Tag Archives: brandon jennings

After Being Last Year’s Surprise Team, Milwaukee Is Struggling

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After exceeding expectations last season, the Milwaukee Bucks have struggled to live up to them this year. It just hasn’t been the right mix of personnel in Milwaukee, and to make matters worse seemingly everyone has been hurt. Yet the biggest problem might have been that expectations were simply too high to begin with.

The Bucks won 46 games last season — a 12-game improvement over the year before — and earned the No. 6 seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs. This season they’re on pace for 32 wins, a 14-game drop. Wednesday, they came into Washington and were run off the court by the Wizards, who had lost their previous eight games.

“They kicked our ass up and down the floor,” Andrew Bogut said. “You have those games in the NBA sometimes.”

Sure, those games happen — especially in the second game of a back-to-back on the road. But as the All-Star break approaches, the Bucks don’t have much margin for error if they want to sneak into the final playoff spot in the East. They currently sit 2.5 games behind the Pacers.

“We feel like at the beginning of the season we had high expectations, we thought we were a playoff team,” said John Salmons, who started his second game since returning from injury. “Losing games like this knowing that we got to make a playoff push, it’s a bad loss for us.”

The obvious scapegoat is injuries. The Bucks have been hit hard.

 

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Brandon Jennings Playing Restricted Minutes as Shorthanded Bucks Struggle

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Brandon JenningsPHOENIX — If you thought the Bucks had any shot of beating the Suns on Wednesday night, then you clearly haven’t been paying attention. There was a laundry list of things stacked against Milwaukee heading into this one, and the majority of them conspired against the Bucks in a 92-77 defeat that truthfully wasn’t even that close.

Forget the fact that Milwaukee hadn’t won in Phoenix since before Brandon Jennings was born (seriously — Feb. 21, 1987), or the fact that the team was without productive bigs Andrew Bogut and Drew Gooden due to injury. Phoenix’s defense has been much improved lately, and as recently as two games ago the Suns held the team that leads the league in field goal percentage — the Boston Celtics — to a dismal 34.2 percent shooting. The Bucks? They’re just 29th in the league in that same category — ahead of only the horrific Cavaliers, who by the way have now lost 22 straight.

Combine all of that with the fact that Jennings was on a minutes limitation in just his third game back since missing 19 games with a broken foot, and it’s probably not a surprise that the team trailed by as many as 25 points in the third quarter, and finished the game shooting 31.1 percent from the field, after spending most of it shooting in the high 20s.

 

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NBA’s 2011 Rookie Challenge Rosters Set

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Tyreke EvansIn last year’s Rookie Challenge, Tyreke Evans led his first-year teammates to a surprise upset, earning MVP honors while ending a seven-year reign by the Sophomores.

Can Evans improve to 2-0 in the All-Star weekend event? Or will Blake Griffin, the No. 1 draft pick in 2009 whose rookie year was postponed a year due to injury, lead his squad to victory?

The NBA officially unveiled its nine-man rosters for the 2011 Rookie Challenge, and Evans will be joined by San Antonio Spurs center DeJuan Blair (who grabbed 23 rebounds in last year’s affair), Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry, Toronto Raptors guard DeMar DeRozan (snubbed from last year’s Rookie roster), Chicago Bulls forward Taj Gibson, Philadelphia 76ers guard Jrue Holiday, Oklahoma City Thunder forward/center Serge Ibaka, Milwaukee Bucks guard Brandon Jennings and Portland Trail Blazers guard Wesley Matthews.

Joining Griffin on the Rookies’ roster is fellow No. 1 draft pick John Wall and Clippers teammate Eric Bledsoe, as well as Sacramento Kings center DeMarcus Cousins, New Jersey Nets forward Derrick Favors, New York Knicks guard Landry Fields, Minnesota Timberwolves guard Wesley Johnson, Detroit Pistons center Greg Monroe and San Antonio Spurs guard Gary Neal.

