Ask the Czar

Jimmy B from Boston asked:

Which former NBA point guard does Celtic Rajon Rondo remind you of?

I think Rajon Rondo is unique because of his ability to get on the boards and be such a huge contributor with rebounds for his team. Rondo has an incredible ability to find the open man with his pass. And defensively he can terrorize the opposing point guard with his quick hands, steals and deflections.

Early on there were a number of skeptics who said that Boston would never win a championship with Rondo starting at the point guard position because he doesn’t have an outside shot. But with Rondo at the helm, the Celtics clinched the NBA Title in 2008 and nearly nabbed another last season. So he’s proved his critics wrong in that regard.

Czar Star: Chartbusters Pierce and Rondo

Boston Celtics Captain Paul Pierce, aka The Truth, and playmaker Rajon Rondo both boasted chart-breaking performances last week.

Pierce is coming off of the best shooting year of his All-Star career in 2009-10.  He posted personal bests in FG%, 3-Point FG% and FT%.

On November 3, during a game against the Milwaukee Bucks, Pierce scored his 20,000th career point on a free throw.  He is only the 36th player in league history to reach 20,000 points, and just the third Celtic along with John Havlicek and Larry Bird.

The 8-time NBA All-Star was the MVP of the 2008 NBA Finals. Pierce is still the Celtics’ go-to guy when they need a big basket, and he’s presently their leading scorer after 6 games with 19.3 PPG.  In addition he is shooting 93% from the free throw line and grabbing 7 boards a game.

Teammate Rajon Rondo also got off to a sensational start for the Celtics, attacking the record books nightly. On opening night Rondo put up 17 assists against the Heat to tie with Oscar Robertson for the third-most assists in a season opener.

In the third game of the season, Rondo dished out a career-high 24 assists to combine with 10 points and 10 rebounds for a triple-double against the New York Knicks, joining Isiah Thomas as the only players in NBA history to have at least 24 assists in a triple-double.

Rondo’s total of 50 assists through the first three games of the season tied John Stockton’s NBA record for most assists in the first 3 games of the season. And in the next game against the Detroit Pistons, he finished the game with 17 assists for a total of 67, which is the most assists in any team’s first four games in NBA history.

With a 15-assists effort the following day, Rondo again set a record for most assists through the first five games.  He is averaging 15.5 APG, 5.5 rebounds and almost 3 steals per game so far this year.

Gameday Dish: Heat at Celtics Season Opener

The Heat and the Celtics have their eyes on the same prize: getting to and winning the NBA Finals in June. The Lakers will be showing off their newly acquired championship rings in a pregame ceremony at the Staples Center tonight and appear ready to threepeat for another title and more bling.

Rings, this game is all about championship rings: LeBron on the beach looking for that first ring; Shaq in Boston determined to get championship number five to keep up with his former teammate and now trophy rival Kobe Bryant.

The finals are a very long, arduous regular season away. But there’s the type of buzz surrounding the start of this season that we usually don’t encounter until playoff time. And tonight’s opener between the Celtics and Heat features two teams at the center of the drama as the Celtics’ Big Three Pierce, Garnett and Allen prepare to do battle with Miami’s newly formed triumvirate of James, Wade and Bosh for Eastern Conference supremacy

Tonight’s matchup will put into motion the many exciting subplots set to play out this season. Will D-Wade occupy seat 1 or seat 2? Will Rajon Rondo make the proverbial jump to superstar? How will Kendrick Perkins’ injured knee and his mid-season return to the starting lineup affect the Celts? Will Miami’s supporting cast surrounding the stars step up and deliver? Will Coach Doc Rivers be happy with his big decision to come back to the Boston bench after the heartbreaking Game 7 loss in last year’s Finals to the Los Angeles Lakers. And how will second-year head coach Erik Spoelstra lead his new awesome threesome?

Did I mention LeBron James joining Dwyane Wade and the Heat?

The biggest star in professional basketball (professional sports?) leaves his almost-hometown team (the Akron Cavs?) via a prime-time television special and relocates to flashy, splashy Miami to join forces with D-Wade, Chris Bosh and Pat Boss, aka team president Pat Riley.

