דוקומנטרים

Most Valuable Player San Antonio Spurs forward Kawhi Leonard listens to a question at a news conference after  Game 5 of the NBA basketball finals against the Miami Heat on Sunday, June 15, 2014, in San Antonio
לא מעצבן אתכם שנגר (אוקיי. נגר וחצי) פתאום קופץ לו הפופיק והוא רוצה חוזה מקס? מי הוא בכלל הקאווי לנרד הזה? קלע 12.7 נקודות דפוקות עם 9.9 ריב' ב…קנזס? דוק? פלורידה? צפון קרולינה? נו סיר. בסן דיאגו סטייט הדפוקה, אוניברסיטה שישנם בה יותר סטודנטים מקסיקנים מאשר במכסיקו סיטי, ואנגלית היא שפה זרה שם. טוב, אז בשנתוט השנייה שם הוא קלע 15.7 עם 12.5 ריב'. אם דאג מקדרמוט היה משחק שם הוא היה קולע 45 נק' למשחק.
אוקיי. הוא זכה עם הספארס באליפות ה-NBA והוא היה ה-MVP. ביג דיל: כל שחקני מיאמי היו על הפנים, ובספארס לא היתה לו הרבה תחרות.
אפילו מנבחרת הילדים של ארה"ב הוא נופה כאילו היה גרגר חול במטבח של חנה. רודי גיי עשה את הבנבחרת. דמר דרוזן עשה את הנבחרת. לנרד נישלח הביתה עם "תודה על העזרה".
היתה לו עונה של 12.8 נק' עם 6.2 ריב' בעונת 2013-14. ישנם לפחות 100 שחקני NBA עם מספרים כאלה.

אם עד יום ששי בלילה – ששי הזה -הם לא נותנים לו חוזה מקסימלי, הוא יהיה שחקן חופשי מוגבל, אבל ב-2017 בלתי מוגבל, והוא ינחת ישר בכמיאמי.

טוב. לדעתי הוא לא 'שווה' חוזה מקסימלי. אבל אני לא המנכ"ל ולא המאמן של הספארס. אז מה עליו להבין? שגם הם מאמינים כמו דוקטור לס שהוא לא שווה את הכסף וההימור?

בריאן אפטוס, המנכ"ל של הספארס, לא יתן לו חוזה מקסימום, כי כמו הפלח הוא רוצה להחזיק בשיבולי החיטה, וגם לאכול אותם. הוא לא מוכן לשלם ללנארד 90 מיליון ל-5 שנים פלוס 'הארכה', ובכך לעשותו 'הפנים הבאות' של הספארס אחרי שטים דנקן יפרוש בסיום העונה. או הם יכולים להציע לו 90 מיליון לארבע שנים, וזהו, אז למה להסתכן עתה?

הם יכולים גם לחכות לעונה הבאה ואז כשיהיה שחקן חופשי מוגבל, להציע לו 5 שנים במקסימום משכורת. בינתיים ישנה לו אינפקציה בעין והוא לא ישחק את משחק הפתיחה  נגד דאלאס מחר (היום) בערב.

אוקיי, לנארד לא הולך לשום מקום. אוקיי, הם יכולים להציע לו חוזה מקסימום ל-5 שנים בסיום העונה הבאה.

אבל מה? הוא רוצה את זה עכשיו, לא עוד שנה. מה אם ייפצע? מה אם פתאום תהיה לו עונה של 9.2 נק' ו-4.8 ריב', והספארס לא יעברו סיבוב שני בפלייאוף, האם הם יתנו לו חוזה מקסימום?

הבעייה היא שבריאן אפטוס והפלח חושבים בדיוק כמוני: למה להסתכן שנה למפרע?

כי אם ייפצע קשה, הם יתנו לו חפיסת בוטנים כמתנת פרידה עם בעיטה בתחת.

אז תגידו שהספארס 'חכמים' כי למה עליהם למהר?

