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Blake Griffin

NBA Summer League has been cancelled. But the always-on-point Sam Amick is saying that a bunch of players may head to the desert anyway. And it might not just be the rookies and also-rans that usually head to Nevada for some exhibition runs. (via @CardboardGerald)

He’s talking about full teams, including the likes of Blake Griffin and Kevin Durant, showing up to play som ball.

While the NBA’s official summer league was canceled in July as a result of the lockout, more than 50 players will be descending on Sin City to take part in a league at Impact Academy, starting on Sept. 12. And while the labor gap between owners and players means an actual season is likely still many months away, the Vegas session that was first reported by Hoopsworld will have the feel of an unofficial training camp for a number of teams.

Call it Phase II of lockout life for the players. While ventures such as these won’t provide much-needed leverage in the nearly nonexistent negotiations with the league’s owners, they will certainly help when it comes to staying in shape during the prolonged work stoppage.

According to Impact owner and renowned trainer Joe Abunassar, the Clippers’ Blake Griffin, Mo Williams and Randy Foye came by last week and expressed a desire to enter the league with a team made up solely of their teammates. Oklahoma City center Nazr Mohammed is trying to convince Kevin Durant, James Harden and others to do the same, while Indiana’s Dahntay Jones and Denver’s Al Harrington are making similar pitches to their respective teams.

The Impact Academy’s owner is none other than power hoops stakeholder Joe Abunassar. He has already talked to the top player’s union officials and it sounds as if there has been nothing but support.

Abunassar has spoken with National Basketball Players Association president/Lakers guard Derek Fisher and vice president/Spurs guard Roger Mason about the league and been given their support. “It’s a natural deal,” Abunassar said. “Guys want to play, so this is a great service for guys. It keeps them in shape. They don’t mind coming to Vegas. The difference between what we’re doing and what other leagues are doing is that all five guys on the floor will be pros.

“It’ll keep them in shape. It’s a good thing for the NBPA.”

A few weeks ago, Danny Granger told the Indianapolis Star’s Mike Wells that he, along with Jeff Foster, were likely going to try to get the Pacers players together around September to start some informal practice sessions. So, presumably, he would be into this idea.

Hopefully, of course, there will be a season and none of this will be necessary.

But I wouldn’t count on it. Especially before September 12. Knowing that, yeah, this seems like a great idea for the team to do a little off season gelling, both on and off the court.

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Blake Griffin’s MLK 47

by Jared Wade on January 18, 2011 at 11:55 am · 1 comment

Here they are in case you wanted to relive the Jason Voorhies-like terror that Blake Griffin brought to MLK Day. Martin Luther King Jr likely never got to play against Blake but if ever he was forced to guard The Griffin I believe we would have heard a speech featuring the line “I have a nightmare …” (video via The Basketball Jones)

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Your 2008 and 2009 Naismith College Player of the Year award winners. While both would like to forget 2009-10, one is having a much more enjoyable time on the court in 2010-11.

Pacers employee Conrad Brunner has a new article with some quotes from both Coach Jim O’Brien and Tyler Hansbrough about why he isn’t playing — and what he needs to do to get some time. For the uninitiated, this is Tyler’s second season technically, but he’s really a rookie. He missed 53 games last year, most due to an inner ear infection that gave him vertigo-like symptoms. Overall, he only played 511 minutes during his first year, which, for reference’s sake, is fewer than Mike Dunleavy, Jr. has already played this season.

After that ordeal, which was presumably rather frightening to Tyler and disconcerting to Pacers fans who had just watched their team take the Tar Heel 13th overall in the 2009 NBA Draft, it was nice to see Hansbrough ready to get back on the court at the beginning of the year. But that’s the thing — he hasn’t really been on the court much. And some fans are starting to wonder exactly what is going on, even taking to chant “We want Tyler” inside Conseco Fieldhous during Indiana’s blowout victory over Toronto on Monday night.

Here’s why Hansbrough is riding pine, according to O’Brien.

O’Brien uses his big men as facilitators in the offense, which means they must be able passers, particularly from the high post. Hansbrough was used to having the ball thrown to him throughout his college career, so he must work on sending it the other direction.

