Showing posts with label Indiana Pacers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indiana Pacers. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Will Houston Rockets Pull Off A Blockbuster Deal On Draft Day?

The Houston Rockets have probably been the most active team in the NBA heading into tonight's 2012 NBA Draft, as they have been linked to countless trade rumors and free agent interests ranging from Tyreke Evans to Dwight Howard over the past few weeks.

There's no question Houston has the ammunition to pull off a blockbuster trade tonight with any number of teams as they currently own three first round draft picks after sending Chase Budinger to the Minnesota Timberwolves for the #18 pick on Tuesday (they already owned the #14 and #16 picks).

The most prominent rumor circulating around the internet involves Orlando Magic center Dwight Howard, who the Rockets have been fascinated with for quite some time now, even attempting to acquire him at this past season's trade deadline before he ultimately signed a one-year extension with Orlando.

While it's unknown if the Rockets have officially made any offers for him yet, it's almost certain they will make an attempt to land Howard from the Magic with their haul of draft picks before moving on to other players of interest.

The craziest part about Houston's infatuation with the perennial All-Star center is the fact that it's almost certain that he would not re-sign with the Rockets next summer when he is scheduled to become an unrestricted free agent.

However, anything is possible if they somehow manage to pull off a deal with Orlando, as he could fall in love with the city of Houston and/or the fan base and decide to stay with a long-term deal in free agency.

He might decide to stay with the Rockets even if he isn't crazy about the franchise, as they would be able to offer an extra year and more money than any other team could in free agency if he is on their roster when he hits the market.

Almost everyone on the Rocket's current roster has been linked to trade rumors and could likely be had by Orlando, along with the draft picks, should they decide to send Howard to Houston.

Kyle Lowry is almost certain to be moved prior to or during the draft tonight, as he is publicly stated he wanted to be traded amidst an apparent irreparable relationship between him and head coach Kevin McHale.

The Rockets have reportedly offered him to the Sacramento Kings, along with the #14 and #16 picks, in exchange for Tyreke Evans and the #5 pick according to DraftExpress.com.

Houston also has been linked to trades involving the Toronto Raptors and their #8 pick, as the Rockets reportedly would like to draft center Andre Drummond out of Connecticut if they fail to land Howard from the Magic.

With the team clearly interested in upgrading the center position one way or another, the Rockets have also reportedly made Samuel Dalembert available, according to HoopsWorld, trying to attach with him with one or more of their picks in attempt to move up in the draft or land a proven veteran.

Earlier this month, HoopsWorld also reported the Rockets had expressed interest in Andre Iguodala of the Philadelphia 76ers and Danny Granger of the Indiana Pacers.

Either of those players could likely be had be had with a package of Kevin Martin (expiring contract) or Luis Scola and a pair of their three draft picks if the Rockets decided to go in one of those directions.

Another option that could be possible, although I have not seen or heard any rumors about this one, could involve the Rockets making an attempt to land Pau Gasol of the Los Angeles Lakers, whom they almost acquired last December in the failed Chris Paul to the Lakers trade.

The Lakers have reportedly been interested in trading him should the right offer come along, and quite frankly, they likely won't receive a better offer for him than Houston could offer with their plethora of draft picks and talented players.

With so many options open to them, and with so many assets stock-piled together, the Rockets have a real chance of pulling off at least a semi-blockbuster move (or two) during tonight's draft as it's highly unlikely they will stand pat and hold onto all three of their draft picks and not either move up or deal for an All-Star.

The real question for Houston is which superstar(s) will the Rockets ultimately land or how far up the draft board will they climb with their U-Haul full of assets?

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Charlotte Bobcats Narrow Their Coaching Search To Three Candidates

It appears the Charlotte Bobcats are finally entering the final stages of selecting their next head coach, as Chris Broussard of ESPN reports they have narrowed their search to three candidates: Brian Shaw, Jerry Sloan, and Quin Snyder.

