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Archive for December, 2009

Kevin Durant has 100,000 fewer All-Star votes than Tracy McGrady

December 11th, 2009

And McGrady hasn’t played professional basketball in a year. (link)Dallas All-Star Game

Now I know fan votes are messed up. This isn’t the first time these type of stupid issues have come up. Just last summer baseball saw a similar issue with Manny Ramirez. Heck, Ken Griffey Jr. still gets a TON of All-Star votes.

But doesn’t this really illustrate how this is kind of a flawed system? All-Star games are something we use to judge and evaluate player’s careers. And to a further degree, All-Star starting positions as well. And you’ve got one guy that is third in the league in scoring and is turning into a possible MVP candidate trailing another guy that is averaging 0.0 ppg, 0.0 rpg, 0.0 apg in 0.0 minutes per game by a full 100,000 votes. HOW STUPID IS THAT?

Again, I realize that’s just life with the fan vote. But that doesn’t make it any less ridiculous.

Commentary ,

Friday Bolts – 12.11.09

December 11th, 2009

Game tonight! Finally. I was tired of this little intermission.thunderbolt23

Henry Abbott says KD has flipped the script on his plus/minus issues: “It’s a new season, though, and players Durant’s age improve quickly. And so far this season? Kevin Durant may have the greatest plus/minus improvement in NBA history. He was one of the very worst players in the league by that measure last season, and now he’s second-best. Only Dirk Nowitzki rates better in Wayne Winston’s adjusted plus/minus. As of today, Durant’s Thunder are giving up 11.5 fewer points per hundred possessions when he’s on the floor. And they’re scoring 13.75 more. That’s unbelievable.” Read more…

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Kevin Durant, according to Sherman Alexie

December 10th, 2009
shermanalexie_robcaseyphoto_21

What's so dang funny?

Acclaimed author and famous Sonics fan Sherman Alexie, in a review of Bill Simmons’ Book of Basketball had this to say about Kevin Durant:

I’m not the technical guy who can link readers to the many statistical sites that prove what some of us already know, but you Durant maniacs and Internet hounds can easily find them and learn this: At this point in his career, Kevin Durant is Glenn Robinson 2.0. Yes, Durant is an offensive marvel, but he doesn’t yet rebound effectively, pass the ball well, or make his teammates better.

In the brief time I watched him here in Seattle, I can’t tell you how often the basketball fanatics around me would complain about Durant’s habitual inability and/or unwillingness to rotate on defense. With his height, speed, and grace, he should be getting three help-side blocked shots a game. He’s not. That is a serious problem. And it’s a problem that Simmons—who is so great at pointing out the weaknesses of other players’ games—fails to notice because he is kneeling with his head against the pew in the Church of Durant.

Read more…

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Peace, Love and Thunderstanding: The Difference Between Winning and Losing

December 10th, 2009

Celtics Thunder Basketball

Growing up as a baseball player, two things became incredibly clear to me.  Superstitions are nothing to mess with, and statistics are the lifeblood of sport.  I was that guy who came off the field and grabbed the scorebook to keep myself entertained when it wasn’t my turn to bat.  That led to me getting lobbied by a lot by teammates to score their one hopper to the pitcher that was airmailed into the stands as a double.

As I have grown older and become more obsessed with basketball, I have learned that basketball players are not very superstitious (how else can you explain the number of players who choose to wear the number thirteen–are they crazy?!?) and statistics are not as valuable to rating contributions on the floor (see Kevin Durant and plus/minus controversy).

Of course, that last bit of information has not stopped me from trying to find a way to find value in a player’s stat sheet.  Today, that led me to comparing how the Thunder’s core players (Kevin Durant, Jeff Green, Russell Westbrook, and James Harden) perform when the team wins versus how they peform in losses this season.  After the jump, I share what I found. Read more…

Commentary

Thursday Bolts – 12.10.09

December 10th, 2009

Forbes says the Thunder is the 20th most valuable franchise: “The Thunder’s inaugural season after moving from thunderbolt23Seattle and relinquishing the SuperSonics name was not much of a success on the court. The team managed to win only 23 games, a slight improvement on the team’s 20 win showing the prior year in Seattle. Off-the-court was a different story as attendance jumped a league best 37% and ticket revenues surged 145%. While other small markets struggled to turn a profit last year, the Thunder earned $13 million. The Ford Center is in the middle of a $100 million makeover that includes a new scoreboard, new restaurants and remodeled suites. This season the team got off to a decent start led by its trio of young guns: Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook and Jeff Green.”

