 ppg, 12.1 rpg, 3.8 apg) and Love (20.2 ppg, a league-leading 15.2 rpg, 2.5 apg) put up significantly better numbers than Horford (15.3 ppg, 9.3 rpg, 3.5 apg) so it makes no sense to use a tenuous positional designation as an excuse to put Horford on the team. By placing Gasol at Third Team center I gave Aldridge his just due as a Second Team forward (Aldridge is clearly Portland's franchise player, while Gasol is clearly the Lakers' second option) while also creating room for Griffin and Love to be on the team. Although a good case can be made to put Randolph on the team, Griffin and Love were more productive than Randolph during the regular season--and, even though playoff performance has no bearing on a regular season honor, it should be noted that despite the attention Randolph has received for his postseason production he is shooting just .439 from the field so far in the playoffs, well below his .503 regular season field goal percentage. Randolph and Horford received 67 and 62 points respectively in the voting (scored on a 5-3-1 basis), while Love received 48 (fourth best among players who did not make the cut, trailing Rajon Rondo, Paul Pierce and Carmelo Anthony) and Griffin received 36.
Labels: Derrick Rose, Dirk Nowitzki, Dwight Howard, Kevin Durant, Kobe Bryant, LeBron James
        
    posted by David Friedman @ 1:31 PM
       

   
   
  
  
  
  
  
 
        
    
  
  
  
  
  
     
    
    
	 
	 Bryant and Garnett Each Earn All-Defensive First Team Honors for the Ninth Time
	 
    
    
     
    Three-time Defensive Player of the Year Dwight Howard earned unanimous selection to the 2011 All-Defensive Team, receiving 27 First Team votes and two Second Team votes in balloting conducted among the league's 30 head coaches (coaches are not permitted to vote for their own players). Howard has thus been recognized as the league's top defender by members of the media (who vote for the Defensive Player of the Year) and by the coaches.
After not making either squad last season, a revitalized Kevin Garnett received First Team honors for a record-tying ninth time; Kobe Bryant made the First Team for the ninth time overall and the sixth season in a row. Michael Jordan and Gary Payton are the only other nine-time members of the All-Defensive First Team. Tim Duncan holds the all-time mark with 13 total All-Defensive Team selections (including eight First Team nods), followed by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (11), Bobby Jones (11, including two ABA selections), Kobe Bryant (10), Kevin Garnett (10) and Scottie Pippen (10). The NBA has selected All-Defensive Teams each season since 1969-70, while the ABA selected an All-Defensive Team (one five man unit only, not two five man units) from 1972-73 through 1975-76.
LeBron James and Rajon Rondo are the other First Team selections; James made the First Team for the third straight year, while this is Rondo's second consecutive First Team selection (Rondo made the Second Team in 2009).
Defense is half of the game and yet even many "stat gurus" acknowledge that "advanced basketball statistics" do not precisely measure individual defense. "Stat gurus," media members and fans each have certain biases and these various biases become quite pronounced regarding defense precisely because defense is so hard to quantify and because most observers do not have a sophisticated (or even basic) understanding of NBA defense on a team or individual level. Scientists 
have spent more than 50 years and hundreds of millions of dollars to repeatedly verify arguably the most successful theory of all time (Einstein's Theory of Relativity), so it is mystifying that "stat gurus" appear to be completely disinterested in experimentally verifying their "advanced basketball statistics"; even more troubling is that "stat gurus" largely disregard the reality that many of the basic box score numbers are subjective or even just wrong: I have repeatedly provided evidence that 
assist totals are inaccurate and I strongly suspect that there are similar problems with defensive numbers like steals and blocked shots (not to mention the fact that the league is not even attempting to quantify many of the most important important aspects of team defense, such as switching, hedging, double-teaming and so forth). The raw box score numbers are both flawed and incomplete, yet the "stat gurus" stubbornly insist that they alone possess the full truth about how to evaluate NBA players.
My All-Defensive Team choices are usually very similar to the official selections (the coaches agreed with eight of my 10 picks in each of the past three seasons: 
2008, 
2009 and 
2010) while differing from the opinions expressed by "stat gurus," media members and other self-proclaimed experts. This season, 
six of my 10 All-Defensive Team choices matched the coaches' choices, including all five of my First Team picks plus the selection of Tyson Chandler as the Second Team center; the coaches rounded out their Second Team with Tony Allen, Chris Paul, Andre Iguodala and Joakim Noah while I preferred Thabo Sefolosha, Grant Hill, Tim Duncan and Gerald Wallace. I rejected Allen because he barely averaged 20 mpg and I simply did not think that Paul was quite as effective defensively as he was in previous seasons. I mentioned Noah as a quite viable Second Team honoree and I feel the same way about Iguodala; they each totaled 15 points (players receive two points for each First Team vote and one point for each Second Team vote) and were thus the last players to make the cut, just ahead of Dwyane Wade (14 points), Russell Westbrook (13) and a quartet of players who received 11 points each: Wallace, Hill, Luol Deng (another player who I gave an honorable mention) and Duncan. Sefolosha, a member of the Second Team last season, received just five Second Team votes.
Labels: Dwight Howard, Kevin Garnett, Kobe Bryant, LeBron James, Rajon Rondo
        
