Posts Tagged ‘Ray Allen’

Takeaways from Game 6 of the NBA Finals

Thursday, June 20th, 2013

By Chris Price

B-ball fans, I didn’t get a chance to watch Heat-Spurs Game 6 the other night.  I was in the midst of a great camping trip with the wife, but we both caught the second half of the game on ESPN radio.  Just got a chance to watch the recorded game earlier, and I must say this was a good one.  The game made me mull over some things and I wanted to make a couple of observations.  Bear with me.

“Are you willing to go down the stretch of an elimination game with your second best player sitting on the bench to put more shooting around your best player? Tough decisions if you’re a coach.” – Jeff Van Gundy, when Dwyane Wade subbed in for Mike Miller at 3:48 left in the 4th quarter

The lineup that brought the Heat back from down 10 at the beginning of the 4th to up 3 later in the quarter was Mario Chalmers, Ray Allen, Mike Miller, LeBron, and Birdman.  JVG noted this was also the lineup that blew open Game 2 for them… Miami’s best lineup might contain only one member of their “Big 3”.  Take a minute to let that sink in. Miami’s best lineup might contain only one member of their Big 3.  When D Wade came back into the game, LeBron stopped being as aggressive, some chemistry seemed lost, and the Spurs eventually took the lead.

The Takeaways…

A. Been told y’all from the beginning “The Decision” was not a good look, on multiple levels.  The same people who were championing The Big 3 coming together are the same people now talking about trading Wade (a Top 5, 10, 15, 20 player, however you want to look at it) or bringing him off the bench so that he doesn’t bother LeBron’s rhythm… So that the Heat can be more effective… Because they are not as effective with both of them in the game.

B. The Cavs management were not as dumb we thought.  In Cleveland, LeBron had shooters to space the floor, post defenders, rebounders, and finishers. That’s all he needs, or seems to want to play with.  I don’t ever want to hear “LeBron needs help” again.  He doesn’t need the type of player you might naturally think he does to win with his current style of play.  He is playing with two perennial All-Stars and has yet to make either one of them better or find a workable chemistry with either.  Who he is “making better” and finding greater success with is his team’s role players.  He is playing at his best, and most comfortably, with a solid point guard, two shooters, and a rebounder/finisher.

C. Dwyane, LeBron, and Bosh have never had great offensive chemistry.  The only way they all worked was by them (primarily Dwyane and LeBron) creating havoc on defense, creating steals and getting out and running in transition.  When they are not creating turnovers, or when a team is able to stop their transition offense, they limit their effectiveness (at least in how they want to play).  This is how you have a Ray Allen looking like he’s possibly more effective than Dwyane Wade for any stretch of time.  Ray Allen has value just standing in a half-court set without the ball (he stretches the defense); Dwyane Wade does not.

D. The Heat will not be able to play their most effective lineups for the majority of Game 7 because there is no way Erik Spoelstra is going to bench Dwyane Wade. There is no way he is going to play Bosh for 20 or less minutes.  Conversely, there is no way he is going to bench LeBron for 10-15 minutes to let Wade work (also a slightly positive +/- against the Spurs without LeBron on the floor). Because of real life dynamics, the Heat will probably try to win Game 7 using less efficient lineups… They have more talent than the Spurs but worse chemistry. We’ll see which one wins out tonight.  The Heat still have a good chance because their talent is supreme and they are playing at home; We’ll see how it goes.

E. I only heard part of the 3rd and the 4th quarter of the game on the radio the other night, so I thought LeBron went into superhero mode in that 4th quarter. When I went back and watched the game though, I realized that he didn’t; he just played comfortable LeBron James basketball with that particular Chalmers, Allen, Birdman, Miller lineup.  Now some people think LeBron is a superhero anyway so this could all be semantics, but I didn’t see a guy taking over the game.  I saw a guy who was able to do what he does because of space, and knowing he was the 1st and 2nd best offensive option on the floor.  LeBron just “did him” in that 8 minute stretch before Wade came in, and the result was a 13 point swing in favor of Miami.

F. Oh yeah, and as far as him choking or almost choking at the end of regulation, I can’t even call what I saw choking.  Because I’m used to seeing LeBron tentative from time to time.  In the last couple minutes of the game, he went back to looking like he did in Games 2 and 3.  To me, “choking” refers to a guy being visibly shaken by the moment and nerves causing you to play at a level below what you are capable of. Choking to me is not missing shots or making bad passes.  For instance, vs. Indiana Game 2 where Lebron made two late turnovers, I did not consider that a choke.  LeBron was still being aggressive but just made two poor passes; it was poor execution.  In Game 6 though, the turnovers he made were because he was being tentative.  On the first turnover, he over-dribbled and on the second, I literally don’t know if he was trying to pass or shoot.  His reactions to both of those turnovers further let me know these weren’t just poor execution turnovers.  On the same hand though, I don’t know if you can “choke” and win the game.  And even though he shot those late 3-pointers with what looked liked 20% confidence, one of them joints went in.  If Ray Allen didn’t hit that corner three, it would have been a Cruel Summer, but I can’t say LeBron choked because his team won the game… AND LeBron did hit the three to cut it to 2 with 20 seconds left.  He’s got to get credit for that.  And after that he was very comfortable in the overtime and was key to helping his team win this game in that period.  In my opinion, no choke should be credited.

