Archive for December, 2009

Clippers vs Celtics Recap 12/27/09

Posted by TheCalmInsanity under TCN Blog

Garrett W. Ellwood/NBAE via Getty Images

Garrett W. Ellwood/NBAE via Getty Images

As we’re nearing the end of the year and my birthday (December 31st), the Clippers gave us a belated Christmas present and an early birthday present (for me at least). This game, like most other Clipper victories, was considered a game that the Clippers should not have won.

For some reason, the Clippers seem to play up to the good opponents such as Denver and Boston, and they play down to all the opponents that they should have beat. Even the victories against the bad teams have been ugly and scrappy. Well if you watched this game, you could see a lot of heart and determination from the Clippers team.

Aside from bad games from Al Thornton and Eric Gordon, the entire Clipper team did well. Deandre Jordan got the start- a big upgrade from being a “fish out of water” any time he stepped on the court in the previous few games. Not only did he start, but he did well- he rebounded well, he played good defense on Kevin Garnett, Kendrick Perkins, and even the more versatile Rasheed Wallace.

Baron Davis had a STRONG game, with 24 points and 13 assists on 7-11 shooting. Kaman also had a monster game with 27 points and 12 assists on 12-21 shooting.

The last few plays is where this game went crazy. Down by 3, Baron Davis drove into the lane. While everyone in the crowd, everyone watching at home, and yes even the Celtics team was scratching their heads wondering why he would take a 2 pointer when his team is down 3- they collapsed on him anyways. As they collapsed, Baron delivered a perfect pass to Butler for the 3 pointer in the corner (I’ve realized this is when Butler is a HUGE asset. As a relief shooter to kick out to, for corner 3′s and set shots. Butler has proven to be very clutch, hitting many big shots as a Clipper and we’re still in December). Butler tied the game 90-90 with his clutch 3 pointer, and in the next possession Baron bailed Rondo out with a foul with 1.5 seconds left in the game. Rondo missed both free throws- technically missing 3 of them in a row if you count his “practice shot” which made Dunleavy very angry.

There’s 1.5 seconds left on the clock. Baron told fans, his friends, his coaching staff, and his team that he wants the ball and that he WILL make the shot. The team obviously trusts Baron, as they gave him the ball as he ran away from the basket. He caught the ball, turned around, fading away in Rondo’s face- and bombed a shot right inside the 3 point line near the top of the key as the buzzer sounded to win the game.

Here’s an article from my friend Eric Pincus- an article I enjoyed reading. He’s a senior writer for hoopsworld and also does the Q & A for Clippers.com.

The Los Angeles Clippers upset the Boston Celtics Sunday night 92-90 with a buzzer-beater from Baron Davis. Here are some notes from the game . . .

- That’s the Baron Davis the Clippers thought they were signing two summers ago. After a terrible first year, the team has been very happy with Baron’s performance this year, even if it hasn’t kept LA in the West’s top eight.

- Coach Dunleavy praised Davis for his work all season, lighter, healthier and more efficient. He specifically pointed out his chemistry with Chris Kaman, running the pick and roll.

“Baron [Davis] is delivering the ball in a timely fashion. With Kaman down low we have so many options,” said Dunleavy. “They have really worked on their timing and ability to play together. Kaman is an assist waiting to happen, he is a threat. When they work together they create difficult for the other team.”

- Now if Dunleavy can only get Baron and Eric Gordon to develop a similar chemistry.

- DeAndre Jordan got his first start of the season, Dunleavy going big to try and match up to Boston’s trio of Kevin Garnett, Kendrick Perkins and Rasheed Wallace. Although Jordan didn’t do a lot that necessarily stood out, Kaman praised him as a difference maker tonight. DJ finished with six points, eight boards and three blocks. He missed a couple of big free throws late but then so did Rajon Rondo with just 1.5 seconds left in the game.

Keep reading Eric’s article here!

Merry Christmas everyone! HUGE UPDATES SOON!

