Category: NBA (Page 459 of 595)

Michael Beasley vs. Kevin Love, by the numbers

I’m not advocating anyone taking Kevin Love over Michael Beasley, but take a look at these measurements from the draft combine:

Michael Beasley, Kansas State
Height: 6’7″ (6’8 1/2″ in shoes)
Wingspan: 7’0 1/4″
Standing Reach: 8’11”
Body Fat: 7.7%
Vertical Jump (no step): 30″
Vertical Jump (max): 35″
Bench Press: 19
Lane Agility: 11.06
3/4 Court Sprint: 3.24

Kevin Love, UCLA
Height: 6’7 3/4″ (6’9 1/2″)
Wingspan: 6’11 1/4″
Standing Reach: 8’10”
Body Fat: 12.9%
Vertical Jump (no step): 29.5″
Vertical Jump (max): 35″
Bench Press: 18
Lane Agility: 11.17
3/4 Court Sprint: 3.22

Here’s what Chad Ford had to say about their combine workouts:

Beasley
While other workouts were going on, we all watched in awe as Beasley drained NBA 3-pointer after NBA 3-pointer. That continued in the workouts, in which Beasley shot as well as any prospect here. Deep or midrange, Beasley can shoot the lights out.

Love
Kevin Love tested better than you’d think in just about every category. He’s by no means a great athlete, but he’s not a bad one either.

He continues to slim down, and a number of scouts mentioned that he’s in as good shape as they’ve ever seen him. Although Love doesn’t run the floor the way some of the other top athletes do, he hustled up and down the floor and showed good athleticism.

Just as important, Love shot the ball very well in the workouts. At times, he looked like a guard out there. Love also did well in the strength training, bench-pressing the 185-pound bar 18 times.

First things first, I was surprised to hear that Beasley measured out the way he did. There were rumors going around that he’s actually 6’7″, but his standing reach (which is more important) is 8’11”, just an inch shorter than the supposed ideal for a power forward. The other thing that jumped out at me was Ford’s description of Beasley’s range. If he already has three-point range, he’s going to be a dangerous scorer right out of the gate.

Kevin Love has a 35″vertical?!? I posted a video of his workout a few weeks ago and he definitely looked slimmer and more agile, but 35″? Not only that, but when compared to Beasley, Love did pretty well in every other category. Given all of his intangibles, I wouldn’t blame anyone for taking him after Rose and Beasley. I’d still give Beasley the nod, due to his terrific scoring ability.

Hoopsworld credits Kobe for the Laker turnaround

Now that the Lakers have made the Finals, a number of Kobe Believers are stepping forward and saying that he’s the one responsible for the turnaround. Bill Ingram is apparently one of these Believers. A good portion of my latest column was dedicated to debunking this theory.

Let me take Ingram’s points one-by-one.

The truth is that Kupchak attempted to trade Kobe numerous times. Deals were discussed with a number of teams, the most notable being the Chicago Bulls, but each time Kobe shot them down. It could be, in fact, that Kobe never wanted to be traded.

It’s true that could be the case, but Kobe’s frustrations last summer were real and I believe that if there had been a deal in place that wouldn’t have gutted his new team, he probably would have approved it. Every deal that was floated (through the media, anyway) would have left Kobe’s new team decimated, so what’s the point of making the trade?

Kobe forced the Lakers to be all they could be. His remarks about his lackluster supporting cast pushed those players to raise their collective games to a higher level. Sasha Vujacic, Luke Walton, Ronny Turiaf, and Andrew Bynum (pre-injury) all turned their games up a notch.

So Ingram’s premise is that all of those young players he mentioned – Vujacic, Walton, Turiaf and Bynum – were just going about their own business last summer and then suddenly decided, after Kobe’s media tantrum, that they were going to become good players. (By the way, I wouldn’t include Walton in a list of players that “turned their games up a notch.” And why did Ingram snub Jordan Farmar? Other than Bynum, Farmar probably stepped up his game the most, despite his playoff struggles.) Most young players improve year-to-year. That’s what they do. There was an article about Bynum in ESPN The Magazine which discussed the personal trainer he hired and rigorous training program he adopted well before Kobe’s outburst. Bynum implied that there were times that Kobe’s harsh words…

“Andrew Bynum? Are you f—ing kidding me? Andrew Bynum? F—ing ship his ass out. We’re talking about Jason Kidd …”

…helped him push through a difficult workout, but the truth is that the regimen was already in place.