Y’all enjoy Game 7.

 

What are your thoughts on Joe Johnson of The Atlanta Hawks?

Wednesday, December 28th, 2011

Kobe Bryant: “Muckin Maggot!”

Friday, April 15th, 2011

Kobe Bryant, easily one of the top 5 most polarizing sports figures of all time, was recently fined $100,000 for calling NBA Official Bennie Adams, and I quote; “Faggot”.  Now it seems the world wants to act as if they are shocked and oh so appalled by such an offensive slur.  Get the “F” out of here America.  We’ve all known for years that Pro Athletes curse, slur, and say the most despicable things in the heat of battle.  This one just happened to be caught on TNT cameras.  Now, from Kobe’s perspective, he may feel as though alternative lifestyle living dudes are encroaching on his turf and disrespecting him.  John Amaechi, Ray Allen, and Vince Carter to name a few…and the referees…who knows?  They all could be a word that rhymes with maggot…and Lord knows the refs don’t respect dude and he may know something we all don’t know about them.  I can’t really call it.  My beef is with the silly, witch hunt-like reaction, filled with condescending self-righteousness and pontifications of exacerbatingly pretentious moral high-handedness.  FOH!  This country enjoys its vices like no other, and name-calling is the least of our worries.  IF we want to get right down to it, the problem I have with all of this is the “political correctness”, which I believe fosters a culture of dishonesty and disingenuous behavior.  Give me the honest bigot over the dishonest, disingenuous, politically correct liar any day.  To the fellas…Political Correctness is like when you see that beautiful woman off in the distance…dressed up, “hair did, nails did, everything did”…but up close she’s a sea donkey, a brillo-padded baboon, or a Jar-Jar Binks look-alike.  She did and said all the right things, had the right clothes on, but…she mislead you from afar.  Or ladies…when that dude has on the $1,500 Hickey Freeman, with the $540 Salvatore Ferragamos, and business cards that say…”Real Estate or Commodities”…but in reality, he lives in his mom’s basement and the CL550 is leased…HE WAS BEING POLITICALLY CORRECT!

Kobe & Bennie

So if Kobe felt a certain way about the officiating of that particular game and needed to let Bennie know that he was being a maggot with an “F”, we should applaud his forthrightness and honest expression of how he felt at the moment.  Perhaps Bennie’s officiating is characterized by “maggotry”…I don’t know….but if you have a problem with the word that was used, then address the culture that perpetuated it and do your part to change hate where you see it, and leave a basketball player engaged in heated combat alone.

B. Austin aka “The Hot Block Commander” of The War Room, for War Room Sports

Smelling Like a Rose…A Derrick Rose

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

ROY to MVP?

I just want to take a minute to go the route of my Homie & co-host Aquil Bayyan and offer a public apology to one Mr. Derrick Rose.  Prior to, during, and shortly thereafter the 2008 NBA draft, I loudly proclaimed that Mike Beasley should have been the #1 pick instead of the young Mr. Rose.  I saw Rose’s athletic upside in his lone season at the University of Memphis but never in a million years thought he could also become a prototypical point guard on top of that.  Less than 3 years after draft day, he is averaging 24.5 points, 8.1 assists,  and 4.3 rebounds per game, he’s in the midst of a VERY legitimate MVP campaign, and though I don’t give him this title quite yet, he is arguably the best point guard in the NBA (I personally still reserve that title for Deron Williams).

Now hindsight is always 20/20 and I never actually said he wouldn’t be good, but I was unaware of the intangibles that this youngster possesses that sets him apart from the “pretender” category.  His desire to be great is extremely evident in both his work ethic and his level of what seems to be GENUINE humility.  When he came into the league, his jumpshot had a body-cast on it.  He, unlike Raon Rondo (yeah I said Raon…I left the J out on purpose…think about it for a minute) has put in tireless work to become a better shooter…and a better shot has disallowed people to continue to play off of him and limit his athleticism by forcing him to shoot.  Let’s put this into perspective…he’s no Ray Allen, but he has arrived at a point where you must respect his jumper, leaving defenders at his mercy and vulnerable to ape-like highlight reels and poster shots (yeah I said ape-like…get over it…it’s a compliment).  He has also become a much better passer and playmaker than I’d expected.

So ball on young Mr. Rose and continue to prove all the doubters wrong…if you still have any.  This is one sports analyst that you’ve won over.  Now go collect your MVP trophy and take a bow.  

Devin “Dev” McMillan of The War Room, for War Room Sports 

How Great of a Player is Dirk Nowitzki?

Monday, February 28th, 2011