Category: Fantasy Basketball (Page 46 of 274)

Hate for LeBron tied to race?

Vincent Thomas argues that there’s some black protectionism going on with LeBron.

You’ve probably heard about his plummeting Q rating (the industry standard for measuring an athlete’s familiarity and appeal). According to The Q Scores Co., for non-blacks, LeBron’s positive Q rating went from 18 percent in January to 10 percent in September and, more telling, his negative Q rating went from 24 percent to 44. Nearly half of the non-blacks in this country don’t like the dude. Meanwhile, LeBron’s positive Q rating among blacks went from 52 percent in January to 39 — a noticeable drop — but his negative Q rating barely budged, going from 14 percent to 15. Among African-Americans, says The Q Scores Co. executive vice president Henry Schafer, the shift in opinion was mostly to neutral.

The general, expressed sentiment of African-Americans has been, “I may not have agreed with how LeBron carried the whole free-agency thing, but I’m not gonna hate the man.” The more America shuns LeBron, the more Black America retreats to his corner. In fact, as America hates LeBron more and more, Black America’s collective hug embraces LeBron tighter and tighter. It’s called black protectionism.

Athletes have always been inspirational figures within the black community and — as far back as Jack Johnson, Jesse Owens and Jackie Robinson — often have taken the public racial hit for the team. So, naturally, through the years, they’ve engendered an almost automatic protectionism response whenever America — whether justifiably or not — decides it wants to hate them.You saw it with Hank Aaron. You saw it with Barry Bonds. You saw it with Allen Iverson. You saw it with Michael Vick. You’re seeing it now with LeBron James. There are plenty of black folks who want LeBron to drop 60 on the Cavs when he visits Cleveland and wouldn’t mind the maligned Heat winning a championship.

As a white man who has never particularly liked LeBron the person or the player, I can honestly say that I don’t dislike him any more now that he’s decided to ‘take his talents to South Beach.’ He had every right to choose to play with a different team and, unlike most NBA fans, I don’t hold it against him that he decided to join forces with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami. Was he disloyal to the fans in Cleveland? Sure, but that wasn’t any surprise after hearing about how much of a front-running fan he was as a kid — rooting for the Cowboys, Bulls and Yankees — and how he’d hobnob on the Cowboy sidelines when they played the Browns or how he’d wear his Yankee hat to an Indians game.

First and foremost, LeBron is a fan of himself, and that was what “The Decision” was all about. It was a horrible lapse in judgment and the majority of the jump in his negative Q rating can be attributed to how he chose his new team in early July, not that he chose a new team.

As for the Miami Heat, I don’t know if I’ll be rooting for or against them, or if the truth will lie somewhere in between. I can tell you this — I’d rather see the Heat win a title in 2011 than see Kobe get his sixth ring, so to me, the Lakers are still far more annoying. If nothing else, it will be fascinating to watch LeBron, Wade and Bosh navigate the season and each other, and I’m looking forward to potential playoff battles with the Celtics, Magic and Bulls.

But back to LeBron — I don’t like the guy because he’s an egomaniac, he doesn’t do enough in the offseason to improve his game, he hasn’t developed a go-to post move because he thinks it’s “boring” to play on the block, he settles for jumpers far too often and he complains too much to the officials. Generally speaking, I don’t think he’s done enough with the innate talent that he’s been given, and that’s saying something considering the guy has back-to-back MVPs, six All-Star nods and six All-NBA appearances under his belt.

He has the physical ability to be the greatest basketball player ever to play the game, but he’ll never reach that level because he refuses to work on those areas of his game that give him trouble. That’s why I have a problem with the guy — and it has nothing to do with the color of his skin or his decision to take his talents to South Beach.

Nets leading the Carmelo sweepstakes?

