Tag Archives: Nick Collison

Miami Heat Poised to Win Championship

One more

Doyle Rader: With the Miami Heat one win away from their second ever NBA title, now is as good a time as any for us to talk about the Finals. Last night, the Thunder, namely Russell Westbrook, threw everything they had at the Heat in an attempt to tie the series but came up just short as they have in every game since Game 1. Plenty of people are singling out Westbrook for the foul he committed on Mario Chalmers with 15 seconds left in the game as the moment the Thunder lost the game. (They were down three points at that time.) Yet, this is a complete overreaction to the play in my opinion. If it wasn’t for Westbrook in the first place the Thunder would have likely not even been in this game. He poured in 43 points on 20 made field goals. Everything was falling for him last night. It was a performance on par with what Rajon Rondo did against the Heat in the Eastern Conference Finals. During the presser LeBron James even likened those two performances to each other. It seems to me that a new narrative (it isn’t that new actually) is forming around Westbrook, scapegoating him, doubting him, much in the same ilk that James has dealt with throughout his career. However, James is on the cusp of shattering his previous narrative and the baggage that came with it.

Travis Huse: If we’re looking at problems here, it’s not Westy. Harden went
2-10 last night and finished with 8 points, and here’s the part where I tell
you that he was still third in the Thunder’s point totals. They managed to
beat the Spurs with an effective team play atmosphere, and they’ve lost the
contributions from Harden and Serge Ibaka. Smart team play can defeat Miami, but pitting a “Big 2″ against a “Big 3″ is suicide.

Casual basketball fans tend to place much more emphasis on offense than
defense, and that’s the population most affected by Anti-Westbrook Fever.
But you can’t overlook how the Heat have been able to control the tempo of
the game, and Harden looks thrown off. He was 2-10 on Sunday, as well, held
to only 9 points. If he wants the label of next-generation Manu Ginobili, he
needs to step up better now, where it really matters.

DR: You’re right, Harden has been bad, but it isn’t just his shooting. For
some reason, and there has been much to talk about concerning Scott Brooks’
rotations, Brooks insists on having Harden defend James for extended periods
of time. I know that James is a player that is difficult to defend on every
level but this simply is not where Harden should be utilized on the
defensive end. Time and again, James will just post him up since he is
bigger and stronger and the results have been devastating.

Zach Lowe over at SI.com touched on that today. By his tally, Miami scored 24 point on James post-ups. The points did not all come from LeBron as he was able to hit open teammates when double teams came his way. He finished the game with 12 assists. How can anyone stop him at this point, let alone an undersized player known more for his offense?

It’s not just Harden, though, you are correct in pointing out Ibaka’s
dramatic fall-off but Kendrick Perkins has been equally awful. He is the
wrench in the gears. Nick Collison showed flashes of brilliance against the
Heat in Game 4 but then vanished. Poof! Scott Brooks is showing us his
inexperience with these stubborn, and at times haphazard, lineups that he
has been throwing out there.

Last year Rick Carlisle showed his flexibility by inserting J.J. Barea into
the starting lineup to wondrous results for Dallas as they went on to win
the championship. Erik Spoelstra was left in the dust scratching his head as
he stuck with Mike Bibby in the starting lineup for too long. Now, Spoelstra
is in command and his small center-less lineups are rendering OKC’s bigs
completely useless.

TH: To be very honest, one of the biggest hindrances in Lebron’s career has
been his unwillingness to post up. He used to be very prone to jacking Josh
Smith-type 3s, so much so that every time I play against him (Miami or
Cleveland) on the 2K games, I will sag off him and make him shoot it. I
might have to change my approach with the next one. And it makes sense that
their success has revolved around his post play, because the dude is the
biggest, strongest, most athletic person that might have ever existed. The
Thunder don’t have anyone who’s going to be able to defend him without
leaving a glaring mismatch. I’m not sure anyone in the league does, and
that’s why the Heat are one win away from the championship.

They’re a stronger team than last year, and they’ve found a way for both
Lebron and Dwyane Wade to play together. Right now their bench is outplaying the Thunder bench. I don’t see any way the Thunder make it as champs, and you’re right, Spo is out-coaching Brooks. Unless something drastic changes, the Heat seem to be poised to close this one out sooner rather than later.

DR: After the body language that Durant showed last night in the post game
presser this series could wrap up Thursday night. During that presser we
witnessed the return of Durant’s backpack, which had been MIA all
postseason. It too was just as sad an dejected as Durant as he let it fall
to the floor, shoulders slumped. It reminded me of the Western Conference
Finals last year. There were many a sad backpacks to be found in that
series.

Here’s the thing though, as I am not a true fan of either of the teams in the Finals, just a fan of the game, I have slowly come to view the post game presser as must-see throughout these playoffs. Sure, the questions are generally fluff, verging on inane at times, but I find them to be truly interesting.

Chris Bosh, who has been great this series, gives one of the best presser
interviews there are. Honestly, if more people heard him speak, instead of
instantly buying into the “Like a Bosh” or “Bosh Face” trope, they would see
just how smart, composed, and well spoken he is.