    posted by David Friedman @ 3:30 AM
       

   
   
  
  
  
  
  
 
        
    
  
  
  
  
  
     
    
    
	 
	 Lakers Face Crossroads After Being Swept by Mavericks
	 
    
    
     
    The Dallas Mavericks swept the Lakers out of the second round of the  playoffs with a 122-86 victory marked by great Dallas teamwork, a  stunning lack of effort by nearly every Laker not named Kobe Bryant and  two cheap shots by Laker players--the second of which ranks among the  dirtiest plays seen in the NBA in quite some time. The stunning end to  the Lakers' "three-peat" quest will no doubt inspire a lot of commentary  devoid of logic and context; this article is a preemptive strike  intended to provide some much needed perspective about the era that just  ended and about what the future holds for the Lakers. I am not in any  way slighting the Mavericks by focusing on the Lakers; the Mavericks  have the opportunity to write their own championship ending in the next  six weeks, so the story of their season (and the story of the Dirk  Nowitzki era) cannot be completely told until after their playoff run is  over.
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Evaluating the 2008-2010 LakersThere  will most likely be a lot of overheated rhetoric about how the Lakers'  loss supposedly tarnishes Kobe Bryant's legacy (interestingly, that kind  of argument has yet to be heard regarding Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili and  Tony Parker in the wake of the San Antonio Spurs' first round loss to  the eighth seeded Memphis Grizzlies). The Lakers' "failure" this season  has to be put in the larger context of what they accomplished from  2008-2010 and the nearly unprecedented nature of what they were trying  to do this season; during that period of time the Western Conference has  arguably been as strong as either conference has ever been but the  Lakers finished with the best record three years in a row, backed up  that regular season success by advancing to the NBA Finals each time and  won two championships after losing in the 2008 Finals to the Boston  Celtics. The 2008 Celtics were anchored by three future Hall of Famers  and were one of the greatest defensive teams ever. The Lakers avenged  the 2008 loss by defeating the Celtics in an epic seven game NBA Finals in  2010.
The 2011 Lakers were trying to advance to the NBA Finals  for the fourth straight season, a feat that has only been accomplished  by three teams: the 1984-87 Celtics, the 1982-85 Lakers and the 1959-66  Celtics. If the Lakers had won the 2011 championship then they would  have been the only team other than Bill Russell's Celtics to advance to  at least four straight Finals and win at least three championships (the  Jordan-Pippen Bulls "three-peated" twice, the O'Neal-Bryant Lakers  "three-peated" once and the Mikan Lakers "three-peated" once but none of  those teams also made it to four straight Finals).
Think for  just a moment about the facts in the preceding paragraph: the Lakers  were trying to do something that has only been achieved by the greatest  dynasties in the history of the sport! Then think about this for a  moment: Russell's Celtics were loaded with other Hall of Famers  (including 
Top 50 players  Bob Cousy, John Havlicek, Sam Jones and Bill Sharman), the 1980's  Celtics had three Top 50 players (Larry Bird, Kevin McHale and Robert  Parish) plus another Hall of Famer (Dennis Johnson) and the 1980's  Lakers had three Top 50 players (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Magic Johnson and  James Worthy). Each of those dynasties brought current or former  All-Stars off of the bench during at least some of those seasons.
Some people try to fool the public by saying that the current Lakers team is talented and/or deep but in 2009 I wrote a detailed 
refutation of both notions  (the 2010 Lakers added some talent by essentially swapping Trevor Ariza  for Ron Artest but that did not materially change the truth of what I asserted in 2009); the 2009 and 2010 Lakers were among the least talented and  least deep champions of the past two decades and they were not even  close to being as talented or deep as the Russell Celtics, Bird Celtics  or Johnson Lakers: while the latter three teams had multiple Hall of  Famers/Top 50 players, the current Lakers have one player of that  caliber (Kobe Bryant), one All-Star who had not won a single playoff  game prior to joining the Lakers (Pau Gasol), a solid sixth man who  often had to start (Lamar Odom), a talented but raw young center with  chronically bad knees (Andrew Bynum) and a collection of role players  (Artest made his only All-Star appearance seven years and three teams  ago and thus can hardly be compared to the perennial All-Stars who played alongside Russell, Bird and Johnson).
