Thursday, March 29th, 2012 at 8:15 am  |  113 responses

Post Up: Love Abuse

Kevin won’t stop, plus wins for the Knicks, Clips, Spurs and Bulls.

by Eldon Khorshidi | @eldonadam

Rise and shine, SLAM fam. Our man Abe had some business to handle last night, so it’s me—Eldon Adam Khorshidi—holding down TPU this morning. With 10 games and plenty of storylines to dissect, there’s no need for a cute intro, so let’s do this…

Knicks 108, Magic 86

Holy Mike Woodson! A few hours after receiving word that Amar’e Stoudemire’s back was still intact, the Knicks continued their recent success, winning their eighth game in nine tries with a 108-86 thrashing of the Magic. Orlando won the first and fourth quarters with a combined +13 differential, but was outscored 65-30 in the middle two quarters, which obviously didn’t pan-out well for them. New York was sans Jeremy Lin (knee) and Stoudemire, but Carmelo Anthony, who was hampered by a groin injury of his own and played with a noticeable limp, put up 25 points, 5 rebounds and 6 assists in only 26 minutes. Rookie Iman Shumpert poured in a career-high 25, Steve Novak had 16 and Baron Davis hit em’ with a smooth 11-7-6 line to propel NY to an easy dub. The turning, er, runaway point of the game came in the third quarter, when New York scored 21 straight points and went up by…39(!). Jameer Nelson led the Magic with 17 points, but honestly who cares about that when Dwight Howard scores 12 points on only seven shots. Seven shots!? You opted-in for seven shots? C’mon, fam! Arguably worse, however, was Dwight (and the Magic’s) rebounding effort, or lack thereof, as Howard grabbed only 5 boards and his team got killed on the glass, 49-34, by a very undersized Knicks squad (Melo started at power forward). With the win, the Knicks are above .500 (26-25) for the first time since mid-January, and are now within 2.5 games of Philly and Boston for first place in the Atlantic Division.

Timberwolves 88, Bobcats 83

Who’s afraid of the Big Bad Wolf? The Bobcats, that’s who!

The Wolf, formally known as Kevin Love, continued his March Abuse Tour, scoring 40 points and grabbing 19 rebounds, while Ricky Rubio Luke Ridnour dished out a season-high 14 assists and Anthony Toliver recorded his first double-double of the year (11 points, 11 rebounds) to help Minny (25-27) get within 2.5 games of the West’s final playoff spot.

With his team leading 68-65 entering the fourth, Love quickly stretched the lead to nine with back-to-back threes, and scored 14 in the final stanza to help the Wolves escape with the win. Corey Maggette led Charlotte with 22 points, and Kemba Walker chipped in 20 points off the bench. With starter DJ Augustin’s atrocious play of late (0-4, zero points in this one), it wouldn’t surprise me if Paul Silas makes the switch to Kemba in the near future. Meanwhile, Love is averaging an outrageous 31 points, 14 rebounds and 2 assists in March, while making 47.3 percent of his shots and 45.1 percent of his threes. He also recorded his league-leading 44th double-double, which means he has 43 more double-doubles than Toliver, and that he’s fallen short of a 2-x-2 only four times this season.

Raptors 105, Nuggets 96

“I can’t remember the last time we won back-to-back games…” —Arron Afflalo

Well, Arron, your squad last won back-to-back games on March 5th, which is 24 days ago. No bueno.

A night after knocking off the league-leading Chicago Bulls, the Nuggets, paced by Ty Lawson’s 26 points and 9 assists, and the Raptors entered the fourth quarter tied at 85. But Toronto closed the game on a 17-2 run, holding Lawson scoreless in the final frame and the entire Nuggets team scoreless from the field for the last 8:26 of the game, to emerge with a nine-point victory. Andrea Bargnani led Toronto with 26 points, along the way surpassing the 6,000 point mark for his career, good for 4th all-time on the team’s scoring list. Jose Calderon scored 10 points and dished 10 assists—his fourth consecutive game with double-digit assists—and DeMar DeRozan returned from an ankle injury to contribute 17 points. The Nuggets were outscored (105-96), out-rebounded (49-43) and out-assisted (25-18), a formula that doesn’t equate to winning basketball games.

