reflections
Pincus: Power Picks Week 10

 The Mavericks retain the top spot but the Suns are right there waiting to leapfrog them to the top.  The Lakers win four straight despite playing through significant injuries.  The Spurs slump unexpectedly while the Rockets hold their own with Yao Ming.  Where the rankings get tricky is at the top of the Eastern Conference where the separation between the Pistons, Wizards, Bulls and Magic is hard to quantify.  The Cavs and Magic overcome difficult stretches to have perfect weeks.  The scorching hot Bulls lose two of three but then wax the Pistons.  Give it a week or two and the pecking order in the East will become more evident.

1 Dallas Mavericks
(27-8)
[last week #1 (24-7)]
The Mavericks may have lost on Sunday to the Lakers, but they’re still the best team in the NBA by two wins.  It’s amazing that the Mavericks barely gained any space over the Phoenix Suns despite the win streak.  Up next for the Mavericks, a visit to the Utah Jazz.  Could Dallas be looking at a losing streak?
2 Phoenix Suns
(25-8)
[last week #2 (21-8)]
Phoenix keeps on winning.  With losses to the Wizards and Mavericks in late December, the Suns have now won 22 of the last 24.  Steve Nash tells local media that he’ll probably start licking his hands again now that the league has gone back to the old ball.  Gross, but apparently effective.
3 Los Angeles Lakers
(23-11)
[last week #6 (20-11)]
LA ends the Mavericks 13-game win streak despite playing without Lamar Odom and Kwame Brown.  The Lakers are just a single win behind the Spurs and one full game behind the Jazz.  Did anyone expect Luke Walton to ever play this well?  They’re 8-5 since Odom went down and 3-0 without Brown.  Maybe it’s time to give GM Mitch Kupchak a little credit for putting together a relatively deep squad.
4 Utah Jazz
(24-10)
[last week #4 (22-9)]
There’s no real denying at this point that Andrei Kirilenko is having a down year.  Last season he averaged 15.3 ppg, 8.0 rpg, 4.3 apg and 3.2 bpg.  His numbers are down across the board at 9.2 ppg, 5.4 rpg, 3.7 apg and 2.5 bpg.  If his stats are a sacrifice to the team cause, then so be it.  It just seems like there’s something more going on that hasn’t reached the boiling point yet.
5 San Antonio Spurs
(24-11)
[last week #3 (23-8)]
The Spurs had a tough week losing three before taking the Grizzlies on the road.  Local reports suggest the Spurs are looking to add some athleticism to help them come playoff time.  It’s not clear if the Clippers are interested, but San Antonio apparently has designs on Corey Maggette.  For any other team the fourth best record in the NBA would be considered a good start . . .
6 Houston Rockets
(21-13)
[last week #8 (19-12)]
The Rockets have been winning without Yao, but the schedule played a part in that.  The first game on the road trip didn’t end well in overtime against the Wolves.  This week they have visits to Chicago, Denver and Sacramento.  In between they’ll host the Lakers on Wednesday.  The Rockets are still very close to being among the top teams in the West but also within striking distance of bubble teams like the Warriors and Kings.
7 Detroit Pistons
(19-12)
[last week #7 (18-11)]
Considering the Pistons are playing without Billups, it’s no wonder they’ve tailed off a bit.  Time to pick it up a notch, with a four-game stretch of beatable teams.  Flip Murray hasn’t been consistent, struggling in the loss to Chicago with just two points in 30 minutes (1-9 from the field).  Backing him up is Will Blalock who went scoreless against the Bulls, missed all three of his shots.  The pair combined for four assists with four turnovers . . .
8 Washington Wizards
(19-14)
[last week #9 (17-13)]
As dominant as the Wizards are at home (13-3), they’re not a particularly good road team (6-11).  They’ve won some big ones (Los Angeles Lakers and Phoenix Suns), but their most recent loss in Toronto was a minor letdown.  The Wednesday night match up at home against the Bulls could be a playoff preview.
9 Chicago Bulls
(20-14)
[last week #5 (19-12)]
Tough, tough loss to the Suns.  After a let-down on the road to the struggling Nets, a loss to the Chauncey Billups-less Pistons at home Saturday would have been a major drop in momentum.  Instead, Chicago managed to salvage the week with a solid win.  The next three should be challenging (Houston, a visit to Washington then back home hosting New Jersey).
10 Orlando Magic
(21-14)
[last week #11 (18-14)]
Orlando took advantage of a light week to improve to 14-6 at home.  The Magic will take it on the road in what should be a challenging trip: the Warriors, Lakers and Suns over a three day span.  At just 7-8 in away game, this week would be the ideal time to reestablish their early season dominance.
11 Cleveland Cavaliers
(21-12)
[last week #12 (17-12)]
The Cavaliers are finally showing signs of life, winning four games in five nights.  They needed a strong start considering the next seven are on the road.  After an unimpressive December, Cleveland can make a serious statement this week with wins over the Kings, Suns and Clippers.
12 Minnesota Timberwolves
(17-15)
[last week #16 (13-15)]
Minnesota is on a legitimate run.  They’ve won four straight including two against the Spurs and Rockets.  That could extend to seven if beat the struggling Clippers, Grizzlies and Nets.  If the Rockets can continue to play well without Yao Ming, the top six playoff seeds in the West seem secure . . . but Minnesota has a very good chance to take one of the final two spots.
13 Indiana Pacers
(18-16)
[last week #13 (17-15)]
Jermaine O’Neal finally vents to the media.  He didn’t demand a trade, but it’s clear he’s not happy playing for a mediocre team.  The Pacers aren’t bad, but the writing is on the wall . . . they peaked a few seasons ago.  O’Neal still has three more years left on his contract after this campaign at over $20 million per.  Though a mid-season trade does not seem likely, he could moved over the summer . . . especially if the post-season is predictably brief.
14 Golden State Warriors
(18-18)
[last week #15 (16-16)]
The Warriors are a slightly better version of the Clippers.  They win at home and fall apart on the road.  Monta Ellis is back from injury which helps, but the Warriors are going to have to pick it up a notch if they want to sneak into the playoffs.  With the Wolves on the rise and the Nuggets likely to turn it around once Carmelo Anthony returns from injury, Golden State could once again be left on the outside come April.
15 Denver Nuggets
(16-15)
[last week #10 (16-12)]
When the Nuggets are at full strength and can turn to the tiny lineup of Allen Iverson and Earl Boykins, they’ll cause teams some serious problems.  Having to rely on that right now, night after night just isn’t working.  The role players Denver is forced to turn to aren’t ready for starring roles (Yakhouba Diawara, DerMarr Johnson, Julius Hodge and Linas Kleiza).  It’ll be very interesting to see how it all finally does fit together once the suspensions have expired. 
16 Milwaukee Bucks
(16-17)
[last week #14 (16-15)]
