Tuesday, February 28, 2012

A Great Year for Sacramento

The Kings don’t have a great record at just 10-21, additionally, they don’t have a long term coach in Keith Smart, and they don’t have great veterans (sorry Chuck Hayes, you just aren’t cutting it as a sole veteran for the team).  But those are pretty much the only bad things for the team, and all of those things are going to get better.
            Pretty much, the importance of wins is to get fan excitement.  Generally you don’t want to have a bad season because your fans won’t enjoy it and therefore won’t watch; and you want to have a good season so fans will be excited about their teams.  For this reason, the kings pretty much have a free pass this season.  By signing their deal to stay in Sacramento, the Kings have made their fans excited about their team, and they are just glad to be having a team.  Therefore those fans are going to worship their team regardless of how they play. 
Since they aren’t in the championship, I’d say their record is even helpful.  In a year where there are a lot of exciting bigs, having a high lottery pick is good.  Right now the kings have the seventh worst record in the league.  Pretty much anyone they could get with that pick would instantly jump into the starting lineup.  Let’s examine a specific case, say they get Jared Sullinger with the pick; They would instantly have a frontcourt that would be unique and at least borderline elite. 
Demarcus Cousins is averaging 16.4 points and 11 rebounds this season (which is outstanding for a third scoring option who only averages 29 minutes a game; Andrew Bynum, the second scoring option on his team, averages 16.4 points and 12.3 rebounds in 34 minutes.) he’s also not a normal big man stylistically; he’s quick (for a big man), he can handle the ball (for a big man), he passes well from the post, he runs the floor surprisingly well, and although he doesn’t get as many blocks as you’d like a big man to get, he gets steals using his quickness.  Jared Sullinger Is a big man very much like Greg Monroe; he’s got a great post game, he rebounds well, and he’s slow, but he actually has advantages on Monroe because he’s bigger (280 pounds), he scores better, and he gets steals.  Their frontcourt would be two bulky (550 combined pounds) low post scorers who rebound well and run the floor well and can run heavy minutes.  That would be the biggest front court in the NBA, and these are both guys who genuinely do use their weight.
Everyone has been playing well lately.  Keith Smart may not be a championship coach, but he certainly is making championship players.  Before he came Tyreke Evans was having a terrible season, Demarcus Cousins was about to be labeled a bust, and Isiah Thomas was the most irrelevant name imaginable.  Over the last 10 games Evans has averaged 17 points 5 rebounds and 5 assists, Thomas is averaging 13 points and 4 assist (19.5 points and 6.3 assists over the 5 games he has started), and Cousins has averaged 19.6 Points and 11.3 Rebounds, and Marcus Thornton, who was already playing well, has been averaging 20 points.  Pretty much every player on the team has been playing better under Smart.  The only reason they lose is because their defense sucks, but really it’s their defensive strategy that sucks.  That’s one of the things you don’t get with Keith Smart is wins but he will help another coach get some soon.
They really have the players you need to succeed, a wing scorer (Thornton), a post scorer (Cousins) a versatile, athletic, defender (Evans), and a point guard who you can trust with your offense (Thomas)… wait did I just list Isiah Thomas as a trustable point guard?  Scratch that, I’ll admit, they can’t yet consider their void at the point guard position filled yet.  Thomas isn’t big, not a great shooter, and not a great passer.  He’s not the next Linsanity he’s just having a spike.  That being said, he does have a permanent place in this league perhaps even as a starter on a contender, but he’s just can’t be a core part of a championship team.  If the Kings want a championship, they’ll need a frontcourt partner for Cousins and a starting point guard.
So really, assuming they get that (not that hard to do when you have a good first round pick coming up in a draft class loaded with big men.  And they needed a veteran or two (veterans on expiring contracts over the next two years are:  Kirk Hinrich, Tracy McGrady, Kevin Garnett, Jermaine O’Neal, Lamar Odom, Shawn Marion, Ben Wallace, Samuel Dalambert, David West, Chauncey Billups, Juwan Howard, Brad Miller, Mehmet Okur, Chris Kaman, Emeka Okafor, Mike Bibby, Baron Davis, Tony Battie, Elton Brand, Steve Nash, Grant Hill, Kurt Thomas, Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobli, Raja Bell, and Maurice Evans.)  Obviously they are going to have to show improvement (or just fork up a lot of cash) to sign any of these guys.  (genuinely, they should just fork up some cash and get rid of salmons.)  But really, isn’t it scary to think that the team that’s 7th to last could be in contention for a championship within 3 years?

