Archive for January, 2010

One would think just losing to the Nets, breaking their 11 game losing streak, would instantly make you say that it’s the lowest point in the season. No team in the league wanted to lose to the Nets, much less lose to them by a double digit margin.

So what do the Clippers do after embarrassing themselves in front of the Nets, the worst team in the East? They embarrass themselves in front of the Timberwolves, the worst team in the West.

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Eric Gordon POSTER dunk in High School

Posted by TheCalmInsanity under TCN Blog

A rare clip of an unbelievable dunk in high school. It’s only fitting that I put up a video like this since All-Star weekend is coming up, and Eric Gordon is our representative for the dunk-in.

Thanks to ballislife.com for the clip:

After doing some research on the 24 year old prospect, I’ve come to the conclusion that he’s a scoring point guard, or a combo guard. Although he averaged about 40 points, 6 assists, and 7 rebounds in high school, he didn’t live up to the full hype in college. He wasn’t bad though- on the court. Off the court he had 8 run ins with the police, and surprisingly enough even after all that trouble he still ended up going to the NBA in the 2nd round to the Bulls.

Soon thereafter the Bulls sent him to the Iowa Energy (D-League team) and then he went to the Springfield Armor (another D-League team). He averaged about 20 points per game, along with 7.5 assists in the D-League. 7.5 assists is nice, but he and his teammate Morris Almond (who averages 28 points per game) pretty much ran a two man show.

He’s about average on defense, he’s a decent on-ball defender but needs work.

King James visits LA

Posted by LAC_12 under TCN Blog

Might have gone a little LeBron happy, over 70% of my shots are of him – however I did manage to get some shots of the legendary Shaq and our boy DJ. Congrats to Sul for his ridiculous shooting night, too bad we couldn’t come home with a W. Applied a different style of editing, let me know what you think.

Lakers vs Clippers 01-06-10

Posted by LAC_12 under TCN Blog

After our embarrassing loss to the Lakers, Id like to add some pictures I took of our previous, more fortunate event.

Here’s the story, from their greatest stretch of the season until arguably their worst:

We start this “story” from when the Clippers had a 4 game winning streak, with wins over teams including the Lakers, the Celtics, and other good opponents. Should have been a 6 game winning streak, but after beating Boston, Clips gave a game away to a very injured Portland team who even lost Aldridge to injury 10 minutes into the game.

17-18, one game away from .500.

BIG confidence tester on the way, with two very hot teams (Memphis, winners of 8 or their last 10, who reached .500 recently- and New Orleans with CP3 back, who just had a 6 game winning streak). Next two games after that? Back to back games, vs the Lakers and Cavs. Ouch.. But with the way Clippers had been playing, their outlook was BRING IT ON.

Chris Kaman was looking like an All-Star, with 7 straight games of 20+ points.

Blake Griffin was 1 week away from coming back to the team.

THEN, all of a sudden..

Their first chance to get back to .500 in a long time, the Clippers were playing the Grizzlies. Chris Kaman injured his back during warmups, but the team was fine without him- or so it seemed. With an amazing first half and great start to the 2nd half, Baron Davis got ready to shoot his second free throw with the Clippers having a 12 point lead. Suddenly the jumbotron told EVERYONE in the whole arena to evacuate, and that there is some kind of danger. Prime Ticket goes on to the next show and leaves Clipper fans staring at their TV’s wondering what happened.

Clippers and Grizzlies resume play on the court 36 minutes later. While Dunleavy said this was no excuse for losing, a team who was red hot and in the mood to play has to have some kind of different outlook after 36 minutes of waiting to resume play. Camby left the game with a stomach virus and was unable to help the Clippers potentially finish off the Grizzlies, also leaving Craig Smith and Deandre Jordan as the only Clipper big men left in this game. Grizzlies came back wanting the game more, took over and won the game.

Instead of being .500 with a 5 game winning streak, Clippers become 17-19 with a 1 game losing streak and red-hot Hornets the next day, and Lakers and Cavs on a back to back that same weekend. Also without Chris Kaman, and with Camby questionable for the next few games.

Kaman’s injury was more serious than expected, and he missed the next few games as well. Things could not have gotten worse for the Clippers for this tough stretch.

On top of all this? Instead of Blake Griffin coming back sometime this week or next week, we get SUDDEN AND UNEXPECTED NEWS that Griffin will undergo surgery and miss the entire rest of the season.

