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duncan228
04-15-2010, 02:48 PM
Bryant's (relative) weaknesses give Thunder window of hope (http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/chris_ballard/04/15/bryant.thunder/index.html)
Chris Ballard
SI.com

Over the years we've seen many qualities in Kobe Bryant -- immaturity, greatness, hubris, intelligence and killer instinct, to name but a few. But not until recently have we seen vulnerability.

Not mentally, mind you, but physically. And to be clear, we're talking about relative vulnerability, for Bryant remains one of the best athletes in the league. Still, it is there. It shows with the occasional ill-fated drive to the basket, where he ends up looking to draw contact as much as finish. It shows with some of his jumpers, where he doesn't rise quite as high or extend quite as far as he once did. And most often, it shows at the basket, where he no longer finishes with the same rim-cracking authority.

All this is natural, of course. Even an athlete as finely conditioned as Bryant can't offset the cumulative effect of playing more than 37,000 NBA minutes and reaching an age when most normal men begin to peer toward the horizon, where the warm glow of over-35 leagues beckons.

The numbers tell a similar story. Perhaps not the 27.0 points per game Bryant averaged this season, but head over to Hoopdata (http://hoopdata.com/), which compiles a treasure trove of advanced stats, and check out his peripheral indicators. This year, Bryant had a greater percentage of his shots blocked, finished fewer and-ones and, though he took just as many shots at the rim, made fewer of them (his field-goal percentage at the rim has dropped to 58.6 percent from 66 percent in 2008-09).

Sure, he's improved his post game measurably, but everywhere else -- within 10 feet, from 16-23 feet and beyond the arc -- his shooting percentage is down or static. "He's not getting to the basket the way he has in the past," said one Western Conference team executive tasked with preparing for Bryant during the season. "And he's not finishing as well, especially with the left hand."

All of which makes the Lakers' first-round matchup with the Thunder even more compelling (and it's already pretty darn compelling; if I had to allot my viewing time between the two No. 1-No. 8 matchups, it would go roughly as follows: Oklahoma City-L.A.: 100 percent, Cleveland-Chicago: 0 percent).

Not only are the Thunder the strongest eight seed in recent memory, but they're also one of the best defensive teams in the league and, in 6-foot-7 guard Thabo Sefolosha, boasts one of better perimeter defenders. While there is no such thing in basketball as a "stopper," as ludicrous a sporting misnomer as you'll find, occasionally a defender can have a true shutdown game.

And the last time the Thunder played the Lakers, on March 26, Sefolosha had one. During the 22-plus minutes that Sefolosha guarded Bryant, Kobe made exactly one field goal, and that was an end-of-shot-clock special. For the game, which the Thunder won, Bryant finished with 11 points on 4 of 11 shooting and committed a career-high-tying nine turnovers. Afterward, he even admitted that Sefolosha had bothered him (http://newsok.com/thabo-sefolosha-smothers-la/article/3449609?custom_click=lead_story_title). Copping to weakness? Now this is not the Kobe we've come to know and (pick your choice) love/detest/grudgingly respect/name our firstborn after.

No doubt, Bryant will use that game as fuel for the playoffs. As you read this, he's probably holed up somewhere, masochistically watching film of Sefolosha while chanting whatever mantra Kobe chants when he's doing some serious self-improvement. And as a result Bryant will likely come out focused and dangerous, which in years past would have led to a ritual thrashing of his opponent.

This year, I'm not so sure. Not only is Sefolosha the rare player, long, quick, strong and relentless enough to stay with Bryant -- Portland's Nicolas Batum is another -- but Bryant's looked more human than usual lately, and the Lakers more beatable. So if you only watch one series, and one matchup, during the first round of the NBA playoffs, make it Bryant vs. Sefolosha and the Thunder. And if you do, here is what to look for, a scouting report of sorts for Slowing (if not Stopping) Kobe:

What to expect from Kobe:

Bryant has always had a remarkably diverse offensive game, and this season is no exception. According to Synergy Sports, which tracks every play in every NBA game, 28 percent of Bryant's offense comes in isolation situations, 22 percent in post-ups, 11 percent as the pick-and-roll ball-handler and the rest in an amalgam of transition, cuts, spot-up and the like (naturally, he's above-average to excellent at nearly all aspects).

His breakdown of jump shots is even more eerily balanced: Exactly a third of his shots come from 0-17 feet, another third from 17 feet out to the there-point line and the other third from beyond the arc. When he's isolated, it's almost as equally divided between on the left side, the right and the top of the key. He shows a slight preference for driving right (57 percent of the time to 43 percent left) while regardless of direction he prefers to, in order, pull up for the jumper, get to the rim and, more rarely and less effectively, shoot a runner (understandably, as this is really a little man's shot -- think Steve Nash and Stephen Curry).

