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<title>HOOPLOG: Dirk Nowitzki</title>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/dirk-nowitzki/index.php</link>
<description>NBA basketball news, rumors, insider analysis and more from around the country.  Updated hourly by Team RxSN.</description>
<copyright>Copyright 2009</copyright>
<lastBuildDate>Sat, 06 May 2006 15:03:29 -0800</lastBuildDate>
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<item>
<title>The series we have all been waiting for!!!</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
  <p>What a great first round.&nbsp; We, the humble fans of the NBA, have been given some great contests&nbsp;filled with buzzer beaters and last second heroics.&nbsp; The first round rattled off without much of a&nbsp;hitch as the favored teams have won as expected.&nbsp; The only outcome which remains to be seen would of course be Phoenix and Los Angeles tonight at America West Arena.&nbsp; It will be a shame for one of these teams to have to start&nbsp;planning their fishing trip tonight, as they have both played a great series.&nbsp; With that said, let us look ahead to a matchup that many NBA fans have been looking forward to for months.</p>
  <p><strong><u><font size="4">San Antonio Spurs vs. Dallas Mavericks</font></u></strong></p>
  <p>The much anticipated west semifinal is finally upon us!&nbsp; Avery Johnson and company will make their way to the AT&amp;T Center for the series opener tomorrow at high noon.&nbsp; This matchup promises to be an extremely exciting one.&nbsp; </p>
  <p>Dallas of course comes into the second round after taking out Memphis in four straight.&nbsp; The Spurs, on the other hand, had a little bit more trouble with Sacramento.&nbsp; Given the regular season split of two games a piece this series could very well stretch to seven games.&nbsp; There will be some key factors in this series&nbsp;that play into who is moving on to&nbsp;the next round and who is getting their fishing gear ready.&nbsp; These are a couple of&nbsp;questions that might hold the answer as to who wins the series.</p>
  <p><strong>Who will set the tone in Game 1?&nbsp; </strong></p>
  <p>Unfortunately the Spurs head into game 1 only 36 hours after playing the Kings in Sacramento.&nbsp; Parker's right thigh contusion and other ailments on his right side will definitely be hurting him.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Duncan has looked solid over the the last few games and showed signs that the plantar fascilitis isn't bothering him as much as it had during the regular season.&nbsp; Ginobili also looks to be back close to 100% again.&nbsp; Still, the limited rest has many Spurs fans concerned.&nbsp; The Spurs have played less than .500 basketball on&nbsp;back to backs&nbsp;this year.&nbsp; The Mavs come in with plenty of time off, in fact maybe a&nbsp;little bit too much.&nbsp; They haven't played a game since Monday so&nbsp;the key for&nbsp;Dallas will be how rusty they are and how quickly they can shake that off.&nbsp; However, the pressure lies more squarely on San Antonio being that they must come out and protect their homecourt.&nbsp; The Spurs will have to set the tone by matching Dallas' intensity on both ends of the floor to have a chance of beating the Mavs in game 1.</p>
  <p><strong>Whose bench will step up?</strong></p>
  <p>Both of these teams possess a lot of depth off the bench.&nbsp; No doubt that the edge of the bench play will be pretty even on paper.&nbsp; San Antonio has&nbsp;enjoyed&nbsp;solid production from Finley, Barry, and Horry thus far in the playoffs.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Jerry Stackhouse and Erick Dampier gave Dallas a spark off the bench is the opening round, while Marquis Daniels has the ability to give the Mavs a solid contribution as well.&nbsp; Pop made a change and started Robert Horry in games 5 and 6 of the first round against Sacramento,&nbsp;similar to switching out Ginobili&nbsp;with Brent Barry in the first round last year against Denver.&nbsp; Nazr Mohammed or Rasho Nesterovic will probably slip back into the starting spot for the beginning of this series unless Pop feels that he would rather keep the change with Horry starting and Rasho giving energy off the bench.&nbsp;&nbsp;Regardless, a big key for San Antonio is&nbsp;winning the&nbsp;rebounding battle, meaning&nbsp;Mohammed and Nesterovic&nbsp;will have to give Duncan as much help as possible on the glass inside.</p>
  <p><strong>Who will win the battle of the big men?</strong></p>
  <p>For Dallas on offense Dirk Nowitzki can create mismatch problems for the Spurs.&nbsp; He is not a prototypical seven-footer in that hes not a low post player.&nbsp; Duncan, who is not an excellent perimeter defender, will&nbsp;hurt the&nbsp;Spurs if hes sucked out of the post.&nbsp; Duncan is a dominant rebounding force and he must remain inside to&nbsp;prevent the Mavs from crashing the offensive glass.&nbsp; Its no secret that the team that wins the rebounding battle usually puts themself in a better position to win the game.&nbsp; Pop, who&nbsp;used Bowen at times during the regular season to guard Nowitzki, will probably give him the assignment along with Robert Horry.&nbsp; Keeping Duncan inside will force Nowitzki to take more jump shots and leave the&nbsp;Spurs a dominant rebounder and shot blocker&nbsp;inside.</p>
  <p><strong>Will the student become the teacher?</strong></p>
  <p>Avery Johnson will match wits&nbsp;with his former coach&nbsp;Gregg Popovich for the first time in playoff competition. &nbsp;Johnson&nbsp;knows the Spurs better than any head coach in the league.&nbsp; Using his knowledge to exploit the weaknesses of his former team will be crucial if the Mavs want to win the series.&nbsp; The problem: the&nbsp;Spurs don't&nbsp;have a lot of weaknesses.&nbsp; They are the most well-rounded&nbsp;ball club this&nbsp;side of Detroit.&nbsp; Still, Avery has his guys playing great basketball right now and he will&nbsp;bring&nbsp;the defensive mentality that&nbsp;Pop instilled in him during his playing days in silver and black.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
  <p>Fans should be happy that they get an early preview of the Western Conference Finals.&nbsp; San Antonio and Dallas might be the two best teams in the league.&nbsp; The winner of this series is going to win the West and has a good chance of winning it all.&nbsp; So get ready for some action-packed-hard-nosed-ratings-producing basketball!</p><br><br><a href="http://blogs.foxsports.com/ctodrummer/24156#comments">No comments</a>
            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/the-series-we-have-all-been-waiting-for.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/the-series-we-have-all-been-waiting-for.php</guid>
<category>Dirk Nowitzki</category>
<pubDate>Sat, 06 May 2006 15:03:29 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>Mavs Try to Make Idle Time Profitable</title>