So let’s recap all this…

17-18, about to become 18-18
4 game winning streak
Kaman looking like an All-Star
Up 12 on the Grizzlies, with 5th win in their sights
Expecting to have Camby and Kaman next game, as usual
Expecting to have Blake Griffin back sometime that week/ next week

All that, became this:

17-21, playing the Cavs tomorrow on a back to back after playing Lakers tonight
3 game losing streak, with Cavs looming on tomorrow
Kaman STILL INJURED
Losing to the Grizz after Camby becoming injured and a mandatory emergency evacuation delaying the game
Camby not in great condition to play, Kaman refused to play against the Lakers because his back still hurt
Blake Griffin out for the entire season.

…What a big swing. You guys also have to remember- seeing Blake Griffin go down was very tough on the team in the beginning of the season, and it really impacted their confidence. Also seeing a friend of theirs and a teammate not being able to play his first NBA games really put everyone on the team in shock. Imagine how they felt, AFTER WAITING FOR 8 WEEKS TO SEE GRIFFIN ON THE COURT, hear that he’s out for the whole season.

Although I believe Demar is a born dunker, don’t underestimate Eric Gordon… he has as much vert as Dwayne Wade, and although he doesn’t do crazy things in games, he’s fully capable of doing it. I think he’s just more fundamental if anything… Clipper fans have seen him dunk on people, and also seen him go up for layups instead of ferocious dunks.

I won’t knock him until I see him try.

Although I do admit I was surprised, I thought maybe Deandre Jordan was the most suited on our Clipper team but I guess this isn’t his year.

Source- NBA.com:

NEW YORK — Raptors guard DeMar DeRozan and Clippers guard Eric Gordon will compete in the All-Star Slam Dunk-In competition at halftime of the T-Mobile Rookie Challenge on Friday, Feb. 12. The winner will advance to the All-Star Saturday Night Sprite Slam Dunk event.
DeRozan and Gordon will each get two dunks in the one-round dunk-in, with the player receiving the highest percentage of fan votes via NBA.com and SMS text messaging advancing to the dunk contest on All-Star Saturday.
Taking the fourth and final spot in the event, the dunk-in winner will then compete against three other dunk contestants for the 2010 Sprite Slam Dunk title. The NBA has yet to announce the other dunkers. The Knicks’ Nate Robinson won the contest in 2009.
DeRozan is a rookie forward from USC, averaging 7.8 ppg with Toronto. He was drafted ninth in the 2009 Draft. He created a Web site, LetDeMarDunk.com, to promote his candidacy.
Gordon is in his second NBA season out of Indiana, averaging 17.1 ppg with the Clippers this season after being selected seventh overall in 2008.

All Star Dunk-In Rules

Two dunkers will compete in a one-round competition at halftime of the T-Mobile Rookie Challenge to advance to the All-Star Saturday Night “Sprite Slam Dunk” event.
• Officiating — Throughout the competition, an NBA Referee will judge whether a dunk is considered a made dunk or a missed dunk.
• Time Limit — Upon receiving the ball from the referee, players will have two minutes to complete their dunk. Attempts resulting in missed dunks are unlimited. However, once a made dunk is ruled by the referee, that dunk will be scored. There is no replacing a made dunk, even if time remains.
• Final Attempts — If a player has not begun an attempt that results in a made dunk when the clock expires, he will have two final attempts to do so. An attempt is defined as the ball leaving the player’s (or his teammate’s) hand in an effort to complete the dunk (in any motion other than dribbling). The referee is the final judge and will advise the dunker when he has used an attempt.
• Props — Use of any props (including the use of any person other than a current NBA player in uniform) to assist in any way must be approved in advance of the competition by the NBA Basketball Operations department.
• Two Dunks per player: A random draw will determine the order.
• At the beginning of the event, fan voting polls will open via SMS text messaging and on NBA.com.
• For text message voting, the letter “A” will be assigned to the dunker who goes first. B = Player 2.
• Fans can vote via SMS Text message from their wireless phone by sending in the letter “A” or “B” to the wireless short-code 38657 (DUNKS).
• Voting will be closed two minutes after the final dunk has been completed.
• The combined SMS text message and NBA.com votes will determine who advances.
• The player with a higher percentage of overall votes, rounded to the nearest tenth of a percent, will advance to participate in the Sprite Slam Dunk event on All-Star Saturday Night.
• At the discretion of the referee, instant replay may be consulted for clarification of rules compliance.
• Number of votes per user is unlimited. Voting is available to users on all major wireless carriers in the United States, plus most second-tier carriers. Voting is also available to wireless users in Canada. Standard SMS text message rates apply.

Griffin to undergo surgery to end season

Posted by TheCalmInsanity under TCN Blog

Here’s Eric Pincus’ take on it:

http://www.hoopsworld.com/Story.asp?story_id=14971

…and here’s the official story on NBA.com:

http://www.nba.com/clippers/news/breakingnews100113.html

After experiencing some discomfort during his recently-accelerated rehabilitation program, Clippers’ forward Blake Griffin was examined Tuesday afternoon by Dr. Neal ElAttrache in Los Angeles.