למה? כי אם הם באמת טוענים שהוא 'שחקן העתיד' שלהם, שייראו זאת עם חתימה היום, לא בשנה הבאה.

מה על לנארד להרגיש שהוא ביקש מקבוצתו חוזה מקסימלי עכשיו, והם אומרים לו 'FORGET ABOUT IT'? הוא חייב להרגיש שנאה יוקדת לכל הארגון הזה.

הוא לא יישכח זאת להם.

בדיוק אותו ספור שיש לקייל ת'ומפסון בגולדן סטייט ווריורס!

 

 

As Kawhi Leonard holds firm on his desire for a maximum contract, extension talks with the San Antonio Spurs have failed to gather traction despite a looming Friday deadline, league sources told Yahoo Sports.

Leonard, the 2014 NBA Finals Most Valuable Player, would become a restricted free agent in July without an extension agreement by midnight Oct. 31 – the deadline for eligible extensions for the NBA’s draft class of 2011.

Spurs president and general manager R.C. Buford and agent Brian Elfus have had several discussions in recent weeks, but no progress has been made, league sources told Yahoo Sports.

Leonard, 23, is considered one of the NBA’s rising young stars, and multiple league executives told Yahoo Sports he’ll command a max offer sheet on the market next summer. The Spurs would assuredly match a sheet and retain Leonard, but there remains the risk of Leonard signing a similar offer sheet to Dallas Mavericks forward Chandler Parsons.

Parsons signed a three-year, $46 million offer sheet that included a player option on the third year. This way, Leonard could become an unrestricted free agent and potentially leave the Spurs in 2017.

San Antonio could sign Leonard to a five-year, $90 million-plus extension now, if the Spurs were willing to make him their designated player. San Antonio could also negotiate a four-year deal at the maximum contract level – or below – before the Friday deadline. As a restricted free agent next summer, the Spurs could also sign Leonard to a five-year extension at or below the maximum contract level.

Leonard has missed the preseason with an eye infection and is unlikely to be in the lineup on Tuesday for the Spurs opening night game against Dallas.

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Sources: Stalling contract talks between Thompson, Warriors causing frustration

Marc J. Spears

By October 25, 2014 4:13 PMYahoo Sports

Klay Thompson's camp is frustrated that the Golden State Warriors haven't offered a maximum contract in their ongoing extension talks with Friday's deadline nearing, sources told Yahoo Sports.

Thompson is seeking a maximum deal paying upward of $15 million per season, a source said. The Warriors have improved their offer to get in the vicinity but have not offered a full maximum contract, sources said.

 

View photo

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(Getty Images)

(Getty Images)

If Thompson and the Warriors do not come to terms on an extension by the Halloween deadline, he will be a restricted free agent next summer.

Warriors owner Joe Lacob has yet to become comfortable offering a maximum extension, sources said. A source close to Thompson said any offer shy of a max would be "absurd" considering his improvement and the influx of money to come to NBA teams from the next television contract.

Thompson averaged 18.4 points, 2.8 3-pointers, 3.1 rebounds and 2.2 assists per game last season and also has a reputation as a strong defender. He helped his stock with a strong performance for the gold-medal winning USA Basketball team during the 2014 World Cup in Spain. Thompson is slated to make $3 million this season.

The Minnesota Timberwolves had strong interest in acquiring Thompson in a trade for Kevin Love before dealing him to the Cleveland Cavaliers, but the Warriors wouldn't budge.

"As far as contract stuff, I try not to worry about it, because then it will affect your game," Thompson told reporters on Friday. "I'll just go out there and do what I do, and I know it will take care of itself

 

 

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No. 2: ‘Melo would have been fine playing with Kobe — Carmelo Anthony is no loser, Jeanie Buss. He’d have been fine playing alongside Kobe Bryant in a Los Angeles Lakers uniform, had his free-agent destiny taken him there. It’s a moot point now on the eve of the 2014-15 season with ‘Melo back in New York and Kobe ready to lead the Lakers. But those rumblings about no one wanting to play with Kobe, the ones that Buss addressed head on late last week, caused a stir. Ramona Shelbourne and Ohn Youngmisuk of ESPNNewYork.com provide the details:

Carmelo Anthony heard “MVP” chants from the Madison Square Garden crowd as the New York Knicks held an open practice Sunday afternoon. So yes, it’s good to be back in New York after a summer of free agent visits to Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles and Houston.

