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duncan228
06-06-2009, 07:24 PM
Life as a dominant big man can be a lonely one (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=jy-howardbynum060609&prov=yhoo&type=lgns)
By Johnny Ludden

LOS ANGELES – He started with Wilt Chamberlain and worked his way down. Bob Lanier. Bill Walton. Moses Malone. Artis Gilmore. Robert Parish, who delivered him three memorable championship battles. Hakeem Olajuwon and Patrick Ewing, representing the youth brigade, arrived in time to take their turns.

Over some 20 seasons, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar stood across from them all. These were the men who helped form his training ground. If you wanted to be the best, to stay the best, you took on the best your peers had to offer. For a center during those two decades, the challenges came one after the other, the next only a night or two away.

“I understood that I had to keep my skills sharp,” Abdul-Jabbar said. “If I didn’t prepare and be ready to do what I had to do near the basket, I’d be embarrassed.”

Now 62 and an assistant coach for the Los Angeles Lakers, Abdul-Jabbar looks out on the NBA today and says, politely, “It’s a different landscape.”

Kobe Bryant, LeBron James and Dwyane Wade have their MVP tug-of-war. Chris Paul, Deron Williams, Tony Parker and Rajon Rondo have given the league an ever-burgeoning crop of fleet-footed, game-changing point guards. For franchise centers, however, these are the days of climate change and tar pits.

“We’re like dinosaurs in the NBA,” Orlando Magic center Dwight Howard said of himself and his 7-foot counter for the Lakers, Andrew Bynum.

“There’s not a lot of us, so we have to stick together.”

They are 23 and 21 years old, respectively, and already fighting extinction. That’s why Howard and Bynum would like to use these NBA Finals as an opportunity to show the league that for all the 3-point chucking, 7-foot hybrids joining its ranks, there’s still some value in having a hulking, shot-swatting, back-to-the-basket center who can impact the game on both ends of the floor. Chicks dig the long ball, but Howard and Bynum are out to prove size still matters.

“It’s a rebirth, kind of,” Bynum said.

Kind of not, actually. Or not yet, at least. Howard has established himself as a dominant force, but Bynum still has some work to do, and there’s not a whole lot behind him. When it comes to legit franchise centers, there’s Howard … and Yao Ming (seemingly always a hairline fracture away from catastrophe) … and Bynum (maybe). Greg Oden, for all of his injuries, has plenty of time to join them, provided he hasn’t already signed up for the Michael Olowokandi Cruise to Oblivion.

Shaquille O’Neal is still twittering away and coming off a productive season, but he’s not someone to build a team around. If you’re looking for a good complementary piece for your roster, he’d be great, if you also have $20 million to spare. Tim Duncan? He’s played like a center for years, but don’t dare call him that. When the NBA listed him as one on its All-Star ballot two seasons ago, Duncan and the San Antonio Spurs deemed it such an insult – his candidacy was at risk of being swallowed up by Yao’s massive Chinese fan base – they successfully petitioned the league to rank his votes among forwards.

Andrew Bogut gets paid like a franchise center, but can’t stay healthy long enough to prove he is one. Samuel Dalembert gets paid like a franchise center, but isn’t. Kendrick Perkins is a bruiser and effective, but a role player, just the same. Erick Dampier takes up space and cap room, but does little else.

Chris Bosh decided the position wasn’t for him. Zydrunas Ilgauskas might be ready to do the same after seeing Howard close up in the East finals. Nene is … solid. Marc Gasol is the younger brother of Pau.

Marcus Camby doesn’t play with his back to the basket. Chris Kaman rarely plays. Andris Biedrins weighs, what, 180? Mehmet Okur would rather hang out at the 3-point line, which, of course, is probably where all the franchise centers started vanishing.

“Everyone wants to shoot the 3-pointer,” Abdul-Jabbar said. “It’s like lotto fever or something. The 3-pointer just has a lot of appeal to young players and their imagination and everything. They work on that and they all want to be 7-foot point guards.”

