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Posts Tagged ‘Jason Kidd’

NBA Jam Set to Return

March 19, 2010 Leave a comment

Nothing screams Freshman year of high school like NBA Jam. Well, maybe the untimely death of Kurt Cobain, but the arcade hit, and subsequent Super Nintendo favorite played a large role in my life in 1994.  I remember sitting in class, passing notes back and forth with my friends trying to get “cheats” for the game, to unlock players like Michael Jordan and Bill Clinton.  After school was out, we would gather at one of the members of our group’s house and play the Super Nintendo version of the game all night long (and all weekend long). On a trip to San Antonio, I remember spending 4 hours and countless quarters in an arcade in our hotel, trying to master the arcade version of the game, only to find out the “cheats” for the Super NES version were different than the “cheats” for the arcade version.  Needless to say, I was overcome with joy to read that the game is being revamped and released in December 2010.

Marc Stein, writing for ESPN.Com’s “Weekend Dime,” provided a breakdown of each team’s roster from 1993-1994 and who he would like see represented in the new version of the game. Reading through the list brought back countless memories and filled my head with the voices of the game announcers–”he’s on fire!”

One point where I disagree with Stein, I would pick Jason Kidd, Dirk Nowitzki and Jason Terry, instead of Shawn Marion, for the Mavericks. Either way, the Mavs team in this version of NBA Jam, will be a significant upgrade from the 1994 version, which featured Derek Harper and Mike Iuzzolino.

Your kiss, your kiss is on my list

July 29, 2009 Leave a comment

It didn’t exactly go down the way that ESPN predicted, but Tim Thomas is officially a Dallas Maverick. While I’m sure the “kiss” Thomas blew at Dirk during the 2006 playoffs is forgotten, I don’t think Thomas and Dirk will ever be BFF’s. Don’t expect to see the two eating at Taco Diner or enjoying drinks at The Loon together, as Dirk and Steve Nash did. I’ve got to think that there will be at least some tension between the two. Dirk is a professional and I’m sure he will make every effort to make Thomas feel welcome on this team, but I’m sure he is with the rest of us and scratching his head at this signing.

Is this an indication that a trade is looming on the horizon?

Other blogs have speculated heavily on what the Mavs might be able to get for the Greg Buckner trading chip in September. Is it possible that either Thomas or Drew Gooden would be paired with Buckner to bring another piece to this ever confusing puzzle?

If Thomas stays with the Mavs, what will be his role? With the exception of Jason Terry, this team lacked a true 3-point threat last season. Sure, Dirk, Josh and Kidd would hit the occasional 3, but JET was the only true shooter on this squad.  Thomas instantly gives them another threat from beyond the arc. He ranks #22 all-time in 3-point field goal percentage at .413%.  Thomas, a highly emotional player, also brings a certain edge that has been lacking from this roster. Finally, while he will never be considered a defensive star, he is not a liability on defense either, especially in one-on-one situations. Look for Thomas to get minutes while Dirk rests.

As I said yesterday, free agency is unpredictable and it’s way too early to determine what effect this signing will have on the Mavs 2009-2010 season. However, at this point, it is definitely the most curious off-season move by the Mavericks this season. Almost as curious as using their mid-level exception on ‘Gana Diop last season. Let us pray that the results are not as disastrous.

How about Von Wafer

July 16, 2009 Leave a comment

Entering the off-season, I felt the Mavericks’ three biggest needs were to address the center, shooting guard and lack of athleticism. It appeared that the Mavs had addressed the center situation by singing an offer sheet for Marcin Gortat; however, we all know how that worked out. While several rumors have swirled around regarding other potential deals to address the center position, none have materialized as of this time.

Acquiring Shawn Marion improves the athleticism of this team to some extent and the flashes that Rodrigue Beaubois has shown in his brief NBA Summer League career suggests tha the too could add some athleticism to this team. Yet this team still lacks the athleticism of many of their Western Conference counterparts.

