субота, 30 квітня 2011 р.

BDL Hump Day Chat!

Because I've been charged with covering the Chicago/Indiana series, I haven't been in office long enough to talk much about the Miami Heat, the Philadelphia 76ers, and Sixers wingman Andre Iguodala. In response to this, I bring you smart words from those that rarely seem to leave the office. Seriously, are Tom Haberstroh and Kurt Helin on trucker pills? Because these guys pump out brilliant content for what appears to be continuous 24-hour stretches.

First is Helin, on AI's offense:

The most explosive wing player on Philadelphia has shot just 31.6 percent overall and 25 percent from three. He is averaging only 8.8 points per game. He has looked like a shell of the guy who won gold with Team USA in Turkey last summer. That guy looked at home with the best in the NBA. Granted in the playoffs he had to track guys like LeBron James and Dwyane Wade out on the wings, but the drop-off has been more than that.

And Haberstroh on da D:

Iguodala's reputation has swung like a pendulum over the past few seasons, from underappreciated to overpaid to underappreciated again. Sure, he's been hobbled this season, but the 27-year-old still ranks as one of the best defenders in the league. According to 82games, his opponent PER is a league-best 8.8, which means he basically reduces his counterpart to Travis Outlaw-esque production.

Also, Dre is hurting. Badly.

So, with that out of the way, fancy a chat? We'll start off around 3:30 p.m., Eastern. Click the jump to have at it.

(All comments are moderated, so your contribution will not show up in real time. Get in early for the best chance of seeing you question or comment added. Thank you.)

Shaquille O Neal Hakeem Olajuwon Robert Parish Bob Pettit Scottie Pippen

LaMarcus Aldridge needs to step up his game, isn’t thinking about it

Throughout this season, LaMarcus Aldridge took it upon himself to become a true star, the best player on the Blazers in the wake of several huge knee injuries to presumed�franchise mainstay�Brandon Roy (and Greg Oden, if you count him). Accomplishing that feat made him the big name for the Blazers in their first-round series against the Mavericks. If they were to pull off the upset, he was likely to be the reason.

Dallas now leads the series at 3-2, with Game 6 set to tip off Thursday night in Portland. Despite the series being tight, though, Aldridge has 20.2 ppg and 7.0 rpg. If those numbers sound good, please note that Aldridge is shooting 46.7 percent from the field and has seen his scoring numbers drop with each successive game.

With the Blazers facing elimination Thursday night, Aldridge needs to step up. Except he is not really thinking about it. From Matt Calkins for The Columbian:

"Nah, I don't feel like this is a defining moment for me. I'm sorry if I should," said Aldridge, whose team trails the series three games to two. "It's a team sport. I didn't get here by myself. I feel like this is a defining moment for our team."

Aldridge's averages of 20.2 points and 7 rebounds in the playoffs aren't too divergent from the 21.8 and 8.8 he posted during the regular season. But he does appear to be growing more and more fatigued as the postseason progresses ? Blazers coach Nate McMillan acknowledging as much Tuesday afternoon. [...]

And that's a point Marcus Camby emphasized, as well ? that because Aldridge has been such a consistent performer throughout the the year, putting added pressure on him to supply a breakout playoff performance is unfair.

"He's been our guy all season long. What more can he possibly do? In my opinion, he was robbed as an All-Star and robbed of being the Most Improved Player," Camby said. "He's had a phenomenal season. ... You can't put all that pressure on him. He's been the focal point of the whole defense and is still getting the job done."

As Calkins notes, Aldridge's averages for the series are not terribly far off his regular-season averages of 21.8 ppg and 8.8 rpg. Given the five-game sample size, it's tough to say that Aldridge is failing his team. He could have a good Game 6 and see his averages rise even higher than his season marks. If he does that, will he be great again?

Still, there is something a little weird about LMA's progressive worsening over the course of the series from 27 points in Game 1 to 12 points in Game 5. That drop could be explained by the fact that defenses get to key in on stars over a seven-game series, adjusting their game plans based on previous performances. Coaches get to focus on one team, rather than the many they must track during the regular season. It makes sense that certain players would see their numbers drop over the course of the series.

The trouble here is that, even with these drops, Aldridge is playing reasonably similar to how he did during the season. Any criticism directed his way arises from the bizarre point of view that the real stars need to play better in the playoffs, and that anyone who doesn't is somehow a failure. This is unfair -- it presents a fanbase's desires as logical expectations for an athlete's performance. In truth, the playoffs are an assortment of games, and performance can be expected to meet a player's average production over a larger sample size.

In other words, Aldridge has not suddenly become a failure over the last week. He is the same player he was during the regular season. If he can't perform well Thursday night, it doesn't change the fact that he carried the Blazers to a better-than-expected win-loss record this season. If he scores fewer than 30 points Thursday night, he's still the team's best player and a rising star.

Wes Unseld Bill Walton Jerry West Lenny Wilkens James Worthy

The Portland Trail Blazers answer some fan signmail

Great signs, Portland Trail Blazers fans. We shared them with the team ? here's how they responded:

"Um ... I mean, I could use 'em. Yeah, sure, I know, but still ... like, do you remember how good I was? For real?

"You know what? Never mind. Just ... yeah. It'd be nice. Good knees would be really�nice. Like, really, really nice."

***

"Seriously?�What, you have a pair? Oh my God, yes! Yes, I need them!�Thank you SO MUCH! You have no idea what this means to me -- finally, I can start fresh. Finally.

"Wait ... rhetorical? A reference to Brandon's ... oh."

/sotto voce

"Thank you for your question and for supporting the portland trail blazer organization. We love our fans we truly do and we appreciate your feedback. going back to hiding now."

***

"We can't worry about that. Got to focus on the here and now. But I mean ... can you imagine? No way we're down 3-2 to these chumps. Sixty wins and a two seed, probably. It'd be a whole new world. A whole new ..."

/cough, sniffle

"We can't worry about that."

***

"THANK YOU FOR SAYING WE'RE AWESOME!"

***

Keep 'em coming, fans. The NBA is all about player-fan interaction, especially come playoff time.

John Stockton Isiah Thomas Nate Thurmond Wes Unseld Bill Walton

LeBron’s ‘Decision’ was awful, but his charities are thankful

Watching "The Decision" last summer was one of the more unsettling experiences most of us have ever encountered. At least amongst those that don't regularly watch scripted "reality" TV. The uneasiness with LeBron James' buildup to his decision as to who to sign with leapt across the board, regardless of team affiliation, age, interest level, or sense of tact. Nobody thought "The Decision" was a good idea. Even if it did produce some hilarious results.

