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International Players Set to make Impact in 2008 NBA Playoffs
Apr 19, 2008 | 8:56AM | report this

(interbasket.net) -- With the NBA playoffs set to begin in a couple hours, Ibn would be remiss not to talk about the unprecedented competitive Western Conference this year and the roles that international players are having on every playoff-bound team. There is no less than 20 foreign-born players playing important roles on those eight teams. Interbasket will break down each team's international player and how important they are to their team's success.

1. Los Angeles LakersRonny-Turiaf-Image
Key Rotation Players: Pau Gasol, Ronny Turiaf, Vladimir Radmanovic, Sasha Vujacic
International Importance: 8.5/10
Notes: The Lakers have the most players in their likely playoff rotation with four and the newest one, Pau Gasol, has arguably been the most important player for the Lakers since being stolen from Memphis. The Lakers went from being serious pretenders to contenders with the late-season addition of the Spanish Superstar and World Champion.

Vladmir Radmanovic starts for the Lakers because he has the potential to become a game-changer with his outside shot, the problem is the 6-10 Radman isn't very consistent with his play.  If Radmanovic isn't breaking his leg in skiing accidents and lying about it, he can be a game-changer for Los Angeles.

I'm convinced that Ronny Turiaf is posed to make a splash in this year's playoffs. With his energy, all-out hustle, defense (he led the team in blocks with 1.4 a game), and with opposing teams focusing on other players -- Turiaf is going to that X-factor player that everyone talks about this time of year.

What a difference a year makes.  The former-baby-faced Slovenian has longer hair, facial hair, and grown up this year for the Lakers - bringing consistency and competitiveness off the bench.   Sasha Vujacic is the sniper that the Lakers need, is showing feistiness on defense while leading the Lakers in three-point shooting percentage (43.7).

2. New orleans Hornets
Key Rotation Players
: Peja Stojakovic
International Importance: 5/10
Notes: Peja not only brings his well-known three-point shooting, but also brings the most playoff experience to the inexperienced Hornets.  Peja's range keeps the middle open for Chris Paul, David West and Tyson Chandler to manuever inside.

I'm hoping Peja can help the Hornets advance and have a better playoff showing that his last couple years in Sacramento. Peja's always been a better second or third option player, and with Chris Paul dancing around the paint and the threat of David West, Peja is free to roam the arc for open shots.

3. San Antonio Spurs
Key Rotation Players
: Tony Parker, Manu Ginobili, Fabricio Oberto
International Importance: 10/10
Notes: International players have always played a big role with the championship Spurs teams, and with every year that Tim Duncan gets older, the more the Spurs seem to rely on French point guard Tony Parker and Argentine superstar Manu Ginobili, whom is arguably been their best player this year. If the Spurs win it this season, it would be surprising if Manu wasn't named the Finals MVP (he was ROBBED last year).

And Manu has a good repoire with Fabricio Oberto, the Spur's starting center and glue guy. The Argentine center clogs up the middle, cleans up the messes and rolls to the hoop for easy baskets.  Oberto is sometimes the forgotten Spur, but that doesn't mean Fab isn't important to their overall success.

4. Utah Jazz
Key Rotation Players: Andrei Kirilenko, Memo Okur
International Importance: 8/10
Notes: AK and Memo Okur are the #3 and #4 players for the Jazz and their play is hugely important for the Utah Jazz to advance on their progress from last year. As some of you may recall, Kirilenko wasn't in the best place last season and Memo Okur couldn't find his outside stroke in the playoffs despite earning a reputation for being a big-time shooter. Kirilenko is playing this season as if last season didn't happen, with renewed confidence.  It's likely he got a shot of adrenaline from leading Russia to the gold medal in the European Championships (and the automatic bid to this years Olympics).

Okur was well on his way to becoming the best Turkish player in the world before he lost his outside shot last season and before Hedo Turkoglu found his career in Orlando. Okur has suggested that his down year hasn't affected him, that he'll take the shots as they come. With Carlos Boozer demanding double teams and Deron Williams passing the ball, the Jazz are certainly hoping that Okur is on his game this playoff season.