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Has John Wall Really Been the Best player from the 2010 Draft Class?

At the time of the 2010 draft it was an obvious, undoubted fact that John Wall was the best player in that draft class.  No one could argue that, he’s fast, he’s strong, he has great vision, he’s humble, and he was NBA ready.  Everyone just knew that he would be the best player right out of that gate and he would stay the best for every second of every one of their careers.
Now we have an elephant in the room; this season there has been no practical argument that John Wall is the best rookie of that draft class.  There have been three truly standout players with bright futures, 4 if you want to put John wall in that class.
Greg Monroe is the first of these standouts.  He has had undoubtedly the best numbers of all the rookies from that year.  He’s averaged 16.3 points and 9.9 rebounds per game.  He’s scored a majority of his baskets off of post catches.  He appears to be someone who can be built around, you can dump the ball off to him and tell him to score.  He also inhales rebounds, while he’s no Kevin Love, teams shouldn’t anticipate easy lanes to the glass while he’s down there.  His downside is he’s not a good defender, he he’s too slow to guard a forward, too small to guard a center.  He ends up playing center because at least that lets him get the rebounds and there are less elite scoring centers than power forwards.  Also, his scoring numbers could be deceptive.  Monroe is the first scoring option on his team.  They give him the ball and he gives it back if he doesn’t want it.  He’s very much like Kevin Love where you can count on him for numbers, but you can’t count on him for wins.  Also, if his team had another good scorer I’d wonder if he would still score so well because he doesn’t move without the ball very well.
The next is Paul George.  I’m not going to lie, I didn’t even know who he was, but he has made me learn.  He has been averaging 12.5 points, 5.5 rebounds, 1.4 steals, and 2.2 assists per game; while these numbers aren’t exactly overflowing the stat sheet you have to understand that numbers on the Pacers are harder.  They have a near unstoppable scorer in Danny Granger and even he can’t score that much on this team (only 18 ppg) because they get everyone involved in the offense.  Essentially the way there offense works is they move the ball around (really well) and it doesn’t stop until they find a flaw in the defense and someone capitalizes on it.  The way I just described it really doesn’t give them enough credit because it is an outstanding offense, you should really watch them if you haven’t done so already this year.  So anyway, in this system it’s hard to get numbers very easily.  He’s the third highest scorer in this offense behind Roy Hibbert and Danny Granger.  Another thing that’s impressive about him is his defense, a lot of people forget that he has really replaced Dahntay Jones (and done a better job) of defending the other teams best player, he smothers them and he’s massive (6’8).  But he’s done one thing none of the other stellar members of that draft class have done which is bringing his team wins.  Of course there is the con that he hasn’t necessarily brought his team those wins, the pacers are a good team, but still numbers on a good team is more impressive than putting up numbers in losses.  Also there’s the issue that the offense may be creating the numbers for him, but just to make it simple, the offense itself isn’t doing all of the work for him, he goes over people, he runs ahead of people and he gets by people, just because his numbers aren’t coming from isolations doesn’t mean they are not coming from serious work.
The last of these surprises is Demarcus Cousins, everyone who has seen him play understands that he is talented, he can post you, he can handle it fairly well, he can pass, he can rebound, and he’s actually a pretty good defender although he’s not really a shot blocker.  All last season and early this season he had confirmed those worries to be true.  However, since the kings fired Paul Westphal and hired Keith Smart there has not been a hint of any maturity issues, Cousins has put up great numbers and I think he has been the best king.  He’s done everything we had hoped he would eventually do.  Since hiring smart, Cousins has only been held to less than 10 rebounds 4 times, and he’s had 15 or more rebounds 5 times.  Also, the team has been playing good basketball and looking like a decent basketball team.  The downside is that cousins can’t block shots and he doesn’t run the floor very well (even though that shouldn’t be too big of a deal.)
John Wall has by no means played badly.  He’s averaging 15 points, 7 assists and 5 rebounds, all of those numbers are down this year except for rebounds.  When a guy is on a team where he is expected to dominate the ball as much as John Wall, he’s supposed to get points, but Wall has gotten his points in extremely inefficient ways.  He is shooting below %40 from the field which is the worst of the good players.  His assists come solely off of being a point guard who has the ball in his hands all of the time.
So to acknowledge the elephant in the room, I’ll just say it, Wall has not been the best player form that draft class.  Whether you think it’s been Cousins, Monroe, or George, it certainly hasn’t been Wall; while he still could eventually be one of the best point guards in the league, up to now he still hasn’t even passed the rest of his class.