Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
Carter Picks Right Time For Surgery
by Michael - posted Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008
Vince Carter underwent successful arthroscopic surgery on his right ankle Wednesday, to remove bone spurs and loose bodies, plus perform a debridement of the ankle, according to the Nets website. The team provided no exact timetable for recovery, but after several weeks on crutches and rehab, the Nets expect Carter to be ready for training camp.
Criticized in the past for not playing through injuries, tagged as soft in NBA circles, Carter showed his heart playing in 70 games after initially injuring his ankle in a loss to
Give Carter credit on two fronts. He played hard right until the last day of the season, elevating his game – on and off the court - after the Kidd trade, while the ankle continued to give him problems. Not once did he complain about the injury. That should quiet any questions about his heart, or devotion to the team. Ankle injuries can be serious, unlike, say, a migraine.
Having the surgery immediately after the season to gives VC as much time to rehab for next season as possible. Too many times injured stars wait after the season, talk about rehabbing, talk about resting, wind up having surgery later in the summer, then next thing you know they show up unprepared for the season, or miss regular season games. By taking care of the injury a week after the season ended, barring an unforeseen setback, the Nets can count on Carter.
Missing the playoffs has its benefits, a high draft pick, and extra rest for the veterans. Giving Carter a few extra weeks, and others that hobbled to the finish line like Devin Harris, Josh Boone, and Boki Nochbar – if he returns – will benefit the Nets playoff run next season.
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Tags: ankle, injury, New Jersey Nets, surgery, Vince Carter
For the Record: NBA Playoff Picks
by Michael - posted Monday, April 21st, 2008
This year’s NBA playoffs has it all – except the Knicks.
Eastern Conference
36 win teams do not belong in the playoffs. They don’t deserve to collect a playoff share, or even get the chance to pull an upset.
Rarely do 59-win teams fly under the radar, especially one with five consecutive Eastern Conference Finals appearances and a chip on their shoulder after losing to an inferior team last season. Welcome to the Detroit Pistons world. Ripe with a rare mix of veteran leadership, playoff experience, and young energy off the bench, this Pistons team goes deeper than years past, though questions remain on how youngsters Rodney Stuckey, Amir Johnson, Aaron Afflalo, and Jason Maxiell will handle the playoff intensity.
Dwight Howard arrived this season. No longer the next big thing, Howard is an almost automatic double-double every time he steps foot on the court, yet the key to
There are some things you don’t do, then just shake your head when someone does it. DeShawn Stevenson went there. He called out Lebron James. Mind you, this is not
A two horse race all season, its only fitting the conference championship comes down to
Western Conference
It happened last season, the eight seed knocking off the top seed in the West, this year only 6 wins separate the two, could it happen again? Not unless
Rarely is the second-seed viewed as an underdog in the opening series, especially one that boasts an MVP candidate. Not quite the underdog in Vegas, a Hornets first round exit would still surprise few. The knock on them, never been there before. Well,
A heavyweight tussle made for the conference finals, not the first round. Forget the build up and hype, we all know the history between San Antonio and Phoenix by now, we know all the major players, buckle up for a classic. Amare Stoudemire played as good as anyone in the NBA after the Shaq acquisition freed him up on both ends of the court, the Spurs need to find a way to contain him off the pick and roll with Nash to slow down the Suns offensively.
Somehow,
After my don’t underestimate New Orleans speech, I give them little to no chance in the second round against San Antonio, to whom home court advantage makes little difference. LA and
One question, will any team coming out of the West have enough in the tank when the Finals rolls around? The Spurs have an older team, having to go through
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Tags: 2008 NBA Playoffs, Boston Celtics, Chauncey Billups, Chris Paul, Cleveland Cavs, Dallas Mavericks, Detroit Pistons, Dwight Howard, Gilbert Arenas, Houston Rockets, Jason Kidd, Kobe Bryant, Lebron James, Los Angeles Lakers, New Orleans Hornets, Orlando Magic, Phoenix Suns, San Antonio Spurs, Shaquille O’Neal, Tracy McGrady, Utah Jazz
Former Nets in Playoffs
by Michael - posted Sunday, April 20th, 2008
Yesterday the NBA tipped off it’s second season without the New Jersey Nets for the first time in seven seasons, however many players and coaches with ties to the Nets organization still have a chance for the crown. So as the Nets hit the links, resting hope on ping-pong balls, here’s some former Nets to keep an eye on.
