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<title>HOOPLOG: Sebastian Telfair</title>
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<description>NBA basketball news, rumors, insider analysis and more from around the country.  Updated hourly by Team RxSN.</description>
<copyright>Copyright 2009</copyright>
<lastBuildDate>Fri, 17 Feb 2006 09:54:14 -0800</lastBuildDate>
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<title>Head-to-Head&apos;s Up (2/20-2/26): Trade Deadline Edition</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">Well I’m glad the NBA (David Stern) came to its senses and invited Gilbert Arenas to play in Houston this weekend after all. Too bad Gil had to go and finish the first half of the season with a 4-for-22 effort and 6 turnovers at Dallas. Ouch.<br>So we have All-Star festivities to get through this weekend and then we’re back to the real games and hopefully an exciting week full of blockbuster trades. Here’s looking at you, week 2/20-2/26.<br>
<br>
<strong>Four Games:</strong> Atlanta, Boston, Cleveland, Detroit, Indiana, LAL, Memphis, Milwaukee, New Jersey, New Orleans, Orlando, Portland, Seattle.<br>
<strong>Three Games:</strong> Charlotte, Chicago, Dallas, Golden State, Houston, LAC, Minnesota, New York, Philadelphia, San Antonio, Utah, Washington.<br>
<strong>Two Games:</strong> Denver, Miami, Phoenix, Sacramento, Toronto.<br>
<br>Season-long trade rumors are finally coming to fruition this week. Darko is moving to Disney World, former Terrapin Chris Wilcox swapped area codes with Vlad Rad, and Stevie Franchise just may get another ‘change of scenery’ if Isaiah Thomas continues his quest to bury the Knicks six-feet-under. Keep a close eye on pending trades as several players are sure to find themselves in new situations that could really boost their second half value.<br>
<br>
<strong>Plug ‘em in, Plug ‘em in:</strong>
<br>
<strong>Josh Smith/Childress, G/F</strong> – The reigning Slam-Dunk champ just put up career-highs of 21 points and 15 boards, while fellow swingman Josh Childress also scored a season-high 21 in a win over the Lakers Wednesday. We’re keeping our fingers crossed that Al Harrington will be asked to pack his bags before the Feb. 23rd deadline. Josh & Josh would immediately reap the benefits should Harrington (and his 37 mpg) depart. Smith averages an incredible 2.3 blks in only 27.5 mpg, and Childress contributes across the board but especially in steals with 1.2 spg in 28.4 minutes. Hopefully both will see 30-35 minutes a night the rest of the way and improve on their already respectable numbers. The youngsters have four games next week so get them in your lineups.<br>
<br>
<strong>Delonte West, PG</strong> – LeBron (43/12/11) and Paul Pierce (50/7/8) may have stolen the show in an overtime thriller the other night, but Delonte also filled his stat line with 15/10/8 and 3 blocks. One of the best waiver wire pickups of the year, the versatile guard just keeps on truckin’. Jefferson, Perkins, and Wally are banged up, so West should have plenty of scoring chances in four contests next week.<br>
<br>
<strong>Anthony Johnson, PG</strong> – Jamaal Tinsley is starting to make Marcus Camby and Fred Taylor look like iron men. He’s only appeared in 23 games this season and hasn’t been healthy for a full year since his rookie campaign. Veteran point guard Anthony Johnson has been handed the reins and asked to do what he can to help salvage Indiana’s season. A.J. has been a member of the Pacers’ starting five since the end of December and averages nearly 30 mpg as a starter. Usually just a borderline fantasy starter in deep leagues, Johnson’s hot hand (19/4/5 with 2 threes and 1.3spg in last 3 outings) makes a decent plug-and-play for four games next week.<br>
<br>
<strong>Darko Milicic, F/C</strong> – If there ever was an ideal situation for the young 7-footer, Orlando is it. Darko’s playing time was so limited in Detroit that analyzing his stats does not really give you an indication of his potential. He’s shooting an impressive 51.5% from the floor, yet a miserable 37.5% from the charity stripe this season. But of course, his 17-of-33 FGs and 3-of-8 from the line are such small samples that they are essentially rendered meaningless. If one were to ascertain <em>anything</em> from his stats it would have to be his impressive 15 blocks in only 140 minutes of play this season. He’s sure to see plenty of playing time on his new team, and starting alongside league-leading rebounder Dwight Howard (12.6 rpg) seems to be a perfect fit for the Serbian big man. If you’re feelin’ Darko, get him in your lineups right away. Let's just hope for the best.<br>
<br>
<strong>Chris Wilcox, F/C</strong> – Assuming Evans/Fortson get shipped out of town sometime before next Thursday, Wilcox will have a great opportunity to excel as the new starting PF in Seattle. Now that he lives in Starbucks capital, USA, maybe some grande caramel macchiatos can help Chris wake up and get his head in the game. The former Terp has immense talent and this appears to be a good situation for him. The Sonics frontcourt has lacked athleticism and been clogged up with the likes of Evans/Swift/Collison/Petro/Fortson for too long. Wilcox brings much needed explosiveness up front and <em>could</em> average 15 and 10 if he's focused and motivated. Think of him as a younger/healthier Kenyon Martin, with center eligibility to boot.<br>
<br>
<strong>Stash ‘em or at least keep on your radar:</strong>
<br>
<strong>Antoine Walker</strong> – He was back in the SLU for a couple games before the break (scored 26 pts and hit six treys on 2/15). Employee #8 needs a starting gig to be a consistent fantasy contributor, and he may just land one if traded to the right team.<br>
<strong>Shaun Livingston</strong> – Prep-to-pro point guard struggling in his second season, "the next Magic Johnson" has started three of the Clips last five games, averaging 6.7 assists in those contests. The potential is there for a monster second half if 36-year-old Cassell were to go down with an injury.<br>
<strong>Earl Watson</strong> – Incessant trade rumors surrounding Denver’s reserve PG are making me nauseous. He could have some value if given a starting job somewhere (New York?)<br>
<strong>Nazr Mohammed</strong> – The big man averaged 11 pts and 8 rebounds for the Knicks last season. He has been stuck on the Spurs’ bench all year, but exploded for 18 pts and 20 boards Wednesday night at Philly. He could make some noise if he were to take the starting spot from Rasho, or perhaps filling in for an injured Duncan.<br>
<br>
<strong>Forget about ‘em and move on:<br>Larry Hughes</strong> – just went under the knife again and will be lucky to return for the playoffs.<br>
<strong>Emeka Okafor</strong> – they’ve been saying he’ll be back in 3-5 weeks for over a month now. Word out of Charlotte is that he’ll likely sit for the rest of the season.<br>
<strong>Jameer Nelson</strong> – Specialists can’t figure out what is wrong with his foot, and he is out for at <em>least</em> another three weeks. Even if he returns, he’ll have to fight for playing time with a crowded Orlando backcourt.<br>
<strong>Sebastian Telfair</strong> – Stephon Marbury’s little cousin was benched in favor of the Blake/Dixon combo. Bassy needs to learn the pro game and improve on his "Dick Cheney-esque" shooting (36.6%FG) before he can be a reliable fantasy force. Maybe next year.<br>
<strong>Marko Jaric</strong> – Yes, he may be traded, but he is just stinkin’ it up this season.<br>
<strong>Deron Williams</strong> – Did they really draft him ahead of Chris Paul? Williams is simply not a good fit for the Jazz and Jerry Sloan is not a good fit for fantasy owners.<br>
<br>Also… the Knicks/Magic exchanging <strong>Jamal Crawford</strong> and <strong>Steve Francis</strong> would help all parties involved (especially their fantasy owners).<br>Enjoy the All-Star festivities and be ready to pounce once those trades are announced.</div>

            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/headtoheads-up-220226-trade-deadline-edition.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/headtoheads-up-220226-trade-deadline-edition.php</guid>
<category>Chris Paul</category>
<pubDate>Fri, 17 Feb 2006 09:54:14 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>The Telfair Affair</title>
<description>    This week Sebastian Telfair added another segment to &quot;Through The Fire&quot;. Read why airplanes, loaded handguns, and a young Blazer point guard was the last thing one writer wanted to address. 