<description><![CDATA[    Jeff Caplan of the STAR-TELEGRAM in Dallas writes, &quot;Another day without a game, another day of answering questions about getting ready to play one. 'I'm ready to see no reporters,' Dirk Nowitzki quipped sarcastically. On Day 4 of not playing, the Mavericks had a relaxed film session Friday on the heels of a full-speed scrimmage Thursday that included referees. Waiting for an opponent has tested the theory of when rest becomes too much rest.&quot;
            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/mavs-try-to-make-idle-time-profitable.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/mavs-try-to-make-idle-time-profitable.php</guid>
<category>Dirk Nowitzki</category>
<pubDate>Sat, 06 May 2006 15:03:25 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Wilcox Named WC Player of the Week</title>
<description><![CDATA[    <script type="text/javascript">window.document.getElementById('post-563').parentNode.className += ' adhesive_post';</script>	<p>CHRIS WILCOX NAMED WESTERN CONFERENCE PLAYER OF THE WEEK</p>
	<p>SEATTLE – The NBA announced today that Sonics forward Chris Wilcox has been named Western Conference Player of the Week for games played Monday, April 3 through Sunday, April 9. Wilcox averaged 23.0 points and 15.3 rebounds while shooting 75.0 percent (27-of-36) from the field during the week to help the Sonics extend their winning streak to a season-long four games. The league honor is the first of Wilcox’s career and the first for a Sonics player this season.<a id="more-563"></a></p>
	<p>Wilcox began the week by posting 26 points and a career-high 24 rebounds in a 104-87 win over Houston on April 4, becoming the first Sonics player to post a 20-point/20-rebound game since Shawn Kemp did so on Nov. 15, 1995. Wilcox’s 24 rebounds were also the most by a Sonics player since Jack Sikma grabbed 25 boards on Feb. 10, 1983. Wilcox also dished out a career-best six assists at Portland last Friday, April 7, and has recorded double-doubles in scoring and rebounding in four consecutive games.</p>
	<p>After averaging 4.5 points and 3.6 rebounds in 48 games with the Clippers this season, Wilcox has posted 15.3 points and 8.2 rebounds per game since joining the Sonics on Feb. 23.</p>
	<p>The New York Knicks’ Jamal Crawford was named Eastern Conference Player of the Week after averaging 26.3 points, 6.0 rebounds, 3.3 assists and 2.25 steals per game. He hit two game-winning jumpers to lead the Knicks to a 3-1 record during the week. Crawford grew up in Seattle and was a prep basketball star at Rainier Beach High School</p>
	<p>Other nominees for Eastern and Western Conference Players of the Week were Cleveland’s LeBron James, Dallas’ Dirk Nowitzki, New Jersey’s Jason Kidd, Orlando’s Dwight Howard, Sacramento’s Mike Bibby and Seattle’s Ray Allen.</p>
	<p>The Seattle Sonics &#038; Storm organization manages the Puget Sound region’s professional basketball franchises – the NBA’s Seattle SuperSonics and the WNBA’s Seattle Storm. The organization oversees all sales, marketing, finance, public relations and basketball operations for the teams. The Basketball Club of Seattle LLC owns both teams. </p>

            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/wilcox-named-wc-player-of-the-week.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/wilcox-named-wc-player-of-the-week.php</guid>
<category>Jamal Crawford</category>
<pubDate>Mon, 10 Apr 2006 14:44:56 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Nike Ballers of the Week</title>
<description>    While Shawn Marion and Dirk Nowitzki square off this week, Steve Nash defeated Sam Cassell to earn last week&apos;s Nike Baller honors.
            </description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/nike-ballers-of-the-week.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/nike-ballers-of-the-week.php</guid>
<category>Shawn Marion</category>
<pubDate>Fri, 07 Apr 2006 17:54:51 -0800</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Mavs&apos; Van Horn Has Broken Bone Repaired</title>
<description>    He will miss the rest of the regular season and perhaps all of the playoffs. Van Horn, the primary backup for Dirk Nowitzki, was injured Friday night while trying to make a steal.
            </description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/mavs-van-horn-has-broken-bone-repaired.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/mavs-van-horn-has-broken-bone-repaired.php</guid>
<category>Dirk Nowitzki</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 06 Apr 2006 09:56:10 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Nothing fits forever</title>
<description><![CDATA[    <img src="http://static.flickr.com/36/109959901_a48711dc38_o.jpg"><br /><br />It would seem that last night’s infernal burst of Gilbertology might truly need no comment from ours truly. As in, we live in heaven, he lives alone, our souls are intertwined and the moment need not be soiled by explanation. The more and more I gazed upon that fascinating still—one as destined for iconic status as Tiger with the fist pump or Yao’s scream of antiquity—the more brutally apparent it becomes to me that Arenas, far from being an oddball, is the living, breathing god of my favorite kind of NBA player: the kind you watch, instead of just view. What Iverson, Kobe, Nash, and a handful of others I go out of my way to see play have in common is this ability to not merely produce on any given night, but to casually redefine themselves through masterstrokes of basketball impressionism. <br /><br /><img src="http://static.flickr.com/37/109959903_2461c59cda.jpg"><br /><br />Let me put briefly put aside the strained fire and brimstone that guides this site long enough to admit, as I did last week, that this is by and large a league of consistency. Unlike baseball and football, where one can be violently up and down from one game to the next but still get recognized overall as a fantastic contributor, to be a credible contributor a guy’s got to come with steady output. Freaks and streaks can be profound, but no player’s a recognizable force (or definite failure) in this league until he can be counted on; to scrape the ridges of Mount Dunkmore, he’d better be guaranteed to account for a serious percentage of his team’s production, both in the box score and as a reliable force when the ball hits his hands. Until then, he will always get saddled with the p-word, no matter how impressive he is in spurts. <br /><br />When you reach the rarified air of superlative hoops accomplishment, there are at least three kind of consistency. Most obviously, there are the rock-solid bequeathers, under-appreciated and often big men like Duncan, Brand, Bosh, Dirk, Jamison, Kidd, Ray Ray and Redd. These folks give it their all with frightening regularity, churning it out from the opening bell and expected to operate as if to a rhythmic tick. I want to stop short of saying that you can intuit them from looking at a box score, but by and large there is no dramatic arc to their in-game performances. Professional, workmanlike, whatever you want to call them, these are