From the monthly archives:

August 2010

With the reports getting uglier, Larry Bird and the Indiana Pacers issued the following statement about Lance’s arrest:

Statement from Indiana Pacers President of Basketball Operations Larry Bird:

The news of Lance Stephenson’s arrest is very disappointing to the Pacers franchise and to me personally.  We have worked very hard to bring in players that are excellent representatives of our franchise, community and state both on and off the court.   Our commitment to this goal is too strong to permit the actions of one individual to reverse all of the positive strides that have been made as a franchise over the last couple of years or to hurt the image of the rest of the players on our team.  Everyone in the Pacers organization remains strongly committed to our players representing Indianapolis and the state of Indiana in a positive way and will not condone behavior that reflects poorly on this franchise and community.

We are continuing to gather all of the facts regarding Lance’s arrest but regardless of the outcome of the investigation, Lance should not have put himself in the position he was in early Sunday morning.  We have consistently emphasized to our players the importance of not putting themselves in situations where bad things can happen.  Once all the facts are known we will deal appropriately with Lance so that he, the team and the entire Pacers community understands that this message cannot be ignored.

It is somewhat boilerplate and clearly non-committal as to the specifics of the charges, but it will be very telling how exactly Bird executes the sentiment in the final sentence – repeated here for emphasis.

Once all the facts are known we will deal appropriately with Lance so that he, the team and the entire Pacers community understands that this message cannot be ignored.

It appears that Lance is about to have a come-to-(Basketball)-Jesus meeting, and I have to wonder if the axe isn’t about to fall.

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In August, most players on most teams who got into most types of legal trouble would likely be given the time to plead their case, be tried by the justice system and, even if found guilty, be allowed the chance to give their mea culpa, perhaps attend some counseling and then rejoin the team. For an example, see: Beasley, Michael.

As everyone knows, however, the Pacers are not most teams. Not when it comes to this.

The JailPacers Era is such a millstone around the team’s neck that legal trouble — any legal trouble — comes with added weight. Just because of the transgressions that others have committed in the past while employed by the Pacers, everything is now magnified.

And when the legal trouble is allegedly shoving a young woman down a flight of stairs, it is already magnified simply by how heinous the act is. The fact that it’s so heinous and your paycheck says Indiana Pacers means that the whole team is now on trial by a community who has been reluctantly listening to team that has been preaching “we’ve changed … we have players that represent your community now … we are putting a product on the floor that you can be proud.”

Well, if what the New York Daily News is reporting turns out to be an accurate tale of what happened late Saturday night/early Sunday morning, Lance is looking like a pretty difficult person to be proud of.

And based on this tweet from Indy Star Pacers beat writer Mike Wells, the Pacers are now probably kicking themselves for taking a chance on a kid who, on talent alone, probably should have been drafted early than 40th this June.

Lance Stephenson Arrested

Now the question becomes: What will the Pacers’ reaction be?

Will they immediately excommunicate Lance? He is signed for two years (UPDATE: signed for four actually, but only first two are guaranteed), but the total deal is only around $1.5 million (guaranteed), so the salary cap ramifications are largely insignificant even if the team wanted to waive him tomorrow. That’s certainly an option on the table, particularly now that Darren Collison can run the point and AJ Price will likely be healthy enough to back up the one well before Christmas.

Option two would be to let the legal issues work themselves out and make a decision based on that. Of course, the justice system works in mysterious — and slow — ways, so by the time even all the initial he said/she said gets figured out, the Pacers decision likely will not come for a while. And during that time, more and more people will hear about the story and more and more people will again have a reason to be turned off by the team. Still, this would likely be the “fairest” thing to do from Lance’s perspective. It would also allow the team to remain objective and impartial until a ruling causes them to either stand by the kid or waive him the day he is found guilty and, thus, in their estimation, no longer fit to play for Indiana.

To “stand by the kid” — no matter what is decided — is the final option. You recognize his talent, you allow his punishment to be handled by the legal system, not his employer, and provided he’s still allowed to come to work, you let him come to work. He apologizes, does some community service and promises to be on his best behavior for the rest of his days in Pacer blue.

But it feels sort of hard to believe that the team would do that.

Again.

UPDATE: Tom Lewis has a nice post that recounts some comments about Lance that Bird made earlier this Summer. Interesting.

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The Pacers have officially ended their streak of days without a player appearing in the police blotter, and this alleged offense is among the worst a man could ever be arrested for.

Coney Island basketball star Lance Stephenson – a second-round Indiana Pacers pick in the June NBA draft – was busted Sunday for pushing his girlfriend down a flight of stairs, cops said.

Stephenson, 19, a legendary player at Brooklyn’s Abraham Lincoln High School, roughed up Jasmine Williams, 21, in the stairwell of her Brooklyn apartment building about 5 a.m., according to police.

