Being
a better player is not just about improving your jump shot
and handles. The great players find ways to sharpen their
'mental game'.
This site is
dedicated to developing leaders on and off the court who
'think the game'
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It all starts with confidence
If you
haven't read Eric Musselman's blog,
then you are missing out on some great advice from a
former coach who sees
the game from a unique perspective. I hope this article
inspires you to
lead with confidence!
http://emuss.blogspot.com/2008/10/it-all-starts-with-confidence.html
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Four
traits of a perfect point guard
As a (not very good) college point guard and someone who
believes that the PG is the most important position on the
floor, I've pulled four "traits" from the article that
highlight the perfect point guard:
This story was
originally published Eric Musselman's Basketball Notebook
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Four
traits of a perfect point guard
As a (not very good) college point guard and someone who
believes that the PG is the most important position on the
floor, I've pulled four "traits" from the article that
highlight the perfect point guard:
1. Court vision: "He sees things," guard Dwyane Wade says
of Kidd's sixth sense. "When you're on the court and you
see him do something, you think he had to see that like
three minutes ago."
2. High basketball IQ: "His mind is his best talent,"
Krzyzewski says. "And his ability to instinctively react
to situations on the court is at the highest level, as
high as anyone who has ever played the game." Krzyzewski
compares Kidd's basketball IQ to Magic Johnson's, who was
Kidd's idol growing up in California.
3. Not just passes; perfect passes: "He grew up being a
passer, understanding the angles. With Jason, you get
wide-open looks. He puts the ball right on the money."
During shooting drills last summer, Kidd turned to Carmelo
Anthony and asked, "Where do you want the ball?" Anthony,
not quite sure what Kidd meant, gave him a puzzled look.
"What do you mean?" When players realize that Kidd can
deliver the ball to their sweet spot, Krzyzewski says
their reaction is: "You mean, I'm going to have room
service and you're going to cut my meat too? You're going
to give it to me in a certain position?" So where does
Anthony want the ball? "Wherever he gives it to me,"
Anthony says.
4. Ability to facilitate: "What's fabulous for our team is
if you put Kobe, Carmelo and LeBron in the game, you need
a point guard who's really just looking to facilitate and
that's what Jason does," says assistant coach Jim Boeheim.
"Other great point guards have a scoring portion of their
game, some of them have it as a large portion of their
game, whereas Jason never needs to take a shot." This
approach fits the team-oriented aspect of the
international game, with the emphasis on passing and
selfless play.
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This story was
originally published on SI.com.
The
Defense Never Rests
The keys to Boston's league-best D: a new assistant, an
older roster, a desire to change and lots of hustle
Throughout the Celtics' rise from second-worst team in the
league to NBA finalist, the biggest revelation has been
that old dogs really can learn to slide their feet, fight
through screens and close out on shooters. "I was laughing
the other night -- I've never seen Ray Allen play so much
defense in his life," says Trail Blazers coach Nate
McMillan, who coached Allen for 2 1/2 years with the
Sonics. "At the end of Game 5 [in the Eastern finals
against the Pistons] he gave weakside help then sprinted
to the three-point line to challenge the jump shot. I
remember when [he] was spinning around in circles on a
pick-and-roll."
How has a team of offensive-minded veterans like guard
Allen and forward Paul Pierce become the league's dominant
defensive unit in one short, magical season? Part of the
answer lies in maturity: In the off-season president of
basketball operations Danny Ainge traded away five players
under 30 (plus last June's first-round pick) and began to
assemble a roster that now has nine players 30 or older --
including 32-year-old forward Kevin Garnett, the Defensive
Player of the Year. "Young guys want to run-and-gun," says
Celtics coach Doc Rivers, "but veteran teams are always
defensive teams."
In recent years Rivers had earned a reputation as an
offensive coach with a minimal interest in defense; in
fact, Rivers was voted Coach of the Year in 2000 because
of the heart-and-hustle D he installed in Orlando with Ben
Wallace, Bo Outlaw and Darrell Armstrong. What's more, in
his 13-year career Rivers played point guard under Mike
Fratello, Larry Brown and Pat Riley, "three of the best
defensive coaches who ever walked the earth," he says.
That's why he tried to hire Brown as his lead defensive
assistant last summer before settling on longtime Jeff Van
Gundy aide Tom Thibodeau. Rivers knew that he would be
preoccupied with persuading Garnett, Pierce and Allen to
adapt to one another on offense; he needed Thibodeau to do
the coordinating -- and yelling -- at the other end of the
floor. "There's days when we want to wring Tom Thibodeau's
neck," says Garnett. "But he keeps us intact, and the more
we saw the results, the more we fell in love with it.
[Defense is] our backbone now."
Thibodeau's defensive scheme is a bug-free marriage of
hardware and software. The programming is straight out of
the Van Gundy manual: Keep the ball out of the paint,
shrink the floor by overloading defenders to one side and
try to contest every shot. Rarely does Thibodeau tweak the
game plan by calling a variety of sets from the sideline.
The Celtics are committed to their basic man-to-man
principles, and when a certain approach isn't working, the
staff's first adjustment is to demand greater effort.
During the season the Celtics ranked No. 1 in overall
field goal defense (41.9%) and three-point defense
(31.6%), a remarkable double for a team that regularly
leaves players open off the ball. "They put five guys on
half of the floor -- they really believe in loading up the
strong side," says Grizzlies coach Marc Iavaroni. "They're
very hard on showing and trapping the pick-and-roll, and
they have great ball pressure. If you're on the ball,
people can't pick you apart."
The platform is built around the 6' 11" Garnett, who has
been Russellesque in shouting commands and guarding every
corner of the court. "Kevin made [the transformation]
possible," says Rivers, who devotes 60% to 70% of practice
time to defense. "When your best player buys in
defensively, then everybody has to follow." Boston also
has a punishing but surprisingly nimble center in Kendrick
Perkins, a 6' 10" 280-pounder who can show out to the
three-point line yet get back to block shots and rebound;
a versatile sixth man in 6' 8" James Posey, who is
re-creating the crucial defensive stopper role he played
during the Heat's 2006 championship run; and a long-armed
ball hawk in second-year point guard Rajon Rondo, one of
the league's quickest players.
Against the Lakers, the initial responsibility of guarding
league MVP Kobe Bryant will fall to Allen. But Boston will
be wary of helping on Bryant too much because Los Angeles
surrounds him with floor-spacing scorers such as Pau Gasol,
Lamar Odom and Vladimir Radmanovic. "Kobe is going to take
shots, but it's important we don't foul him and send him
to the free throw line," says Allen, hinting broadly at
Boston's strategy. "Keep a swarm around him, but don't let
those other guys start figuring out the game and getting
confident out there."
It's a tough assignment, but if the Celtics can pull it
off, one of the greatest makeovers in NBA history will be
complete.
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