The only thing the Mavs have done at the shooting guard position is the signing of Quinton Ross, who the front office says will provide defensive help and shoot the three. What they really mean to say is that Ross is just another Antoine Wright.  If we assume that the Mavericks will move Josh Howard to the starting shooting guard position, we can set the depth chart–Jason Terry will come in off the bench and get a majority of the minutes at the 2 and Ross will fill in, as needed, in specific situations. Theoretically, the Mavs are three deep at the 2 position.

I love what JET brings off the bench, but neither Ross nor Howard excite me.  My suggestion? Go for a change of pace, sign Von Wafer.  The little I saw of Wafer last year, I liked. He would instantly add a level of athleticism to this team that is asbsent. 

How would the rotation work at four deep? The move would make Josh Howard expendable. He could be shopped to someone like New Orleans, for Tyson Chandler, or to Charlotte, near his home, for someone like Emeka Okafor.

The Mavericks starting line-up would look something like this:

PG – Jason Kidd

SG- Von Wafer

SF – Shawn Marion

PF- Dirk Nowitzki

C – Emeka Okafor/Tyson Chandler

I realize the move has it drawbacks.  One, Wafer’s limited body of work and lack of starting experience. Terry would still get a majority of the minutes at the 2, but would start as a change of pace. Think of the way the Nuggets used Dahntay Jones last season (18.1 MPG, 5.4 PPG). Wafer put up better numbers (19.4 MPG, 9.7 PPG) as a reserve.

Could you get Okafor or Chandler for Howard? It’s worth shopping around. I hope the Mavs learned from the Gortat fiasco and would have a deal in place for Howard before inking Wafer. This is the key piece to making the deal work. If you can’t move Howard for an upgrade of Dampier, then there’s really no sense in pursuing Wafer. However, if the Mavs are serious about addressing two of the most glaring weaknesses, they should at least give Wafer a casual glance.

Mavericks back-up center options…

July 14, 2009 Leave a comment

The Suns have reportedly offered to buy out the remainder of Ben Wallace’s contract. Let’s hope that the Mavs aren’t feeling so desperate that they express interest in him. Wallace would do nothing to addressing any of the issues facing this team. Indeed, he would only add to the Mavs problems.

The Dallas Morning News reports that Mark Cuban told NBA TV that the Mavs have contacted Lamar Odom’s agent. To me, this is a more compelling option, specifically, could he be used a small, athletic 5? With that, you could a run a starting line-up of Kidd, Howard, Marion, Dirk and Odom onto the court. As the News reports, this is unlikely though since it would probably require a sign-and-trade to secure Odom and the Lakers aren’t looking to dump salary.

We know the New Orleans Hornets were shopping Tyson Chandler last season, would he be worth using the Dampier trade chip? I would think this would be something worth looking into. If healthy, Chandler could help address several issues with this team.

Marcin Gortat

July 3, 2009 Leave a comment

Thus far, the most compelling news of this NBA off-season has been the jail sentence of the Denver Nuggets’ J.R. Smith. Out of all the adjectives in the English language,  “underwhelming” best describes the Mavs draft picks–a Euro point guard, a mid-major project and a guard with potential who will spend a year in Greece. At first glance, I was equally unimpressed with the organizations interest in the 6-11 Marcin Gortat.

I’ll be the first to admit, I don’t watch much Orlando Magic basketball, and  Gortat’s 3 ppg and 4 rpg average doesn’t instill a lot of confidence. However, Gortat got those numbers as a back-up, averaging 12.6 minutes per game; Erick Dampier averaged 5/7, as a starter, in 23.0 minutes per game, so if the numbers hold, Gortat wouldn’t be much a drop off–production wise–from Dampier.

Perhaps the most exciting prospect Gortat brings is his youth. The Mavs looked old against the Nuggets and looked middle-aged against an ancient Spurs team. They need some youth. I still hope that Ryan Hollins is the future at center for this team, but a Gortat/Hollins combination is younger than a Dampier/Hollins combination and should translate into more energy on the court.

