View Full Version : Mike Monroe's analysis: All-NBA teams
Kori Ellis
04-15-2007, 01:01 AM
Mike Monroe's analysis: All-NBA teams
Web Posted: 04/14/2007 09:25 PM CDT
http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/basketball/nba/spurs/stories/MYSA041507.08C.BKNbeat.analysis.2c94072.html
San Antonio Express-News
There can be only one NBA Most Valuable Player, and it typically goes to a player from one of the best teams.
The league's best players place nearly as much value on making one of the three All-NBA teams because the criteria are meant to recognize the league's top players, regardless of how well each team fares.
Here are my choices:
First team
Guard — Steve Nash, Suns: He's the choice here as MVP, so he has to be one of the first-team guards. He leads the league in assists again, shoots 53.5 percent from the field and 46 percent from the 3-point line.
Guard — Kobe Bryant, Lakers: He is going to win the scoring title again and has eight games of 50 or more points this season. He gets credit for becoming more of a team player this season, too. It's not his fault Luke Walton and Ronny Turiaf are the only teammates who seem to care about winning as much as he does.
Center — Yao Ming, Rockets: True, he missed 33 games with a broken leg and assorted other ailments, but his determination to return from injury was impressive and his performance, when healthy, has been outstanding. He's a lot tougher than some think, and he gets no breaks from referees.
Forward — Tim Duncan, Spurs: The difference between this season and last? Healthy feet and a return of the bank shot from the wing. Duncan is back to being nearly unguardable because that bank shot is back. He also is the best defender of the paint in the league.
Forward — Dirk Nowitzki, Mavericks: OK, so I've got two power forwards on my first team. They are the best forwards in the game. Nowitzki continues to improve his rebounding and defense, and he is the best-shooting big man since Larry Bird.
Second team
Guard — Gilbert Arenas, Wizards: "Agent Zero" has a pure shot, nearly unlimited range and the guts to take it from anywhere, any time.
Guard — Tony Parker, Spurs: There is no guard in basketball better at getting to the rim and finishing. Plus, his perimeter shot is no longer scary.
Center — Dwight Howard, Magic: His performance tailed off in the second half of the season, but he is the league's No. 3 rebounder and averages a solid 17.8 points.
Forward — LeBron James, Cavaliers: He's the league's No. 5 scorer and averages 6.8 rebounds and 6.0 assists.
Forward — Shawn Marion, Suns: Most versatile defender of all the big men in the league and a stats monster.
Third team
Guard — Jason Kidd, Nets: He believes this is the second-best season of his career. That's good enough for us.
Guard — Deron Williams, Jazz: His toughness and smarts are John Stockton-like.
Center — Tyson Chandler, Hornets: Led the league in field-goal percentage and was No. 2 in rebounding.
Forward — Carmelo Anthony, Nuggets: Might have been first team had it not been for one stupid punch.
Forward — Amare Stoudemire, Suns: If the league still had a comeback player of the year, he would be it.
Kori Ellis
04-15-2007, 01:02 AM
Mike Monroe: Nash deserves another MVP
Web Posted: 04/14/2007 09:32 PM CDT
http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/basketball/nba/spurs/stories/MYSA041507.08C.COL.BKNmonroe.mvp.2c940af.html
San Antonio Express-News
Kobe Bryant believes no player on a team as mediocre as the Lakers should be considered for NBA Most Valuable Player.
Who am I to disagree? Kobe, you just moved yourself down a notch on my MVP ballot.
Bryant's logic is wrapped around the definition of the award. If a player is the league's most valuable, shouldn't his team be a title contender? Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was MVP in 1975-76 when the Lakers went 40-42 and failed to make the playoffs. It was the worst record for an MVP's team, but, at the time, voters seemed to favor picking the best player in the league rather than the most valuable. No doubt the emphasis has evolved into voting for a player most responsible for making his team a title contender.
If Abdul-Jabbar, who in '75-76 led the league in rebounds and blocks and was second in scoring, is the lone exception to what has been the rule over the 51 years since the award was first bestowed, the rule still seems sacred.
The guess here, though, is that Bryant will get a few first-place votes despite "Al Gore-ing" himself — his words — from the race last week.
He will not, however, occupy one of the top four spots on my MVP ballot. The league asks voters to rank their MVPs in order, one through five, with 10 points awarded for a first-place vote, seven for second, five for third, three for fourth and one for fifth. Bryant's streak of 50-point and 40-point games late in the season kept the Lakers in contention for a playoff berth despite a rash of injuries and a roster that still does not include a legitimate starting point guard. Kobe will get my fifth-place MVP nod.