Posted by TheCalmInsanity under TCN Blog

Have a Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays guys, and an amazing new year.

TheClippersNation has been undergoing some changes lately. If you’re a user of our forums, you’ve probably noticed by now. I’ve taken down the forums for now- you can still access the old ones by clicking on the forum tab. But for now, the forums aren’t on www.TheClippersNation.com/forums anymore.

Why? Because we’ve just bought a huge upgrade in forum software. We now have Invision Power Boards, one of the best (if not THE best) forum software out there. Please keep checking on the front page for the release of these forums, it will be VERY SOON.

The forums will be much nicer, with many many added features to make posting much more fun and enjoyable.

We hope you guys will enjoy our hard work, and remember that we’re always trying our best to make this site better.

Blake Griffin Update

Posted by TheCalmInsanity under TCN Blog

Blake Griffin Update:

Los Angeles Clippers rookie forward Blake Griffin underwent a CT Scan and MRI of the stress fracture of his left patella yesterday.

In addition to his continued strength and conditioning work, Griffin has been cleared to begin running on an AlterG Anti-Gravity treadmill beginning today and is expected to begin running on a normal full-body weight treadmill next week.

Based on expected progression, Griffin is expected to be cleared for a return to basketball related activity in approximately three weeks.

Griffin, the first overall selection in the 2009 NBA Draft, suffered a non-displaced stress fracture of his left patella during the Clippers’ last preseason game vs. the New Orleans Hornets on Friday, October 23rd.

This is completely normal. The Clippers had this timeframe for him all along- because now he’s cleared to run on the anti-gravity treadmill. Blake Griffin is on track and will be making his debut somewhere in the last 2 weeks of January. This is good news because if the CT scan wasn’t clean, we could have been looking at a much longer time table. Let’s just be thankful that he’s been progressing, and will be cleared for full contact basketball activities very soon.

Kevin Arnovitz’s Recap from ClipperBlog:

The league is changing and the seismic shift can be felt most conspicuously in the front-court. Some teams are getting stretchier at both the power forward and center, while others are employing smaller, more agile bigs who can beat you from any spot on the floor. The Clippers, as currently constituted, have real vulnerabilities defending this new breed of big men. They field two traditional 7-footers whose primary strengths are shot blocking, weak side help and basket protection, but who struggle with quick, versatile athletes like Carl Landry who have a range of offensive weaponry that can combat length. Landry unleashes that arsenal tonight against the Clippers’ big men.

Landry embodies all the strengths of Rick Adelman’s read-and-react offense. We see this on his first score at (1st, 8:21) when Kaman leaves him at the weak elbow to cut off a potential baseline drive by Luis Scola. Landry immediately dives to the hoop behind Kaman where he receives the feed from Scola. He’s fouled on the play, and sinks his first two of what will be 13 free throws on the night. When Brian Skinner checks in for the Clippers in the second period, Landry faces up and uses that big drop step to create room to burst past his slower defender to the rack for another trip to the stripe.  Landry is particularly useful in transition because he can beat just about every big down the floor and set up position just a few feet away from the hoop, which is how he gets his first bucket from the field (2nd, 10:37).

Chris Kaman applies his size and footwork to establish his dominance down low, while Landry uses his agility, strength and capacity to manufacture shots from anywhere. Since the Rockets’ half-court program is all about creating pockets of space on the floor that players can fill for clean looks, Landry’s ability to hurt you underneath, off the dribble, and as a face-up jump shooter make him invaluable in that system.

The Clippers have scrapped their way into the top half of the league defensively, but they simply don’t have the personnel to match up against a big — and I use the term loosely — like Landry who moves his defenders around the floor. Blake Griffin is slated to be that defender, but until he takes the floor, the Clippers will have to hope that when Kaman and Camby get drawn outside, or beaten off the dribble, there’s someone on the wing who can prevent the Carl Landrys from slipping to the basket. And when faced-up one-on-one, the Clippers’ big men are going to need help dealing with that mobility. Tonight, the Clips do no such thing and, despite their length, get absolutely shredded inside by Landry’s athleticism.