            </description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/the-telfair-affair.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/the-telfair-affair.php</guid>
<category>Sebastian Telfair</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 16 Feb 2006 23:17:32 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>As the Point Guard Turns</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<strong>Three Situations to Pay Attention To (Because Five Just Makes This Column Too Damn Long)<br>
</strong>
<br>
<strong>
<u>Denver</u>
</strong>
<br>
<strong>Earl Watson</strong> was one of my favorite guys to write about when doing this column last year. The Memphis rotation prevented him from having consistent fantasy value, but whenever Jason Williams was out, Watson was worth plugging in there. In 14 starts he was good for 11.9/3.3/6.5 with 1.4 steals and 1.1 3s. People thought it was odd when he signed with Denver in the offseason since the team already had point guards <strong>Andre Miller</strong> and <strong>Earl Boykins</strong> on board. Those opinions certainly didn’t change after he appeared in just one of the team’s first eight games, and Watson seemed like one of the players most likely to be moved once Dec. 15 came around. But with Earl Boykins nursing an injury, Watson has used the last four games to remind us of what he can do. He’s stepped right into Boykins role, coming off the bench gunning. In four games he’s put up an impressive line of 14.3/2.8/4.5 with 2.0 steals and a shockingly great 3.5 3pg in just 27.3 mpg. The 3s are the big surprise. He’s put up at least seven in each of those four games; he had never attempted seven 3s in a single even <i>once</i> before this stretch. So what does it mean for your fantasy team? Not all that much. Boykins will probably miss a few more games, so Watson will have a few more chances to show his stuff. (It should also be noted that <strong>Marcus Camby</strong> has missed the last three games and <strong>Kenyon Martin</strong> sat out yesterday’s, meaning there was more offense to go around.) When Boykins is ready to return, it’s hard to see Watson maintaining any of his current value. Andre Miller is playing some of the best ball of his career, and because of size issues, there’s just no way that all three of them can be on the court together for an extended period of time. Watson’s inspired play this past week has surely captured the attention of teams around the league, but at the same time it probably reminded the Nuggets of why they signed him in the first place. Watson’s a nifty little player, and he’s probably better to have around than Boykins, as Watson’s +9.6 (tops on the team, by the way) compared to Boykins’s –3.0 might attest. The Nuggets are in dire need of interior help with Camby and Martin perpetually banged up and <strong>Nene</strong> out for the year, so it’s possible Watson could still be shipped out. And now you know – or at least are reminded – that Watson can be filed in with the same group of guys as <strong>Jameer Nelson</strong> and <strong>Mo Williams</strong> – all they need is an opportunity.<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>Portland</u>
</strong>
<br>Oh, happy day – a legitimate excuse to actually write about my favorite basketball player of the past decade, <strong>Steve Blake</strong>. If you’re a regular reader – and if you aren’t, may I ask why not? – you should know that we are Wizards fans and former Terps. So we have a long history with Stevie – I even have a Wiz jersey with his name on it. When <strong>Antonio Daniels</strong> and <strong>Chucky Atkins</strong> came on board over the summer it was clear that Blake was out of the Wizards’ plans, which was obviously disappointing to me. I didn’t mind seeing <strong>Juan Dixon</strong> leave – he’s just not all that good. But Blake, while far from a perfect player, is a useful guy to have around as a backup point guard. He signed with Portland, and like Watson, immediately found himself #3 on the depth chart behind <strong>Sebastian Telfair</strong> and rookie <strong>Jarrett Jack</strong>. Again like Watson, he was a forgotten man early in the season, appearing in just two of the first 12 games of the season. But once Nate McMillian gave him a chance, he offered some solid production off the bench and when Telfair went down with a thumb injury it was Blake, not Jack, who got the starting nod. That was quite a breakout performance on Friday against the Sonics – 19 points, 13 assists, 4 rebounds, 2 steals, 2 3s, 1 block on 7-of-14 shooting. Despite picking up two fouls in the first minute of last night’s game against the shitty, sorry, no-account, pathetic Wizards, Blake went for 14/5/4 with a 3 in 23 minutes, leading a short-handed Blazers squad to victory. So what does Blake bring to the table? Well, since he arrived at Maryland as a freshman he’s tried to shed the label that he’s not a strong outside shooter, but he’s actually not bad. Over his career thus far he’s 119-for-311, which is a strong 38%. For comparison’s sake, “great shooter” Juan Dixon is a career 32% shooter from long range. Blake’s a smart player who looks for his teammates but has a tendency to try to make the spectacular play a bit too often. I always argued that his game would be better suited for the NBA when he would be surrounded by players who could anticipate and handle his passes. And then he ends up on the 05-06 Blazers. Oh well. Blake seems to have won the trust of McMillian over the past week or so and should stay in the starting lineup as long as Telfair is out, which could be anywhere from a few games to a month. Just keep checking the Portland papers to find out. <em>(Note: Reports indicate Telfair will be out for at least a month. Great news for all the players mentioned here.)</em> As long as Blake is starting he deserves serious consideration and makes a great guy to plug into the utility spot this week, although road games against Detroit, Memphis and Minnesota aren’t the most enticing matchups.<br>