I'm not sure there is a legitimate MVP candidate in the Eastern Conference. The Pistons already have locked up the East's best record, but they have not had the sort of dominant season they did in 2005-06, when they had the best record in the league at 64-18. Chauncey Billups remains their key player, but he has not been Mr. Big Shot this season. His 3-point percentage (34.7) is his lowest in seven seasons.
It's hard even to know which of the Bulls is his team's most valuable player — Ben Gordon, Luol Deng or Kirk Hinrich — so count all of them out.
Dwyane Wade would have been a legitimate candidate had he not missed 30 games with injuries. If the Heat successfully defend their championship, it will be because Wade once again is MVP of the NBA Finals. But 52 games do not qualify him for the regular-season award.
I love Wizards guard Gilbert Arenas' game and his bravado, and his 74 pre-injury games is plenty enough to qualify him for consideration. It's his field-goal percentage that makes one pause. When you average 21.2 shots, making only 41.8 percent of them diminishes your value, even when you're making 35 percent of your 3-pointers.
LeBron James averages 27.8 points, 6.8 rebounds and 6.0 assists for a Cavaliers team that likely will win 50 games. He will go on my ballot in the No. 4 position, mostly so nobody can accuse me of regional bias.
I believe there are three truly legitimate MVP candidates. Suns point guard Steve Nash, Mavericks power forward Dirk Nowitzki and Spurs power forward Tim Duncan either have led their teams to 60-win seasons, or, in Duncan's case, is about to.
It was refreshing to hear what Baron Davis had to say about Duncan after the Spurs defeated the Warriors last week. The Warriors' most dangerous player called Duncan the MVP "... hands down. He's the ultimate team player that goes unnoticed. I mean, yeah, he fills up the stat sheet, but it's all the little stuff he does and does not allow to happen."
Davis is right about Duncan going relatively unnoticed. Few media types seem to include him in MVP discussion. That is because Tony Parker has continued to mature as a high-scoring point guard and because Manu Ginobili deserves consideration for the Sixth Man Award.
In fact, Duncan has had his best season since his 2002-03 MVP campaign. His scoring average is up from last season's career-low 18.6, back to 20.0 points despite the fact that Gregg Popovich monitors his minutes from Game 1 through 82. By design, Duncan plays fewer minutes than either Nash or Nowitzki. Nevertheless, he ranks 10th in the league in rebounds and fifth in blocked shots. His shooting percentage (54.7) is the highest since his rookie season despite his being double-teamed nearly every time he catches the ball in the low post. He already has more assists (267) than in his previous three seasons.
Davis' observation about "all the little things" Duncan does is both accurate and astute, especially when it comes to defense. Duncan does more than block and change shots. He discourages shots and drives to the basket.
If Duncan had cured his one major fault — his free-throw shooting is at 63.6 percent, and some teams have even taken to intentionally fouling him in the fourth quarters of close games — he would be higher than the third line on my MVP ballot.
Nowitzki is the presumed winner of this season's award because he is the best player on a team that could finish the season with 68 victories, one of the best records in league history. He averages 24.7 points and 9.0 rebounds and shoots 50.1 percent from the field and 41.5 percent from 3-point range. He also is a 90 percent free-throw shooter, which is a huge factor in ranking him ahead of Duncan. He gets the second line of my ballot.
Only two players ever have won three consecutive MVPs, Wilt Chamberlain and Bill Russell. I believe Nash deserves to be the third.
That's because I believe he is the best team player in the game today, more so than Duncan only because he is a point guard. His numbers are amazing: 18.9 points a game on 53.5 percent shooting, almost unheard-of for a point guard. He makes 46 percent of his 3-point shots and 90 percent of his free throws.
What makes him the MVP, though, is what he does for his Suns teammates. His league-best 11.5 assists per game don't begin to tell the story, either.
Nash thinks through the game better than any player since Magic Johnson. He has even improved as a defender and leads the league in charges taken, an unofficial category, but an important one.
Texas_Ranger
04-15-2007, 02:34 AM
At least Timmy is in the first NBA team.
Kobulingam
04-15-2007, 02:55 AM
Mike Monroe's analysis: All-NBA teams
Web Posted: 04/14/2007 09:25 PM CDT
http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/basketball/nba/spurs/stories/MYSA041507.08C.BKNbeat.analysis.2c94072.html
San Antonio Express-News
There can be only one NBA Most Valuable Player, and it typically goes to a player from one of the best teams.
The league's best players place nearly as much value on making one of the three All-NBA teams because the criteria are meant to recognize the league's top players, regardless of how well each team fares.
Here are my choices:
First team
Guard — Steve Nash, Suns: He's the choice here as MVP, so he has to be one of the first-team guards. He leads the league in assists again, shoots 53.5 percent from the field and 46 percent from the 3-point line.