In order for this to be relevant, the Mavs must remain committed to the youth already on the team. This means going out and resigning Brandon Bass and ironically making sure Jason Kidd signs his three year offer. Kidd will be instrumental in shaping the future of this franchise. If we expect any of the young guard prospects on this team to develop, it will require Kidd’s experience and tutelage. Additionally, the Mavs must make sure they turn the expiring contracts of Jerry Stackhouse and Dampier into youthful contributors during the course of this off-season. I know it may be asking for too much, but it would be nice to get a young prospect in exchange for Devean George.

As I step back and look at it, the Gortat signing has potential as the first piece in a much bigger off-season puzzle for the Mavericks.  In order for it to work, the Mavs must make additional, more substantial moves this off-season.

Mavs Mental Toughness

May 1, 2009 3 comments

As with most Dallas Mavericks fans, the memory of Game 3 of the 2006 NBA Finals remains fresh in my mind. I remember, vividly, the excitement through the first 2 ½ quarters of basketball in that game, glowing in the very real possibility of a four game sweep and the soon to follow championship parade snaking through downtown Dallas.

From the end of the third quarter of that game, through Game 5 of the San Antonio series on Tuesday, the NBA post-season has been a nightmarish time for me and legions of Mavs fans. First, I watched Dwayne Wade pull off his best imitation of Michael Jordan (with a little help from his friends with whistles) and lead the Miami Heat to four straight victories to claim the 2006 NBA title.

In 2007, I watched all 82 games, as the Mavericks compiled a 67-15 record heading into the playoffs as the #1 seed against the #8 seed Golden State Warriors. In what still may be the biggest upset in professional sports post-season history, the Warriors dominated the round 1 series from the start, dispatching of the Mavs in six games.

Last year, the Mavs still managed to win 50 games, but entered the playoffs with a lot of excess baggage. The New Orleans Hornets had no trouble whatsoever in dominating the series, but the off-the-court issues overshadowed and outweighed the on-the-court disappointments.

During the off season, Mark Cuban, Donnie Nelson and the other decision makers in the Mavericks organization decided to stay the course, replacing only the coach and choosing not to make any major moves with the roster. This lack of movement baffled critics, MFFL’s and the media talking heads alike and many felt the Mavs would continue to struggle.

 After a disastrous start to the season, the fears seemed legitimate. Indeed, some felt that the initial assessment of the damage done to the team’s psyche and chemistry was far too conservative. Around the All-Star break, something began to change within this team and despite a few set backs the Mavs began to play like a transformed team, a transformation that has carried into the 2009 NBA Playoffs.

Mavs fans, our little Mavericks are now a mentally tough team.

For years, the knock against Dirk Nowitzki has been that he does not perform under pressure. Whether it was missing key free throws in Game 6 of the 2006 Finals or allowing his emotions to overcome him when dealing with double and triple teams, critics certainly have a lot of evidence to point to in their argument. Throughout the last two months of the season and in the San Antonio series, we began to see a different Dirk.

The blueprint that Don Nelson drew up for beating the Mavs in 2007 was shutting down Dirk.  “Take Dirk out of the game and the Mavericks can’t score” was the philosophy the Warriors used and the Hornets copied.  Sure enough, the Spurs continued to focus their defensive attention on Dirk, but this time, Dirk showed true discipline and decided to handle the situation differently, passing the ball to other teammates, which opened up the offense, getting some of the key role players involved in the scoring.

In the past, many teams tried to exploit the emotional side of Dirk. They recognized that if you stifled him physically, he could become emotionally frustrated, lose focus on the game and commit costly errors (i.e. missed free throws, turn overs, technical fouls, etc.). Again, over the course of the final two months of the regular season and during the San Antonio series, we began to see a new Dirk emerge, a Dirk more in control of his emotions and more focused on the mental aspect of the game.

In the past, the confidence of the Mavericks seemed to hinge on the performance of Dirk. They heard the chatter that without Dirk they were nothing and seemed to believe it. Perhaps no one player epitomized this more than Eric Dampier.  In spite of his size and strength, Dampier has always been a bit of a timid player, unsure of himself, even when Dirk was hot.

