Posts Tagged ‘Eastern Conference’

Apr
0

Eastern Conference Performers 3-on-3

 

Jeff Green jumper (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images).

The opening weekend of the 2013 postseason has come and gone. Warriors World reached out to Jared Dubin of Hardwood Paroxysm and Jim Cavan of Knickerblogger to get their takes on the Eastern Conference playoffs.

1. Best performance from a player on a losing team in the Eastern Conference?

Jared Dubin, Hardwood Paroxysm: This is tough, because all the losing teams in the East played really, really poorly. I guess I’ll go with Jeff Green, who had a sublime first half for the Celtics in New York. Working mostly against Carmelo Anthony and then Iman Shumpert, Green scored inside and out, from the post, in isolation and in transition on his way to 20 first half points… and then was promptly shut down after halftime. 

Jim Cavan, Knickerblogger: Jeff Green. Although you could consider his 26 points and seven rebounds more of a great performance unfulfilled. Green is seen by many to be Boston’s bellwether – if he can get going, that eases the scoring burdens of Pierce, Garnett, and…. Basically just those two. Green was unstoppable for the first 24 minutes, but – in a development all too familiar to Celtic fans – disappeared down the stretch, going just 1-5 in the second half.

Following Saturday’s Game 1, Mike Woodson suggested that the return of Pablo Prigioni (ankle) to the stating lineup would mean more Jeff Green face time for Iman Shumpert. That could go either way – Shump is certainly a good enough defender to make life difficult for Green, but the latter’s size advantage could make for a punishing assignment for the Bocker soph.

J.M. Poulard, Warriors World: Jeff Green. He was simply superb in the first half of Game 1 against the New York Knicks. He poured in 20 points in the first two quarters and led the Boston Celtics to a four-point lead of the Knicks. He struggled in the second half, but his overall performance was impressive nonetheless.

2. Best performance from a player on a winning team in the Eastern Conference?

Jared Dubin: LeBron. Do I really need to elaborate?

Jim Cavan: Paul George had himself a Sunday HAM sandwich – 23 points, 11 rebounds, 12 assists, and one Atlanta team completely devoid of answers. Coupled with a defensive effort that forced Josh Smith into a blizzard of terrible outside jumpers, George’s measured marauding is exactly what Frank Vogel and the Pacers wanted to see out of their new franchise cornerstone.

But what made George’s performance so encouraging was his ability to get to the stripe. His 18 trips (he made 17) tied the franchise playoff record previously set by Reggie Miller, and served as an effective recourse on an afternoon when the jumpers weren’t falling. If George can keep this up, this series is over in four.

J.M. Poulard: Paul George would have been the answer here if not for LeBron James’ performance in Game 1 against the Milwaukee Bucks. The reigning league MVP dictated the pace and flow of the Miami Heat’s offense, all the while flirting with a triple double.

George actually managed double figures in three statistical categories, but James’ 9-for-11 field goal shooting coupled with his great overall play gave him the slight edge.

3. Which Eastern Conference player that had a poor showing in Game 1 do you expect to break out?

Jared Dubin: JR Smith. Earl scored just 15 points on 7-for-19 shooting and had a grand total of zero assists. He took only one free throw. This is not the decisive, attacking JR Smith we saw for the last six weeks. He’s got a size advantage on Avery Bradley and Courtney Lee, the two defenders Boston used on him most often, so it wouldn’t surprise to see him more aggressive as the series moves along. If he starts getting to the basket, he’ll get to the line, and his jumpers will be more open. 

Jim Cavan: A couple come to mind. Ersan Ilyasova was dreadful – DREADFUL! – in Game 1. Chalk it up to playoff nerves (it’s his first postseason burn since 2010, his rookie season), the terrifying Heat defense, whatever – Ersan was clearly out of his element. Don’t expect him to single-handedly carry the Bucks to a Game 2 victory, if for no other reason that LeBron will be there to check the heat as soon as it’s warm. But 1-7 with only a single three point attempt? That ain’t happening again.