Kevin Durant said he almost cried when Oden got hurt: “Once I heard he was having surgery, to be honest with you I almost drew a tear for him,” said Durant, who became the no-brainer No. 2 pick behind Oden in one of the most highly-debated decisions in the draft’s history … “It’s unfair to him because people don’t know how hard he works every day,” Durant said. “But they’re already ready to tear him down. That’s life I guess. But he works hard every day and he does his job every day and people don’t give him credit for that.” Read more…

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DT-Shirts Update: Broingtons available tonight, inventory re-stocked

December 9th, 2009

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Heads up shirt buyers: The Broingtons shirt will be available for purchase sometime this evening and the other four shirts are being re-stocked. All will hopefully be ready to buy before close at Tree and Leaf tonight (that’s 8 p.m.).

If you’re thinking about going to check but don’t want to waste a trip, give them a call and see if it’s there. Phone number: 405-728-2026. Or just click the banner to the right and furiously refresh until you see them pop up.

UPDATE: Bad news, the Harden shirt won’t be done today, but the others will. Also, it doesn’t show up online, but there are XXL sizes now as well. Just call the store if you want an XXL and are buying online and they’ll get it sorted. Thanks!

News

Wednesday Bolts – 12.9.09

December 9th, 2009

Oklahoma City is well respresented again in ESPN’s Award Watch. Scott Brooks is No. 1 for Coach of the Year, KD is thunderbolt2310th in the MVP race, James Harden third for Rookie of the Year and Thabo is second for defensive player of the year.

Sam Presti was reportedly intersted in Nate Robinson last year around the deadline, and it looks like the Knicks are open to trading him: ”But Robinson is another matter. He is on a one-year, $4 million contract, which the Knicks can simply let expire next July. Unlike Stephon Marbury, who was benched and then banished last year, Robinson is not a corrosive influence in the locker room. There is little risk to keeping him around as an insurance policy. The Knicks are open to trading Robinson, but as a player on a one-year deal, he would have veto rights. It might also be tough to find a trade partner; no team offered Robinson a contract over the summer, when he was a restricted free agent.” Read more…

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Playoffs? Yes, playoffs. Or so says John Hollinger

December 8th, 2009

I’m not getting ahead of myself here. I’m not going to start talking about the p-word until at least late January. But if other people want to, by all means.

Get it? Hold your hor-- ah nevermind.

Get it? Hold your hor-- ah nevermind.

Oklahoma City has got a seriously tough December ahead and some difficult January games. But regardless, Hollinger still projects 48 wins, with a best case scenario of 64-18 and a worst case of 28-54. (Hollinger’s Playoff Odds)

Right now Hollinger has the Thunder’s playoff odds at a solid 82.5 percent. Remember though, that’s as of RIGHT NOW. That could change drastically with a five-game losing streak. Right now though, he puts OKC’s NBA Finals chances at 8.8 percent, which is right where Utah, Houston and Miami sit. The Thunder has a 4.9 percent chance to win it all. I just peed a little.

He gives the Thunder the second best chance to win the Northwest Division (19.6 percent) behind the Nuggs who hold a 60.6 percent chance. The Lakers are his favorite to win it all, in a series with Boston. Ooooh fun.

