Game 17 Recap: 76ers 88, Blazers 79

Who knows who Nate is yelling at, hopefully it's members of the Trail Blazers. Photo courtesy of the AP.

So apparently it’s going to have to get worse before it gets any better. Sunday night’s 18 points in the fourth quarter against New Jersey seemed like a pretty low number. While how about 11 in the final quarter against the 76ers? Now that’s a REALLY low number.

There were moments in this game, like in most of the games in November, where the Blazers looked like they had it won. Every time they’ve been unable to shut the door, unable to keep the other team from going on a run, and most importantly completely unable to do a single thing on offense.

There’s not a whole lot that can be said about Tuesday’s game. The effort doesn’t seem to be there on either end of the floor, the shots have not been good, the calls haven’t broken in Portland’s favor, and basically it seems like everyone wearing black and red has simply checked out. One thing that can be taken away from the last two atrocious performances; this is something that is happening to the whole team. There isn’t one guy that can be singled out for poor performance, lack of effort, or bad shot selection. It’s everyone as a team that is failing, and it will take everyone as a team to make this thing right.

Last season there were times when Portland was unable to get things going at the start of games and ended up on the losing end of a couple of big beat downs. There were even times in 2008-09 when the Blazers were out played from start to finish. But never before have I seen a Portland team so thoroughly indifferent. Tuesday night when Portland went up in the third quarter, it looked like Philadelphia was ready and waiting for the Blazers to close them out. A four, now five, win team doesn’t expect to get victories very often. Philly is a young squad with a ton of chuckers. They wanted to give this game away. The Blazers, though, couldn’t deliver that final nail in the coffin, and for long stretches in the fourth quarter they played like they just expected to walk into the final period and hand over the game. Teams play poorly, string together bad possessions, and fail to execute, but expecting to lose is a totally different beast. Portland is not 30 win team, they are not a lottery team. Right now that’s how they’re playing, as if they shouldn’t step on the court and simply destroy a hapless team like the 76ers.

Somebody, anybody needs to step up. It doesn’t have to be in the fourth quarter. Any time would be the right time for whoever wants it to step in and take control of this team.

November’s over. That’s good. Portland comes away from the first full month of the season with only five wins, by any measure that’s not a good sign. We as Blazer fans can be happy to put this month behind us, knowing that every game day is a chance for Portland to redeem themselves. If Portland can string some wins together in December, most of what has happened thus far in the season can be forgotten. The flip side is true too, if Portland drops any more games like these last two you can plain forget it. Forget about playoffs, forget about the Conference Finals, forget about championships. Just forget it.

Nobody needs to forget about those unstated preseason goals more than the Portland Trail Blazers. Tomorrow night they are in Boston, facing one of the NBA’s best teams. If the Blazers go into the TD Garden thinking about their failures in the fourth quarter, their overall lack of effort, or the fact that only 17 games in 2010-11 is shaping up to be a season nobody wants anything to do with, then they have lost before the opening tip. Yet again, the opposite actions, the opposite results, and you’ll be looking at a completely opposite reaction. And that’s the beauty of the NBA.

No better way to erase two weeks of futility with a victory against the Boston Celtics. I’m going to continue to have faith because at this point I don’t know what else to do. The question is, do the Blazers have faith in themselves?

I’ve only got a few thoughts about Tuesday’s loss:

  • I’m not really sure how the whole Wesley Matthew/Nicolas Batum swap really worked out. It all seems pretty irrelevant with the end result. Matthews looked strong, finishing with a game high 26 points. Nicolas got a little lost, finishing with just two points in a shade over 13 minutes. Two arguments in favor of Batum have come out in the last few days that make me think it might be good to leave him in the starting lineup. First, Nic is a three, he can guard the three, and he can play against other threes. Wesley gives up a lot of size to small forwards around the league. The second reason for Nic in the starting lineup, and this is a major one if and when Portland decides to bag this season and blow up this team, is that he needs to be groomed to take over a major playing role. Nicolas looks baffled sometimes on offense, if he is going to become the center piece of the Portland franchise at some later date, he needs to play more than 12 minutes.
  • Playing with one center is absolutely killing the Blazers. In the first quarter the 76ers weren’t going to the hoop, and although they were hitting their jump shots, it looked like Portland was going to be able to control the game. Marcus Camby had to leave the game, which happens because he can’t play 48 minutes a game, and the 76ers started attacking the basket. Of course it wasn’t poor defense that did the Blazers in, but late in the game the confidence the 76ers had built on offense from their earlier easy forays to the hoop helped to put the home team over the top.
  • Portland needs to find a way to generate points. My suggestion; try to get to the free throw line. The New Jersey Nets did it to the Blazers in their comeback. Because I guess we’ve gotten to the point where using the Nets as a positive example is totally reasonable, it might not be a bad idea for the Blazers to take a page out of their book.
  • I thought a “players-only” meeting was good for at least one win. On that count I was wrong.
  • I’m sticking to keeping Brandon on the floor for at least one more game. I firmly believe that the problems that Portland is having on offense are not entirely his fault. Like I said earlier, this is a problem the whole team is having, and the WHOLE TEAM is going to have to fix it.

