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Archive for April, 2009

Ricky Rubio Declares for NBA Draft

Posted by Kevin Arnovitz On April - 21 - 2009

From Chad Ford at ESPN.com:

Ricky Rubio, the Spanish point guard sensation that has been compared to everyone from Pete Maravich to Steve Nash will declare for the 2009 NBA draft, his agent, Dan Fegan, told ESPN.com from Barcelona Monday afternoon.

Rubio will have until June 15 to withdraw his name from the draft. However, his agent sounded confident that he’s staying in. “Ricky will be in the 2009 draft,” Fegan said. Fegan has been in Barcelona this week meeting with Rubio and his family trying to come to a decision. Rubio is the starting point guard for DKV Joventut in Spain and is widely considered the best young international player in the world…

Season Ticket Renewals and the Marketplace

Posted by Kevin Arnovitz On April - 20 - 2009

If you’re a full or partial season ticket holder to the Clippers, then you probably received the glossy renewal folder in the mail over the past week or so.  Prices have dropped for season ticket holders in some sections of Staples Center and have remained the same for others.  If you follow the team, you also know that the market value of a Clippers ticket has dropped precipitously in recent months, and the organization has been slashing prices to get people inside the building. For some season ticket holders who pay for their packages in full months before training camp, this is a source of agitation. Whether that agitation is justified depends on whether you perceive pro sports teams as public trusts or luxury items.

Year Six

Posted by Kevin Arnovitz On April - 18 - 2009

For many years, being a Clippers fan meant that you lived a life devoid of expectations.  The Clippers never tempted you with promises of achievement and all the accoutrements that went with it — fun rivalries, meaningful games that were televised nationally, a guarantee that if you showed up at the arena the place would be berserk.  Being a Clippers fan offered a simple, almost acetic comfort, even if you knew nothing of consequence would ever happen while you were watching.

Oklahoma City 126, Clippers 85

Posted by Kevin Arnovitz On April - 16 - 2009

From Clipperblog, February 27, 2007:

Whatever approximation a Clipper fan might have of Corey Maggette’s Basketball I.Q., or Mike Dunleavy’s competence, or the precise effect of Quinton Ross’ presence on the court, there’s virtual unanimity among the Naçion about one thing:  The team’s fortunes in the foreseeable future will rise and fall with Shaun Livingston’s development.  It’s the one irrefutable truism, no matter where you stand on the other big questions.

So when Shaun’s patella pops out and he crumples to the floor in the opening minutes of the game, there’s more at stake than the “Jeez, I hope he’s okay” that usually punctuates a moment like this.  Apart from anything he may or may not embody to a fan or spectator, Shaun is a 21-year-old kid who must be terrified beyond delirium when he feels his leg snap like a toothpick.  He deserves the compassion of every basketball well-wisher.

Whether it’s fair or not, Shaun also embodies something larger.  Shaun has been carrying around the hopes of the Naçion since he was drafted in 2004.  On Saturday, he put together what might be the most professional game of his career – a 14 point, 14 assist effort against Golden State.  Following the game, Mike Dunleavy said, “Until I tell him to pull back, I want him to push the ball every time and I want him to explore. I want him to use his abilities. That’s what could take us to another level.”  And that’s exactly what Shaun is doing in the first quarter when he picks up a steal at the other end and initiates the break with Raymond Felton in pursuit.   Four seconds later, Shaun is on the hardwood.

It’s been a while since I thought about Shaun Livingston in any meaningful context w/r/t the Clippers. His injury was painful to witness.  As a result, most of us made him a human interest story.  It seemed too crass to consider Shaun’s recovery in terms of its effect on the franchise’s fortunes, so we focused — rightly so — on the part of the story that was about a shy kid with natural talent trying to make it all the way back from a catastrophic injury.

With the benefit of hindsight, we can now mark February 26, 2007 as the date the state of the franchise turned.  True, things were already sour that season. The Clippers were 26-29; Chris Kaman had regressed; the playoffs were increasingly unlikely.  But the significance of the moment isn’t chronological as much as it is psychogenic.  Shaun did embody something larger, even though it’s possible he never would’ve put the package together.  His departure from the Clippers’ active roster left a spiritual vacuum that’s been filled with waste.

Tonight, Shaun starts at point guard for the Thunder wearing number 14.  He goes [2-5 FG, 2-2 FT, 6 points, 7 rebounds, 2 assists, 1 steal, and 0 turnovers]. He wears a brace on his left knee.

Some impressions:

  • [1st, 11:40] One area where Shaun was fluent from day one was execution on the break. He hasn’t lost that. Nenad Krstic strips the ball away from Baron Davis and gets the outlet to Livingston at the time line.  Russell Westbrook fills the lane to Shaun’s left.  Shaun shuttles a pass to Westbrook, who streaks in for an easy lay-in.
  • [1st, 10:11] Early offense as Livingston rushes it up court.  The Clippers do a decent job of getting back. Baron plays in front of Livingston, who crosses from his right to his left, then backs Baron in at the elbow. Baron gives up a step, but not more.  Shaun stops, pivots on his right, then takes an awkward rising jumper off his back leg.  The shot is long.

    Shaun never perfected his shooting mechanics in Los Angeles, which was one part of his development that was lagging at the time of the injury. His frame isn’t squared when he releases the ball. There’s too much arm and not enough leg in his shot. He still needs a little work.
  • [1st, 5:02] Shaun spots up to the right of Durant on a controlled break. He’s wide open from 15, but the shot clanks high off the front of the rim. See above.
  • [2nd, 7:58] Shaun has checked in for Kevin Durant at the 3 spot for the Thunder, with Earl Watson running point. On the defensive end, Shaun is assigned to Baron Davis, then later, Fred Jones. Kaman and Baron run a high S/R at the top of the circle. Livingston and DJ White — Eric Gordon’s classmate — trap. Baron swings the ball across his body to hit Kaman with a pass, but Livingston leaps backward and gets his fingertips in the passing lane. Jeff Green collects the ball and the Thunder get out on the break.
  • [2nd, 5:42] Off DJ White’s block of Chris Kaman’s layup attempt, the Thunder go the other way. Watson pushes it up. Livingston runs the left sideline. As he glides over the arc, he signals to Watson. Livingston runs a basket cut simultaneous to Watson’s perfect lob pass. Livingston leaps, clears the rim by a good foot, and slams the ball down through the iron.

    By any player in any circumstance, it’s a highlight dunk. For Shaun, I imagine it’s also an anthem.
  • [3rd, 9:11] Shaun parks himself in the right corner. The ball works its way counterclockwise around the arc. When the pass arrives, Shaun has plenty of time to catch, turn, set, square his shoulders and release. The combination of Mike Taylor’s height [he gives up at least seven inches to Shaun], and the distance Taylor has to cover on the close-out gives Shaun plenty of time to nail the 20-footer.

Shaun plays solid defense on Baron, but the Clippers never ask to be challenged, so it’s hard to gauge how Shaun is using his length and what was once great lateral quickness, on the defensive end of the floor. Physically, he looks filled out. Based on what we know about his regimen during his recovery, it’s no surprise.

Shaun is the only person who truly understands his physical limitations, and it’s likely he doesn’t completely trust his impressions of what he can and can’t do. Whether he can become an impact NBA player is uncertain. The irony is that Shaun appeared more confident on the floor tonight than he did during most of his tenure as a teenager in Los Angeles.

Game Thread: Oklahoma City at Clippers

Posted by Kevin Arnovitz On April - 15 - 2009

barbaras

Game 82

7:30p PT

NBA League Pass

KSPN 710 AM

ESPN Video

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