consummate anchors of an offense, the given you pencil in at most moments during the season’s onslaught. <br /><br /><a href="http://static.flickr.com/54/109968528_2b1f794def_o.jpg"><img style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px;" src="http://static.flickr.com/54/109968528_2b1f794def_o.jpg" border="0" alt="" /></a><br /><br />In the next category, you find explosive players with a tendency toward predictable outcomes, who ebb and flow over the course of a game, occasionally make you doubt, and ultimately bring you right back to who you always knew they were. I’m talking about Garnett, Pierce, Wade, Vince, Billups, Bibby, Gasol, Melo, Richardson, Jefferson, Sheed, Marion, and Artest himself—unquestioned experts who sometimes lull, sometimes soar, but never have to redeem themselves and are constantly working within their own limits and images. This isn’t a knock on any of these fine, hurling turtles; merely to point out that if you turn on the television to see them play, you know what you’re getting and will be accordingly excited. Each game reinforces their , with ups and downs that end in a pointed reminder of yeah, that’s him. <br /><br />Gilbert and his gang, as I will now aptly dub them, rest upon their own set of shaggy shoulders. To return to last week’s trope of half-assed existentialism, All-American and yet bleakly Continental, they are players constantly exceeding themselves, or at least engaging in what feels for all the world like a motherfucking statement game. It can LeBron or Amare exerting and expanding their dominance, Kirilenko or Gerald Wallace twisting up the parameters of a box score, Nash working his conductor-ly magic, or Kobe, Iverson or McGrady scoring not only at will, but as if it’s unnatural for them to miss—or even repeat themselves out on the floor. Arenas is a must-see, not only because he’s likely to put on a show, but for what each and every game can do to your sense of him as a player and personality. If Wade proves with each big game that he’s still Wade, still proud, then Gilbert does it up in a way that’s not only unpredictable; with each of these self-transcending events, he also manages to seem unlikely all anew. As does Kobe, Bron, et al. In the crucible of the game, their legend is broken down and created anew, surprising you not only with this most recent installment but, in its reconstitution of the player’s most basic essence, shock you yet again they exist at all, that anything they do has ever happened in the glare of man’s senses. <br /><br /><img src="http://static.flickr.com/42/109968527_d2dc3991ba.jpg"><br /><br />This may seem like two-bit metaphysics for those of you not in tune with my lifelong education on this planet (or anyone merely taking issue with my late night sloppiness). But next time you find yourself up past bedtime watching one of these aforementioned idols, think about whether or not you feel you’re seeing them for the first time, whether you’re transfixed partly out of the fear that you’re witnessing a once-in-a-lifetime occurrence. Not just a good game from your favorite NBA player, or one of those “instant classics” this blog will reference two years from now; I mean one of those performances where, in some ways, you feel like you’re discovering the sport again for the very first time. <br /><br /><a href="http://static.flickr.com/44/109968529_e566e71d16_o.jpg"><img style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px;" src="http://static.flickr.com/44/109968529_e566e71d16_o.jpg" border="0" alt="" /></a>
            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/nothing-fits-forever.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/nothing-fits-forever.php</guid>
<category>Chauncey Billups</category>
<pubDate>Wed, 08 Mar 2006 21:49:48 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>Justice and Injustice:  The Ides of March in the NBA</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
  <p>I almost died laughing when I saw the headline of Tim Thomas getting waived.&nbsp; But, when I saw Bo Outlaw and Jim Jackson receive the same treatment the laugh got caught up in a semi-WHAT!&nbsp; Granted Bo isn't the prototype anything but (as a personal friend) I admire his tenacity and his integrity.&nbsp; In college he led his CONFERENCE in blocked shots and as a high schooler he DOMINATED Shaquille.&nbsp; The odds of him doing either now are very slim (as is he, although he has bulked up since then) but you have to admit he is a hard worker.</p>
  <p>Jim Jackson, on the other hand, is the prototype 2-guard.&nbsp; Strong, athletic, and a tenacious competitor, Jim Jackson has stepped in admirably for every team he has graced.&nbsp; I'm not swingin' on his jock mind you, when he was at Ohio State he was good but I never expected much more than a mediocre career.&nbsp; But, after seeing him during his tenure Dallas go crazy and score at will on occasion while playing with Jason Kidd and Jamaal Mashburn (despite the drama) and then with Sacramento SMASH on DIRK and the entire DALLAS MAV squad without so much as a replay on ESPN, and after watching him step in in Houston and play quiet minutes very effectively, and finally in Phenix.&nbsp; After watching Joe J. go down on his face and crack his mug, Jim Jackson stepped in and hit major 3's and played major &quot;D.&quot;&nbsp; What is the problem?&nbsp; Why is there so much disdain for this fella in the league?&nbsp; I questioned that with a friend of mine who had recently tried out for a league team and faced Jimmy.&nbsp; He was as perplexed as I was.&nbsp; He described Jim as strong, effective, and an awesome physical specimen who could flat out play.&nbsp; </p>
  <p>Oddly enough, Tim Thomas is none of the things that these two gentlemen are and yet they share his fate.&nbsp; Jim may get another chance soon I suspect but my friend Bo... unknown.&nbsp; BO, if you read this brotha, know that the fellas from the <strong>WARHAWK </strong>luv ya as much as we loved punishing you when you stepped on the floor.</p><br><br><a href="http://blogs.foxsports.com/Illuminati69/16917#comments">6 comments</a>
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<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/justice-and-injustice-the-ides-of-march-in-the-nba.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/justice-and-injustice-the-ides-of-march-in-the-nba.php</guid>
<category>Jason Kidd</category>
<pubDate>Tue, 07 Mar 2006 08:30:26 -0800</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Isiah Thomas is an Excellent Driver</title>