It’s not all Landry. Throughout the game, the Rockets run interference at Marcus Camby, whose primary assignment is Luis Scola.  Sometimes it’s Landry rolling off a high screen that diverts Camby. Other times, it’s penetration by Lowry that demands Camby’s attention. But whenever Camby steps in to help, Scola flashes to the high post or floats out to the baseline between 15 and 18 feet, or merely finds the open side of the glass and awaits a pass for a close-range shot.

How do the Rockets get such easy shots? They move the ball from side to side to scramble the defense. We see it on their first score of the night. Aaron Brooks and Chuck Hayes run a little pick-and-roll on the right side. After Camby gets lured to the action to cut off potential penetration by Aaron Brooks, the Rockets swing it around to Scola, who has floated out to that spot along the baseline. The Clippers, whose entire defense has tilted to the ball side, can’t close quickly enough, and Scola hits the 17-footer.

Figure that the Clippers’ first two defensive priorities of the evening were (1) transition defense and (2) chasing the Rockets’ shooters off the line. Mission accomplished on both fronts. The Clippers win the fast break battle 21-6, while they hold the Rockets to 5-18 from beyond the arc. Apart from Kyle Lowry and Tracy McGrady’s brief cameo, the Rockets’ perimeter players have forgettable evenings.

Instead, the Rockets adjust by drawing contact inside (the aforementioned Landry), and using their big men in step-out situations once Camby and Kaman commit themselves to help. Why? Because that’s what the defense is giving them — which is the governing principle of their offense this season. All five guys in the Rockets’ unit are forever surveying the floor to see where the defense is over-committing. When they identify that spot, they move to it.  And the man with the ball is attuned to that dynamic. Next time you catch the Rockets on TV or in person, watch how each guy is scanning the floor. They’re acutely aware that shot creation won’t (can’t) come from any individual talent — though both Landry and Brooks have their opportunities against certain matchups — it’ll come from the acquisition of open space.  And that open space develops because the defense gets drawn to the ball. Fill that space, reverse the ball, convert the open look.  That’s what Houston does tonight, and it succeeds against a Clippers team that has a reasonably efficient offensive night of their own: 99 points on 94 possessions.

The Clippers derive their offense by exploiting their two best mismatches on the floor — Baron Davis (vs. Aaron Brooks) and Chris Kaman (vs. Houston’s committee). They work themselves a bevy of good shots, but they’re still too impatient. For every nice kickout to Eric Gordon for an open 3PA, there’s a silly jumper off the dribble early in the shot clock by the usual guilty parties. Or missed opportunities in the half-court because the man with the ball has blinders on. It’s smart to be on the attack, but it’s better to recognize that sometimes the attack — especially when the defense collapses — is a means, not an end. The best shot on the floor is often in your peripheral vision.

Baron deserves a lot of praise. He assists the four other starters at least once, and establishes the offensive flow from the beginning of the game. He even works Marcus into the offense to start the fourth quarter on a couple of pretty feeds close to the basket. The majority of Baron’s shots are inside of 10 feet, and that doesn’t include the drives to the hoop that result in four trips to the line. But more important, he’s guiding his teammates to the places on the floor where they can do the most good.

Kaman exploits single coverage for the second consecutive night, and controls the right side of the floor with a series of hooks, baseline drives, and jumpers off screens. With a few exceptions, the quality of his non-jumpers correspond with the compactness of his dribble moves. He’s introducing a touch pass to Camby on the weak side, and is anticipating double-teams more alertly. He’s often passing the ball out just before he’s blitzed or, even better, he’s spinning away from the help to create a shot for himself. Tonight’s six turnovers were less about defensive pressure and more a symptom of carelessness.

