Posts Tagged ‘lakers’

Lakers Should Trade for Utah Jazz’s Kirilenko

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

Greg Miller, the Jazz owner, started a blog, conveying his displeasure with the Jazz’s play and desire to improve the team. Many analysts have already observed that the Jazz are underachieving despite paying the luxury tax, which is infuriating to both owner and fan alike.

As Greg Miller stated, trades are difficult. But hardly impossible. One of the difficult contracts to trade is Andrei Kirilenko. It’s no secret the Jazz have been trying to trade Kirilenko for years. He’s had several fallouts with Coach Jerry Sloan over coming off the bench, his minutes, and his role with the team. According to several sources, the Jazz are paying Kirilenko close to 16.5 million this year and 18 the next, making him the highest paid player on the Jazz roster.

Yet his fat contract was given to him for a reason. The multi-talented forward promised to be the poster child of the new, modern NBA player; position-less, versatile, with a diverse set of skills. Throughout his career, Kirilenko showed his potential on defense by being both a lockdown and team defender, using his lanky 6′9″ frame and great instincts, while filling the boxscore, nearly leading the league in both steals and blocks.  And yet, Kirilenko had the versatility to move to power forward and put up his best statistical numbers replacing Karl Malone, in the years when Tim Duncan and Kevin Garnett ruled the Western Conference at that position.  Moreover, it was Kirilenko who took over point guard when Deron Williams was in foul trouble in recent playoffs battles. Forced to spread the floor and becoming a jump shooter, Kirilenko posted 38% 3-point shooting 2 of the past 3 years, again demonstrating his diversity. Kirilenko was one of the league’s elite defenders with an almost unmatched set of skills.  

How did he end up becoming an underachieving sixth man, wildly overpaid, constantly scapegoated? In my opinion? Several factors.

  1. The arrival of Carlos Boozer and Deron Williams. Instead of working much of the offense through Kirilenko, the Jazz became increasingly focused on recreating the Stockon-Malone pick-and-roll with Williams and Boozer.  The Jazz began to surround them with shooters to spread the floor. Since Kirilenko wasn’t a shooter at the time, he began to lose his significance to his team. Kirilenko was awarded such a huge contract based on his status as a franchise player – Boozer and Williams permanently changed that.
  2. Competition at the position.  Guys like Korver, Matt Harpring, and Paul Millsap started to steal Kirilenko’s minutes. These players started to fill in the roles around Williams and Boozer, as three-point specialists, hard-nosed defenders, scrappy post scorers. They simply made more sense in the offense the Jazz were running. Kirilenko was relegated to standing around the perimeter and allowing Milsap or Boozer get to work in the post, waiting for any kick-out passes. He was forced to adjust his game, and in the meantime, other players began to carve out roles and minutes.
  3. Kirilenko’s mentality and personality. Due to the language barrier and Sloan’s style of coaching, Kirilenko never really understood why his role changed. He never had a smooth transition. A year ago, Kirilenko apparently cried, a result of his frustration. Coach Sloan admitted he could have done a better job communicating. Eventually things became better between player and coach, but the team still moved on, centered around Williams and Boozer. Kirilenko lost confidence in his game, because he never really understood what was happening around him; that lack of understanding affected his ability to adjust, which in turn sapped his confidence and transformed him an uncertain, passive player.

Why the Lakers? First of all, the Lakers are one of the few teams that can pay some luxury tax and still rake in a pretty profit. The Lakers were deemed the league’s most valuable franchise and certainly among the most profitable. Moreover, Jerry Buss frequently has reiterated his desire to spend money to win. It just has to be the right type of player. Kirilenko is that type of player, because he’s ideal for the triangle offense; a versatile player for an offense built around interchangeable players. In fact, this was a major reason why Lamar Odom was kept by the Lakers, due to his versatility in the offense, initiating the offense from the perimeter or replacing a post player. However, Kirilenko is more suited to the halfcourt offense than Odom, who is best powering a rebound and leading the break, a fullcourt playmaker. Considering the Lakers have an inconsistent bench, inconsistent defense exposed by the absence of Ron Artest, and lack great playmaking from the “other” guard position, as Fish, Farmar, and Brown are mostly shooters and scorers, Andrei Kirilenko would have a major role in this equal-opportunity offense. Especially because as of late, the Lakers has still shown a tendency to rely too much on Kobe Bryant, who had to average an unhealthy number of minutes, a gaudy PPG, broken bones and strained ligaments, and several game-winners to save the Lakers from embarrassment. 

