20 Second Timeout is the place to find the best analysis and commentary about the NBA.

Thursday, April 06, 2023

LeBron "No Excuses" James Offers Lame Excuses After Losing to the Clippers

Throughout his long and highly decorated career, LeBron James has often said that he is a "no excuses" player, and that his teams are "no excuses" teams.

Last night, James recited lame excuses after his L.A. Lakers lost 125-118 to the L.A. Clippers, the Lakers' 11th straight defeat at the hands of their crosstown rivals--a setback that will likely relegate the Lakers to the Play-In Tournament, an embarrassment for a team led by two players named to the NBA's 75th Anniversary Team (LeBron James and Anthony Davis).

Norman Powell led the Clippers with 27 points, while Kawhi Leonard added 25 points, seven rebounds, and four assists. Former Laker Ivica Zubac contributed 17 points and a game-high 13 rebounds. Bones Hyland added 14 points in 21 minutes off of the bench.

Russell Westbrook, banished by the Lakers in February and then signed by the Clippers, had 14 points and four assists (tied for team-high honors with Leonard and Powell) in 21 minutes. Dared by the Lakers to shoot, Westbrook shot 6-12 from the field, including 2-4 from three point range. Clippers Coach Ty Lue explained that Westbrook played slightly fewer minutes than usual because when the time came for Westbrook to be reinserted in the lineup during the second half the reserves were playing very well so Lue decided to stick with the hot hand. Westbrook made no secret of his joy after each shot that he made, but--even more significantly--when he was not in the game he cheered enthusiastically for his teammates. Westbrook is an unselfish, team-first player. 

I don't evaluate players and teams based on the outcome of one game, but for everyone who has repeatedly issued negative hot takes about Russell Westbrook based on one game or even one play, in order to prove that you are not hypocritical you have no choice but to put some respect on that man's name after this game, particularly considering how well Westbrook has fit in with his new team.

In his post-game interview, Zubac said of Westbrook, "He's a great dude. Great leader. Always happy, always positive. Helping everyone on the court. Helped me a lot. He leads us on and off the court. He's a great dude. So we just wanted to prove everyone wrong, prove all those rumors and that stuff that was said about him wrong. It just makes it better that it came in the biggest game of the season."

Leonard also praised Westbrook: "Every night he's coming out with energy, being aggressive no matter what game it is. He is helping us be a better team, be a faster team, and be more organized with him having the ball and pointing us in our spots."

The Clippers notched this big win despite being without the services of Paul George, who has finished as high as third in regular season MVP balloting and who was in the midst of another All-Star season before suffering a knee injury that has sidelined him indefinitely. The Clippers made no excuses before or after the game; they just showed up ready to play, and they got the job done.

Meanwhile, James was the only Lakers' starter who had a negative plus/minus number (-10). Every other Lakers' starter had a plus/minus number of +8 or better. Plus/minus numbers for individual players can be "noisy" in small sample sizes, but they can also tell at least part of the story when combined with intelligent use of the eye test--and the eye test revealed that James is a master of "stat padding": he may be better than any great player ever at putting up huge numbers that have little to no connection with team success (he is also very good at putting up huge numbers that are connected to team success, which is why he has won four championships). 

It is often--and incorrectly--asserted that the NBA is a fourth quarter league. The reality is that many games are decided in the first quarter; that is when matchup advantages are often established, and that is when teams often build leads that are too substantial for the opposing team to overcome. Sure, teams can make runs--and that is part of how the plus/minus numbers can become noisy--but an early advantage often sets the tone and decides the outcome. Last night, the Clippers jumped out to an 8-0 lead as Westbrook assisted on the team's first two field goals before draining a three pointer. The Clippers led 37-31 at the end of the first quarter, and by halftime the Clippers were routing the Lakers, 71-52. Leonard (17 points), Powell (13 points), and Westbrook (12 points) had set the tone. Meanwhile, James scored three first half points on 1-6 field goal shooting while posting a ghastly -25 plus/minus number. 

With the outcome not in doubt, James unleashed one of the great stat-padding performances in recent history, scoring 30 second half points as the Lakers trailed by double digits for most of the final two quarters. The Lakers are likely heading for the Play-In Tournament, but the very deliberate point of James' second half showing is to shift the narrative from the Lakers' sorry season to James' individual numbers: "How can anyone blame James?" is the narrative du jour. After all, James finished with a game-high 33 points on 13-20 field goal shooting while amassing eight rebounds and seven assists. There may not be a better example than this game of why I consistently insist--in direct opposition to "stat gurus"--that you cannot understand basketball merely by looking at selected statistics. James knows that most media members will promote his preferred narrative.