Anthony ultimately chose to remain in New York and sign a five-year, $124 million contract with the Knicks. But he says that’s because he “just felt more comfortable staying here in New York” and not because he had any misgivings about playing with Lakers star guard Kobe Bryant.

“Hell no. Of course not,” Anthony said. “If I thought that [playing for the Lakers] was the right situation for me from an overall perspective as far as having a team there, then I would have looked at that situation more in-depth. I just felt more comfortable staying here in New York. But as far as playing with him … I’m here now but I would always love to play with Kobe.”

An ESPN The Magazine article last week quoted several agents and NBA personnel — including Lakers insiders — saying that L.A. has been unable to attract top talent in free agency because players don’t want to work with Bryant.

Bryant was unable to attend Anthony’s meeting with the Lakers in July. He had initially planned on being a part of the Lakers’ pitch, but wasn’t able to make it back to Los Angeles from a European vacation in time, after the meeting was moved up by several hours.

Anthony said that he and Bryant, whom he considers a good friend, had several conversations outside of the pitch meeting, but that he never felt pressured.

“He wasn’t calling me every day and like, ‘Get over here! I want you here!'” Anthony said. “We had conversations about different situations whether it was in New York or in L.A., but it wasn’t to the point where it was non-stop calling or texting or stuff like that.”

***

No. 3: Iguodala fine with backing up Barnes — Jamal Crawford could have in-state competition for Sixth Man of the Year honors this season if Andre Iguodala is serious about coming off the bench behindHarrison Barnes with the Golden State Warriors. A new coach and system could mean a tweak to the starting lineup. Rusty Simmons of the San Francisco Chronicle has more:

Steve Kerr is leaning toward starting Harrison Barnes over Andre Iguodala, and for that, the Warriors’ head coach has granted everyone permission to call him an idiot.

“I could make an argument that Andre has been our best player, especially over the past two weeks,” Kerr said Sunday, three days before the season opener in Sacramento. “Right now, in scrimmages, he’s the most impactful player we have. Over the past couple of weeks, he has sort of determined who is winning, depending on which side he’s on. From that standpoint, you could call me an idiot.”

One huge reason that Kerr probably will bring Iguodala off the bench is how important the $12million man is to the second unit. Without backup point guard Shaun Livingston, who is recovering from offseason toe surgery, Iguodala has acted as the reserves’ point forward.

Iguodala had not come off the bench in 806 NBA games (regular season and playoffs) until Kerr experimented with the idea this preseason, and after joking about trying to tank the job, the do-it-all swingman basically won the sixth-man gig with a 19-to-0 (no misprint) assist-to-turnover ratio in a three-game span.

“He’s an incredibly smart player,” Kerr said. “He recognizes everything that is happening on the floor at both ends. He’s a leader, so he knows how to run a team and get guys organized. He is an absolute joy to watch out there. I can’t wait to get him in the game to see him, but we’re trying to put the right combinations out there to help everybody and make the team its best.”

Plugging Barnes back into the starting lineup, in which he showed promise as a rookie before struggling to find consistency as a reserve last season, also could help the third-year forward. Kerr says Barnes has been the team’s best cutter throughout camp, and with floor-stretching shooters Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson and excellent passing big men Andrew Bogut and David Lee, there should be plenty of cutting and driving angles for Barnes and players capable of getting him the ball.