The 6-foot-5 rookie point guard’s blows sent Williams tumbling head-first down 10 steps, requiring her to be treated at a hospital for injuries to her head and neck, cops said.

Between the Darren Collison acquisition and Danny Granger presumably cementing his spot for a trip to Turkey, this had seemed like one of the best week’s for the Pacers in recent memory.

This certainly puts a damper on that — particularly since it’s Lance’s second run-in with the cops regarding assaulting a woman, with the first being a sexual assault charge that occurred back when he was a 17-year-old star at Brooklyn’s Lincoln High School.

UPDATE: WTHR.com has a story up on it as well and it includes a little more info on the exact criminal charges against Lance (two felonies and a misdemeanor). (via Pacers Digest)

Police in New York City confirm to Eyewitness News that Lance Stephenson, 19, was arrested in Brooklyn just after 5:30 a.m. Sunday. Police had been called to an altercation at an apartment building on Avenue Z and arrived to find the player had gotten into a fight with his girlfriend in a stairwell.

Investigators at the scene found Stephenson was in a fight with 21-year-old Jasmine Williams and banged her head against a wall, then shoved her down a flight of stairs.

Williams was transported to a local hospital for head and neck injuries. Police say she fell down 10 stairs.

The team has issued the following statement from team president Larry Bird.

“We have been made aware of a situation involving Lance Stephenson early Sunday morning in Brooklyn,” Pacers president said in a statement released by the team. “We are currently in the process of gathering information and will have further comments as we learn more facts.”

Stay tuned. There will certainly be more.

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Danny Excels During Team USA Scrimmage

by Jared Wade on August 15, 2010 at 12:27 pm · 3 comments

danny granger team usa

Saturday’s Team USA scrimmage vs. China was entertaining for the few onlookers inside Madison Square Garden. But more than anything, Danny Granger was just happy to play against some foreign competition after “beating up on each other for the past month,” as Granger put it.

And in the process, Granger may have also — finally — put to rest any “bubble” talk from analysts speculating whether or not Danny would make Team USA’s final, 12-man roster for the upcoming 2010 FIBA World Championship that start August 28 in Turkey. After the run, he himself admitted that it would he thinks it would be hard for anyone to leave him off the team after he went out and led the team with 22 points on 9/12 shooting, including 10 first quarter points (on 4/4 shooting) that helped set the tone for Team USA dominance.

His good shooting performance, along with two blocks during one four-minute stretch he had in the third quarter while playing out of the team’s 2-3 half-court zone and full-court zone press, should also put to rest any concerns about his finger, which he initially injured last week when his hand was caught in the net while playing defense. He originally thought the finger might be broken, or at least dislocated, but it turned out to just be a mild sprain, he said. Though he is still taping the ring and middle fingers of his shooting hand together and he admits “it was kind of weird,” just being aggressive out there helped him play so well Saturday.

“A lot of times, I’ve been passive and that’s not my game,” said Granger. “So I was going out there with that aggressive mentality.” Scorers gonna score, basically, was his mindset, as he added that he thinks every shot is a good shot.

It’s not just Granger that international defenses are going to have to worry about on the wing, of course,. Between him, Kevin Durant, Rudy Gay and Andre Iguodala, the team has a whole stable of potent, athletic scorers. “We all are scorers when we’re out there,” he said. “It’s great because we’re all athletic.”

The transition to the shorter three-point line has been an adjustment for Danny, but based on the way he shot Saturday, moving in a few feet certainly hasn’t done anything to take away his most lethal weapon. And for the personnel on this team overall, the shorter line might be a good thing—particularly for guys like Derrick Rose and Lamar Odom who have accurate shots from midrange but become more erratic from 24 feet. “We all have to go through that [adjustment],” said Granger. “For some of us who aren’t shooters, it’s better.”

As far as all the activity back in Indiana, Danny loved the deal the Pacers made to acquire Darren Collison, calling it “an excellent trade.” Now that Troy Murphy is out of the picture, he expects to play the four spot more often next season, although he does think Larry Bird will make another deal to acquire a true power forward. Him playing extended minutes at the four probably isn’t ideal – for him or the Pacers – but he noted that his “ability to shoot the ball, stretch the floor” will help the offense. “Coach likes that,” he said.

UPDATE: From what Danny knows about Darren, he thinks Jim O’Brien will like Darren’s long-distance shooting, too. “When he got drafted, I’m not sure they knew how good of a shooter he was,” said Granger. “But he ended up shooting 40% from three for the year.”

The other big change for Danny during his Team USA days has been his shoes. Along with Durant and Rondo, he is wearing the red, white and blue colorway Nike Hyperfuse. He never wore them last season but is impressed and enjoys that several of the guys are all wearing the same Star Spangled design.

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