<description><![CDATA[    Though I enjoyed it very much, the slam dunk contest was a joke.  The problems have been written about all over the place, so instead I'll offer a solution.  Each of the four contestants get four dunks.  The first three rounds are limited to three attempts per dunk with the last round having unlimited attempts.  After all dunks are completed a panel of "experts" (as in former players who have at least the cognitive ability of a multi-cellular organism) will pick the four best dunks (one per player to avoid a situation where the fans split the vote between two dunks by the same guy).  The public will then pick the winner, in 10 minutes of online and/or text messaging voting.<p> This prevents the judges' inevitable premature adulation:  giving perfect 10s in first round when everyone knows better dunks are coming.  Fan involvement is encouraged, likely to increase ratings (and revenue to whatever cell phone company sponsors the text messaging portion).  Barkley and crew could banter about which dunk was the best for each player.  Leaving the unlimited attempts round to the end will build anticipation on what crazy-ass dunk each player is going to pull out.  During the voting period TNT could interview the active players in the arena that didn't participate.  You know Iverson, Shaq and company would love to share their opinions on who should win and the crowd would eat that shit up.  (Did anyone notice Kobe's reaction when he realized that Robinson had won instead of AI?  He looked crushed; I thought he was going to buy some diamond encrusted fronts for Igoudala just to say he's sorry.)  They could interview random posse members and celebrities as well.  Running voting results could be displayed on the scoreboard.  What's not to like?<p> Call me crazy, but I had absolutely no desire to see four Pistons playing at once in the All Star Game.  This has nothing to do with my thoughts on whether they deserved the spot; it was simply boring.  If I wanted to watch "Pistons basketball" I would watch a DET game.  Do people really want to watch Rip running off staggered screens?  And was anyone really surprised that four Pistons plus Pierce outplayed the West?  Hell, four Raptors plus Pierce would likely beat the West, too.  Virtually any NBA team playing team basketball would beat an All-Star team featuring guys trying lobs from half court.  And yeah, I would feel the same way about four Spurs.  I know how the Spurs play.  I don't know how Manu would play with Nash, Marion, Dirk and Brand.  That's what I would want to see.<p> My favorite part of the latest Isiah trade isn't that the Knicks will be paying $60+ million a year (including luxury tax) for Marbury and Francis.  It's not that these two players are incompatible due to both of them being undersized for a shooting guard (not that they play much defense anyway).  Nor is it that the combination will drive the lying, sniveling Larry Brown to a premature demise.  The best part about this deal is that multiple media outlets are reporting that Isiah is stockpiling assets in order to go after Garnett in the summer.<p> HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.  I can see only one high-quality asset the Knicks have that MIN could possibly want.  And that's Channing Frye.  They have don't have any premium draft picks over the next two years.  Meanwhile a team like CHI could offer some combination of Deng, Gordon, Duhon, Nocioni, Hinrich and Chandler plus multiple premium first round picks.<p> I didn't get to watch the SA-SEA game because the NBA League Pass channel was blacked out and I didn't notice until the game was already over.  I'm beginning to see the early signs of Spurs withdrawal.<p> Here are my quick midseason player reviews; based on minutes of careful consideration and preseason expectations.<p> <b>Coach Pop, B</b><p> Clearly trying to establish a rotation ASAP but stuck with Finley in the starting lineup way too long.  Has successfully kept Manu's minutes down but needs to do the same for Timmeh; props for loosening the reins on Parker.<p> <b>Mike Budenholzer, A+</b><p> I just like saying his name.  Boo-din-hol-zer.<p> <b>Sean Marks, B+</b><p> He's played well when given the opportunity and helped spawn a new catch phrase:  AND SEAN MARKS FINISHES THE JOB!!!<p> <b>Beno Udrih, B</b><p> Yeah, Van Exel is a better ball-handler, but that's the end of the list in my book.<p> <b>Fabricio Oberto, C+</b><p> He looks less lost every time he plays and always brings the effort.<p> <b>Brent Barry, D</b><p> 40.3% from the field and 33.7% from 3 isn't good enough for a guy that's getting $5 million a year to shoot the ball.<p> <b>Robert Horry, NA</b><p> The regular season?  We're talking about the regular season?<p> <b>Nick Van Exel, D</b><p> Why do I have the feeling that Spurs fans will blame a key playoff loss on his poor shot selection and total inability to guard anyone with legs?<p> <b>Nazr Mohammed, B-</b><p> I'm seeing improvement, but he needs to up his blocks and cut down on turnovers and the ubiquitous mental errors.<p> <b>Rasho Nesterovic, B</b><p> As solid as ever, but he needs to cut down on his ubiquitous lack of athleticism.<p> <b>Michael Finley, D-</b><p> How bad has Finley played?  The lineup of TP/BB/MF/TD/RS has outscored its opponents by a whopping 13 points in 286 minutes.  That amounts to 2.2 points per game.  For a team with a 6.5 point differential.<p> <b>The Sickness, B-</b><p> Swap Manu for Finley in the above lineup and you have a squad that has outscored its opponents  by 113 points in 335 minutes; 16.2 points per game.  Certainly not the same guy we saw in the playoffs, but, well, this isn't the playoffs.  His regular season numbers from last year are similar and his grade would be higher if not for the injuries.<p> <b>Bruce Bowen, A-</b><p> He's added to his offensive game without adding FGA, but I'll be damned if he hasn't lost a quarter-step on defense.  Yeah, I said it.<p> <b>Tim Duncan, B</b><p> Lowest, PPG, FG% and BPG of his career.  59% of his FGA are outside of the lane which is higher than Parker and Ginobili.  Still an incredible defensive anchor but, like last year, not capable of offensively carrying this team to a title.  His plantar fascia cost him a half-grade or so.<p> <b>Tony Parker, A</b><p> Better shot selection this year and maybe the best guard finisher in the NBA (his eFG% inside is 71.1% compared to 55.3% for Wade, 52.3% for Bryant and 63.7% for LeBron).  Still has the undeniable Achilles heel to his game that will be exploited without mercy during the playoffs.</p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p></p>
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<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/isiah-thomas-is-an-excellent-driver.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/isiah-thomas-is-an-excellent-driver.php</guid>
<category>Charles Barkley</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 23 Feb 2006 15:11:28 -0800</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Allen Selected for the Three-Point Shootout</title>
<description><![CDATA[    	<p>It has been announced that <a href="http://www.nba.com/sonics/news/allen060208.html">Ray Allen has been selected to participate in the Three-Point Shootout </a>at this year&#8217;s All-Star game.  He joins Quentin Richardson (the defending champion), Dirk Nowitzki, Jason Terry, Chauncey Billups and Raja Bell in the competition.  I like Allen&#8217;s chances this year.  He probably has the purest shot of the bunch.