<br>Juan Dixon qualifies at PG in at least Yahoo leagues, and now that he’s cracked the starting lineup for the Blazers, it’s time to give him a shot. We’ve been tough on Juan around here, but we still love him. He’s still not going to be a fantasy savior and given the same amount of PT, Blake should have more value, but Dixon should hit just enough 3s and grab enough steals to have some marginal value. His FG% will always be a drag – he’ll have his good games, like last night’s 8-for-13 performance or his 13-for-22 game against the Hornets two weeks ago, but be prepared for some 4-for-15s. He’s actually been a complete non-entity in the steals department this year, but he averages 1.7 p40 over his career, so you’d expect him to approach that level with regular PT. Jarrett Jack is another person who could have some value in the deepest of leagues while the Blazers deal with all of their injury issues, but it seems like McMillian likes keeping him in a limited role. He had a very impressive 11/6/8 performance last night, but played just six minutes in the game before that. He was Telfair’s primary backup before he went down, and the fact that he was passed over for the starting nod seems to be a pretty good indication of how McMillian wants to use him right now.<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>Los Angeles Clippers</u>
</strong>
<br>
<strong>Shaun Livingston</strong> was a popular preseason sleeper pick despite the fact that he has already proven to be quite brittle and would be in the backcourt with proven vets <strong>Sam Cassell</strong> and <strong>Cuttino Mobley</strong>. But it was understandable based on his April stats from last season and the simpler fact that the kid can flat out play. In 10 April starts he put up a line of 11.0/4.4/7.4 with 1.4 steals on 45% shooting. Nice numbers, but he didn’t even attempt a 3 in that period. Not too bad in real life – a point guard needs to make good decisions, and if you can’t hit the 3, don’t take it – but that’s not what we look from from a PG in fantasy land. The Clippers took their time letting Livingston get healthy at the beginning of the season, sensing no need to rush him considering his past and the Clippers fast start. The 20-year old was rusty in his first game back, failing to register an assist in 20 minutes of action; he notched at least one dime in every game he played last year. But Livingston showed why he was so highly regarded in his second game back as he dished 10 assists (with just a single turnover) in 29 minutes of action in a Clips win over the Rockets. Livingston was out there during crunch time, and while that may have had a lot to do with the fact that <strong>Corey Maggette</strong> was out, it is still worth noting. He obviously has a long future in the league, but his fantasy outlook is still murky. Playing time issues aside – and it looks like he should be able to see around 20 mpg as long as Cassell and Mobley are healthy – Livingston still needs that secondary skill to help him emerge from the pack. We know the assists will be there, but what else? His 1.6 steals p40 last season was good but not great. We already know his complete aversion to shooting 3s. He shot 41% last year, so we can’t expect anything great there. Right now he’s looking a lot like <strong>T.J. Ford</strong>. Check out their rookie season p40:<br>
<br>Livingston: 10.9/7.4/4.4 with 1.6 steals, 0.5 blocks, 3.7 turnovers, on 41% shooting.<br>Ford: 10.6/9.7/4.8 with 1.6 steals, 0.1 blocks, 3.8 turnovers, on 38% shooting.<br>
<br>Ford has added sort of added the 3-point shot to his repertoire this year (hitting 0.6 per game on 41% shooting) and he’s seriously boosted his FG% even with more shots. So Livingston certainly has a chance to be much improved in the near future. But even if he somehow found himself with a starting job, he looks to be PG2 material for the time being.<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>Comet Gain<br>
</u>Jason Kidd</strong> – 14/9/1 with two 3s, a steal and a block yesterday – <i>in the first quarter</i>. You knew those assists were start piling up<br>
<br>
<strong>Andre Miller</strong> – Speaking of piling up assists, 10.1 in the last 9 games for Miller; also picking up scoring slack with injuries piling up, but career low 72% from the line isn’t too hot.<br>
<br>
<strong>Chris Duhon</strong> – You know he runs hot and cold; 17.0/3.7/4.0 with 3.7 3s and 61% shooting over last three is pretty hot.<br>
<br>
<strong>Chauncey Billups</strong> – Don’t bother calling it an All-Star game if Chauncey’s not there this year; 21.3/2.713.0 with 3 3s on 64% shooting over last 3 is almost – <i>almost</i> – expected at this point.<br>
<br>
<strong>Chucky Atkins</strong> – The 3s are starting to come in bunches – 13 in his last four games; with <strong>Jarvis Hayes</strong> out for at least the next three games he’s a great short-term add as he’s seen 44.5 mpg in his two starts thus far.<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>The Hold Steady</u>
</strong>
<br>
<strong>Gilbert Arenas</strong> – Absolutely killing his owners in FG%, but absolutely dominant in 3s, FT%, assists, steals and points. That’s not a bad trade off.<br>
<br>
<strong>Sarunas Jasikevicius</strong> – Still a starter even with <strong>Jamaal Tinsley</strong> back? That’s good news. Expect fewer assists, but the steals and 3s should still be there.<br>
<br>
<strong>Marko Jaric</strong> – Numbers haven’t been great (8.5/3.5/6.0 with 1.5 steals and no 3s), but the fact that he’s seen 39 mpg in the two contests since <strong>Troy Hudson</strong> returned is at least encouraging.<br>
<br>
<strong>Mike James</strong> – A clunker yesterday, but 19.0/3.0/4.7 with 2.3 3s in the three games before that were a nice bounce back.<br>
<br>
<strong>Stephon Marbury</strong> – Still waiting for him to bust out; after going for 30+ in 17 games last year, has done it only twice this year.<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>The Fall</u>
</strong>
<br>
<strong>Jason Williams</strong> – Maybe he won’t officially lose his starting job to Gary Payton, but you’ve got to think that especially with Riley on board, he’ll be on an extremely short leash when he gets back.<br>
<br>
<strong>Nate Robinson</strong> – There’s a reason the Knicks are a team to stay away from; one day you’re a “must” pick-up, the next day right back on the waiver wire.<br>
<br>
<strong>Damon Stoudamire</strong> – Still a solid option, but team’s recent scoring woes have taken a toll on his production; career low in steals is very disappointing.<br>
<br>
<strong>Steve Francis</strong> – Shooting only 19-for-54 (35%) since returning from injuries, with a 20 assists/13 turnovers to boot. Quite unimpressive.<br>
<br>
<strong>Mike Bibby</strong> – Another second overall pick that’s been disappointing; I’m still a big fan, but the 0.9 steals after tying his career high with 1.6 last year is bad news.</div>