As a result of that examination, it has been determined that the healing in his left patella area has not improved to the expected required level. Griffin will undergo a surgical procedure in the near future, with a recovery prognosis of four to six months. Team personnel will be made available to the media. Further details will be made available as events develop.

Previously on December 23rd, after undergoing a CT Scan and MRI Griffin had been cleared to increase his rehabilitation workload.

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.

Clippers vs Lakers recaps- 1/6/10

Posted by TheCalmInsanity under TCN Blog

Sorry that I haven’t been writing many recaps lately, I’ve been so busy with the forums and updates with the site. I’ll start writing them again very soon.

In the meantime, if you’re reading this and you’re good at writing recaps for games, please email me at thecalminsanity [@] gmail.com and let me know, and we’ll put your work up here on the front page and give you credit for it. Thanks guys!

From Steve Perrin at ClipsNation-

Let the optimism begin.

The Clippers beat the Lakers after nine consecutive losses, 102-91. They did it convincingly. They did it solidly. They did it, most importantly, in the fourth quarter. They have now won four of their last five, including victories over the two best teams in the league, the Lakers and the Celtics. If there were lingering doubts before, they are now gone. The Clippers are for real, and they have every intention of making this season interesting, no matter how long it takes to get Blake Griffin back on the floor. And of course, that’s when it gets really interesting.

In the game preview, I emphasized that Baron Davis needed to dominate the point guard matchup, the one position on the floor where the Clippers had a clear advantage. Let’s give him a big check mark on that one. From the opening tip, Baron abused Derek Fisher. He scored the first time he touched the ball, and then picked Fisher clean 5 seconds later. It didn’t matter much when the Lakers went to Shannon Brown or Jordan Farmar – nobody could guard him, and Baron played arguable his best game as a Clipper.

It wasn’t just the production either. 25 points, 10 assists, 5 rebounds, 2 steals, 10 for 18 shooting – that’s all great. But Baron was a LEADER tonight. He had the team focused and executing from the beginning. It’s not a fluke that his plus/minus was plus 20 in 37 minutes of play. When he was on the floor, the Lakers were not going to win, because if the Clippers needed a basket, Baron was going to get one.

The numbers in the box score are all positive for the Clippers. 46% shooting to 38% for the Lakers. A 50 to 44 rebounding. 28 assists on 40 made baskets. And importantly, only 11 turnovers. After back to back games with 20 turnovers (both Clipper wins, surprisingly) the Clippers needed to do a better job taking care of the ball, and they did it.

But the ebb and flow of the game tells a story that we aren’t used to in Clips Nation. When the Clippers went ice cold and lost their 15 point third quarter lead, the roof didn’t collapse. The Lakers got within two with a minute to go in the third – but after missing six straight shots, the Clippers scored the final four of the period to stretch it back to six (on a basket by Baron and an assist by Baron). Then, when the Lakers scored the first six points of the fourth to tie the game for the first time since 38-38, instead of folding, the Clippers re-took control of the game. With 7 minutes to go, Farmar made two free throws to tie the game at 83. The Clippers proceeded to go on a 16 to 2 run to build an insurmountable 99-85 advantage. Close Clipper-Laker games frequently feature 16 to 2 fourth quarter runs – but invariably it’s the Lakers doing the running.

I really can’t emphasize this point enough. The Clippers have blown 20 point leads in multiple games this year. Meanwhile the Lakers have toyed with opponents all season, playing from behind and then closing furiously to get the win. That the Clippers might build an early double digit lead and that the Lakers might erase that lead is not surprising. That the Clippers would then go on to win the game decisively – that’s shocking. And it’s also a big step forward for this club.

If Baron gets the game ball for the Clippers, Craig Smith gets honorable mention. He put up 12 points, 6 rebounds and 3 assists in 20 minutes, shooting 6 for 7 from the field. He just loves playing the Lakers. He has four double digit scoring games this season, and two of them have come against LAL. It’s interesting because Smith is the opposite of long. He’s squat. And he loves to go against long, lanky Lamar Odom. Smith is used to having guys outreach him – everyone does it. He just wants to get into his defenders body and move him back under the basket, where that length doesn’t matter. Odom’s thin frame and high center of gravity can’t keep Smith out of the paint. So while Lamar is a great low post defender against most of the league, he can’t figure out the bowling ball that is Craig Smith.

