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Kelly Dwyer

Beating the Bobcats

by Jared Wade on February 10, 2011 at 11:26 am · 1 comment

I didn’t see one second of the game last night as I was busy rescuing kittens from trees and helping grandmas carry home their groceries while you just sat there on your couch, selfishly eating nachos and watching basketball. Really altruistic guy you are. Way to go, jerk.

But a bunch of actually smart people did tune in to watch Indy hold on to beat Charlotte. Here’s what Kelly Dwyer had to say, which I thought was pretty eloquent. It’s not so much about the game as the team under new coach Frank Vogel.

Lots of running and confidence and pell-mell ball from the Pacers on Wednesday, but they also run good plays, and are paying more attention to detail now that they, well, want to. And while that’s not fair to former coach Jim O’Brien, it still is his fault. Even if it’s the players’ fault, if that makes sense.

Well put, KD.

As for the game, again, I have nothing to add. But The Basketball Jones did highlight Stephen Jackson’s final shot. They ask “Did Darren Collison Foul Stephen Jackson?”

Well … obviously he did. It’s really not a debate. Good for the Pacers that they didn’t call it, but that’s a fairly foolish challenge by Darren. Give credit to Cpt. Jack for forcing the controversy, but at some point you just need to let the guy throw a heave at the rim and hope for the best. Throw up a hand, sure, but your defense really isn’t going to have a lot of effect on a buzzer-beating prayer.

Check the play below. Also of note is DC’s reaction.

“I didn’t feel like I fouled him,” Collison said. “I made a play and whatever happened, happened. I’m not answering that type of question because I hate lying.”

Collison would be a good politician.

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Like Raymond, Everybody Loves the Pacers

by Jared Wade on November 29, 2010 at 4:44 pm · 4 comments

Even if it is to be expected after the Pacers big win last night, this is pretty weird: everyone is talking about Indiana basketball. And there is nary a one who isn’t singing its praises.

Sebastian Pruiti of NBA Playbook wrote a wonderful break down of Indy’s final bucket last night. We pick it up midway through with Pruiti discussing Roy Hibbert’s decision to slip the screen. (There is video and telestrator work if you click through.)

Hibbert sees what is going on and just forgets about setting the screen and runs straight to the rim.  This is fantastic awareness by Hibbert, he sees nobody is responsible for him and just tries to get to an open space.

Pau Gasol is a little late in noticing Hibbert’s cut to the rim, and he is trailing behind the play.  The Pacers’ terrific floor balance also plays a role here since the Pacers are so spread out that it puts the Lakers in a tough position.  Stay with your man or help out.

Both Kobe and Odom decide to stay with their men (Rush & Posey) and not help defend Hibbert.  This allows Hibbert to get an easy dunk on Gasol.

Dexter Fishmore is upset with how his Lakers played last night but concedes that, last night anyway, the Pacers were simply the better team, especially on the defensive end.

Indiana earned this W. They competed with hustle and smarts. They defended extremely well and with impressive discipline. The Lakers managed only a point per possession, their worst output of the year, and it felt like every point they scored was an uphill struggle. If you watched the game, how many Laker baskets do you remember that resulted from Pacer defensive breakdowns? For me, the answer is zero. These guys stuck to their assignments, stayed in front of their men, rotated when necessary and challenged seemingly every shot.

Kelly Dwyer of Ball Don’t Lie knows the Pacers are good — but how good?

I’m here to tell you that Indiana’s 8-7 record is a mirage.

Because they’re actually better than 8-7.

I don’t know how much better, because properly finishing close games still has some value in this league, but this team’s point differential is eighth in the NBA, ahead of teams in Utah, Chicago, Oklahoma City, Phoenix, Portland, Denver, and Atlanta. And point differential, not win/loss records, has long been the most telling statistic when it comes to ranking teams. You might not like the idea of the Pacers playing as this league’s eighth-best team over the first five weeks of the season, but points are points.

ESPN’s J.A. Adande got Roy to talk about how he improved this offseason.

He’s noticeably leaner and much more effective, thanks to a summer in which, “I watched every calorie I ate, I did MMA trainer, pumped my knees and everything like that,” Hibbert said. “I cut down from 14 percent body fat to 8. I’m at 250 [pounds] right now. I started out at 275. I just feel like I’m moving better and I’m not a big stiff.”

Darius Soriano of Forum Blue and Gold was thoroughly impressed by Roy last night.

it all started with Hibbert.  The Pacers run an offense that takes a lot of action from UCLA’s classic high post sets while also incorporating principles of the Flex and the Princeton offense.  They run a lot of motion, screens, and back cuts and Hibbert does a lot of initiating from the high post where he picks out cutters or takes his own (much improved) jumper from about 18 feet.  And when he wasn’t operating from the high post, he was doing damage from the low block by hitting his jump hook from both the right block and the from the middle with relative ease.  When Hibbert didn’t have the ball in his hands he was setting good screens to free up his mates for dribble penetration or curls into open space where they could get up good shots.  It’s easy to see why he’s the early leading candidate for most improved player as he’s taken on a heavy burden for his team and really stepped up in a variety of areas to improve them on both sides of the floor.