5. Houston Rockets
Key Rotation Players: Luis Scola, Dikembe Mutombo
International Importance: 7/10
Notes: When Yao Ming went down, every one thought that the Rockets would go down with the 7-6 Chinese center, but that hasn't been tboris-diaw-drives-imagehe case. Not by a long shot. Houston definitely is more of a threat with him in the lineup for the playoffs, but the team-based play and the impending threat that Tracy McGrady could go for 50 on any given night is what makes this current version of the Rockets go. With that said, Mutombo, at age 57, is still intimidating and blocking shots, while Scola's adapting to the NBA game will help fuel the Rockets forward.

6. Phoenix Suns
Key Rotation Players
: Steve Nash, Boris Diaw, Leandro Barbosa, Gordan Giricek
International Importance: 10/10
Notes: Steve Nash by himself is a 10/10. The reigning MVP is enough to say that international players really play important roles for the Phoenix Suns, but we need to recognize the roles that multi-talented small forward from France Boris Diaw, and power bench players Leandro Barbosa and troubled Gordon Giricek play for the revamped, re-Shaqed Phoenix Suns. Adding Giricek's shot-making ability has made the Suns that much more dangerous, and his shooting will become more important as Shaquille ONeal gets more comfortable in their re-tooled offense.

7. Dallas Mavericks
Key Rotation Players
: Dirk Nowitzkieduardo-najera-image
International Importance: 10/10
Notes: As the 7-0 German with the gimpy ankle goes, so goes the playoff chances for the Dallas Mavericks. Enough Said. 10 out of 10.  It's going to be a ugly off-season filled with second-guessing if the Mavs don't make it to at least game seven of the Western Conference Finals.

8. Denver Nuggets
Key Rotation Players: Linas Kleiza, Eduardo Najera, Nene
International Importance:
Notes: These three big guys cannot be more different from each other and that's why they'll play important roles. Linas Kleiza has become a surprisingly consistent offensive option coming off the bench with his ability to not only shoot the three but put the ball down on the floor and attack the basket with his 6-8, 255-pound frame.

Eduardo Najera really has created a great niche for himself. He's a poor-man's jack of all trades and I don't mean that in a detrimental manner. He plays defense, he rebounds, he gets on the floor, dribbles, drives, and is efficient with his time. Najera has also added a consistent three-point shot, the 6-7 Mexican forward has shot and made more threes this season than in all of his seasons combined. his newfound touch which will stretch the defense for Allen Iverson and Carmelo Anthony to work their offensive moves with more space to spare.

Nene is working his way back into the rotation after having a tumor removed, but if the Brazilian power player can get into game shape, the Nuggets will be in good shape on the inside.  Even if Nene can give 10-15 minutes of smart play, strong defense and throwing his weight around, the Denver interior will be fortified and that much more ready for a rugged playoff run.  The Nuggets will need his strength to counter Pau Gasol and Lamar Odom in the first round.

What about the East? This isn't the case in the East where the amount of international players in key roles can be counted on one hand and two fingers - Hedo Turkoglu, Jose Manuel Calderon, Samuel Dalembert, Anderson Varejao Sasha Pavlovic, Carlos Arroyo, and Andrea Bargnani. And none of those players are the true, unquestioned leaders that the West has in Steve Nash and Dirk Nowitzki. Hedo Turkoglu plays a key role in Orlando, and Calderon runs the Toronto team, but the rest of those guys are solely role players. Teams like Washington (Darius Songaila), Boston, Detroit (Walter Herrmann), and Atlanta (Zaza Pachulia) have international players, but none of them play a significant enough role.

Want more?  Visit us at Interbasket.net and our international basketball forum...

Add a comment   categories: NBA, Manu Ginobili, Dirk Nowitzki, Pau Gasol, Tony Parker, NBA Playoffs, Linas Kleiza, Luis Scola, Fabricio Oberto, Andrei Kirilenko, Ronny Turiaf, Vladimir Radmanovic, Jose Calderon, Sasha Pavlovic, Anderson Varejao, Sasha Vujacic, Peja Stojakovic, Mehmet Okur, Dikembe Mutombo, Boris Diaw
 
Kobe Bryant Youngest, but not Fastest to 20,000 Points
Dec 24, 2007 | 6:47PM | report this
(interbasket) - Don't get lost in the hype, Kobe Bryant may be the youngest player to reach 20,000 points in the NBA, but it certainly doesn't mean he was the fastest nor most efficient. 14 players reached 20,000 points before Kobe.

