In
less than 24 hours families and friends will be gathering around the Christmas
tree. Gifts will be shared and exchanged followed by I love you and thank you,
hugs and kisses and everything in between. Enjoyment will fill rooms and
buildings as far as the eye can see. This is also a day where NBA will be front
and center with a quintet of five games on ESPN and ABC. There will be stars in
each game trying to make a statement through highlight plays and defensive
plays and showing us how to play the game on both ends the right way.
New
Orleans Pelicans (9-19) vs. Miami Heat (16-11): 12 p.m. on ESPN
The
first contest will feature two teams with two top notch All-Star players in
Anthony Davis (23.4 ppg-10th NBA, 10.8 rpg-T-6th NBA, 2.7
bpg-2nd NBA) of the Pelicans, who leads the league in 30-plus point and 10-plus rebound games with five and 11-time All-Star guard Dwyane Wade
(18.5 ppg-Leads team, 3.9 rpg, 4.4 apg, 45.6 FG%) of the Heat.
This
contest also features two teams that have been on the opposite ends on how they
have started this season.
The
Pelicans had a rough start out of the gates under their new head coach Alvin
Gentry, who was brought on this off-season replacing Monty Williams winning
just five times out of their first 21 chances.
A
big reason for their struggles has been injuries suffer to key players like
swingman Tyreke Evans (16.4 ppg, 6.0 rpg, 6.6 apg) and guards Jrue Holiday
(13.1 ppg, 4.5 apg, 41.1 3-Pt.%) and Norris Cole, who combined to miss 40 games
in the early stages of this season.
While
the Pelicans have been solid offensively in terms of scoring at 102.8 points
per contest, which is 7th in the league, their defense has been
terrible in points allowed at 107.5, which is 29th in “The
Association.” They are 24th in field goal percentage allowed
surrendering 46.0 percent; 29th in three-point percentage allowed at
39.3 and even with the great Davis guarding the paint, the Pelicans are 25th
in rebounds per contest at 41.7; tied with the Philadelphia 76ers for 25th
in rebound differential at -3.7 are 14th in block shots per contest
at 5.2.
The
one bright spot besides Davis in this season so far for the Pelicans has been
the play of understudy guard Ish Smith, who is having a break out season with
career-high averages of 8.9 points, 5.7 assists and 3.4 rebounds per contest. Unfortunately, the Pelicans traded him to the Philadelphia 76ers for two second-round picks.
After
a 105-101 loss at the Portland Trail Blazers (11-20) on Dec. 14, the Pelicans
have won three of their last four games, which began with a 104-94 win at the
Utah Jazz (12-15). Forward Ryan Anderson led the come from behind win with 24
points, hitting 13 for 13 from the free throw line. Guard Eric Gordon had 19
points, hitting 4 for 7 from three-point range. Davis had 17 points and 13
rebounds. Holiday had 15 points and Evans had 11 points, five assists, four
boards and two steals.
Following
a 104-88 loss at the Phoenix Suns 48 hours later, the Pelicans won a shootout
at the Denver Nuggets (12-17) 130-125 on Dec. 20 scoring over 30 points in all
four quarters.
Despite
having flu-like symptoms, Davis led the way with 27 points and four blocks.
Evans had 21 points, 10 assists and eight boards. Holiday also had 21 points to
go along with five assists off the bench. Gordon had 20 points, connecting on four
three-pointers in seven tries and Anderson had 16 points off the bench.
In
their most lopsided win of the season so far, the Pelicans in their third
opportunity defeated the Trail Blazers 115-89 on Wednesday night and Davis led
the way with 28 points, 12 boards and three blocks for the Pelicans, who shot
48.2 percent from the floor and hit 13 three-pointers in 31 tries to win their second straight contest. Evans had 24
points, eight rebounds, nine assists and two steals. Holiday had 19 points and five
assists off the bench, connecting on three of five from long range. Anderson
had 13 points, hitting three from downtown in seven chances and six rebounds.
Gordon had 11 points and six assists.
For
the Heat and head coach Erik Spoelstra, this season has been about getting back
to the playoffs after missing out last season, which also ended four straight
seasons of making it to The NBA Finals. Seeing four-time NBA MVP LeBron James
return to the Cleveland Cavaliers the summer before did not help.