Much has been made of the Lakers' vaunted size but the  reality is that Gasol, Bynum and Odom were hardly ever on the court  together at the same time and Bynum was a hobbled 20 mpg role player  during the playoffs in the Lakers' two championship seasons. Gasol,  Bynum and Odom comprised a nice three man rotation of bigs but what  really made them deadly was the fact that opposing teams had to send multiple defenders at Bryant, enabling those bigs to play one on one in the post and/or  have free lanes to crash the offensive boards.
In order to really  understand the evolution of the Lakers' roster and what made the Lakers  tick from 2008-10 it is useful to think back to the 2006 and 2007  seasons; Kobe Bryant set various scoring records while twice carrying  the Lakers to the playoffs with Kwame Brown as the starting center,  Smush Parker as the starting point guard and Luke Walton as the starting  small forward. Brown never started a playoff game before or since that  time, Parker has been out of the league for several years and Walton has  become a seldom-used reserve. Bryant arguably did more with less in  those seasons than just about any other superstar in NBA history and it  was clearly evident that if the Lakers could surround him with even a  semi-adequate supporting cast then they would once again be championship  contenders.
During those years, no one thought of Gasol as an  elite player; Gasol made the All-Star team in 2006--his only All-Star  selection in the first seven years of his career--but after his Memphis  teams were repeatedly swept in the first round of the playoffs Memphis'  management realized that it would not be possible to build a legit  contender around Gasol so they decided to trade him and rebuild.  Meanwhile, the 2008 Lakers reacquired Derek Fisher to take Parker's spot, inserted  Bynum into the starting lineup and started out 25-11. When Bynum got  hurt the Lakers realized that if they could replace him with a big man  who could walk and chew gum at the same time (i.e., not Brown) they  could make some noise in the playoffs; their short term need provided a  perfect match with Memphis' long term need, so the Lakers sent Kwame  Brown, Marc Gasol and other considerations to the Grizzlies in exchange  for Pau Gasol. Many people reacted as if the Lakers had pulled off the  heist of the century but, as I 
wrote right after the Lakers-Grizzlies trade,   "All that can be said at the moment is that this is the right kind of   move for Memphis to make, because there was no future for the team the   way it was composed prior to this deal. In an odd way, there is a  slight  similarity between what Memphis is doing now and what the Lakers  did  with Shaq several years ago; the Grizzlies are getting rid of  their best  player and taking a short term step backwards with the hope  of being  better off long term, while the Lakers are shedding some youth  in order  to make a championship run now. Two obvious differences are  that Gasol  is not nearly as good now as Shaq was in 2004 and the talent  that the  Lakers acquired as a result of the Shaq trade (which, after  several  deals, has crystallized, essentially, as Bynum, Odom and Gasol)  should  give the Lakers a multiple year window in which to try to win  titles,  while the Heat narrowly escaped with one championship before  the bottom  fell out." My assessment proved to be quite prophetic as the Lakers enjoyed a nice three year run with Pau Gasol while the Grizzlies rebuilt their squad and may actually advance farther in the playoffs this season than the Lakers did.
Pau Gasol has never been a dominant player  or an especially tough player but he is intelligent and he has a  multi-faceted skill set; a screen-roll play featuring him and Bryant can  be lethal because the opposing team must trap Bryant, thus enabling  Gasol to roll to the hoop, spot up or catch a pass from Bryant and  quickly swing the ball to a wide open player on the weak side. The Lakers  did not need for Gasol to carry a huge load as a franchise player but  merely to be a legit second option, thus relegating Odom to his proper  role as the third option. Although some teams struggle after making  significant moves, the 2008 Lakers bonded quickly as Bryant and Gasol  instantly formed a very good on-court chemistry. The Lakers rolled all  the way to the NBA Finals, where a bigger, tougher, more talented and  deeper Celtics team took them out in six games.
Statistically,  Gasol was essentially the same player in L.A. that he had been in  Memphis except for two differences: his field goal percentage and his  offensive rebounding both increased in L.A., a direct result of the openings  created for him when opposing teams trapped Bryant.