All these news outlets talking up this youngest-to-20,000-record has left me a little perplexed. I know it’s a nice-sounding record, but since I am a stats-kinda-guy, I find that it's inherently flawed to judge these type of records based on age. Perhaps if all NBA players entered the league at 18 years old, then the accomplishment would have some weight, but that’s just not the case - making all this mostly just hype.

Viewing this as an apples-to-apples comparison, Kobe’s feat isn’t nearly as amazing-sounding. Using the amount of games-played as our simple yet equal measure- Wilt, Jordan, Big-O, Kareem and ten other players reached 20,000 points faster than Kobe Bryant. On this list, Kobe falls to 15th. Here's the top-ten list of players that reached 20,000 points in order of the least amount of games played:

  1. Wilt Chamberlain (499 games) during the 65-66 season (7th NBA season)
  2. Michael Jordan (620) January 08, 1993 vs Milwukee Bucks (9th)
  3. Oscar Robertson (671) during the 1968-69 season (9th)
  4. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (684) during the 1976-77 season (9th)
  5. Elgin Baylor (711) during the 1968-69 season (11th)
  6. Allen Iverson (713) January 23, 2007 vs. Denver Nuggets (11th)
  7. Jerry West (~720) during the 1970-71 season (11th)
  8. Shaquille O’Neal (727) March 20, 2003 vs. Sacramento Kings (11th)
  9. George Gervin (~745) during the 1985-86 season (10th)
  10. Bob Petit (~760) November 13, 1964 (11th)
  11. check out the entire list
  12. check out the entire list
  13. check out the entire list
  14. check out the entire list
  15. check out the entire list
Researching the internet and referring to basketball-reference.com I was able to determine the top-15 list (some I had to go with approximate games played) as well as including other players in the 20,000 point-club. To see where Kobe stands and where players like Dominique Wilkins, Hakeem Olajuwon, Clyde Drexler, Larry Bird, Kevin Garnett and Charles Barkley rank on this list check out the entire list and article if you dig.


29 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Kobe Bryant, NBA, Michael Jordan, Allen Iverson, Shaquille O’Neal, Wilt Chamberlain, Larry Bird, Charles Barkley, Kevin Garnett
 
Ten NBA Players from Around the World (11/28)
Nov 28, 2007 | 10:43AM | report this

Jorge Garbajosa drives against Dirk Nowitzki in EuroBasket 2007Every Wednesday during the NBA season, interbasket takes a closer look at ten international NBA players that has caught our eye. (This week is for period 11/22 - 11/28/2007)

We start with some big news out of Toronto. Spanish small forward and Toronto Raptor Jorge Garbajosa is going to have another surgery on his leg.

Ok, that's not news. That happens all the time in sports, Stuart.

True, but there's an added layer to the situation; Garbajosa played in the European Championships this past summer despite the Raptor's strong advice to skip the qualifier and have surgery done on the same injured leg that wasn't healing correctly according to the Toronto's medical team.

Instead, Garbajosa chose to represent Spain, backed by Spanish doctors that claimed further surgery was superflous. The Spanish team wanted him so much that they took out a $1 million dollar insurance policy that would cover his $4 mil salary had Garbajosa injured himself during National team duty. Looks like the Raptors might be filing a claim against that policy soon.

That's only the tip of the iceberg right now. With the Memphis Grizzlies coming into Toronto tonight, it would have brought four Spanish players in one NBA game -- Pau Gasol, Juan Carlos Navarro, and Jose Calderon with Garbajosa on the sidelines. What should be a celebratory photo-op at mid-court, has become a huge controversy in Spain and with one Pau Gasol.

Pau Gasol and the Spanish press feel as if the Raptors don't have Garbajosa's best interest in mind by sending him off to surgery, but rather they're punishing him for going against their will. Stay tuned...

On a sidenote: Would this have been the first time that four international players from the same country played in the same NBA game? I know the Houston-San Antonio game last week brought three Argentines together, but can anyone remember four players? Maybe those Sacramento Kings with Vlade and Peja?

For all our Spanish readers, there is a lighter side - Juan Carlos Navarro is finally finding his groove. In the last three gamee, the Spanish superstar has played his 34, 37, and 38 minutes -- by far his highest total minutes logged this season. During that span, Navarro has averaged 20 points, 5 rebounds, 4 assists, has shot 55% from the field and 45% from three. Navarro had his first NBA double-double last night, 16 points and 11 rebounds (his previous high was 4 rebounds!). It seems as both La Bomba and his coach are finally gaining confidence in... well, Juan Carlos Navarro.