Back to Ingram…

Kupchak stepped up his game by trading away a bunch of nothing to land All-Star Pau Gasol…

This is the line that really kills me. Does Ingram honestly believe that if Kobe hadn’t thrown a fit the previous summer that Kupchak would have passed on the Gasol deal? Any GM with an owner willing to take on Gasol’s contract would have made that deal, with or without their star player throwing a hissy fit.

At the end of the day, though, it was Kobe Bryant who pushed the Lakers to the NBA Finals. He did it with his play on the court, and he did it with the pressure he exerted on his franchise off the court.

I’ll agree that Kobe had a terrific season. But he has had terrific seasons before and his team didn’t get out of the first round. It’s the improvement of those young players (whom Kupchak drafted) and the addition of Pau Gasol and Derek Fisher (whom Kupchak acquired) that make up the difference between the one-and-done 2007 Lakers and the Finals-favorite 2008 Lakers. Kupchak deserves most of the credit, with big assists from Memphis’ GM Chris Wallace for giving away Gasol and the Jazz for being so generous with Fisher’s situation.

Crediting Kobe for the turnaround is a big stretch. It’s true that superstars can raise the level of their team, but that usually happens during the season in practices and games, not in a parking lot on a YouTube video.

Whew! Fantasy leagues are safe for now

Fantasy fans everywhere can breathe a sign of relief. The U.S. Supreme Court has refused to hear a case from Major League Baseball that would require all fantasy sports leagues to pay a high data-licensing fee.

Fantasy sports companies like Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO), CBS (NYSE: CBS) Sportsline and others can now breathe a sigh of relief: the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday refused to hear an appeal from Major League Baseball and its Players Association that, if successful, could have given these leagues the ability to control the lucrative fantasy-sports business via high data-licensing fee. This tussle has been going on for some years now…the situation began in 2005 when MLBAM acquired the rights to represent the MLBPA in licensing, decided to limit its licenses for fantasy baseball and refused to grant one to St. Louis-based CDM Sports, which then filed suit. CDM won the suit in federal court last year.

Wall Street Journal: Fantasy-sports companies and the leagues had a mostly peaceful relationship through the 1990s, and these companies paid licensing fees of 5% to 10% of revenues for the rights to the players’ names and statistics. Deals with the largest companies produced nearly $1.5 million a year, the story says. But three years ago, MLB tried to limit the number of companies that could use its statistics, even though they were readily available from variety of sources, and that’s when CDM filed the lawsuit.

LA Times: The justices’ decision was a setback not only for baseball players, but for other professional athletes who maintained that outside companies had no right to “exploit players’ identity for commercial gain.” The NFL, NBA and NHL had supported baseball’s players and owners in their appeal to the court.

We all know what this is about… money. The leagues see sites like ESPN, CBS and all the other mom-and-pop fantasy sites making a profit on what they perceive to be their product, and they want a (big) piece. But the fantasy sites have a strong argument that they are only using players’ names and stats, which are readily available for free on the internet. The sites are then providing consumers with a fantasy league and all the services and features that entails.

It always amazes me when professional sports leagues fail to see the big picture. Fantasy football has helped to explode the NFL’s fan base, yet the league wants to make it more difficult and more expensive for fans to own a fantasy team. Why doesn’t the league just appreciate the increased revenue produced from its higher ratings? Why must they squeeze every last cent out of us? I don’t mean to single out the NFL, but if there has been any league that has benefited from free, available fantasy sports, it’s the NFL.

Of course, I shouldn’t be surprised. This is the same league that repeatedly gives exclusive rights to Sunday Ticket to the highest bidder, leaving millions of fans out in the cold.

Flip Saunders fired

In a fairly unsurprising move, the Detroit Pistons have fired head coach Flip Saunders.

Saunders led the Pistons to a combined 176-70 regular season record (.715), which is enough to get your clipboard retired with most teams. But it was his “failure” in the playoffs that was his undoing. His Pistons were 30-21 in the postseason and lost in the Eastern Conference Finals three straight times after making the Finals the two previous seasons.

It’s a risky move for the Pistons to let Saunders go. He has a proven track record (he won 50+ games in seven of his last nine seasons), but just hasn’t been able to get over the hump in the
playoffs.

No replacement has been named, but Avery Johnson seems like he’d be a good fit.

Do the Celtics or the Lakers have the better dance team?

The 2008 NBA Finals are not only a matchup of two great teams, they are also a matchup of two great “dance” teams. On one hand, you have the Laker Girls, who have tapped into Los Angeles’ constantly refreshing pool of dancer/model types, pioneering sexiness in the NBA. On the other, you have the up-and-coming Celtics Dancers, who are known for pushing the envelope when it comes to skimpy attire and dance moves that would make a stripper blush.

Click on each picture for a bigger view and make your choice!


Poll Answers

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