While
Wade has been solid this season, the return of perennial All-Star
forward/center Chris Bosh (17.6 ppg-2nd team, 7.9 rpg, 45.5 FG%)
from blood clot that forced him to miss half of the season a year ago has been
a huge boost.
What
has also helped the Heat this season has been the continued emergence of
starting center Hassan Whiteside (12.8 ppg, 10.9 rpg-4th NBA, 4.0
bpg-Leads NBA, 62.4 FG%-2nd NBA), who has registered 10 double-doubles
on the season; has 17 double-digit rebounding games and has on 14 occasions
this recorded four or more block shots in a game.
In
Miami’s 103-91 loss versus the Minnesota Timberwolves on Nov. 17, Whiteside
became the seventh player in league history to record multiple –points-rebounds-blocks
triple doubles when he had 22 points, 14 boards and 10 blocks, which was the
second triple-double of his career. He had on last season against the Chicago
Bulls on national television off the bench.
Along
with the great play of Whiteside, who will definitely be in the spotlight when
he guards Davis tomorrow, the likes of swingman Gerald Green (11.8 ppg, 37.4
3-Pt.%), who the Heat signed in free agency this summer, Goran Dragic (11.3
ppg, 5.3 apg), who the Heat re-signed this summer and rookie forward Justise
Winslow (5.8 ppg, 4.7 rpg) and guard Tyler Johnson (9.1 ppg, 45.7 3-Pt.%) have
been solid compliments to the Heat alongside forward Luol Deng (10.4 ppg).
While
the Heat have had strong wins in the month of December beating the likes of
Oklahoma City Thunder (97-95) on Dec. 3; versus the Cavs (99-84) on Dec. 5 and
Dec. 14 at the Atlanta Hawks (19-12) 100-88; they have had some tough defeats
as. They lost three straight games versus the inconsistent Washington Wizards (13-14)
114-103 on Dec. 7; at the Charlotte Hornets (15-13) two days later 99-81 and at
the Indiana Pacers (16-12) 96-83.
After
three straight wins from Dec. 13 to Dec. 16, the Heat lost at the Toronto
Raptors 108-94 on Dec. 18 breaking the 12-game winning streak that Heat had
against the Raptors with Bosh in the lineup.
The
Heat bounced back with a 116-109 win this past Sunday versus the Portland Trail
Blazers (11-20), but suffered a disappointing loss at home versus the Detroit
Pistons (17-13) 93-92, in a game where they led by as many as 18 points in the first
half.
When
these two teams meet at 12 noon tomorrow, the Pelicans will be trying to win
their third game in succession for the second time this season, while the Heat
will trying to avoid their second straight defeat. The one good thing the Heat have in their favor, they have won their last six games in a row on Christmas Day and in the Wade era are 9-1 on Christmas Day.
Chicago
Bulls (15-11) versus Oklahoma City Thunder (20-9) on ABC
The
first contest of a double-header on the American Broadcasting Company (ABC)
will feature two teams right now going in opposite directions.
We
have the Bulls, who have been inconsistent in December with a three-game skid
from Dec. 5 to Dec. 9, which followed a four-game winning streak from Dec. 10
to Dec. 16 and which has followed a new three-game losing streak.
The
team’s third straight loss came at home versus the struggling Brooklyn Nets
(8-21) 105-102.
The
front end of this three-game slide was versus the Pistons who beat them 147-144
in quadruple overtime, marking the second four overtime game in Bulls history.
The only other one came against the Trail Blazers back on March 16, 1984.
While
they shot just 41.7 percent from the field and shot better at the foul line (39
for 44) compared to the Pistons (27-46), the Bulls were out-rebounded by the
Pistons 64-62; out-assisted 28 to 21 and had 16 turnovers compared to the
Pistons 11 miscues.
The
Bulls also wasted a career-high night from All-Star swingman Jimmy Butler,
scored 29 of his 43 points in the four quarter and the four overtimes going 14
for 29 from the field and 14 for 16 from the charity stripe with eight boards
in 56 minutes. The 2011 MVP Derrick Rose had his best game of this season with
34 points and eight assists. Pau Gasol had 30 points, 15 rebounds, five assists
and five blocks on 10 for 23 from the field and 10 for 12 from the free throw
line for the Bulls, who for the first time since 1996 had three players
register 30 points or more in the same game when Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen
and Toni Kukoc did it.