The head coaches for the Rookie Challenge consist of the lead assistants for the 2011 All-Star Game. Since the Spurs have already locked up Gregg Popovich’s spot coaching the West, San Antonio’s Mike Budenholzer will guide the Rookies. He’ll be joined on the sidelines by Amar’e Stoudemire and NBA TV/TNT analyst Kevin McHale. The Celtics secured the top spot in the East with a 95-90 win in Sacramento on Tuesday, meaning Doc Rivers will coach the East and Lawrence Frank will coach the Sophomores. Frank will be assisted by Carmelo Anthony and TNT analyst Steve Kerr.

The 2011 Rookie Challenge will be televised by TNT at 9 p.m. ET on Friday, Feb. 18.

– Updated to reflect Doc Rivers being officially named the East’s coach.

 

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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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NBA Dunk Contest 2011 Contestants: YouTube Preview

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NBA Dunk Contest

The NBA Dunk Contest has been waiting for Superman to save it, but as it turns out not even he — nor Krypo-Nate — could pull off such a feat. So up next is a tall new crop of contestants headlined by Clippers forward Blake Griffin, who is joined by Thunder forward Serge Ibaka, Wizards center JaVale McGee and Bucks guard Brandon Jennings.

But you already knew all that (word travels fast on the Internet), and The Works already gave us a must-read breakdown of the field. So … what is left? Well, mostly YouTube videos.



 

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The Works: Blake Griffin Brings Back the Dunk Contest

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Today in The Works: How in the world can the Trail Blazers save themselves; dissecting the latest bizarre statement from Gilbert Arenas; and we offer up some alternatives to the Heatles.

But first, how Blake Griffin saved the dunk contest.

Let There Be Dunk!

You could make a very convincing argument that Blake Griffin, not the Heat, is the top story of this NBA season. Oh, I’ll go even further: the Clippers rook has set the tone for everything that is worthwhile about 2010-11. Without Blake, there’s no 2010-11. And if he weren’t a part of next month’s dunk contest — in Los Angeles, no less — it would be the kind of PR blunder fans would talk about for years to come.

Well, it looks like they made good after all. According to the LA Times, Griffin is in, along with Thunder big man Serge Ibaka; surreal Wizards center JaVale McGee; and flamboyant Bucks point guard Brandon Jennings. A totally unpredictable field, a rush of cult favorites unseen in years, and yes, a pretty good opportunity to save the dunk contest.

But what, pray tell, should each man do? Dwight Howard and Nate Robinson pushed the idea of gimmick dunks off into the rubbish heap, and if Andre Iguodala couldn’t win by dunking in an out-of-bounds, off-the-backboard, alley-oop from teammate Allen Iverson, then pure skill won’t cut it anymore. What the dunk contest now demands is a third way, some as of yet undiscovered combination of style, ingenuity, and showmanship.

Each of these four contestants has it in him to be that guiding light, not just Blake Griffin. The questions is … how?

 

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Brandon Jennings Out 4-6 Weeks With Left Foot Fracture

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Brandon JenningsThings are not looking up for the Milwaukee Bucks as they found out Monday that Brandon Jennings is going to miss the next 4-6 weeks due to a fractured left foot.

Jennings, who is averaging 17.9 points on 39.1 percent shooting, 5.5 assists and 4.0 rebounds on the season, was in pain Saturday against Utah but managed to play 30 minutes. Jennings has played in 107 straight games to start his career and was slated to miss Monday night’s game against Portland, which now in hindsight was a best-case scenario.

The Bucks, who are 10-15 on the season, will have to make do without their star point guard, turning to Keyon Dooling, who has played in all 25 games for the Bucks this season, averaging 5.2 points and 2.0 assists in 17 minutes per game, and 12-year veteran point guard Earl Boykins to carry the load.

 

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Brandon Jennings’ 55-Point Effort Last Season Proving to Be a Curse?