Some prognosticators have been throwing around the Michael Jordan-led 1995-96 Champion Chicago Bulls and their 72-10 all-time best regular season mark as a measuring stick for this Miami team. Jordan, Pippen and Rodman … James, Wade and Bosh – different eras, different players for sure, but similar expectations in many fans’ and even experts’ minds.

Anything less than a dominating start of the season in the wins column will be viewed as a letdown for this newer than new Miami Heat squad.  Expectations of success are higher than maybe any team has shouldered since those mid-to-late 90’s Bulls teams that won three titles back-to-back-to-back.

The Celtics on the other hand, having won the crown in 2008 with what was then considered a veteran team, are statistically the oldest team in the NBA and may be forgiven for some regular season stretches of sub-par play due to wear and tear.

However, Boston fans could taste franchise-record title 18 until the final, final moments of Finals’ Game 7 last year and are hungry for another championship banner to add to the Celtics’ collection in the rafters of the TD Garden.

The quest for the coveted 2011 NBA Championship ring starts tonight. Marv Albert, Steve Kerr and I have Miami Heat at Boston Celtics at 7:30 PM EST on TNT.

Ask the Czar: Blogger Q&A

I took a timeout this week to answer questions from some of the nation’s top basketball bloggers. Here is a transcript of that session.

John from http://www.redsarmy.com

Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty ImagesHow difficult is it for a coach to mix an up-and-coming young star like Rajon Rando into a group of established veterans like the Celtics Big 3 and keep everyone happy?

I’m not sure if it’s more difficult for the coach or if its’ more difficult for the players who have to accept that player in. Its makes it much easier for the coach if the veteran guys are accepting or, I think it’s a two way street- not only do they have to be willing to trust, or accept, the new player, the young player, but at the same time he has to be willing to understand who’s he’s playing with. That‘s the coaches job, to go sit down and say to him, “Here’s what you have: You have a Hall of Famer here, you have another Hall of Famer here, you have the leading three point shooter in history.”

You have to lay it out for him so that he understands whom he’s dealing with. And then you hope you have a mature young man, that’s stepping into that spot.  Obviously his talents take a lot of that. If he can play and the veterans know he can play, they’ll be much more accepting of him. They want to win, veteran guys, that’s what they want: somebody on the floor that can get it done for them, they’re all part of it together.

Ryan from http://www.hoopsaddict.com

 

Why do you think Vince Carter has yet to break out with a big game?

Well without me being on the series and seeing every game in totality, it’s hard for me to really answer that because different match-ups dictate we go to different people sometimes in the game. The one thing about Vince Carter, he’s always capable of having 40-point game. So you know that you have this weapon- we may not have broken out yet- but on any given day or night or game, Vince is capable of doing that.

We’ve seen him do it during the season: There was a month, a terrible month of Vince not being able to make a shot. He said “I will play better.” He did – he came out exploded one game, he had like 39 or whatever. That’s what you get with Vince, the capability of having one of those kinds of games at any time.

Photo by Fernando Medina/NBAE via Getty Images

Cody from http://www.kingjamesgospel.com

 

Assuming that every great player to ever compete in the NBA was part of the same draft class, which one player in the NBA would you pick with the first overall draft pick to build your team around?

Well I can’t. I can’t do that. But, I think your decision comes down to a great, great big man or a great guard. One of those two because if you can’t have a great big man, you have to have a great guard that controls the ball, to lead a team.

Photo by Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty ImagesRyan from http://www.lakeshowlife.com

 

With Oklahoma rising and Portland succeeding despite injuries and the perennial playoff teams continuing to evolve, is it possible for the Lakers to continue to dominate the Western Conference or will we see a new team assume that role?

I think they’ll be another team stepping up. The Lakers certainly aren’t what you would call an ancient team. Their key parts are certainly in their prime. However I think there are a lot of teams with the pieces in place that will make them move eventually. Then we’ll get to the point where Kobe decides that enough is enough and he steps down. What will that Lakers team be without him? So, yeah it would not surprise me in the next year or two years that the next team will step up in the Western Conference, whoever that might be, and become a dominant team.

Boozer & Williams_Photo by Layne Murdoch/NBAE via Getty ImagesLee from http://www.purpleandblues.com

What’s your take on the Jazz-Nuggets series? Are you surprised that Utah has a 3-1 lead?

