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Joakim Noah

Indiana Pacers @ Chicago Bulls
Monday, December 13, 2010
8:00 pm EST
United Center
Chicago, Illinois

In the preseason, not many people thought that Chicago’s only real threat to winning the Central Division would be the Pacers. But with the Bucks looking like they have taken a step backwards this season and the Cavs and Pistons both just looking like really bad teams, that’s how it looks on December 13.

Furthermore, when you look at the most important teams statistics (see chart below), the Pacers and Bulls appear to be performing almost identically. In point differential, the Pacers rank 11th in the NBA while the Bulls are 10th. Offensively, the Pacers rank 19th while the Bulls are 20th. Defensively, the Pacers are 8th and have the leagues 2nd best eFG% against and the Bulls are 7th with the 5th best eFG% against.

Just like Jim O’Brien is doing in Conseco, new Chicago coach Tom Thibodeau, formerly the architect of the Celtics championship defense, has these guys playing superb defense.

It’s not as even as the numerical picture paints, however.

Chicago was forced to play its first 15 games without marquee offseason acquisition Carlos Boozer. The team has long lacked a consistent interior scorer and that’s what the former Jazz power forward does best. He hasn’t been his old self thus far since returning and playing his way into the system, but the impact has been apparent, with the Bulls having won five straight coming into tonight’s game.

But this team was pretty good even without Booz. Now that he is back, Mark Stein has put the Bulls fourth in his week-seven power rankings based largely on one eye-opening piece of information about how they’ve played against the West.

The Bulls have 11 wins against Western Conference foes, and no other team in the East has more than six. D-Rose is shooting 41.6 percent on 3-pointers, and Boozer is back. Safe bet: Chicago is in the top 10 to stay.

Yeah .. That Derrick Rose kid is pretty good. With averages of 25.1 ppg (on 46.6% shooting), 8.1 apg and 4.3 rpg, Maurice Brooks has the point guard listed third on his current MVP ballot. The fact that Darren Collison recently questioned the Pacers point guard rotation highlights just how much this match-up leans in Chicago’s favor.

Throw in the fact that Joakim Noah is an excellent defender and the league’s third best rebounder and we’re talking about a team on the cusp of the NBA elite. They might only be 14-8, but they are very good and getting better. (Kobe’s not passing the torch just yet, however.)

Hopefully for the Pacers, they can catch them on a night where they still look like they haven’t put it all together yet in what will be the first of four meetings between the squads this season. The fact that Danny Granger is questionable to go with an ankle sprain (last I heard anyway) won’t help.

Pacers vs Bulls By the Numbers

Pacers vs Magic
43-29 (3rd) Record (Conf Rank) 37-24 (6th)
23-10 (Home) Home / Road Records 16-17(Road)
8-2 Last 10 Games 4-6
15-5 Last 20 Games 8-12
+3.30 (7th) Point Differential (Rank) +0.79 (15th)
106.7 (7th) Offensive Rating (Rank) 105.0 (15th)
47.4 (23rd) eFG% (Rank) 50.6% (4th)
103.1 (9th) Defensive Rating (Rank) 104.1 (12th)
47.6% (7th) Opponent's eFG% (Rank) 48.8% (14th)
90.7 (19th) Pace (Rank) 89.0 (29th)

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Roy Hibbert Is the NBA’s 5th Best Center

by Jared Wade on December 11, 2010 at 3:16 pm · 0 comments

According to Scott Carefoot’s latest positional rankings over on The Basketball Jones, Roy Hibbert is now the fifth best center in the league.

5. (7.) Roy Hibbert, Indiana Pacers — 2010-11 stats: 20 GP, 29.8 MPG, 15.4 PPG, 3.1 APG, 8.5 RPG, 0.4 SPG, 1.9 BPG, .512 FG%, .000 3P%, .750 FT%, 20.4 PER

Hibbert says that his nickname at Georgetown was BMW — meaning “‘Body Made Wrong.” He dropped 30 pounds this off-season, practiced his passing out of the post with Bill Walton and trained with MMA fighters. Now you could call him “VW” because he’s playing Very Well. His 3.1 assists per game trails only Al Horford among NBA centers, but Pacers coach Jim O’Brien says, “He’ll average, I believe within a year or two, seven assists a game.”

The most common question I get about the team is whether or not Roy Hibbert will be an All-Star this year. It’s certainly a possibility. The East starting will obviously be Dwight Howard and there are rarely more than two centers selected, however.

That means that one of Al Horford (who TBJ ranked fourth), Joakim Noah (sixth) and Andrew Bogut (seventh) will not be invited to All-Star Weekend. If Amar’e Stoudemire is voted in as a center (third), then it’s possible none of these guys makes it.

