Basketball

The Clippers’ head coaching job is undoubtedly the most intriguing out of all of the ones that are currently open for next season. Assuming Chris Paul re-signs with the team in free agency, L.A. will return the core of a team that ...
The Clippers’ head coaching job is undoubtedly the most intriguing out of all of the ones that are currently open for next season. Assuming Chris Paul re-signs with the team in free agency, L.A. will return the core of a team that was talented enough to win 56 regular season games and two in the…
30 minutes ago
Portland Trail Blazers owner Paul Allen is making the most of his offseason. After recently selling a pair of blue curtains painting for $43.8 million, he has now purchased, restored and displayed a 46-foot tall V-2 rocket used by Nazi G...
Portland Trail Blazers owner Paul Allen is making the most of his offseason. After recently selling a pair of blue curtains painting for $43.8 million, he has now purchased, restored and displayed a 46-foot tall V-2 rocket used by Nazi Germany in World War 2 at his Flying Heritage Museum in Everett, Washington. Bill Sheets of the Herald Net reports that there are now only six such rockets in the United States and 16 total in the world. Even better, the paper filmed time-lapse video of the rocket being assembled (below). Microsoft billionaire Paul Allen added the rocket to his collection of World War II-era aircraft and weapons in 2003, and its restoration was recently completed, military aviation curator Cory Graff said. The restored rocket was brought to the Flying Heritage Collection museum at Paine Field in three sections on Monday, and crews worked all day to have the rocket reassembled and ready for display today. ... "It's definitely an iconic piece of machinery. It fits very well into our technology theme," Graff said. "It's great to have that as an example of a milestone of World War II aviation and technology." Aubrey Cohen of the Seattle PI has more details. Just like Christmas here, except you know what's in the package," Graff said. And most Christmas gifts aren't 46 feet tall, with the ability to carry 2,000 pounds of explosives 200 miles at 3,400 mph. V-2, short for Vergeltungswaffe (Retaliation Weapon) 2, was the commonly used name of the Aggregat-4 rocket, which Germany deployed in the last year of World War II. It was the world's first long-range ballistic missile, the first human-made object to travel into space and the basis for future U.S. and Soviet rockets and ballistic missiles. Image via HeraldNet video on YouTube -- Ben Golliver | benjamin.golliver@gmail.com | Twitter
35 minutes ago
To answer your first question, that is Todd MacCulloch getting dunked on. He played for the Nets in 2002, one of those years when the real NBA finals was the Lakers vs. Kings in the Western Conference Finals and whichever team got there ...
To answer your first question, that is Todd MacCulloch getting dunked on. He played for the Nets in 2002, one of those years when the real NBA finals was the Lakers vs. Kings in the Western Conference Finals and whichever team got there was going to steamroll New Jersey. Which is what happened, the Lakers…
38 minutes ago
The New York Knicks are one of the biggest brands in the NBA, if not all of professional sports. They’ve won two championships, boast a legendary core of alumni, and have the biggest television market in the country. Their history should...
The New York Knicks are one of the biggest brands in the NBA, if not all of professional sports. They’ve won two championships, boast a legendary core of alumni, and have the biggest television market in the country. Their history should speak for itself. Unfortunately over the past decade and a half, they’ve had one [...]The post The 15 Biggest New York Knicks Fails in the Last 15 Years appeared first on Dime Magazine (dimemag.com) : Daily NBA News, NBA Trades, NBA Rumors, Basketball Videos, Sneakers.
42 minutes ago
Acquiring any player, whether it’s via trade, free agency, or the draft, comes with an air of uncertainty. The NBA has no guaranteed covenant and all sales are final, no matter how talented, proven, or productive the player may have been...