Guard — Kobe Bryant, Lakers: He is going to win the scoring title again and has eight games of 50 or more points this season. He gets credit for becoming more of a team player this season, too. It's not his fault Luke Walton and Ronny Turiaf are the only teammates who seem to care about winning as much as he does.
Center — Yao Ming, Rockets: True, he missed 33 games with a broken leg and assorted other ailments, but his determination to return from injury was impressive and his performance, when healthy, has been outstanding. He's a lot tougher than some think, and he gets no breaks from referees.
Forward — Tim Duncan, Spurs: The difference between this season and last? Healthy feet and a return of the bank shot from the wing. Duncan is back to being nearly unguardable because that bank shot is back. He also is the best defender of the paint in the league.
Forward — Dirk Nowitzki, Mavericks: OK, so I've got two power forwards on my first team. They are the best forwards in the game. Nowitzki continues to improve his rebounding and defense, and he is the best-shooting big man since Larry Bird.
Second team
Guard — Gilbert Arenas, Wizards: "Agent Zero" has a pure shot, nearly unlimited range and the guts to take it from anywhere, any time.
Guard — Tony Parker, Spurs: There is no guard in basketball better at getting to the rim and finishing. Plus, his perimeter shot is no longer scary.
Center — Dwight Howard, Magic: His performance tailed off in the second half of the season, but he is the league's No. 3 rebounder and averages a solid 17.8 points.
:lol :lol :lol
Next Superstar
04-15-2007, 03:51 AM
Guard — Tony Parker, Spurs: There is no guard in basketball better at getting to the rim and finishing. Plus, his perimeter shot is no longer scary
I can think of a couple guards who finish better then parker namely KOBE and DWAYNE WADE, nice of this guy to be a spurs homer though and put parker on the 2nd team.
mikejones99
04-15-2007, 04:06 AM
T mac must be somewhere
aaronstampler
04-15-2007, 06:34 AM
Going by Hollinger's PER, my All-NBA teams would look like this...
1st Team:
C Duncan
PF Nowitzki
SF James
SG Bryant (I moved him ahead of Wade because the latter missed 30 games)
PG Nash
2nd Team:
C: Yao
PF: Garnett
SF: McGrady
SG: Wade
PG: Arenas
3rd Team:
C: Stoudemire
PF: Boozer
SF: Anthony
SG: Ginobili
PG: Parker
Tippecanoe
04-15-2007, 09:23 AM
no wade?? :wtf
am i missing something?
ShoogarBear
04-15-2007, 09:29 AM
Wade will have missed almost 30 games.
exstatic
04-15-2007, 09:32 AM
Wade will have missed almost 30 games.
Yao has only played 47 games, so far.
exstatic
04-15-2007, 09:33 AM
Church of Manu will have to open an Inquisition as to why Tim and Tony get votes for the teams and Manu doesn't. ;)
TDMVPDPOY
04-15-2007, 10:15 AM
TP second team lmao
dude has nash for mvp is a joke.
nash winnin 3 in a row is BS.
wildbill2u
04-15-2007, 11:04 AM
Trying to decide between Dirk, Tim, and Nash is like deciding upon a choice between Johnny Walker Black, Chivas, and Glenfiddach.
All of them are excellent so it's a matter of individual taste. This is truly a vintage year where so many players are giving outstanding performances.
T Park
04-15-2007, 11:07 AM
oh man, hope the argentines aren't awake yet....
ShoogarBear
04-15-2007, 11:15 AM
Buenos Aires is one hour ahead of Eastern Time.
romain.star
04-15-2007, 11:16 AM
well.... TP in the second team... it looks weird but the spurs would not be a top 3 NBA teams for years now without a great PG...
Kori Ellis
04-15-2007, 11:19 AM
I've seen other writers mentioning TP for 3rd team, but not that many. He might get it but I sort of doubt it.
I just hope Bruce gets DPOY. Many writers I have seen and heard voted for him. I thought more people would be voting for Camby, but I haven't seen as much I had expected.
Fabbs
04-15-2007, 11:22 AM
True MVP Duncan or Dirk.
Tim did too much pouting in the seasons 1st half tho.
Fluff stats in games that don't count MVP: Nash.
3rd team All NBA F Vince Carter instead of MarshMello Anthony.
T Park
04-15-2007, 12:49 PM
no way Anthony>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Vagina Carter
Rummpd
04-15-2007, 01:22 PM
Why does Kobe get credit for being more of a team player - he gets Odom etc. back and leads them to a 500 record. Come on, this is insane. He might deserve first team but make it a legit reason. Also, Dirk > Nash for MVP period.
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