</p>

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<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/allen-selected-for-the-threepoint-shootout.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/allen-selected-for-the-threepoint-shootout.php</guid>
<category>Chauncey Billups</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2006 12:41:02 -0800</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Mavs cap successful trip with victory in Seattle</title>
<description>    Dirk Nowitzki scored 29 points and reserve Jerry Stackhouse added 21 as the Dallas Mavericks closed the most successful road trip in franchise history by beating the Seattle SuperSonics 104-97 Thursday night.

Nowitzki added 12 rebounds and was 10-for-11 at the free throw line, making up for an 8-for-22 shooting performance.

Dallas won its seventh straight overall and finished a 5-0 trip. The Mavs had never won five games in any of their 34 road trips of five games or more.
            </description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/mavs-cap-successful-trip-with-victory-in-seattle.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/mavs-cap-successful-trip-with-victory-in-seattle.php</guid>
<category>Dirk Nowitzki</category>
<pubDate>Fri, 27 Jan 2006 07:58:28 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>Center of Attention</title>
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<p class="MsoNormal">Thought I’d throw up a special weekend column, since I’m not sure I’ll have one for tomorrow since it’s a holiday and all. Before we get into the situations to pay attention to, I thought we should check in on some of the centers who recently won starting jobs and were popular pick ups over the past couple weeks. I expressed skepticism about all of them for various reasons, and for the most part it looks like it was pretty well-founded. </p>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Francisco Elson</span>: 7.8/6.7/0.6, 0.7 steals, 1.1 blocks, 55% (31-of-56), 28.9 mpg in 9 starts</p>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Ike Diogu</span>: 9.4/4.5/0.9, 0.1 steals, 0.6 blocks, 62% (28-of-45), 24.1 mpg in 8 starts</p>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Eddie Griffin</span>: 6.6/6.0/0.7, 0.4 steals, 2.6 blocks, 0.3 3s, 43% (24-of-56), 22.4 mpg in 9 starts</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">I know that centers are tough to come by in deep, two-center leagues, but there’s still just not a lot of value up there. Elson is the only one getting acceptable minutes, but even his 29 per game might be considered a disappointment considering that not just <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Marcus Camby</span>, but also <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Kenyon Martin</span>, has been out for the majority of those nine games. He’s doing about what I expected him to do – basically a <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Rasho Nesterovic</span> impersonation – and while he’s not been an embarrassment, those who were hoping for 12 and 8 with close to 2 blocks per game just had unreasonable expectations. Diogu has proven to be a stud in FG%, but if he can’t be on the court enough to take even 6 shots per game, he won’t be able to help you all that much. He’s nowhere close to an asset in any other category. As for Griffin, have more typestrokes been unnecessarily wasted on a single player? </p>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Three Situations to Pay Attention To</span>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Los Angeles Lakers</span>
<br>After just writing about how much space has been wasted writing about Eddie Griffin, it seems pretty silly to follow that up by writing about <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Kwame Brown</span>. As much as we want to call Griffin a disappointment and a tease, it doesn’t even begin to compare to Kwame. But there seems to be a recent shift in Kwame’s game and might be making him a more reliable – if one-dimensional – fantasy option. In his fifth season in the league, Kwame has shown an extremely limited offensive game. His touch around the basket hasn’t developed at all, and while his jumper looks decent at times, he’s never been able to hit it with any consistency. Phil Jackson seems to have realized that – and maybe Kwame has as well – and isn’t asking Kwame to score. Last night’s 18-point “breakout” game was the first time since Nov. 14 that Kwame attempted 10 shots in a game. He’s been recast as someone who’s main duty is to attack the boards, especially on the offensive end. Brown averaged 1.9 offensive boards per game in November, 2.5 per game in December, and is up to 3.3 per game so far in January. The fact that many of his shots are coming off these offensive rebounds is helping his FG%. In six games since re-entering the starting lineup, he’s shooting 54%. Here’s his overall line in those six starts:</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">8.8/8.2/1.0, 0 steals, 0.5 blocks, 54% (21-of-39)</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It’s pretty comparable to most of those “hot” pickups listed above, but without that secondary category to help out in. Although Brown has no steals in those six games, that’s the one category he’s most likely to offer some help in. He averaged nearly a steal per game while seeing 30 mpg in 03-04, which is pretty decent for a big man. If he remains in the starting lineup he could average somewhere around 0.8 steals and blocks per game, which isn’t spectacular, but isn’t terrible. Expecting any consistency from Kwame is probably pretty foolish at this point. A game like last night’s is still the exception, not the rule. But if he can keep pounding the boards and converting some of those putbacks, he might be able to emerge as something better than just another <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Reggie Evans</span>. </p>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Indiana Pacers</span>
<br>Let’s take a look at <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Jeff Foster</span>’s line so far in January:</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">7.3/9.4/0, 0.4 steals, 0.4 blocks, 61% (22-of-36)</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Again, not too different from the lines of those Elson/Diogu/Griffin group. Foster is quite similar – and the exact opposite – of Kwame Brown. Like Brown, he seems to be a one-category helper who is pretty consistent in that one category, but doesn’t have much of a shot of helping out elsewhere. Unlike Kwame, Foster seems to be getting the most out of his talent while Brown is getting only a portion. Foster’s upside is extremely limited – he will not score, he will not get blocks. But if you want a boost in rebounds – and only rebounds – he is probably one of the best guys you can grab. I’m not at all a fan of one category specialists because they leave you with holes in too many other categories, but situations get dicey sometimes, especially at center. I thought I was in the perfect situation earlier this year with <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Yao Ming</span> and <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Rasheed Wallace</span>, with a very capable backup on the bench in <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Brendan Haywood</span>. Then Yao went down and Haywood became completely ineffective right around the same time. I ended up dumping Haywood, because he just wasn’t worth using. Since I’m in a daily changes, cumulative roto league, I decided to simply take the beating at center and go way under my projected games limit rather than try my luck with the dregs available on the waiver wire. My strategy is to use quality games when you have them. Right now I have a lot of point guards playing well, so I’ll go over the projected pace there and make a trade from there at a later date, even if it means not getting the best return. But in weekly H2H leagues, this strategy doesn’t work. So guys like Foster might be the best option available. And if you’re strong in blocks thanks to non-centers like <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Andrei Kirilenko</span>, <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Shawn Marion</span> or <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Paul Gasol</span>, Foster can at least give you the boards you need from a center. He’s averaging 9.9 rpg in his last seven contests, and that’s in just 24.4 mpg. With <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Jermaine O’Neal</span> iffy, he might see even more time. Foster’s no savior, but at least you know what you’ll be getting.<span style="font-size:+0;"> </span>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Dallas Mavericks</span>