After a nice run the Bucks had a rough week against tough competition (Wizards and Cavaliers).  This week they’ve got a light schedule (Nuggets, Raptors, Sixers and Hornets).  The goal for the Bucks is to climb to the fifth seed.  The Atlantic Division winner likely be an under .500 fourth seed which mean home-court advantage for the Bucks (though they have a long way to go to catch Orlando, Chicago and Indiana).
17 Toronto Raptors
(15-19)
[last week #19 (13-18)]
Chris Bosh is back and Toronto looks poised to establish themselves as the best team in the sorry Atlantic Division.  They can take a 2-1 series lead over the Nets if they win in Jersey on Tuesday.  Bryan Colangelo has put an interesting team together in just one summer.  They may not be a major force but the Raptors are winning at a 44.1% clip, which is an improvement over last year’s 27 win season (32.9%).
18 Sacramento Kings
(14-17)
[last week #18 (13-15)]
The Kings seemed to put the trade rumors behind them (Ron Artest, Mike Bibby, etc), but then coughed up a game they fought so hard to get back into (Lakers).  Two nights later they blow a lead to the Blazers and once again get waxed in overtime.  Sacramento isn’t bad enough for the team to pull the plug, but also not quite good enough yet to make a playoff run.  They’re only a couple of games behind the Nuggets and Wolves, but nine of the next 13 are on the road.
19 Miami Heat
(14-19)
[last week #20 (13-17)]
Coach Patrick Riley is out (for now).  Interim Coach Ron Rothstein is in.  Dwyane Wade is back from the wrist injury but suspended forwards James Posey and Antoine Walker are still trying to get their body fat % down.  Without Wade they were terrible but the Heat beat the Blazers in Portland on his return.  The next four are on the road (Sonics, Warriors, Jazz and Lakers).  Will the Heat regain their form when Shaquille O’Neal returns, allegedly on the 15th in LA?
20 Los Angeles Clippers
(15-19)
[last week #17 (14-16)]
After a nice stretch at home the Clippers have returned to their losing ways on the road.  It’s understandable dropping one to the Wizards, but the Hawks?  They’re simply not going to make the playoffs if they can only win outside of Staples at an 18.8% pace.  The Vince Carter for Corey Maggette rumor hit the local stations, but to match salaries LA would have to include Cuttino Mobley.  It seems a stretch Jersey would take on his deal (which doesn’t expire until 2009/10).
21 New York Knicks
(15-21)
[last week #25 (13-20)]
There’s no question Isiah Thomas is fighting for his job, the Knicks were clear about that from the start.  What happened against the Nuggets in December was inexcusable, but coaching is an inexact science.  If Thomas was at fault for the brawl but in the process got the attention of his team . . . who is to say he didn’t do the right thing?  New York is 6-4 since the fight; before they were just 9-17.
22 New Jersey Nets
(14-19)
[last week #21 (13-18)]
For a moment the Nets were a playoff team but then they lost to the Cavs.  Two Raptor wins in a row and Jersey is back on the outside looking in.  Considering how badly they need a big man, should the Nets strive for the playoffs (without home court advantage in any round) or a lottery pick?  This draft in particular is loaded with capable size.
23 Portland Trail Blazers
(14-21)
[last week #22 (13-18)]
The overtime win in Sacramento was impressive, but was that more about the Kings struggles than Portland starting to pull together?  Losing to the Heat the next night on the second of a back-to-back is no shock.  What’s going to be trickier are the next two . . . visits to San Antonio and Dallas back-to-back.
24 Boston Celtics
(12-21)
[last week #26 (10-19)]
Coach Doc Rivers tapped the injured Paul Pierce to be an unofficial assistant coach.  That plan was quickly scrapped so Pierce could maintain his conditioning while out.  Boston has started to figure out how to win now and again without their All-Star.  Theo Ratliff has opted for back surgery and is likely done for the season.
25 Seattle SuperSonics
(13-23)
[last week #23 (13-19)]
The schedule was difficult and the Sonics went winless.  It doesn’t improve much this week with a visit to Phoenix on tap.  It’s becoming pretty obvious by now that Seattle is not a playoff team.  Injuries have been the story but the ax could fall on Coach Bob Hill if the team doesn’t improve.  It’s a shame to get judged when working with so little, but that’s the NBA.  From the get go Seattle has been snake-bit, losing center Robert Swift before the season even started.
26 New Orleans Hornets
(12-21)
[last week #24 (12-18)]
The Hornets are another team that never had a chance.  Hopefully Byron Scott won’t lose his job either while trying to navigate through the Western Conference with half a roster.  Devin Brown was a nice free agent pickup.  If the Hornets can get a nice lottery pick, next season they could be a very, very dangerous team . . . if healthy.
27 Charlotte Bobcats
(9-23)
[last week #27 (9-21)]
After finishing out 2006 with a bang, the Bobcats have started the year slowly with losses to the Wolves and Magic.  With a little bit of time off, Charlotte has a winnable schedule after a visit to Detroit on Wednesday (Knicks, Sixers, Bucks, Nets, Hawks (twice) and Raptors . . . all under .500).  Once again Gerald Wallace went down with injury (shoulder), but he isn’t expected to be gone long.
28 Philadelphia 76ers
(9-24)
[last week #28 (8-22)]
The Sixers got the nice revenge win over the Nuggets.  They’re slightly better than before the Iverson trade, but sufficiently bad enough to earn a nice lottery pick (if earn is the proper term).  Word is the team is happy with Andre Miller and the leadership that he brings to the floor.  With a big chunk of his salary already paid in a front-loaded contract, he could very well be the Sixers’ starting point guard next season.
29 Memphis Grizzlies
(8-27)
[last week #29 (7-25)]
Apparently this Tony Barone character has made the Grizzlies’ season suddenly bearable for the team, despite the constant losing.  Now that Memphis is no longer close to being sold, GM Jerry West is back on the phones.  Sources say Pau Gasol and Mike Miller will not be traded by the deadline.  No team has neither won more few nor lost more than the Grizzlies.
30 Atlanta Hawks
(10-21)
[last week #30 (9-20)]
Anyone notice that the Hawks falling apart coincided with Tyronn Lue going down with injury?  Lue should be back soon and eventually Josh Smith.  Atlanta is better than they’ve played, but obviously not as good as their hot start.  Beating the Clippers finally ended the losing streak, but doesn’t say much considering how hard it is for LA to get any sort of win on the road.
Nenad Kristic
What can the Nets do to get a filler for Nenad? He was getting about 17 points and 7 rebounds per game for the Nets, but things changed when he got injured in New Jersey, against the Los Angeles Lakers. Should they wait until he comes back, or should they make a trade to acquire a Center, replacing Nenad?
-Smush
Nets: Robinson eager to help tighten defense