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No. 4: Report: Barea back to the Mavericks? — The Dallas Mavericks are still trying to round up members of the championship group they put on the floor in 2011. Tyson Chandler came back via trade over the summer. And now J.J. Barea could be next. The Minnesota Timberwolves are reportedly on the verge of buying him out, which would pave the way for a return to Dallas. Marc Stein of ESPNDallas.com explains:

Sources told ESPN.com that Barea will be waived by the Wolves before Monday’s 5 p.m. deadline for teams to cut rosters down to 15 players and possibly as early as Sunday.

Sources say that the Dallas Mavericks, meanwhile, are planning to re-sign Barea next week once he clears waivers. Barea is expected to clear because his salary-cap number for the coming season is $4.5 million.

The Mavericks would have to create a roster spot to make room for Barea but can do so by trading or releasing guard Gal Mekel or big man Greg Smith.

Barea would be the second member of the Mavs’ 2011 championship team to return to the franchise in recent months after Dallas reacquired center Tyson Chandler in June in a trade with the New York Knicks.

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iors, Thompson yet to make a deal | Can Kobe be an All-Star? Oladipo out a month | Outlaw out in New York?

No. 1: Warriors, Thompson yet to make a deal — All summer, the Golden State Warriors seemed to be in the mix for Minnesota’s on-the-block power forward Kevin Love, at times even appearing to be the front-runner. Of course, Love ended up going to Cleveland, at least in some part because the Warriors refused to give up shooting guard Klay Thompson, who they firmly believe is a big part of their future going forward. But now, with less than a week remaining in the time period where Golden State can agree to a contract extension to Thompson, Yahoo’s Marc Spears reports a disagreement over Thompson’s worth has led to some frustrations in Thompson’s camp…

Klay Thompson’s camp is frustrated that the Golden State Warriors haven’t offered a maximum contract in their ongoing extension talks with Friday’s deadline nearing, sources told Yahoo Sports.

Thompson is seeking a maximum deal paying upward of $15 million per season, a source said. The Warriors have improved their offer to get in the vicinity but have not offered a full maximum contract, sources said.

If Thompson and the Warriors do not come to terms on an extension by the Halloween deadline, he will be a restricted free agent next summer.

Warriors owner Joe Lacob has yet to become comfortable offering a maximum extension, sources said. A source close to Thompson said any offer shy of a max would be “absurd” considering his improvement and the influx of money to come to NBA teams from the next television contract.

***

No. 2: Can Kobe be an All-Star? — At 36 years old, and after struggling with injuries the last two seasons, nobody is quite sure what type of production the Lakers can expect to receive this season from Kobe Bryant. Yes, he’s older and has been through a lot of injuries, but this is Kobe Bryant, a player who regularly overcomes odds and produces amazing results. According to Lakersnation , Lakers GM Mitch Kupchak appeared on television and professed confidence about what the Lakers should see out of Bryant this season…

On Friday, following the game between the Lakers and Sacramento Kings, GM Mitch Kupchak appeared on an episode of “Connected With…” on TWCSportsNet. Kupchak talked about all things Lakers along with touching on what he believes Kobe will accomplish this season:

“I think he can make the All-Star team… I think he’ll have the ability to score when he wants to score. I think he’ll be a great leader. His voice will be heard… He won’t be like he was fifteen years ago… that wirey, springy, try to dunk the ball every time… but you won’t notice it.”

Kupchak is confident Kobe will be an All-Star for the 17th time in his career and a great leader for this team filled with young players. Although the Lakers have suffered some ugly defeats in the preseason thus far, the team has bounced back recently with impressive performances against the Utah Jazz, Phoenix Suns and Portland Trail Blazers.

***

No. 3: Oladipo out a month — Orlando’s Victor Oladipo finished last season as runner-up for the Rookie of the Year award, and he is expected to team this season with rookies Aaron Gordon and Elfrid Payton to lead Orlando’s rebuilding efforts. But after taking an accidental elbow to the face in practice, Oladipo had surgery late this week, and now, according to Adrian Wojnarowski, Oladipo will miss the first few weeks of the season …

Oladipo, the 2014 runner-up for the NBA’s Rookie of the Year award, sustained an elbow to his head in practice on Thursday. He had the surgical procedure on Saturday.