With Gasol on  board Bryant no longer had to score at a record setting pace during the  regular season but in order to advance in the playoffs the Lakers  needed for Bryant to play at roughly the level that Michael Jordan  performed at during the Bulls' second "three-peat"; I provided an  indepth analysis of this subject in my June 24, 2010 article titled 
Placing Kobe Bryant's Career in Historical Context  but the shorthand confirmation of that assessment is a simple  comparison of Jordan's playoff numbers from 1996-98 with Bryant's  playoff numbers from 2008-10:
Here are Jordan's playoff averages from 1996-98 when the Bulls won three championships:
1996: 30.7 ppg, 4.9 rpg, 4.1 apg, .459 FG%, .403 3FG%, .818 FT%
1997: 31.1 ppg, 7.9 rpg, 4.8 apg, .456 FG%, .194 3FG%, .831 FT%
1998: 32.4 ppg, 5.1 rpg, 3.5 apg, .462 FG%, .302 3FG%, .812 FT%
Here  are Bryant's playoff averages from 2008-10 when the Lakers made three  straight trips to the Finals and won two championships:
2008: 30.1 ppg, 5.7 rpg, 5.6 apg, .479 FG%, .302 3FG%, .809 FT%
2009: 30.2 ppg, 5.3 rpg, 5.5 apg, .457 FG%, .349 3FG%, .883 FT%
2010: 29.2 ppg, 6.0 rpg, 5.5 apg, .458 FG%, .374 3FG%, .842 FT%
Here are some other important stats/facts about Bryant's 2008-10 playoff productivity:
1) Bryant averaged at least 40.1 mpg in each of those postseasons.
2) Bryant scored at least 30 points in 12 of the Lakers' 21 playoff  games in 2008, 15 of their 23 playoff games in 2009 and 14 of their 23  playoff games in 2010.
3) Bryant set an NBA record by scoring at least 30 points in eight  straight potential road closeout games (the previous record of six was  held by Elgin Baylor).
4) In addition to carrying the aforementioned scoring load despite  facing constant double and triple teams, Bryant also led the Lakers in  assists and played a major role defensively, alternating between being a lockdown one on one defender in some matchups and being a roaming help defender in  other matchups (Boston Coach Doc Rivers asserted that Bryant is the  best help defender since Scottie Pippen).
5) Bryant accomplished these feats despite multiple finger injuries  (including an avulsion fracture to the index finger on his shooting  hand) and a 2010 right knee injury that ultimately required surgical  correction after the playoffs.
Two things should be quite obvious:
1) Kobe Bryant carried a huge load during the 2008-10 playoffs.
2) Kobe Bryant's 2008-10 accomplishments plus his contributions to the  2000-02 championship teams, his 2008 regular season MVP, his two scoring  titles and his numerous All-NBA and All-Defensive Team selections mean  that his legacy is very secure regardless of what happens during the  rest of his career; he can add to his legacy by winning more championships but his legacy will not be diminished if he fails to win another title.
When thinking about Bryant's legacy it is useful to consider that LeBron James is 26, has logged over 25,000 regular season minutes and has yet to win an NBA championship. Even if James' Heat win the 2011 championship they will have to capture four more titles in a row--something that has only been accomplished by Russell's Celtics--just for James to tie Bryant with five rings; otherwise, James will have to win some rings well past the age of 30 in order to match Bryant's total, a task that may not be so easy for a player who is very dependent on size, speed and strength but whose midrange game and footwork are not nearly as good as Bryant's. Bryant won two championships and made three straight Finals appearances with Pau Gasol, who was a one-time All-Star prior to joining the Lakers; James not only has his own Gasol (Chris Bosh) but he also is playing alongside Dwyane Wade, a perennial member of the All-NBA Team.
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The 2011 Lakers: Lack of Focus and Toughness Culminates in Missed Assignments, Flagrant Fouls and an Embarrassing SweepBryant  ranks 27th on the all-time regular season minutes played list (40,145).  What does that mean? Here is what some other NBA legends were doing by  the time they had logged that many career minutes: Michael Jordan was a  39 year old Wizard averaging 20 ppg in his final season, Julius Erving  was a 34 year old All-Star averaging 20 ppg, Hakeem Olajuwon was an  injury-prone role player averaging 10.3 ppg and Oscar Robertson was  averaging 15.5 ppg in the second to last season of his career. Ageless  wonder Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was still an All-NBA level performer  well past the 40,000 minute mark but that just shows how remarkable (and  underrated) he is; Larry Bird, Elgin Baylor and Magic Johnson each  retired thousands of minutes shy of the 40,000 barrier.