One
night later, the Bulls traveled to New York City and lost at the New York
Knicks (14-16) 107-91 to drop their second in a row and their first game in
their third opportunity on the second night of a back-to-back.
Center
Joakim Noah in his first start of the season led the way with 21 points and 10
boards. Rookie forward Bobby Portis had 20 points, 11 rebounds and two steals
off the bench. Butler, who had a career night a little over 24 hours ago had
just 12 points on 4 for 11 from the floor. Rose had just six points on 3 for 10
shooting. Guard Aaron Brooks was the fourth player in double-figures with 11
points.
In
looking at the Bulls this season and their inconsistency, there are three
things that jump out. First, they are not the same team, under first-year head
coach and former Bull Fred Hoiberg than they have been the past few years under
the guy he replaced Tom Thibodeau.
While
by the numbers they are a good defensive team leading the league in rebounds
per game at 49.0, they are not the suffocating, lock you down everything will
be a struggle offensively for you. On top of that they rank just 12th
in points allowed at 99.5.
Thibodeau to be honest was the leader of this team. Whenever
you saw a Bulls game, you could hear him imploring his team to play hard night,
particularly at the defensive end. He was the leader, the voice and the
foundation of the Bulls in his five seasons on the bench, despite the fact that
Rose was MVP in 2010-11, that Butler was an All-Star a season ago and Noah was
like the vocal leader on defense.
The
third thing about this team is the question whose team is it? Is it still Rose’s
team or is it Butler’s. Ever since Butler emerged as this team’s leading
scorer, earning 2015 Most Improved Player Award last season, the question has
been who should the offense go through, Butler or Rose?
The
Thunder have a new leader on the sideline themselves in former Florida
University basketball head coach Billy Donovan, but they have been on an
uptick, especially lately as winners of
three straight games and nine of 11 in the month of December.
The
All-Star tandem of forward Kevin Durant (26.6 ppg-3rd NBA, 7.7 rpg,
4.3 apg 52.6 FG%, 42.6 3-Pt.%), who has averaged 31.8 points per contest in five games on Christmas Day and Russell Westbrook (25.3 ppg-5th
NBA, 6.9 rpg, 9.3 apg-3rd NBA, 46.6 FG%) have returned this season
to solid healthy with Durant missing just six games this season.
The
two big keys for them and why they have been able to hit their stride has been
the ability of both Westbrook and Durant to get the role players involved at
the offensive end and the Thunder’s continued improvement at the defensive end
of the court.
Only
the defending champion Golden State Warriors at 115.5 points per contest score
more per game than the Thunder, who average 107.8. The Thunder are third in field
goal percentage per game at 47.5 percent; a solid 12th in
three-point percentage at 35.5 percent and are eighth in free throw percentage
at 79.0 percent.
The
only area on offense that the team must progress in is their passing as the
Thunder are just 17th in assists per contest at 21.3, which goes
back to Westbrook and Durant being to make sure that the core players like starting
forward Serge Ibaka (13.6 ppg, 7.1 rpg, 2.3 bpg-4th NBA), center
Enes Kanter (11.3 ppg, 8.0 rpg-Leads team), guard Dion Waiters (10.4 ppg),
starting center Steven Adams (6.3 ppg, 6.3 rpg), guards Anthony Morrow and D.J.
Augustin get involved during and throughout the game.
The
Thunder have really come on this month at the defensive end giving up 100
points just once, which occurred at the Cavaliers on Dec. 17 and they lost
104-100 as they were outscored 58-53 in the second half.
In
one of their most complete games of the season, the Thunder blew out the
Memphis Grizzlies (16-15) on their home court 125-88 back on Dec. 8.
Durant
had a strong game of 32 points, 10 boards, six assists and three steals going
11 for 14 from the field, including 4 for 5 from downtown. Westbrook was great
with 13 points on 5 for 7 from the floor and 16 assists. Ibaka had 17 points.
Augustin had 13 points off the bench, including three triples in five tries.