But of course the presser is all about the clothes. Man, these players
(Westbrook) wear some silly expensive shit. That said, Wade won the presser
clothes game last night when he came out wearing glasses that were straight
off the face of Dwayne Wayne from Different World.

TH: I’ve never really understood why Bosh gets so much shit. He’s a consistent 20-10 player, a perennial all star, who stretches the floor very well. His outside touch does wonders for the sometimes-anemic Heat offense, exposing the rim for the slashing of the other two stars.

It has become so commonplace to make fun of the Heat, that the worst thing I could think of has happened. I have moved past resenting them, past feeling sorry for them, into rooting for them as an underdog. Obviously, they are not the underdog, but I now feel that I have to throw stats in the faces of anyone who harps in on how much they hate the Heat.

DR: I found myself in the same place as the Finals started this year. For various and extremely biased reasons I cannot bring myself to root for the Thunder organization so that left me with only one choice. I have James many times on this blog, taking both a negative and positive view of him and his game. Seeing all the backlash towards one of the greatest players the league has ever seen has continually shocked me, though. Sure he, and the Heat have made some questionable choices in the past but does that really outweigh what goes on in a game? Miami is the most scrutinized team in sports and it is simply ludicrous to hear some of the things said about them.

The Heat deserve to win the championship this year, if for no other reason that silence the doubters who continually lob volley after volley of asinine rhetoric interspersed with buzz words at them all the while refusing to make sound judgments and arguments. At this point, if winning a championship is the only way to get it through the thick skull of some people that James is good and so are the Heat then so be it. They shall be vindicated.

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Ri-DIRK-ulous

Rising above

The beliefs of many have been shattered this postseason. For years those who are less knowledgeable but rather vocal have been quick to defame and tarnish Dirk Nowitzki. They were quick to blame him for the Dallas Mavericks’ playoff missteps. Labels of soft and choker were pinned upon him. However, that will not be the case any longer. Of course he will have his detractors, those who refuse to give any amount of credence to his game, but they will be ignored as conventional knowledge has accepted Nowitzki’s game finally. Better late than never.

Game Four against the Oklahoma City Thunder will go down as one of the greatest comebacks in NBA playoff history and it was fueled by Nowitzki. With 5:08 left in the fourth quarter the Mavericks were down 15 to the Thunder, who were, along with the crowd, celebrating wildly. If only they knew how premature their celebrations would become. Dallas rattled off a 17-2 run to tie the game in regulation forcing overtime. Nowitzki scored twelve of the 17 points including two free throws, after Nick Collison was finally called for a foul on him, to tie the game as ice coursed through his veins. He would go on to tally 40 points for the game.

To those naysayers who have always jumped at the opportunity to throw the first stones at Nowitzki after a playoff defeat Game Four was an affront to their beliefs. They were left reeling like Harold Camping when the Rapture never came. This was Nowitzki’s second 40-pint outburst during the series, he scored 48 in Game One. He became the first player since Shaquille O’Neal in the 2000 Finals to have two 40-point games and shoot 60 percent or better in those games. Those are just a few more marks on Nowitzki’s bloated playoff résumé.

This postseason, as the nation has an opportunity to re-acquaint themselves with Dallas’ future Hall of Famer, Nowitzki has put on a clinic. Not only that, but he his making a case for the best clutch performer in the league. Those with knowledge know that Kobe Bryant does not perform well with the game on the line. Nowitzki’s Efficiency Rating in the clutch is an astounding +62.7. That is almost double both Dwyane Wade‘s and LeBron James‘ ratings. His rating skyrockets while his turnover ratio plummets to zero. Nowitzki does not turn the ball over in the clutch. This does not mean that his defenders are not trying to wrest the ball from him. They most certainly are only to the tune of sending him to the line 29.3 times during the last five minutes of a close game.

Not only in the closing minutes of a game as Nowitzki been key but in the fourth quarter he has thrived all season including the playoffs. Against the Thunder he has scored 46 points in the fourth quarter. He had 10 points in Game One, 16 in Game Two, and 10 in both Games Three and Four. In the final frame he has shot a combined 58.6 percent.

Nowitzki means everything to the Mavericks. That is why they made their strongest push to resign him last summer, foregoing the circus that engulfed much of free agency. In these playoffs, Nowitzki has shown why he is so valuable. When he is on the bench, the Mavericks’ offensive rating drops from 114.44 to 98.63. Their rebounding percentage drops from 50.3 to 42.9 and their true shooting percentage goes from 59.3 to 51.2. Those are just a few of the declines, and there are many, that Dallas experiences when Nowitzki sits.

Now that the media has flooded its coverage of the Mavericks with the amazing statistics that Nowitzki has put up throughout his career, the haters, detractors, and those who just had no clue have run out of ammunition. Dirk Nowitzki is one of the best players in this generation. Period. There can be no questioning that. He is a lock for first ballot Hall of Fame induction. The scrawny kid from Würzburg, Germany has become an unstoppable force. He now sits just one win away from returning to the NBA Finals. A return trip will give him the opportunity for vindication and possibly revenge. As he has shown all postseason, he does not miss his opportunities.