One good thing did come out of it, though. The program raised more than $2 million�for various Boys & Girls Clubs, and nearly half a million dollars has been sent to clubs in Northeast Ohio -- site of James' former home of Akron, and the NBA domain of his former Cleveland Cavaliers club.

Mark Gillespie of the Cleveland Plain-Dealer has the breakdown:

A contribution of nearly $60,000 repaired a leaky roof, refurbished a dingy gymnasium and will pay for a new playground at the Mount Pleasant club on East 131st Street. And the Slavic Village club on Broadway received $70,000, which was used to install a new gym floor and purchase bleachers. The club also is waiting on delivery of 20 new computers.

Both clubs also received a video sports training system and $2,500 worth of sports gear.

In addition to the $2 million cash contribution, James arranged for the donation of $500,000 in computers from Hewlett-Packard and $500,000 in gear from Nike. Fifty-nine Boys & Girls Clubs across the country are receiving help from James.

News like this helps "The Decision" go down a little easier as the focus on James turns more to basketball, and less on the look-at-me production that he sent our way last July. And, as the waves from "The Decision's" wake shrink smaller and smaller as the months move on, most of us will start to once again regard LeBron James as a basketball player, and not the guy from that pathetic mess run terribly by Jim Gray.

The next generation, including a child named "LaBron," are already one step ahead of us. From the Plain-Dealer:

Kids playing basketball on the new floor at the Broadway Avenue club Tuesday afternoon had a more forgiving attitude toward James than is typically expressed by those who continue to demonize him on sports talk radio.

"I think he deserves to get a ring," said LaBron Sanford, 14. "He just went to a better team."

Dave Archibold, 15, echoed LaBron's sentiments. And he's happy with James' gift.

"This is a good floor," he said. "I'll remember him for that."

The Elyria club received $110,000, money that is paying for a new fitness center and improvements to the basketball court. The club also is getting 15 new computers.

Even the skeeviest of clouds have a silver lining, apparently.

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Other popular Yahoo! Sports stories:
? Oakland Raiders get a new, ridiculous stadium name
? Rumors bothering Urban Meyer's family
? Oops! Embarrassing assist on home run ball

Bob Cousy Dave Cowens Billy Cunningham Dave DeBusschere Clyde Drexler

LeBron James is quietly getting it together


Though a few of the games made the ABC cut, and LeBron James made waves Wednesday for his comments on the Philadelphia 76ers coming off like so many orders of tea and toast, James and his Heat have somewhat fallen off of the radar as the NBA looks to other, more competitive series.

That doesn't mean James has fallen off. His play in the first round was superb, and a portion of it needs to be addressed as the Heat gear up for their second-round pairing with the Boston Celtics.

The Heat are playing the second-slowest pace of the playoffs, which hinders a player's ability to put up individual stats, but that hasn't stopped James from averaging 24.2 points, 10.6 rebounds, and over six assists per game in his five outings against Philly. All of this came against Sixers wing stopper Andre Iguodala, who as Tom Haberstroh mentioned Wednesday, held opponents to terrible Travis Outlaw-esque production as a defender during the regular season.

Better, James has significantly cut down on his turnovers. The Sixers were just ahead of the middle of the pack in causing turnovers per possession this year, but their long arms can still get in the way. Not for James' passes, though.

From Rob Mahoney:

Before Wednesday's game, James held the lowest turnover rate among all qualified postseason players, as just 4.4 percent of his possessions ended with a giveaway, according to Basketball-Reference.com. That was less than a third of James's regular-season turnover rate, despite the fact that James was being guarded by one of the top perimeter defenders in the league (Andre Iguodala) and working against Philadelphia's formidable team defense.

The statistical outlook has changed a bit since then, as James's three turnovers in Game 5 nearly doubled his total from the first four games combined. His playoff turnover rate now stands at 6.4 percent, fourth among qualified players. Not quite as good, but considering his track record, remarkable nonetheless.

James has turned it over just seven times since the playoffs began, but the 6.4 mark is worth paying attention to because it accounts for pace, minutes, and the sheer amount of possessions that LeBron uses up. The guy has the ball in his hands a ton, and he's not giving it up.

And now, as Yahoo! Sports' Adrian Wojnarowski points out, James has a chance to lead his team past the more-celebrated-but-less-prone-to-celebrating Big Three his Heat were modeled after:

James needs to beat Boston. He lost to the Celtics in 2008 and 2010, and he has won only one playoff game in the Boston Garden. He didn't pick Miami to wait his turn, grind away and eventually break through in the East. Make no mistake: The Heat aren't allowed to lower expectations for themselves. The plan was never for that process to take hold in Miami, because these Celtics are living proof that a freshly minted Big Three could be a champion immediately.

The series starts on Sunday, and color everyone giddy already. This could be the start of the big wave that James so gleefully promised last summer.

Karl Malone Moses Malone Pete Maravich Kevin McHale George Mikan

Did Keith Smart get a fair chance with Golden State?

The news broke a few hours ago, and it is not terribly surprising: Keith Smart has been dismissed as head coach of the Golden State Warriors after just one season at the helm, as first reported by Matt Steinmetz of CSNBayArea.com, confirmed by Yahoo!'s own Marc Spears, and announced by the franchise itself. Smart got the job just before training camp this fall after new owners Joe Lacob and Peter Guber deposed the increasingly erratic Don Nelson, and he had a season to prove to his new bosses that he was the man for the long-term job. As these developments indicate, he did not do enough to please them.

The question is whether or not he got a fair shake, or if Lacob and Guber just considered him a convenient stopgap after Nellie and before their own handpicked successor. While Smart almost certainly would have received consideration in a full coaching search, he was given this job in the fall because he was already on the coaching staff, was generally well-liked, and had head-coaching experience from an interim stint with Cleveland in 2002. The new owners wanted no part of Nelson and had another option close. It was a no-brainer move, but Smart could hardly be called the perfect choice for the job.