            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/as-the-point-guard-turns.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/as-the-point-guard-turns.php</guid>
<category>Orlando Magic</category>
<pubDate>Mon, 19 Dec 2005 07:57:26 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
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<title>As the Point Guard Turns</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Chicago</strong>
</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Kirk Hinrich’s </strong>a tough dude. After leaving the season opener with an ankle injury and being questionable the next night, he came out and went for 26 points on 8-of-13 shooting with 3 3s. After being knocked out with a concussion against Dallas, he did miss a game, but then came back with averages of 24/4.5/10 in his next two games. You’ve got to like that. I normally leave players on the bench for a game to let them get back into the swing of things after an injury, but after Hinrich’s last performance I made sure to get him back in. Of course, it should be noted that Captain Kirk saw an average of 43 minutes in those two games due to the absence of <strong>Ben Gordon</strong>. </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">I should have known better than to give <strong>Chris Duhon </strong>any credit. He promptly had four absolute nightmare games before exploding for 24 points, 7 assists and 6 3s against, of course, the goddamn <strong>Wizards</strong>. Duhon’s still worth keeping around because he’s one of the few players you can tell <strong>Scott Skiles </strong>actually likes. His steals and 3s are still solid, but he’s starting to lose some of his assists to Hinrich. His minutes have remained fairly consistent, but it was a good thing he had that great game before Ben Gordon came back, because then things would have gotten interesting. ESPN’s Player Rater isn’t the gospel, but it’s an effective tool; as of Saturday night, Duhon was right in between <strong>Richard Hamilton </strong>and <strong>T.J. Ford</strong>. Numbers don’t lie, right?<span style="font-size:+0;"> </span>
</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Miami</strong>
</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Was I a little too early in proclaiming the death of <strong>Gary Payton’s </strong>fantasy relevancy? Looks that way. With <strong>Jason Williams </strong>nursing a bum knee, Payton has played 42 mpg in two starts, averaging 17/3.5/3 with 2.5 3s and 1.5 steals in his last two. His shot looked especially strong last night in a game against the Wizards THAT WAS HANDED TO THE HEAT BY THE OFFICIALS. Sorry, lost my composure there a bit, the last two Wizards games have been especially brutal. But that was a fucking fraud. Anyway, the 3-pointers are the big news here. Payton hadn’t been a serious long distance threat since the 00-01 season when he averaged 1.3 per game. But The Man Formerly Known as The Glove is putting them up at a high rate this season. Against the Wiz he was spotting up in the corner on multiple occasions – these were designed plays. In his four starts Payton – who topped 8 apg in six straight seasons in the prime of his career – has had more than 3 assists just once, so these 3s are huge for his value, especially since he’s nowhere near the pickpocket he used to be. If he’s going be seeing roughly 40 minutes per games there’s no problem with using him. In weekly leagues he makes a possibly excellent play – the Heat play four games, but who knows when Williams will return?<span style="font-size:+0;"> </span>
</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Atlanta</strong>
</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">In case you didn’t notice, there’s a new starting PG in the league. You’d be forgiven for not noticing, of course. <strong>Royal Ivey </strong>has started the last three games for the Hawks and after a somewhat promising debut in which he scored 14 on 7-of-10 shooting, he still hasn’t seen more than 20 minutes in any of those starts. <strong>Tyronn Lue </strong>is still seeing just about the same amount of time even though he’s now coming off the bench. Actually, I should probably just stop now. The title of this section is Five Situations to Pay Attention To, and unless you play in the deepest league in the entire country, this is certainly not a situation worth your attention. </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Los Angeles Lakers</strong>
</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Call me crazy, but I think <strong>Sasha Vujajic </strong>might actually have some fantasy value at some point this season. The triangle offense doesn’t need a traditional point guard to run it, but Parker barely even resembles a point guard. He’s certainly more of a swingman, and his 1.65:1 assist/turnover ratio backs this up. He’s been putting up decent numbers, but the majority of his production has come early in games. On Saturday he had no production at all; no points, no rebounds, 3 assists, missed all 7 of his shots in 24 minutes. Vujacic wasn’t much better, making only 1-of-3 and he didn’t register a single assist in his 24 minutes. The Lakers have been playing better lately, but they still have very little margin for error. Vujacic’s 3.9:1 assist/turnover ranks fourth in the league, behind only <strong>Eric Snow</strong>, <strong>Brevin Knight </strong>and <strong>Chauncey Billups</strong>. It’s not hard to envision Jackson getting fed up with Parker and making a switch. But what kind of value would Vujajic have if he could find regular PT? Marginal, to be sure. He’s not going to be in there for his scoring, and his 31% shooting so far in his career is almost historically bad. I see him similar to Duhon in that he could hit enough 3s and steals to be a marginal play in weeks when he has enough games, or as a guy to keep on your bench and plug in when the inevitable injuries hit. </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Denver</strong>
</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Say this about <strong>Earl Boykins</strong>: his 26 mpg usually means 26 minutes. In 18 of his 21 games the little man has received between 22 and 29 minutes, which makes him a little easier to deal with than guys that fluctuate between 17-33-24, etc. But the last four games show why Boykins just isn’t a reliable player. Through the season’s first 16 games Boykins was averaging 0.8 3s and 1.1 steals – not great numbers, but enough to merit a utility spot in deep leagues. But that’s about as good as it gets for Boykins in those categories, and you know that he’ll never grab any boards or shoot above 42%. Lots of people have been hoping for Earl to sneak into the starting lineup, but this is a guy who has started 10 games in his 379 game career. His role seems pretty defined. With <strong>Andre Miller </strong>on one of his hot streaks and piling up the assists, there’s no point in shifting him over to SG in favor of Boykins. You can do better. </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Comet Gain</strong>
