Category: Fantasy Basketball (Page 111 of 274)

Phil Jackson not interested in coaching the Bulls

Before last night’s Game 4, Phil Jackson shot down the rumors about a possible return to Chicago.

“I have no, at all, desire to go back to Chicago and coach the Bulls,” Jackson said, responding to an ESPN.com report from Monday night that the Bulls had reached out to Jackson through back channels to gauge his interest in a return.

Jackson went on to say that the “probabilities are great” that he’d be coaching the Lakers next season, though the franchise has made it clear that they expect him to take a pay cut.

The timing of this is curious. The Lakers are still in the playoffs, and Jackson is fielding questions about his 2010-11 salary and a possible job change. Sometimes he gets caught up in using the media to tweak his players or tweaking the media just for fun, but there’s a possibility that this is becoming a distraction to a Laker team that came to Phoenix looking invincible and is leaving the Valley of the Sun knotted in a 2-2 series and licking its proverbial wounds.

With the media in a tizzy trying to predict the landing spot for LeBron James and several other big-name free agents, these questions are going to come up over and over again. Sometimes the best way to answer is just to say “no comment.”

WCF Game 4: What a second quarter!

The Suns lead 64-55 at halftime, but both teams were hot in the second quarter, combining for 73 points.

Check out this series of jumpers:

8:19 Kobe Bryant makes 21-foot jumper
8:07 Leandro Barbosa makes 21-foot jumper
7:52 Kobe Bryant makes 22-foot jumper
7:30 Jared Dudley makes 15-foot two point shot
7:01 Channing Frye makes 26-foot three point jumper
6:09 Jared Dudley makes 24-foot three point jumper
5:50 Kobe Bryant makes 25-foot three point jumper
5:41 Leandro Barbosa makes 26-foot three point jumper
5:24 Kobe Bryant makes 23-foot three point jumper
4:41 Steve Nash makes 26-foot three point jumper
4:11 Ron Artest makes 25-foot three point jumper
3:59 Channing Frye makes 25-foot three point jumper
3:10 Kobe Bryant makes 22-foot jumper
2:58 Channing Frye makes 23-foot three point jumper
2:36 Derek Fisher makes jumper
2:03 Kobe Bryant makes 26-foot three point jumper
1:53 Steve Nash makes 17-foot jumper

That’s 17 made jumpers in 6:26 of gameplay. In other words, during this stretch, there was one made jumper every 21.5 seconds. Wow.

The curse of the Coach of the Year award

DIME MAGAZINE noticed something very odd with the last few NBA COY winners

2005–06: Avery Johnson, Dallas Mavericks, 60–22 (Fired April 30, 2008)
2006–07: Sam Mitchell, Toronto Raptors, 47–35 (Fired December 3, 2008)
2007–08: Byron Scott, New Orleans Hornets, 56–26 (Fired November 12, 2009)
2008–09: Mike Brown, Cleveland Cavaliers, 66–16 (Fired May 24, 2010)
2009–10: Scott Brooks, Oklahoma City Thunder, 50–32 (???)

They were all fired within two years. The post goes on to speculate that the reason behind this trend is heightened expectations and I tend to agree. I’d go a step further, however. The award often goes to a coach who “got the most out of his team” (i.e. the team played “over their heads”). When this kind of outlier occurs, it’s far more likely that the team will return to the mean instead of continuing to develop into an NBA champion.

In other words, all it takes is one bad/mediocre season and the guy is a bum again. And with 30 teams vying for a championship, a bad/mediocre season is far more likely than a great one.


Photo from fOTOGLIF

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