On the other hand, he was far from incompetent. Faced with a very thin bench (especially in the backcourt) and several question marks in the frontcourt, Smart guided the Warriors to 36 wins, a 10-game improvement over 2009-10. Some of that improvement can be chalked up to better injury luck, but the Warriors also began to resemble a real basketball team for the first time in two seasons. Stephen Curry and Monta Ellis appeared to reach an understanding with each other at the offensive end of the court, even if their defense still leaves a metric ton to be desired. After the barely organized mess of the last two Nellie seasons, having any sort of organization was the greatest improvement of all. It was possible to envision this squad improving and growing together instead of festering in an incoherent approximation of the NBA game. Perhaps that would have happened under any coach not named "Don Nelson." But Smart made it happen, and he deserves credit for it.

Still, he was not without fault. Andris Biedrins had another terrible season at center and looks like he hates basketball. His regression can be explained in part by Nelson's extreme mishandling, but it's still Smart's job to get the players interested. Additionally, while the Warriors looked more like a real basketball unit this season, they remain fundamentally averse to defense and working to get good shots. Again, the roster can be blamed for those issues. But if the new higher-ups are looking to change the identity of the team, it stands to reason that a man who spent eight years in the organization wouldn't be the best man for the job. The fact that Smart was rumored to have a testy relationship with Curry, a near-universally loved young player, only made the choice easier.

The Warriors have had a horrible history over the last 20 years of keeping coaches -- as Tom Ziller notes at SB Nation, only Don Nelson (on two occasions) has spent more than three years in the job since the late '80s. However, Lacob and Guber didn't consider that history when they made this choice. Their interest lies in molding the franchise as they see fit, not making decisions based on recent examples. Smart was never their guy; he was just an available replacement.

Ultimately, we won't know if letting Smart go was a good decision until we find out who will take his job. Several high profile candidates could be interviewed -- including Jerry Sloan, apparently -- but it's unclear whom Lacob and Guber will pick. Whoever it is, though, will be their choice. He will have no ties to the old regime.

So, depending on how you view the circumstances, Smart either had a fair chance to prove himself or no chance at all. Many assistants would kill to get a season to show they can be capable head coaches. Smart got that shot, and his career will be better for it in the long run. His dismissal was always a strong possibility, and it should come as no shock.

Sam Jones Michael Jordan Jerry Lucas Karl Malone Moses Malone

Blazers bitter about 1st-round exit (AP)

Portland Trail Blazers ' Gerald Wallace (3) falls to the floor after his shoot is blocked by Dallas Mavericks ' Shawn Marion (0) while teammate Dallas Mavericks' Tyson Chandler (6), in the back ground looks on in the fourth quarter of Game 6 of their NBA basketball first-round playoff series Thursday, April 28, 2011, in Portland, Ore. The Mavericks won their first-round playoff series by defeated the Trail Blazers 103-96.

When the Trail Blazers were eliminated from the playoffs in the first round last season, there was a sense of accomplishment because the team had pulled through so much. The Blazers again overcame a string of untimely injuries this season to make the playoffs, but the feeling upon their first-round exit this time was utter disappointment.


Bob Pettit Scottie Pippen Willis Reed Oscar Robertson David Robinson

Create-a-Caption: ‘It’s like you’re not even practicing, Zach’

"No, no, no. It's right, then left, then double teapot, then hips don't lie, then Roger Rabbit. I mean, seriously, Zach: Do you want to get left out of MonT.N.T.? Because no one's making you be here. We'll be America's Best Dance Crew with or without you. Your decision."

Better get on the stick, Zach Zarba. Monty Williams doesn't seem to be messing around. Best caption wins serious consideration of the dance video game "bubble." Good luck.

In our last adventure: Toney Douglas is really, really not happy with his present predicament.

Winner, ArunK: The New York Knicks, attempting to model a Big 3 after the one in Miami, have the following checklist:

1. Super skilled 250-lb. forward. Check.

2. Clutch all-around scorer. Check.

3. Guy who cares enough to cry. Check.

Runner-up, Jeffrey D: It was awkward when conjoined twins Rajon Rondo and Toney Douglas were drafted by different teams, but somehow, they knew they'd find a way to make it work.

Second runner-up, Carlos: Mike D'Antoni: "I'd like to see him make a basket while sitting on top of Toney Douglas, see what he does."

Pete Maravich Kevin McHale George Mikan Earl Monroe Shaquille O Neal

пʼятниця, 29 квітня 2011 р.

Brandon Roy carries Portland to series-tying win with dominant fourth quarter

In Tuesday's Game 2 loss against the Dallas Mavericks, Portland Trail Blazers guard Brandon Roy played only eight minutes and admitted to being near tears on the bench. Formerly one of the brightest young stars in the league, Roy sat on the verge of irrelevance.

After Saturday afternoon's Game 4, it's safe to say that he doesn't have to worry about being consigned to the bench for large portions of this series. In what will surely become a legendary performance in Rip City, Roy scored 18 of his 24 points in the fourth quarter to bring the Blazers back from a 23-point deficit in the second half to an 84-82 win. He also had the eventual game-winner, a driving bank shot with 39 seconds on the clock. It's tempting to call it vintage Roy, except for the fact that it's probably the best quarter he's ever had, given the context.

Dallas had two chances to tie or win, but Jason Kidd and Jason Terry both missed three-pointers on the team's last two possessions.

In addition to providing a memorable finish, this win evens up the series at 2-2 and adds a ton of intrigue to Monday's Game 5 in Dallas. After jumping out to a 2-0 lead and seeming to have total command, the Mavs have dropped two close games late in Portland. Can they regain control and put the pressure back on the Blazers?

Whatever the case, it's safe to say that the Blazers will rely on Roy to give them a boost. A few days ago, there was talk that his griping would be a distraction to the rest of the team. Instead, he's bounced back with a solid performance in Game 3 and a stellar one in Game 4 to help tie up the series.

Roy may never become a star again. However, by putting the Blazers on his back in this fourth quarter, he proved that he can still be a difference-maker. For at least one game in this series, he was the best player on the floor.

Scottie Pippen Willis Reed Oscar Robertson David Robinson Bill Russell

Nuggets enthusiastic about future (AP)

NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 24:  (L-R) Amar'e Stoudemire #1, Carmelo Anthony #7 and Shawne Williams #3 of the New York Knicks celebrate a play against the Boston Celtics in Game Four of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals during the 2011 NBA Playoffs on April 24, 2011 at Madison Square Garden in New York City. The Celtics won 101-89. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement  (Photo by Nick Laham/Getty Images)

The Denver Nuggets did just fine without Carmelo Anthony and Chauncey Billups to finish off the regular season, hardly missing the All-Star duo in the wake of their blockbuster deal with the New York Knicks. They sure could've used them in the playoffs, though. The Nuggets lacked a go-to guy such as Anthony in crunch time and they sorely missed Billups' free throw shooting.