Pistons 87, Cavaliers 75

In a game when all eyes were focused on the Kyrie Irving/Brandon Knight rookie battle, it was 10-year veteran Tayshaun Prince who stole the show. Prince, who finished with a season-high 29 points (11-for-21, four threes) and grabbed 8 rebounds, was quick to shun every Cleveland comeback attempt, and Knight provided a 16-5-4 line to hand the Cavs their eighth loss in the last nine games and help Detroit win back-to-back road games for only the second time this season. Irving did his usual thing, posting 22 points, 9 rebounds and 6 assists, and Antawn Jamison scored 17 points, but it wasn’t enough to get by Detroit, who was playing sans Ben Gordon, and lost Rodney Stuckey to a hamstring injury in the first quarter. Irving tried to bring the Cavs back in the final frame, sinking a jumper to cut it to 76-71 with 4:08 left, but Knight countered with a 3-pointer, Jason Maxiell got a quick dunk and Prince dropped a short hook to secure the victory. Maxiell had 12 points, 9 rebounds and 3 blocks, and young’n Greg Monroe had 8 points and a team-high 10 rebounds, extending his streak of games with at least five boards to a league-leading 76.

Celtics 94, Jazz 82

KG had 23 points and 10 rebounds, Brandon Bass scored 19 and Rajon Rondo distributed 14 assists to help Boston win for the fifth time in six games, in the process tying Philly atop the Atlantic Division. At one point the C’s were up by as much as 18, but the Jazz came out firing in the third quarter and eventually tied the game early in the fourth. That’s when Garnett scored seven straight, and Boston never relinquished the lead. For Utah, Al Jefferson (who was traded for KG back in 2007 to complete Boston’s “Big 3″) scored 18 points and grabbed 12 boards, Gordon Hayward scored 19 and Paul Millsap 16, but it wasn’t enough. Utah is now in a three-way tie with Denver and Houston for the last two Playoff spots out West.

Nets 100, Pacers 84

One game after beating the Miami Heat, the Pacers, simply put, pooped the bed in this one. Word to Mr. Schwadron.

Deron Williams scored 30 points and dished 9 assists to give the Nets a 16-point win, the team’s largest margin of victory this season. MarShon Brooks added 17 and Gerald Green added 14 to help New Jersey avoid a 4-0 season sweep against Indiana. The Nets started the game with only 10 players, and their roster was soon trimmed to eight, as they lost Shelden and Jordan Williams to an eye injury and concussion, respectively. Shelden actually went to the hospital after game, which by default is kind of scary. Paul George had 22 points to lead the Pacers, who hold a half-game lead over the Hawks for the 5th seed in the Eastern Conference.

Bulls 98, Hawks 77

Atlanta, playing its fifth game in six days, raced to a 13-5 lead but then the weary legs kicked in, as the DRose-less Bulls seized control and never relented. Chicago made its first seven treys (finished with nine) en route to a relatively easy “road” win. “Road” is in quotation marks because at one point in the fourth quarter, Phillips Arena began an overwhelming “Let’s Go Bulls!” chant. Behind Luol Deng’s 22 points (5 threes), Carlos Boozer’s 20 and Taj Gibson’s 19, Chicago improved to an NBA-best 21-6 away from home. Josh Smith led the Hawks with 19 points and 7 assists, but Atlanta didn’t get much from Joe Johnson, who scored only 12 points. The Hawks’ exhaustion coupled with Chicago’s suffocating defense made for a 40 percent shooting night for Atlanta.

Spurs 117, Kings 112

While the Hawks were too tired to compete, the Spurs, who were also playing their fifth game in six nights, used 11 players to hold off the Kings for their sixth straight win. Gregg Popovich did a great job of keeping everyone fresh, as rookie Kawhi Leonard (19 points) was the only Spur to play over 30 minutes. That’s sound coaching, folks.

Rookie Isaiah Thomas posted a career-high 28 points and dished 10 assists for the Kings, and DeMarcus Cousins had a solid 25/11 game, but San Antonio’s reserves, led by Manu Ginobili (20 points), outscored Sacramento’s bench, 55-20. Timmy Duncan added 28, Gary Neal scored 13 and Tony Parker almost had the 3-x-2, posting 10 points, 10 assists and 7 rebounds to hand Sacramento it’s fourth straight L.

