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Cuttino Mobley can't guard a fire hydrant.

Baron Davis' idea of defense is to swipe at the ball and make reckless gambles. On offense, Davis is obviously confused and disgruntled -- shaking his head when teammates aren't where he thinks they should be, clucking his distress when his instructions are ignored.

Al Thornton is lost when playing off-the-ball defense.

Tim Thomas is useless at both ends of the game.

Young Mike Taylor gets nailed on every high-screen he encounters, and is always on the edge of being out of control.

Eric Gordon is a stranger in paradise.

Ricky Davis can't pass, handle or defend. With the score knotted and only seconds remaining in the game, the Spurs attacked Davis and Camby with a high screen/roll. Davis never got past the screen and Camby sagged into the paint, leaving Roger Mason totally unguarded as he dropped the 3-pointer that won the game.

Overall, the Clippers' offense relied less on teamwork than it did on individual play. For example, 40 of their 87 shots were taken by players who were either posted-up or in isolation situations. These on-your-own sequences produced 25 points and 3 assists (worth 7 points). That works out to .8 points per shot -- always a losing number.

Also, the Clippers unleashed a total of 11 too-quick or blatantly forced shots -- which had a collective yield of only two points (by Thomas).

When confronted with wing-screens, the Clippers always shot the strong-side gap -- which meant that if the ball-handler reversed direction his defender could never catch up with him.

YUCK!

Here's what's right

Mobley can be counted on for one good hot streak per game.

NBA roundup

An interesting proposal.

I'd choose Bill Russell because speed, defense, rebounding and unselfishness are the cornerstones of successful teams — and because, by definition, centers are at the center of every meaningful play. Even though he measured only 6-foot-10, 220 pounds, Russell would be extremely effective against today's premier low- and high-post scorers, i.e., Tim Duncan, Amare Stoudemire, Chris Bosh, Dwight Howard, Zydrunas Ilguaskas, Carlos Boozer and even Yao Ming. That's because Russell had a kind of tensile strength that rarely was forced to give ground against more massive opponents. Plus, his timing was impeccable, as were his instincts and his court awareness. Even more important than his skills, however, was Russell's indomitable competitive spirit.

In any case, I'd take Michael Jordan over Magic, simply because MJ could do things that Magic couldn't. Like shoot and play defense.

Travels with Charley

Here's the trickiest pass I ever saw.

As a certified sports scribe I had a courtside seat during a Knicks practice session back in the early '70s. This was before teams were obliged to bar the media from these events.

Anyway, the Knicks were running at half-speed through a three-man passing drill, the ball being moved from the middle to a wing, back to the middle and then to the other wing. While the middle-man ran straight ahead, both wings turned to face the ball and made their way downcourt with a quick sideways shuffle.

I don't recall who the other two players were, but Phil Jackson was on the right wing. As the trio approached the time-line and the ball was thrown to him, Jackson did a fast about-face so that his back was turned to the ball. Then he bent over, hunched up and used his butt to deflect the ball into the hands of the middle-man.

A perfect pass.

All of the players hooted with laughter, and even the ordinarily dour Red Holzman broke into a smile.

Perhaps a revival of the skills contests at the All-Star game could be expanded to include competition in bass-ackwards passing.


Author: Fox Sports
Author's Website: http://www.foxsports.com
Added: November 18, 2008

News » Clippers have problems all over 2008-11-18


Clippers have problems all over 2008-11-18


Clippers have problems all over 2008-11-18

Game Time: Spurs 88, Clippers 83

The Clippers are certainly not a good team. In fact, they can barely be called a team at all. What they are is a collection of variously flawed and variously talented individuals.

Here's what's wrong

On defense, Marcus Camby fails to put pressure on his man whenever he's faced up. Even in his post-up defense, Camby is still too reactive. In fact, all that Camby wants to do on the defensive end is block shots.

Chris Kaman has no explosiveness with the ball.

Charley's NBA tour

Charley RosenDuring the first half of the season, FOXSports.com's Charley Rosen will analyze each NBA team and offer a scouting report.
  • Phoenix Suns
  • Houston Rockets
  • Philadelphia 76ers
  • New Jersey Nets
  • Charlotte Bobcats
  • Sacramento Kings
  • Oklahoma City Thunder
  • Los Angeles Lakers
  • Memphis Grizzlies
  • Los Angeles Clippers
  • Orlando Magic
  • Detroit Pistons
  • Next: Nuggets (Friday vs. Lakers)

 

 
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