Nate Archibald Paul Arizin Charles Barkley Rick Barry Elgin Baylor

Celtics, Heat knew they would square off (AP)

Boston Celtics ' Paul Pierce smiles at teammates before practice in Waltham, Mass. Wednesday, April 27, 2011.

Long before the playoffs began, even before this season started, the Miami Heat and Boston Celtics both suspected the same thing. A postseason matchup was inevitable. Sure enough, they were absolutely correct. "It's finally here," Celtics forward Paul Pierce said. Want drama? This Eastern Conference semifinal series will have it in bunches.


Dave DeBusschere Clyde Drexler Julius Erving Patrick Ewing Walt Frazier

Actor/model/rapper Common reminisces about being a Bulls ballboy

With the Bulls holding the top seed in the East and cruising into the second round, all of Chicago has basketball fever. Finally, 13 seasons after Michael Jordan's retirement, The City That Works has a team that can win a championship. It's been an incredibly long wait, especially for a franchise that won six championships in eight seasons. I don't know how it weathered the storm.

It's an exciting team, with all manner of Chicago celebrities reminiscing about days gone by with their favorite franchise. One of those people is actor ("Terminator: Salvation"), model (GAP), and rapper (who even knows anymore) Common, born Lonnie Lynn, Jr. As a young man in the '80s, Common spent time with the Bulls as a ballboy and locker room go-fer. He spoke about the experience (and several other Chicago memories) with TimeOut Chicago:

"When I was 11, till maybe 13 [1983?85 seasons], I was a ball boy for the Chicago Bulls. I came in on a year when they weren't that great, but they had some cool players like Quintin Dailey, Ennis Whatley and Orlando Woolridge. But after a year, a man by the name of Michael Jordan came in. I will never forget seeing Jordan play a song in the locker room during the first exhibition game and the general manager, Rod Thorn, saying to him he can't play music, that's the rule. But after the second exhibition game they told him he could play whatever he wanted because he was that good. Just to be around that kind of transition, and getting to bond [with] and meet Michael Jordan and all those cats, was obviously one of the best experiences you could ever have in life."

Let this be a lesson to every NBA player: If you want control over locker-room music, you should probably be the best player of all time. Hopefully that serves as motivation for all the young hoop stars out there.

Common is a basketball fan and a decent player, as well, as he's shown in several All-Star Celebrity Games and his work in the hit film "Just Wright," in which he plays star point guard Scott McKnight, whose team somehow gets to the conference finals without him as he recovers from a terrible knee injury. If any famous Chicago fan is going to talk about the Bulls, he's the guy you'd most want to hear from.

Wait, except for George Wendt. You should always want to hear from George Wendt.

Patrick Ewing Walt Frazier George Gervin Hal Greer John Havlicek

Mavs hold off Blazers, face Lakers next (AP)

PORTLAND, OR - APRIL 28: Jason Terry #31 of the Dallas Mavericks hits a three-point shot during the fourth quarter of Game Six of the Western Conference Quartefinals against the Portland Trail Blazers in the 2011 NBA Playsoffs on April 28, 2011 at the Rose garden in Portland, Oregon. The Mavericks won the game 103-96 to win the series and advance. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Steve Dykes/Getty Images)

The Dallas Mavericks have had trouble in the playoffs in recent years, so Dirk Nowitzki didn't want to take too much away from conquering the Portland Trail Blazers in the first round. Not with the Los Angeles Lakers looming. "Once you've been in the playoffs for a number of years, you want to win it all.


Bob Cousy Dave Cowens Billy Cunningham Dave DeBusschere Clyde Drexler

Hawks eliminate Magic, get Bulls next (AP)

ATLANTA, GA - APRIL 28:  Stan Van Gundy of the Orlando Magic reacts after a missed basket during Game Six of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals in the 2011 NBA Playoffs against the Atlanta Hawks at Philips Arena on April 28, 2011 in Atlanta, Georgia.  NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.  (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

The Atlanta Hawks didn't like the way things ended a year ago. They certainly were miffed about being written off in these playoffs. Well, look who's moving on to the next round. Using every motivational trick in the book, Atlanta held on for an 84-81 victory in Game 6 Thursday night to finish off the Orlando Magic.


Bob Cousy Dave Cowens Billy Cunningham Dave DeBusschere Clyde Drexler

LeBron James is quietly getting it together


Though a few of the games made the ABC cut, and LeBron James made waves Wednesday for his comments on the Philadelphia 76ers coming off like so many orders of tea and toast, James and his Heat have somewhat fallen off of the radar as the NBA looks to other, more competitive series.

That doesn't mean James has fallen off. His play in the first round was superb, and a portion of it needs to be addressed as the Heat gear up for their second-round pairing with the Boston Celtics.

The Heat are playing the second-slowest pace of the playoffs, which hinders a player's ability to put up individual stats, but that hasn't stopped James from averaging 24.2 points, 10.6 rebounds, and over six assists per game in his five outings against Philly. All of this came against Sixers wing stopper Andre Iguodala, who as Tom Haberstroh mentioned Wednesday, held opponents to terrible Travis Outlaw-esque production as a defender during the regular season.

Better, James has significantly cut down on his turnovers. The Sixers were just ahead of the middle of the pack in causing turnovers per possession this year, but their long arms can still get in the way. Not for James' passes, though.

From Rob Mahoney:

Before Wednesday's game, James held the lowest turnover rate among all qualified postseason players, as just 4.4 percent of his possessions ended with a giveaway, according to Basketball-Reference.com. That was less than a third of James's regular-season turnover rate, despite the fact that James was being guarded by one of the top perimeter defenders in the league (Andre Iguodala) and working against Philadelphia's formidable team defense.

The statistical outlook has changed a bit since then, as James's three turnovers in Game 5 nearly doubled his total from the first four games combined. His playoff turnover rate now stands at 6.4 percent, fourth among qualified players. Not quite as good, but considering his track record, remarkable nonetheless.