</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Gilbert Arenas</strong> – That was a brutal shooting game last night, but he’s starting to rack up the steals and fills up the box score every night. Think of him as the new <strong>AI</strong>. </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Brevin Knight </strong>– Owners don’t have him for scoring, but certainly won’t complain about 17.5 ppg to go along with 9 apg and 2.7 spg in his last six.<span style="font-size:+0;"> </span>
</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Sarunas Jasikevicius </strong>– A little bit of everything in his five starts: 11.0/4.2/5.4 with 1.6 3s, 1.0 steals on 52% and 94% shooting. Liking my Brent Barry comparison more and more. </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Mo Williams </strong>– He’s back on the bench now, but those numbers in his four starts – 19.3/1.5/7.0 with 2.5 3s and 1.3 steals – and his consistent 3-point gunning off the bench make him worthy of at least a bench spot.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Baron Davis </strong>– Yeah yeah yeah, he can’t shoot. But optimists will look at his 41% career number and think that means he’ll shoot around 43% from here on out. Hey, it’s possible.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>The Hold Steady</strong>
</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Chauncey Billups </strong>– How nice is it to have a guy like this on your team? Holding strong with that career high assist number.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Derek Fisher </strong>– Last two games were especially encouraging – no 3s, but still managed to average 16.5 with 1.5 steals. You know my non-starter policy, but if you’re desperate…</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Tony Parker </strong>– After no steals in first four games, averaging 1.6 since then. In a bit of a shooting slump, but that was to be expected.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Marko Jaric </strong>– Life without Hudson is nice; 15.5/5.5/6.0 with 2 3s and 1 steal in 37.5 minutes in last two. Sell high? If you can…</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Delonte West </strong>– I’m becoming a believer; eight straight games of 30+ minutes and just enough steals, blocks and 3s to merit that final roster spot in your lineup. </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>The Fall</strong>
</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Deron Williams </strong>– <strong>Jerry Sloan </strong>can’t take all the blame; 31% shooting and 17/12 assist/turnover in last four just won’t cut it.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Sebastian Telfair </strong>– You don’t look for rebounds from PG, but four in his last six games is flat-out pathetic; </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Jameer Nelson </strong>– Back to the bench with <strong>Francis </strong>back; he’s crippling in leagues that count TO.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Damon Jones </strong>– A forgotten man in most recent game; hard to see him making an impact any time soon.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<strong>Luther Head </strong>– As expected, he’s slid off to irrelevance with the return of <strong>McGrady</strong>. </p>
</div>

            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/as-the-point-guard-turns.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/as-the-point-guard-turns.php</guid>
<category>Utah Jazz</category>
<pubDate>Mon, 12 Dec 2005 08:11:04 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>T-Mac collects season-high 35 in win</title>
<description>    Tracy McGrady matched his season high with 35 points and added seven rebounds to lead the Houston Rockets to a 100-86 victory over the Portland Trail Blazers on Sunday night.

McGrady&apos;s driving dunk early in the fourth quarter made it 72-57.

Sebastian Telfair&apos;s steal and layup pulled the Blazers to 78-71, but Portland - losers of seven of its last eight games - couldn&apos;t get any closer.
            </description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/tmac-collects-seasonhigh-35-in-win.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/tmac-collects-seasonhigh-35-in-win.php</guid>
<category>Sebastian Telfair</category>
<pubDate>Sun, 11 Dec 2005 23:05:42 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Overall Rankings: 91 to 120</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<a href="http://fantasybasketblog.blogspot.com/2005/10/overall-rankings-1-to-30.html">1 to 30</a>
<br>
<a href="http://fantasybasketblog.blogspot.com/2005/10/overall-rankings-31-to-60.html">31 to 60</a>
<br>
<a href="http://fantasybasketblog.blogspot.com/2005/10/overall-rankings-61-90.html">61 to 90</a>
<br>
<br>
<strong>91. Jamaal Tinsley</strong> – The ultimate tease; few can match his 3s/steals/assists combo, but he plain cannot shoot or stay healthy.<br>
<strong>92. Eddie Jones</strong> – Certainly on the downside of his career, but can handle lots of minutes and hit 3s with the best.<br>
<strong>93. Al Harrington</strong> – Won’t ever have a huge breakout like some had hoped, but should be solid as long as minutes are there.<br>
<strong>94. Morris Peterson</strong> – See above.<br>
<strong>95. Gerald Wallace</strong> – His big numbers (for his position) in steals and blocks will do a lot to offset his seriously lackluster shooting.<br>
<strong>96. Ricky Davis</strong> – He’ll start, yes, but averaged 33 mpg last year and wasn’t anything all that special.<br>
<strong>97. Sam Cassell</strong> – Could be a disaster, but Livingston is young and injury-prone; can’t forget how consistently awesome Sam was the three years before last.<br>
<strong>98. Mike James</strong> – As long as he’s starting, he’ll be well worth using.<br>
<strong>99. Mike Sweetney</strong> – Needs to lock down starting job, but will be a rebound/FG% monster if he does.<br>
