Mon Nov 24, 2008 9:00 am EST
Detroit continues to have major offensive issues. The team was first in offensive efficiency at the time of the Allen Iverson trade, they've now dropped to 10th, and the defense has fallen off as well. Sunday was a pathetic showing, just 87 points per 100 possessions, and the final score actually indicates a game that was closer than it was. Only a 30-28 fourth quarter after Minnesota took it easy turned this into a regular blowout, instead of a shocker.
Defensively, the Pistons had no clue when it came to Randy Foye. Nobody in the Detroit backcourt could stop him, everyone got a chance, and the third-year guard finished with 23 points and 14 assists with just two turnovers. He just kept moving. Mike Miller continued his "I don't care about shooting anymore" turn with a nine-point, eight-rebound, and seven-assist game in only 24 minutes. And Al Jefferson (19 and eight boards) was nearly unstoppable in the third quarter.
You keep thinking that a Raptor team like this is ready to turn the corner, ready for a definitive win that tells you that things are different now, but it never seems to show up. Then you tell yourself that, even at home, a 15-point loss to the defending champs doesn't seem out of the question. Even if you played them awfully close earlier in the month.
Then you look at the 118 points, and go right back to feeling lousy. Boston has had terrible issues offensively this season, so how can that happen? Then again, Boston isn't as bad as it has played offensively this year, Rajon Rondo and Kendrick Perkins are bound to play better, and Tony Allen continues to round back into 2006-07ish form. Boston is so good. You have issues, still. It makes sense.
61.6 percent shooting for Boston. Goodness. That's a "players only meeting" sort of stat.
Philadelphia 89, Golden State 81
Philly in a nutshell: dominant in the first half with 57 points. Playing unsure of themselves and playing not to lose in the second with 32 points. And then Andre Miller has to clinch it, late.
Elton Brand (23 points), Andre Iguodala (15), and Thad Young all had OK games, but they needed a ton of shots to put up those numbers. Philly won this by nailing everything in the first half and by pulling down a ton of offensive rebounds (22 overall) over the course of the game.
Andris Biedrins finished the game with two fouls, eight rebounds, 10 points, four assists, three turnovers, two steals and two blocks. And I have no idea why he played only 30 minutes.
Los Angeles Lakers 118, Sacramento 108
Los Angeles' (rightfully) celebrated defense took the night off in this win, but it hardly mattered against a Kings team that has to try to out-shoot its opponents for the win, and (um ...) can't really out-shoot its opponents for the win.
The Lakers out-shot their opponents for the win, and dominated the glass. The ball was moving, 28 assists on 45 field goals, as eight of the nine Lakers that played scored in double-figures. Let's get it together, Machine.
After a while, the excuses about not know the team personnel have to be overcome. The Bulls coaching staff has been in place for months, they've been legally practicing for nearly two months, and even though Vinny Del Negro, Del Harris, and Bernie Bickerstaff all had big roles on different teams this time last year, that doesn't mean a damn on November 23rd.
And it certainly doesn't mean you play three 6-3-and-under guards, a small forward with footspeed issues, and an undersized power forward down the stretch and expect to win. Don Nelson wouldn't even do that, and he rarely expects to win.
A bogus coaching job from Vinny Del Negro from beginning to end in this one, Denver took over in the fourth by spreading the floor and getting into the paint on a lineup that featured Lindsey Hunter, Derrick Rose, Ben Gordon, Andres Nocioni, and Drew Gooden.
Del Negro's response to a series of layups and dunks was to bring in Aaron Gray to supposedly guard the rim. Of course, Gray's never changed a shot in his life because he's too slow, so the pattern continued. Denver enjoyed a 31-16 fourth quarter advantage as Joakim Noah and Tyrus Thomas get lied to again.
Kenyon Martin (26 points, eight rebounds, two blocks in 32 minutes) did not miss in 10 attempts from the field.
Ball Don't Lie is an NBA blog edited by J.E. Skeets. Email him, and follow him on Twitter.

Fantasy Insider: Pick 'n' Drop
Posted Nov 23 2009
Posted Nov 23 2009
Posted Nov 23 2009
Edited by MJD
Edited by 'Duk
Edited by J.E. Skeets
Edited by Greg Wyshynski
Edited by Matt Hinton
Edited by E. Brennan
Edited by Jay Busbee
Edited by Jay Busbee
Edited by Steve Cofield
Edited by Chris Chase
Edited by Chris Chase
Edited by Andy Behrens
14 Comments
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E Jordan out in DC:
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/wizardsinsider/2008/11/jordan_fired.html
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Is there any explanation to Mike Miller's newfound fondness for avoiding shots? He's hitting shots when he takes them and its really not that cool for Mike Miller fantasy owners (ugh). Is he really pissed about being in Minny? Does he want a trade? I can't imagine he's really excited about taking half as many shots as Bassy Telfair....
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Though I have appreciated his effort this season a great deal. It almost makes up for all those 22 (not 19, not 20) footers.
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:(
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