Category: Fantasy Basketball (Page 19 of 274)

DeMarcus Cousins expected to be suspended after altercation with teammate [video]

FanHouse has the details about the altercation that DeMarcus Cousins had with teammate Donte Greene after the Kings’ loss to the Thunder on Saturday night.

Kings rookie forward DeMarcus Cousins was removed from team plane bound for Phoenix after an altercation with teammate Donte Greene on Saturday night, according to two sources close to the organization.

The incident, which was first reported by FanHouse, immediately followed a loss to Oklahoma City. Cousins, who had overcome early-season struggles of the performance and personality variety recently, is expected to be suspended for at least one game.

According to the sources, Cousins (whose postgame interview can be seen here) was furious at the last play in which Tyreke Evans missed a three-pointer in the final seconds of regulation that would have won the game. Cousins, who had been calling for the ball in the post in the final possession, watched angrily as Greene in-bounded the ball to Evans for the final shot.

After the buzzer, Cousins let his opinion be known to Greene as he blew by him in the tunnel leading into the locker room. According to the sources, Greene and Cousins began exchanging words inside the locker room. The situation then escalated when Cousins accused Greene of being too “scared” of making what Cousins thought was the right play and with both players taking swings at each other before they were separated.

Here’s the play in question. Watch as Green inbounds the ball to Evans instead of Cousins, and then watch Cousins’ reaction after the game ends.

FanHouse looks at the bigger picture:

There is certainly a bigger picture to consider for the Kings, though, as their volatile 20-year-old who was taken fifth overall in the June draft clearly has no plans to keep quiet about what ails the team. The situation has become nothing short of a power struggle between the rookie and the reigning Rookie of the Year, with Cousins’ improved play of late giving him the gumption to question the way in which Evans is so often given carte blanche control of scenarios such as these.

This is not how the Kings wanted this to go, but when a team is 13-38, the frustration is going to pile up. Sacramento was hoping that Evans and Cousins would make a great 1-2 punch, and they still may, but clearly Cousins isn’t afraid to vent his frustration when he isn’t being utilized in late-game situations.

One thing I noticed about the video is that Cousins didn’t react negatively until the play was over. He didn’t snap his hand down in frustration (like Kobe does ALL THE TIME) when Greene didn’t pass him the ball and he fought for the rebound until the buzzer sounded.

In the game, Cousins was 5-of-14 for 14 points, while Evans was 11-for-22 with 30 points, so this may not be the battle that Cousins needs to fight. Evans was 0-for-2 from long range before he missed the potential game winner, so maybe he should have instead taken the ball into the paint to try to tie the game up at home.

Over the last 10 games, Cousins is averaging 18.1 points and 9.8 rebounds, and is shooting 48% from the field, so he has it in him to be great. But, fair or not, with his reputation he’s under a microscope and he can’t be getting into physical altercations with teammates after a loss. He needs to channel that frustration into getting better — if he does, he could become one of the all-time greats. He’s that good.

This is just a ridiculous sportsmanship commercial [video]

This commercial debuted a while ago, and it irks me every time I see it. I like the fact that someone is trying to promote sportsmanship, because clearly some people don’t know what’s appropriate and what’s not, but this ad is just preposterous.

The ref’s job is to make the call. Sometimes he gets them right and sometimes he gets them wrong. Over the course of the game, his missed calls are likely to even out, assuming he’s trying to call a fair game. Alex doesn’t know if the other player hit the ball after he hit it, and shouldn’t assume that he knows better than the ref. Even if he does try to do the “right thing,” it’s doubtful that the ref is going to change his call after a timeout based on what the player says.

The bottom line is that NO ONE expects Alex to fess up and admit that he hit the ball out on that play, so we’ve crossed the line from sportsmanship to stupidity.

Come on, Alex!

Celtics beat the Heat…again.

Boston Celtics’ center Kendrick Perkins (C) drives to the basket between Miami Heat’s guard Mike Miller (L) and Heat center Zydrunas Ilgauskas in the second half of their NBA basketball game in Boston, Massachusetts February 13, 2011. REUTERS/Brian Snyder (UNITED STATES – Tags: SPORT BASKETBALL)

We can forgive the season-opening eight-point loss back on Oct. 26th. Then there was the Nov. 11th loss at home when Ray Allen scored 35 points, hitting 7-of-9 from three point range. Less forgivable, but still understandable given that it was only the ninth game of the season for the Heat.

But what do we make of Miami’s 85-82 loss in Boston on Sunday? The Heat shot just 42% from the field and only 19% from three-point range. Boston’s percentages (42%, 27%) weren’t much better, but when we consider Paul Pierce’s awful game (0-10 from the field, one point) and the fact that Miami’s three stars played pretty well — LeBron, Wade and Bosh combined for 24-49 from the field, 62 points, 22 rebounds and 13 assists — how didn’t Miami win this game?

The answer is that it was a team effort from the Celtics, with six players scoring in double digits including 16 from Glen Davis and 10 from Von Wafer off the Boston bench. Conversely, the Miami supporting cast played poorly. The Heat are playing pretty good basketball overall, but I don’t see them getting by the Celtics in the postseason unless they can get a dependable fourth and fifth option offensively. Mike Miller (1-5, five points), Eddie House (1-6, two points) and Mario Chalmers (1-3, three points) were collectively dreadful for the Heat.

The win is crucial for the Celtics, who are now a half of a game ahead of the Heat in the Eastern Conference standings. Remember, that’s how home-court is decided in the playoffs, so as it stands, Boston would be hosting Miami in a potential Game 7 if the two teams meet in the playoffs.

L.A. Times: ESPN promoted D.O.A. Carmelo/Bynum story for ratings

Los Angeles Laker’s talks to reporters during the media day at the Lakers training facility in El Segundo, Ca., on September 25, 2010 (UPI Photo/Lori Shepler)

Mark Heisler of the L.A. Times asserts that the Worldwide Leader promoted the dead on arrival Carmelo Anthony/Andrew Bynum trade rumors just to get ratings and hits.

ESPN’s Chris Broussard reported “preliminary discussions about a blockbuster trade.”

Cellphones on the Lakers beat started ringing like the hot line from Moscow.

With the advantage of years developing Lakers sources . . . as opposed to trusting a single source, like the one who assured everyone Anthony was New Jersey-bound . . . local writers got denials across the board and, significantly, nothing suggesting Jim Buss doesn’t still dote on Bynum.

This is a beat writer (who has multiple sources with the team he covers) taking aim at a national writer (who may only have one source). Heisler’s accusation falls squarely on the shoulders of Broussard and those producers at ESPN who decided to promote this story/rumor based on Broussard’s source(s).

This doesn’t change the fact that the Lakers should absolutely trade Bynum for Carmelo, if they have the opportunity.

Shannon Brown can really dunk [video]

Supposedly Brown’s vertical was measured pre-draft (in 2006) by the Lakers at 44.5 inches, and based on the various dunks we’ve seen him finish, I wouldn’t be surprised if that’s accurate. The guy has some serious hops.

Brown has a better than average Player Efficiency Rating (15.66) for the first time in his career, largely because he’s hitting almost 39% of his three-point shots. For a “point guard,” he’s still a poor playmaker (1.1 assists per game), but that’s not the role of the point guard in the triangle offense.

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