Rudy's got the right idea. Photo courtesy of the AP.

Standings

Box Score

Twitter: @mikeacker | @ripcityproject

Rip City Project | A Portland Trail Blazers blog

LPGA Passes Vote to Allow Transgender Membership

Lana Lawless, a transgender woman, is suing the LPGA

The LPGA voted to lift the “female at birth” clause in its constitution bylaws on Tuesday evening at a player meeting in Grand Cypress Hyatt, just a hop, skip and small jump away from the site of this week’s LPGA Tour Championship.

Commissioner Mike Whan presented the situation, citing examples of other organizations that allow transgender membership, such as the USGA and IOC. The move to amend the clause was easily passed, says an LPGA player, who wishes to remain anonymous. She added it was a non-issue. The players understood that it was in the best interest of the LPGA to make the change because it would have been a losing battle to contend the lawsuit filed by Lana Lawless, a 57-year-old transgender woman who had gender reassignment surgery in 2005.

Lawless’ lawyer threatened to seek an injunction to prevent the LPGA from doing business in California if the members voted against overturning the clause that all members have to be female at birth. However, Lawless is still suing the LPGA for lost pay.

While the players have their personal opinions and some didn’t agree with it, they voted in favor of the move. Earlier in the day, several players said they would have liked Lawless to attend the meeting, so she could explain her case because they wanted to make a well-informed decision. But when the time came to vote, the players were aware that the precedent had been set by other organizations and knew what they had to do. They also didn’t want the controversy to overshadow an exciting tournament week with the season-ending Tour Championship.

Whan shared the 2011 schedule with the players at the meeting, too. Apparently there were no surprises and it’s better than expected. Some events aren’t set in stone, so the LPGA is holding off on making any announcements, but the players were told for planning purposes. Compared to the total money from this season, the ladies will have more earning potential next season. Whan and the LPGA are working on some deals that could still come into fruition for 2011. But word is that 2012 looks very promising for the tour.

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Wei Under Par

A Game the Jags Could Have Won – Who looked Crisp in Week 12?

Losing to a team that you’ve dominated an entire game is always disheartening.  After a three game streak of close wins, the Jaguars just couldn’t pull it off against the Giants.  On the bright side: The Titans and Colts both lost.  But when the bright side is two other teams in the division losing, you know you’ve got problems.  So, this week we take a look at who was crisp, and who’s soggy.  Follow the jump to find out.

  • The Crispest of the Crispies: Kirk Morrison.  Yes, I know the defense didn’t do such a great job in the second half.  And yes, there were a lot of missed tackles.  But did you have eyes on this man?  His motor never stops.  He was always around the ball carrier on every play and was always poised to make stops.  His four tackles in this game don’t truly reflect the effort he put in.  Morrison is quietly becoming a force on this defense.  His leadership is felt every day and the young defense is benefitting from his experience and work ethic.
  • Just as Crispy:  Courtney Greene.  While tempted to mark him as 2nd or 3rd crispest, Courtney demonstrated why he is deserving of the starting safety spot.  For the first time in a while a safety is being felt by opposing defenses.  Remember when Donovin Darius was one of the hardest hitters in the league and was respected by everyone?  I think an emerge of Greene may reflect a similar presence.  Seven tackles and four assists led the team this week and he is rapidly becoming one of the better tacklers on the defense.  Now, if only he could work on disrupting some passes.  His play is consistently crisp, and may be one of the best performers on the defense.
  • 2nd Crispest:  Maurice Jones-Drew.  For the second week in a row, MJD occupies this spot.  He was running over players in the first half and punishing the defense for even thinking they could stop the Jaguars’ running attack this week (207 rushing yards by the Jags).  Pocket Hercules provided 113 yards on the ground this week.  Unfortunately, most of that was in the first half of the game.  But he helped to ensure the Jags held the ball for a full 35 minutes in the game.  And that is crucial to success.
  • 3rd Crispest:  Rashad Jennings.  The towering 6′1″ (Compared to MJD) Jennings ran the ball seven times for 53 yards on Sunday.  He averaged a whopping 7.6 yards per carry and demonstrated why he is the number one backup to Jones-Drew.  Not only that, but Jennings showed that he is worthy of more carries per game and could develop into the second coming of the two headed monster that was MJD-Taylor.  I’ve never been all that high on Rashad, but he’s turning me into a believer and I’m getting excited each time he touches the football.  This man is a force and should be kept with the Jags for as long as possible.
  • Not So Crisp (Soggy):  The Dr. Jekyll (or is it Mr. Hyde?) Defense.  Did you see their play in the first half?  Getting some pressure on Eli Manning.  Stopping Brandon Jacobs in the backfield.  Bending, but not breaking.  The front seven dominated the offense.  But then Half-time came.  And suddenly the Jaguar D couldn’t stop a high school team.  I don’t know what Tom Coughlin said to his guys in the locker room, but I guarantee it was more inspiring than the “keep doing what you’re doing” the Jaguars probably got.  If the game of football was 30 minutes long, we’d be fine.  But it’s not.  Instead, we get some form of defense in the second half that falls over itself trying to get in position.  There is no reason why the Jaguars should lose this game when they have 200 yards rushing, control the clock for 35 minutes, and dominate so thoroughly in the second half.  This loss rests directly on the shoulders of the players.  I saw the plays being called, and they were solid for the situations.  The team let Jack Del Rio down on this one.  They the fans, JDR, and the NFL an apology for their performance in the second half.