Mike Prada agrees with me — and Tom Lewis of Indy Cornrows — that the victory was more about the Pacers playing well than simply the Lakers having an off night.

The operative question to come out of last night’s surprising 95-92 Indiana Pacers victory over the Los Angeles Lakers is this: did Indiana take the game away from the Lakers, or did Los Angeles give it away with poor play.

Naturally, it depends on your perspective. For my money, it looked like the former. The Lakers certainly could and should have played better, but I think their poor play occurred in large part due to Indiana’s defensive intensity and offensive execution.

Mike Wells is starting to think this team is playoff-bound.

I heard from several people after the Pacers beat the Heat in Miami last week.

“I need to see them do it more once for me to start believing in them,” one person said. “Besides, the Heat aren’t as good as people think.”

I think it’s about time that this person and whoever else doesn’t believe in the Pacers to change their tune.

Hey, I’m the same person who said they would have a difficult time making the playoffs.

The Pacers continue to gradually change my thought about their playoff chances as each game passes (I still say they have to stay relatively healthy).

And, oh yeah — Wells is also reporting that one other guy you might have heard of thinks the Pacers are pretty good, too.

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Roy Hibbert Learned How to Pass

by Jared Wade on November 1, 2010 at 11:52 am · 1 comment

First thing’s first: sweet “Hibbert is center of attention for Pacers” headline, Indy Star. Hard to believe our nation’s newspaper industry is going bankrupt when you see things like this.

Second thing’s second: Coach Jim O’Brien recently reaffirmed his commitment to running Indiana’s offense through Roy in the post and is encouraged by how well the big fella has been finding the open man so far this year — something best illustrated by the fact that Hibbert has led the team in assists the past two games (with 6 vs. Charlotte and 5 vs. Philly).

“I’ve repeatedly said we’re going to play through Roy and that’s because he’s a unique big man,” O’Brien said. “He’s effective in the low post. He can spot up and shoot and he’s also a terrific passer and willing passer. Our guys know that.

“When you have a big guy who is going to have his hands on the ball a lot, you know if your guy turns his head, cut to the basket and he’ll get you the basketball. That’s a great weapon.”

Many of us expected to see this. But to see it so fast is indeed a fantastic sight. When Kelly Dwyer of Ball Don’t Lie fame was writing about Roy this offseason, he told us that we shouldn’t “be surprised if Roy comes out of nowhere in 2010-11 to act as one of the better passing big men in the NBA,” noting Hibbert’s “growing ease with the high post.”

Here’s what I wrote as a response, suggesting that Roy’s natural passing evolution along with Bill Walton’s tutledge would likely do wonders to make that “growing ease” grow even faster.

Going back to Dwyer’s comments from earlier, he certainly does have a “growing ease with the high post.” At the beginning of last season, he was at times comically poor, holding … holding … holding the ball with his back to the hoop and just waiting for someone to come save him by taking a dribble hand-off. A dribble hand-off he would execute clumsily.

But by the end of the year, he was turning, facing and hitting cutters at times. No, the awkwardness never escaped him entirely. And, yes, the low block is where most Pacers fans should want to see him firmly planted most of the time. But there may be no big man on the planet more qualified to help Roy get comfortable holding the ball when he isn’t immediately trying to score than Mr. Sir Bill Walton himself.

The Pacers have only played three games thus far, so let’s not start celebrating and presuming that Hibbert will maintain his torrid 4.7 assist-per-game average. But it certainly looks like he has fully turned the corner to the degree that opposing coaches will start thinking twice about running a double team at big Roy.

Now all they need is more, better cutters to find open space.

Lastly, in related news, Tom Lewis of Indy Cornrows offers some insightful commentary on another positive advancement in Roy’s career: leadership. And while this is great for both Hibbert and the team, Tom says, it is particularly helpful for Danny Granger. Read in full.

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dr-hibbert1

Trey Kerbz and Kelly Dwyer aren’t really telling us anything us Pacer followers don’t know, but there were a notable two Roy Hibbert mentions today on the co-#1 NBA blog out there (along with TrueHoop, naturally). So I figured we could talk about that since it’s boring old August and all.

Roy first appeared in the mid-tier of NBA centers on Dwyer’s “Ranking the Centers 30-1″ list. Specifically, Hibbert comes in almost dead center at #16.

Says Kelly:

16. Roy Hibbert, Indiana Pacers (last year: unranked)

Hibbert has had his growing pains, for sure. From fouling too much in his rookie year to serving as Pacer coach Jim O’Brien’s go-to screaming post in his second. But the Georgetown product has significant skills in the pivot, and don’t be surprised if Roy comes out of nowhere in 2010-11 to act as one of the better passing big men in the NBA. His growing ease with the high post, combined with his already potent low-post play gives Indiana a real up-and-comer.