 

 

Throughout the preseason, he sensed something was wrong, that the de-emphasis on defense was going to come back to bite them, and that a profound change in style would be reckless, no matter how much offensive talent the team had assembled.

Everything Cliff Robinson said was spot-on. And though the Nets weren’t a good defensive team when he departed with a meniscus tear on Nov. 18 — they were 5-4 at the time — they have evolved into a terrible one (8-14) in the six weeks hence.

The 40-year-old is too modest to suggest that this is a cause-effect equation. But he vividly recalls crying wolf as early as mid-October.

“I tried to say something,” he said with a shrug last night, before taking the court with his teammates during an open practice at Ramapo College. “But hey, if we’re going to hang our hats on defense, we have to be consistent, do it on a nightly basis. For us to do anything of significance, that’s going to be the end we’re going to have to (improve) on.

“We’ve been able to put up some points, but we haven’t been able to stop anybody on a consistent basis.”

Now, instead of just nagging everyone about it, Robinson is in a position to do something about it.

He took part in last night’s scrimmage, and the Nets will give him back his uniform in time for Chicago’s visit Friday night, nearly seven weeks after injuring his left knee in that Saturday night debacle against Portland. The team has missed him, and he knows it, but he leaves it to others to point it out.

“We’re starting to develop consistency at the defensive end, and he’s one of our best defenders,” Richard Jefferson said. “So it’s good timing. Just to have his veteran leadership is going to be big for us. We have a lot of road games in the next month and a half, so to have another post guy won’t hurt, either.”