For the Magic, Oladipo’s loss is a significant blow and adds to the burden on promising rookie Elfrid Payton Jr., who will take on a more significant role in Oladipo’s absence. The Magic have confidence that Oladipo – who averaged 13.8 points, four assists and four rebounds a season ago – and Payton will form the franchise’s backcourt for years to come.

***

No. 4: Outlaw out in New York? — Just a few months ago, the Knicks struck a deal with the Sacramento Kings to bring in Quincy Acy and Travis Outlaw. But after training camp and the exhibition season, according to a report from ESPN.com the Knicks are apparently considering waiving Outlaw and his $3 million in guaranteed money so they can keep Travis Wear, a former UCLA player with a non-guaranteed deal…

Outlaw is owed $3 million this season. If the Knicks released him, they would still owe him his full salary. They also could dump him on another team via a trade.

Getting rid of Outlaw via release would open up a roster spot for another player. There is a possibility that spot would be filled by Travis Wear.

Wear, whom the Knicks signed to a non-guaranteed deal, impressed the team in training camp and the preseason.

It was widely expected Wear would end up in Westchester, too. If the Knicks get rid of Outlaw — eating $3 million in the process if he’s released — to keep Wear, it’s a sign the organization is committed under Phil Jackson to developing young talent, regardless of the

 

 

 

 

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Matthew Stockman
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The Heat star was able to fade into the background with LeBron James on his team. Now, he must reassume the leading role four years and several injuries later. Can he do it?

What more could Dwyane Wade want? After two first-round exits in the 2009 and 2010 NBA Playoffs, Miami's favorite two-guard seemed doomed to superlative individual performance on teams with no shot at winning titles. Something had to be done. A decision had to be made.

LeBron James proved to be just what the doctor ordered, making life easier for Wade in a multitude of ways. In the past, Wade was tasked with do everything. He brought the ball up the court, defended the opponent's best wing player and executed the offense in crucial situations. As he grew older and James continued to rise, Wade also played less minutes than before. Last year, you could argue he used the equivalent of paid time off during the regular season.

It's not a stretch to say no superstar had it made more than Wade. With four NBA Finals appearances and two more rings, Wade etched in stone his case as a first-ballot Hall of Famer and his team's all-time greatest player without actually shouldering the burden of carrying the franchise. He lived one helluva life for four years.

Then, James decided to take his talents back home. In the span of a few months, the Miami Heat went from reloading their super team to rebuilding the foundation of the roster to save face. After four years of sitting in the passenger seat of LeBron's powerful Batmobile, Wade now takes the keys of his used Nissan Maxima. It's a nice car and it was hot four years ago, but it's not the Batmobile. Nothing's like the Batmobile.

This is life for Dwyane Wade, a 32-year old with almost 900 games and 32,000 minutes on his timecard. Four years after he ceded the role to LeBron, he must once again become the leader of men in Miami.

There are some areas of continuity for Wade to use. Many other key parts of the last four years still remain on the roster, parts like Chris Bosh, Mario Chalmers and Chris Andersen. Bosh will now be sitting in the front passenger seat alongside Wade, but Bosh too will have the opportunity to take the wheel like he did in Toronto four years prior. This may be more of a dual partnership than a Batman-Robin situation.

Moreover, this Miami roster has been rebuilt to be leaner and faster. Role players like James Ennis, Shawne Williams and rookie Shabazz Napier will be called on to run the wings on fast breaks and defend on the perimeter in ways LeBron and Wade used to when at full strength the last four years. It's asking a lot for the Heat to be as cohesive "on a string" like they were before, but it's a focus head coach Erik Spolestra must take on if Miami has any hope of being a formidable team come playoff time. That means Wade must play closer to his All-Defense first-team level from years past instead of being dazed and confused on lost rotations.