- Luke N. Sims

Black and Teal | A Jacksonville Jaguars Blog

Looking Back To Looking Ahead: The Four Factors

Before the season started, I made some predictions about how the four factors would change for the Atlanta Hawks this season. I’m not interested in evaluating those predictions this early* in the season but, in the first of a recurring series, let’s track how the Hawks are performing relative to last season’s 53-win team.

*Not least of which because, according to John Hollinger’s power rankings, the Hawks have played the league’s fifth-easiest schedule thus far. Granted, the end of season power rankings at the Basketball-Reference.com Blog in April ranked the 2009-10 Hawks schedule the sixth-easiest in the league.

First, the offense:

Name Off Eff eFG% FT Rate OR% TO%
2009-10 113.4 50.6 21.3 28.2 13.3
2010-11 109.8 51.6 23.2 25.0 15.1

Unsurprisingly, the Hawks haven’t been able to match last season’s offensive efficiency. Then again, they don’t have to do so to remain a good team. They’ve declined only to fifth in the league as improved shooting from the field and more frequent trips to the foul line have mostly compensated for a decline in offensive rebound rate and an increase in turnover rate.

The team’s turnover rate, though far higher than last season’s, has improved significantly over the last two-and-a-half weeks.

click to enlarge

Now, for the defense:

Name Def Eff eFG% FT Rate OR% TO%
2009-10 108.3 49.7 28.0 27.2 15.4
2010-11 106.3 48.8 27.6 26.8 14.4

The Hawks have been slightly better defensively (so far) this season. The changes are less dramatic than cumulative. Opponents are missing slightly more shots and the Hawks are rebounding slightly more of those misses. Most importantly, the Hawks haven’t seen a spike in their opponents’ free throw rate despite their opponents making 78% (league average (76.5%) of their free throws this season compared with 74.5% (league average: 75.9%) last season.

Premature conclusions: the Hawks are 1.6 points per 100 possessions to the worse so far this season compared to last but are, as expected, a fundamentally similar team.

Hoopinion

Game 17 Preview: Portland Trail Blazers at Philadelphia 76ers

Blazers: 8-8

Sixers: 4-13

Game Details: Wells Fargo Center, Philadelphia, PA. 4:00 PM. TV: CSN. Radio: KXTG (95.5 FM).

Projected Portland Starting Lineup: PG Andre Miller (#24, 6′2″, Utah), SG Brandon Roy (#7, 6′6″, Washington), SF Wesley Matthews (#2, 6′5″, Marquette), PF LaMarcus Aldridge (#12, 6′11″, Texas), C Marcus Camby (#23, 6′11″, UMass)

Projected Philadelphia Starting Lineup: PG Jrue Holiday (#11, 6′4″, UCLA), SG Evan Turner (#12, 6′7″, Ohio State), SF Andre Igoudala (#9, 6′6″, Arizona), PF Elton Brand (#42, 6′9″, Duke), C Spencer Hawes (#0, 7′1″, Washington)

There’s no more dancing around it: the Blazers are at a crossroads. They’ve lost three straight, two of which being games they controlled until the fourth quarter. A team that began the season looking almost unstoppable in the final period now seemingly can’t close out a game to save its life. The team called a players-only meeting after Sunday’s late loss to New Jersey, which according to various players went well. Nate McMillan is shaking things up at least for tonight, starting Wesley Matthews at small forward instead of Nicolas Batum. Batum previously showed signs of delivering on the enormous potential the Blazers saw in him, but has struggled to find his role offensively in recent games. Matthews, meanwhile, has blossomed into one of the Blazers’ most reliable scoring options, putting up 25 against the Nets.