This started to change over the last part of the regular season as well and we saw flashes of a changed Dampier in Games 1 & 2 of the San Antonio series, but it was Dampier’s comments after Game 2 regarding Tony Parker and the energy he brought into Game 3, refusing to let the media criticism and scrutiny of the NBA Gestapo get to him.

Dampier did not put up gaudy statistics in the San Antonio series and he made a couple of bone headed mistakes during the series, but the Mavericks don’t need a double-double out of Dampier to be successful. They simply need Dampier to play his role. If you look at Dampier’s performance over the last two months of the regular season and his performance during the San Antonio series, you will see that he is playing with his most confidence and his best basketball since joining the Mavericks, possibly in his NBA career.

In the past, critics railed that the Mavericks lacked “poise,” a vague, intangible element that I place under the “mental toughness” umbrella.  For the sake of this post, “poise” simply refers to the ability to remain steady throughout the course of a game or series, refusing to succumb to the ups and downs that will surely come. 

The 2006 Mavericks squad lacked “poise” and when they blew a 13-point lead in Game 3 of the Finals there was no recovering.  The 2007 Mavericks squad lacked “poise” (and confidence) heading into the Golden State series and they never put up a fight. The 2008 Mavericks squad lack a lot of things, including “poise.”

What’s different in 2009? Jason Kidd!

Yes, Kidd was part of the 2008 that lacked “poise,” but, as discussed earlier, there were other issues at play with the 2008 team (even then, it was his “poise” that led a furious comeback in Game 5 of the New Orleans series). Throughout this season and throughout the San Antonio series, Jason Kidd has been the steady, guiding hand—dare I say the leader—of this team. 

Without a doubt, the biggest mental liability on this team over the past few seasons has been Josh Howard. Where do we begin? In last year’s playoffs, Josh Howard decided to declare over the air waves that he was a proud pot smoker. He followed this up by shooting around 26% during the New Orleans series and decided to throw a birthday party for himself on the same night the Mavericks suffered a huge defeat at home to the Hornets.

Contrast that with the San Antonio series where J-Ho was consistent from start to finish in all games. Whereas the last few seasons, J-Ho appeared to be just stepping on the court to draw a paycheck, during the San Antonio series you could actually see passion and emotion in his face. His previous lack of performance in the second half was due to a lack of focus. The energy with which J-Ho is playing with this season, helps to keep that focus throughout the game. (This focus can be seen off the court as well. Just compare his interview from the past two seasons to his interview this season.)

The Mavericks have grown mentally tough. How this happened is not so much as important as how to keep it.  Denver is one of those teams that only folks from Denver can like , a cast of miscreants and social deviants who will stop at nothing to try and expose the Mavericks as physically and mentally soft—hard fouls, taunting, showboating—all attempts to draw the Mavs offsides.

Which Mavericks’ team will we see in the Denver series—the Mavs teams of ’06, ’07 & ’08 or the Mavs team of the San Antonio series?

2009 NBA Playoffs: Mavs/Spurs Game 3: Part 3

April 25, 2009 Leave a comment

From the opening tip, a host of Mavericks, including Jason Kidd, applied defensive pressure to Parker. He never adjusted and looked out of sorts the entire evening. Rumor has it that Kidd begged Coach Rick Carlisle for this defensive assignment.

 

 kidd-defense

2009 NBA Playoffs: Mavs/Spurs Game 3: Part 4

April 25, 2009 Leave a comment

On the opposite end of the floor, Kidd ran the point and led an early offensive explosion.

kidd-over-parker

2009 NBA Playoffs: Mavs/Spurs Game 3: Part 11

April 25, 2009 Leave a comment

As the third quarter began, the offense was running like a well oiled machine. The stats do not show the impact that both Jason Kidd and Eric Dampier had offensively.

 

dampier-pick

2009 NBA Playoffs: Mavs/Spurs Game 3: Part 12

April 25, 2009 Leave a comment

Kidd and Dampier’s work allowed the rest of the team to get good looks and everything started falling right for the Mavs.

 

dirk-over-parker

 

dirk-over-francisco

 

bass-jumper

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