Going into the game, we assumed that Kaman and Gordon would also have to have good games. Neither played poorly – but nor were they in peak form. It’s a testament perhaps to how good this team can be when everything is clicking that they just beat the Lakers with Kaman shooting 7 for 19 from the field and Gordon making only one jump shot. To his credit, EJ did not settle for his jumper too often, and got into the paint numerous times where he was 6 for 6, helping him to a 7 for 12 shooting night despite the fact that his jumper was off. (How good can this guy be, if he can 18 points in 11 shots on the Lakers on a night when he’s ice cold from outside? Wow.) Kaman likewise struggled with his jumper but contributed in other ways. He grabbed 14 rebounds and played solid defense on Andrew Bynum, winning his personal matchup with the other center in LA. Kaman finished with 21 points and 14 rebounds. It was his 11th 20+ game out of his last 12.

The other thing we saw on offense was a very aggressive, up tempo attack. The Clippers scored 26 fast break points – a season high. Part of it was simply the energy they brought to the game – they were clearly pumped for this game, and they were flying up and down the court filling lanes. But it was also by design – they clearly thought that the Lakers’ transition defense could be exploited, and they were correct. It’s no coincidence that Baron had one of his best games as a Clipper in a game in which they were pushing the tempo. By the way, you won’t see a better bounce pass than the one Baron threw forty feet to Rasual Butler for the jam. Milph praised it highly, but they never really gave it enough credit in my opinion. If you haven’t seen it, take a look on NBA.com. He had a tiny window between Kobe on the left and Bynum on the right, and he actually put spin on the ball that made it bounce up and back to Butler. If he throws that ball straight through that opening without english, it skips out of Butler’s reach and out of bounds. Watch it come out of his hand in the slow motion – he very deliberately puts spin on the pass. That is a simply amazing dish.

As for the defense, the Clippers held Kobe Bryant to 10 for 30 shooting. Though he finished with 33, no one else on the Lakers was able to step up and help him. They really missed Pau Gasol in this one, as the offense seemed stagnant and wholly dependent on number 24. Bynum finished with 15, but he took 16 shots to get there. Shannon Brown made a nice contribution off the bench with 15 points, but no one else wearing purple reached double figures. Odom was 3 for 11, and was thwarted on three crucial plays – once when Baron drew a charge, and on key blocks by Camby and Kaman. Ron Artest was 3 for 7, and showed the worst part of his game on a key fourth quarter possession, when he overdribbled his way into a turnover and an Eric Gordon dunk the other way. I really feel like that play was the momentum swinger for the Clippers – if the Lakers score on that possession, the game is tied again, and instead the Clippers built the lead back to four at the start of their 16-2 run.

For his part, Kobe was absolutely magnificent – for 2 and a half minutes in the third quarter. Over the course of those 150 seconds, he scored 14 points on six consecutive Laker possessions, making 5 of 5 field goals and 3 of 3 free throws. The other 38 minutes he was on the court he was 5 for 25 – 20%. As they did against Brandon Roy on Monday, the Clippers played defense by committee – EJ got the assignment to start, but Al Thornton, Ricky Davis, Baron Davis and Rasual Butler all spent time on him. Butler did the best job (Kobe’s a little too big for EJ). At one point in the fourth, Sool cut off the baseline drive so effectively that Kobe simply went out of bounds with the ball.

Speaking of Butler, we haven’t really been talking about it, but look who the starting small forward is again. Rasual has gotten three consecutive starts – all three of them Clipper victories. It didn’t seem like a definitive move at first. He started against the Sixers because of the matchup – MDsr wanted him on Iguodala. Then Thornton was sick and Butler started against the Blazers, while Al played only 9 minutes. Tonight, Butler once again was in the starting lineup, and Thornton played only 6 minutes. I’m assuming that is at least partially because of Al’s recent illness still, especially considering that the Artest matchup would seem to have favored Al as the bigger three. But regardless of the reason, it’s hard to ignore that the team is on a three game winning streak and really seeming to gel with Butler in the first five. I’ve always believed that this was MDsr’s preference with this roster – Butler was just shooting so poorly early in the season that it wasn’t working. But with Rasual having relocated his touch, he seems to be a better fit for the first unit, as we suspected he would be. Let’s keep an eye on this over the next several games. Al has not been good off the bench this season, but if he embraces the role, I think he could be an ideal sixth man.

The Clippers get three days off before taking on Miami Sunday afternoon. The team keeps hanging around .500, and they can climb back to within a game of break even against the Heat. If they play like they did tonight, it won’t be a problem.

IP BOARDS FULLY READY!!

Posted by TheCalmInsanity under TCN Blog

Thank you guys for your patience, and now finally our IP boards are fully up and running.

If you were a member of our forums before the huge update, don’t worry, your info and posts were not lost. They’re still all up there.

Please enjoy the new features! If you haven’t signed up for the forums yet, please do!

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