As a result, the skills required to be a dominant center don’t seem to have transferred generations. Kareem has started selling “Skyhook” T-shirts on his website, but there’s also a reason why you probably haven’t seen anyone but Kareem wearing them. For something to be retro, the cool kids first have to know it existed.

Bynum, however, is different. He’s developed the skills. He just hasn’t stayed on the court long enough to show he can consistently put them to use. A knee injury cut short last season. Another knee injury threatened to do the same to this one. Not wanting to again miss the Finals, he returned in April. He estimates he’s 85 percent of full strength and won’t fully get his legs back until he can rest in the summer.

“Other than that, it is what it is at this point,” he said.

Translation: These playoffs haven’t been easy for him, and he hasn’t come close to the level of dominance he showed when he averaged 20.8 points, 8.7 rebounds and 2.5 blocks in the 12 games before his injury. Still, he’s gradually come to accept that the Lakers need him to rebound and protect the rim, and his play picked up in the conference finals, which led to the opener of the NBA Finals and his best performance of the postseason.

Bynum had nine points and nine rebounds in Game 1, and set the tone for how the Lakers hope to make life difficult on Howard. He didn’t let Howard overpower him or beat him down the floor, and the Lakers frequently crowded the Magic center with double- and sometimes triple-teams, limiting him to just one basket: a lay-in. On the other end of the floor, Bynum hovered around in the rim in the opening minutes, throwing down a dunk, jamming a missed shot.

Bynum still ran into some foul trouble, a constant problem for him. But the Lakers noticed from the opening tip on he had an extra bounce to his step. They’ve also come to learn when he plays like that, they’re nearly unbeatable.

“Andrew has really cherished the opportunity,” said Abdul-Jabbar, whose primary job is to work with Bynum. “This is a great professional opportunity, so he’s gotten into that and he’s very happy to be here.”

Bynum’s ongoing frustration, like that of Howard and even that of O’Neal, is that there are so few legit centers for him to play. For now, Howard is the measuring stick. Howard hasn’t developed the offensive repertoire of Bynum and is still searching for a go-to move, but Bynum can’t match his athleticism or his experience. While Bynum, like Howard, came to the NBA from high school, he didn’t start playing the sport until he was a prep.

“It’s funny,” Abdul-Jabbar said. “He has the tools, but he doesn’t know how to use them because he hasn’t competed a lot.”

Bynum’s game has steadily grown and should continue to grow. Howard watched Bynum shoot a fadeaway jumper early this season and wondered: Where in the hell did that come from? “I was like, ‘Is that really Andrew?’ ” Howard said. The two also have discussed working out together this summer in Atlanta, so Howard can help Bynum “get a little bit more toned up.”

And if Bynum stays healthy and continues to develop? If Howard continues to refine his own game?

“Given their ages and their talent level,” Abdul-Jabbar said, “they could be around here for a long time.”

Two twentysomething dinosaurs slugging it out, hoping to remind everyone of an era when the biggest and the best were often one and the same.

HarlemHeat37
06-06-2009, 07:53 PM
great article, as usual from Ludden..

Howard will be there, but the future of the C position's success is completely dependent on Bynum and Oden..if those 2 pan out, we could have a major rejuvenation at the position..

ajh18
06-06-2009, 08:44 PM
THe article talks about the centers from Kareem's (20 year) career, but the mid-90's crop of centers could certainly hold its own. You had Ewing and Hakeem and David, a young Shaq and Mourning and Mutumbo, all putting up pretty sick stats and acting as the cores of their teams. Most of the good centers today would have been productive afterthoughts of the Ric Smitts variety back in the 90s.

TDMVPDPOY
06-06-2009, 08:53 PM
its the nbas fault with the stupid rule changes that benefits wing players more than low post bigs...

duncan228
06-06-2009, 10:45 PM
Traditional centers Howard, Bynum are two of rare breed (http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/spurs/Traditional_centers_Howard_Bynum_are_two_of_rare_b reed.html)
By Jonathan Feigen - Houston Chronicle

LOS ANGELES — The “dinosaurs” live.

They don’t rule the NBA as they once did, but neither do they seem heading to extinction, as Shaquille O’Neal has so often predicted.