“No doubt, we definitely missed him,” said Lawrence Frank, whose team is ranked 16th in scoring defense. “He only played seven games (after his two-game league suspension). The bigs have done a good job, but losing Curly (Nenad Krstic) like we did, we certainly welcome Cliffy back.”

So what went wrong with the defense during his absence? Robinson only cites a lack of commitment — on the part of the players, not the coaches. Asked whether Frank is adamant about defense as he has been in years past, his response was immediate:

“Oh, yeah — he’s even more high-strung than he’s been in the past,” Robinson said. “It still hasn’t worked out to be effective. I can’t put my finger on it. I don’t know if it’s new guys out there, I don’t know if it’s old guys. We just haven’t come together.”

Notes: The trade talks with Charlotte involving Melvin Ely and Jeff McInnis are all but dead: While the Bobs would do the deal for a second-round pick, the Nets’ overarching concern is to avoid the luxury tax, and this deal wouldn’t do it for them. They are $1.7 million over the threshold. But according to ESPN, the Nets and Charlotte were discussing a deal involving McInnis and swingman Bernard Robinson, which would get them below the $65.4 million tax threshold…. Jason Collins (sore back) sat out last night….

The practice was said to be a sellout, but the stands were only two-thirds full…. The most crowd-pleasing moment (aside from some long jumpers from Mikki Moore and Eddie House) actually occurred before the scrimmage, when Frank announced, “The officiating will be better here than in an NBA game.” Basically, there wasn’t any, other than out-of-bounds calls….

With two more off-days, the Nets’ social calendar is full: Three rookies (Marcus Williams, Josh Boone, Hassan Adams) will read to fifth-graders at Martin Luther King Elementary School in Edison today at 2, while Boki Nachbar and Mile Ilic will visit 50 children in the pediatric unit at St. Peter’s University Hospital in New Brunswick…. Friday marks the start of the 10-day contract period, but with Robinson returning, the Nets don’t have a need to bring in anyone.

http://www.nj.com/nets/ledger/index.ssf?/base/sports-0/1167802553121830.xml&coll=1

RJ getting his groove back

There was a certitude in everything he did this time — he felt it, and everyone saw it. There was no hesitation, no fear, no mind games. Richard Jefferson made up his mind to do something, and he did it.

And when you added it all up — 43 minutes, 23 points, six rebounds, five assists — you can only reach one conclusion: This could be a happy new year for him after all.

“I hope so,” the Nets forward said Saturday night, as he pondered whether his right ankle has reached a positive turning point after the Nets beat the Timberwolves, 100-92. “Because the last two games, I haven’t done anything out of the ordinary.”

Re-check the numbers, he was told. He had 22 points at Miami, 23 against Minnesota — both victories. He hadn’t had back-to-back 20-point games all season.

“No, I played the way people are used to seeing me play, the way I’ve played the last four or five seasons,” he corrected. “For this year, those are looking like great games. But in the past, those are numbers you’d expect from me. Also, we won the last two games, and we got numbers you expect from your small forward.”

But there are small forwards, and there are great small forwards. Jefferson ranks among the top half-dozen at his position in the league, but persistent ankle problems — first the left, then the right — have grounded him to the point in which he thought of giving up on the season as recently as two weeks ago, one teammate said.

Then the Wolves arrived in town, and he turned into RJ again — maybe not the same, walking-on-air sorcery, but certainly more certain of every move he tried to execute.

“That’s the thing — exploding up on your jumper, driving the lane and being able to finish, free throws…you’re always going to get beat up, but when you have a major thing you’re trying to deal with, it’s confidence,” Jefferson said. “It’s like, ‘Okay, driving the lane, do I have the explosion to get up?’ So you hesitate. The last few games — I want to say the last five or six games — for the most part, I’m getting better.”

This should be music to Lawrence Frank’s ears.

But he isn’t going to jump to any conclusions, because injuries — especially ankle injuries — tend to come and go. . . .and come back again.

http://www.nj.com/nets/ledger/index.ssf?/base/sports-0/1167629753136860.xml&coll=1

Moore plays Nets’ big shot, wows crowd

In the jaunty optimism of the visiting locker room Friday night at Miami, there was a lone figure with his head down in his locker stall. The Nets had won, but Mikki Moore was not pleased.

He’s a starter these days, but as that game broke in the third period, he was like a traffic cop with his hands tied behind his back — the world moving past him at its own pace, with its own design, as though he were a spectator listening to interesting stories told by other people. 

He was pulled five minutes into that quarter for Boki Nachbar, and the Nets kept going. And as the lead increased, Moore’s confidence sank. “He was very disappointed in his performance,” coach Lawrence Frank recalled. “And when a guy is committed to the team, he wants to make amends.”