It's certainly tough to count the guy out. Regardless of how one feels about Wade today, he deserves a ton of credit for being the league's most unstoppable force eight years ago in winning his first NBA title. If anything, Wade deserves even more credit for adapting his game and being a secondary star to LeBron. Superstar teams don't always end well, but Miami did in large part because Wade ceded control when many thought he couldn't.

But asking Wade to play a leading role he hasn't owned in four years, all while constantly monitoring his physical limits and adapting to new teammates and a tweaked style of play, is asking a hell of a lot. On some nights, we'll see the old Wade of 30+ points and double-digit free throw attempts. But on many other nights, we'll be reminded of the Wade that looked incapable of finishing around the rim in the Finals. We'll understand more easily why LeBron decided to take a second stint in Cleveland.

In a dream scenario, Miami finds a way to squeeze one or two more years out of Wade and Bosh starring like it's 2010. But of the two players, Bosh is the more likely to revert to his pre-Heat form. He's younger and has much less of an injury history.

Wade's climb, on the other hand, is an uphill one. At 32 and with many miles on his body, it's going to take a major effort to avoid turning into a mere jack-of-all-trades player for a second-tier team in a pedestrian Eastern Conference. The Heat's modest hopes depend on Wade proving that statement wrong.

 

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ditor's note: For more information on the concept of gravity, click here.

Dwyane Wade has been great at many things on the basketball court. But one skill has always escaped him: 3-point shooting.

This isn't breaking news to anyone who has followed his tenure in the NBA. Wade is a career 29 percent 3-point shooter, a sorry figure that places him 311th among the 315 players in NBA history who have shot at least 1,000 3-pointers.

But Wade has adjusted. Starting in the lockout-shortened 2011-12 season, Wade kicked the habit for the most part and generally expelled the 3-point shot from his regular jump-shooting diet. In 2013-14, Wade's propensity for shooting (and making) the 3 hit a career nadir; he took only 32 trifectas and made only nine during the entire regular season. Five years ago, he might have stumbled into making nine treys in a single week. Those days are long gone.

But here's the crazy thing about all that: Opposing defenses still glued themselves to Wade off the ball like he's the next Steve Kerr.

This isn't just a theory; there is quantifiable evidence of this phenomenon. According to data provided by STATS LLC from cutting-edge SportVU cameras that track the movement of the ball and every player last season, defenses stuck to Wade on the perimeter as if he were an elite 3-point shooter.

The question is, why?


During one of last week's practices, Wade was on the Miami Heat's practice court upstairs at AmericanAirlines Arena. The team has been struggling to find its identity in the wake of LeBron James' sudden departure this summer, and Wade had just wrapped up a long, arduous practice meticulously going over coach Erik Spoelstra's defensive principles. Wade and his teammates are tired, and the general mood feels grim after a string of hard losses.

But in this moment, Wade is laughing. He's giggling because for so long he thought he was going crazy, seeing something on the court that had to be a figment of his imagination. Opposing defenses just won't leave him alone off the ball. To him, this didn't make any sense. He's not a 3-point shooter.

"Lately, I've been seeing everybody start doing this more," Wade said as he turned his back pretending to be a defender gluing himself to a perimeter shooter. "And I'm just like, 'Damn, did I just start shooting 3s and I didn't know about it?'"

To Wade's elation, the data from SportVU cameras corroborated his story. He wasn't seeing things; defenses were really playing him that way.

What Wade was describing was the dynamic of a floor-spacer who spreads the defense thin, a characteristic almost exclusively held by 3-point sharpshooters. Ask an NBA coach to name the best floor-spacers in the league and chances are you'll hear names like Kyle KorverStephen Curry and Klay Thompson. You do not leave these guys on the perimeter and live to tell about it. In the domain of floor-spacing, shooters rule the day.

Wade, however, is the quirk in the system. The statisticians at STATS LLC have crunched the SportVU data to come up with two advanced metrics which they've called "gravity score" and "distraction score." By tracking how the defense shifts at every instance in the game, gravity score attempts to quantify how much defensive attention a player receives when he's off the ball. In other words, a player's gravitational pull on the opposing defense.