The Economics: Under the salary cap rules regarding NBA trades, the Lakers and the Jazz could make a trade such as this: Lakers: Jordan Farmar (2m), Sasha Vujacic (5m, 5.5m next), DJ Mbenga (1m), and Adam Morrison (5.3m) Utah: Andrei Kirilenko (16.5m, 17.8m next)

The Lakers declined to extend Farmar and Morrison, making them unrestricted free agents next year – essentially making them expiring contracts. The additional upside for Utah is that Farmar may prove to be a good backup to Deron Williams, and may fit in better in a more conventional guard setting than the Lakers triangle offense. DJ Mbenga and Vujacic are simply contract fillers, and the one downside is that the Jazz eat Vujacic’s contract next year. Financially, the Jazz would save more than 3 mil this year, and more than 12 mil the next year. A caveat: these are numbers for the year; depending on when these players are traded, the actual savings would be prorated. Regardless, the savings are actually double, because the luxury tax penalizes a dollar for dollar tax.

For the Lakers, if Buss is really committed to winning by paying a marginal additional cost (relatively-speaking, of course, it is his millions. But it would be an even bigger waste of money to try to save a few million on a near 100 million investment and fall short of a championship), this would be a sneaky way to solidify a dynasty. Kobe and Pau can play at an elite level until probably their mid to late 30s. Odom and Artest are still relatively young. And Bynum is just beginning to blossom. Kirilenko would elevate this team on both ends of the floor. They lack halfcourt playmaking, which falls squarely on the shoulders of Kobe and Gasol. When Kobe decides to dominate the ball, the Lakers lose all, not just half, of the playmaking because Gasol needs to get the ball to make plays from the post. The team lacks a reliable perimeter playmaker, and Kirilenko could easily fill that spot, considering his height, which allows him to see over defenses and create passing angles into the post, and vision, which is innately remarkable for his size. Moreover, his ballhandling is more than adequate, as shown throughout his career in Utah. On defense, Kirilenko would work perfectly with his help defense and using his length to bother perimeter players. Last season, the Lakers frequently used Trevor Ariza to defend point guards. The Lakers, with Gasol and Bynum, already rank among the top in the NBA in lowest field goal percentage allowed at the rim. The Lakers could have Kirilenko, Kobe, and Artest pressure the perimeter, funnel guards into Pau and Bynum, and have the length to recover, switch, and rotate.

Essentially, Kirilenko would replace Ron Harper, Toni Kukoc, and Scottie Pippen’s roles on the Lakers, players who defined balanced execution in the triangle offense.

Kobe is a Killer; the Lakers, Not So Much, Lose to the Spurs 111-112

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

What a tragic way to squander Kobe’s nearly flawless performance. What a way to lose a chance to gain a psychological edge against the Spurs, who have owned the Lakers on their court.

First of all, let’s not blame the refs. We’ve got bigger fish to fry.

1. Bynum is not reliable.

He got 1 rebound last night against the Rockets, and 3 tonight. Kwame would’ve broken out with pimples if that ever happened to him (Kwame might be the only player in NBA history who sat out a game with a DNP – Acne). Bynum is supposed to be our answer against the Celtics? Please. First he needs to a better rebounder than Smush Parker, who is somewhere in China right now.

Here are some positives: Bynum is more aggressive scoring the ball (yet he’s not always getting good position). Bynum is playing good individual defense (and inconsistent help defense). So even his contributions have some drawbacks.

Bynum is just far from being a consistent, reliable player. 

Some say he’s lost some fire after signing his big contract. Personally, I think he’s not fully recovered from knee surgery. Bynum had some swelling early in the season, and Jermaine O’Neal advised him to be careful (and he should know). Bynum could be playing through some pain, which would explain his reduced explosiveness and lack of energy. It’s a cause for concern. 

2. Gasol is soft.

YES. Soft. Screaming “let’s go” after every time he makes a basket doesn’t make him tough. Growing a tree-chopping beard doesn’t make him tough. Grabbing more than 5 rebounds makes him tough. But that’s the deal with Gasol. Against small frontlines like Golden State and Miami, or even softer opponents like Troy Murphy and the Pacers, Gasol is a beast. Pounding the glass and his chest, the 7′1″ lanky forward seems formidable. Against teams with a little more beef like New Orleans, Portland, Houston, and San Antonio, Gasol is a baby. How many rebounds did he have against the Celtics on Christmas? 3.