Each of the three will meet with team owner Michael Jordan within the next week or so according to the report, and then a decision will likely be made soon thereafter.

Recent Hall of Fame inductee Jerry Sloan is the only candidate with prior head coaching experience, resigning midseason during his 23rd season leading the Utah Jazz.

Sloan took the Jazz to the NBA Finals twice during his tenure as their coach, however, he was denied of a championship both times by the Chicago Bulls and his potential future boss, Michael Jordan.

Although Shaw doesn't have any previous head coaching experience, he was a protege of the legendary Phil Jackson and has been an assistant head coach with the Los Angeles Lakers and Indiana Pacers.

He has been an assistant coach since 2004-05 and was considered for the Lakers and Orlando Magic's head coaching vacancies over the past two seasons.

Quin Snyder was an assistant with the Los Angeles Lakers this past season (he still likely will be if he doesn't land the Bobcats job) and coached in the NBDL for three seasons prior to that with the Austin Toros.

Snyder was also interviewed for the Minnesota Timberwolves job last summer, before they had even fired Kurt Rambis.

The narrowing of candidates comes after the team originally had ten people interview with team executives Rod Higgins and Rich Cho for the position.

Including the three finalists, the others that were interviewed were Orlando assistant Patrick Ewing, former Portland coach Nate McMillan, Golden State assistant Michael Malone, Cleveland assistant Nate Tibbetts, Charlotte assistant Stephen Silas, Memphis assistant Dave Joerger and St. John's University assistant Mike Dunlap.

In my opinion, Sloan would probably be the best choice for the job if the Bobcats were closer to being a championship contender, but considering the fact that he is 70-years old will probably mean he won't be coaching long enough to see the transformation through.

With that being said, I think the Bobcats will likely pick Shaw when all three of the meetings with Jordan are complete, as he is widely considered to be the best assistant coach in the league right now.

Shaw spent plenty of time learning coaching tactics from Jackson and has first-hand experience with the Triangle Offense, which with the right players, can be one of the most successful offenses in basketball.

I think Shaw is ready at this point in his coaching career to take a head coaching position, and a spot with the Charlotte Bobcats would be the perfect place to begin his career in the lead role on the bench.

Regardless of who lands the vacant job, they will have a massive task on their hands of turning around a franchise that finished with the worst winning percentage in NBA history last season (.106).

Which coach do you think would be the best fit with the Charlotte Bobcats? Do you think they left someone out of their final three that would've made a better coach? Share what you think about their coaching vacancy down below in the comments section.

Monday, June 11, 2012

NBA Players React to Manny Pacquiao's Controversial Loss

By: Stephen Patterson

It seems like everyone has an opinion on the Manny Pacquiao-Timothy Bradley fight from Saturday night that ended with one of the most controversial split-decisions in recent boxing history.

Pacquiao, who is a huge fan of the Boston Celtics, landed nearly 100 more punches, with ringside punching statistics showing Pacquiao land 253 punches compared to only 159 by Bradley.

And while the three ringside judges had two scorecards with Bradley winning 115-113 and a third with him winning by the same margin, the Associated Press had Pacquiao winning 117-111, a pretty huge difference than what the judges scored it.

Bradley even fractured his left foot in the second round, apparently bad enough for him to hear it snap, and sprained his right ankle in the fifth.

Yet, somehow, through all of that, Bradley is the new owner of the WBO welterweight title and Pacquiao is still trying to figure out how his seven-year winning streak is now a thing of the past.

Plenty of NBA players weighed in with their opinions through their Twitter accounts, many of them angry that Pacquiao, who waited to start the fight until after the conclusion of Game 7 of the Heat/Celtics series, was blatantly "robbed".