Waiters had 12 points off the pine and starting shooting guard Andre Roberson
had 10 points.
The
Grizzlies were held to 40.7 percent from the field; were out-rebounded 46-33;
had 16 turnovers that resulted in 24 Thunder points and the Thunder had 31
assists compared to 14 by the Grizzlies.
Just
ask the Los Angeles Lakers (5-24) how good the Thunder have been on both ends.
They were taken to the cleaners at the Thunder five days ago 118-78, being
outscored 35-15 in the first quarter.
Durant
led seven players in double-figures with 22 points on 7 for 13 from the field
and eight boards. Kanter had 19 points and 14 rebounds off the bench. Westbrook
had 13 points and 11 assists on 5 for 11 from the field. Ibaka had 12 points
and seven boards. Waiters had 11 points and six boards off the pine and Morrow
and Adams had 10 points each.
The
Thunder held the Lakers to 34.9 percent shooting; out-rebounded them 56-32,
including 12 to 8 on the offensive glass; outscored them in the paint 50-25 and
14-7 in fast break points and recorded 28 assists to the Lakers 14.
The
Thunder took to the Lakers in front of their fans at Staples Center in L.A. 96
hours later as the Lakers ran them out of their own gym 120-85 thanks to a 36-2
run bridging the 2nd and 3rd quarters.
This
time, it was Westbrook who led five Thunder players in double-digit scoring
with 23 points going 10 for 19 from the field with eight boards, eight assists and
two steals.
Durant
had 21 points going 7 for 9 from the floor with seven rebounds, five assists
and two block shots. Ibaka had 17 points, seven rebounds and two blocks. Kanter
had 16 points, 11 rebounds and two blocks off the bench and Roberson had 15
points, seven boards, three assists, two steals and four blocks.
The
Thunder outplayed the Lakers again, holding them to 36 percent from the field;
out-rebounded them 61-35, including 19-12 on the offensive glass; registered 13
blocks; outscored them in the paint 76 to 32 and 27 to 7 in fast break points
and recorded 23 assists to the Lakers 19.
This
is the worst time to be facing the Thunder and if the Bulls cannot put it
together, they will be in for a rough Christmas afternoon.
Cleveland
Cavaliers (19-7) versus Golden State Warriors (27-1) 5 p.m. on ABC
The
back end of ABC’s twin bill features not just the current Central Division and
Pacific Division champs, but the defending Eastern Conference champions against
the team that denied their dreams of an NBA title last June and these defending
champions have not looked back this season.
Unless
you have been under a rock the first two and a half months of the 2015-16 NBA
campaign, the Golden State Warriors have been great, spectacular, stunning,
marvelous and every adjective to describe how good they have been.
To
put their season into perspective, their 24-0 beginning this season not only
was the best start to a season in NBA history, but the greatest start in the
history of North American professional sports (NBA, MLB, NHL and NFL).
Lead
guard and reigning MVP Stephen Curry (31.2 ppg-Leads NBA, 6.3 apg, 5.4 rpg,
51.6 FG%, 44.8 3-Pt.%-6th NBA) has been unstoppable from the start
of the season until now. It has gotten to the point that whether it is at home
or on the road, fans come to see him warm up for games.
His
fellow backcourt mate, a.k.a. “Splash Brother” Klay Thompson (19.3 ppg, 46.8
FG%, 43.9 3-Pt.%) has been solid and has been off the charts in the last three
games.
He
scored 27 of his season-high 43 points on 15 for 22, including 8 for 13 from
three-point range in the Warriors’ 128-103 win versus the Suns on Dec. 16,
which followed their first loss of the season that prior Saturday at the
Milwaukee Bucks (12-18) 108-95 back on Dec. 12.
Like
last season, the Warriors have shot up to the top of the West thanks to the
emergence of their role players and one player who role player who has really
risen has been All-Star lock for the 2016 exhibition in Toronto this February
Draymond Green.
After
having a break out season a year ago, the 2012 second round pick out of
Michigan State is posting even better numbers this season with 14.7 points, 8.8
boards, 7.1 assists (T-6th NBA) and 1.5 blocks per contest. He is
also having a career-year in terms of shooting from the floor (46.0 percent),
three-point range (37.9 percent) and the foul line (71.6 percent).