New Jersey Nets new owner Mikhail Prokhorov (L) of Russia sits with his new head coach Avery Johnson during Game 5 of the 2010 NBA Finals basketball series in Boston, Massachusetts, June 13, 2010. REUTERS/Mike Segar (UNITED STATES - Tags: SPORT BASKETBALL)

The New Jersey Nets have emerged as the frontrunner for Carmelo Anthony’s services, according to ESPN…

Several league sources on Monday told ESPN.com that they believe the Nets have emerged as the front-runner to secure Anthony. Not only is Anthony willing to sign a contract extension with the Nets, sources say the club is willing to make an intriguing offer of Derrick Favors (the No. 3 pick in this year’s draft), the expiring contracts of Troy Murphy and Kris Humphries, and at least one future first-round pick to Denver to land Anthony.

A source close to the Nets told ESPN.com that he wasn’t ready to concede that the Nets were the front-runners for Anthony’s services, nor was the source willing to confirm what the Nets would offer. However, the source did acknowledge that New Jersey was in serious consideration based on the Nuggets’ reluctance to trade Anthony to a Western Conference team and the Nets’ combination of expiring contracts, draft picks and a young player with serious upside.

Hmm. This trade looks familiar, though the Nets don’t have to include Humphries in the deal (unless I’m missing some rule about the extend-and-trade). Favors is obviously the centerpiece, and he’d give the Nuggets and intriguing building block and running mate for Ty Lawson.

The report makes me wonder if the Knicks have offered Danilo Gallinari and Anthony Randolph (along with Eddy Curry’s contract) or if they are holding to the originally reported Gallinari/Curry deal. It seemed like the Nuggets weren’t too impressed with anything on the Knicks’ roster, so this Favors deal might be enough to get the Nuggets to pull the trigger. They’d get a young prospect, a draft pick, salary cap relief, and they’d trade Carmelo out of the conference. Not bad.

For the Nets, the trade would open a hole at power forward, but the team could move forward with a core of Melo, Brook Lopez, Devin Harris and Terrence Williams. I’m still confused by the team’s decision to invest $11 million per year in Travis Outlaw and Jordan Farmar when they could have used that cap space to sign someone like David Lee. I guess they were waiting on LeBron, like everyone else, and when he finally decided to ‘take his talents to South Beach,’ they scrambled to do the best they could with what was still out there. I don’t mind the Farmar signing so much, but the Outlaw deal leaves the Nets with zero cap flexibility going forward.

The Nuggets should trade Carmelo now

Denver Nuggets forward Carmelo Anthony fouls out against the Utah Jazz during the fourth quarter of the first round playoffs game two at the Pepsi Center on April 19, 2010 in Denver. Utah beat Denver 114-111 to even the series at 1-1.  UPI/Gary C. Caskey Photo via Newscom

The Denver Nuggets are now listening to trade offers, per ESPN…

The Nuggets still aren’t aggressively shopping Anthony and haven’t withdrawn their longstanding offer of a contract extension, but numerous sources told ESPN.com that Denver officials have in recent days let other teams know for the first time that they will listen to pitches after previously resisting such discussions.

“I’m not sure how soon, but I do think they’re going to trade him [between now and February],” said one rival GM.

Said another source briefed on Denver’s plans: “There’s no doubt they are working on it. Eventually they’re going to pull the trigger. ”

One source close to the situation told ESPN.com that Anthony has been no more communicative with the organization since the hiring of Masai Ujiri as Denver’s new vice president of basketball operations in late August than he was before Ujiri’s return to the Nuggets. Ujiri began his front-office career as a Nuggets scout during Anthony’s rookie season in 2003-04 and spoke optimistically about arranging a face-to-face meeting with Anthony — which sources say has not yet taken place — and trying to sell him on the team’s plans for the future at his introductory press conference.

The timing on this is going to be interesting. Training camp starts on Sep. 28, and it’s pretty obvious that Carmelo doesn’t want to play in Denver this season. He hasn’t even met with the new GM and the guy has been on the job for a month now. Yeesh.

So, yes, in all likelihood, the Nuggets will move Anthony before the February trade deadline, but it will be a hell of a lot easier to move him now that it will in five months, when the Nuggets are sitting in the #3 or #4 spot in the West. How does the team sell that to its fan base? Look, we’re poised to make a deep run in the posteason, but we’re going to trade away our best player because he’s going to sign elsewhere in the summer.

