Tag Archives: Andre Iguodala

Pistons Play Only Six in Loss After Apparent Player Protest

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PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The 76ers finally got even.

Elton Brand had 20 points and 17 rebounds, and the hard-charging Philadelphia 76ers reached .500 for the first time this season in a 110-94 victory over the Detroit Pistons on Friday night.

Led by a resurgent Brand, the Sixers have rebounded from a 3-13 start to get to 29-29. Coach Doug Collins had already in his first season led the Sixers to more wins than they had a year ago. The Sixers have won 12 of 16 and are in seventh place in the Eastern Conference — with the sixth-place Knicks in sight.

“This is a great night for our team and our fans,” Collins said.

It was a clunker of a day for the Pistons.

Detroit used six players in the latest embarrassment for the fallen franchise. Several Pistons skipped at least part of Friday’s shootaround and sat out their third straight loss.

Tayshaun Prince, Tracy McGrady, Ben Wallace and Rodney Stuckey did not start. Coach John Kuester wasn’t around for the finish — he was ejected in the second quarter after he was whistled for two quick technical fouls arguing a non-call.

 

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NBA Power Rankings: Heat Still Hot

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Surprise! The red-hot Miami Heat are still streaking, putting some distance between themselves and the rest of the top-heavy Eastern Conference while challenging the San Antonio Spurs for the best record in the NBA. In fact, Miami is the only constant atop our rankings, which otherwise feature a completely shuffled top 10.

Can the Heat — who have posted a 22-1 record since Nov. 27 — keep it up? Or will injuries slow LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and company like they have the Boston Celtics, Dallas Mavericks and Spurs? Only time will tell. But for now, there’s no team better.

 

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The Works: Knicks Should Check Out Andre Iguodala

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Today in The Works: how front offices fake progress; the meaning of Gil’s new number; and looking back at Flea, NBA poet. But first, why someone other than Melo or Paul might be the best fit for the Knicks.

Let The Right One In

The other day, Eric Freeman wrote that the Knicks needed to go after Carmelo Anthony, not Chris Paul. His reasoning: Raymond Felton is good enough, the Knicks are crazy thin and upgrading is less important than adding another important piece. That’s not to downplay Paul’s talents, or suggest the he’s even available. Certainly, though, New York’s not quite there yet, and will be looking to make a move sooner rather than later before James Dolan decides he needs to strangle a giant squid at the beginning of each game and sends Amar’e Stoudemire off to the Pacific in search of one. He’s paying him all that money, right? It’s the least Amar’e can do!

The question, though, is whether Melo would actually fit in the current Knicks offense. The D’Antoni system, which stresses spacing and ball movement as much as up-tempo play, has allowed Felton to come into his own. It’s also ideally suited to a predatory scorer like Stoudemire, who plays around the basket with the agility and adaptability of a wing. At Syracuse, Melo was this kind of transparent force; as a pro, his economy, and ability to create from anywhere, is what sets him apart from other pure scorers. And yet, by D’Antoni standards, he is a ball-stopper (note: he has worked with Mike D on Team USA).

Given that, maybe we should be paying closer attention to another option: Philadelphia’s Andre Iguodala.

 

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The Works: The Knicks Need Carmelo Anthony, Not Chris Paul

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Today in The Works: the fall of the franchise player; debating Donald Sterling; and the starting line-up for the real New Yorkers. But first, why the Knicks shouldn’t pursue Chris Paul.

Inside the Point Guard Fun House

With the Miami Heat riding a nine-game winning streak, Big Three trios are”Hot” once again after a six-week stint in the “Not” column. Yet for all its cachet as a model, the Heat‘s star alliance remains mostly unattainable for all but the luckiest of franchises. It takes a lot of work to a clear enough cap room for three max-level deals, and that’s with no knowledge of which collective bargaining agreements teams will need to comply with next season.

Only one team seems poised to create a superhero team-up: the New York Knicks, who already have an early-season MVP candidate in Amar’e Stoudemire. With free-agent-to-be Carmelo Anthony anxious to play in a major market and Chris Paul potentially leaving the current ownership vacuum in New Orleans, the Knicks have a chance to put together three stars with powers comparable to the Heat trio. It will require assets, but the Knicks’ recent string of wins has made young pieces like Landry Fields and Danilo Gallinari look more attractive than they did in October.

Still, you need assets to pick up two additional stars, and the unfortunate fact of the Knicks’ current hot streak is that the team isn’t that deep. Unless they’re able to steal Melo away from Denver this summer for nothing (either by signing him next summer or dealing Eddy Curry‘s expiring contract before the deadline), picking up both Anthony and Paul will leave the Knicks with a supporting cast even less impressive than the current cast of wannabes in Miami. The Knicks might only have room for one more star in Madison Square Garden, and they could have to choose between two equally wonderful new toys.

 

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Heat Take Longer Than Expected to Outlast Sixers

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MIAMI — The Miami Heat faced the Philadelphia 76ers for the second time this season on Friday night and it was under similar circumstances as they were looking to bounce back after a tough loss to an elite East team. Given the circumstances of their underwhelming start to the season, the Heat played without much urgency through three quarters but their talent was simply too much for the hapless Sixers in a 99-90 win.

Sixers coach Doug Collins anticipated that the game would bring the best of out of the Heat, who were seeking to end their three-game losing streak before going on the road to face the Dallas Mavericks on Saturday night.

“We’re going to get the rampaging Miami Heat tonight,” said Collins before the game “They’re going to come out with all kinds of energy, we know that. They’re not happy the way they played the last couple of games.”