Green
has recorded five triple-doubles this season and has come close on many other
occasions. In the aforementioned 25-point win versus the Suns, Green had 16
points, 11 rebounds, 10 assists and five steals.
One
other player who has emerged this season for the Warriors has been the other
starting forward alongside Green Harrison Barnes (13.4 ppg, 5.0 rpg, 50.0 FG%,
38.9 3-Pt.), but has been on the shelf the last 12 games because of a sprained
ankle.
His
absence has shown going 11-1 in this span the depth of the Warriors and how
they are more than just a three-man show of Curry, Thompson and Green.
Guard
Brandon Rush, who started in place of Barnes on Nov. 28 versus the Sacramento
Kings (12-17) had 16 points, hitting 4 of 5 three-pointers as the Kings won 120
to 101. Other roles players like backup center Festus Ezeli played well of the
bench with 11 points and 11 rebounds. Forward/Center Marreese Speights had 13
points and five boards. Swingman Andre Igoudala had nine points off the bench;
guards Ian Clark had eight points and Shaun Livingston had seven off the pine.
The
one great thing that has been wonderful to see from the Warriors is that they
embrace being champions. They do not shy away from the fact that whoever they
have faced this season at home or on the road, they play with a vigor, swagger
and focus that you have to play at a high level or they have to have an off
night to beat them.
That
is what happened a mentioned earlier at the Bucks two weeks ago when they lost
their first game of the season.
Since
then, they have won their last three and the middle game of this current
winning streak really showed their mental toughness to win a game.
They
have done all of this without their head coach Steve Kerr on the sideline, who
is still recovering from back surgery he had late this off-season. Steadying
this ship has been the son of Hall of Famer and NBA champion Bill Walton, Luke
Walton, who without question will be a head coach down the road.
In
the rematch versus the Bucks, this time at Oracle Arena, the Warriors trailed
93-85 heading into the fourth quarter and trailed at one point in the final
stanza 100-89.
The
Warriors outscored the Bucks 32-12 and won the game 121-112. In the fourth
period, the Warriors outscored the Bucks 36-19. Shot 10 for 20 from the field
and 14 for 18 from the free throw line; hit 2 of their 5 triples in the period
and had 11 fast break points. The league leaders in assists per contest with
28.8 per had 31 assists on the evening.
Defensively,
the Bucks went just 9 for 28 from the field in the final quarter; went to the
foul line just once making that chance; had just two fast break points and went
0 for 2 from downtown.
“We
came and tried to make it about ourselves individually and no it’s never about
us, it’s about the team. We got back to the team concept in the second half and
we looked like ourselves,” Ezeli, who had 14 points and 10 boards said to
Comcast Sportsnet Bay Area’s Ros Gold-Onwude after the game.
One
streak that is still intact is the Warriors home winning streak, which was
extended to 31 games after a 103-85 versus the Jazz on Wednesday night. The
streak is the 8th longest in NBA history. On top of that, they will
enter their matchup with the Cavs with the best record on Christmas Day,
beating the old mark of 27-2 by the eventual Eastern Conference champion Boston
Celtics of 2008-09. The eventual champion Bulls of 1995-96 enter Christmas Day
at 23-2. The eventual 1993-94 champion Houston Rockets came in at 22-2 and the
eventual 1971-72 Lakers entered this day at 33-3.
That
is what the Cleveland Cavaliers will be trying to put a halt to on Friday
afternoon as well as get above .500 on the road, where they stand just 6-6, compared to a 13-1 home record.
While
the Cavs have been the team head and shoulders above all the other teams in the
East, they have been doing so not at full strength as last season’s starting
back court of Kyrie Irving and Iman Shumpert have been on the shelf recovering
from a knee and wrist injuries respectably.
Both
have returned in recent days along with guard Mo Williams from a sprained thumb and the Cavs are finally whole, even though Irving
has been on a minute’s restriction.
In
his first game of the season this past Sunday, he had 12 points and four
assists on 5 for 12 from the floor in 17 minutes as the Cavs won versus the
Philadelphia 76ers (1-30) 108-86, their fifth straight win.
