Dumpy
Yi-ha!!
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- Aug 1, 2007
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The Nets have won three of four since Devin Harris has returned from his injury--but it is no coincidence that they have also won three of four since Brook has replaced the injured Josh Boone in the starting lineup. As a starter, Brook is averaging:
31:23 minutes per game
14.8 PPG
59.1% FG%
70% FT%
8.8 rebounds per game, including 4.0 offensive rebounds
2.0 blocks per game
Just 0.8 turnovers per game
4.0 fouls per game
Those are pretty incredible numbers.
The trio of Devin Harris-Vince Carter-Brook Lopez looks to be a dynamic foundation.
Moreover, the primary bench guys of Keyon Dooling, Jarvis Hayes, and Ryan Anderson have been great. Ryan is 13-21 in those four games, 9-11 on free throws, and 16 rebounds with just one TO. Jarvis Hayes has scored in double figures in four of his last six games, and has had great energy. Despite his mediocre game yesterday, Dooling has been good: He had six straight games scoring in double figures and since November 8 has hit 29 of 55 shots (53%).
Let's assume that the change has happened and that Josh Boone will start to come off the bench, where he'll be no worse than a league-average backup center (and possibly a little better).
This is a solid freaking team. That reserve group is SOLID . . . and I haven't included Eddie Najera, who will contribute at some point, CDR, Sean Williams, or even Stro.
But wait . . . there are two guys I haven't mentioned. The starting SF and the starting PF.
If the Nets could get ANYTHING out of those guys worth writing about, this would be an above-average team.
But that's it: two roster spots will make this team a playoff team.
Simmons is actually playing a bit better. Over his last six games, he is shooting 13-for-30--that's 43%--and that includes six-for-17 from behind the arc (35%), so on two-pointers he is actually shooting better than 50%. Also note that he is only taking five shots a game, which is perfect for the fourth or fifth option. Over his last four games, he has 17 rebounds, and just two turnovers. I'd like to see him hit 40% of his three-pointers, but really, that would mean just hitting one more of his attempts over the past four games; not a big difference. Defensively, he had Bargnani and LeBron the last two games, so maybe it isn't too fair to judge him on those games. Over the previous few games, the opposing SFs weren't exactly lighting it up. The ones that scored 15+ points did so on poor shooting percentages (Marvin Williams, Danny Granger). I'd really love to upgrade this spot by dangling Sean, but I'm no longer so convinced that the starting SF is what is holding the team back right now.
Then there is Yi, who has been horrible. The guy hit 37% of his shots yesterday--and his shooting percentage went UP. He has missed 30 of his last 43 shots: that's a 30.2% shooting percentage. he commits a buttload of fouls and turnovers. He has committed more turnovers than Dooling in roughly the same number of minutes!
Anyway, I guess the point of all this is that at this point, if Yi improves, the Nets will just roll. I'm not advocating giving up on him . . . but if he was to suddenly blossom into Bargnani, this team would really be fascinating.
31:23 minutes per game
14.8 PPG
59.1% FG%
70% FT%
8.8 rebounds per game, including 4.0 offensive rebounds
2.0 blocks per game
Just 0.8 turnovers per game
4.0 fouls per game
Those are pretty incredible numbers.
The trio of Devin Harris-Vince Carter-Brook Lopez looks to be a dynamic foundation.
Moreover, the primary bench guys of Keyon Dooling, Jarvis Hayes, and Ryan Anderson have been great. Ryan is 13-21 in those four games, 9-11 on free throws, and 16 rebounds with just one TO. Jarvis Hayes has scored in double figures in four of his last six games, and has had great energy. Despite his mediocre game yesterday, Dooling has been good: He had six straight games scoring in double figures and since November 8 has hit 29 of 55 shots (53%).
Let's assume that the change has happened and that Josh Boone will start to come off the bench, where he'll be no worse than a league-average backup center (and possibly a little better).
This is a solid freaking team. That reserve group is SOLID . . . and I haven't included Eddie Najera, who will contribute at some point, CDR, Sean Williams, or even Stro.
But wait . . . there are two guys I haven't mentioned. The starting SF and the starting PF.
If the Nets could get ANYTHING out of those guys worth writing about, this would be an above-average team.
But that's it: two roster spots will make this team a playoff team.
Simmons is actually playing a bit better. Over his last six games, he is shooting 13-for-30--that's 43%--and that includes six-for-17 from behind the arc (35%), so on two-pointers he is actually shooting better than 50%. Also note that he is only taking five shots a game, which is perfect for the fourth or fifth option. Over his last four games, he has 17 rebounds, and just two turnovers. I'd like to see him hit 40% of his three-pointers, but really, that would mean just hitting one more of his attempts over the past four games; not a big difference. Defensively, he had Bargnani and LeBron the last two games, so maybe it isn't too fair to judge him on those games. Over the previous few games, the opposing SFs weren't exactly lighting it up. The ones that scored 15+ points did so on poor shooting percentages (Marvin Williams, Danny Granger). I'd really love to upgrade this spot by dangling Sean, but I'm no longer so convinced that the starting SF is what is holding the team back right now.
Then there is Yi, who has been horrible. The guy hit 37% of his shots yesterday--and his shooting percentage went UP. He has missed 30 of his last 43 shots: that's a 30.2% shooting percentage. he commits a buttload of fouls and turnovers. He has committed more turnovers than Dooling in roughly the same number of minutes!
Anyway, I guess the point of all this is that at this point, if Yi improves, the Nets will just roll. I'm not advocating giving up on him . . . but if he was to suddenly blossom into Bargnani, this team would really be fascinating.