<br>Did someone in your league pick up <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">DeSagana Diop</span> yesterday? It happened in my league, and I’ll admit I was about to make the move myself and was beaten to the punch by about five minutes. I’m not going to lose too much sleep over it, but man, I sure could have used that help in blocks. There’s no denying that Diop is a blocks machine – he’s second in the league blocks per minute, averaging 2.0 bpg in just over 17 minutes, which is rather ridiculous. But the big question is this – even with his ascent to the starting lineup, how much more playing time will Diop actually receive? In last night’s game he saw just 20 minutes, although it’s hard to read too much into that since the game was over early and <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Adrian Griffin</span> was the only player in the game to play more than 30 minutes. One of the many problems with Diop early in his career was his total lack of conditioning, and while he’s gotten better, it’s hard for someone to start consistently playing more than he ever has and to do it at a high level. This is Diop’s fifth season in the league and he’s played more than 30 minutes in a game a grand total of <i>two</i> times. This is one of the same arguments I made against <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Al Jefferson</span> even after he joined the starting lineup and he hasn’t broken the 30-minute mark at all in 8 starts. Avery Johnson hasn’t given up on <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Erick Dampier</span> yet, and this could be one of those old-fashioned “motivation” benchings, although it might take more than that to motivate a guy who’s going to get paid $53 million over the next five seasons no matter what. </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Some people want to think of Diop as a poor man’s <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Ben Wallace</span>, but a homeless, penniless Ben Wallace might be more like it. Like Wallace, Diop can help out in steals; he averages 1.3 steals per 40 over his career, which isn’t bad at all for a center. Unfortunately, he also shares Big Ben’s inability to put the ball in the basket. While he’s shooting 45% this season, he’s a career 37% shooter. And it would be a miracle if he could ever get his FT% up to 50%. While he won’t shoot nearly enough in either category to hurt you too much, it’s still worth noting. The Mavs are an extremely deep team. They don’t need to have a center out there at all times, as they can get by with <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Dirk Nowitzki</span> at the five for stretches. The Mavs need Diop to be at his most energetic whenever he’s out there, so it’s probably not in their best interests to have him out there for 32-35 mpg. Grab him, stash him, start him if you need him, but if there’s one lesson that his column should make you realize, it’s that finding serious help at center on the waiver wire is almost always more fantasy than reality. </p>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">
<u>Comet Gain</u>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Chris Kaman</span> – Wow. Just, wow. Not only a top center, but a dominant overall force the past couple weeks. Might not last when <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Elton Brand</span> returns, but he’s looking more and more like a legit #1 center.</p>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Samuel Dalembert</span> – Like Kaman, not just a top center lately, but an absolutely dominant force. He’s not missing – including from the line – and he’s swatting away everything in sight (which unfortunately for the 76ers means many obvious goaltends). His 37 mpg so far in January is huge for a center.</p>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Ben Wallace</span> – The old Big Ben is back; 13.8 boards and 2.7 blocks so far in January. Now about that 29% from the free throw line in that span…</p>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">The Hold Steady</span>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Rasheed Wallace</span> – Has slowed down a bit, his rebounding leaves a lot to be desired from a C, but he’ll keep raining in those 3s and getting the blocks.</p>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Zydrunas Ilgauskas</span> – He’s staying healthy, he’s hitting his shots, and is more than respectable on the boards and in blocks. A steadying force in the middle.</p>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Brad Miller</span> – A couple of down games recently, but he’s still one of the top 30 or so fantasy players in the league.</p>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">The Fall</span>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Shaquille O’Neal</span> – You knew you were punting free throws; but 15/10 with just 1 block per game in January leaves a lot to be desired.</p>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Brendan Haywood</span> – Back in the starting lineup after a two-game absence, but still too inconsistent to be counted on.</p>
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<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Joel Przybilla</span> – Nothing more than a blocks specialist now that <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Theo Ratliff</span> is on a run of good health. </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">I’ll do my very best to answer any relevant big man questions in the comments here, so feel free to ask away on guys not mentioned (or mentioned) here. </p>
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<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/center-of-attention.php</link>
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<category>Shawn Marion</category>
<pubDate>Sun, 15 Jan 2006 19:41:34 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>On Artest</title>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">I’ve been waiting at least a week now to write about <strong>Ron Artest</strong>.  The idea would be to wait until he got moved, and then go over the plusses and minuses for each player involved and a couple of ancillary guys as well.  Then last week came and went with no deal.  Now it looks like we’re still a little bit away from a deal.  And while Artest isn’t on any NBA courts near you, he’s still filling up a precious roster spot for an owner in your fantasy league.  And the longer that Donnie Walsh waits to move him, the longer Artest will contribute nothing to your fantasy squad.  However, just because Artest isn’t playing doesn’t mean that he can’t have value for your fantasy team – even if he’s not on it. <br>
<br>Let’s get back to the basics for a second: when you’re playing fantasy sports, you’re gambling (like I needed to remind you).  Even if you’re not in a pay league, you’re still gambling.  You’re betting that over the course of the season, the players on your roster will combine to play better than everyone else’s players.  And the way to do that is to accumulate the best talent – based on YOUR analysis - over the course of the year.  What that means is that a certain player can have vastly different value according to each owner in your league.<br>