Bryant also ranks  second on the all-time playoff minutes played list (8165), trailing only  Abdul-Jabbar (8851). It is remarkable--and nearly unprecedented--for any player, let alone a  perimeter player, to still be an All-NBA First Team caliber performer  after accumulating as much mileage as Bryant has. Bryant has transformed  himself from a high flyer with a jump shot to a jump shooter who can  still occasionally fly. Prior to the 2011 season, Bryant and Coach Phil  Jackson agreed upon a minutes restriction plan to preserve Bryant's  health and hopefully enable Bryant to peak at playoff time; Bryant had  averaged between 36.1 and 41.5 mpg from 1999-2010 but in 2011 Bryant  averaged just 33.9 mpg, nearly five mpg less than he averaged in 2010.  Since Bryant played in all 82 games that amounted to saving more than  400 minutes of wear and tear--but it also meant sacrificing some regular  season wins; Bryant used to say that he never worried about the Lakers'  reserves playing poorly because if the situation got out of hand then  he would just check himself back into the game but that was not the case  in 2011: when the Lakers' reserves blew leads or allowed deficits to  grow in the fourth quarter Bryant stayed on the bench. Bryant also  rarely practiced with the team, another concession to age that had a  domino effect on the team; Bryant is a notoriously intense practice  player but it became evident that without him setting the tone the  Lakers' practices lacked a certain edge and that soon spilled over into  how they played during games.
Jackson and Bryant hoped/believed that during the playoffs they would be  able to unleash a rested, healthy Bryant but that did not really turn  out to be the case; Bryant severely sprained his left ankle in March and  then he reaggravated that injury in game four of the Lakers' first  round series versus New Orleans. Bryant averaged at least 10 FTA/g  during each of his three peak seasons and he settled in at around 7  FTA/g from 2009-2011 but he averaged fewer than 5 FTA/g in the Lakers'  final six playoff games this season after attempting at least seven free  throws in each of the first four games. Bryant averaged at least 5.2  rpg in each of the past five postseasons but in 2011 he averaged just  3.4 rpg, including games with 2, 1 and 0 rebounds after reinjuring his  ankle. I don't know how seriously Bryant's ankle is injured--Bryant only  talks about injuries when he is directly asked about them and he  refused to have an MRI done on his ankle during the playoffs--but it is  obvious from both a visual and statistical standpoint that he was not  the same player after game four versus New Orleans; during the 2008-10  Finals runs Bryant played like Jordan circa 1996-98 but in the 2011  playoffs Bryant was "merely" an All-Star caliber player (22.8 ppg, 3.4  rpg, 3.3 apg). Ironically, the reduction of Bryant from Superman to just  a very good player proved the validity of everything that I have been  saying about Bryant's importance to the Lakers and the Lakers' lack of  talent/depth; during previous playoff runs when the Lakers got into  trouble Bryant uncorked a 35-40 point game and/or locked down any  perimeter player who was hurting the Lakers. Bryant nullified traps  by either scoring over them or picking them apart with pinpoint passes.  Bryant still attracted double teams during the 2011 playoffs but he  could not power through them, he could not stay on the court for 40-plus  minutes to buttress the team's weak bench (he played more than 40  minutes just once in 10 postseason games after doing so 15 times in 23  postseason games in 2010) and he could not consistently produce the  scoring barrages that simultaneously boosted his team's confidence while  demoralizing the opposing team.
Logically, the slack should have been picked up by the highly touted  frontcourt of Gasol, Bynum and Odom but that did not happen. Bynum had  some good moments but he completely disappeared in game one and game  four versus Dallas. Odom was very inconsistent and shot poorly from the  field (.459) and from three point range (.200). However, the biggest  disappointment by far was Gasol, who some people were foolishly touting  as a league MVP candidate just a few months ago; instead of stepping up  to become a legit number one option, Gasol completely melted down,  shooting just .420 from the field, becoming invisible defensively and  committing numerous gaffes at both ends of the court. In 10 playoff  games Gasol never exceeded 17 points and he only reached double figures  in rebounds three times; Lakers' fans are now painfully aware of exactly  why the Memphis Grizzlies decided that it is not possible to build a  championship team around Gasol.