Distraction score takes this one step further and quantifies how much a player's defender is willing to help off him to stop the ball handler. If a lights-out shooter is standing in the corner, his defender will rarely leave him to stop a penetrating point guard. Coaches have noticed this, but SportVU quantifies it, through comprehensive optical tracking and innovative algorithms.

I wanted to examine which players performed strongly in both metrics so I could identify the NBA's true floor-spacers. So I blended the two metrics together to create a composite metric, which I've called "respect rating."

Now, this is where it gets interesting. Flipping through the leaders in respect rating is like glancing at a list of 3-point contest candidates. There's Kevin Durant. Predictably, Korver's name shows up high on the list. So do Curry and Thompson. Ray Allen. J.J. Redick. You name the sharpshooter … he's there.

But oddly enough, so is Wade. He is the anomaly, the lone floor-spacer who ignores 3s altogether.

 

Dwyane WadeCourtesy of Tom HaberstrohThe newly created "respect rating" metric.

 

As illustrated above, Wade converted 0.2 3-pointers every 36 minutes on the court last season, which is remarkably low for someone ranked in the top 25 of respect rating. On average, the other 24 players made far more trifectas than Wade, about 2.2 3s every 36 minutes. Wade was unique in this sense. In fact, no wing player with fewer than 0.5 3-pointers every 36 minutes even cracked the top 100 in respect rating. Tyreke EvansShaun Livingston and Tony Allen? All nowhere near the upper echelon.

But then there's Wade.

"I don't think anybody has ever called me that term — a floor-spacer — before," Wade says. "But honestly I've always known that I'm a floor-spacer, just in a different way."

So what makes Wade different? Why do defenses treat Wade like he's an elite 3-point shooter even though he's not?

"They're always up on me," Wade says. "I always wonder why."


The answer to this riddle is not simply that Wade scores a lot of points. It's how he gets his points that matters. More specifically, he's a deadly off-ball threat not because he's a 3-point shooter, but because he's a lethal cutter.

The mystery starts to reveal itself when you look at the Synergy numbers. Since losing the 2011 Finals, Wade says he has dedicated himself to cutting off the ball more for easy buckets. Not surprisingly, the data backs this up. According to Synergy's video tracking, Wade has accumulated 497 points on cuts off the ball, which is 100 more points than anyone else in the league over that time.

Dwyane WadeCourtesy of Tom Haberstroh

 

What's clear is that Wade is indeed a floor-spacer, but he does it by cutting, not shooting.

And SportVU has detected that defenses are programming against it. Through their algorithms, SportVU has found that Wade pulls his defender away from the ball handler. Last season, Wade ranked 21st in the league in respect rating, which, interestingly enough, places him even higher than James. Part of the reason: James is not quite the same cutter off the ball as Wade.

"I think once I became a dynamic cutter, then it became a part of the scouting report," Wade says. "If you turn your head and go help … boom, I'm cutting backdoor."

On the practice floor, Wade put on an impromptu demonstration all by himself. He acted like a coach, moving around the perimeter and angling himself in different ways to demonstrate how defenses used to guard him compared to how they've guarded him more recently. Before he developed his off-ball cutting game, his defender used to shade off of him on the perimeter, sinking into the paint and keeping a close eye on the ball. "Now," Wade shouted as he slid from the paint to the 3-point arc, "they will guard me like this."

Wade's gravitational pull has gotten so impactful that he began to use it against his opposition.

 

Wade

AP Photo/Lynne SladkySince the start of the 2011-12 season, Dwyane Wade leads the NBA in points off cutters by a massive margin.

 

"There have been a lot of times where I tell my teammates, 'Just drive on my side! They're not leaving me!'" Wade said, laughing.

Wade then backtracked a bit.

"Well, it's not like 'Ray Allen not leaving me,'" he says, "but it's my version of not leaving me."