The traditional dominant 7-footers remain a rare breed. Orlando Magic general manager Otis Smith said Saturday there are just five true centers left. But the NBA Finals features two who will spend the series crashing into each other the way it was for so many years before rules changed and the giants abandoned the paint.

The Magic have been built around Dwight Howard. The Los Angeles Lakers have been grooming Andrew Bynum. Along with Yao Ming, O’Neal and a fifth center Smith would not identify, there is a renewed sense that championships can still come in giant packages.

“People needed to be reminded,” said Hall of Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, a Lakers assistant tutoring Bynum. “The personnel hasn’t led itself to that. It’s a very effective way to play the game and to win. There are a lot of 7-footers. They just don’t play that way.”

Like Abdul-Jabbar, the centers in the Finals and their teams’ general managers said the move away from traditional centers was not by choice. With few dominant centers left, teams found other ways to win. That doesn’t mean they wanted to change.

“If you polled most coaches and asked them where you’d like to start, I think they’d say with a great center or a great ball-handling guard,” Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak said. “The easiest, most high-percentage shot is the one closest to the basket. That’s going to happen most often with a dominant center.”

“We know if you rebound, clog the paint and defend from the basket out, you have a better chance of winning. I don’t think that’s going to change, and the only way to do that is to have dominant big men.”

The Chicago Bulls dynasty, Kupchak said, “broke tradition.” The Miami Heat had O’Neal, but he was far from his dominant Lakers days by the time Dwyane Wade carried Miami to a title against the Mavericks, whose stars played outside the paint.

The Detroit Pistons and Boston Celtics lacked dominant centers. In the Spurs’ three championships since David Robinson retired, power forward Tim Duncan handled much of the center responsibilities but usually with someone else playing center next to him.

“We’ve seen the game change,” Kupchak said. “The line and the rules, the zone defenses, encourage teams to take jump shots. But I really believe if you can have a dominant big man — they certainly have one that dominates, and we have one who we believe can dominate, and Pau (Gasol) is a low-post player too — it’s a way to win.”

Though the Lakers hope Bynum, 21, becomes that sort of force, progress stalled by his injuries each of the past two seasons, Howard is considered a worthy heir to the legends, with ample room and time to grow.

“He would be an even better asset to his team if he had a go-to shot,” Abdul-Jabbar said. “He doesn’t have a lot of smooth offensive skills. I can see where he’s worked on his hook shot with Patrick (Ewing). But having a good offensive game to complement his incredible defensive skills would just make him that much better.

“(Bynum) has got the tools. He doesn’t exactly know how to use them. He hasn’t competed a lot. He started playing in high school. The injuries have slowed him down.”

Both are a long way from Abdul-Jabbar’s standard as a six-time champion and all-time leading scorer. But Howard, 23, has surpassed Yao as the league’s top-scoring center, was the defensive player of the year and took the Magic to the Finals in his fifth season by defying the trends of other big men of his generation.

“I get asked all the time, ‘When is Dwight going to develop a 17-foot jump shot’, and I say, ‘Why does he need a 17-foot jump shot? Because everyone else has one?’” Magic GM Otis Smith said.

“There are not many (dominant centers) left because we’re all making them into jump shooters. There’s maybe five centers left. Most centers want to be guards. We’re fortunate to have a center who can play with a back to the basket and do the things you need to win.”

“It is a copycat league – if you can. If you don’t have a big, you can’t play big.”

In some ways, however, little has changed. Kupchak said current rules allowing zone-oriented defenses provide ways to defend big men without another big man, but that no coach would choose it.

“Teams with an effective big man dominating have a big, big plus to get to this level (the Finals,”) Gasol said. “I don’t know if they forgot it or not. The league markets the smaller men. We can go out there, be effective and help our team to win.”

A traditional 7-footer will win this season’s title. Rather than moving toward extinction, they could be ready to flourish again.

“I think we both have a lot of respect for each other,” Howard said. “And knowing that we’re like dinosaurs in the NBA, there’s not a lot of us, so we have to stick together.”