So here’s how a journeyman atones for a one-point, three-re bound dud: He attacks the game with his old vigor, throws up nine shots from inside and out, hits all nine, abuses Mark Blount for five offensive boards, makes two steals, helps hold Kevin Garnett to five measly field goals, acknowledges the crowd when it chants his name and helps carry the Nets back into first place in the Atlantic with a routine 100-92 triumph over the Minnesota Timberwolves at Continental Airlines Arena.

Yes, Mikki Moore.

“I’ll tell you what,” said Richard Jefferson, reduced to second-star status after playing 43 brilliant minutes, “Since I’ve been here, we’ve had a lot of success, and I can only remember three or four times when the crowd was chanting somebody’s name. That’s huge. Even the way things have gone this season, it shows the impact Mikki’s having on this team.”

He finished with a career-high 20 points and eight rebounds in 39 sterling minutes — a career night by any measure — and suddenly the Nets, while not having any unrealistic expectations, feel a lot bet ter about their starting lineup.

But Moore’s contribution wasn’t the only reason. Jefferson, despite the chronic pain in his right ankle, showed his old bounce and put up his old numbers (23 points, six rebounds, five assists), and together they showed that the Nets can control a game from start to finish and not always have to rely on the Jason Kidd/Vince Carter tandem to carry them every night.

Even the bench had its standouts — there were seven assists for Marcus Williams, nine quick points in the second quarter for Eddie House (chaining Carter to the bench for the last 10:36 of the first half) and a game-busting 3 for Boki Nachbar.

But only one guy heard his name chanted. And only one guy received an ovation in the postgame locker room from his teammates.

http://www.nj.com/nets/ledger/index.ssf?/base/sports-0/1167544352308920.xml&coll=1

Nets defense may be finding a comfort zone

The Nets’ only salvation this season will be their defense, and their approach to defense might have just changed.

Wait, wait, don’t say it: The zone is boring. Granted, everyone knows that already. It’s a contrivance of bored coaches for bad players, and if you want to take it to its logical extreme, the zone is an act of desperation for teams that consider defense an inconvenience rather than a necessity.

Norm Sloan, the legendary college coach, once said, “I hate it. It looks like a stickup at the 7-Eleven — five guys standing there with their hands in the air.”

Charles Barkley loved it, because he thought the legalization of the zone four years ago represented equal opportunity for all. “This is great!” the defense-challenged legend said. “They just made the world safe for crappy defensive players.”

Which brings us to the Nets. For the better part of two months, you had to peel Lawrence Frank off the ceiling over the infuriating, consternating defense his team has played. But he might have stumbled upon something in Friday night’s victory at Miami.

“Sixteen possessions, 12 stops,” the Nets coach said of the zone’s success rate against the Heat. “Pretty good.”

Good enough to explore it further? Probably. Undoubtedly, all teams nowadays must use a mix of man-to-man and zone, but using a zone is usually the result of one thing: You do it to cover up for weaknesses. And all season long, the Nets have been fairly lousy at guarding the dribble.

“Well, there’s that, but if you do it because you can’t guard, you probably won’t guard in a zone, either,” said Frank, whose team played host to Minnesota last night. “We have to have the mentality that we’ll guard; that’s always the most important thing. But we’ll throw in the zone just to give teams a different look, and take them out of rhythm or disrupt them a bit. But I’ll agree that if teams go all zone, it’s not exactly a sign of strength. And we don’t want to be a team like that.”

Typically, the Nets have set up in a 2-3 matchup (most often after free-throw conversions). Among those who study such things, it’s primarily what Roy Williams uses: The North Carolina point zone, it is called in those parts. Occasionally — such as the case against Detroit — Frank will throw in a few wrinkles (”Just call it hybrid,” he says) to counteract cutting action.

But the goal is always the same: to get stops. Sometimes it works, sometimes it’s an adventure. For example, against Houston on Wednesday night, Frank put his fist in the air only seven times — that’s the zone call — and the Nets got only two stops out of it.

Of course, that’s not much of a sample, and Frank was reluctant to use it because Houston (at least without Yao Ming) is a perimeter-oriented team. You’re more likely to use the zone against post-oriented teams.

“Or if you’re being hurt by pick-and-rolls, or if you’re getting beat in a certain matchup,” the coach added. “Like if they’re using the same pick-and-roll to force a switch, the zone can help you take them out of that play easier. Then teams have to find different ways to get their shots.

“We’re not a great steal or block team. So this is a way to change the rhythm of the game.”

It should also be noted that despite the Nets’ success Friday night, they were going up against a Miami team without Dwyane Wade, James Posey and Shaquille O’Neal.

“You’re talking about three individuals that can really break down zones,” Richard Jefferson agreed. “Wade can find seams, Posey always killed us on 3s, and Shaq is Shaq. So they were undermanned.

“But that doesn’t mean you don’t use it. And it’s more than just covering up mistakes — there are teams that really struggle with it, because you don’t get to practice against it much, and you don’t have a wide variety of plays to deal with it. If you break it down, we have 100 man plays and five zone plays. Everybody’s pretty much the same way.”

http://www.nj.com/nets/ledger/index.ssf?/base/sports-0/1167544419308920.xml&coll=1

RETURN OF OLD RJ HAS NETS BACK IN FORM

Two games do not a season make.But if the last two games by Richard Jefferson are indicative of what lies ahead, then the Nets just might turn what so far has been a mess into a success.