Western Conference
Kidd is the focal point of this series on and off the court. His match up against MVP-candidate Chris Paul, who torched Kidd multiple times during the regular season, will go a long way in determining the series. If Paul continues to dominate,
Off the court, that extension J-Kidd demanded from the Nets and he expected from Mark Cuban remains unsigned. Mr. Triple Double may still need to prove he’s worth his weight in gold – or green, in this case – before
On the opposite bench, Byron Scott, leading candidate for coach of the year, sits with revenge on his mind. Only four years ago, Kidd forced the Nets to fire Scott following two NBA Finals appearances. Now, Scott has brought another team from the ranks of laughingstock to the forefront of championship discussion. Kidd, meanwhile, never reached that level of team success again, and this may be his last chance. Think Scott would like to squash it.
Of the small army
Denver-Los Angeles – Net fans point to losing one player that ended the string of Eastern Conference supremacy earlier this decade – Kenyon Martin. After missing all but two games last season, Martin put up solid numbers in
Houston-Utah – Thrust back into a starting role when Yao Ming suffered the fractured leg, 41-year old Dikembe Mutombo hopes to return to the NBA Finals one last time. Mutombo filled in admirably for
San Antonio-Phoenix – When Tony Parker needs a breather, Gregg Poppovich will look to defensive-specialist Jacques Vaughn to contain former MVP point guard Steve Nash. If the Spurs go deep into the playoffs, Vaughn will have his opportunities to spell Parker. He fits
Boston-Atlanta – Playing backup point guard most of the season, Eddie House sacrificed shots and points for the good of the team. Of course, running along side three superstars on your way to a 66-16 season makes it easier. With Sam Cassell now on board to backup Rajon Rondo, House is free to do what he does best, shoot. That same shooting ability the Nets sorely missed this season, will force to defenses to spread out, opening up lanes for Garnet and Pierce inside. If teams opt leave House open, he can bury them from downtown. His 91% FT shooting makes House a viable option in late game situations.
Cleveland-Washtington – A throwback to another era, Damon James made a cameo with the Nets in 1998-99. Now, the
Toronto-Orlando – For those who forget, the Nets actually drafted current Raptor Anthony Parker in 1997, then shipped him to
Philadelphia-Detroit – Former Nets GM Ed Stefanski now presides over arguably the biggest surprise in the NBA. Most experts picked Philly to battle for the top spot in the lottery, not playoff position. Give credit where credit is due though, former GM Billy King drafted the young players emerging this year, and built this team.
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Tags: Anthony Parker, Antoine Wright, Byron Scott, Dikembe Mutombo, Ed Stefanski, Eddie House, former players, Jacques Vaughn, Jamaal Magloire, Jason Kidd, Kenyon Martin, Malik Allen, NBA Playoffs, New Jersey Nets
Jackson Officially Leaving Nets Broadcast Booth
by Michael - posted Wednesday, April 16th, 2008
Mark Jackson announced that tonight marks his last game behind the microphone on Nets broadcast. Jackson slipped it in during the nightly third quarter segment of the broadcast that reviews the text message results of the question of the night, which conincidentally asked viewers to vote on where Mark Jackson would be next year.
Though widely rumored to be among the leading candidates for the Knicks head coaching job, or another GM or coaching position in the NBA, Jackson stated that he will focus on broadcasting for ESPN/ABC full-time - as of now, at least. He cited family issues, his wife and kids live in Los Angeles, for the decision to leave the Nets. Over three seasons as the Nets lead analyst, Jackson has emerged as a top-notch broadcaster, balancing a quick wit and solid ability to break down basketball from an X’s and O’s perspective in simple, understandable terms for viewers. The New York native had great chemistry with both play-by-play men, Marv Albert and Ian Eagle, making for entertaining, informative broadcasts, even as the Nets struggled this year.
Jackson will begin broadcasting the NBA playoffs on ESPN and ABC with Jeff Van Gundy and Mike Breen this weekend. If he continues in that position next year, remains to be seen.
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Tags: broadcasts, Ian Eagle, Mark Jackson, Marv Albert, New Jersey Nets
Potential Draftees Declare For Draft
by Michael - posted Thursday, April 10th, 2008
Monday night’s exciting college basketball season finale in the rear view mirror, full attention shifts to the draft this week. Underclassmen have until April 27th to declare for the draft, June 16th is the last day underclassmen who choose not to hire an agent can withdraw and preserve eligibility.