<strong>100. Sebastian Telfair</strong> – If he could shoot the 3 he’d be better, but 6.7 apg and 1.4 spg in April make him an OK option.<br>
<strong>101. Mehmet Okur</strong> – As always, potential is there, but he’s usually frustrating to own with Sloan getting much of the blame.<br>
<strong>102. Joel Przybilla</strong> – Ask the folks who drafted Mark Blount and Samuel Dalembert last year how reliable big men who finish strong are.<br>
<strong>103. J.R. Smith</strong> – Hasn’t shown he can do anything but shoot a bunch of 3s; don’t go crazy with the kids.<br>
<strong>104. Troy Murphy</strong> – We’re never too high on non-hustle stat guys, but if the Warriors run enough he should have some value.<br>
<strong>105. Ben Gordon</strong> – Have to think he’ll break into the starting lineup eventually; still is a pretty one-dimensional player.<br>
<strong>106. Raja Bell</strong> – Someone will probably jump the gun thinking he’ll replicate JoeJohn’s numbers from last year; that’s quite unlikely, but he should be solid.<br>
<strong>107. Al Jefferson</strong> – Pick him up in January after the guy who drafted him too early gets frustrated and drops him.<br>
<strong>108. P.J. Brown</strong> – Keeps on plugging away; needs to get that FG% back up to around 47%, but will be underrated as usual.<br>
<strong>109. Wally Szczerbiak</strong> – His strong percentages make him worth having around, especially if he can get back up to 15 shots per game.<br>
<strong>110. Nenad Krstic</strong> – Another one of those strong-finish big men to be wary of, especially since he doesn’t block many shots.<br>
<strong>111. Brendan Haywood</strong> – OK, a bit of a homer pick, but it’s not unreasonably to expect 2 bpg with very nice boards and FG%.<br>
<strong>112. Erick Dampier</strong> – He might be interested, he might not. His 12/12 with 2 blocks from a couple years is hard to ignore, but honestly, you probably should.<br>
<strong>113. Eddy Curry</strong> – All of the big men in this batch have major questions, so just pick one you like. Could be an offensive force, but don’t expect any rebounds or blocks all of a sudden.<br>
<strong>114. Jameer Nelson</strong> – He seems to be buried right now, just can’t understand why; 14.9/4.0/4.6 with 1.5 spg and 1.2 3pg after the break shows he’s more than ready.<br>
<strong>115. Bonzi Wells</strong> – Is slated for lots of PT, but doesn’t have the greatest game and can get on coaches’ bad sides quickly.<br>
<strong>116. Theo Ratliff</strong> – Even in a very off year averaged 2.5 bpg; if Przybilla isn’t for real should get a chance to reclaim his starting job.<br>
<strong>117. Darius Miles</strong> – Perennial tease, but Portland is very thin this year and he does get a decent number of steals and blocks for his position.<br>
<strong>118. Eddie Griffin</strong> – Yet another perennial tease, but he can be very effective with only 25-28 mpg.<br>
<strong>119. Raymond Felton</strong> – We think he’ll get there eventually…<br>
<strong>120. Brevin Knight</strong> – But until then, these two are going to hurt each other’s value.</div>

            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/overall-rankings-91-to-120.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/overall-rankings-91-to-120.php</guid>
<category>Morris Peterson</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 20 Oct 2005 17:00:35 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Carnival of the NBA #15</title>
<description><![CDATA[    It's with a heavy heart that this 15th edition of the Carnival of the NBA comes to you. All our minds are on not the hoops world, but the Gulf Coast. It's the most horrible tragedy of my life by far, and I have to admit my eyes have been glued to CNN, not ESPN or NBA TV.<br /><br />If you can, please <a href="http://www.redcross.org">donate</a>. Help is needed in New Orleans, Slidell, Gulfport and Biloxi, and they will need it for a long time to come. <a href="http://www.givelife.org">Blood is needed</a>, as well. And <a href="http://www.hurricanehousing.org/">homes for the refugees</a>, too. Here's a <a href="http://instapundit.com/archives/025235.php">comprehensive list of charities</a> - there's something out there for everyone.<br /><br />Ron at Hornets247 <a href="http://www.hornets247.com/">puts everything in perspective</a>. Basketball hardly seems important right now. The fact that no one has heard from PJ Brown is very distressing - we all hope and pray he and his family are well, as we do about the hundreds of thousands of Gulf Coasters, even if the images on CNN tell us otherwise.<br /><br />With our hearts and minds on the victims of the disaster, here are the hoops links for this edition of the Carnival:<br /><br />Henry at <a href="http://www.truehoop.com">True Hoop</a> has been blogging up a storm, per usual. He <a href="http://www.truehoop.com/portland-trail-blazers-658-zach-randolphs-trip-to-the-mall.html">tackles the issue of publishing athlete-smoking-dope rumors on the internet</a>, <a href="http://www.truehoop.com/new-jersey-nets-638-blogging-the-jump-iii.html">continues to discuss the Sebastian Telfair bio</a> and <a href="?ReBlogSessionID=2e9a4242ee897a82f219d5ca9df560ae">grins at a Mighty Mouse quote about Pau Gasol</a> (it's a must-read if you haven't seen).<br /><br />Kurt at <a href="http://www.forumblueandgold.com">Lakers-blog Forum Blue and Gold</a> thinks Jerry Colangelo is <a href="http://forumblueandgold.com/2005/08/good-steps-for-team-usa.html">moving Team USA in the right direction</a> by looking towards Kobe to join the squad. Kurt also attacks the notion that last year's team lacked fundamentals, pointing instead at the lack of proper scouting, the lack of understanding for the international game and the lack of a pure shooter.<br /><br />The hilarious <a href="http://nbasource.blogspot.com">NBA Source</a> looks at the <a href="http://nbasource.blogspot.com/2005/08/funniest-things-about-nba-part-<br />1.html">funnier things in the NBA</a>, including redhead players, Sir Charles's philosophy and Bob Marley's tattoos. There's also a <a href="?ReBlogSessionID=2e9a4242ee897a82f219d5ca9df560ae">second edition</a>, which tackles Rasheed's bald spot, the Brian Cardinal Phenomenon and some laugh-out-loud quotes from Shaq.<br /><br />Dave at <a href="http://warriors.mostvaluablenetwork.com">The City</a> - a Warriors blog - completes his end-of-season review by looking closely at Baron Davis and Derek Fisher. It's determined that if Todd Fuller were a point guard, he'd be about 20 percent of Baron.