Friday in Miami, the Nets’ Big Three – Jefferson, Jason Kidd and Vince Carter – were big, especially in a game-turning 21-0 third quarter run. Jefferson was in the thick of that run.

Saturday, in a 100-92 disposal of Minnesota, Mikki Moore was the obvious darling, shooting 9-of-9 and scoring 20 points.

But Jefferson scored 23. And looked darn good doing it. He ran, jumped, cut, dunked. He was Richard Jefferson again as the Nets aligned themselves to try for their first three-game winning streak this season. That chance will come at home Friday against Chicago after five days of rest for Jefferson and his chronically painful right ankle.

“The last two games, I haven’t played amazing or done anything out of the ordinary,” said Jefferson, who totaled 81 minutes and shot 17-of-30 (.567) while averaging 22.5 points (the first time all season he scored 20 points in consecutive games) and 5.5 rebounds in the two victories. “No, I played the way people are used to seeing me play, the way I’ve played the last four, five seasons.”

Precisely. And that could impact the season far more than any reasonable trade the Nets can muster. It would change the entire outlook.

“Oh, yeah; 100 percent,” Jefferson agreed. “And that was the frustration for me early on. And for a lot of the team. We know we have the talent, but we had to deal with the injury to [Nenad] Krstic, losing Cliff Robinson [he's back Friday] . . . You knew that even with those losses, if I came out and played the way I normally played – nothing great – then I think we’d be a different team.”

No question. The Nets are 13-18, and as of yesterday laughably were still tied for the Atlantic Division lead. A healthy Jefferson changes the landscape. And note, that’s simply healthy; not outstanding. That’s why with Jefferson running and cutting better, the Nets have a two-game winning streak.

Coach Lawrence Frank threw up a caution sign. He wants to see how Jefferson responds.

“Obviously, he is playing through a great deal of pain. It feels like there’s gravel in his ankle,” Frank said. “I saw some really positive things; he had good lift and good action.”

Like Jefferson showed folks the last few years.

“Hopefully with a couple of days’ break, to rest and relax, it will maintain,” said Jefferson who showed none of the tentativeness that plagued him earlier – remember the Houston game?

“That’s the thing, exploding up on your jumper, driving the lane and being able to finish,” Jefferson said. “It’s confidence. . . . Say the last 5-6 games, you look at the way my body has been, it’s been a little inconsistent. But for the most part I’m getting better the last few weeks.”

Keep it up, and the Nets will be undeniably better the next few months.

Link

Cavs 96, Nets 91
The Cavaliers are hitting the road packed with confidence.

LeBron James scored 19 points and added a season-high 13 rebounds as Cleveland finished off its most successful week in nearly 14 years with a 96-91 victory over the New Jersey Nets on Saturday night.

By beating San Antonio, Boston, Milwaukee and New Jersey since Tuesday, the Cavaliers have won four games in five nights for the first time since Feb. 2-6, 1993. It’s just the streak they were looking for before departing on a seven-game, two-week road trip.

“Just look at the box score,” said James, who added four assists, three steals and three blocks in 44 minutes. “Everybody contributed.”

Larry Hughes and Drew Gooden scored 21 points apiece, Zydrunas Ilgauskas added 16 and Eric Snow had seven assists – his biggest on an extra-effort play down the stretch – as the Cavs improved to 15-3 at home this season and 26-3 since March 5.

Cleveland’s first week of 2007 included a pair of road wins (Boston and Milwaukee), raising the club’s record to just 6-9 in away games, a mark the Cavs hope to improve on their longest road trip this season.

On a similar out-of-town excursion last year, the Cavs dropped six in a row before finally winning.

“We don’t want to do that again,” James said.

Vince Carter and Mikki Moore each had 18 points and Richard Jefferson 17 for the Nets, who after trailing most of the night, pulled within 93-91 on Jefferson’s 3-pointer with 17 seconds left.

Gooden gave the Nets a chance to tie it by missing one of two free throws with 9.3 seconds to go. However, Carter misfired on a 3-pointer with 2.9 seconds remaining and Gooden sealed Cleveland’s seventh win in eight games by hitting a pair of free throws in the final second.

“It was a good look,” Carter said. “A little bit short.”

Carter’s jumper with 4:30 to play tied it 83-all, but on Cleveland’s next trip, James drove and whipped a pass underneath to Ilgauskas for a dunk.

Snow then made the game’s biggest play, diving to tip a loose ball ahead to James, who went in for a reverse slam to make it 87-83 with 3:26 left.

“I call him the pit bull,” Cavs coach Mike Brown said of Snow. “He sticks his nose in there, his fingers in there. He’s going to bite you, fight you, scratch you, claw you and he’s going to come up with the big play.”

Held to eight points – his lowest output since Dec. 29, 2004 – in Friday’s win at Milwaukee, James only had nine in the first 35 minutes before scoring twice in the final 43 seconds of the third quarter as the Cavaliers took a 71-65 lead into the fourth.