Barring a lottery miracle, the Nets will land a pick on the fringe of the Top 10 to address their two biggest needs – perimeter shooting and post scoring. Arizona’s Chase Budinger, Nevada’s Javale McGee, Texas A&M’s DeAndre Jordan, Florida’s Marreese Speights, and LSU’s Anthony Randolph all declared for the draft, expect to be available around the Nets selection, and project to address a need area. Only McGee hired an agent.
Rod Thorn decided to let Eddie House walk, and the Nets paid for it all season without a legitimate long distance threat to stretch defenses or combat zone defenses. The Nets toyed with Mike Miller at the trade deadline before standing pat, leaving the perimeter shooting hole. Budinger, the lanky 6’7” shooting guard, possesses the outside stroke to make teams pay from behind the arc the next time the Nets see a 2-3 zone. His defense remains a question, but Budinger is a legitimate perimeter scorer with a shot and the size to create mismatches.
Recent Net draft picks Sean Williams and Josh Boone pleasantly surprised this season stepping into prominent rotation roles most of the season, Boone elevated to the starting lineup. Questions remain on the offensively challenged Boone, who relied on transition and high percentage shots to score. Williams sporadically displayed flashes of a post game and the potential to bury the 10-foot shot, but is still extremely raw and inconsistent. Lacking a go-to post presence, the Nets became jump shot happy too often when they needed a basket. Arthur showed an array of post moves in Monday nights title game, though he’s undersized for a center. Randolph and Jordan are both long-term projects with immense talent and many questions. McGee does not have the upside of the other’s, but is a safer option that could contribute immediately.
The next few months leaves plenty of time to analyze the strengths and weaknesses of each player, and detail the Nets need areas this offseason. By late April, the Nets will know who their options are with the two first round picks. Check out www.njnetscast.com for a full potential wish list when the underclassmen dust settles.
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Tags: 2008, Anthony Randolph, Chase Budinger, DeAndre Jordan, Javale McGee, NBA Draft, New Jersey Nets, underclassmen
Nets Can Still Impact Playoffs
by Michael - posted Wednesday, April 9th, 2008
Only 5 games remain until the countdown until the Nets first lottery appearance since 2001, barring a miracle, yet each of the next two games have major Eastern Conference playoff implications. Tonight the Nets travel to
Teams entering the postseason have three items on the wish list: health, home court, and peak at the right time.
While the Nets countdown to the draft lottery, they still have a chance to leave their fingerprints on the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs before hitting the links.
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Tags: Cleveland Cavaliers, New Jersey Nets, playoffs, pre-game nots, Toronto Raptors
Nets, Carter Place Priority on Integrity
by Michael - posted Monday, April 7th, 2008
Vince Carter could hang up his number 15 Nets jersey and called it a season last week with the Nets playoff hopes on life support. Other teams would almost force Carter to do so, not risking the team superstar and its biggest investment, trying to improve draft position by not fielding the best team possible.
After sitting out Friday, watching a listless Nets loss to a
Frank alluded to “professional responsibility” in a pre-game interview with YES Saturday, a responsibility to the league, the team, and the fans.
Sadly, NBA players get commended for just doing what they are paid an obscene amount of money to do. But look at
He should know better.
Go a step further, evaluate the past three drafts, last year’s prize sat out the entire season with injury, the two best players from the 2006 draft were selected sixth and eighth (Rudy Gay and Brandon Roy), and while Milwaukee struck gold in the lottery in 2005, Utah and New Orleans have Deron Williams and Chris Paul. If fate holds, the lottery will not reward
Back to Carter, his turnaround dates back to the Kidd trade. Widely criticized throughout his career, fairly and unfairly, for being soft, and getting comfortable after signing long term contracts, Carter has elevated his all-around game. Compared to the first half of the season, in 23 games since the All-Star break Carter increased his scoring by over 3 points per game, plays 2 more minutes, and grabs about 1.5 more rebounds a night. Carter has truly tried to fill every void left by Kidd. Rebounding, often overlooked for big scorers, proves the point. Thanks to a big second half on the glass, when the team needed help to replace its leading rebounder, Carter has elevated his season average to 6.1, on pace for a career high.