When I suggested that the Raptors look to trade Chris Bosh last February, the blog was inundated by delusional Raptor fans who said that the team was playing well and Bosh wasn’t about to leave a winner. Come February, will Nugget fans remember the Bosh fiasco or will they still be dreaming about a run to the NBA Finals? Because if Carmelo starts the season with the Nuggets, they’ll probably be a 50+ win team again.

No, Ujiri should bite the bullet and get the best deal he can for Carmelo now. Then he should turn around and move Chauncey Billups, because there’s no point in paying a 33-year-old point guard $13+ million to lead a rebuilding effort when the point guard of the future (Ty Lawson) is already on the roster. It’s going to be painful, but look at how the Seattle Supersonics/Oklahoma City Thunder has rebuilt its roster over the past few seasons. They were once a middling playoff team built around Ray Allen and Rashard Lewis, but management let Lewis walk in free agency and traded Allen for assets. Now look at them — they’re arguably the second-best team in the West.

Is Ujiri the second coming of Thunder GM Sam Presti? Probably not, but that doesn’t mean he can’t emulate him.

Yao Ming’s minutes will be limited…all season

Rocket's Luis Scola #4 and Yao Ming #11 as the Lakers beat the Rockets 89-70 during game seven of a Western Conference semi-final playoff basketball game between the Houston Rockets and the Los Angeles Lakers at the Staples Center on Sunday May 17, 2009 in Los Angeles Photo via Newscom

Per the Houston Chronicle

Yao will play no more than 24 minutes per game, Rockets vice president and athletic trainer Keith Jones said. There will be no exceptions. If Yao has played his 24 minutes and the Rockets have the ball and eight seconds on the clock to make up a one-point deficit, Yao will not play those eight seconds.

Yao’s playing time will not average 24 minutes; it will end there. If he plays 22 minutes in one game, he will not play 26 the next. For that matter, if he plays two minutes one game, he will not play 26 the next. When Yao reaches his 24 minutes, he will be through for that game.

The article goes on to suggest that things could change in the playoffs, but the Rockets are bound and determined to get their big man to April fully healthy.

After missing just two games in his first three seasons, Yao has missed 173 of the next 410 games over the following five seasons, or 42% of his team’s games. What good is a franchise center if the guy can’t make it through the season without some sort of season-ending ailment?

That’s why the Rockets are so intent on limiting his workload. They hope that by reducing his minutes throughout the season, it will enable him to be healthy enough in the postseason.

Thank you, Kevin Durant.

Kevin Durant of U.S. (C) is surrounded by team mates as they celebrate their victory against Turkey after their FIBA Basketball World Championship final game in Istanbul, September 12, 2010.  REUTERS/Murad Sezer (TURKEY - Tags: SPORT BASKETBALL)

In case you missed it with all the hullabaloo surrounding the first Sunday of the NFL season, Team USA’s so-called “B-Team” beat host nation Turkey in the finals of the 2010 FIBA World Championship, 81-64, earning an automatic bid to the 2012 Olympics in London.

The team’s defense deserves a lot of credit for its gold medal run — Jim Boeheim said that he thought this team played better D than the 2008 Olympic team, which is saying something — but offensively the team would have been lost without Kevin Durant.

What the 21-year-old did on international basketball’s biggest stage is pretty amazing. He averaged 22.8 points — no other U.S. player averaged in double figures — and 6.1 rebounds, while shooting 55.6% from the field, 45.6% from long range and better than 91% from the free throw line. Many NBA players have trouble with the international three-point line, but Durant can shoot from anywhere and he proved that in Turkey. Moreover, he did it as the team’s overwhelming #1 offensive option. No other player even took half as many shots as he did, so he was able to shoot almost 56% even though defenses were trying desperately to stop him.

And he saved some of his best basketball for last, dropping 28 points (on 10-for-17 shooting, including 7-of-13 from 3PT) on Turkey in the title game. It was funny to watch the demonstrative Turkish fans in the stands throw up their hands in frustration as he hit three after three.

His defense still needs some work, but offensively, there’s no better scorer on the planet. It’s going to be interesting to see how Mike Krzyzewski fits him in alongside Kobe, LeBron and Dwyane Wade, assuming they all play in 2012.

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