“Felt
amazing. Just getting back on the court there with my brothers,” Irving said to
FOX Sports Ohio’s Allie Clifton after the win.
“The
minutes restriction kind of took away my aggressiveness a little bit… Just
knocking off the rust. A lot of emotions built up this game. I’m glad I got the
first one out the way.
What
has allowed the Cavs to be where they are without the second leading scorer on
the team a season ago is that LeBron James (26.4 ppg-4th NBA, 7.6
rpg-2nd on team; 6.3 apg-Leads team, 1.5 spg-Leads team), who has averaged 27.2 points per game on Christmas Day, second behind Durant has played like
his MVP self; Kevin Love (17.5 ppg, 10.6 rpg-8th NBA, 37.0 3-Pt.%)
has been utilized more in the low post and not as just a three-point shooter;
role players like Mo Williams (12.5 ppg, 3.9 apg, 34.7 3-Pt.%), J.R. Smith
(10.6 ppg, 35.6 3-Pt.%), Matthew Dellavedova (8.9 ppg, 5.4 apg, 45.0 3-Pt.%),
Tristan Thompson (7.1 ppg, 9.9 rpg), Richard Jefferson (6.9 ppg, 37.0 3-Pt.%)
and Timofey Mozgov (7.3 ppg, 4.3 rpg) have played well in stretches.
With
the team now whole, we can finally get a gage at where they are against the
elite and this game, which will be the seventh matchup between two teams that played in The NBA Finals the season before will tell a lot about if the Cavs are really hitting their
stride or is their more progress to be made.
James, who has averaged the most points per contest on Christmas Day on the road at 28.8 will for sure be motivated and prepared with this being his 10th appearance on Christmas Day and his 7th on the road. In those seven games with the Cavs and Heat, James is 4-2 on the road.
In the case of the Warriors, they will be battling against history as the defending champ is just 2-4 in the rematch against the team they beat in The Finals the year before according to Elias Sports Bureau.
San
Antonio Spurs (25-5) versus Houston Rockets (15-15) 8 p.m. on ESPN
The
quartet of NBA action will feature Southwest Division and state rivals where
one team has quietly stayed in stride with the defending champion Warriors
while the other is trying to find some sort of consistency and chemistry on
both ends.
While
the Warriors have been the headline grabbers of the league, the five-time
champion Spurs without anyone looking have been playing just as well either at
home or on the road.
In
the month of December, they have gone 11-1 so far, winning seven in a row and a
big reason for that has been their stellar defense. On only two occasions, the
Spurs have surrendered 100-plus points, On Dec. 5 versus the Boston Celtics
(16-13) and Dec. 18 versus the Clippers. The Spurs won both games 108-105 and
115-107 respectably.
They
surrendered just 68 points at the 76ers on Dec 7, blowing them out of their gym
119-68, beating them for the 10th consecutive time and handed them
their fifth worst loss in franchise history.
Along
with the fantastic defense, the Spurs winning ways this season have been in
large part to not the eventual Hall of Fame champion trio of Tim Duncan (8.9
ppg, 7.9 rpg, 1.5 bpg-Leads team), Manu Ginobili (10.3 ppg, 3.5 apg, 36.5
3-Pt.%) and Tony Parker (13.1 ppg, 5.0 apg, 56.0 FG%), but by the career-year
of 201 Finals MVP Kawhi Leonard (21.0 ppg-Leads team, 7.4 rpg, 2.0 spg-T-8th
NBA) and prized free agent LaMarcus Aldridge (15.7 ppg, 8.8 rpg).
There
has not been a better defender on the perimeter this season than Leonard, who
has put the clamps on some of the best in the league on the outside.
He
held Pacers swingman Paul George to just seven points on 1 for 14 shooting and
scored 24 points on 10 for 19 from the floor with six rebounds five assists and
three steals as the Spurs beat the Pacers 106-92 this past Monday night, to run
their home record to 16-0 and a franchise record 25th straight home
dating back to last season.
Two
nights later, Leonard scored 19 points with six boards, two steals and two
blocks as the Spurs won their seventh game in a row at the Minnesota
Timberwolves (11-18) 108-83.
