Posts Tagged ‘bulls’

Celtics 83, Bulls 96

Monday, January 18th, 2010

The Chicago Bulls led from start to finish for a much-needed road win over the Boston Celtics, 96-83. Luol Deng finished with 25 points on 8-13 shooting, making up for only nine foul-plagued minutes of ineffectiveness from Derrick Rose in the first half.

Watching Joakim Noah (15 pts, 11 rbds, 4 blks) sends my mind back to the 2007 draft, and one of the big ‘what ifs’ for Mike D’Antoni’s Phoenix Suns. The lottery had already dealt Phoenix its biggest blow, when the Atlanta Hawks (the fourth worst record) drew the third pick and kept their top-three protected pick instead of conveying it to the Suns. However, the Suns still had interest in trading up from #24 and #29 to get among the top prospects.

Phoenix reportedly had a deal in place to acquire the 8th pick from Charlotte in exchange for Kurt Thomas (among other assets) in order to select Joakim Noah. Instead, the Golden State Warriors arrived late with an offer including Jason Richardson, and selected Brandon Wright with the pick. Noah, touted as a #1 pick in the 2006 draft, fell to Chicago at #9 in the 2007 draft. Phoenix selected then sold (a typical Robert Sarver draft night) Rudy Fernandez at #24, but kept Alando Tucker at #29, a player who never cracked the rotation and who was traded for financial reasons in 09-10.

Soon after the draft, the Suns ended up trading Thomas to Seattle, a team committed to rebuilding following the departure of Rashard Lewis to Orlando and the trade of Ray Allen to the Celtics. The salary dump backfired on the Suns when Seattle traded Thomas later in the season to the Spurs, who acquired Thomas to counter the Suns’ acquisition of Shaquille O’Neal. Thomas often guarded O’Neal as the Spurs dispatched the Suns in the first round of the 2008 playoffs.

Now, seeing Noah collect boards at a top-of-the-league rate (12.2 rpg), run the floor and finish the pick and roll (0.495 FG%) and make free throws (0.761 FT%), I wonder just how dynamic a Suns team with Noah at center could have been.

Someone (perhaps me one day) ought to compile a ‘what ifs’ for D’Antoni’s Suns to see where this one would rank.

Jazz 97, Cavs 96

Sundiata Gaines upstages Lebron James’ 4th quarter heroics by hitting his first 3-pointer in the NBA to win the game at the buzzer.

Cavs 85, Bulls 86

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

The Chicago Bulls, in the first game of One HD’s NBA double header, defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers 86-85. The Bulls used a balanced attack to hand the Cavs another loss at Quicken Loans Arena, and further showed that the home court advantage enjoyed by Cleveland last season has diminished this season.

Luol Deng had great outside touch, Brad Miller was reliable in the pick and roll, Kirk Hinrich was pretty around the basket and Derrick Rose continues to regain form. However, it was the play of rookie Taj Gibson that caught my eye. Starting in the place of Tyrus Thomas, Gibson brought energy and touch in the paint. He even tried to dunk on Shaquille O’Neal, but Shaq was bailed out on a no-call ‘clean’ block that sent Gibson to the floor.

There are only 450 guys who get a shot at playing in the NBA each season, and we’ve heard about Griffin, Evans and other high draft picks. But it is terrific to see a young guy taking his opportunity with both hands. Taj Gibson must be enjoying life as a Chicago Bull.

Jazz 113, Spurs 99

The Utah Jazz, behind Carlos Boozer’s first strong game of the season, handed the rested San Antonio Spurs a 113-99 loss in the second game of One HD’s NBA double-header. The win improved the Jazz’ record to 2-3 and was an important step toward rebuilding Boozer’s relationship with the Utah fans. An up-and-down offseason of comments and controversies surrounding Boozer’s contract and future with the organisation will be more easily forgiven every night that Boozer puts up 25-15.

Yet another unheralded rookie shared the spotlight with Carlos Boozer. Wes Matthews, undrafted out of Marquette, looked in great early season touch with quick drives and a nice shooting touch. Like Taj Gibson, Matthews is benefiting from low expectations, low-key defence and young energy. When opposing teams start taking these rookies a little more seriously, their real NBA potential will be tested.

Bulls 92, Spurs 85

Saturday, October 31st, 2009

The San Antonio Spurs, after blowing out the Hornets in their season opener, surrendered during the second half in a 92-85 loss to the Chicago Bulls. The veteran lineup kept pace with the young Bulls in an entertaining first half, but faded badly as the game wore on.

Duncan KneeWatching the game on One HD, Tim Duncan looked great for the Spurs. I could watch his mid-range bank shots all day. Again and again, he took advantage of Joakim Noah’s refusal to body up, and kiss after kiss, the shots fell. Brad Miller had more success with a more physical defense, but Duncan had a great shooting rhythm. The question is, how much does Duncan have left?

TNT gave us a great shot of the brace that Duncan is wearing on his left knee. It looks strong enough to withstand a bump from a small car. But can it hold Duncan together for the long season and into the play offs?

The Spurs will only go as far as Tim Duncan and his left knee will take them.

To follow all the action of the 2009-10 NBA Season, download NBA Scoreboard 2010 today.