James’ flurry came shortly after tempers flared when Hughes and New Jersey’s Bostjan Nachbar got tangled as they headed up court. The pair went tumbling to the floor in a heap, and players from both sides rushed to separate them before things got nastier.

The Nets didn’t have their usual size as big men Jason Collins (strained lower back) and rookie Josh Boone (migraine) were inactive.

Cleveland outscored New Jersey 13-3 to open the second quarter and the Cavaliers built a 16-point lead before Jefferson and Kidd hit back-to-back 3-pointers to help the Nets close within 46-38 at halftime.

The Nets put themselves in a big hole on Friday, falling behind 18-0 at the start before rallying to beat Chicago. They scored on their first possession against Cleveland, but after being tied 12-all, the Cavaliers went on a 12-2 run and led 27-21 entering the second.

“It was kind of like last night,” Kidd said. “We were down 18-0 and then we started to play. Once we figure out that we don’t have to be down so much to come back, we’ll be better off.”

Notes: James, a devoted Ohio State fan, predicts the Buckeyes will beat Florida 31-27 in Monday’s BCS national championship. … Cleveland, which begins its trip Tuesday in Sacramento, won’t play at home again until Jan. 22. … Frank is hoping Collins, who didn’t make the trip, will be able to play Tuesday against Toronto. … Boone has had a history of severe headaches and has been bothered by them two other times in the last three months, Frank said. … Gooden’s 31-point, 16-board performance on Friday made him just the fifth player this season to get more than 30 points and 15 rebounds. Yao Ming, Elton Brand, Carlos Boozer and Dirk Nowitzki are the others.

http://www.nba.com/games/20070106/NJNCLE/recap.html

Cavs 96, Nets 91
The Cavaliers are hitting the road packed with confidence.

LeBron James scored 19 points and added a season-high 13 rebounds as Cleveland finished off its most successful week in nearly 14 years with a 96-91 victory over the New Jersey Nets on Saturday night.

By beating San Antonio, Boston, Milwaukee and New Jersey since Tuesday, the Cavaliers have won four games in five nights for the first time since Feb. 2-6, 1993. It’s just the streak they were looking for before departing on a seven-game, two-week road trip.

“Just look at the box score,” said James, who added four assists, three steals and three blocks in 44 minutes. “Everybody contributed.”

Larry Hughes and Drew Gooden scored 21 points apiece, Zydrunas Ilgauskas added 16 and Eric Snow had seven assists – his biggest on an extra-effort play down the stretch – as the Cavs improved to 15-3 at home this season and 26-3 since March 5.

Cleveland’s first week of 2007 included a pair of road wins (Boston and Milwaukee), raising the club’s record to just 6-9 in away games, a mark the Cavs hope to improve on their longest road trip this season.

On a similar out-of-town excursion last year, the Cavs dropped six in a row before finally winning.

“We don’t want to do that again,” James said.

Vince Carter and Mikki Moore each had 18 points and Richard Jefferson 17 for the Nets, who after trailing most of the night, pulled within 93-91 on Jefferson’s 3-pointer with 17 seconds left.

Gooden gave the Nets a chance to tie it by missing one of two free throws with 9.3 seconds to go. However, Carter misfired on a 3-pointer with 2.9 seconds remaining and Gooden sealed Cleveland’s seventh win in eight games by hitting a pair of free throws in the final second.

“It was a good look,” Carter said. “A little bit short.”

Carter’s jumper with 4:30 to play tied it 83-all, but on Cleveland’s next trip, James drove and whipped a pass underneath to Ilgauskas for a dunk.

Snow then made the game’s biggest play, diving to tip a loose ball ahead to James, who went in for a reverse slam to make it 87-83 with 3:26 left.

“I call him the pit bull,” Cavs coach Mike Brown said of Snow. “He sticks his nose in there, his fingers in there. He’s going to bite you, fight you, scratch you, claw you and he’s going to come up with the big play.”

Held to eight points – his lowest output since Dec. 29, 2004 – in Friday’s win at Milwaukee, James only had nine in the first 35 minutes before scoring twice in the final 43 seconds of the third quarter as the Cavaliers took a 71-65 lead into the fourth.

James’ flurry came shortly after tempers flared when Hughes and New Jersey’s Bostjan Nachbar got tangled as they headed up court. The pair went tumbling to the floor in a heap, and players from both sides rushed to separate them before things got nastier.

The Nets didn’t have their usual size as big men Jason Collins (strained lower back) and rookie Josh Boone (migraine) were inactive.

Cleveland outscored New Jersey 13-3 to open the second quarter and the Cavaliers built a 16-point lead before Jefferson and Kidd hit back-to-back 3-pointers to help the Nets close within 46-38 at halftime.

The Nets put themselves in a big hole on Friday, falling behind 18-0 at the start before rallying to beat Chicago. They scored on their first possession against Cleveland, but after being tied 12-all, the Cavaliers went on a 12-2 run and led 27-21 entering the second.