“He’s never been a passer,” said O’Brien. “If you have thrown 10,000 passes from that position coming into the pros, it seems comfortable. I don’t know how many times in high school in college he got the basketball at the elbow. It’s a matter of repetition. We try to put him in those situations as much as possible at practice and he’ll get it.

“It just takes a lot of first-year guys time, especially when you have to change what has made you successful in the past. But his attitude, his aggressiveness, his passion for the game is all there and those are the ingredients, once he gets all these other things, will make him the type of player that we drafted.”

A recent blog post by Mike Wells of the Indianapolis Star cites basically the same thing, stressing the Tyler needs to perform better from the high post to get on the court. Wells understands, but doesn’t buy it completely, noting that he believes Tyler should at least be getting some minutes.

As it stands, since before Thanksgiving, Hansbrough hasn’t played more than 13 minutes in any game, has recorded two DNP-CDs and only got garbage minutes against both Utah and Toronto.

I agree with fans, I think Hansbrough should get some court time.

He’s not ready to be a rotation player yet, but it wouldn’t hurt giving him some spot minutes every now and then.

An example of that was last week at Utah. The Pacers were flat and Al Jefferson and Paul Milsap were doing work on the boards.

I’m not saying Hansbrough would have had a huge impact on the game, but he would have given the Pacers some life and he could have mixed it up a little bit with Jefferson and Milsap in the paint.

What does Tyler himself think about all this? Well, I’m sure he wants to play — everyone in the league aside from Baron Davis wants more time on the court. But at least publicly, he totally understands the situation. (Quotes from Bruno’s piece)

“I think it’s just a matter of coach trying to build up his confidence in me,” said Hansbrough. “Obviously, the guys on the court are doing something good and we’re winning ballgames. That’s what’s important right now. As far as my playing time, I just have to earn it through practice.

“I feel like as the year goes on I’ll see myself play a bigger role with the Pacers. I just have to earn coach’s respect. He’s one of those guys where you’re not going to just walk on the court and get playing time. I’m not saying I haven’t earned his respect already but I’m trying to get there.”

Nice work, Tyler. Maybe you can run for office some day. One final comment really shows his media savvy when dealing with interviews with Pacers Sports and Entertainment employees.

“The team’s bigger than me,” Hansbrough said. “My playing time will come.”

Nailed it.

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These lyrics from the Counting Crows song “St. Robinson in His Cadillac Dream” aptly sum up the current state of Pacers Nation.

Indiana entered the summer of 2009 as a team needing to change and improve, but they had very few options to do so. They had the 13th and 52nd picks in a notoriously weak draft. They had a budget of around $9 million to fill out the roster. They had to figure out what to do with restricted free agents Jarrett Jack and Josh McRoberts.

With all of the exciting draft prospects gone by the time the Pacers picked, and all of the attractive free agents out of their price range, the Pacers options appeared to be a choice between “Meh” and “Bored, Now.” Watching Larry Bird and David Morway handle the draft and free agency this summer brought 30-year-old flashbacks of my mom shopping at Zayre’s for my school clothes. They have eschewed the trendier locales and the pricier aisles, instead heading straight to the clearance section — a strategy that seems destined to draw snickers from the cooler, richer kids and an exasperated “Awwww, mom!” from Pacer fans.

It’s hard for Pacer fans to watch that snazzy power forward (Blake Griffin) leaving the store in another team’s shopping basket, just as it was hard last summer when we couldn’t take home that really cool point guard (Derrick Rose). It’s hard for Pacer fans to watch their former nemesis (Detroit) go shopping with daddy’s Gold Card. It’s hard to watch that car they have come to like (Jarrett Jack) be replaced by a cheaper one with more miles (Watson).

It’s hard to get excited about adding a collection of players who scream “serviceable” when “difference-maker” is the most ardent desire. But, again, Pacer fans can find solace in the words of founding father Benjamin Franklin: “He that can have patience, can have what he will.”

Learning to Live “In Between

In my 43 years of stumbling through life, I’ve come to the conclusion that “in between” is without question the crappiest place to be.  That is where the Pacers and their fans find themselves. They are in between the bad and the good. In between the despair and the hope. In between the fall and the rise.

