Monday, January 28, 2013
Rajon Rondo Ending His Season, Torn ACL
Rajon Rondo was creating a league-leading 24.3 points per game off his assists this season, nearly three more points per game than the next closest player. Last season, Rondo created a career-high 25.8 points per game off his assists. Rondo in the Miami Heat game the other day came up with some horrible news. Rondo had a hyperextended knee but during the game he tore his right ACL and is an injury that ended his season early. This injury recovery will take at least a year to be completely healthy again and depending how well he rests and does therapy. All his teammates especially Kevin Garrnet took this news to heart making him devestated. Dwayne Wade and Lebron James also felt for consideration even through the rivarly they had, it hurts to see someone miss out the season over a injury especially him being a great point guard and making the best out of the celtics.
http://espn.go.com/boston/nba/story/_/id/8887106/rajon-rondo-boston-celtics-torn-acl-undergo-surgery
Friday, January 25, 2013
Brooklyn Nets Outburst
The Nets (26-16) have now won three in a row, and improved to 12-2 under interim coach P.J. Carlesimo, 16-0 overall against sub-.500 teams (at time of game played). They trail the Knicks by a half game for the Atlantic Division lead.
Brooklyn didn’t play well by any means, but overcame a 6-for-20 3-point shooting performance and 14 turnovers to come away with the win. The Nets out-rebounded the Timberwolves, 45-37.
BROOK-LYN: Brook Lopez, who will find out if he’s named to his first All-Star team as a reserve on Thursday night, posted another fine line: 22 points, seven rebounds and two blocks on 10-for-16 shooting. Lopez hit his first four shots en route to 10 first-quarter points.
BROOKLYN’S BACKCOURT: Deron Williams stuffed the stat sheet to the tune of 18 points, eight assists, six rebounds and three steals, while Joe Johnson chipped in 18 points on 8-for-16 shooting.
They've become one team you would never think of coming in strong trying to win the title of being NBA Champions.
Carmelo Anthony Making History and Having People Get In His Way
Carmelo Anthony scored at least 20 points Thursday night for the 27th straight game. Anthony is two games away from tying the Knicks' record for most consecutive 20-point games, set by Richie Guerin in 1961-62.
Season | Player | Streak |
---|---|---|
1961-62 | Richie Guerin | 29 |
1989-90 | Patrick Ewing | 28 |
2012-13 | Carmelo Anthony | 27* |
2010-11 | Amar'e Stoudemire | 26 |
During the Celtics gamelast night, Anthony and Kevin Garnett have shared the floor since Anthony confronted Garnett in the bowels of Madison Square Garden after the Knicks' loss to Boston on Jan. 7.
Anthony has insisted that the incident is behind him and, by all appearances, there has been no carryover from that night.
Garnett and Anthony bumped fists before tipoff.
Garnett had a wicked -- as they say in Boston -- block on an Anthony layup attempt, much to the delight of the TD Garden crowd.
Anthony didn't shoot well in the first half, but contributed in other ways. He had seven rebounds and two assists.
He finished 4-for-13 from the field with 13 points.
Garnett had five points and a game-high nine rebounds, helping the Celtics keep pace despite their poor performance from beyond the arc (2-for-11).
Paul Pierce has a game-high 19 points.
Boston would be down by a significant margin were it not for Rajon Rondo, who has a game-high nine assists. Anthony leads the Knicks with two assists, another sign that this team misses Ray Felton.
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Into The Miami Heat , Lebron James Clutch Moments
Kobe Bryant was heating up, scoring 10 quick points in the fourth quarter, and the Lakers were mounting a comeback. With the game entering crunch-time, LeBron James switched onto Bryant with 5:27 left in the game and the score tied at 83.
Right off the bat, James smothered Bryant like a wet blanket and forced him to take an off-balance jumper. As the ball bounced off the rim, James dove to the loose ball on the ground, snatched it from Bryant's grasp, stood up and plowed down the floor in transition. All five Lakers packed the paint and did everything in their power to wall off James' attack.
But they forgot about Ray Allen. Seeing this, James found Allen on the wing with a no-look pass and Allen drilled it. Assist for James. Heat up three.
Next trip down the floor, James pulled up on Metta World Peace and swished a 20-footer. Heat up five. Later, James fed Dwyane Wade for a midrange jumper. Assist for James. Again, next time down the floor, James hit Allen on a curl and Allen nailed a tough shot over Dwight Howard. Another assist for James.
Then with the game clock ticking down under a minute, James took World Peace off the dribble one-on-one, pulled up for a midrange jumper and it splashed through the net. Heat up six with 49 seconds left. After a failed Lakers possession, James got the ball back again after an inbound pass, drove to the rim past Pau Gasol and threw it down as Gasol could only push him in the back. And-one. James made the ensuing free throw.
Game over.
Miami ended up winning 99-90 at the Staples Center on a back-to-back in dramatic fashion, but the game was essentially won when James decided to clamp down on Bryant with 5:27 left in the game.
From that point on, the Heat finished the game on a 16-7 run with James matching the entire Lakers' team point-for-point with seven points alone. But what's more amazing is that if we include his four assists, James accounted for 14 of the Heat's final 16 points.
A common complaint about James is that he hasn't hit many last-second shots in his career, which is true. But Thursday's game showed one reason why: He often doesn't let it come to that.
Thanks to James' overwhelming performance in crunch-time on both ends of the floor, the Heat almost beat the Lakers by double-digits when it was a tie game with 2:32 left. Simply put, James made a close game not a close game anymore. For this reason, James remains a ruthless clutch player even without dramatic last-second shots.
And he kills the opponent in more ways than one. On the season, James has played 86 minutes of clutch time, which is defined by NBA.com as when the game is within five points in the final five minutes. In those 86 minutes of high-stakes basketball, James has registered 62 points, 28 assists and 24 rebounds. The assist total is what's most astounding when you think about it. He has more clutch assists this season than any other player. Actually, James has more clutch assists in 86 minutes than Chris Paul, Deron Williams and Russell Westbrook have combined for in 213 minutes.
If we put it all together on a per-36 minute level to better wrap our heads around it, we find that James is averaging a staggering 26 points, 11.7 assists and 10 rebounds in crunch-time. That's right, James is playing at such a high level in the clutch that he's averaging a triple-double on a per-36 minute level. No one else really comes close.
James isn't the ruthless scorer in clutch situations that Kevin Durant can be (Durant's averaging a gaudy 39.1 points per 36 minutes in those situations), but James dissects opposing defenses like a surgeon. Of those 28 assists, 11 of them have gone for 3s. In other words, while James has scored 62 points on his own in clutch time, he's also set up an additional 67 points with his passes. When James has been on the court for the Heat in clutch circumstances this season, he has accounted for 129 of the team's 207 points, or 62 percent of the team's scoring.
Sixty-two percent.
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