After the game, James--surrounded by an adoring, non-critical media throng, declared, "It was tough. It's one of the toughest games we've had this year. Coming off the road trip and even though this is a road game, getting back late last night, but after an overtime game, this was a tough game for us. We started off the first half not playing Laker basketball...this was one of those scheduling conflicts in the season and definitely got the best of us tonight."

By the time James finished his whining about traveling, road games, and the schedule, I expected the media members to give him a hug out of sympathy for the tough, tough challenges that he and his team overcame by playing a "road" game in Los Angeles after playing an overtime game the night before. Try to imagine Kobe Bryant uttering the words that James said--which is hard to do, because Bryant did not make excuses--and then imagine how the media would have covered such a loss and such excuses.  

Dave McMenamin, who asserted after the Lakers traded Westbrook that Westbrook's presence in the locker room was equivalent to a "vampire"--a slanderous accusation unsupported by any evidence or on the record comments--did not frame the Lakers' loss as an indictment of James and Davis (who had a quiet, non-impactful 17 points and 11 rebounds). Instead, McMenamin questioned whether the Lakers' stars should have played at all: "With three games remaining in the regular season and playoff seeding on the line, the Los Angeles Lakers played their stars Wednesday against the LA Clippers. The question is, after a 125-118 loss in a game in which the Lakers trailed by as many as 24 points, was it worth it when they could have just prioritized rest in an attempt to be as spry as can be for the final two regular-season games this weekend?"

McMenamin did his job--not to be a journalist, but to be a p.r. flack for James and deflect attention from James' first half disappearing act as the Lakers lost a critical game for playoff positioning. No one is interested in McMenamin's recommendations about load management, or his not so veiled implication that James' poor performance when the game was up for grabs is the fault of the coach who dared to put James on the court in the second game of a back to back. Instead of casting himself as some kind of basketball strategist, McMenamin could have described what he saw: James disappeared when the game was up for grabs with playoff positioning on the line. That is the lede, and McMenamin buried it like a vampire burying a victim.

Contrast James' approach, attitude, and performance with the approach, attitude, and performance of Kobe Bryant, as discussed in my recap of the 2018 NBA Finals:

Bryant has made some interesting comments in the past week or so about comparing James to himself and to other great players (as quoted in a recent article by Howard Beck): "Phil used to say this thing to me a lot, when I was doing a lot on the court. He'd say, 'You have to do less.' And I'd say, 'Well, my teammates got to step up more.' Phil would say, 'Well, it's your responsibility to thrust the game upon them.'"

Bryant added these pertinent thoughts and observations:

All I thought about as a kid personally was winning championships. That's all I cared about. That's how I valued Michael. That's how I valued [Larry] Bird. That's how I valued Magic [Johnson]. It was just winning championships. Now, everybody's going to value things differently, which is fine. I'm just telling you how I value mine. If I'm Bron, you got to figure out a way to win. It's not about narrative. You want to win championships, you just gotta figure it out. Michael gave me some really good advice after the '08 Finals: "You got all the tools. You gotta figure out how to get these guys to that next level to win that championship." Going into the 2010 series, I said, "Listen, Boston, they got Ray Allen, they got Paul Pierce, they got [Kevin] Garnett, they got Sheed [Wallace], the talent is there. They're stacked." That was the first superteam. [Michael] kind of heard me lament about it, and he just goes, "Yeah, well, it is what it is; you gotta figure it out. There's no other alternative." And that's the challenge LeBron has. You have pieces that you have to try to figure out how to work with. Excuses don't work right now...

It has everything to do with how you build the team, from an emotional level. How do you motivate them?...Leadership is not making guys better by just throwing them the ball. That's not what it is. It's about the influence that you have on them to reach their full potential. And some of it's not pretty. Some of it's challenging, some of it's confrontational. Some of it's pat on the back. But it's finding that balance, so now when you show up to play a Golden State or a Boston, your guys feel like you have the confidence to take on more.
There is a lot of wisdom contained in those remarks but three points stand out: (1) This is not about "narrative" but about results. James is too often concerned more about controlling the "narrative" than he is about doing whatever it takes to win; (2) great players historically have been judged largely based on championships won, because every player has possible excuses/contextual factors to mention but the best of the best figure out how to get the job done; (3) leadership is not just about throwing the ball to players (particularly in situations when the great player should be assuming the obligation to score) but about empowering those players to improve on a daily basis.