Hornets 102, Warriors 87

The Hornets earned only their 13th victory of the season, cruising to a rare victory in an easy dispatching of the Warriors. Marco Belinelli scored 22 points and dished 6 assists, Jarrett Jack had 20 and 9, and Carl Landry scored 20 points and grabbed 8 boards to help defeat Golden State, who fell to 2-8 since trading Monta Ellis. The Hornets built a 69-49 lead halfway through the third quarter and never looked back, despite playing without Trevor Ariza (ankle), Chris Kaman (illness), Emeka Okafor (knee) and Eric Gordon (knee). After the game, Hornets guard Greivis Vasquez (6 points, 6 assists, 4 rebounds) had a message for the rest of the League. “Teams better watch out,” Vasquez said. ”We might mess around and win a couple games.” Touché, Greivis. Touché.

Clippers 103, Suns 86

Another classic case of the best (and only) remedy in sports: winning. After losing three straight last week, the Clips continued to erase their woes and cool Vinny Del Negro’s seat, earning their third consecutive victory. Blake Griffin led the way with 27 points and 14 rebounds (including a few sickening dunks), and the ever-consistent CP3 posted 15 points and 15 assists. Paul outplayed his superstar point guard counterpart, Steve Nash, who finished with 15 assists but scored only one point, which came on a free throw. Phoenix converted on only one field goal over the first six minutes of the fourth quarter, and LA took advantage with a 13-5 that put them up 97-60 and sealed the victory. For the Suns, Marcin Gortat scored an admirable 23 points and grabbed 7 boards.

Line of the Night: Kevin Love’s 40 points, 19 rebounds and 4 assists.

Plays of the Night: We’ve got 10, highlighted by Blake Griffin’s amazing aerial feats and Gordon Hayward’s block party.

Tonight: Only four games, but certainly nothing to sneeze at, as TNT’s got us with a Heat-Mavericks Finals rematch at 8 followed by Thunder-Lakers at 10:30. Dopeness on all fronts, if you ask me. Until next time, peace out.

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  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    No you don’t have to be dominant on both ends, but you can’t just ignore one side of the ball like you could in the 90s. I am fine with people saying Kevin Love is the best 4 in the league, i don’t agree because he is a horrible defender and not a player you can give the ball too in isolation. But if you feel that he’s the best in the league that’s fine, every player in the league has their issues. I’m just saying, you can’t bring up something from 20 years ago to try and justify a situation today. It’s totally different.

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    I think Barkely is a great comparison to be honest.
    The issue is that Love doesn’t dominate the way we expect players to dominate.
    Like Duncan, he doesn’t possess jaw dropping athletic ability. But, he also isn’t as polished on the block as Duncan either. He’s a jump shooter, but unlike say, Karl Malone, he shoots from three most of the time, or is shooting layups.
    Love is actually very similar to Malone and Barkley. Unlike Malone is doesn’t have the same sort of consistency to get you 30 ppg every single night. But, that has a lot to do with pace too. But, he also is far more likely to put up video game numbers like 40 and 20 than Barkley and Malone ever were, and none of them were great defenders, although Barkley and Malone were slightly better when motivated.
    I think the three pointers are what throw people off. You almost feel like he’s cheating in some way because he gets more points despite making fewer shots. If you look at his lines, he will regularly shoot like a shooting guard, but because of his free throws and threes, his numbers will be insane.
    It’s interesting to watch and completely unique.

  • http://espn.go.com/nba/ Paul H

    I take you’re point about comparing era’s but I don’t think It was ever ok to ignore the defensive side of the Ball. Even In the Nineties.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    As a player he is comparable to Barkley, very comparable. I am solely just talking about using the “Barkley was the best in his day, so Love is the best today” train of thought. That to me doesn’t make any sense. That’s like me saying, Barkley would be the best PF in the NBA right now if he were there.

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    It seems comparing players to players of a different eras is a one way street for some people. You can do it if it proves your point, but not if it proves mine lol. I hate that double standard.
    Love is a great PF in any era. So is Malone, Barkley, Duncan, Webber, Garnett, McHale, Rodman, LJ, Dirk, Gasol, Kemp, even guys like Griffin, LaMarcus A., Z-Bo would all hold their own.
    -nbk, you say he is a horrible defender, but the other PF’s are just mediocre to slightly above average. Smith and Ibaka are the only two defensive stalwarts at the 4 spot. Love plays better defense than these PF’s:
    -Boozer(duh)
    -Amare(duh)
    -Z-Bo
    While being suitable defenders, guys like Dirk, Gasol, and LA are only slightly above average defenders. Not great, but suitable.
    I don’t think you have to be a great player on both ends to be the best at a position, but you do have to be viable. He is working his way towards being viable.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    *without any reasoning or proof* my bad, i am really low on sleep over the last couple weeks.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Ibaka is not a defensive stalwart. Let’s get that straight. The guy is a good help defender, but he is no stalwart at all.
    .
    i have expressed how i feel about Love numerous times over the last few days, it’s not just his defense that keeps me from putting him as the top 4. the most important thing to me is winning, and frankly putting up 40 and 19 in a 5 point win over the Bobcats is not going to change my opinion even a little bit.