The problem with “in between” is the uncertainty. It’s the feeling that you could go either way. Doubt grows, first making you antsy, then panicky.

Now, don’t mistake my intentions here. I am not saying “Be patient. Everything will be OK.”  I have no idea whether everything will be OK. I am simply saying that remaining patient will be crucial for everyone as the Pacers try to get from here to there.

In the meantime, Bird and Morway must avoid confusing activity with accomplishment. It could be reasonably argued that the small moves this summer are proof that the front office is doing exactly that, but I would disagree on two counts. First of all, the acquisitions made this summer (Tyler Hansbrough, Dahntay Jones, Earl Watson and Solomon Jones) all bring qualities that were lacking in last year’s squad, primarily in the areas of defense, toughness and athleticism. Given the tenuous position of both their finances and their reputation, the Pacers must continue to put a competitive product on the floor. While none of these players may be difference makers, they may help players like Granger, Rush and Hibbert to be more effective.

Secondly, none of the decisions made this summer will be difficult to “un-make.” Some may question the length of Dahntay Jones’ contract or the size of Earl Watson’s one-year salary. But, as in all assessments, proper perspective is necessary.  To shed some light, I offer the following three financial nuggets:

  1. Only the contracts of Hansbrough and Dahntay Jones extend beyond two years (with the final two years of Hansbrough’s being team options)
  2. Over the next four years, Dahntay Jones will be paid $5 million less than the Pacers will have paid Jamaal Tinsley to not play a single game in three seasons.
  3. The five contracts added this summer (Watson, Jones, Jones, Hansbrough and McRoberts) represent about $27 million in total salary commitments (and that’s including team options). Compare that to the some past decisions that couldn’t be “un-made,” and you’ll see that the price paid to acquire five new players is roughly equal to the Jonathan Bender extension, about $6 million less than the salary burden added in the Murphleavy trade, and about $13 million less than the Tinsley extension.

The moves made by Bird and Morway this summer were designed to address modest, short-term goals without jeopardizing any long-term plans or flexibility. As with all decisions, some will prove wise, and some will prove foolish. But even if they all fail, they won’t cost the franchise as dearly as any one of a half-dozen or more foolish decisions made in the years since the Pacers played in the NBA Finals.

There will be one or two minor deals made yet this summer, the most likely of which will center around the rumored sign-and-trade deal with Boston for Marquis Daniels. It is doubtful, however, that any more acquisitions will cause much more than a ripple in terms of Pacer or NBA news.

A Light at the End of the Tunnel

Patience is crucial for Pacer fans, if for no other reason than to preserve their sanity. It took years to create this quagmire, and it will take years to extricate the team from it. Pacer fans will need to save their energy for next year, when we see the real, foundational moves begin to be made. (Or, at least, I hope will be made.)

There has been a recurring charge over the past few years that Indiana’s leadership, particularly Larry Bird, has the goal of perpetual mediocrity. I’ve always considered this a straw man argument, primarily because I can’t imagine Bird, of all people, embracing mediocrity.

That being said, I think it is valid to be worried that mediocrity may be the final result of Larry Bird’s tenure. Over the past two years, Bird and Morway have demonstrated that they are quite adept at righting the ship, plugging the leaks and navigating the treacherous seas the Pacers blundered into years ago. The bigger question remains whether or not they actually will lead the Pacers back into contention. They have done a wonderful job of bringing in players that the fans can feel good about cheering for, most recently demonstrated by Earl Watson’s charming and engaging performance in his fan chat. This is laudable, but these players will need to be able to win games, too.

Bird and Morway have shown the ability to make sound, conservative decisions when those are appropriate. But do they have a vision? Can they make bold, aggressive moves when the opportunity presents itself? Can they create that opportunity, if it is not forthcoming?

Regrettably, the answers to these questions belong to tomorrow. And tomorrow is not coming today.

So until it does, I leave you with one last quote from The Count of Monte Cristo author Alexandre Dumas Pére: “All human wisdom is summed up in two words: wait and hope.”

patience

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