James has turned it over just seven times since the playoffs began, but the 6.4 mark is worth paying attention to because it accounts for pace, minutes, and the sheer amount of possessions that LeBron uses up. The guy has the ball in his hands a ton, and he's not giving it up.

And now, as Yahoo! Sports' Adrian Wojnarowski points out, James has a chance to lead his team past the more-celebrated-but-less-prone-to-celebrating Big Three his Heat were modeled after:

James needs to beat Boston. He lost to the Celtics in 2008 and 2010, and he has won only one playoff game in the Boston Garden. He didn't pick Miami to wait his turn, grind away and eventually break through in the East. Make no mistake: The Heat aren't allowed to lower expectations for themselves. The plan was never for that process to take hold in Miami, because these Celtics are living proof that a freshly minted Big Three could be a champion immediately.

The series starts on Sunday, and color everyone giddy already. This could be the start of the big wave that James so gleefully promised last summer.

Dave DeBusschere Clyde Drexler Julius Erving Patrick Ewing Walt Frazier

Hawks eliminate Magic, get Bulls next (AP)

ATLANTA, GA - APRIL 28:  Stan Van Gundy of the Orlando Magic reacts after a missed basket during Game Six of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals in the 2011 NBA Playoffs against the Atlanta Hawks at Philips Arena on April 28, 2011 in Atlanta, Georgia.  NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.  (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

The Atlanta Hawks didn't like the way things ended a year ago. They certainly were miffed about being written off in these playoffs. Well, look who's moving on to the next round. Using every motivational trick in the book, Atlanta held on for an 84-81 victory in Game 6 Thursday night to finish off the Orlando Magic.


Elvin Hayes Magic Johnson Sam Jones Michael Jordan Jerry Lucas

четвер, 28 квітня 2011 р.

Knicks bring back PG Billups for 2011-12 (AP)

BOSTON, MA - APRIL 17:  Chauncey Billups #4 of the New York Knicks drives to the net as Rajon Rondo #9 of the Boston Celtics defends in Game One of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals in the 2011 NBA Playoffs on April 17, 2011 at the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. The Boston Celtics defeated the New York Knicks 87-85. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)

The New York Knicks are bringing Chauncey Billups back for next season. The Knicks announced Wednesday that they are keeping the veteran point guard, deciding his leadership outweighs the savings they would have earned by waiving him this week. The Knicks would have been obligated to pay Billups only $3.7 million if they cut him within five days after the season.


Dolph Schayes Bill Sharman John Stockton Isiah Thomas Nate Thurmond

Create-a-Caption: ‘It’s like you’re not even practicing, Zach’

"No, no, no. It's right, then left, then double teapot, then hips don't lie, then Roger Rabbit. I mean, seriously, Zach: Do you want to get left out of MonT.N.T.? Because no one's making you be here. We'll be America's Best Dance Crew with or without you. Your decision."

Better get on the stick, Zach Zarba. Monty Williams doesn't seem to be messing around. Best caption wins serious consideration of the dance video game "bubble." Good luck.

In our last adventure: Toney Douglas is really, really not happy with his present predicament.

Winner, ArunK: The New York Knicks, attempting to model a Big 3 after the one in Miami, have the following checklist:

1. Super skilled 250-lb. forward. Check.

2. Clutch all-around scorer. Check.

3. Guy who cares enough to cry. Check.

Runner-up, Jeffrey D: It was awkward when conjoined twins Rajon Rondo and Toney Douglas were drafted by different teams, but somehow, they knew they'd find a way to make it work.

Second runner-up, Carlos: Mike D'Antoni: "I'd like to see him make a basket while sitting on top of Toney Douglas, see what he does."

Walt Frazier George Gervin Hal Greer John Havlicek Elvin Hayes

Days of NBA Lives: Wherein the Blazers need help from Ellen DeGeneres

At this point, seemingly half the NBA is on Twitter. It's a wild world of training updates, questions as to which movies they should go see, and explanations of their Call of Duty prowess. Every so often, though, you also get a picture into the more interesting aspects of NBA life. This feature is your window into that world.

Jason Thompson: Jus Seen Sammy D in the Airport!! As Usual He Late for his Flight!! LOL

Al-Farouq Aminu:
Where is Dubai on the map.

Marquis Daniels:
I'm trying to look at a movie n my daughter has Dora disk on blast all I keep hearing is come on vominoes or however u spell it #beleedat

Patty Mills: Hey @TheEllenShow. Support me and my team mates in the Playoffs. We are down 2 games and need your help...! [Note: There are roughly 20 messages from Mills to Ellen.]

Sonny Weems:
Just picked up my new improved charger!! Dare anybody to race me now.

You can also follow Eric Freeman on Twitter at @freemaneric.

Earl Monroe Shaquille O Neal Hakeem Olajuwon Robert Parish Bob Pettit

Behind the Box Score, where the Nuggets are hanging on


Denver 104, Oklahoma City 101

It was the meme immediately following, the starter on everyone's breath on into the night, and the sting that hurt as morning revealed itself. Russell Westbrook just shot the Oklahoma City Thunder out of a first round sweep of the Nuggets. And we'd write that even if we hadn't seen the final two minutes of Westbrook chucking it up there as he, well, shot the Thunder out of a first round sweep of the Nuggets.

This was a game-long thing, for Westbrook, as he dominated the ball and made terrible decisions offensively. RW can put up 30 shots, I don't mind even if that means Kevin Durant takes half as many. His offensive potential is good enough to ignore Durant in that way.

But Westbrook has to manage it properly, and that just wasn't happening in Game 4. Too many bouncy-bouncy dribbles that allowed Denver to load up on his fakes and half-hearted attempts at driving. His pull-ups weren't working, his misses led to running and/or cross-matches for the Nuggets on the other end, and he's got a lot of making up to do after a regular season that routinely offered play along these lines.

Three cheers for the Nuggies, though, as they listened to their coach and took chances early in possessions. They weren't always the best decisions -- decisions will never go along those lines when you pile them up by the dozen and peel them off so quickly -- but Denver did make a point to get past whoever was directly in front of them with a drive or pass. And as the defense collapses and bodies start to move, good shots open up. Suddenly the corner three is open, Nene is getting to the line, or the front of the rim is ready to be terrorized by a tiny guard.