Diop holds down the middle against Tony ParkerIs this really Desagana Diop's seventh NBA season? Yeah, I guess it is. The 25-year old came straight out of high-school and was drafted eighth overall in the the 2001 high-school-crazy draft (that saw Kwame Brown, Tyson Chandler, and Eddy Curry go 1, 2, and 4)

The 7-foot center from Senegal has finally found his niche averaging great numbers (also career-highs) in rebounds (7.8) and blocks (2.4) for the Dallas Mavericks - holding down the middle for the Dallas Mavericks... 

What's even more amazing, Diop has usurped Erick Dampier as the starting center, the same Erick Dampier that proclaimed himself the second-best center in the league (after Shaq)!  Make that the third-best, Damp.

Vladamir Radmanovic was never the face of consistency and level-headedness.  Despite his shooting touch, size and agility, Vladimir's career has been marred by a reputation of a bad work-ethic, whining on his national team, and sever inconsistency from game-to-game. Add all that to his lying about how he got a leg-injury last season (he hurt himself snowboarding). Not a great legacy thus far.

Despite all that, Radman has started out the season with perhaps the most promise. His points per game were holding steady at double-digits, is hitting the long ball when he open, and the Lakers are wnning games in the West. Radmanovic is shooting at a career-high clip almost across the board.

And then it came down in a 102-100 loss to the New Jersey Nets in which he shot 0-7 from three and a combined 0-10 from the field. He was 1-2 from the free-throw line and had 3 turnovers, all this in just 24 minutes. Even with his performance, Radmanovic is still shooting 44% from three.

On the other side of the shooting spectrum, Steve Nash hasn't missed from the free-throw line this season. Nash is 40-40 on free throws this year. The only other player that hasn't missed a free-throw this season is another international player - Darius Songaila of Lithuania. Songaila is 21-21.  Previous to Nash's season-record, Yao Ming had a streak of 30 straight free throws made.

Tony Parker drives into Beno UdrihWhen Luis Scola scored a then career-high 20 points against the Spurs last week, I dismissed it as a mere coincidence. Though he was a Spur, Scola was traded away before any real hard-feelings could be accumulated.

Now, when Beno Udrih went for 27 points (8-12FG, 9-9 FT), 5 assists and 4 rebounds in a win vs. the Spurs. I have no doubt that Beno had a little more jump to his step before and after the game against his former team.

Nenad Krstic returned from his leg-injury this season and has been slow-going in regaining form. The Serbian center is averaging career lows in all categories and has played only 3 minutes in the last four games. It doesn't look good for Krstic since the struggling Nets have won three of those four games.

Speaking of struggling Nets players - Bostjan Nachbar is averaging more minutes, points, assists, steals, blocks, FG-attempts, 3pt FG attempts and FT attempts this season but hasn't been able to carry-over his efficient shooting percentages from the previous year.

I respect Scott Skiles coaching, I do, but with the Chicago Bulls struggling, why isn't Viktor Khryapa playing more? Or why was he not even activated? I am not one of those guys that blindly love-on all international players, but did anyone in Russia send Skiles a tape of what Khryapa did this past summer?

In the one game that Khryapa has played in this season, he scored 7 points (3-5), grabbed 5 rebounds, and blocked 2 shots in 21 minutes (he also was 1-4 from FT and had two turnovers). This guy can play, plays hard, and hits open shots, I really believe he needs another look. Thank god he isn't Spanish, or Skiles would have Pau Gasol on his back...

NBA Notes: Man, that Golden State vs. Phoenix Suns game was fun to watch. Monta Ellis was the man in that game, blowing by Steve Nash like a statue and hitting multiple jumpers over Shawn Marion. Baron Davis has nothing to worry about just yet (he's playing like a beast), but we're seeing a star in the making with Monta Ellis.

2 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Jorge Garbajosa, Pau Gasol, Juan Carlos Navarro, Viktor Khryapa, Jose Calderon, DeSagana Diop, Steve Nash, Luis Scola, Beno Udrih, Vladimir Radmanovic, Darius Songaila, Yao Ming, Monta Ellis, Nenad Krstic, Bostjan Nachbar, NBA
 
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