Thus, it goes without saying that there is no such thing as a "bad" shot for Bryant, and his weaknesses are relative. "He's still good enough to carry them to the Finals, and win it all," said the exec. "But I don't see the unstoppability that was there a few years ago."

Where Kobe is Mortal:

As evidenced by the Hoopdata numbers, Bryant is less dangerous at the rim than he used to be. This means shot-blockers can challenge with more success, though Oklahoma City lacks the type of veteran intimidator that can take advantage of this (again, Portland and Marcus Camby would have been tough). "If the bigs are smart enough to not foul him, or not let the refs think they fouled him, they'll be OK," said the exec. "But I don't see Oklahoma City's bigs being good enough -- maybe [Serge] Ibaka, but I think Kobe will get him in foul trouble."

Still, once Kobe finishes his usual series of head fakes and commits to the air, the key is for Thunder defenders to try to jump with him, not at him, forcing him to finish.

What Oklahoma City needs to minimize with Kobe:

The post-ups. This has been the biggest jump in Bryant's game, fueled in part by necessity and part by practice (most famously his sessions with Hakeem Olajuwon last summer). The result: After accounting for 14 percent of his offense in 2008-09, post-ups accounted for 22 percent in this season, with impressive results.

"Early in the year with Pau [Gasol] out, he went to the post a lot more which got a lot of play from people but it was real and he was really good down there," said the exec. "Part of what makes that so dangerous is he has good spot-up shooters around him, including Ron Artest -- who can hurt the Lakers in a lot of ways but is a better spot-up shooter than people think."

This creates a problem for the Thunder: double and you leave the shooters, while single coverage often leads to highly efficient scoring from Bryant. So instead ...

What the Thunder should encourage:

In the grand scheme, probably a lot of things (like Artest creating his own offense and Bryant getting annoyed with his teammates and Sasha Vujacic doing, well, anything).

Specifically with Kobe, though, the numbers point to a few curious weaknesses. For example, when he's isolated at the top of the key, a favorite spot, a quarter of the time he shoots a jumper without dribbling. When he does, he averages only 0.65 points per shot (compared to around a point per shot in other situations), which ranks him "below average" for the league by Synergy's standards.

Think about it and it makes sense. "If you can get him to shoot a 20-footer without taking a dribble, that's the best-case scenario," said the exec. "That way he doesn't have an advantage of timing on you, so he'll draw fewer fouls. And he's dead-footing in front of you, so it's much easier to contest without fouling."

Secondly, if Bryant does get it in the post, the numbers suggest your best hope -- especially on the left block -- is to try to force him to his left shoulder. When he turns to the middle, not only does he shoot a jumper 96 percent of the time, allowing the D to sit on that move, but it's his lowest-efficiency move from that spot.

Granted, this is a bit counterintuitive. When most right-handed players get the ball in the post, they prefer to turn over their left shoulder, as this allows them to get more power under the ball on a fadeaway, hiding it back in the shooting pocket. Bryant, however, is one of the few players strong enough to turn to his right effectively, strong-arming the ball to the rim. "He's pretty darn good off the right shoulder in the paint, which most guys don't have the lift to do," said the exec. "Most want to shoot over the left shoulder, like [Michael Jordan] used to do.

"It's a testament to Kobe's skill and freakish hours of practice he puts in. "

Big Picture

In the end, chances are the Thunder's best strategy will be to give Bryant a number of different looks. Thunder coach Scott Brooks might try the larger Jeff Green on him at times (Sefolosha's defensive weakness is in the post, where at 215 pounds he lacks a wide base). Or Brooks might run doubles at Bryant and use his team's defensive length -- think of the windmill arms of Kevin Durant -- to try to cover the rotations on the shooters. Regardless, the more time Sefolosha can stick with Bryant one-on-one, the better for Oklahoma City.

On the other side of the ball, who knows what to expect from the Lakers. Bryant could come out gunning, or go into his selfless mode and feed Gasol and the shooters, or spend more of his time worrying about helping slow the other dominant offensive player in this series, Durant.

Regardless, you can count on two things: First, it's going to be fun to watch, especially when the series shifts to Oklahoma City for the Thunder's first-ever home playoff game (seriously, those fans might not know better and end up standing the entire game). And secondly, at the center of it all, one way or the other, will be No. 24.

Ashy Larry
04-15-2010, 03:03 PM
two good things about the Lakers not winning the title:

(1) it will let these new school, Kobe first Laker fans know that they just can't flip the switch and;

(2) no riots

Trainwreck2100
04-15-2010, 03:59 PM
okc don't even have a punchers chance, I expect many shellshocked looks from their players

crc21209
04-15-2010, 04:15 PM
okc don't even have a punchers chance, I expect many shellshocked looks from their players

I think the whole "they're too young" argument is overrated. Last year's Bulls who had basically no playoff experience led by Derrick Rose pushed the defending champion Celtics to 7 games. Now I know the C's were without Garnett, but it was still pretty impressive by the Bulls...

nkdlunch
04-15-2010, 04:26 PM
if Durant can take his game to another level in the playoffs, they could give the Lakers a handful.