Steve Perrin’s Recap from ClipsNation:

The Clippers held the Rockets‘ two leading scorers, Aaron Brooks andTrevor Ariza, who average 17 points each, to 7 points apiece, on combined 4 for 19 shooting.  They also limited the Rockets to 5 for 18 from three, including 1 for their last 10 – three point shooting being a key to the Rockets win over the Clippers earlier this month.  So you’d think this game might have gone LA’s way.  You’d think.

Instead, every other Rocket player picked up the slack, first and foremostCarl Landry.  Playing just a couple days after major oral surgery to repair the damage done by Dirk Nowitzki’s elbow, Landry scored 27 points on 7 for 10 shooting and 13 of 15 free throws.  The Clippers hung around in the second half, and cut the lead to two in the fourth quarter.  But they never led after the last minute of the first quarter, and the Rockets prevaild 108 to 99.

I actually spent all day today at Disneyland with the family.  I watched the game on the DVR about midnight after getting home, and so it’s pretty late as I work on this recap.  Which is my way of saying, lower your expectations.  I don’t know why the Clippers couldn’t stop – couldn’t come close to stopping, really – Landry, Luis Scola, or David Andersen, who combined to shoot 19 for 27.  Someone commented on the preview today that the Rockets are the anti-Clippers.  The Clippers have tons of talent on paper, but seem to underachieve on the floor.  The Rockets are the opposite.  When the Clippers need a player to step up, it almost never happens.  The Rockets are the opposite.   When the Clippers need a bucket, they get a turnover.  When the Rockets need a play – they get a play.  They are the anti-Clippers.

Case in point – the Rockets are an undersized team, and as such they are 27th in the league in blocked shots.  With the Clippers still clinging to a faint hope in this game, down six with the ball with a minute to go, Ariza blocked Eric Gordon’s layup.  Still down six seconds later, Scola blocked Baron Davis’ layup.  The Rockets, the fourth worst shot blocking team in the league, got three blocked shots in the final minute of the game.  Why?  Because they needed them.

By contrast, when the Clippers got the lead down to 2 at 91-89 early in the fourth quarter, and had the ball with a chance to tie or take the lead, they really needed a bucket.  But when Baron dished out of the lane to the corner to Rasual Butler deep in the shot clock, Butler decided to pass up the three ball, and instead earned a shot clock violation.  The next trip down, Craig Smith took a nice pass from Kaman and instead of going straight up with it, he decided to loop under the basket, and instead stepped out of bounds.  The next trip Gordon missed a fast break layup (he reacted as if he was fouled).  The next trip Butler missed a three.  The next trip, Kaman turned the ball over.  By the end of this sequence, the Clippers had on five key possessions turned the ball over three times, missed on layup, and missed one three.  And suddenly instead of being down 2, they were down 10.  Game over.

The Clippers squandered a career high 29 points from Chris Kaman and a 50% shooting night for the team.  But Eric Gordon struggled, and with Houston scoring 65 points in the first half and 108 in the game, LA needed Gordon to shoot better than 6 for 17 in a shootout.

Last thing – it’s pretty clear that fouls were a factor in this game.  The Clippers were not getting a lot of whistles from the refs, something that did not go unnoticed by MDsr and Kaman, who each picked up technical fouls arguing non-calls (and for what it’s worth, they were both bad calls – Kaman was definitely fouled each time).  Houston took 17 more free throws in the game, and made 11 of them.  That was more than enough to get them over the top.

Dissecting Iguodala’s Last Shot

Posted by TheCalmInsanity under TCN Blog

Here’s my picture on the last second shot by Iguodala…

Watching the game, I thought it was good. Even watching some of the replays, I thought it was good. But what confuses me is why didn’t they do it frame by frame? I’m sure that’s how the refs came to their conclusion. Well whether they used it or not, I did, and I’m confident that the refs made the right decision (based on the backboard lighting ALONE it’s too late). But even with the backboard lights on AND the time “officially” at 0.0, it is still arguably in Iguodala’s fingertips. I’m sure their quality was much better than mine as well. Click on the icon below to see it.

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