Indeed, Allen placed higher than Wade in respect rating last season. Evidently, Wade's remarkable cutting abilities have not gone unnoticed. Heat.com writer Couper Moorhead has chronicled Wade's now-you-see-me-now-you-don't routine, dubbing it "ghost cuts." Last season, Wade scored 147 points on 97 plays ending in a cut, which translates to a ridiculously good payoff of 1.52 points per play. Only Dwight Howard was more efficient. By comparison, leaving Allen open for a catch-and-shoot play last season — a defensive cardinal sin — resulted in a 1.2-point average payoff. Wade's move was more deadly.

Wade stood in the corner and described how he works his magic. He preys on his defender as soon as he drifts away and loses focus.

"It's a feeling, but I'm watching my guy's eyes," Wade said. "I'm looking at the ball and where it's going, because sometimes my job is to run to the top of the key, but if I see he's out of position and he's just looking [toward the ball] …"

Wade darted to the basket.

"… I'm gone."


But that was then, this is now. Can Wade be effective on cuts without James around anymore?

This is the elephant in the room. James is a passing virtuoso who can see above the defenses like he's observing from an air traffic control tower. Wade was always one pass away, and no player assisted Wade's field goals more than James last season.

It remains to be seen whether teams will be willing to pack the paint more when Wade is off the ball. Why respect his cutting game so much if James isn't around to deliver the pass? It turns out Wade would welcome the extra breathing room.

"That'd be great, fine by me," Wade says. "It'd give me a chance to get my 3 off."

Uh-oh. The career 29 percent 3-point shooter wants to shoot more 3s? Teams may be rooting for that counterpunch.

Wade has indeed taken more 3-pointers this preseason. He's shot 2.7 3-pointers every 36 minutes thus far in five games, which would be his highest rate since 2009-10. He made just 30 percent from deep that season.

"It's funny," he says, "because in the last couple games, I've hit a couple 3s and the guys who are guarding me have looked at me like, 'What?'"

The look typically comes from younger players who only know the James-era Wade.

"Y'all forgot that I did shoot 3s," Wade says. "Last three years I just haven't done it."

And that discipline worked in the Heat's favor. Oftentimes, there were better shots available thanks to James' presence. But now the exchange rate has been disrupted with James gone.

The Heat may have lost James' passing abilities, but they hope that free-agent signee Josh McRoberts can fill some of the void. McRoberts, who has missed the preseason with a toe injury, averaged 4.5 assists per game last season in Charlotte, which marks one of the highest rates in the league among big men. And much of those went to Gerald Henderson and Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, two players who like to cut off the ball, like Wade.

This introduces an interesting wrinkle for Wade's season, and really the rest of his NBA career. Will he need to start shooting 3-pointers to maintain his gravitational pull as he ages? Or has the attention derived from his cutting game made the 3-pointer irrelevant?

Nonetheless, get ready for more 3-pointers from Wade.

"I'm going to shoot ’em more," Wade says, which sounds a little like a warning than a prediction. "It is what it is."

You have our full attention, Dwyane. Let's see how long it lasts.

 

 

 

 

 

מנחם לס

מנהל הופס. הזקן והוותיק מכולם בצוות. מנסה לכתוב יומית - כל זמן שאוכל!

לפוסט הזה יש 12 תגובות

  1. הסרט על לארי ומג'יק מדהים ומרגש, לא פחות.

    ה"דוקומנטרי" על קרופורד הוא למעשה קליפ-מיקס, קשה לקרוא לזה דוקו..

  2. מנחם, אולי תפתח באתר עמוד של סרטים מומלצים ולינקים ?
    מה אתה אומר ?
    תוכן וידאו גם ככה מתחיל להשתלט על האינטרנט, חבל שפנינים כאלה תלכנה לאיבוד בערמות הפוסטים מן העבר….

  3. מצטרף ל Berch יש המון סרטים שניתן להוסיף, כדאי שיהיה עמוד עם קישור קבוע ואפשרות לאנשים לדרג ולהוסיף הערות.

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