Like, say, Ty Lawson. The Nuggets point man had 27 points and just one turnover despite going all-out for 36 minutes. Nobody had more than one turnover for Denver, who nearly halved Oklahoma City's miscue total (15) with eight turns in a fast, 94-possession contest. That was the killer. The Thunder could go on a mini-run, but Denver would hold its own on the offensive end, and OKC (usually led by Westbrook, who missed 18 of 30 shots) would fail to do so on their end.

At least one more game of THUNDERNUGGETS. I'm cool with that.

***

Memphis 104, San Antonio 86

We know the Spurs have taken a step back on defense this season, but for the Grizzlies to put up nearly 120 points per 100 possessions in a crucial playoff game against San Antonio speaks loudly enough that you'd kindly ask the speaker in question to take it down a notch.

Memphis seemed to get whatever it wanted in the third quarter, starting most of its offense on defense but also showcasing good spacing as the Grizz took it to the team with the West's best record. Memphis doubled San Antonio up during that turn with a 30-15 advantage, and the Spurs just had no answer.

San Antonio could square itself for good looks at the rim, both inside and out, but no combination seemed to work for Gregg Popovich. The team's offensive futility (missing 13 of 18 three-pointers, getting to the line only 14 times) was led by a 19 percent turnover ratio, which meant that the Spurs turned the ball over nearly once for every five times they got the ball. In a crucial Game 4 against a team from Memphis, mind you.

Everyone contributed for the Grizzlies. Because the team was forcing so many turnovers and missed long jumpers, the Grizz worked well in transition, which allowed sparkplugs (to say the very least -- these guys are sparkplugs fitted around a V-12 engine) like Tony Allen and Darrell Arthur to lay-in their way to double-figure points. Somehow, Greivis Vasquez actually ran the show off the Grizzlies bench without hurting his team, Mike Conley scored 15 points on 15 shots but seemed to have an offensive answer whenever it was needed, and Marc Gasol's touch was put to good use on broken plays.

Lucky looks? The Grizzlies had a few. The team was playing careless basketball at times in a good way, inspired by that home crowd. Does that sustain in a desperate Game 5 that will take place in San Antonio, with all the pressure suddenly on the favored Grizzlies to close out? I don't think anyone should anticipate that, at this point, as we could see a blowout.

And we can't count the Spurs out , in spite of the rough odds. What we can do is praise Memphis' drive, and attention to detail in this win. It's easy to get lost while up in the air, when out of control and with no place to go outside of firing something at the rim. But this team, for all of its pell-mell plays, concentrated and earned that win. Not unlike the way the Spurs used to do it. Fancy that.

***


Dallas 93, Portland 82

This series has been full of home wins, teams doing what they're supposed to do as they guard the familiar floor and hang on (or come back) for wins whilst wearing the whites. Sometimes that makes for a dull back-and-forth. How would you classify this one?

Because while Dallas had Portland at arm's length for most of the night (the Blazers staged a mini-rally in the final three minutes to make the score look closer than the game was), it's still fun to run your best George Peppard impersonation and watch a plan come together. It's nice to see Dallas play well, even if the results while at home are to be expected.

And, as the highlights and recaps have documented, Tyson Chandler was the driving force. He wasn't swatting a ton of shots (in what was a surprise to me, Chandler registered zero blocks) or dunking all over the place, but he was in his usual role of setting perfect and somewhat-legal screens on offense while chasing all manner of Blazer down from behind on defense. He was fantastic, with 20 rebounds overall, and his completely re-worked free throw stroke allowed him to hit 8-12 needed freebies from the stripe.

The Blazer bench was terrible. Brandon Roy looked to have good separation a few times on his jumpers, indicating that maybe this wasn't an off night for that knee, but he missed five of seven shots. Nic Batum's contributions all came in the form of long two-point jumpers, and Rudy Fernandez wasn't putting anyone over the top. Portland needed something on a night that saw LaMarcus Aldridge take 15 shots to score 12 points, and it just wasn't happening.

Also, because Dallas and Chandler did well to take Portland out of its initial sets, the Blazers badly need to go against type and start to initiate plays earlier in the shot clock.

Back to Portland, for Game 6. The Blazers will probably win, and we'll probably enjoy watching it.

Wes Unseld Bill Walton Jerry West Lenny Wilkens James Worthy

Kevin Love is your Most Improved Player, whatever that means

It's the first round of the playoffs, so the NBA award season rambles on. Thursday afternoon, the Minnesota Timberwolves held a press conference to honor All-Star forward Kevin Love, this season's Most Improved Player. Love had an amazing season, averaging 20.2 ppg (with terrific shooting percentages across the board) and a league-leading 15.2 rpg, and he deserves recognition for his accomplishments.

Unfortunately, Most Improved Player might not be the best honor. As Kelly Dwyer noted in his case for Derrick Rose as MIP, Love saw his per-minute numbers rise significantly this year. On the other hand, his per-game stats shot up primarily because of a jump in minutes from 28.6 per game to 35.8. He had a great season, no doubt. But he also benefited because MIP is perhaps the most nebulously defined award of all. It could easily go to a star who becomes a superstar, a solid player who becomes a star, an end-of-the-bench guy who becomes a rotation player, etc.

In fact, most of the players who finished behind Love in MIP voting would have been perfectly acceptable winners.

Second-place finisher LaMarcus Aldridge became a legitimate star for a Blazers team in desperate need of an on-court leader following Brandon Roy's knee problems. Third-place Dorell Wright joined the Warriors and promptly became a quality 3-point shooter capable of shouldering a too-heavy load of minutes. Fourth-place Derrick Rose figured out how to get to the line more often and turned from a young star to an All-NBA talent and likely MVP. The list goes on, from Kris Humphries to Kyle Lowry to Russell Westbrook.

Still, hazy award definition issues aside, Love deserves recognition for the way he played for the NBA's worst team this season. His contributions rarely translated to wins, but he had a terrific season and firmly established himself as the league's top rebounder. Give him some form of hardware, even if no one can agree on exactly what this trophy means.

Hal Greer John Havlicek Elvin Hayes Magic Johnson Sam Jones

Kevin Love is your Most Improved Player, whatever that means

It's the first round of the playoffs, so the NBA award season rambles on. Thursday afternoon, the Minnesota Timberwolves held a press conference to honor All-Star forward Kevin Love, this season's Most Improved Player. Love had an amazing season, averaging 20.2 ppg (with terrific shooting percentages across the board) and a league-leading 15.2 rpg, and he deserves recognition for his accomplishments.

