Saturday, April 10, 2010
USA Basketball
Look out, 2012 London Olympics. USA basketball may have problems trying to stay at the top of the basketball world. It all starts with team management of its players. Basketball stars such as Lebron James and Dwayne Wade are backing off their commitments of playing extended time for US basketball because of summer plans. Why are they doing this? The USA basketball program is not programmed for team dedication such as the overseas European basketball teams and the South American teams like Argentina. The US basketball program is used to having its own way in every way, shape, and form. They're not used to having team-oriented players who are able to do multiple things on a basketball court such as competing on every single basketball possession. That's what team USA basketball is unable to do. They were forced to compete against the opposing teams who were able to scrap, hustle, score, rebound, play pressure defense, and perform all the intangibles it takes to win games. So when Lebron James says he can't commit to a three-year playing spurt for team USA at the London Games commenting that he has summer plans, it just goes to mean that American basketball players have a lot more on their minds than just playing basketball and making drastic improvements on their games unlike the American counterparts who are dedicated to hone their basketball skills , countries such as Lithuania, Argentina, Spain, Puerto Rico, etc. USA basketball director Jerry Colangelo made an edict and he should not back down from it. His edict required that all basketball players who played previously for him would continue since 2009 until 2012 at the London Olympics. He should stay with this plan and propose that all players who play for Colangelo follow through on their 3-year commitment. This is why USA basketball isn't as dominant as was before in the past in the era of Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, and Michael Jordan. You can't put together star players who have complete and pure basketball skills and blend them together, making them work alongside each other. You need your players to understand the coach as a person, make the players relate to the coach as a person, they will understand why the players need to make this three-year commitment. USA basketball doesn't think like that. The thinking throughout these basketball years in the United States is that you can put together a group of NBA stars and win Olympic games and the gold medal without team cohesiveness and chemistry. Boy, has that thinking gone wrong. If anything, USA basketball is totally dysfunctional because of these types of unwarranted behaviors that nobody expects to read about. Nobody wants to hear about Lebron James or Dwayne Wade taking summer breaks off from basketball. They want to hear about their basketball heroes go to the training room and work on their skills.
Friday, April 9, 2010
2010 NBA Playoff Picture
As the NBA playoffs come around on April 17, I wonder which of the sixteen teams in round one will have a big bang on the start of things to come. The Cleveland Cavaliers, behind Lebron 'King' James are a heavy favorite, as are the Orlando Magic, whose dominant basketball plays belong to Dwight Howard and perimeter threat Vince Carter. Not far behind are the Atlanta Hawks, whose playoff positioning has them eager to go further in the NBA playoffs. With the Hawks' addition of Jamal Crawford in the offseason, they want to go the distance and sprint ahead to the NBA Finals. The fading Boston Celtics are still a perennial powerhouse, but they are a force to be reckoned with. Their Big Three of Kevin Garnett, Paul Pierce, and Ray Allen are aging and they do not seem to be getting better with age. Garnett's knees are no less young than they were of yesteryear. Paul Pierce is being nagged with injuries. Ray Allen is no less of a great defender as is Kevin Garnett is. Allen's sharp shooting has helped the Celtic offense spurts energy of points. As the Eastern conference ladder goes down for playoff positioning, the Milwaukee Bucks are fifth. They have been surging for throughout the NBA season. The Bucks have been led in part of Brandon Jennings, their point guard acquired in the off-season who has played in Europe and Andrew Bogut, their center. The Miami Heat, Charlotte Bobcats, Toronto Raptors, and the Chicago Bulls follow suit in the six, seven, and eight seeded spots. Currently, the Raptors and the Bulls are tied for the eighth spot. The Heat have been inspired by Dwayne Wade's play, not by his teammates, although Wade's supporting cast has shown brilliant basketball plays frequently on a night-by-night basis, but not enough to warrant a SportsCenter highlight reel. The Bobcats have been fired up by general manager Michael Jordan's 100% ownership of the franchise and Gerald Wallace and Stephen Jackson are leading the Charlotte franchise to their first-ever NBA playoff appearance. This is a big boost for their team morale and especially for Bobcats coach Larry Brown. I'd like to see the GM Michael Jordan-led Bobcats pull off an upset over one of the top four East teams in Cleveland, Boston, Atlanta, and Orlando.
In the West, you have the defending NBA champs in the L.A. Lakers. They are the top seeded team in the West seedings. The Denver Nuggets are second seeded behind Carmelo Anthony's scoring and Chauncey Billups' steady dose of floor leadership and poise. Dallas is third with Dirk Nowitzki's shooting as a seven-foot big man. The Mavericks' combination of Caron Butler and Brendan Haywood, who have been recently been acquired by Dallas are also a threat to be dealt with. Then, you have the Phoenix Suns, whose basketball play has brought them into fourth place. The play of Steve Nash and Amare Stoudemire has been outstanding and none of the teams they played against have been able to stop the Phoenix duo defensively. Fifth seeded Utah are no better than they were last year. The Jazz are still the same engine that keeps running behind Deron Williams and Carlos Boozer. They do no better defensively and offensively on a game-by-game basis. The Portland Trail Blazers follow sixth. They are still trying how to win consecutive basketball games consistently. The reason how? Brandon Roy must take more shots selfishly. If Roy does that, then the Blazers will figure out how best they win basketball games. The San Antonio Spurs have fallen way off the map. They hold down the seventh seed. They won't be able to win the basketball games they want to, unless one of the teams they play against will sustain an injury to one of their players. That way, the Spurs will have a chance at least to win one playoff series. The Oklahoma City Thunder are in the eighth seed. The play of Kevin Durant and Jeff Green haven't been able to hold down the fifth seed as of March 18, 2010. If Durant's Thunder has a chance, they might not go back up to the fifth seed unless the Jazz lose games.
In the West, you have the defending NBA champs in the L.A. Lakers. They are the top seeded team in the West seedings. The Denver Nuggets are second seeded behind Carmelo Anthony's scoring and Chauncey Billups' steady dose of floor leadership and poise. Dallas is third with Dirk Nowitzki's shooting as a seven-foot big man. The Mavericks' combination of Caron Butler and Brendan Haywood, who have been recently been acquired by Dallas are also a threat to be dealt with. Then, you have the Phoenix Suns, whose basketball play has brought them into fourth place. The play of Steve Nash and Amare Stoudemire has been outstanding and none of the teams they played against have been able to stop the Phoenix duo defensively. Fifth seeded Utah are no better than they were last year. The Jazz are still the same engine that keeps running behind Deron Williams and Carlos Boozer. They do no better defensively and offensively on a game-by-game basis. The Portland Trail Blazers follow sixth. They are still trying how to win consecutive basketball games consistently. The reason how? Brandon Roy must take more shots selfishly. If Roy does that, then the Blazers will figure out how best they win basketball games. The San Antonio Spurs have fallen way off the map. They hold down the seventh seed. They won't be able to win the basketball games they want to, unless one of the teams they play against will sustain an injury to one of their players. That way, the Spurs will have a chance at least to win one playoff series. The Oklahoma City Thunder are in the eighth seed. The play of Kevin Durant and Jeff Green haven't been able to hold down the fifth seed as of March 18, 2010. If Durant's Thunder has a chance, they might not go back up to the fifth seed unless the Jazz lose games.
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