DUNCANownsKOBE2
04-15-2010, 04:28 PM
I think the whole "they're too young" argument is overrated.


This. I don't think OKC has a good shot or anything (mainly because of the disadvantage down low), but the "lack of experience" is overrated. Kevin Durant isn't gonna forget how to shoot because being in the playoffs freaks him out.

Findog
04-15-2010, 04:31 PM
okc don't even have a punchers chance, I expect many shellshocked looks from their players

They might get a game at home because their crowds are good, but that's about it.

duncan228
04-15-2010, 05:21 PM
Scoring champ Durant preps for Kobe’s Lakers (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=txthunderdurantsdebut)
By Jeff Latzke

Kevin Durant believes Kobe Bryant has helped make him the rising star he is today - even if he might not realize it.

From the days when Durant could only watch Bryant on television to the pair’s time together training for the U.S. national team, Durant has been learning from the Los Angeles Lakers superstar for some time now.

Now, just days after becoming the youngest scoring champion in league history, Durant will make his playoff debut against Bryant when the Oklahoma City Thunder head west to face the defending NBA champions on Sunday.

“He’s such a fierce competitor, can do anything on the floor. It’s just amazing the things he does,” Durant said Thursday. “He’s all about his team. A lot of people say this and that about Kobe, but he’s a true teammate. Playing with him in USA Basketball and being around him there, he’s just a good teammate and you can see why he has (four championship) rings.

“He’s a great guy to learn from and I know playing in this series is going to make us better as a team and better as players as each game goes by.”

At age 21, Durant averaged 30.1 points to finish ahead of Cleveland’s LeBron James, Denver’s Carmelo Anthony, Bryant and Miami’s Dwyane Wade in the NBA scoring race while leading the Thunder to its first playoff appearance in five years. That was when the franchise was still in Seattle, prior to moving south before the 2008-09 season.

Since then, the roster has been almost entirely flipped. Only forward Nick Collison remains from the SuperSonics’ last playoff appearance in 2005, and starters Thabo Sefolosha and Nenad Krstic are the only others in the regular rotation that can provide Durant and his young teammates with perspective on the postseason.

“It’s one of those things you’ve got to just experience on your own. You can’t really ask any questions of how it is because different players were in different positions back then,” Durant said. “I know I’m different from a lot of guys.

“I just want to experience it myself, just go out there and approach it as a regular game but knowing in the back of my mind at the same time that it’s not.”

A key lesson in Durant’s development came during his rookie season in Seattle when he faced Bryant for the first time. He came away with a new outlook on Bryant’s approach to the game, remembering how he never smiled on the court and was out to destroy whoever he was facing on both ends of the court.

Lesson No. 1 in playing in the postseason will come in Game 1.

“It’s pretty cool. It’s a guy I’ve been looking up to for a while,” Durant said. “It should be fun. I’ve learned from a lot of different guys every time I watch them, whether I’m playing against them or watching them on TV. He’s another one of those guys that helped me without even knowing it.”

Durant, who was the college player of the year in his only season at Texas, has improved steadily since that Rookie of the Year season in Seattle. He has added just under 10 points to his scoring average in becoming the NBA’s top scorer while also leading the Thunder in rebounds and steals.

The biggest change in his game this season: more frequent trips to the foul line, where he shot 90 percent and made an NBA-best 756 free throws. That’s 232 more than he even attempted last season.

“I think he’s a lot more comfortable kind of with who he is and his place in the NBA and also in our franchise and our team,” Collison said. “It’s not easy to just say, ‘I’m going to be more vocal. I’m going to be a leader.’ You have to be comfortable in doing it. I’ve noticed a big difference with Kevin this year, and it shows in his game, too.”

Collison said the key to Durant carrying his success over into the postseason is solid execution by the rest of the Thunder, “so he’s not playing 1-on-3.”

“I think he’ll be all right,” Collison said. “He’s not afraid of the big shot or the big stage.”

It doesn’t get much bigger for a first-timer than facing an NBA icon and the defending world champions right off the bat.

But it wouldn’t be the first time Durant has done the unexpected.

“Not too many people think at 21 that you can help lead a team to a playoff berth,” Durant said. “That feels good to say that my leadership abilities and how we play, that I helped my team.

“It’s just all about getting better from here and continuing to learn from my teammates and coaches each day.”

Ghazi
04-15-2010, 06:28 PM
What else should give the Thunder hope is the Lakers have a sack of shit center who only puts up 5.7/3.8 come playoff time

LMAO 21_blessings

LMAO GLASSNUM REGULAR SEASON PLAYER :lmao :lmao :lmao

BRHornet45
04-15-2010, 06:57 PM
sons hopefully the piece of shit has a career ending injury in game 1.