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Darrell Arthur Posterizes Nick Collison

What’s better?  Darrell Arthur’s dunk over Nick Collison or Marc Gasol’s reaction when it was called a charge?

"Whaaa?"

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Young Duet Composes Verisimilar Music

This young duo could someday walk away with a title

The NBA has had its fair number of dynamic duos over its history, tandems such as Stockton and Malone, Barkley and Johnson, Kareem and Magic, Bird and McHale, Russell and Cousy, Alcindor and Robertson, Bryant and O’Neal, Duncan and Robinson, Thomas and Dumars, Ewing and Starks, Kemp and Payton, and of course Pippen and Jordan. Debating the greatness of these past duos is something that has been done ad nauseam. What is discussed is the present. Names of players for rival teams are frequently paired to promote games, or sneakers, such as Kobe and LeBron or Wade and Anthony. They do not play together except when called upon by Team USA. So, who are the best duos playing the game today? Melo and Billups? Kobe and Pau? LeBron and Jamison? Howard and Carter? Nowitzki and Kidd? Nash and Amare? Williams and Boozer? No. They are all great in their own right and have their teams in the playoff picture but none of these players are the best tandem playing the game. There are two players currently playing at a high level taking their young team right into the heart of the playoff push in a brutally tough Western conference.

Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook have the Oklahoma City Thunder poised to make the playoffs for the first time in the franchise’s short history. The level of their play and that of their teammates puts them on the top of the list of teams that no one wants to play in the first round. They currently sit in fifth place in the West six and a half games behind the first place Lakers. If the playoffs started today the Thunder would play the Utah Jazz, who they just beat 119-111 on Sunday to move within a half game of the Jazz who hold fourth place. This does not bode well for the Jazz as they are now 0-3 against the Thunder this season and could lose home-court advantage in the playoffs if the Thunder catch or pass them in the standings. In Sunday’s game, Durant and Westbrook paced the Thunder the entire game with Durant posting 35 points and Westbrook posting 30 points and handing out 11 assists.

These gaudy numbers are nothing new to these two players. Earlier this season Durant went on a two month (29 games) stretch of scoring at least 25 points in consecutive games. This is the longest stretch of games with a player having this type of offensive production since the 1986-87 season when a player by the name of Michael Jordan had run of 40 games scoring 25 points or more. Durant, who was drafted second overall in 2007 from the University of Texas, behind Greg Oden, has been steadily increasing his numbers and his knowledge of the game since joining the Supersonics and subsequently becoming the face of a new franchise after the team was commandeered by Clay Bennett and moved to Oklahoma City. During his freshman campaign in the league, Durant proved himself capable of playing at an NBA level and earned Rookie of the Year honors. Since that season, where he averaged 20.3 points per game, his scoring average has increased at an almost five point clip each following season. Durant’s second year he averaged 25.3 points per game and 29.8 points per game this season while also shooting .480 from the floor. His average this season of 29.8 points per game ranks Durant second in scoring behind LeBron James, who barely edges Durant, at 29.9 points per game. This production has deservedly garnered Durant some support in MVP discussions this season.

Drafted fourth overall in 2008 out of UCLA, Westbrook is in his second season in the NBA and has already established himself as a top 10 point guard in the league. His assists average jumped from 5.3 per game to 8 assists per game this season. His scoring has also improved over a full point from 15.3 to 16.8 points per game.  Combined, Westbrook’s and Durant’s average scoring output totals 46.6 points per game on a team that scores on average 100.1 points a game. Their importance to the success of the Thunder is clear. Westbrook knows that on such a young team, their average age is 25, that distributing the ball is crucial for the development of the team as a whole. His eight assists per game, which ranks seventh in the NBA, allow players such as Nick Collison, Jeff Green, and James Harden to get into the rhythm of a game and create scoring opportunities for themselves and others. However, Westbrook also has the ability to break down opposing defenses to create and score himself. This season he is shooting .424 from field goal range up from .398 last season. More impressively, Westbrook has already recorded a triple-double in his young career and frequently puts up numbers just short of reaching that mark again.

The future is bright for this young tandem, both were born in 1988, and it would be in the best interests of the Oklahoma City Thunder to keep the two paired together. The future success of the franchise depends on them. Durant has indicated that he wishes to stay with the team once his contract expires. The Thunder’s front office is sure to grant his wishes. Even though they are both young players and do not have any playoff experience between them they are undoubtedly the best duo in the league. They mean everything to the success of their team and it is they who have performed at such high levels to put their team in playoff contention. These two players, if kept together, will ultimately take their teams to the highest level of achievement that the NBA has to offer: the NBA Finals. It would not be surprising if they journeyed there more than once. Basketball historians and fans alike will forever debate who might be the greatest pairing the NBA has ever seen and may not ever come to any agreement. What is certain, however, is that they will have two more names on their list when all is said and done.

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