Everything came to a head in game four versus Dallas. Bryant scored 13  points on 6-8 field goal shooting in the first quarter, repeatedly  nailing midrange jumpers, but the other Lakers combined to shoot 2-11  from the field. I don't know if  anyone said 
"1,2,3, Cancun"   on the Lakers' sideline but--other than Bryant--the Lakers' body   language and production spoke very loudly and very clearly about their   mindset. Despite Bryant's efficient scoring outburst the Lakers trailed  27-23 after the first 12 minutes and you could already see the writing  on the wall: as soon as Bryant cooled off (or took a rest) the game  would clearly get out of hand.
In the always entertaining--but  rarely  informative--post-first quarter interview, ABC's Heather Cox asked  Coach Phil  Jackson "What did you tell him (Kobe Bryant) you need from  him today?"  Jackson answered, "I don't have to tell him anything. He  knows what he  has to do." Then she asked Jackson what Jackson had just  said to Lamar  Odom on the sideline and Jackson replied, "Lamar's  getting confused with  their matchup zone. He just has to move the ball.  He's trying to  dribble with it at the top of the floor."
Odom and the rest of the Lakers remained confused on offense but their defensive effort and execution were even  worse as the Mavericks outscored the Lakers 36-16 in the second quarter  to effectively end the game by halftime. The Mavericks aggressively  trapped Bryant and dared any other Laker to shoot. The notion that  Bryant took the Lakers out of rhythm by shooting too  much is absurd; no Laker other than Bryant displayed the willingness or  ability to generate any kind of offense. Bryant did not have the  necessary burst to explode past the double team to score but he made the  correct passes that led to wide open shots for Gasol and other Lakers; Gasol and company either misfired or hesitated to shoot for so long  that the Mavericks could easily recover. After his hot start, Bryant  shot 1-10 from the field in the final three quarters but still finished  as the Lakers' high scorer with 17 points.
The only thing uglier than the final score was the way that Odom and  Bynum completely lost their composure in the fourth quarter; Odom  received a flagrant two foul (and an automatic ejection) for hitting  Dirk Nowitzki with a cheap shot elbow to the midsection and then Bynum  got a flagrant two foul for smashing his forearm into an airborne J.J.  Barea's ribcage, a reckless act that could have seriously injured Barea.  TNT's Chris Webber made two excellent points about the cheap shots  delivered by Odom and Bynum: (1) It is easy to seem tough/act tough (in  previous seasons) when Kobe Bryant is bailing you out by making big  plays and hitting tough shots; (2) if the NBA does not respond  forcefully to Bynum's foul--a particularly vicious and dangerous  blow--then the league runs the risk that game four of any series in  which a team is losing 3-0 could devolve into a procession of  head-hunting by the team that is about to get swept.
This is not the  first time that Bynum has committed such a foul, either; in January 2009  
Bynum delivered a cheap shot that fractured one of Gerald Wallace's ribs and collapsed Wallace's left lung and 
in March 2011 Bynum cracked Michael Beasley in the midsection.  Bynum was ejected from the game and then suspended for two additional  games after the foul against Beasley; the NBA indicated that it  considered suspending Bynum for three games, so since Bynum is a  multiple offender--and since the foul against Barea was the worst of  Bynum's three cheap shots--the NBA should suspend Bynum for at least  five games at the start of next season.
Phil Jackson clearly  reached his wit's end with this team; Jackson has long been a vocal  exponent of positive coaching--the very antithesis of someone like Bobby  Knight, who used to rant and rave on the sidelines--but the softness  and lack of focus exhibited by Gasol incited Jackson to literally strike  out at Gasol twice during timeouts in game three of the Dallas series.  Jackson--like John Wooden and most other members of the coaching  pantheon--knows that most of a coach's job is done during practice and  that is why Jackson's default demeanor on the sidelines usually was very  calm no matter what was happening on the court; if a coach prepares his  team properly then there is no reason for him to get overly excited  during the game. Jackson's reaction to Gasol in the Dallas series is a powerful indictment of  just how poorly Gasol played.