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Game #30 Preview: 2 Teams, 1 Cup

by Jared Wade on December 29, 2009 at 5:09 pm · 0 comments

Indiana Pacers @ Chicago Bulls
Tuesday, December 29
8:00 PM EST
United Center
Chicago, Illinois

Pacers @ Bulls
9-20 (13th) Overall Record 11-17 (9th)
3-12 Home / Road Records 9-6
3-7 Record Last 10 Games 4-6
Lost 6 Current Streak Won 1
5-5 Last 10 Head-to-Head 5-5
-5.34 (27th) Avg Scoring Margin -6.68 (28th)
96.7 (23rd) Points Per Game 91.0 (29th)
99.8 (26th) Offensive Rating 98.3 (29th)
43.0% (28th) FG% 42.8% (29th)
46.9% (26th) eFG% 44.9% (29th)
102.0 (22nd) Opponent's PPG 97.7 (14th)
105.3 (12th) Defensive Rating 105.5 (15th)
44.7 (11th) Opponent's FG% 44.6% (9th)
48.0% (5th) Opponent's eFG% 48.7% (13th)
96.9 (2nd) Pace 91.9 (23rd)

Off Rating: pts / 100 possessions Def Rating: pts allowed / 100 possessions
eFG%: FG% accounting for 3PA being worth more Pace: avg possessions per game

When the two worst shooting teams in the entire league who aren’t from New Jersey square off, it’s probably going to be pretty ugly. And despite our constant harping around here. I’m still not sure that many Pacer fans realize the depths to which this offense has fallen.

As has been the case all year long, the defense is middle of the road, but the team just can’t score with enough regularity to get wins. Somewhat fortunately, the Bulls are pretty much the same team in that regard. Very unfortunately, that means we’re probably going to see a ton of missed shots this evening and shooting percentages hovering around 40%.

Or not. Who knows? Weird things happen every day in the NBA and season trends can seem pointless on any given night.

Still, here are a few extra info tidbits I dug up earlier today when I was previewing tonight’s game for Hardwood Paroxysm. (You can see my quick previews of all the Association’s games tonight if you follow the link).

Indiana Pacers @ Chicago Bulls – 8:00 pm EST

A good game to watch if you want to see some really good defense a ton of missed open jumpers. The Bulls, for example, shoot an embarrassing 36.2% on shots taken between 16-23 feet (which ranks them 27th best in the league from that location) yet they opt to lead the league in attempts with 29.8 FGAs between 16-23 feet per night. (For perspective, only two other teams take more than 25 attempts per game from that range. And Orlando only takes 13.2 per from this notoriously inefficient distance.). The Pacers, on the other hand, like to miss from further out. They attempt 20.8 three-pointers per outing despite only shooing 31.8% from there as a team and only having one healthy member of the rotation (Troy Murphy) shooting above 34% from behind the arc. I suppose none of this should come as a surprise since these two teams rank 28th and 29th in the NBA in FG% (Indy is 43.0% while Chi-Town shoots 42.8%), but these really are some staggering numbers. Get amped for this one, sports fans.

So the poor shooting thing is definitely the macro theme for both teams tonight.

For some more Bulls-specific stuff, read on.

Five Other Things

(1) Vinny Del Negro is by most accounts a walking lame duck right now. Chris Broussard of ESPN is reporting him as already fired, with the Bulls simply waiting on a replacement. Barring a major turnaround in the very, very near future, Vinny of the Black will likely be shown the door by early 2010 at the latest. I’m not a professional basketball player, so I’m not sure how all this effects the team precisely, but it must have some impact.

(2) Tyrus Thomas will come off the bench tonight for his second game since breaking his arm earlier this year. He scored an impressive 21 points on 10/17 shooting to go along with 9 boards in his first game in nearly two months against the Hornets on Sunday.

(3) With 10.9 ppg, 12.4 rpg and 1.9 bpg so far this season, Joakim Noah has gotten himself on the radar for this year’s Most Improved Player award. He still needs to work on shooting better (only 47.7% this season, which is down from last year’s 55.7%), but a lot of his inaccuracy can probably be attributed to the overall futility of Chicago’s offense as a whole. He’s more of a finisher by trade and since the whole system is broken, he isn’t getting as many easy looks as he should be. Still, he will be a good guy for Pacers fans to focus on tonight, as he does a lot of the things that Larry Bird and company are hoping Tyler Hansbrough can become adept at, albeit in a smaller frame and, hopefully, with a little more scoring ability.

(4) Derrick Rose hasn’t met the high expectations many people (including me) had for him this season. Again, some of this is just the Bulls offense being terrible, but seeing as he is the point guard and all, obviously a lot of that is on him. And even if that’s not fair, it comes with position regardless. Some of his struggles can be attributed to an early season ankle injury. He has also seemed a little hesitant to become the team’s primary scorer at times, instead distributing. But he is calling his number a lot more of late to the tune of 20.6 FGAs per game in his last 10 outings. He is still shooting just 45.1% during this stretch, but if he gets hot (or more likely, he drives by Indy’s guards at a high rate and finishes at the hoop) he’s liable to score 24 or more tonight — just like he has in 3 of Chicago’s last four games.

(5) Former Pacer Brad Miller has only made 1 shot in his last 5 games despite playing a around 17 mpg during what has easily been he worst year of his career. Somehow the 7-footer is shooting 39.7% for the season, which, for perspective, is almost as bad as Brandon Rush’s 38.6%.

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