Unfortunately, Most Improved Player might not be the best honor. As Kelly Dwyer noted in his case for Derrick Rose as MIP, Love saw his per-minute numbers rise significantly this year. On the other hand, his per-game stats shot up primarily because of a jump in minutes from 28.6 per game to 35.8. He had a great season, no doubt. But he also benefited because MIP is perhaps the most nebulously defined award of all. It could easily go to a star who becomes a superstar, a solid player who becomes a star, an end-of-the-bench guy who becomes a rotation player, etc.

In fact, most of the players who finished behind Love in MIP voting would have been perfectly acceptable winners.

Second-place finisher LaMarcus Aldridge became a legitimate star for a Blazers team in desperate need of an on-court leader following Brandon Roy's knee problems. Third-place Dorell Wright joined the Warriors and promptly became a quality 3-point shooter capable of shouldering a too-heavy load of minutes. Fourth-place Derrick Rose figured out how to get to the line more often and turned from a young star to an All-NBA talent and likely MVP. The list goes on, from Kris Humphries to Kyle Lowry to Russell Westbrook.

Still, hazy award definition issues aside, Love deserves recognition for the way he played for the NBA's worst team this season. His contributions rarely translated to wins, but he had a terrific season and firmly established himself as the league's top rebounder. Give him some form of hardware, even if no one can agree on exactly what this trophy means.

Isiah Thomas Nate Thurmond Wes Unseld Bill Walton Jerry West

Pacers hang on as they extend their season


The Indiana Pacers didn't have much credibility outside their home state as they entered their first postseason in five years. But in a week's time and four games into their opening-round series with the Chicago Bulls, a national audience is slowly realizing that, holy cow, these guys can really defend. And, for the first time since Anthony Johnson scored 25 points with eight assists to lead the Pacers, the team has a postseason win to show for it.

Indiana is still facing a 1-3 deficit, down to a Bulls squad that finished the season with the best record in basketball, but this team and its interim coach Frank Vogel have clearly earned the respect of the league -- and the Bulls -- with its amplified play. Saturday's 89-84 win marked the fifth (if you count the teams' last regular-season meeting on March 18th) straight game the Pacers have taken Chicago to the brink. This time, Indiana managed to finally break through with a win to sustain its season.

Of course, because these Pacers are so mercurial, things were pretty dicey down the stretch. With just six minutes left in the contest, Indiana led by a seemingly insurmountable 80-66 score. And though by the final buzzer there was nothing "seeming" about that too-big lead, the Pacers managed to nearly give up another one in the clutch. Benefiting from a rash of Pacer turnovers, Chicago whittled the lead down to one with less than a minute left, and even had a chance to tie the game with 14.1 seconds left, down by three.

Alas, on a guard-around screen Chicago has executed numerous times this season, Joakim Noah failed to find Bulls MVP candidate Derrick Rose, and Chicago was left to find a wide-open-for-a-reason Carlos Boozer in the corner for a desperate 3-pointer that fell short.

The play was typical of Chicago's offensive futility, and Indiana's fantastic defense on Rose throughout the game. Though the Bulls third-year guard sprained his ankle in the first quarter (forcing him to leave the bench for a few minutes as he sought treatment), it was mainly the long-armed defense of Pacers rookie Paul George and aggressive footwork of veteran Dahntay Jones that held Rose to 6-of-22 shooting on the afternoon. Jones did admit after the game that Rose "was hobbled," and that his left ankle injury may have played a part, but this sort of defense on Rose has been a hallmark of the Pacers throughout this series, in spite of Rose's crunch-time brilliance and high points-per-game average.

"[Jones and George] are doing an equally great job on him," Frank Vogel pointed out post game. "I have a hard time deciding who to go to down the stretch. They're very different types of defenders."

"We're just trying to make it," George explained, "so that he's tired and shooting jumpers. Anyone is going to be frustrated when they're shooting jumpers, and [Chicago] is not at their best when he's shooting jumpers."

Jones, though he gabs a bit on the court, shooed away any recognition for his role in Rose's tough Game 4. "I can't even recall the final play," he said following the Pacers' win, "it all happened so fast." Such is life guarding Rose, even if he's only on one leg.

Perhaps the most impressive part of Indiana's defensive attack was the different styles the team used to keep the Bulls to 38 percent shooting and a miserable 95 points per 100 possessions -- a mark that takes into account Chicago's hot-shooting, 28-point fourth quarter, which was mainly the fault of the Indiana offense turning the ball over six times. Indiana caused nine turnovers in the first quarter and a half, trapping Rose miles away from the hoop and recovering on drivers expertly. It was the second straight game that Chicago debuted with a rash of miscues.

For the next two quarters after that, before the offensive meltdown, Indiana got out on shooters and forced timid and usually fruitless long jumpers from the Bulls. The Pacers' pitiful offense down the stretch helped make Chicago's final 84 points look a little more palatable, but this was a dominant defensive game throughout for Indiana.


Don't think the Bulls didn't notice, and don't think they're not frustrated. Noah was the team's best player in the loss with 21 points and 14 rebounds, but he was also chirping at teammates (and, to Noah's credit, himself) after the mistakes piled up. Boozer was often the object of Chicago scorn, as he needed 15 shots to score 15 points, missed several chippies around the rim, and scuttled a potential run (Chicago had halved Indiana's 18-point lead in a 3 1/2-minute turn) with a needless technical foul for taunting Roy Hibbert.

Hibbert was more amused than shook by Boozer's filthy mouth following the contest. "I've got a lot of respect for Carlos Boozer," he parsed carefully, "but our crowd was so loud that I honestly couldn't hear what he said. Your guess is as good as mine."

If your guess is good, then you're good to guess that both teams will come through with more of the same during Tuesday's Game 5. Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau can tinker all he wants with the formula that led the Bulls to 65 wins in the team's first 85 tries, but Saturday's Game 4 was just more of the same between these two teams save for a different outcome. Tuesday will be just another in a growing line of pitched battles.

The Pacers obviously have an edge in guarding Rose (now shooting 35 percent in four playoff games) and the rest of the Bulls (just under 40 percent on the series), and Chicago now has Rose's iffy ankle to worry about (he was noticeably limping following the game while promising that he'll be fine by Tuesday's tipoff), along with the growing confidence of Danny Granger -- who scored 24 points to go with 10 rebounds and four assists in 37 minutes of nearly error-less play on both ends.