  • http://www.slamonline.com TADOne

    I think another way to look at the PF argument: if you were to start an NBA team from scratch, which PF would pick for your squad? I would take Love myself and fill in the talent around him.

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    I don’t think you have to see Love as the best. But I think you should.
    Dirk isn’t above average on defense.
    Love does not play better defense than any person you named. They play equal defense.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Dirk is an above average defender. I don’t see why anyone doesn’t notice this. Is it just because he’s slow people think he is a bad defender? Is it because he wasn’t good when he was young (and weak)? What is it that makes you think he isn’t an above average defender?

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    Exactly once again nbk, Ibaka is no defensive stalwart and he is one of the best defending 4′s in the L.(telling of our expectations in defenders)
    Putting up 40, 19 against an NBA team is a feat. No matter if it’s in a losing effort or a winning one. No matter if you played defense or not. No one else has put up numbers like that against the Bobcats. I mean you can keep claiming that he has to win more and all that(to which I agree in the long term). But no one else is doing what he does in losing efforts either. No matter what he is making history.
    Kobe might have scored 81 against the lowly, defensively deficient Raps, but no one else did or has come close. Props need to be sent K-Loves way for the yeoman’s job he does on the glass every night and the improvements he has made to his offensive game.

  • http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/post/_/id/39089/killer-lineup-dirk-and-the-d nbk

    Average PER against Dirk is 13.0 – He leads the Mavericks in Defensive Win Shares. The Mavericks gives up less points and force a lower shooting % with Dirk on the court. He’s a legit 7’0″ tall playing PF. His height is a huge. And he is actually an effective Pick and Roll defender (believe it or not). Now Dallas does hide Dirk a little bit on defense to prevent him from getting into foul trouble, so he switches on picks less then the rest of the team. You can click my name if you want to read an article that talks about Dirk’s effectiveness on defense. (as well as highlighting Dallas’ starting lineup as the best defensive 5-man unit in the league, which I bet nobody believes but there is proof)

  • http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/post/_/id/39089/killer-lineup-dirk-and-the-d nbk

    Uhm Lake how much credit do you want me to give Kevin Love? I said he was by far the best player in that game last night. Every time I say something remotely negative or don’t agree then i’m not giving enough credit….I don’t think he’s the best PF in the NBA. He’s top 5, but to me, he isn’t the best. There is nothing wrong with me having that opinion, or you disagreeing with it. (And 40 and 19 on 31 shots in a game where both teams shot 40% is not 81, i don’t see what Kobe’s game against the Raptors has to do with this at all)

  • http://espn.go.com/nba/ Paul H

    @NBK, I wasn’t saying that “Barkley was the best in his day, so Love is the best today”, or anything near that train of thought, I was simply saying that they are very similar players and he was the most glaring example I could think of when thinking of a player who excelled on only one side of the ball and was considered the best at his position.

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    It’s more that you won’t take him top 3 that bugs me. I don’t claim him as the best 4 hands down. He is playing like the best 4 in the L. I still would take a mentally and physically 100% Gasol and Dirk over him. That’s it at this point. He gives you too much on the offensive end to have him any less #3.
    I don’t need you to say it, I just think your wrong. So any who, moving on…

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    Dirk absolutely sucks on the ball. Which is why he is always guarding the worst big on the other team. He is decent about rotations and staying attached. I say average. He is better than he was, but mainly because teams rarely go at him because they player he is guarding doesn’t have that ability. He looked worse on defense when there were more talented bigs in the League, and Dallas had Shawn Bradley as it’s other big.

  • T-Money

    perhaps the 4-spot is just kinda weak right now? love is the best 4 to me but he still doesn’t crack my top 50. i would pick any of these guys before love: bron, kobe, wade, durant, westbrook, rose, dwight, paul, deron, melo .