Acquiring any player, whether it’s via trade, free agency, or the draft, comes with an air of uncertainty. The NBA has no guaranteed covenant and all sales are final, no matter how talented, proven, or productive the player may have been in year’s past. But these memories—especially recent ones—often clouds the judgment of a fan who thinks of players as actual puzzle pieces as opposed to emotional human beings. We might have a good idea how a player will respond to his new surroundings, but we’re never 100% sure. No matter who we’re talking about. When Jason Terry signed with the Boston Celtics, most (including myself) thought they were getting the second best offensive player from the 2011 NBA champions. Someone who knew what it took to defeat the Miami Heat, and a player who could knock down a PUJIT (pull up jumper in transition) with the consistency of a functioning automatic car window. The narrative behind the signing immediately made Terry “Ray Allen’s replacement,” which was half true. The similarities were on par with the differences, but while Terry wasn’t as prolific as Allen from behind the arc, his addition projected to add a brand new dimension to Boston’s offense. Terry could set up a pick-and-roll. He could pull up off the dribble. He could catch and shoot from almost anywhere on the floor with a legitimate chance of seeing the ball go in. He could attack in the mid-range and be (somewhat of) a threat below the foul line. Unfortunately, the previous paragraph is written entirely in past tense because over the course of 79 regular season games then six in the playoffs, none of its sentences could be used to accurately describe what Jason Terry brought to Boston this season. Let’s paint the picture by comparing how Terry scored the ball in his last season with Dallas with his first season in Boston. For starters, his independent action was drastically altered. On the Mavericks, 49.9% of Terry’s made shots were unassisted. Last season that number dropped to 23.1% (for those wondering if having a ball-dominant point guard like Rajon Rondo was the culprit for this drop, 28.2% of Terry’s shots were unassisted after the All-Star break, long after Rondo hurt his knee). Terry was a player who needed the ball in his hands to succeed, yet having the ball in his hands for any purpose other than to shoot didn’t happen nearly enough this season. Age and natural decline surely did their part in Terry’s overall declining numbers, but he wasn’t the same player in part because he wasn’t used the same way. Last year with Dallas, 25.8% of Terry’s offense was from pick-and-roll action, with 25% coming from spot-up shots and just 7.7% coming with him running off a screen, according to Synergy Sports. On paper the fit was there for Boston to replicate some of the pick-and-roll action that Terry had so much success with in Dallas. There, Dirk Nowitzki was a major factor, with defenses choosing to stay home on the big German for fear of giving up a wide open shot after a hook pass. Once he signed with Boston the thinking was that Terry could just do the same thing with either Kevin Garnett or Brandon Bass, two forwards who hardly ever miss wide open shots from the mid-range. But for whatever reason that never happened. For the season, only 14.8% of Terry’s offense came as the ball-handler on pick-and-rolls, per Synergy Sports. Spot-up shots were the bulk of how he found himself engaged in Boston’s offense, as they took up nearly a third of his production (30.8%); Terry found 18.4% of his offense resulting from running off screens, which wasn’t ever something he specialized in. I guess what I’m trying to say here is this: not all the blame should be placed on Terry and Terry alone for his disappointing season. Boston’s coaching staff didn’t place him often enough in places that emphasize his strengths. Which begs to ask why did they sign him in the first place? Was the plan all along to simply pretend Terry could just plug ri
42 minutes ago
Flynn Robinson, former Lakers guard, dies at 72
Flynn Robinson, former Lakers guard, dies at 72
about 1 hour ago
This can be viewed as sour grapes, or it can be viewed as a true assessment. P.J. Carlesimo was not retained by the Brooklyn Nets after they were eliminated by the Chicago Bulls in the first round. In fact, they got rid of him the next d...
This can be viewed as sour grapes, or it can be viewed as a true assessment. P.J. Carlesimo was not retained by the Brooklyn Nets after they were eliminated by the Chicago Bulls in the first round. In fact, they got rid of him the next day. Brooklyn’s billionaire owner has spent a lot of money on the roster (and the relocation obviously) and he expecting that to translate into immediate success on the court. While the Nets are improved, they still have a ways to go. According to P.J., the organization’s goal of winning a title in the next year or so are unrealistic. He’s right. “When you have a job in this league that you have a chance to win every night, that’s very special, and Brooklyn is one of those jobs.  Having said that, the expectations to win a championship in two years, that’s a heavy load for anybody, not just for Brooklyn. I don’t know if that’s realistic the way the roster is right now.  I would not say that team could not win a championship. We thought we could this year if things broke a little better for us.” H/T: Newsday
about 1 hour ago
Amin Elhassan of ESPN.com (Insider) offers his thoughts on the three best fits for the Portland Trail Blazers, who will select No. 10 overall in the 2013 NBA Draft. Ben McLemore, SG, Kansas (Chad Ford Big Board ranking: No. 2): McLemo...
Amin Elhassan of ESPN.com (Insider) offers his thoughts on the three best fits for the Portland Trail Blazers, who will select No. 10 overall in the 2013 NBA Draft. Ben McLemore, SG, Kansas (Chad Ford Big Board ranking: No. 2): McLemore would be an excellent complement to Lillard in the backcourt as a great shooter and athlete. His main criticism, lack of aggression, would not be an issue in Portland with other offensive options ahead of him like Lillard and Aldridge. C.J. McCollum, Combo, Lehigh (No. 7): McCollum is undersized as a shooting guard, but he is a big-time scorer with some playmaking ability and mirrors Lillard's maturity and professionalism despite being just 21. Ideally, McCollum could be the third guard in a rotation with Lillard and Wesley Matthews. Cody Zeller, C, Indiana (No. 9): Zeller might not fit the bill of a defensive anchor, but he is a center with attributes no Blazers center has -- an excellent feel for the game and the ability to play with his back to the basket or face up. He is the type of player you can insert into a game right now. Cody Zeller was a popular name among the post-lottery mock drafts. Chad Ford of ESPN.com has liked McLemore for the Blazers in an ideal world. Blazers guard Damian Lillard listed McLemore, C.J. McCollum and Nerlens Noel as his three favorite players in the Draft. Hat tip: Casey Holdahl, Blazers.com -- Ben Golliver | benjamin.golliver@gmail.com | Twitter
about 1 hour ago
The mayor of San Antonio says everyone knows the best barbecue and basketball comes from Texas. The mayor of Memphis notes barbecue is prized in his city, where restaurant smoke stacks rise like steeples. So the mayors have bet barbecue ...