<br /><br />The SportsBiz Blog <a href="http://thesportsbizblog.blogspot.com/2005/08/addidas-reebok-deal-will-cultures-mix.html">looks at the cultural hurdles</a> Adidas and Reebok will have to overcome to make their recent merger, citing their substantially different corporate cultures.<br /><br />Todd, who runs Orlando-blog BELIEVING IN MAGIC, posts on <a href="http://magic.mostvaluablenetwork.com/?p=40">why the Magic may very well be the least improved team in the league</a>. Hard to argue with that, though I think the Warriors and Supersonics could compete for that title.<br /><br />Nels at Give Me the Rock <a href="http://givemetherock.com/2005/08/31/finley-ginobli-duncan-oh-my/">looks at the effect of Michael Finley on the Spurs and on fantasy basketball teams</a>.<br /><br />The readers of the imitable Celtics Blog <a href="http://celticsrant.blogspot.com/2005/08/ricky-being-ricky_31.html">compare and contrast two of Boston's funnier characters: Manny and Ricky</a>.<br /><br />Matt at Bulls Blog - the guy who started this whole Carnival thing - <a href="http://bulls.blogspot.com/2005/08/never-too-early.html">says next summer is the moment of truth for the franchise</a>.<br /><br />SuperSonicSoul - king of the brief post titles - has already <a href="http://www.supersonicsoul.com/2005/08/next-calvin-booth.html">granted new Sonic Mikki Moore a nickname</a> and <a href="http://www.supersonicsoul.com/2005/08/cyberlew-or-cyberpoo.html">questions a "technological breakthrough" by the franchise that resembles Lil' Penny</a>.<br /><br />RaptorBlog <a href="http://www.raptorblog.com/#082405_1900">contemplates the play-by-play guy's dark side</a>.<br /><br />Ryan at the aptly-named Ryan's Ramblings <a href="http://basketballramblings.blog.com/309573/">shakes his head at Earl Watson's decision to go to Denver</a>.<br /><br />When Dan Rosenbaum posts, everyone notices. His recent post on <a href="http://danrosenbaum.blogspot.com/2005/08/using-statistics-in-basketball-bar-is.html">how high the bar is in terms of really grasping the statistics of basketball</a>.<br /><br />Celtics 17 addresses <a href="http://celtics.mostvaluablenetwork.com/?p=27">recent bad press surrounding Danny Ainge</a>, both locally and nationally.<br /><br />Runnin' With The Bulls <a href="http://bulls.mostvaluablenetwork.com/?p=22">likes the solid financial ground the Chicago franchise is building itself on</a>.<br /><br />Cavalier Attitude <a href="http://cavaliers.mostvaluablenetwork.com/?p=156">says Luke Jackson has a role on Cleveland's squad this year</a>, despite getting the Darko treatment last season.<br /><br />Motoring Pistons manages to <a href="http://pistons.mostvaluablenetwork.com/?p=149">wish Finley and the Spurs turmoil and conclude the Clippers have a superior line-up to the Lakers</a>, all in one post.<br /><br />Pacer Nation <a href="http://pacers.mostvaluablenetwork.com/?p=28">looks at possible trade scenarios to get under the cap</a>.<br /><br />A couple weeks ago, Crazy from the Heat <a href="http://heat.mostvaluablenetwork.com/?p=254">compared recent Miami addition Gerald Fitch to recent tradee Andre Emmett</a>.<br /><br />Father Knickerbocker <a href="http://knicks.mostvaluablenetwork.com/?p=174">trolls around the NY Web and finds some entertaining musings</a> from fans of variable knowledge bases.<br /><br />Solid Gold <a href="http://nuggets.mostvaluablenetwork.com/?p=37">questions the notion that George Karl's 2005 Nuggets are ready to compete with the elite of the 2006 Western Conference</a>.<br /><br />If it's a look of the best tantrum throwers in all of sports you want, <a href="http://120proofball.blogspot.com/2005/08/titans-of-tantrum.html">120 Proof Ball has you covered</a>.<br /><br />easyMarksman, a fantasy blog, <a href="http://easymarksman.blogspot.com/2005/08/6-degrees-of-vince-carter.html">discusses the player's that upped their fantasy value the most</a> as the season ended. Vince Carter is prominently involved.<br /><br />Despite Yao's Houston extension, Lakers blog Show Time is <a href="http://lakers.mostvaluablenetwork.com/?p=74">still looking forward to 2007</a>, when Dirk, Rashard and The Truth and Vinsanity are all on the market.<br /><br />Rising Suns <a href="http://suns.mostvaluablenetwork.com/?p=50">is disappointed about Finley-to-the-Spurs</a>, to say the least. Spur of the Moment, on the other hand, <a href="http://spurs.mostvaluablenetwork.com/?p=86">wonders about Fin's defense</a>.<br /><br />Visit these blogs, bookmark them and feel free to leave comments and read other posts! There's a ton of great hoops writers out there not getting paid by ESPN or SI or CBSSportsline. Support 'em!<br /><br />And please <a href="http://www.redcross.org">give what you can</a> to help preserve and rebuild lives.
            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/carnival-of-the-nba-15.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/carnival-of-the-nba-15.php</guid>
<category>Charles Barkley</category>
<pubDate>Fri, 02 Sep 2005 09:21:18 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Jack&apos;s not nimble for summer play</title>
<description>    TUALATIN - The battle between young point guards Sebastian Telfair and Jarrett Jack will have to wait until the Portland Trail Blazers open training camp in October.
            </description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/jacks-not-nimble-for-summer-play.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/jacks-not-nimble-for-summer-play.php</guid>
<category>Sebastian Telfair</category>
<pubDate>Mon, 04 Jul 2005 17:09:40 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Blazers will wait to hold point guard competition</title>
<description>    TUALATIN, Ore. The battle between young point guards Sebastian Telfair and Jarrett Jack will have to wait until the Portland Trail Blazers open training camp in October.
            </description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/blazers-will-wait-to-hold-point-guard-competition.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/blazers-will-wait-to-hold-point-guard-competition.php</guid>
<category>Sebastian Telfair</category>
<pubDate>Mon, 04 Jul 2005 17:09:37 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cavs eye Damon Stoudamire?</title>
<description>    
      	If Jeff McInnis doesn&apos;t re-sign this summer, don&apos;t be surprised if the Cavaliers take some interest in Blazers guard Damon Stoudamire. He doesn&apos;t appear likely to return to Portland now that new coach Kevin Pritchard is starting rookie Sebastian Telfair...