<br>Now, most of the time, a player’s value will be perceived pretty similarly across the board.  No one is going to mistake <strong>Dirk Nowitzki </strong>for a second-round value, and no one would consider, say, <strong>Eddy Curry </strong>as a third-round-value kinda guy.  So every time you see trades involving those players, both owners involved in the trade are pretty aware of what the other guy is thinking.<br>
<br>Still, there are some players where one owner will vastly disagree with another.  You see this a lot on draft day, as you see owners reaching high for picks that they clearly value higher than other owners.  But usually after the first couple of weeks shake out, everyone is pretty much on the same page.<br>
<br>However, every once in awhile, in the middle of a season, a player’s value will come into question, and we’ll see that disparity in owners’ opinions that is usually reserved only for draft time.  That’s what’s happening right now with Artest.  We’re getting plenty of questions about him, meaning that his perceived value is all over the table.<br>
<br>With all that in mind, let’s get back to how to handle Artest.  The first thing you need to do is figure out how YOU value Artest.  For me, I’d say he’s about a fifth round pick, with the following reasoning:  He’s generally a late second/early third round value.  However, because we don’t know when he’ll actually return to the court, or what sort of situation he’ll be in, I’m going to dock him 2-3 rounds of value.  But that doesn’t mean that you or other owners in your league don’t see him as still having 2nd round value, or that others don’t believe he’s worth more than a 7th rounder right now.<br>
<br>Now, it’s time to take that opinion and put it to work.  If you’ve got Artest, and have a relatively low value for him (i.e. 4th rd or lower) you should be offering him around the league right now to as many people as possible.  If another owner in your league is valuing Artest as a third rounder, you’ll get him to bite.<br>
<br>If you don’t have Artest, and you have him valued relatively high, then by all means make an offer for the guy.  You’ve got to gauge how his owner values the troubled star, and the only way to find out is to go after him.  And if you get him – well, you know what you’re in for.  Good luck.</div>

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<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/on-artest.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/on-artest.php</guid>
<category>Dirk Nowitzki</category>
<pubDate>Tue, 27 Dec 2005 09:39:13 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>Yao What Do I Do?</title>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">So I had a strategy this year going into the draft. It was pretty simple – draft players who were likely to play 80 games, take the best player available over the first 6-7 rounds but also make sure to get two solid centers so I wouldn’t have to play the dreaded “Find a Second Center” game, and do not ignore percentages. It worked pretty well, I think. In a 12-team league I got Dirk-Yao-Pau-Kirk-Cuttino-Sheed-Rip with my first seven picks. I felt that with those picks guys I had seven guys who would stay in my lineup all season, and that included two centers and two guys with an outside shot at qualifying at center.<br>
<br>So you can imagine my frustration now that Yao is going to miss approximately six weeks with a booboo on his big toe. First off, I don’t doubt that the big man is in pain, as when you are 7’6” and nearly 300 pounds, your feet have a lot of weight on them. But the thing is, Yao was playing his <i>best ball of the season</i> right before he got hurt. His last three games before sitting down he was averaging 26/11/1 on 62% from the field on 15 shots per game and 85% from the line at nearly 9 attempts per game. His blocks had been disappointing all season, but you can’t complain about those other numbers. If he had been putting up 14/6 on 43% shooting  over five games before going down, then maybe I’d comprehend it a bit more. But as it is, it just doesn’t make sense.<br>
<br>So now I’m stuck without my #2 draft pick for at least a month. Lots of you are in similar situations, if not with Yao then with many of the other guys fighting injuries. So what to do? Don’t freak out. Stick with your strategy. You did have a strategy, right? For all the advice we give on guys who make hot pickups and all that, my team has remained pretty much in tact the entire season. With Eddie Jones and Marquis Daniels as my only SF, I needed some help there so I dumped Daniels this morning (with Josh Howard and Jason Terry back in full force, there’s simply not enough production to go around I feel) for James Jones, who should be able to help me out in 3s when he moves back into the starting lineup. That was just my fourth roster move of the season.<br>
<br>Yao leaves a big hole for me at center, but I kept Brendan Haywood around for this specific reason. This was another part of the strategy – don’t be left without a quality backup at the key positions, those obviously being PG and C. Haywood’s no star, obviously, but he certainly qualifies as a quality backup. His PT is a bit volatile, swinging between 20 and 30 minutes per night, but he does what you want a fill-in center to do: hit a high percentage of his shots and block some shots. His 57% from the field should come down a bit, but he is a 53% career shooter, so there shouldn’t be too much of a drop off. A good number of his shot attempts are layups/dunks/follows. And at 2.0 blocks per game, there are only 14 guys better than him there. What you want from injury fill-ins is to not lose ground. Everyone team in your league will suffer through injuries at some point during the season, and how they deal with them will go a long way towards determining who will end up at the top of the standings.<br>
<br>One thing I certainly won’t be doing is making a panic deal for another center. If you play in a league with people that pay attention, most people will see someone with Yao on their team and think that they’ll be able to gouge that owner for an extra center. The odds just aren’t in my favor in a situation like this. Would I love to someone like Jermaine ONeal manning my other center spot instead of Brendan Haywood? Of course. But to get him I’d have to deal from another strength, and then you invariably end up creating more holes for yourself. Basically, I go with under-management as opposed to over-management as a general rule. That is, as long as you have good players.<br>
<br>And I suppose I should address the Rockets frontcourt situation. As one helpful, anonymous commenter pointed out, <a href="http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/sports/3541558.html">Stromile Swift did indeed get nutted by Chris Bosh last night</a>, which led to his receiving the same PT as Lonny Baxter. If Stro has recovered he should be back in the starting lineup as long as Dikembe Mutombo is out. But unless he really explodes, it’s hard to see Van Gundy sticking with him as a starter when Mutombo comes back. The Rockets were having enough trouble outscoring anyone with Yao, so without him they’ll need to be even tougher on D, and even in his second century in the league, Mutombo is still a solid defensive presence. If you are willing to use a roster spot on someone who will help you in blocks while killing you in every other category except rebounds, have fun with Mutombo. As for Juwan Howards … he’s just so boring. He just doesn’t help you anywhere – his per 40 numbers are .7 steals, .1 blocks and 0 3s. He’s shot exactly 45% from the field the past three years, so you know what to expect there. He’ll basically need to go for 21 and 12 like he did last game every night to have even mediocre value.<br>
<br>That should do it for me for a few days, at least in terms of posted content. Have a happy holiday of your choosing.</div>