Leonard
held last season’s Rookie of the Year and T’Wolves top scorer Andrew Wiggins to
just 10 points on 2 for 11 shooting. Rookie center Karly Anthony-Towns had 10
points and 11 boards, but was just for 12 from the field as the team shot just
41.7 percent from the field.
Parker
had 14 points and six assists. David West had 13 points off the bench and five
boards. Aldridge had 12 points and eight boards. Green had 11 points, hitting 3
for 4 from long distance and seven rebounds. Kyle Anderson had 10 points off
the pine and five rebounds.
It
is the solid play from “the others” like Anderson, Green, West, Patty Mills,
Boris Diaw, Jonathon Simmons that Spurs can win games by 20-plus points and
Duncan can have just two points on 1 for 6 shooting.
Why
is that? It is because for the Spurs, Warriors it is about team and winning and
not about the individual. Also they believe in getting a better shot at the
offensive end for one another, which is why they are second in assists per game
at 25.2.
Last
season’s West runner-up the Rockets on the other hand have looked nothing of the team that fell
three wins shy of making it to the NBA Finals.
Their
last contest at the Orlando Magic is a microcosm of why they stand at the .500
mark right now. They fell behind in the game by double-digits, but thanks to
All-Star James Harden, who had 31 points and seven assists to lead the way, the
Rockets roared back to lead in the closing moments of the fourth.
Magic
swingman Evan Fournier, who scored 17 points hit a bank shot with 14.2 seconds
left to give the Magic the lead back at 102-101. Two free throws by Tobias
Harris, who had 19 points and eight boards that gave the Magic a 104-101 lead.
Marcus
Thornton triple attempt at the horn was short and the Rockets’ three-game win
streak came to a close.
Another
glaring issue in this game has been the play of center Dwight Howard, who had
just 12 points and seven boards in the loss on Wednesday night.
While
his rebounding has been consistent at 11.5 per contest leading the team, Howard’s
scoring average per contest is the lowest since his rookie year.
It
has not helped that the Rockets have not utilized him consistently whether is
giving the ball to him on the block or going to him off of the pick and roll.
Another
big issue for the Rockets has been their play at the defensive end. Last
season, they were one of the best in the league. Despite leading the league in
steals per contest at 10.2 and ranking ninth in blocks per contest at 5.5, the
Rockets are 27th in points allowed at 105.6; tied for 27th
in opponent’s field goal percentage at 46.4 percent; 20th in
rebounds per contest at 43.6 and 22nd in rebound differential at
-1.7.
If
the Rockets have any chance of stopping the Spurs on Friday evening, the tandem
of Howard and Harden must play well on both ends. Role players like Trevor
Ariza (11.3 ppg, 5.4 rpg), Thornton (11.0 ppg, 36.9 3-Pt.%), Terrence Jones
(10.0 ppg, 5.1 rpg, 40.9 3-pt.%), Patrick Beverly (8.4 ppg, 38.4 3-Pt.%), Clint
Capela (7.9 ppg, 7.1 rpg) Corey Brewer (7.1 ppg) Donatas Motiejunas and Ty
Lawson must play well throughout the game.
While
they have won nine out of 14 after a 6-10 start and are 11-7 since assistant head coach took the place of fired head coach Kevin McHale, the Rockets are in major need
of a big time win to get back on track. The question is, will they put four
quarters together against the Spurs, who are just 1-4 on Christmas Day in franchise history?
Los
Angeles Clippers (16-13) versus Los Angeles Lakers (5-24) 10:30 p.m. on ESPN
The
nightcap of the Christmas Day quintet will be in Hollywood where a battle will
take place between younger brother that is trying to find their stride versus a
team with an aging superstar in his final season and trying to string some wins
together.
Coming
into this season, the Clippers had high expectations of finally making it to
the Western Conference Finals and The NBA Finals and winning the team’s first
title.
Unfortunately
to this point the off-season additions of Josh Smith (5.9 ppg, 4.0 rpg), Lance
Stephenson (4.6 ppg), Wesley Johnson (5.5 ppg) and Paul Pierce (4.1 ppg) to
alongside All-Stars Blake Griffin (23.6 ppg-9th NBA, 8.6 rpg, 4.9
apg) and Chris Paul (17.5 ppg, 9.0 apg-4th NBA, 2.0 spg-8th
NBA), J.J. Redick (15.2 ppg, 46.1 3-Pt.%), DeAndre Jordan (11.0 ppg, 13.1 rpg-2nd
NBA, 2.4 bpg-3rd NBA, 70.6 FG%-Leads NBA) and Sixth Man extraordinaire
Jamal Crawford (11.4 ppg) has not produced at the high rate Head Coach/GM Glenn
“Doc” Rivers and owner Steve Balmer had hoped.