Here is what they had to say:

  • Earl Barron: Chris Paul somewhere watching the fight like I guess the NBA blocking my trade ain't so bad. #SMH
  • Tyson Chandler: My Boy PAC-MaN just got robbed without a GUN!!!
  • Richard Hamilton: I'm done watching boxing. WWF
  • David West: This is why MMA has taken over...
  • Jared Dudley: This is crazy.. Those judges n vegas need to be fired ASAP!!!! I never felt so cheated of my money in my Life!!!!
  • Kyle Lowry: I'm not watching boxing ever!! Wow!! Please overturn this judgement
  • Mark Jackson: I think I’m DONE with boxing!!! Manny just got ROBBED! What a JOKE!
  • LaMarcus Aldridge: Pac man got robbed !
  • Al Horford: Are you kidding me?? They gave the fight to this other dude. PAC-Man is the best. Terrible judges... #SMH
  • Roger Mason: Where's the instrant replay when you need it? #gotitallwrong
  • Deron Williams: Boxing is now the worst sport in the history of the world Im never buying a fight again
  • Brandon Jennings: Welp go ahead and retire Mayweather.... No reason to fight him now!!!!

What did you think of the outcome of the fight? Did the judges make the wrong call or did Bradley deserve the win? Share your thoughts below.

Saturday, June 9, 2012

LeBron James Silences Critics, Carries Miami Heat to a Game 7 Against Boston Celtics

By: Stephen Patterson

Let me start this post off by saying this: If you missed Game 6 of the 2012 Eastern Conference Finals between the Boston Celtics and Miami Heat, I am truly sorry.

I remember watching LeBron in the 2007 postseason against the Detroit Pistons in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference Finals when he scored 25 straight points for the Cleveland Cavaliers en route to 48 points total, including 29 of their last 30 points and the game-winning shot with 2 seconds remaining.

His performance in Game 6 of this series was on par with that one, if not better. In fact, it may have been the greatest performance of his entire professional career.

On Thursday night, the world witnessed something from LeBron James that no one had ever seen from him before, something that not only the Miami Heat desperately needed from him just to stay alive in the series as they entered the game facing elimination, but also something that he had needed for himself as well.

In what might have been the biggest moment of his career, James finished the game with 45 points, 15 rebounds, and 5 assists playing the first 45 minutes of the game before finally seeing his first rest after the game was well out of reach for the Celtics.

Not only did James completely destroy the Celtics on the court, he practically silenced 18,000 of their fans who had earlier been as lively as any crowd could be, hoping to see their team advance to the NBA Finals for the third time since 2008.

James has twice had seasons end in Boston, first in the 2008 postseason en route to Boston's championship and then again in 2010 (his last game as a Cleveland Cavalier), and he refused to let it happen for a third time, playing the entire game with an emotionless expression that is impossible to describe.

“Y'all see that look he had on his face tonight? He had that look on his face since last night at dinner. We knew he was going to come out ready to play. That's why he's the MVP. I call it his ugly look,” said Mario Chalmers to a group of reporters after the game.

James played as though he knew he had to have a performance of a life-time for his team to end their three game slide against Boston and avoid elimination at the TD Garden, where Miami had dropped 15 of their previous 16 games prior to Thursday night's victory.

Perhaps one reason James played so well was because he wanted to silence the hundreds, if not thousands, of people in the media that had spent the 36 hours prior to the game talking about how the Heat's "Big Three" experiment was a failure, that LeBron was never going to be clutch, that he couldn't go the extra mile when his teams needed him the most.

I think ESPN and Grantland's Bill Simmons may have put it best in a column he wrote yesterday called "The Consequences of Failure", which I would recommend to anyone that considers themselves to be a passionate sports fan:

"You can't imagine what this was like to witness in person. I know Michael Jordan had similarly astonishing games, and others, too, but not with stakes like that. This wasn't just an elimination game. This was LeBron James's entire career being put on trial … and it only took an hour for him to tell the jury, "Go home. I'm one of the best players ever. Stop picking me apart. Stop talking about the things I can't do. Stop holding me to standards that have never been applied to any other NBA player. Stop blaming me for an admittedly dumb decision I never should have made. Stop saying I'm weak. Stop saying that I don't want to win. Stop. Just … stop.""