Perhaps the NBA draft gods will reward the Nets for playing hard – Gay, Amare Stoudemire, Andrew Bynum, and Andre Igoudala all fell between 8th and 10th in the draft, where the Nets will likely pick, unless the ping-pong balls bounce the right way.
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Tags: Lawrence Frank, Lottery, Miami Heat, NBA Draft, New Jersey Nets, Pat Riley, Vince Carter
Nets Must Bring Offense on the Road
by Michael - posted Friday, March 28th, 2008
Richard Jefferson went as far to say the Knicks win does not even count as a road win. At least RJ has a grasp on reality. Besides Monday’s 106-91 win at the Garden, the Nets have not won a road game since February 8th, and hold a 3-18 record away from home since January 8th, and those three wins –
Since Devin Harris debuted against Milwaukee, the Nets have been an offensive juggernaut at home, eclipsing 100 points and 50% shooting in 6 of the 7 home games, posting a 5-2 record. With Harris leading the way, the entire team, particularly Vince Carter, have elevated their games. The Nets play with confidence at home, even appear to have fun at times – a shock if you saw them earlier in the year.
However,
Offensively, the recipe is simple for the Nets, do as you do at the
Jermaine O’Neal expects to return to the
After tonight the Nets embark on a treacherous six-game stretch against playoff teams, magnifying the importance of this game. When the Pacers make a run – and its inevitable, basketball is a game of runs – will the Nets counterpunch, or fall back to the bad habits they’ve exhibited on the road?
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Tags: 100 points, Devin Harris, Indiana Pacers, New Jersey Nets, offense, playoffs, road, shooting percentage
Nets Seek to Avoid Humiliation, Stay Alive Vs. Knicks
by Michael - posted Monday, March 24th, 2008
Desperate for a win, who better to play than the New York Knicks, the laughingstock that Isiah built. In recent years that meant an automatic win for the Nets, sporting an impeccable record during the Jason Kidd era, then that nasty migraine hit in December. This season, the Knicks have given the Nets headaches, sweeping the three meetings thus far. Monday night the Knicks look to sweep the season series for the first time since the strike shortened 1998-99 season, and the first four-game set since 1994-95.
Back to back weekend losses combined with Indiana and Atlanta win streaks leave the Nets tied with the Pacers, 1 ½ games behind the Hawks, in the race for eighth in the East, and a date with the Celtics in the playoffs. Following the Knicks,
Outside of
With only four wins away from home in the new year, the Nets need to take advantage of this cupcake to get their feet back under them away from Izod heading down the home stretch. Unfortunately the Knicks depleted active roster still includes Jamaal Crawford and Zach Randolph, two guys that tortured the Nets in the losses earlier this season. Surrounded with the likes of Randolph Morris, Fred Jones, Wilson Chandler, Malik Rose, and Reynaldo Balkman, coach Lawrence Frank must force anyone but Crawford and Randolph beat them. Saturday in
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Tags: Atlanta Hawks, Indiana Pacers, Isiah Thomas, New Jersey Nets, New York Knicks, playoffs, Pre-Game
ESPN Reports Frank Officially On the Hot Seat
by Michael - posted Wednesday, March 19th, 2008
ESPN’s NBA Senior Writer Chris Broussard reports on this morning’s NBA 411 segment during the Mike and Mike in the Morning simulcast on ESPN2 that Lawrence Frank is on the hot seat and could lose his job if the Nets don’t earn a playoff berth. Broussard mentions how both Bruce Ratner and Rod Thorn like Lawrence Frank, but says winning has become a priority and will take precedent over personal feelings.
Broussard first reported that Larry Brown is interested in returning to coaching, at almost any cost, before his segue way into the Frank story, though he made sure to mention that Brown would not fit in New Jersey. One look at the Nets record, compared to the pre-season expectations, and Frank on the hot seat does not come as a shock. Fans have lit up message boards calling for the coach’s head during this dysfunctional, disappointing season, though this marks the first public report from sources close to Ratner and Thorn that a change may be on the horizon.
Ironically, this report comes a day after possibly the most disappointing loss to date this season, a 16-point defeat to Chicago, with a potentially season defining game against Atlanta tonight. The rumor will not serve as any distraction, only a reminder of how far the Nets are from where they expected to be.
If Frank goes, who should be next in line?
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Tags: firing, Lawrence Frank, New Jersey Nets, Rod Thorn