The media narrative states that James is a great teammate and leader. The reality is that his tenure ended badly the first time in Cleveland (and may end badly this time as well) and his tenure in Miami ended with the great Pat Riley referring to "smiling faces with hidden agendas." 

At some point, a resume contains too many black marks to go to the top of the list, no many how many positives are on the resume as well. I have often said that James confounds me more than any other Pantheon level player and that remains true. I am disappointed that he not only injured himself during the 2018 Finals but that he waited until he got swept to reveal the injury, an announcement that not only comes across as a weak excuse but also takes attention away from what the Warriors accomplished. For me, the enduring image of this series will be the several sequences in game three during which the Warriors set fake screens and James switched off of Durant unnecessarily as opposed to accepting the challenge of guarding the eventual Finals MVP down the stretch.

What Bryant said about James in 2018 could be applied to James' whole career, including the Lakers' lackluster, excuse ridden 2023 season: "And that's the challenge LeBron has. You have pieces that you have to try to figure out how to work with. Excuses don't work right now..." 

In Tim Grover's lexicon, Kobe Bryant was a "Cleaner": "When things go wrong and everyone else starts to panic, the Cleaner is calm and unflappable, cool and steady, never too high or too low, never too happy or too depressed. He never sees problems, only situations to resolve, and when he finds the solution, he doesn't waste time explaining it. He just says, 'I got this.'"

If you understand the game, then you can articulate various reasons why Kobe Bryant was a greater player than LeBron James. If you don't understand the game but are willing to play "the game"--the influence peddling game of promoting certain narratives--then you can make a lot of money being paid to tout nonsense!

Labels: , , , , , ,

posted by David Friedman @ 3:14 PM

4 comments

Sunday, April 02, 2023

Pete Maravich Was Decades Ahead of His Time

Pete Maravich was decades ahead of his time as a basketball player/showman. Julius Erving and Pete Maravich were teammates with the Atlanta Hawks during the 1972 preseason, and Erving told me, "It really was one of the joys of my life to play with Pete, to be in training camp with him. We used to stay after practice and play one-on-one. We would play for dinner after practice. I did the same thing with George Gervin once he became my teammate [in Virginia]--I pretty much learned that from Pete. If this guy is going to be your teammate, you really need to stay after practice and get to understand his game and know his likes and his dislikes--where he likes the ball and that kind of stuff. The best way to do that is to just play--go play each other one-on-one, two-on-two, three-on-three. Play away from the coaches, away from the whole team practicing in unison." In today's era of load management--and of star players who refuse to participate in the Slam Dunk Contest because they fear that not winning the event could damage their "brand"--I wonder how many future Hall of Famers stay after practice to play one on one games with teammates to both hone their individual skills and also learn about their teammates' preferences/tendencies?

Maravich sharpened and refined his skills with hours of practice from a very young age. "I'm more specialized than a doctor or a lawyer," Maravich said in an interview published in Sport and quoted by Don Terbush in a column that Terbush wrote in the November 25, 1973 edition of The Times Standard (Eureka, California). "My type of game will eventually revolutionize basketball. I'm already getting letters complaining about the tricky stuff. It's gonna be tough at first. See, I want that center to be thinking, 'Hey man, this guy is crazy, he'll do anything.' Because once he starts thinking that, I've got him. People call me a hot dog. I don't mind that, but what bothers me is to think I didn't win somebody over because he didn't have the slightest idea what I was doing--or how much time I put in. I've been doing this since I was three."

Maravich believed that his style would influence not only guards, but also big men: "The time will come before we know it when you will see forwards and centers throwing the ball behind their backs just like I do. I do what Bob Cousy did sometimes all the time."

When you see big men Nikola Jokic make incredible passes, remember that Maravich not only did it decades ago but that Maravich had the foresight to envision a time when his unique style of play would transform the game. I have my doubts about how well some of today's players would do in the NBA of 50 years ago, but I have no doubt that Maravich's shooting skills, creative passing, and showmanship would be much more appreciated today than they were 50 years ago when too many critics dismissed Maravich as a hot dog.

Labels: , ,

posted by David Friedman @ 12:03 PM

2 comments