Though the Heat struggled for most of the game to put away the Sixers at home, the team did just enough right things in the fourth quarter to keep Philadelphia at bay. The Sixers mostly played catch-up but were able to stay in the game by not affording the Heat easy buckets in the paint and in transition. As a result, the Sixers were able keep their deficit to single digits throughout the game.

 

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Andre Iguodala Doesn’t Expect to Be a 76er for Long

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Andre IguodalaMIAMI — Andre Iguodala has been around long enough to know he might not be around the Philadelphia 76ers much longer.

The fit isn’t there anymore.

He’s not good enough to carry a young team just beginning a major rebuilding project — and probably not patient enough to go through it — but he’s still good enough to have value around the league, fueling the daily speculation about his future.

Getting traded now almost sounds inevitable.

“I would love to stay in Philadelphia, but if I’m playing somewhere else, I definitely understand how that could happen. I know how the business works,” he told FanHouse Friday night before his Sixers lost to the Heat, 99-90. “You have to be prepared for anything in this league. And I am. It’s one of the first things you learn when you get here. Guys get traded on draft night.”

 

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NBA Power Rankings: Ruthless Lakers

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Now that we’ve had a couple of weeks to get a decent look around the league, we present you with our first edition of the NBA Power Rankings. The Hornets are much higher than anyone would have expected to start the season, and the Heat are a little lower than most would expect. But perhaps the most surprising start to the season belongs to the 7-0 Lakers, who look as much like champions now as they did last June.

 

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Amid Philadelphia’s Ruin, Elton Brand Bounces Back

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Elton BrandThe season hasn’t been particularly grand for the 76ers to date. Philadelphia is just 1-5 despite a fairly undemanding early schedule. The Sixers have lost to the Cavaliers at home and the Pacers and Wizards on the road. The team’s only win was a raucous home victory over the Pacers, hardly a signature win. Up next is a five-game road trip with tough jaunts to Oklahoma City, Dallas and San Antonio in the middle.

Even worse is that instead of coming back to Philly revived after a successful World Championship run, Andre Iguodala has looked a bit disinterested, and his scoring prowess has disintegrated. Trade rumors are beginning to sprout up. Iguodala, the 76ers’ top talent bar none, has been the team’s star since the 2006 trade of Allen Iverson. A star defender but uneasy creator, Iguodala hasn’t been able to get the team past the first round of the playoffs.

Of course, it wasn’t supposed to be just Iguodala. After Philadelphia cleared Iverson and Chris Webber from the cap, it spent its space on Elton Brand, a stud power forward smack dab in his prime who had left the Clippers in a huff in 2008. Brand aimed to be what Webber couldn’t: the burly, scoring power forward Iguodala, ace distributor Andre Miller and shotblocker extraordinaire Samuel Dalembert needed to get over the hump.

 

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The Works: LeBron’s Tone-Deaf Ways; Hard Cap as a Solution?

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In The Works today: why Ted Leonsis’ hard cap pitch is disingenuous and previews for the 76ers and the Pistons.

But first, deconstructing The Decision again, this time with race as the hammer.

Color Bind

LeBron JamesRing the alarm! LeBron James, who like his off-court model Michael Jordan has always been slow to express any kind of political, or even socially conscious, opinion, said the r-word. During a CNN segment that gave James and sidekick Maverick Carter a chance to do a little late damage control for their disastrous ESPN “Decision”, both the King and Mav said, unequivocally, that race played a role in the way the media covered James this summer. From CNN.com:

Soledad O’Brien (on camera): Do you think there’s a role that race plays in this?

LeBron James: I think so at times. It’s always, you know, a race factor.

Maverick Carter: It definitely played a role in some of the stuff coming out of the media, things that were written for sure.

Not that this is possible, but the object here is not to get into whether or not race mattters. Since that fateful day in July, I’ve come to the conclusion that it both does and doesn’t. The Dan Gilbert episode, and the invocations of slavery that followed, were as much about power and economics as LeBron’s ethnic background. If any player had held the league in thrall like James, then made his announcement in such a garish fashion, he would have to some degree, been ridiculed for it. He would also have been called a lazy coward for going to someone else’s team. At the same time, the breakdown of James’ Q Scores — widely reported as having plummeted like a felon’s — suggest that African Americans judge black athletes less harshly. You can guess at the other side of that equation.

What’s so notable here is not that James stated the obvious (if you disagree, you were likely just waiting for him to “play the card”), but that he waited until now. As Joey Litman put it, James is a smart guy with opinions who also happens to be completely tone-deaf.

 

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Report: Sixers Enter Trade Talks for Carmelo Anthony

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Carmelo Anthony, Andre IguodalaTalks between the Nuggets and three other teams about a deal that would ultimately send Carmelo Anthony to the New Jersey Nets reportedly were stalling this weekend, according to FanHouse’s own Sam Amick.

The fact that Denver was taking its sweet time in deciding whether or not to pull the trigger appeared to be putting the trade in jeopardy, but if Sunday’s report is accurate, there may have been a very good reason to do so in the minds of those running the Nuggets’ organization.

According to Philly.com, the Sixers have entered the Carmelo conversation, and are willing to part with Andre Iguodala in order to get him. The report states that a Western Conference executive has confirmed the talks between the two teams, and that new Nuggets’ general manager Masai Ujiri has had discussions with Sixers’ head man Ed Stefanski.

Much like the talked-about four-team deal between the Nuggets, Nets, Jazz, and Bobcats, other teams would need to be involved in this one to make the salaries match. And an even bigger obstacle than that one is the fact that Philadelphia wasn’t initially on the short list of teams that Anthony had agreed to be traded to.

 

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