To
bring this into focus, the Clippers are 1-5 against the defending champion
Warriors, Spurs, Mavericks and Thunder this season, the Top 4 in the West.
While
this is one of the top offensive teams in the league and one of the most
exciting, they still have a weak bench and defensively they are inconsistent.
Throughout
their careers, Jordan and Griffin are the most gifted athletically than any two
frontcourt players in the NBA. With that being said Griffin has still an unrefined
game in the low-post and Jordan has no offensive game inside and is terrible at
the free throw line. It is those unresolved issues that have and will continue
to keep the Clippers from becoming champions unless those two decide to tackle
them head on.
As
good as Paul has been in his career both with the now Pelicans formally the
Hornets and with the Clippers, is he the only Clipper with any kind of mental
toughness in the closing moments of games?
With
that being said, they should take care of business in the first of four
meetings with their co-tenants of the Staples Center and who they have beaten a franchise record seven straight times.
While
it has been a special moment in seeing the farewell tour of five-time NBA
champion Kobe Bryant (17.4 ppg-Leads team, 4.1 rpg, 3.5 apg-Leads team), who is
without question a first ballot Hall of Famer, it has been
a tough season for one of the flagship franchises in the NBA as they will miss
the playoffs for the third straight year, which is unthinkable.
Unlike
the past couple of season’s, there is some hope in the fact that they do have
some players to build around for the future in rookies D”Angelo Russell (11.9
ppg), Julius Randle (11.5 ppg, 9.5 rpg) and Larry Nance, Jr. and second-year
guard Jordan Clarkson (14.9 ppg-2nd team, 45.8 FG%, 36.0 3-Pt.%).
Veterans
Louis Williams (13.7 ppg), Nick Young (9.0 ppg), Roy Hibbert (7.2 ppg, 6.3 rpg,
1.8 bpg-Leads team), Brandon Bass (5.5 ppg, 4.2 rpg) and Metta World Peace have
been solid players for the young guys to learn from, but except for Williams,
all the other are just hole fillers for better days ahead, where the hope that
LSU Brandon Simmons is in their future.
The
hope for Lakers head coach Byron Scott, a three-time champion with the “Showtime”
Lakers in the 1980s is that his team comes to compete, like they did at the
Denver Nuggets winning 111-107 to get their first victory against a Western
Conference opponent this season in 16 chances.
Prior
to that victory, a 113-95 win versus the Bucks on Dec. 15 and a 123-122
overtime setback at the T’Wolves on Dec. 9, the Lakers last five losses have
been by 20 points or more.
If
anything that should get the Lakers upbeat for this game on Friday is that this
will be the last game on Christmas for Bryant, whose 383 points scored in 15 appearance on Christmas Day are the most all-time, just six points ahead of Hall of Famer Oscar Robertson. If that does not get them going,
nothing will.
Information,
quotations and statistics are courtesy of www.espn.go.com/nba/standings/teams/statistics;
12/19/15 2 a.m. edition of NBATV’s “Gametime” presented by State Farm with Rick
Kamla, Steve Smith and Dennis Scott; 12/21/15 12 a.m. edition of NBATV’s “Gametime”
with Vince Cellini, Rick Fox and Brent Barry; 12/23/15 2:30 a.m. edition of
NBATV’s “Gametime” presented by KIA with Ernie Johnson, Greg Anthony and Chris
Webber; 12/14/15 1:30 a.m. edition of “NBA Tonight” on ESPN with Cassidy
Hubbarth and Bruce Bowen; 12/24/15 6 a.m. edition of NBATV’s “Gametime”
presented by KIA with Matt Winer, Dennis Scott and Greg Anthony; 12/25/15 11 a.m. edition of ESPN's "Sportscenter" with Linda Cohn and Jaymee Sire.