The thing about the Thunder that’s most encouraging is that conventional wisdom says this team is only going to get better as the season goes along. So as the team sits at 11-9, you have to keep in mind that the deeper we go, the better Kevin Durant will get. Russell Westbrook will get more confident. James Harden more comfortable. Jeff Green more assertive. Roles better understood and defined. This team is young and young teams improve. Just like last season, I suspect this team is going to play its best basketball later in the year, especially since the schedule gets much easier in March and April. (UPDATE: Hollinger’s comments about OKC after the jump) Read more…

Commentary

Tuesday Bolts – 12.8.09

December 8th, 2009

Kevin Durant talking about his adjustment: ”It’s tough to play against little guards,” Durant said. “Since I’m so tall, thunderbolt23they get under me when I dribble. Coming out (in the second half), I wanted to do something else. My shot wasn’t going the first half … I got a few assists early on, and that led to some points for me as well. People think it’s easy (going against small guards), that I’m going to score a lot of points. But it’s tough. Those guys get after it. They have quick hands. That’s something I have to get used to.”

An interesting OTL piece on the decline of white basketball players. Oklahoma City has its quota with Nick Collison. If it brings up Byron Mullens, well, we’re stacked then. Read more…

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The other two Broingtons step up as OKC cruises past GSW

December 7th, 2009

BOX SCORE

(Photo by Layne Murdoch/NBAE via Getty Images)

(Photo by Layne Murdoch/NBAE via Getty Images)

At halftime, Kevin Durant was 3-10 from the floor with just six points. And I’d bet you nobody was happier.

For really the first time this year, his Thunder teammates picked up the slack. It’s not like Durant was playing bad, but for once, he wasn’t forced to play good. The Warriors focused their defensive effort on KD and so Durant deferred to the other two Broingtons. Jeff Green was awesome in the first 24, putting up a double-double (17-10) and James Harden had 15 points (10-10 from the line), as OKC held a 51-50 lead at halftime over Golden State. Just hold down the fort and wait for KD to start cooking and that’s exactly what Harden and Green did.

And all it took was Durant remembering how awesome he is and the Thunder took control in the second half to run away from Golden State, 104-88, notching win No. 11 and finishing this homestand 3-2.

Here’s a good stat: This is the first time this season the Warriors have been held under 90 points. How’s that for defensive improvement? A 29-18 third quarter did the trick for OKC, though it didn’t go as smooth as the box score seems. The Thunder scored seven quick points out of the locker room in literally a minute. Russell Westbrook had five in 10 seconds. But after that, OKC scored six over the next eight minutes. The offense stalled, the team got lazy and GSW cut the score to 63-62. But OKC finished on a 16-5 run to really take the game over. Read more…

Recap

Warriors vs. Thunder: Pregame Primer

December 7th, 2009

gs warriors vs. okc thunder

Golden State Warriors (6-13, 2-8 road) vs. Oklahoma City Thunder (10-9, 5-5 home)

TV: FS Oklahoma (Cox 37, HD 722, Tulsa Cox 27, DirectTV 679, UVerse 753)
Stream: Click Here
Radio: WWLS The Sports Animal (98.1 FM, 640 AM, 97.1 FM Tulsa)
Time: 7:00 CST

Offensive Rating: Thunder – 105.6 (21st), Warriors – 107.5 (15th)
Defensive Rating: Thunder – 103.5 (8th), Warriors – 111.8 (29th)
Pace: Thunder – 91.7 (19th), Warriors – 102.2 (1st)

View from the enemy: Warriors World

Another one of these. The “Slightly scary, but only because the Thunder is perfectly capable of dropping a stinker at any time, but at the same time, OKC should cruise to a victory” type of game. They terrify me. You win and it’s taking care of business. You lose and it feels like a disaster. I feel like I say this every time. But it’s true. Read more…

Preview

Monday Bolts – 12.7.09

December 7th, 2009

A good story on Latavious Williams, the 66ers and the Thunder by Yahoo!’s Marc Spears: “The D-League offers players thunderbolt23a chance to play for teams run by NBA franchises. Oftentimes, the teams have a coach who is appointed by their NBA affiliate and who runs a system similar to that of the NBA team. Presti met with Williams at the Thunder practice facility after the D-League draft and attended the 66ers’ first team meeting and practice. The 66ers also will attend several Thunder games in Oklahoma City.”