“It was kind of like last night,” Kidd said. “We were down 18-0 and then we started to play. Once we figure out that we don’t have to be down so much to come back, we’ll be better off.”

Notes: James, a devoted Ohio State fan, predicts the Buckeyes will beat Florida 31-27 in Monday’s BCS national championship. … Cleveland, which begins its trip Tuesday in Sacramento, won’t play at home again until Jan. 22. … Frank is hoping Collins, who didn’t make the trip, will be able to play Tuesday against Toronto. … Boone has had a history of severe headaches and has been bothered by them two other times in the last three months, Frank said. … Gooden’s 31-point, 16-board performance on Friday made him just the fifth player this season to get more than 30 points and 15 rebounds. Yao Ming, Elton Brand, Carlos Boozer and Dirk Nowitzki are the others.

http://www.nba.com/games/20070106/NJNCLE/recap.html

Cavs 96, Nets 91
The Cavaliers are hitting the road packed with confidence.

LeBron James scored 19 points and added a season-high 13 rebounds as Cleveland finished off its most successful week in nearly 14 years with a 96-91 victory over the New Jersey Nets on Saturday night.

By beating San Antonio, Boston, Milwaukee and New Jersey since Tuesday, the Cavaliers have won four games in five nights for the first time since Feb. 2-6, 1993. It’s just the streak they were looking for before departing on a seven-game, two-week road trip.

“Just look at the box score,” said James, who added four assists, three steals and three blocks in 44 minutes. “Everybody contributed.”

Larry Hughes and Drew Gooden scored 21 points apiece, Zydrunas Ilgauskas added 16 and Eric Snow had seven assists – his biggest on an extra-effort play down the stretch – as the Cavs improved to 15-3 at home this season and 26-3 since March 5.

Cleveland’s first week of 2007 included a pair of road wins (Boston and Milwaukee), raising the club’s record to just 6-9 in away games, a mark the Cavs hope to improve on their longest road trip this season.

On a similar out-of-town excursion last year, the Cavs dropped six in a row before finally winning.

“We don’t want to do that again,” James said.

Vince Carter and Mikki Moore each had 18 points and Richard Jefferson 17 for the Nets, who after trailing most of the night, pulled within 93-91 on Jefferson’s 3-pointer with 17 seconds left.

Gooden gave the Nets a chance to tie it by missing one of two free throws with 9.3 seconds to go. However, Carter misfired on a 3-pointer with 2.9 seconds remaining and Gooden sealed Cleveland’s seventh win in eight games by hitting a pair of free throws in the final second.

“It was a good look,” Carter said. “A little bit short.”

Carter’s jumper with 4:30 to play tied it 83-all, but on Cleveland’s next trip, James drove and whipped a pass underneath to Ilgauskas for a dunk.

Snow then made the game’s biggest play, diving to tip a loose ball ahead to James, who went in for a reverse slam to make it 87-83 with 3:26 left.

“I call him the pit bull,” Cavs coach Mike Brown said of Snow. “He sticks his nose in there, his fingers in there. He’s going to bite you, fight you, scratch you, claw you and he’s going to come up with the big play.”

Held to eight points – his lowest output since Dec. 29, 2004 – in Friday’s win at Milwaukee, James only had nine in the first 35 minutes before scoring twice in the final 43 seconds of the third quarter as the Cavaliers took a 71-65 lead into the fourth.

James’ flurry came shortly after tempers flared when Hughes and New Jersey’s Bostjan Nachbar got tangled as they headed up court. The pair went tumbling to the floor in a heap, and players from both sides rushed to separate them before things got nastier.

The Nets didn’t have their usual size as big men Jason Collins (strained lower back) and rookie Josh Boone (migraine) were inactive.

Cleveland outscored New Jersey 13-3 to open the second quarter and the Cavaliers built a 16-point lead before Jefferson and Kidd hit back-to-back 3-pointers to help the Nets close within 46-38 at halftime.

The Nets put themselves in a big hole on Friday, falling behind 18-0 at the start before rallying to beat Chicago. They scored on their first possession against Cleveland, but after being tied 12-all, the Cavaliers went on a 12-2 run and led 27-21 entering the second.

“It was kind of like last night,” Kidd said. “We were down 18-0 and then we started to play. Once we figure out that we don’t have to be down so much to come back, we’ll be better off.”

Notes: James, a devoted Ohio State fan, predicts the Buckeyes will beat Florida 31-27 in Monday’s BCS national championship. … Cleveland, which begins its trip Tuesday in Sacramento, won’t play at home again until Jan. 22. … Frank is hoping Collins, who didn’t make the trip, will be able to play Tuesday against Toronto. … Boone has had a history of severe headaches and has been bothered by them two other times in the last three months, Frank said. … Gooden’s 31-point, 16-board performance on Friday made him just the fifth player this season to get more than 30 points and 15 rebounds. Yao Ming, Elton Brand, Carlos Boozer and Dirk Nowitzki are the others.

http://www.nba.com/games/20070106/NJNCLE/recap.html