As long as we’re playing crappy, small teams in the Finals, we’re golden. Otherwise, don’t be surprised if Gasol disappears when it matters, like he did tonight, with the quietest 21 points in Laker history. His histrionics and facial hair simply highlight his insecurities. He’s soft, and he knows it.

3. Fisher. WTF?


Like Mark Jackson would say, “you’re better than that.” Why would he gamble for a steal on that last play, forcing him to scramble back to Mason, who was able to draw the foul? Then again, Fish has a tendency to foul, and get caught up in sticky situations (see last year in the playoffs when he got away with a foul). Fish just can’t play good, honest defense, which is why he has to get so close to defenders (doesn’t have the length or quickness to do otherwise), gamble & scramble, foul & flop. From now on, that’s what I’ll call Fish: Gamble & Scramble, Foul & Flop.

4. Ariza, aka Gumby.

Watching Ariza trying to play point guard is like watching my parents operate a DVD player. It’s cringe-worthy, frustrating, and at times funny, but more often sad. Ariza has limited ball-handling skills, cannot dribble with both hands, cannot pass, is frequently off-balance and out of control. He made me miss Smush Parker tonight. I said it, yes, I did. Hell, he made me miss Coby Karl tonight. I already missed Von Wafer last night. Where’s Jannero Pargo? 

Still, it’s not his fault. With Farmar and Vujacic out, Ariza did the best he could, which was inadequate, but again, it’s not his fault he had to play out of position. What is his fault, however, is fouling players way beyond the three-point line, such as his boneheaded reach on Hill (isn’t he the rookie?) with less than one second left in the fourth quarter. That would have been the difference in the game, completely isolated idiotic incident.

5. Kobe was brilliant.

My goodness, people can talk about Gasol’s consistency (yeah right) and Bynum’s potential all they want, they’re simply missing the show of a lifetime. Kobe is not just a great player, he’s one of the greatest ever, and it’s a priviledge to watch him in his prime in purple and gold. When Kobe hangs it up and the Lakers end up a crappy version of Portland, people will realize how special Kobe was to our team. The guy is amazing.

It’s funny, everybody knows 4th quarter is Kobe time. Greg Popovich said it during the interview, Jeff Van Gundy said Kobe’s the best in the Final Four (minutes)…and Kobe comes back after a big deficit in the fourth quarter and the Lakers go on a run to take a 3-point lead (before the loonies take over). Kobe might not have the statistics that Lebron, Wade, and Paul are putting up, but that’s largely a combination of his role, the team around him, his maturity, and his age. Kobe isn’t trying to dominate the ball all the time like those previous players. He has spent most of this season getting his teammates involved in the first half, and if they need him, he’ll punch through in the 3rd or 4th. That kills his stats. But when he wants to, as we’ve seen since Christmas against Boston, he can be a one-man wrecking ball. Tonight was a virtuoso performance, combining tough shots with great playmaking. He was Jordan and Pippen combined tonight, unfortunately, he didn’t have the rest of the Bulls who could come through. No Rodman on the boards, no Ron Harper to run the point, no players he could rely on every night to fulfill their roles.

For those who still cling to this notion that Kobe is selfish, take note of Kobe’s consecutive feeds to Josh Powell, who nailed the open jumpers. Or his last second pass, interrupting his jump shot in mid-air, to Odom for the open layup. Kobe just needs players who can fulfill their roles reliably.

The Lakers currently rely on too many young players (Farmar, Bynum, Vujacic) who haven’t really proven themselves in the playoffs, and one-dimensional, major liabilities such as Radmanovic, Walton, and Fisher.

They should look to make some moves before the trade deadline, since we’re hardly running the triangle consistently or effectively. The Lakers are simply being propelled by the greatness of Kobe Bryant and the heady and smooth Pau Gasol, and getting enough, if inconsistent, contributions from the others. This has been good enough for the best record in the league so far, but it’ll hardly guarantee the pressure-cooker of the playoffs, where many regular season win leaders have been eliminated early, such as Phoenix and Dallas, two other high scoring teams.

Get off your ass and Do It, Mitch.