Like I said, nothing here Pacer fans don’t know. And while I’m sure some Indy backers will put up a stink that Roy is ranked behind Anderson Varejao and Marcus Camby (and perhaps Okafor, too), there is a reasonable argument to be made either way.

The second mention was an Ol’ Yertdawgs joint about Roy Hibbert working with Bill Walton this summer. Again, we’ve known this for quite some time (although I don’t think we actually have mentioned it around these parts yet … mainly cause Tim Donahue is really lazy). And, of course, the actual reporting comes from Mike Wells, who told us about how Roy’s “eyes lit up like a 5-year-old on Christmas morning” when Larry Bird told him he could have his choice of working out this Summer with any of Walton, Kevin McHale or Bill Russell, the proud owners of a combined 16 championship rings if my math is correct. (I’m almost positive it is 2 + 3 + 11 … but whenever I do math in my head it sort of goes like this, so you should probably check my work.)

Now, I’m not sure if the decision was actually up to Hibbert (although Larry has a lot of pull with all three of those Hall of Famers so perhaps it was), but I probably would have also opted to learn from Bill if I was Roy.

For a few reasons.

First, none of these three legends are exactly spry anymore, but Russell is 76-years-old and probably hasn’t actually done a post move in a decade. So his teaching would likely be limited to just sage wisdom. That’s not a bad thing when we’re talking about a 6’9, NBA-version of Yoda who knows more about defense than General Patton, but, at this point in his development, Roy mostly requires help with his footwork, which has been really coming along on its own over the past 24 months.

Given that, McHale might seem the best choice. Along with Hakeem and Duncan, Kevin has the best low block moves of any player to grace the league in my lifetime. But his combination of quickness, deception and gorilla-dragging-his-knuckles-on-the-ground arm length make replicating anything he was able to do nearly impossible. Hibbert trying to learn post moves from McHale would be like an average Major League pitcher trying to learn how to throw like Randy Johnson from Randy Johnson. “Oh … So I see … I should just be 6’10, left-handed and hurl a 100 mph four-seamer that drops six inches while making the hitter think he is about to die from head trauma? OK … I’ll get right on that.”

Thus, Walton was the best fit. Sticking to that past paragraph metaphor, Roy learning from Big Red is like a normal Major League pitcher learning from Greg Maddux. The skill set seems, at least on paper, reasonably translatable.

Both are very, very tall. Both have touch around the hoop. And while even mentioning Roy in Walton’s class when it comes to big man passers is laughable, Hibbert is certainly above average in that regard.

Going back to Dwyer’s comments from earlier, he certainly does have a “growing ease with the high post.” At the beginning of last season, he was at times comically poor, holding … holding … holding the ball with his back to the hoop and just waiting for someone to come save him by taking a dribble hand-off. A dribble hand-off he would execute clumsily.

But by the end of the year, he was turning, facing and hitting cutters at times. No, the awkwardness never escaped him entirely. And, yes, the low block is where most Pacers fans should want to see him firmly planted most of the time. But there may be no big man on the planet more qualified to help Roy get comfortable holding the ball when he isn’t immediately trying to score than Mr. Sir Bill Walton himself.

Meanwhile, Bill was a master of the outlet pass, something that will come in handy in an high-pace offense on the few occasions Roy actually grabs a defensive rebound. Speaking of, Bill can help him with that, too. And, yeah, did I mention that Walton is a genius on the low block, too? Well, he is. Both hands. Hook shots off one or two feet. The works.

All and all, Roy can’t go wrong learning from Walton.

Trey sums it up well:

Yeah, there’s probably no better feeling than having Bill Walton hyperbolizing about how great you are at basketball. It’d be like living in a dream world of magic. Heck, I’d buy a 12-second Walton-ism for $50 if he offered such a service.

Who knows how much this is going to help Roy Hibbert, but if he learns even three defensive tricks from Walton, that’s good news for the Pacers. And, of course, it’s good news for Hibbert because, well, he got to hang out with Bill Walton all summer.

Honestly, the best part of this story, really, is just that Walton is up and about and even physically capable of helping Roy out. Not long ago, Bill was dealing with perhaps his most painful —at least emotionally — injury in a life full of way too many. His spinal pain got so bad that, according to Walton himself, he almost didn’t want to go on living.

“It got to the point where my life wasn’t worth living. I was standing on the edge of the bridge, figuring it was better to jump than to go back to where I was.

“You can’t understand until you’ve been where I’ve been.”

So, yeah, hopefully Roy has gotten a lot out of working with Bill this Summer.

But I have a feeling that one of the best ambassadors this sport has ever had might actually be the one enjoying it even more. Glad to see you back on your feet, Bill.

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