At 4-13, Philadelphia currently holds the worst record in the Eastern Conference, but the way the Blazers have been playing lately, that’s no guarantee of anything. The Sixers have won two in a row and will look to build on that momentum at home. The last two games, Brandon Roy has shown almost no signs of recurring knee trouble, but the rest of the team’s shooting has been atrocious. McMillan is hoping that the new starting lineup will capitalize on Matthews’ recent string of solid scoring games and restore some of the energy on the offensive end from the first few games. Batum, meanwhile, is going to try his hand at being a sixth man, at least for a few games. Andre Igoudala missed several games earlier this month for Philadelphia with a strained achilles, but he has played well the last four games since returning to action.

A win tonight would prevent the Blazers from going on their first four-game losing streak since the 2007-08 season, and restore at least a little momentum leading into tomorrow’s game in Boston. The Celtics are arguably the best team in the league besides the Lakers, and that game will be as tough as any they will play this season. A solid win over the Sixers tonight would be, if not a turning point, at least an encouraging sign that things may be looking up for the Blazers.

Rip City Project | A Portland Trail Blazers blog

Around the Top 25: No one’s looked better than Kemba Walker

Korie Lucious (34) attempts to defend Kemba Walker. Once again, little luck in doing so. (AP/Eugene Tanner)

UPSET—Connecticut 70, No. 2 Michigan State 67. I will budge, but I won’t recant on UConn. Kemba Walker had another huge performance, and it’s because of him his team wins the game. You’ve probably heard the number: 103 points in the last three games. He’s also the first UConn player to score 30 in three straight games since Ben Gordon six years ago. That’s terrific data, and no doubt he’s been the player of the year so far. So good stuff from him, and Alex Oriakhi, who had 15 points and 17 rebounds, nine coming offensively. In fact, Michigan State was in trouble, not just because of turnovers at the guard position, but it allowed UConn to grab a lot of boards on a lot of possessions.

No. 1 Duke 82, No. 4 Kansas State 68. Mike Krzyzewski has won 800 games as head coach at Duke. He’s at 873 all-time. Platitudes can be put on hold, because it’s time to discuss how Duke won: effective foul shooting, killing off K-State’s transition offense, Kyrie Irving killing it all over the 94-foot floor, and successfully nixing out the other team’s star in Pullen. It may not have been Pullen’s night, but you have to credit Duke with a lot of that. Some said on Twitter last night that Pullen hadn’t played this badly since prior to high school ball. I think Duke’s going to win a lot of games against good teams like this. Sure, it’s going to lose a handful, but I’m not expecting a lot of drama with this team, which is sort of unfortunate. Devils shoot that 3 so, so well. For Kansas State, some motivation and some shoulder-shrugging at Pullen’s star-crossed night.

No. 8 Kentucky 74, No. 13 Washington 67. Isaiah Thomas and
Matthew Bryan-Amaning’s trash talking comes back to haunt the Huskies. There wasn’t too much to learn from this game, aside from further proof of Terrence Jones’ ability to be one of the best players in the SEC. I really love his game, and Brandon Knight as well. Sleek. Thomas didn’t come up big, and when Venoy Overton fouled out for UW, the Huskies were dead in the water. But Lorenzo Romar has a good, good team; I think it was a lot of emotion last night. Almost a false litmus test, to be honest.

No. 3 Ohio State 64, Morehead State 45. Kenneth Faried was largely ineffective, a shame, as Jared Sullinger sat the pine with foul issues. After some early issues against the Eagles’ zone, Ohio State soon enough conquered a commanding lead and coasted. And Thad Matta refused to play his bench. Okey.

No. 5 Pittsburgh 74, Robert Morris 53. Panthers easily beat up in intra-city little brother. Mike Rice never kept it close when he was coaching the Colonials, either.

No. 6 Kansas 82, Texas A&M-Corpus Christi 41. The Islanders get doubled-up by the Jayhawks, who of course played everyone that was eligible.

No. 10 Purdue 87, Austin Peay 65. Austin Peay shoots 51 percent from the field, 10 percent from 3 and turns the ball over one in four trips down the floor.