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    Quick bigs give him problem. Strong bigs give him problems. He can forget where his man is at times in the man to man. His rotations are often slow. But, he doesn’t foul, and he doesn’t just give up contested buckets.
    He’s average, and given how good he is on offense, that’s enough for that team.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Paul I see, my bad.
    .
    Lake, well I don’t really know what to say, Love doesn’t score in isolation, and is a horrible defender, to me, he can’t be (right now, not in the future) the best player on a very good team, the other guys can. So I would pick him after them. Although, I’m rethinking my feelings on Bosh, I feel I overrate him for his defense that might really be a product of being on the Heat more then anything else.
    .
    Allen he sucks on the ball against 4′s who can beat you off the dribble, which is a pretty small list. He’s not bad one on one in the post, he’s not bad off hedging and recovering off of picks. And he does a good job of preventing his counterpart from crashing the offensive glass, overall he is an above average defensive player.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    I’m with T-Money though, the position is kind of weak overall. It’s not like it was with KG and Duncan in their prime at all, sh*t even a prime Rasheed Wallace would probably run rough-shot over the vast majority of the 4′s today.

  • http://espn.go.com/nba/ Paul H

    I wouldn’t take ‘Melo over Love If my life depended on It.

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    Love doesn’t score on iso??? You watch him right nbk? How much more iso-ed can you get than being isolated from your team which is giving you space to score. I’m sorry, but no one has ever scored 26+ points a game and not been able to score competently in isolation. I don’t even know what to make of that statement broski.
    Dear goodness gracious, we have a terrible thing that has been said by one of our own…. “a prime Rasheed Wallace would probably run rough-shot over the vast majority of the 4′s today.” ?? What ?? A guy who never scored 20 points a game, a guy who never grabbed double digit rebounds, not even 8.5 ever, a guy who perennially under achieved by everyone’s expectations is going to be the best 4 in the L with Dirk, Gasol, Love, LA, CB, Z-Bo at the 4?? No… No he is not.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Yeah I wouldn’t take Melo over Love even if it meant curing myself of the bubonic plague

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    CoSign Paul on Melo over Love. That’s BS. The rest of them I pretty much agree with you on T-Money. Deron is a close one.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Did I say Rasheed would be the best 4 in the league? Kevin Love is running rough-shot over the vast majority of 4′s in the league at this very moment and I don’t think he’s the best 4 in the league lol don’t overreact with what I said. I was just giving an example of how weak I think the position is today, not that he would walk out and be the best in the league.
    .
    Love just scored 40 points last night, and only ONE!!!!! (1) UNO of his baskets came from isolation. He went 14 for 31, 10 makes were off of assists, 3 were off of offensive rebounds, and 1 was in isolation. Against the Bobcats. If there is not more glaring proof that he doesn’t score in isolation I don’t know what is.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    ON an unrelated note, is there a more stereotypical bad team with a bad name then the Bobcats in professional sports? Judging solely by team names if I had to bet I would bet on the Bobcats over every other professional sports team to never win anything based just by their name.

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    When Sheed played you had Duncan, Garnett, young Dirk, old Barkley, Malone, Webber, Coleman, Gugs, and second tier guys like Tyrone Hill, Charles Oakley, the Davis brothers, Brian Grant and some other I can’t remember.
    i don’t know if Sheed would have run roughshod over the current crop, but he would have likely been better than he was when he had to deal with what he had to deal with back in the day. Probably same numbers as Aldridge, but with better defense.

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    NO Deron is not a close one with Love. Neither of them lifted a crap team when they were the best player.
    Deron is Love equal as a statistical beast at his position and is better skill wise for his position. He has no weaknesses in his game from a skill standpoint.
    And he’s a stellar defender.
    In every demonstrable way, he’s a better player than Love even if they play different positions. AND he plays the point guard and is a proven playoffs beast.

  • BuzzerBeater

    Grizzlies vs Knicks in the finals.
    Oh how I wish it’d be true!
    -Asian fan from Vancouver

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    Yeah I would take Deron over Love. But it’s ‘slightly’ to me at this point. Deron has been good this year, but he has only been truly impressive a half dozen times as opposed to Love having over a dozen really great games this year. He isn’t quite the defender he use to be. I use to have him as elite. He is no longer though. Still a tough dude to go up against, but he won’t stop you like he use to.

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    If your point guard is averaging 22 and 8 he is stellar almost every night. He hasn’t put up video game numbers, but he’s been stellar, easily.

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    AllenP, I said Love is playing like the best PF. I just think that Gasol and ZBo are better players despite putting up inferior numbers to Love. If you had to pick a PF to build your team around, who would you take between those 3 guys? I’m leaning towards Gasol.