After the game, Jackson and Bryant shook hands with Dallas owner Mark  Cuban, Dallas Coach Rick Carlisle and several Dallas players; Jackson's  teams have always lost with dignity--I am thinking in particular of the  1994 Bulls who stayed on court to congratulate the Knicks after a very  hard fought series--so it must have been very disturbing to  Jackson that Bynum and Odom acted so disgracefully in Jackson's final  game as a coach.
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The Future of the LakersIf  you understand how the Lakers achieved the success that they did from  2008-2010 and you understand what went wrong in 2011 then you can only  draw one conclusion: the Lakers as presently constituted are not likely  to qualify for the playoffs in 2011-12. If you think that statement  sounds crazy then consider the reality that since 2008 the eighth seeded  team in the West has won 50, 48, 50 and 46 games; four of the Lakers'  five starters started all 82 games in 2010-11, with Odom filling in for  Bynum when Bynum was hurt, and the Lakers ended up with 57 wins. If the  Lakers keep the current roster intact it is highly likely that they will  not enjoy similar health at the top of their rotation and it is also  highly likely that Bryant's minutes will have to be further reduced as a  concession to all of the mileage that he has accumulated; every minute  that Bryant is not on the court is a minute that must be filled by one  of the Lakers' ineffective bench players.
The Lakers clearly cannot expect Gasol to eventually become the team's  number one option nor is it a good idea to hand that role to Bynum, a  player who has yet to make it through an entire season while playing  starter's minutes. Artest provides almost nothing on offense and his  focus on defense wavers at times; without Jackson on the bench Artest  may revert back to being completely uncoachable.
Derek Fisher has  been a consummate professional throughout his long NBA career and at  one time he was both a tenacious defender and a dangerous clutch  shooter. Now, though, he is quite simply the worst starting point guard  on any of the 16 playoff teams--and he would not even receive any  minutes at all if he were on the Dallas roster competing for playing  time against Jason Kidd, Jason Terry and J.J. Barea. The Lakers brought  in Steve Blake to serve as Fisher's backup and to be the primary  defender against quick point guards but Blake had a very disappointing  season, as did free agent acquisition Matt Barnes; the Mavericks'  reserves obliterated the Lakers' bench, a group that consists of Odom  (who starts nearly half the time due to Bynum's chronic injury  problems), Shannon Brown (who rarely saw any action when he was a member  of a legitimately deep team, the 2007 and 2008 Cavs), Blake, Barnes and  a bunch of players (including former starter Walton) who collected  cobwebs sitting uselessly next to Jackson.
Magic Johnson has received some heat for publicly saying prior to game  three of the Dallas series that the Lakers must blow up the roster and  that no one should be safe except for Bryant. The Lakers must get  younger, deeper and more athletic. Historically, the Lakers have always  responded in times of crisis by acquiring the best available big man:  they nabbed Wilt Chamberlain in 1968, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in 1975,  Shaquille O'Neal in 1996 and Pau Gasol (who really should not be  mentioned with those other guys but was a serviceable second option for  three-plus years) in 2008. The obvious, logical solution for the Lakers  is to find a way to acquire Dwight Howard but that may turn out to be  easier said than done; the Lakers are way over the salary cap and it is  not clear what the new CBA will look like. If Howard decides to stay in  Orlando or if the Lakers are not able to trade for Howard due to changes  in the CBA then their fans may be in for a season that will make the  game four meltdown against Dallas feel like a picnic: optimistically  pencil Bryant in for 22-23 ppg in 30 mpg next season, factor in the  team's obvious lack of chemistry, consider the number of rising teams in  the West, do the math and without an infusion of talent on the roster  it adds up to less than 50 wins--which does not equal a playoff berth in  the West; the Kobe Bryant who worked miracles in 2006-07 and who  carried a good team to great heights in 2008-10 will only be appearing  at the Staples Center in highlights played on the video screen above the  court.
Labels: Dallas Mavericks, Dirk Nowitzki, Kobe Bryant, Lamar Odom, Pau Gasol, Phil Jackson
        
    posted by David Friedman @ 7:09 AM
       