While Michael Jordan is clearly still the greatest player of all-time, even he wasn't picked apart under a microscope the way James has been by the media ever since he was in high school and was billed as the "Chosen One".

LeBron definitely left plenty for the media to talk about after the Heat's 98-79 rout that had a majority of the arena empty by the time he took his first rest of the game with just over 3 minutes remaining.

He scored 30 points in the first half while shooting 12-14 from the field, keeping pace with Boston's entire team for much of the half until they hit a scoring burst midway through the second quarter.

He also absolutely demolished Paul Pierce on both ends of the court, holding him to only nine points on 4-18 shooting and scoring at will against him on the offensive side.

According to ESPN's Daily Dime, :LeBron's 45-15-5 stat line has only been seen once in postseason game in the history of the NBA prior to last night, accomplished by Wilt Chamberlain when he "had 50 points, 15 rebounds and 6 assists in Game 5 of the 1964 Western Division finals". He also led the Heat in all three of those categories.

He shot 19-26 (a whooping 76%, pretty amazing for that number of shots) from the field for 45 points while the remainder of his team shot 18-50 for just 53 points. As a matter of fact, Dwayne Wade was the only other player for Miami to reach double digits, scoring 17 points on 6-17 shooting.

Erik Spoelstra acknowledged after the game that LeBron had grown tired of constantly hearing reports that the Heat were done after letting Game 5 of the series slip away in overtime and that it might be the end of the "Big Three" down in South Beach.

“Nobody likes getting thrown dirt on your face before you're even dead,” Spoelstra said. “He came out with an attack mentality right from the get-go.”

The Heat definitely aren't dead for the season, at least not yet, after James put his entire team on his back and carried them to a Game 7 back at the AmericanAirlines Arena in Miami tonight.

"In an environment like this, you want to have a big game," LeBron said after the game. "I wanted to be there for my teammates, no matter what was going on throughout the course of the game. This was a gut check for us, and it's good to see we were able to bounce back after that loss, after that Game 5 loss at home."

If James plays even close to as efficiently as he did Thursday night in Game 7, and the rest of his teammates show up and do their part, it will be almost impossible for the Celtics to overcome.

“He hit a lot of shots he hasn't been hitting all series,” said Pierce of LeBron's huge game. “I've had that feeling before and sometimes there's nothing you can do about it.”

Pierce knows his team can't allow James to have another huge game like that or their season will be over and likely so will the "Big Three" era in Boston.

The Celtics will have to find a way to control LeBron's scoring in Game 7 without letting Dwayne Wade get too comfortable.

That is the problem Boston has faced all series long, however, prior to Game 6, the method had been working fairly well, with the defense double-teaming Wade often and letting LeBron go for his normal 30 points a night.

While they lost the first two games of the series using that strategy, it worked fairly well during their three game winning-streak. In fact, they have held Wade to just 5.8 points per game in the first half during the series' first six games.

If the Celtics change things up for Game 7 and decide to double team James instead, Wade will have to step up and have a performance similar to the one he had in the deciding game of the Heats' last series, when he dropped 41 points on the Indiana Pacers to eliminate them in six games and sent Miami to the Eastern Conference Finals.

Also, the Heat will need more from Chris Bosh offensively in Game 7. Bosh has played in the past two games of the series after missing three weeks with an abdominal strain that occurred in the first game of Miami's series with Indiana.

In his first game back, Bosh played only 14 minutes off the bench and finished with nine points and seven rebounds. In Game 6, he played twice as many minutes (28), however, he only finished with seven points and six rebounds.

Since it's unlikely LeBron will be able to duplicate his performance from Game 6, he will likely need his two superstar teammates to step up and contribute a lot more than the 24 combined points on 25 shot attempts they had in Game 7.

Regardless of how well James and the Heat play tonight, don't expect the Celtics to go down without putting up a helluva fight and leaving everything they have left in the tank on floor.