The mayor of San Antonio says everyone knows the best barbecue and basketball comes from Texas. The mayor of Memphis notes barbecue is prized in his city, where restaurant smoke stacks rise like steeples. So the mayors have bet barbecue on the NBA Western Conference final. Mayor Julian Castro will pay up with barbecue from The Granary [...]
about 1 hour ago
Name: Matt Barnes 2012-2013 Key Stats: 10.3 ppg, 4.6 rpg, 1.5 apgAge: 33Years in NBA: 10Years With Clippers: 12012-2013 Salary: $1,229,255Contract Status: Unrestricted Free AgentIn A Nutshell: In most cases, it takes a combination of i...
Name: Matt Barnes 2012-2013 Key Stats: 10.3 ppg, 4.6 rpg, 1.5 apgAge: 33Years in NBA: 10Years With Clippers: 12012-2013 Salary: $1,229,255Contract Status: Unrestricted Free AgentIn A Nutshell: In most cases, it takes a combination of ingredients to create a contending roster in the NBA. First and foremost you have to have a superstar or two. In the last 30 years, only the 2004 Detroit Pistons managed to win an NBA title without an MVP in their relative prime on the roster. But once you've added the stars, the reality of the NBA salary cap and the luxury tax invariably requires another key ingredient: productive players on cheap contracts. With a few exceptions (the Heat don't rely as heavily on role players because their stars are so dominant, the Lakers and Mavs didn't need as much cheap production because they were willing to pay huge luxury tax bills) you need both of these elements to really have a shot at a championship. That cheap production can come from a young player still on a rookie contract, or from a veteran who has a great season playing for the NBA minimum, but all the best teams get it from one source or another. The Clippers have their star power in place in Chris Paul and Blake Griffin. But after adding Jamal Crawford this summer, they had to try to find production on a budget for their final few roster spots. It was the last signing of the off-season that proved to be the bargain of the year. Matt Barnes played college basketball at UCLA, broke into the NBA with the Clippers, and played two seasons with the Lakers. He makes his home in L.A. and over the summer he was showing up at the Clippers training facility to scrimmage. When Chris Paul saw how Barnes was playing and found out that he was still a free agent, he went to the front office and lobbied on his behalf; the Clippers signed Barnes on September 14, just a couple of weeks before the start of camp. At the time it seemed like a strange signing. After all, the Clippers already had Caron Butler (a former All Star making $8M a season) and their signing of Grant Hill (another former All Star) had been a pretty significant coup. What did they need Barnes for? Where would he play? With a well-earned reputation as a hot-head around the league, was this really the kind of guy you wanted as your third string small forward? But with Hill injured to begin the season, Barnes went out and had a career-year at 33. He immediately established himself as a key member of the rotation and in fact was on the wing to close games from opening night. He finished the year playing more minutes than Butler and was the Clippers fifth leading scorer, behind the big three of Griffin, Paul and Crawford and ever-so-slightly behind Butler. He was the team's perimeter 'stopper' on defense and provided a level of toughness and intensity that every team needs. And he did all of that for the NBA minimum. Strengths: There little mystery to the production Matt Barnes provides on an NBA court. He runs his way into points and he works his way into defensive stops. He may not be the most talented guy out there, but he works harder than anyone. Barnes averaged a career high 10.3 points per game this season. He scored 14.4 points per 36 minutes, slightly less than he averaged per minute for the 2007 Warriors, but when you adjust for pace this season was still his career year scoring the basketball. Most nights the Clippers knew they could count on Griffin, Paul and Crawford for offense, but going into the season it was unclear who else might provide some scoring. Many nights that wound up being Barnes, which no one would have expected heading into the season. Barnes got his points in essentially three ways: (a) spotting up for open three pointers -- he's not a great three point shooter, but at .342 this season he was more than adequate; (b) finishing on the break -- the Clippers second unit at its best was converting turnovers into fast break baskets, and Barnes was invariably filli
about 1 hour ago