I’m surprised because they are playing with two key guys out of their line-up.  Okur who plays great defense and can make big shots is also a rebounder and a facilitator. They run a lot of their offense through him so that’s a huge loss. And then even before that they lost Kirilenko. You’re talking about a transition offense, a great defender, a guy who can score points and block shots. He’s another key piece.  So to lose those two pieces and then to turn around play the way they’re playing is an incredible accomplishment.

I think it shows you the greatness of Deron Williams and it probably has helped the stock of Carlos Boozer.

Adam from http://www.raptorshq.com

 

To your best knowledge, are NBA coaches embracing the many new statistical measures of player performance?

I think the majority of coaches – I can’t say everyone because I don’t know that as a fact –but I think the majority of the coaches seek as much knowledge as they can get their hands on. Anything that can help them dissect the game, analyze performances, help them make good decisions: I think they’d be stupid not to want it. But then again you’re going to find somebody who doesn’t really care or they don’t find it relevant. I don’t know what the percentages are of the 30 plus coaches in the NBA that utilize all this new stuff or don’t utilize it.

Then you divide that into two categories also; there are guys that coach the players and guys that select the players and on some teams they are not one in the same.

Evan from http://www.orlandopinstripedpoints.com

 

How can Dwight Howard avoid picking up so many fouls? From a coaching standpoint, how do you handle a player like Howard who struggles to stay on the floor at times?

Photo by Fernando Medina/NBAE via Getty Images_29April10I’m sure that whatever could have been done or can be done, is being done because of Stan Van Gundy being the outstanding coach that he is. It’s not like he’s playing for somebody that doesn’t pay attention to these things. Stan is a stickler and into detail. And, he’s got a guy in Patrick Ewing alongside of him who’s an assistant coach that has been in the trenches himself and understands this stuff. There was a time where Patrick was going through the same things and picking up too many fouls.

He’s got to look at it and understand, and deal with the psychological approach as far as referees – what are they looking at? What are teams trying to do to him? Dwight is a bright person and he’s got to make some adjustments to whatever he’s doing that is putting these extra fouls on him. He’s got to make some adjustments to avoid picking up those fouls because he’s not on the court the number of minutes that he would like to be on, and he’s not on the court the number of minutes that the Magic need him on the floor to be the dominant player that he is.

Czar Asks You

Photo by Danny Bollinger/NBAE via Getty Images

Late Sunday night in Dallas, Dirk Nowitzki and rookie point guard Darren Collison of the New Orleans Hornets traded basket for basket in a fourth quarter battle. Dallas won the game 108-100, but not before blowing most of a 25-point second-half lead. Collison’s 20 first-half points prevented this game from becoming an early wipeout. And his clutch fourth quarter performance nearly allowed the Hornets to pull off their second highly improbable comeback in days.

Rookie point guards continue to make headlines in the NBA. While Tyreke Evans and Brandon Jennings jumped out as early ROY candidates (and probably continue to be the favorites), Collison and Golden State’s Stephen Curry are making strong late season surges. Collison has made the most of his added minutes with the injury to starting point guard Chris Paul.

And Curry appears to be hitting his stride in a free-flowing Golden State offense that suits his skill set.  Johnny Flynn in Minnesota has also had a very solid rookie campaign as has Ty Lawson in Denver. At draft time last year, the expectation was that Blake Griffin might be the only potential star among the rookie crop – but these point guards may turn out to be the real story.

Photo by Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images

And they’ve had the opportunity to compete among a number of greats who came before them. In the first round of last year’s playoffs, Derrick Rose and Rajon Rondo went toe-to-toe in one of the classic playoff series of recent years. Both also made their first All-Star appearances this year. Russell Westbrook is having a superb season with the surprising Thunder as is Aaron Brooks with the Rockets. This is even before mentioning the triumvirate of Chris Paul, Deron Williams and Tony Parker, who are hitting the prime of their careers, and the old guard of Steve Nash, Chauncey Billups and Jason Kidd, all of whom are enjoying terrific seasons.

Together with the rookies, this group forms what may be one of the finest collections of point guards in NBA history. Kentucky point guard John Wall may soon join their ranks as many expect him to be the first pick in this year’s college draft.

Q: Do you think there has ever been a more dominant group of NBA point guards or are these guys in a league of their own?