Pierce, Kevin Garnett, Ray Allen, and Rajon Rondo will have their work cut out for them as they attempt to steal a second consecutive game in Miami.

However Game 7 ends up playing out, one thing is for certain: LeBron says he will have no regrets.

"I won't regret Game 7. Win, lose or draw, I'm going to go in with the mindset like I've had this whole season. And we'll see what happens."

If he plays with the same mindset that led to his 45 point outburst in Game 6, the Miami Heat will almost certainly be headed to their second consecutive NBA Finals.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Miami Heat Prepare for Eastern Conference Finals with No Sign of Chris Bosh Return

By: Stephen Patterson

It looks like the Miami Heat are preparing themselves to be without All-Star power forward Chris Bosh for an "indefinite" amount of time heading into their Eastern Conference Finals match-up with the winner of tonight's Game 7 between the Boston Celtics and Philadelphia 76ers.

Head coach Erik Spoelstra told the media on Saturday that although Bosh has made some minor progress in his recovery from the strained abdominal muscle he sustained on May 15th,, there is not a set date that he will be ready to return by.

"No update from before," Spoelstra said, according to the Sun-Sentinel. "He's doing a little bit more. It's still indefinite. ... For me, it's my responsibility right now to prepare this team without him."

Without Bosh, the Heat fell into an early 2-1 hole in their second series against the Indiana Pacers.

However, they stormed back with three consecutive wins led largely by monster games LeBron James and Dwayne Wade to advance to the teams' second straight trip to the Eastern Conference Finals.

First, in Game 4 of the series against Indiana, LeBron had a historic 40 point, 18 rebound, and 9 assist performance that has only been seen once before in the history of the NBA playoffs (Elgin Baylor put up the exact same stat-line over 50 years ago). Wade contributed 30 points, 9 rebounds, and 6 assists as well as the team evened up the series at two games a piece.

Then in Game 5, the dynamic duo combined for 58 points, 13 rebounds, and 10 assists as they led Miami to a 32 point beatdown of the Pacers that prompted Indiana's team president Larry Bird to call out his team as being too S-O-F-T. It also featured several hard fouls, two of which led to suspensions for Udonis Haslem and Dexter Pittman (Pittman is still suspended for the first two games of the Eastern Conference Finals).

Finally in the deciding game, Dwayne Wade took over and closed out the series with a monstrous 41 point, 10 rebound, 3 assist, and 2 steal performance that included him catching fire in the second quarter and scorching the Pacers for 20 points in the period.

Meanwhile, LeBron had an "average" performance 28 points, 6 rebounds, 7 assists, and 3 steals. I call the stat-line "average" because that's the term Pacer's head coach Frank Vogel chose to use, and frankly he is right: As crazy as it sounds, these are just average numbers that we expect from LeBron in the postseason.

In fact, he has more games (16) with at least 30 points, 10 rebounds, and 5 assists that any other active player in the league. Yes, that includes Kobe Bryant. Yes, that means Tim Duncan too.

The scariest part about that stat for the winner of tonight's Game 7 between the Celtics and Sixers? He had three of those sixteen performances in the Heat's six game series against the Pacers.

While Miami has obviously and clearly missed Chris Bosh, it has forced LeBron James to step up his level of play even more so than usual. He's already proven he is more than capable of being able to elevate his game when others around him struggle.

The problem with that is that he has also proven that he can't carry a team on his back for long periods of time. Sure, he was able to throw the Heat on his back for a majority of the team's series against the Pacers after Bosh went down. But does anyone think he can do that for six or seven games against Boston or Philly AND still have enough left in the tank to successfully battle the San Antonio Spurs or Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA Finals?

Bosh averaged 18 points and 7.9 rebounds during the regular season, and although his averages dipped to 14.7 points and 6.8 rebounds per game in the six playoff games he appeared in, his presence on the floor is something the Heat cannot replace.

But as long as D-Wade continues to have 20+ point games and at least one or two of Miami's role players decides to show a pulse each game, the Heat should be able to reach the NBA Finals if LeBron can continue playing at his current MVP level.