Texas coach Rick Barnes got win No. 500 last night. (AP/Patrick Semansky)

No. 11 Missouri 72, Wyoming 62. It’s been seven years since Mizzou had a number next to its name to start the regular season, but despite its 3-0 record, the Tigers aren’t handling expectations well yet. And who’s even noticed them playing, really? The team shot 26 for 67 from the floor last night, and there was a rubber band around this game; Wyoming hung close.

No. 14 Memphis 102, Tennessee-Martin 80.  Not a lot of defense from the Tigers, who seemed to score at will against a team that will be a non-factor in the Ohio Valley.

No. 16 Florida 79, Florida Atlantic 66. Kenny Boynton goes for 21, Alex Tyus for 19, and when Florida can get 40 from those two, I think many opponents will have trouble over the course of 40 minutes. Gators play at Florida State this weekend. That’s a very nice matchup.

No. 19 Illinois 73, Yale 47. Illinois ain’t no Boston College.

No. 20 Texas 84, Sam Houston State 50. Rick Barnes wins the 500th game of his career.

No. 22 Gonzaga 66, Marquette 63. A good sign that Gonzaga could hold of Marquette late, but I don’t know. I’ve got my doubts about the Zags. If you happen to like Mark Few’s team, take solace in the fact I openly questioned how good Butler was last January. I’ll refrain from creating such a post on the Bulldogs until enough evidence mounts. But when I watch, I’m constantly wanting more out of Robert Sacre and Elias Harris, even though Harris probably needs another two weeks to be at full strength. And the book is out on Steven Gray: He can’t handle pressure beyond eight feet from the rim.

No. 23 Brigham Young 86, Mississippi Valley State 36. Absolutely nothing can be gleamed from this.

No. 25 North Carolina 80, UNC-Asheville 69. Carolina blew a big lead late. This was a warning sign last season, before the fall came. Roy’s thoughts.

Notable:

Butler 70, Siena 57. This is going to be a good year for Siena senior Ryan Rossiter (26 points, 15 rebounds!), but he’s not going to get the help around him to make Siena the team it’s been the past four years. As for Butler, it got a strong performance out of its bench, according to those who were there. And Ronald Nored went down early with a cut/shot to his head. Status should be updated later today, but he didn’t return to the game after he left in the first half.

UTEP 73, New Mexico State 56. Suspicions confirmed on New Mexico State. UTEP would love if Christian Polk (25 points) could help take some of the pressure off little ol’ Randy Culpepper.

Virginia 74, Oklahoma 56.If Virginia’s one of the worst in a tepid ACC, then how bad is Oklahoma going to be? To think, John Calipari actually gave the Sooners lip service two days ago. Ha.

Boston 66, Nevada 57. I thought Nevada was going to be viable, maybe just short of a bubble team, but tough nonetheless. It’s now 1-4.

College Hoops Journal

The Layup Line — Which players have had ‘perfect’ games as of late?

• Give it time, Mike. I think many will know all too well just how legit the Aztecs are. {Sporting News}

• Two guesses, who do you think Michigan State picked to have speak at its graduation ceremonies in December? {Michigan State University}

• Bruce Pearl’s wife has actually compared her husband to the one and only Jesus. The parallels are so obvious, I’m surprise no one else picked on this earlier. {No Guts No Glory}

• Sports games in unusual venues. {SI}

• The Indy recruiting train continues to barrel down the tracks. Catch your breath, Tom Crean. {Indy Star}

• Win distributions, and playing the odds. Welcome to Ken’s laboratory. {KenPom}

• The nine athletes who’ve earned Rhodes Scholarships. No hoops players, but still worth seeing. {The Chronicle of Higher Education}

• You come on the CHJ podcast, you get linked early and often. {Luke Winn}

• “Perfect” games from players in the past three seasons. {Basketball Prospectus}

• How much can we learn about UNLV at the 76 Classic?  {Las Vegas Review-Journal}

Here’s a Marcus Jordan dunk that’s getting some run, but really isn’t all that fancy.

On the tube today and tonight …

All times Eastern

»Chaminade vs. Oklahoma; 2:30 (ESPNU).

»No. 2 Michigan State vs. No. 13 Washington; approx. 5 (ESPN2).

» No. 24 Tennessee vs. Virginia Commonwealth; 7 (ESPN).

» Wichita State vs. Virginia; approx. 7:30 (ESPNU).

» UCLA vs. No. 7 Villanova; approx. 9:30 (ESPN2).

» No. 8 Kentucky vs. Connecticut; approx. 10 (ESPN).

College Hoops Journal