benji wrote:I like it. The league needs more ballsy moves.
Are the Rockets better off without Tracy McGrady?
From now until April, absolutely.
In the playoffs? Not a chance.
In the regular season, the Rockets can force feed Yao Ming most nights and get away with it. While there are a few teams with the coaching bona fides and personnel to slow the big man some nights, there are too many Memphises and Sacramentos on the schedule for Houston to have too much problem getting Yao the ball, and the Rockets can win most nights with their defense, anyway.
But in the playoffs, when defenses are better and teams can zero in on one opponent, the Rockets look exceedingly vulnerable without T-Mac. They don't have anyone with his ability to rise and shoot over defenders, to create offense where there is nothing happening, to average a neat 28 per postseason game as McGrady did last year.
McGrady's season-ending microfracture surgery leaves the Rockets in a quandary. For now, there's no doubt that a cloud has been lifted from Toyota Center. As I wrote several weeks ago, McGrady's teammates weren't frustrated by him personally; they respect his game and know how much pain he's been in, taking injections and dragging one leg up and down the floor for almost a year. But they were nonetheless getting tired of not knowing when or if he was going to play on a given night, tired of not knowing who would play and who would not as a result, tired of waiting for McGrady to decide whether to play in pain or shut it down for the rest of the season.
(With T-Mac now sidelined six to 12 months, who knows what his future in Houston will be? The Rockets would have had any number of suitors next season for a healthy McGrady in the last year of his contract, with $22 million available to luxury tax-threatened teams potentially coming off their books in time for the summer of 2010. But tax reliever or no, no team will take a flier on McGrady until they see him back on the court and healthy, and the likelihood of that happening before next year's trade deadline is slim.)
Houston now has a clear identity. It knows that Ron Artest will start at the two. It knows that Shane Battier is almost back to full speed after offseason foot surgery. It knows the way to win games is to sic Artest and Battier on the opponent's best perimeter guy, as the Rockets did to near perfection against LeBron James last week, then get Yao 20-30 touches a game on the offensive end.
"They know who's going to play," coach Rick Adelman said. "They know what the rotation's going to be."
Artest came off the bench while McGrady started. He didn't complain. Mostly. But it's probably better for Houston that that's no longer an issue as the regular season winds down.
"Obviously, I've been a starter since I've been in the NBA," Artest said. "I could be a starter on any team. You put LeBron and Kobe on the same team, I would make the argument that I should start."
Artest's energy can take a team in multiple directions, but when he's channeled and focused, he still is an opponent-wrecking presence. Against Cleveland, Artest used his 260 pounds effectively against James's 270; he didn't try to muscle James around, a sure invitation to three quick first-half fouls; he became more of a wall, absorbing James's contact without giving ground, his still-excellent footwork keeping him squared up and not reaching. Twice, he turned James into Battier, who drew two charges.
That's great for now. But in the playoffs, who'll get that key bucket?
GM Daryl Morey believes in second-year point guard Aaron Brooks, as evidenced by the Rockets' trading starting point Rafer Alston to Orlando in a three-team deal with Memphis that brought Kyle Lowry from the Grizzlies. Brooks and Lowry have ridiculous quickness, with the ability to break down defenses, get to the rim and kick the ball out to shooters. And Brooks is a better perimeter shooter than Skip.
But Brooks and Lowry are both small, and they're both susceptible to pounding the ball too much. At the end of the first half against Cleveland, Brooks dribbled, and dribbled, and dribbled, as the clock ran out without the Rockets getting off a quality shot -- drawing an on-court rebuke from Batier.
As ever, Yao puts adjusting to a new point guard on his big shoulders, even though Brooks has a penchant for entry passes on the bounce, something a 7-foot-6 fella shouldn't have to deal with.
"Aaron's been on this team two years already," Yao said. "We have a kind of chemistry. Passing the ball, it's about timing, it's about position. I can't just point to them. What do you need to do? I think I just need to catch those balls."
Rolling of late, the Rockets look like they could still become a factor in the Western Conference, as long as Battier and Yao stay healthy. ("At times, he made Dwight Howard look very small," Artest said of Yao. "He made Superman look like Mini-Me.") But what will happen when the temperatures rise and the defenses contract and the refs put their whistles away?
Even a one-legged T-Mac would probably be welcome.
Modifly wrote:You guys haven't realised how valuable McGrady is in the playoffs. No matter how good Wafer's numbers are, he's not capable of doing what T-MAC does in the playoffs yet. Down the stretch, when a game is on the line, can you count on Wafer to take that big shot? It's not that he cant make it, but would it be safer to put the ball in McGrady's hand?
i see nobody remembers the legendary game vs spurs... ye right it was luck...
zanshadow wrote:Yes, I do in some ways think the Rockets is a better team without McGrady at the moment. He clearly was nothing close to superstar caliber player early in the season and he stated that he was healthy. It seemed to me, even healthy McGrady is a mere shadow of his old-self now.
benji wrote:A good team doesn't have a "most important shot in the game."i see nobody remembers the legendary game vs spurs... ye right it was luck...
If it wasn't, why doesn't he do it in every single game?
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