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    Taylor that argument should easily go Loves way just because of age. If your building a team it’s usually for the long haul and Gasol is on the steady decline. Love’s stock is looking up, up, up. Gasol can’t give you 20 points any more. His defense is there, but we all know he can be bullied pretty easily if you get in his head. Love or Griffin should be the only realistic choices for “building.” I’d take Love over Griffin.

  • http://slamonline.com datkid

    ehh maybe love is just top 5… and since cp3′s regression I actually have deron as the #1 pg in the league. but that’s me.

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    Lake, I was looking towards a season or two not a long-term deal.
    Also, Gasol has avg. 20ppg only twice in his 10yr career. You can’t just look at his PPG numbers as a way to judge his performance because when he was playing like the best PF in basketball during LA’s recent 2peat, he never cracked the 19ppg barrier. You should already know by now that I’m a fan of cats that are able to dominate and command double teams on the block than I’m of 3pt shooting bigs. It is what it is.

  • http://sdjfklfl.com Jukai

    Allen’s 3:22 pm post is why I wish he wrote about players more.

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    I think CP has been slightly better than DWill this season. Better from the field, 3, FT line, grabbing more rebounds, assists, steals and turning over the ball 2 less times (huge). I love DWill’s game and I can’t hold it against him for the nets’ lack of performance this season but I think he’s shown a real lack of leadership with the way he’s reacted to teammates.

  • http://sdjfklfl.com Jukai

    I can’t see how someone can argue ZBo is better than Love. That’s the weirdest argument one can make, to be honest.
    Randolph is the only guy on the power forward list who was possibly worse than Kevin Love defensively at his worst. They’re equal right now.
    Zach Randolph is a better offensive player, slightly. He can get more buckets in isolation so I give him the nod. But it’s not like you can stop Kevin Love from getting points in the flow of the game. I mean, Kevin Love has one game winner and one game tier this year. You can give it to him at the end of the game.
    And Kevin Love is a much better rebounder and passer.
    Randolph is not better.
    I think Gasol and Dirk, if their mind and body were in the right place, WOULD be better. But they aren’t. They are both out of shape and mentally just not there. So they fall.

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    Jukai, you mean on the ‘top’ of the PF list? Boozer and Amare are both worse defensively.

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    David Lee also for that matter. Is Bargnani a Center? If he’s a PF him also. lol

  • http://sdjfklfl.com Jukai

    I think Boozer is better than both Love and ZBo. Truth be told, I forgot about Amare.

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    Don’t let Thibs fool you like that Jukai.

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    When a PF is shooting 45% from the field, best believe that defenses are stopping him from time to time.

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    When a player is averaging 26.6 PPG on 45.5% Shooting and grabbing 14 boards all while taking 5 threes a game. Best believe this dude is damn near unstoppable.

  • http://Slamonline.com nbk

    Off of a pick

  • http://sdjfklfl.com Jukai

    Who cares if he needs a pick? Damn.

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    Off a nit pick… Lol that was terrible sorry.

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    I care when you just said that he’s damn near unstoppable. There’s nothing unstoppable about a 6-10 PF shooting 45%, nothing.

  • http://Slamonline.com nbk

    Well without being able to create his own offense I think unstoppable is the wrong word. Nothin wrong with it, he’s a great player. I’m stuck watching Channing Frye over here! I was just sayin

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    -He does create his own offense though. Not as well as Z-Bo, not as well as Dirk, Not as good as Gasol when he is on, but he is better than any other PF at iso scoring. What is it called when you get the ball, do a spin move in the lane while keeping your pivot foot, then putting in a nice floating hook over the defender. Sounds like a nice 1 on 1 move. One that is done in isolation. I have seen him do this dozens of times this season.
    -Taylor you put no context on his shooting number though. He shoots 5 threes(which I realize you don’t like) and mostly jumpers. 45.5% considering those facts is not great, but understandable. Lets not forget that he is at 47% post All Star game also.
    -Dirk Nowitzki 2004-2005, right in his prime, arguably his best season: -Mins played: 38.7
    -Rebounds: 9.7
    -FG%: .459
    -3 Pt. FG taken: 2.9
    -3 Pt. FG Made: 1.2
    -3 Pt. FG%: .399
    -Assists: 3.1
    -Steals: 1.2
    -Blocks: 1.5
    -TO: 2.3
    -Points: 26.1
    -Why did I post this? I dunno. Just appeared interesting to me. I guess his FG% stands out to me. It’s low like Loves, while he took two less 3′s a game, but he improved to be better. Love will also.

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