This writer on Bleacher Report lists out all the Thunder’s problems: ”Although the Thunder are advanced on the defensive end (fifth in defensive rating), they allow great defensive teams to control the tempo of the game. They run an undeveloped offense, one that lacks the creativity most NBA teams possess. Great defensive teams expose that and when opponents also have a greater range of offensive plays, they exploit them as well. Their other fatal flaw is the need for a big man.” Read more…

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Sunday Discussion: The Ibaka Conundrum

December 6th, 2009

(One thing lacking here at DT is Sunday fodder. Our good friend J.G. is here to fill that void. So turn off that boring Bengals-Chiefs game and have a read.)90040984NG013_OKC_LAL

Dense droplets of saturated air hang thick around the rusted metal rim, the humidity resisting the flight of the worn leather ball shot after shot. Dust disperses at each bounce of the faded basketball as the chorus of dribbles, feet pounding towards the basket and the familiar clang of an unforgiving rim echoes around the outdoor court.

He catches his breath, inhaling the 89 percent humidity and bouncing the ball a few more times for good measure before returning home, a home lying at 0º00´ North of the Equator. A home of tropical temperatures at the hot and humid equatorial river basin of Brazaville, Congo.  A home that he grew up in without electricity and running water; the same home that  served as the cradle to his still developing craft, one in which he honed outdoors for the majority of his young life, not playing an indoor basketball game until only a few years ago.

And now a few years later, Serge Ibaka finds himself in a place very unlike the sub-tropical climate of his home, in a culture very different from his Brazavillian heritage and in a city where he must learn, yet again, their native tongue so that he can further the education that has spurred him on his whirlwind journey across the globe.

Yet one constant remains. The worn leather ball, the familiar clang of an unforgiving rim and the passionate talent that has brought him thus far. Because wherever Serge Ibaka has gone to continue playing and growing in the sport of basketball, one thing persists throughout all of the changes in scenery, culture and language: The love of the game.

And it is that game that has become his home, his one true constant despite all of the change, and it is his undeniable skill at that game that generates what so many Thunder fans currently find themselves wrestling with: The Ibaka Conundrum. Read more…

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Rejoice you have Kevin Durant and about nothing else

December 6th, 2009

Oden InjuryThey’ve been forever linked together. Because of one year, one draft, one general manager’s decision, whatever happens, Kevin Durant and Greg Oden stand to be compared for the rest of their respective careers.

Is it fair? I don’t really know. Is it perfectly natural? Yes, yes it is. Oden was taken ahead of Durant in what some considered a bad pick, even at the time. Oden, the conventional dominant big man or Durant, the once-in-a-lifetime college superstar? Eventually, Oden won out, at least in Portland general manager Kevin Pritchard’s mind.

But in 2007, Durant won out, at least in the minds of most every NBA fan. Oden sat on the sideline, watching every game of his rookie season without playing a minute. He had microfracture surgery on his right knee before even sniffing a minute of real life run in the NBA. Durant meanwhile went on to glide to the Rookie of the Year Award. Read more…

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Tulsa Time: 66ers win thriller in Austin, go 1-3 for the week

December 5th, 2009

A quick recap of what’s going on with Oklahoma City’s D-League affiliate, the Tulsa 66ers.

Tuesday: Tulsa fell 89-72 to the Austin Toros. Byron Mullens had 11 points Picture-1and five boards in 37 minutes, Larry Owens added 13 and Mustafa Shakur led the team with 19 points, six rebounds and four assists. However, Shakur had seven turnovers. Alonzo Gee had 25 for the Toros.

Wednesday: As often happens in the D-League, the 66ers turned around and rematched the Toros a night later in Austin and Tulsa won a thriller 92-90. Shakur led the way with 26 points on 11-16 shooting and dished out four assists. DeVon Hardin had nine points and six rebounds, Mullens 14 points, 11 rebounds and two blocks and Cecil Brown added 19. Shakur knocked down the game-winner with 1.4 seconds left to secure Tulsa’s second win. Read more…

Recap