      
            </description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/cavs-eye-damon-stoudamire.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/cavs-eye-damon-stoudamire.php</guid>
<category>Cleveland Cavaliers</category>
<pubDate>Mon, 14 Mar 2005 16:55:36 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Weekend Preview</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">So the trading deadline is over. Hopefully you’ve made all the little tweaks you needed to make to your roster (or big tweaks), and now it’s time to sit back and relax, and watch some basketball. Right? Pfft! As IF. There’s always plenty to keep your eye on, and this weekend will be no different. Whether it’s certain teams’ rotations like I discussed the other day, or certain players like DM mentioned yesterday, there’s all sorts of fun going on. In fact, there’s so much that we’re gonna pick a game from every day this weekend that you guys should be checking out.<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>Friday</u>
</strong>
<br>
<strong>Indiana at Portland, 10pm EST</strong>
<br>
<br>Of course, in all the trade talks I’d had over the past few days, <strong>Jermaine O’Neal</strong> was my one untouchable player. Unfortunately, he was much more touchable on the court (don’t take that the wrong way). He sprained his shoulder on a drive to the basket and could be out for quite a while. So there goes 19.8 FGA per game for the Pacers, meaning <strong>Stephen Jackson</strong>, <strong>Freddie Jones</strong> and <strong>Reggie Miller</strong> will be counted on for more scoring. On the other side of the ball, keep a close eye on <strong>Sebastian Telfair</strong>, who has the most promise of all of their yougsters, and should get more playing time under new coach Kevin Pritchard. Also watch the minutes slip away for <strong>Stoudamire, Van Exel, Shareef Abdur-Rahim</strong>, and all the other ‘good’ players on the Blazers. They’re competing with the Raptors for being the worst-run team in the league.<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>Saturday</u>
<br>Philadelphia at Atlanta, 7pm EST</strong>
<br>
<strong></strong>
<br>So things haven’t gone smoothly for <strong>Webber</strong> so far in Philly. Trust me, this is no surprise. But this could be where things completely fall apart in Philly. His 29.8% field goal shooting aside, the Sixers are already concerned about his ability to play in back-to-back games. After his horrendous night against <strong>New Jersey</strong> after playing in <strong>Milwaukee</strong> the night before, you can’t blame them. Saturday, the Sixers head to Atlanta after hosting <strong>LeBron</strong> and the <strong>Cavs</strong> the night before. Webber’s ability to a) play in this game, and b) play WELL in this game will have a great effect on his numbers over the rest of the year. Atlanta, meanwhile, looks like they should hand the reigns back to <strong>Tyronn Lue </strong>after <strong>Boris Diaw</strong> nearly committed as many fouls (5) as points scored (6) in 32 minutes during Lue’s 1-game suspension.<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>Sunday<br>
</u>Phoenix at Seattle, 9pm EST<br>
</strong>OK, I guess one ‘fun’ game out of three is ok. If there was a run n’ gun in the NBA, this is the game that would feature it. Here’s something to consider, though, while watching. Are <strong>Jim Jackson</strong> and/or <strong>Walter McCarty</strong> really going to be able to provide that much help come crunch time in the playoffs? Because last night’s production against posisble Finals opponent <strong>Detroit</strong> (combined 25 minutes, 1-3 FG, 0-1 3P, 2 reb, 5 assists, 1 TO, 2 pts) does not bode well.</div>

            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/weekend-preview.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/weekend-preview.php</guid>
<category>Toronto Raptors</category>
<pubDate>Fri, 04 Mar 2005 16:40:59 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Checking in on the Blazers</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">I know it   s not always right to assume, but I   m going to do that for a second and take a guess that most people reading this are east coast dwellers. I base that on nothing, but I   ll say it anyway. And as I   ve said before us east coasters sometimes have a habit of ignoring what goes on out west. I guess it   s that East Coast bias thing that the Daily Quickie guy likes to talk about all the time, or maybe not. But the fact is, in my league, a middling player on an Eastern Conference team is more likely to be picked up than a middling player on a Western Conference team. So sometimes we like to check in on the teams that play their ball out west to see if they have anything to offer us.
<br>
<br>The Blazers are certainly the hot topic in fantasy basketball these days. With two rotation regulars on the IL, another starter banged up, and a point guard situation that   s up in the air, fantasy players should be keeping a close eye on the situation. <strong>Shareef Abdur-Rahim</strong> and <strong>Darius Miles</strong> are out of action for at least a few weeks each, obviously. <strong>Theo Ratliff</strong> is back in action, though, at least technically. The 2 points, 2 rebounds, 1 assist and 0 blocks he put up on Sunday don   t prove anything. It   s hard to read too much into two games, but let   s take a look at how the Blazers minutes have been split in the two contests since both    Reef and Darius went down.
<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>Minutes per Game
<br>
</u>
</strong>Ruben Patterson: 41
<br>Zack Randolph:  38
<br>Nick Van Exel: 29
<br>Theo Ratliff: 28
<br>Derek Anderson: 26
<br>Damon Stoudamire: 21.5
<br>Sebastian Telfair: 19
<br>Travis Outlaw: 18.5
<br>Joel Przybilla: 11
<br>
<br>What   s interesting here is that with two regulars out, there   s only one player that   s seeing a clear benefit, that being this week   s obvious #1 pickup, <strong>Ruben Patterson</strong>. We told you to grab him on Friday (we weren   t the only ones, we know) and he responded with two-game averages of 23.5 points, 4.5 rebounds and 2.5 steals on an otherworldly 69% shooting. Mo Cheeks wasn   t kidding when he said he was his favorite player, as now that there   s no one to block him, except him to keep getting near 40 mpg. He should obviously be starting in all leagues. That said, get ready for some    Toine-like numbers from the free throw line. He   s a career 66% shooter, but is at 58% this year, hasn   t been above 63% since 2001, and went 7-for-16 in his last two.
<br>
<br>For <strong>Zack Randolph</strong> owners that are puzzled that he saw less PT than Ruben, don   t worry. He played only 32 minutes against the Heat, but that   s because he was in foul trouble all game and ultimately fouled out with just over 4 minutes to go. The 44 minutes he saw against the Knicks on Sunday should be more like it. Still, it   s hard to see Randolph   s numbers getting too much of a bump. He was already the team   s #1 option, and now defenses will be keyed on him even more. Randolph has never really been one to completely take over a game, so don   t expect too much more than his usual 20/10.
<br>
<br>The one player I   d keep an eye on is <strong>Theo Ratliff</strong>, and I   m not just saying that because he   s on my team and I   m trying to talk him up in an attempt to trade him. Seriously, I   m not. The prevailing notion earlier this year was that Ratliff was more effective on the defensive end with Miles in the lineup instead of Abdur-Rahim, because Miles was more of a true SF. There were six games from Dec. 15 to Dec. 27 where Abdur-Rahim was out and Miles started in the frontcourt. In those six games, Ratliff blocked a total of 16 shots. That was Ratliff   s best six-game stretch in terms of blocks since the first six games of the season. After missing nearly three games due to a shoulder injury, Ratliff has done next to nothing in his three games back, blocking only four shots and scoring 20 points to go with his 10 rebounds. That   d be a very nice game, but won   t cut it for three. Still, Patterson, like Miles, is more of a natural SF, and if Ratliff can work out his health issues, he could be in for a whole bunch of blocks over the next few weeks, even if he doesn   t see much more than 30 mpg. If you need blocks and are feeling lucky, get him in your lineup and hope for the best.
<br>
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            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/checking-in-on-the-blazers.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/checking-in-on-the-blazers.php</guid>
<category>Portland Trailblazers</category>
<pubDate>Mon, 10 Jan 2005 14:33:24 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Steph, Telfair Face Off Tonight</title>
<description>    There could be a time tonight at the Garden when Stephon Marbury and rookie Sebastian Telfair do what they did many times on the park courts of Coney Island - go mano-a-mano. They&apos;ve had some fierce Coney ...
            </description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/steph-telfair-face-off-tonight.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/steph-telfair-face-off-tonight.php</guid>
<category>New York Knicks</category>
<pubDate>Sun, 09 Jan 2005 15:54:18 -0800</pubDate>
</item>


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