Speaking of playoff nerves, Chris Copeland may have peed on the Garden floor Saturday afternoon. After getting tapped to start in the wake of Pablo Prigioni’s ankle tweak, Copeland – himself belabored by a minor left shoulder injury – looked out of sorts for most of his 13 minutes of action (0-2, 13 points). The fact that it’s the Celtics has little to do with it: he tallied 22 in the two teams’ final regular season showdown on March 31st,, and arguably locked down his roster spot with a 31-point outburst in the two’s preseason tilt. As soon as Prigs is good to go, Copeland will re-assume his role as bench spark plug, where he played well enough to garner Eastern Conference Rookie of the Month honors in April. With his effective inside-out game (42% from three on the season), Copeland could pose some mismatch nightmares for the frontcourt-thin Celtics.

J.M. Poulard: Luol Deng. I can’t possibly see him producing another six-point outing in 38 minutes of playing time. If the Bulls are going to win and/or compete in the series against the Brooklyn Nets, Deng has to be a factor.

And his play during his career suggests he will bounce back.

Jared Dubin (@JADubin5), Jim Cavan (@JPCavan)and J.M. Poulard (@ShyneIV) ) are all members of the TrueHoop Network and can be found on Twitter brewing a basketball storm.

Nov
0

Warriors World Eastern Conference Power Rankings

 

With the NBA champs flexing their muscles, Brooklyn having an NBA team, the New York Knicks looking like a potential conference finalist and the San Antonio Spurs looking like, well the Spurs, there’s no better time to submit a Power Rankings. First up, the Eastern Conference…

Eastern Conference

15. Detroit Pistons (0-6)

 Offensive Efficiency: 97 (tied for 22nd in NBA)

Defensive Efficiency:  111 (29th in NBA)

Team Blog: Piston Powered.

Take on the team: The Pistons have faced a rather tough schedule so far, playing five of their first six games on the road, but the fact still remains that more was expected from this group of players.

14. Washington Wizards (0-4)

Offensive Efficiency: 90 (30th in NBA)

Defensive Efficiency:  97 (tied for 8th in NBA)

Team Blog: Truth About It.

Take on the team: Washington has lost twice against the Celtics, and their late game execution has been suspect in both instances. You get the sense that if they could clean that up, they might actually be a decent team. Might.

13. Toronto Raptors (1-4)

Offensive Efficiency: 100 (tied for 13th in NBA)

Defensive Efficiency:  102 (tied for 22nd in NBA)

Team Blog: Raptors Republic.

Take on the team: The Kyle Lowry experience is not only fun, it’s the reason why the Minnesota Timberwolves currently do not have a perfect record to open up the season. With that said, all those grumblings that Raptors players had about ESPN.com’s John Hollinger picking them to win 33 games this season, well they’re actually headed for less at the moment.

12. Charlotte Bobcats (1-3)

Offensive Efficiency: 105 (5th in NBA)

Defensive Efficiency:  114 (30th in NBA)

Team Blog: Queen City Hoops.

Take on the team: This spot is far better than the one they had at the end of last season right?

11. Indiana Pacers (2-4)

Offensive Efficiency: 92 (tied for 28th in NBA)

Defensive Efficiency:  97 (tied for 8th in NBA)

Team Blog: 8 points, 9 seconds.

Take on the team: There’s no shame in losing to the San Antonio Spurs, Atlanta Hawks and Minnesota Timberwolves, but at the Pacers could at least pull together to start comfortably beating teams with inferior talent, because that hasn’t been the case so far.

10.  Orlando Magic (2-3)

Offensive Efficiency: 98 (tied for 20th in NBA)

Defensive Efficiency:  102 (tied for 22nd in NBA)

Team Blog: Magic Basketball.

Take on the team: It’s obviously extremely early in the season, but the train wreck of a season that was expected after trading away Dwight Howard has in fact been delayed. That 39-point loss to Brooklyn though is still preposterous.

9. Boston Celtics (2-3)

Offensive Efficiency: 96 (tied for 24th in NBA)

Defensive Efficiency:  101 (tied for 19th in NBA)

Team Blog: Celtics Hub.

Take on the team: The Celtics are a talented team and thus should be higher, but it’s awfully tough to ignore that their lone two victories on the season have come against the winless Wizards with the contests getting decided late.

8. Cleveland Cavaliers (2-4)

Offensive Efficiency: 99 (tied for 15th in NBA)

Defensive Efficiency:  105 (tied for 24th in NBA)

Team Blog: Cavs the Blog.