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MILWAUKEE — A year ago, Brandon Jennings wasn’t just Milwaukee’s best, he was the toast of the NBA.

The Bucks point guard scored 55 points Nov. 14, 2009 at home against Golden State in his seventh NBA game, the most put up by an NBA rookie in nearly 42 years. And at the close of games Nov. 21, 2009, Jennings was averaging 25.3 points in his first 11 games.

But what’s happened since? Entering Friday, Jennings had played in 82 regular-season games since then, one entire season, and has averaged 14.4 points. Not bad for an upcoming player but hardly the numbers many began to expect after Jennings’ electrifying first NBA month.

“We live, I think, to put it politely, in a pretty foolish world, where somebody does one thing and everybody jumps either on the bandwagon or off the bandwagon,” said Bucks coach Scott Skiles. “A team can lose two games and everybody wants to know what’s wrong with them. A guy has one great game. (Jennings) got off to a great start last year and kind of put himself on the map and everything, but I think it also created unrealistic expectations for a guy that’s a very young player.”

 

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Charley Rosen’s Close Look: Celtics Edge Bucks

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Brandon Jennings and Rajon RondoEditor’s Note: A lifelong student of the game, Charley Rosen has played, coached and written about basketball for over half a century. With 15 books about basketball and a longtime column at FOX Sports to his credit, Rosen is bringing his talents to NBA FanHouse for a weekly look at some of the NBA’s most intriguing games, starting with Wednesday’s overtime tilt between the Boston Celtics and Milwaukee Bucks.

BOSTON 105, MILWAUKEE 102 (OT)

While both teams played excellent defense, made several clutch plays, showed guts and resilience, the difference was Boston’s championship experience and Milwaukee’s lack thereof.

Even so, the Bucks had several factors working for them: Since both teams were playing the second of back-to-back games, Milwaukee’s young legs were routinely a step quicker than Boston’s geriatric Big Three. Plus, the Biggest Methuselah was down and out with a boo-boo on his shin.

One result was that Andrew Bogut had an exceptional game in the middle — 21 points (including three tip-ins) and 13 rebounds. Although he was successful on four low-post dances, most of Bogut’s points resulted in his clever movements without the ball. For sure, his pivot-play is often predictable and slow in developing, but his off-the-ball execution within the team concept was impressive. Also, Bogut’s questionable defense was never put to the test with Shaq out, with Jermaine O’Neal no longer a threat to score in the paint, and with Glen Davis evolving into a jump-shooter.

 

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The Works: Be Patient With Your Heat Overlords; Brandon Jennings Is Back

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In The Works today, we consider Jeff Green’s responsibility to the Thunder, the rebirth of the versatile Brandon Jennings and briefly remember Maurice Lucas.

But first, assessing assessments of the Miami Heat.

Are You Not Entertained?

We’re a week into the season, and belief in the power and efficacy of the Miami Heat, shattered by a loss at Boston opening night, is beginning to return. Miami followed the Celtic defeat by running out to a huge lead on the 76ers before getting bored (but closing it out), and then killed the Magic at home and the Nets on the road. Despite a 3-1 record, all that anyone can seem to wonder is whether LeBron James and Dwyane Wade can co-exist and thrive when it matters. To date, the pair have played off each other by not playing together — they almost alternate possessions, or stretches of possessions, instead of working to together. It’s been Justice League, not Power Rangers.

That’s typically a good thing, but we were promised more. We were promised some basketball Voltron stomping the world. We have a team that’s figured out how to stomp the world — a 20-point win over Orlando? are you kidding? — but the fit hasn’t struck awe. This opinion is presented most clearly in Bill Simmons’ column, written after the Philadelphia game. Simmons argues that the Heat can’t succeed until Wade takes a backseat to the clearly superior LeBron — this based on a Michael Eisner anecdote.

The stance strikes me as completely uncreative and in diametric contradiction to the recent history of the NBA.

 

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