However, if Bosh isn't able to return to the team for the NBA Finals, it's going to take four of the best games of LeBron's career for him to lead to Heat past either the Spurs or the Thunder for his first NBA championship. And that's assuming D-Wade can carry his fair share of the load as well.

Friday, May 25, 2012

Top 10 Dunks of the NBA 2011-2012 Season

By: Stephen Patterson

These are the Top 10 dunks from the 2011-12 season according to NBA.com.

While all of these dunks are pretty sick, I can't help but feel like someone got left out of the final list. Especially when you see how many times Blake Griffin is featured (I'm sorry but I think that dunk he had on Kendrick Perkins was overrated, like a majority of his big plays. However, I do love how he absolutely destroys Pau Gasol twice in the same game earlier in the clip).

Do you think someone else deserved a spot among the Top 10? Are you happy with the order that NBA.com put them in? Share your thoughts in the comments section after you check out the video:
 


Thursday, May 24, 2012

Can the Miami Heat Finish Off the Indiana Pacers in Game 6?

By: Stephen Patterson

LeBron James and Dwayne Wade have had to almost literally transform into Batman and Robin over the past two games to recapture the series lead for the Miami Heat against the Indiana Pacers in the Eastern Conference semifinals after they fell into an early 2-1 deficit in the series.

The dynamic duo have had to carry an unusually large amount of the team's offense during the absence of Chris Bosh, who went down during the opening game of the series with an abdominal strain.

LeBron has posted otherworldly numbers over the past two games, both of which have been Heat victories. He has totaled 70 points, 28 rebounds, and 17 assists.

Meanwhile, Wade has dropped in 58 points, 12 rebounds, and 8 assists. Both of them have shot well over 50% from the field as well.

But while James and Wade have been playing at close to the best of their abilities, the Heat will need even more from them in Game 6 if they want to finish off this upstart Pacers team on the road and avoid having to go back to South Beach for a seventh and deciding game.

Both Udonis Haslem and Dexter Pittman have been suspended for flagrant fouls in the previous game of the series.

Haslem will only miss Game 6 for clubbing Indiana forward Tyler Hansbrough in the face with both arms in retaliation for a hard foul committed only a minute earlier by Hanbrough  on Wade.

Pittman, meanwhile, will miss the Heat's next three games after delivering a seemingly intentional elbow to the neck/chest region of Lance Stephenson late in the game in retaliation for Stephenson's choke signal he flashed after LeBron missed a free throw late in the heat's Game 3 loss.

With Bosh already ruled out for tonight's game, and Haslem and Pittman both out with suspensions, the Heat will likely have to rely heavily on Juwan Howard and Eddy Curry, who haven't seen much (or any in Curry's case) playing time so far in this series.

One of the main reasons for Miami's losses in Games 2 and 3 of the series was the fact that LeBron would be worn down by halftime after having to play so many minutes at power forward, causing him to have to bang around in the paint with bigger players than he isn't used to guarding regularly.

If the Heat have to put James at power forward for too many minutes in Game 6, they will likely find themselves having to win a pivotal Game 7 back down in South Beach.

Afterall, if James continues to wear himself out at this pace, it won't matter too much if they advance because he won't have enough left in the tank to go the distance all the way through the Finals.

Luckily for Miami, the Pacers' two best players are dealing with ankle injuries heading into the game and their availability and conditions are still largely unknown.

Danny Granger, who injured his ankle late in the first half of Game 5, and David West, who hurt his own ankle in the second half of the same game, have been two of the most pivotal pieces in Indiana's surprising run.

Unless LeBron James puts on another performance for the ages for a third consecutive game, however, the Heat are probably going to have their hands full finishing off the Pacers on their own floor.

If James can't put together another near triple double masterpiece, look out for Dwayne Wade to explode with a huge game, as he is the type of player that can post a huge 35-40 point performance on any given night and is due for a game in which he carries the Heat on his back to a big victory.