Take on the team: The Cavaliers have deficiencies but I like this young and daring nucleus. They currently have a sub .500 record, but still have a victory over the Los Angeles Clippers at Staples Center.

7. Brooklyn Nets (2-2)

Offensive Efficiency: 102 (tied for 8th in NBA)

Defensive Efficiency:  105 (tied for 24th in NBA)

Team Blog: The Brooklyn Game.

Take on the team: The Nets might be the very definition of a good mediocre team; they have victories over bad teams, and losses by a total of 41 points to the two teams they’ve faced so far with winning records (Miami and Minnesota).

6. Atlanta Hawks (2-2)

Offensive Efficiency: 102 (tied for 8th in NBA)

Defensive Efficiency:  101 (tied for 19th in NBA)

Team Blog: Hoopinion Blog.

Take on the team: The Atlanta Hawks have defeated the Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers in what could be classified as victories to make the franchise and its fans forget about the Joe Johnson era and embrace the new one.

5.  Philadelphia 76ers (3-2)

Offensive Efficiency: 93 (27th in NBA)

Defensive Efficiency:  95 (tied for 4th in NBA)

Team Blog: Philadunkia.

Take on the team: Philadelphia’s current record might make fans temporarily forget about the absence of Andrew Bynum, but that would be fool’s gold. The 76ers have wins over teams with records of .500 or worse, while both of their losses came against the Knicks, and were by double figures. Doug Collins can keep that ship afloat only for so long without his franchise center.

4. Chicago Bulls (3-2)

Offensive Efficiency: 99 (tied for 15th in NBA)

Defensive Efficiency:  93 (tied for 1st in NBA)

Team Blog: Bulls by the Horns.

Take on the team: Last month, former Bull Brian Scalabrine made an appearance on the B.S. Report (Bill Simons’ podcast) and stated that Tom Thibodeau was a franchise changer in the same mold as Jason Kidd and Kevin Garnett. While some might have thought the statement was ludicrous, the Bulls are playing without their best player and still competing and finding ways to win games. Their defense might carry them long enough for Derrick Rose to come back at some point and lead them to a potential fourth seed in the east standings.

3. Milwaukee Bucks (3-1)

Offensive Efficiency: 99 (tied for 15th in NBA)

Defensive Efficiency:  99 (tied for 15th in NBA)

Team Blog: Bucksketball.

Take on the team: One could lament the fact that all of the Bucks’ victories came at the expense of teams with losing records, but that would completely miss the point that they took care of business and won two of those three contests by double digits. Their lone loss came at the hands of a brutally physical Memphis team.

2. Miami Heat (5-1)

Offensive Efficiency: 114 (1st in NBA)

Defensive Efficiency:  101 (tied for 19th in NBA)

Team Blog: Heat Index.

Take on the team: Two of the Heat’s five victories came by 25 points or more and they are currently plus-5.3 on the season despite a 20-point loss at the hands of the Knicks. . Needless to say, the defending champions are looking like juggernauts and may very well flex their muscles early to remind opponents that they took the crown last season. Consider the number 34: it’s the amount of minutes that Wade, LeBron and Bosh are all just about averaging early on this season, which means they could potentially be fresher than usual going into some of the tougher stretches of their schedule this season.

1. New York Knicks (4-0)

Offensive Efficiency: 112 (2nd in NBA)

Defensive Efficiency:  93 (tied for 1st in NBA)

Team Blog: Knickerblogger.

Take on the team: It’s extremely early, but the Knicks have won all of their games by double figures and own the only victory in this young season over the Miami Heat. Their defense has been stellar and they have been putting up points on the board, but the one thing that’s made them seemingly unstoppable so far is undeniably their red hot 3-point shooting. They are shooting a sizzling 43.6 percent from downtown and making defenses pay for giving up open looks.

Check back in about 30 minutes for the Western Conference…

Questions or comments? Feel free to leave them in the comments section or you can contact me by email at [email protected].

Mar
1

CHI About the East?

As the season winds down and we get closer to the playoffs, we can clearly see that certain teams have played up to a level that separates them from every other contender. Indeed, there are about seven teams right now that all have a realistic chance of hoisting the Larry O’Brien trophy; and if history is any indicator, the team that will play great defense and clean up the boards will have arguably the best chance at winning the title.

Continue Reading…