"Danny Granger," Vogel said after the win, "is a flat-out gamer. I'm glad he's on my team."

Indiana, even in defeat earlier this week, appeared to have a lot of those types. Now, for the first time in a brutal series, they have a win to show for such mettle. Will it lead to any playing time beyond Tuesday's Game 5? That remains to be seen, but truth be told the amount of games this series goes doesn't really matter. The Pacers have made their mark. And it left a bruise.

Bob Pettit Scottie Pippen Willis Reed Oscar Robertson David Robinson

The 10-man rotation, starring DeMarcus Cousins: MVP


A look around the league and the web that covers it. It's also important to note that the rotation order and starting nods aren't always listed in order of importance. That's for you, dear reader, to figure out.

C: Negative Dunkalectics. Finding a way to make DeMarcus Cousins' weaknesses into stat-based strengths!
PF: Magic Basketball. Dwight Howard's gravitational pull.
SF: SI.com. A first-hand account from the great Alexander Wolff on MJ's 25-year-old 63-point game.
SG: Basketball Prospectus. There is still time to vote on the Internet Basketball Awards.
PG: SRI. Tyson Chandler's buddy "ran the streets" in Turkey with Jimmy Goldstein.
6th: The Good Point. The MVP race, and classic Samurai cinema.
7th: WEEI. Doc Rivers continues to save his best for the end of close games.
8th: New York Times. Jeremy Tyler's second chance in Japan.
9th: The Basketball Jones. On Wednesday's most famous headband. Click and laugh.
10th: The Point Forward. The Spurs love the corner three, and the Grizz know it. Great work from Zach Lowe here.

Got a link or tip for Ball Don't Lie? Holler at me at KD_BDL_ED (at) yahoo.com, or follow me on Twitter.

Karl Malone Moses Malone Pete Maravich Kevin McHale George Mikan

середа, 27 квітня 2011 р.

Video: Stan Van Gundy punches out early, then KOs the media

The Orlando Magic were moments away from staying alive with style, putting the finishing touches on a Game 5 beatdown of the Atlanta Hawks to send their first-round Eastern Conference playoff series back to Philips Arena for Game 6 on Thursday. Stan Van Gundy's squad held a 23-point lead and possession of the ball with less than 10 seconds left in the game. It was all over but the shoutin', and since SVG doesn't much care for shoutin', he decided to get a head start and beat the traffic to the locker room.

Which would've been fine, except that reserve Atlanta big man Hilton Armstrong elected to foul Magic backup point guard Chris Duhon with 7.1 seconds left, unnecessarily extending a game that (if we're being frank) felt like it lasted a bit too long as it was. The game continued, but Orlando's coach just kept on keeping on down the tunnel. His exit was captured by the Orlando broadcast team, leaving a nation of onlookers ? well, those that hadn't already flipped over to catch the rest of Bulls/Pacers, anyway ? having Alan Ladd flashbacks. It was kind of an odd scene.

Soon after the final buzzer had actually sounded, though, the pep in Van Gundy's step made a bit more sense. He was probably just really, really excited to get to his postgame press conference and sling some zings at the ink-and-pixel-stained wretches covering his team.

At NBA.com's Hang Time blog, Sekou Smith has video of Van Gundy "answering a simple question after the Magic's Game 5 blowout win [by defending] Dwight Howard's honor (yet again), while also taking shots at those of us forced to listen to him on a regular basis." Here's what Stan had to say about a play during the game that one media member suggested could have been called a flagrant foul against Atlanta:

"No, it couldn't have gone as a flagrant, because it was on Dwight. He has not been flagrantly fouled this year, so we were not surprised. [...]

"I understand, and [Dwight] understands too, that he has to keep his cool and everything else. I have said, for the people ? like you guys in the media ? that want to be critical of him: Go run on the treadmill for 40 minutes [that] he plays every night, and every two or three minutes, I'm going to hit you as hard as I can upside the head, OK? And what I want you to do is, keep running and don't react at all. Don't react. Don't say anything to me, don't look at me wrong, don't hit me back, don't do anything. I just get to whack you as hard as I want every three minutes.

"Now, I'm not saying ? look, if you're a referee, you know, they have their guidelines. They just think they're hard fouls. That's fine; I'm not criticizing the referees here. What I'm saying is, for the people in the media who criticize Dwight for the few times that he retaliates, understand: That's what you're criticizing.

"I want to make it clear: I'm not criticizing the officials. I'm not. I'm criticizing you guys, OK? And I don't think I can be fined for that, because nobody out there likes you guys."

Pretty good chop-bustin', Stan. I'm sure some of the journalists in attendance laughed a little at the time for show, then let loose a tear or two over their keyboards later. I mean, it cut me deep, even though I'm the most respected and well-liked type of writer there is ? a part-time basketball blogger.

Smith seemed to be one of the folks who didn't appreciate it. "Maybe some of us aren't as sympathetic to Howard's cause as we should be. But that's beside the point," he wrote at the Hang Time blog. "Van Gundy has more important things to worry about than insulting us."

That's certainly true ? even with the Game 5 blowout, Orlando is still in a 3-2 hole facing Game 6 on the road, a fact Van Gundy made sure his team remembered in a postgame whiteboard message, according to Y!'s Adrian Wojnarowski. But those displeased at Stan's barbs are missing the silver lining around his grumpy, frumpy cloud: At least he's not obliquely comparing writers to military strongmen to make the point about flagrants! That's something, right?

Original video of the SVG postgame presser via wathuhbra.

Kevin McHale George Mikan Earl Monroe Shaquille O Neal Hakeem Olajuwon

Brooks: Westbrook took too many jumpers (AP)

DENVER, CO - APRIL 25:  Russell Westbrook #0 of the Oklahoma City Thunder lays the ball up over a falling J.R. Smith #5 of the Denver Nuggets in Game Four of the Western Conference Quarterfinals in the 2011 NBA Playoffs at Pepsi Center on April 25, 2011 in Denver, Colorado. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.  (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images)

After he makes a big shot, Russell Westbrook likes to gesture with his hands as though they're pistols and then blow the pretend smoke away. But did he get too trigger-happy in Game 4? After Oklahoma City's All-Star point guard attempted 30 shots for just the third time in his career as the Denver Nuggets cut their series deficit to 3-1, even his coach thought so.


Paul Arizin Charles Barkley Rick Barry Elgin Baylor Dave Bing