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<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/yao-what-do-i-do.php</link>
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<category>Brendan Haywood</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 22 Dec 2005 16:23:36 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>Howard Back in Action</title>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">Josh Howard is back and things are looking exciting. He had a big game against the Phoenix Suns last night after the Mavs loss to Kobe Bryant and the Lakers the day before. Howard returned in full form taking on the leadership role he had left to Marquis Daniels and Dirk when he was injured. Josh looked very strong and had 18 points and played for 35 minutes. He only played 12 minutes in the recent game against the Lakers so one can hope Howard will be a driving force in beating them next week now that he’s in the lead.</div>

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<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/howard-back-in-action.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/howard-back-in-action.php</guid>
<category>Phoenix Suns</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 15 Dec 2005 17:02:29 -0800</pubDate>
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<title>Come Back Strong, People of Toil and Bloodshed!!!</title>
<description><![CDATA[    <img src="http://static.flickr.com/35/72681940_88a55a2cbc.jpg"><br /><br />First off, there have lately been some cacklings on and off shore about the way FreeDarko’s decided to handle its business as of late. Let me draw out the obvious: we’re an irreverent, hip-hop-reared blog that constantly hollers “FreeDarko is a movement,” has made style itself into our odalisk, and is getting more multitudinous by the hour. If you bought into the <i>More than Music</i> business model, than stand back and take notes as we move from holy trinity of intimates to hydra of great doom that feeds its own telescoping ire. It might not work, but we’re in this to try and unseat Page 2—something that will make far more sense when we leave the ghetto of Blogger once and for all. <br /><br /><img src="http://static.flickr.com/34/72681938_0fda642e31_m.jpg"><br /><br />Now, to make it at least halfway out of the prism of self-love: FreeDarko and the Euro as we know it. Although, as the Recluse proclaimed so groutishly the other day, we have no particular love for Darko, the Euro itself is a rich and astounding sword of meaning. And while whether or not Serbia’s own Whitey Bulger indeed deserves to see the light of day, his pre-draft rep as a hardened lout with a “nasty streak” gets at why I from the beginning have felt that the Euro is not, as many might believe, the polar opposite of the sort of the raw as fuck players that we’re prone to light our lanterns around.<br /><br />You see, it has always been of incredible surprise to me that all the Euro’s making the Association tended towards soft, that from the lands that brought us pogroms, death squads, famines, and endless, cloudless gray came slews of slithering giants best known for three-point range and shrinking in the light. Western Europe is one thing; B-Jax calling out Dirk as “the softest guy in the league” barely registers, since Germans have gone out of their way to feign harmlessness and inner depth since the Holocaust got revealed. If sports are often a correlative of national identity, it figures that Dirk would express exactly the benign view that Germany sees in the mirror and wishes to reflect back to the world as history marches forward the second most war-thirsty nation in modern history. In all actual fact, it’s their post-war ethos that’s to blame for EuroTrash, that self-fulfilling prophecy of a thousand trampled "other" Western nations. <br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/7478/785/1600/alig_dapics_4.jpg"><img style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/7478/785/320/alig_dapics_4.jpg" border="0" alt="" /></a><br /><br />But Latvia, Lithuania, the Balkans, all these other places that both in my imagination (think shtetl 1926) and recent history are all about some hardcore. I want, no, I need, Euros to show me the tough, proud souls of their haunted peoples and besieged cultural past. It is with thought in mind that I turn to Sarunas Jasikevicius, Pacers rookie, potential savior (respect due to DLIC’s <blogitemurl><a href="http://freedarko.blogspot.com/2005/09/um-basketball.html">ode to Mario Kasun</a></blogitemurl>, penned in a time of leaner circumstance). <br /><br />Watching Jasikevicius last Thursday, the first thing I noticed was how much commitment he plays with. SJ exists within the flow of the game, and not just as an accessory. He digs in, makes things happen, puts his confidence, poise, and rep on the line to push a possession into fruitful being. To be sure, SJ’s a marksman, but he drains three’s with an Arenas-like portent. He only makes big shots and if they’re insignificant, he wills them unto bigness. We’re used to creators who need the ball a lot, so let’s call Jasikevicius a facilitator—he sets things into motion with an economy of action, the perfect point guard on a team full of scorers who need to ball in their hands. Key pass, key cut, finding his way to where someone needs to be to make a play. . . commentators often describe Nash or Kidd as “orchestrating” an offense, so try imagining that without the deliberate, heroic, quarterbacking aspect. SJ doesn’t just “play the right way,” he finds a way to mysteriously force the entire offense into that rhythm without touching the ball, directing the operation without actually getting everyone’s attention. He’s steeped in emotion, pumping his fist and grunting brilliantly, and looks more like some kind of squat, broken-nosed mercenary than a former folk dancer. <br /><br /><img src="http://static.flickr.com/35/72684378_28d391a347.jpg"><br /><br />I am fully expecting that a reader clothed in Pacer will insist that I’m wrong, that Jasikevicius is not even a slivered fingernail of what I’m claiming. But what’s important is that Jasikevicius represents everything a Euro should be, according to all the theories of thoughtful provocation I hold most dear. As much as Euros are supposed to have brought back the great game of Bird and McHale, the promise of SJ is that international players, who came into this world of NBA in ways we pampered, ivoried Americans could only begin to imagine, could what they alone see when they close their wild, vaguely Asiatic eyes. Style not as narrowly defined dribbling and dunking, but as acting like you know, true to your roots, throwing up your geo-political set every time the smoke clears at mid-court. <br /><br />And naturally, if you have followed me this far, you have no choice but to admit that the ultimate model for these dream Euros of my future thought is—in both structure and content—none other than the one man who knows the meaning of rugged and makes us feel it every time he surveys the game and makes it his own.<br /><br /><img src="http://static.flickr.com/34/72681942_4a9fc47807_o.jpg"><br /><br />Except no Slav would ever demand a trade. I am not nearly influential enough to map out the relationship between a nearly feudal sense of honor and duty and submission to Communism’s heavy-lidded reign, but I know that it’s got nothing to do with trying to mastermind that eternal Queensbridge come-up. <br /><br /><img src="http://static.flickr.com/20/72688436_fcc5f013a5_o.jpg"><br /><br /><i>Permit me to kill a few things on my way out: the new LeBron commercials may have put him on Melo’s level, and rendered Wade useless as a cultural icon. </i>
            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/come-back-strong-people-of-toil-and-bloodshed.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/come-back-strong-people-of-toil-and-bloodshed.php</guid>
<category>Jason Kidd</category>
<pubDate>Sun, 11 Dec 2005 23:05:47 -0800</pubDate>
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