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Tag Archive - O.J. Mayo

GRIZZLIES: Michael Heisley, The Most Dangerous Man With A Mic

Griz owner Michael Heisley told a group of season ticket holders that the team intends to match any offer Gay might receive as a restricted free agent this summer. Heisley spoke before the game at the team’s annual “State of the Franchise” Chalk Talk where season ticket holders could ask questions.

via Griz owner Michael Heisley told a group of season ticket holders that the team intends to match any… – Straight Outta Vancouver.

First, he couldn’t re-sign him because attendance wasn’t good enough. Then he said he would make every effort. Now he’s going to do it no matter what.

So which is it?

I’m about to sympathize with Michael Heisley, so let’s all hold our noses as we plunge into this cesspool.

It’s an impossible situation. If he doesn’t re-sign Gay, no matter how overpaid the offer sheet may be, he’s a cheap owner. But Gay is simply not worth all that much. He’s worth a lot, don’t get me wrong. But he’s worth the most to the Grizzlies as a symbol that they’re willing to spend to compete. Which is something the fanbase, whatever’s left of it, needs.

The attendance in Memphis is bad news bears, pardon the pun. I support small markets. I stick up for small markets. I defend small markets. But the team has been over .500 for the vast majority of the season and was in the playoff hunt as recently as last night when Aaron Brooks hit his 900th three pointer. And yet attendance has been pathetic. Not bad. Pathetic. The Grizzlies have given Memphis every reason to come out and support this team, and instead, the city had basically decided what they thought about the Grizzlies back in October, and have refused to reconsider.

But if they’re going to buy back in, they have to believe this is a franchise committed to winning.  And Heisley’s discussions with the press are not helping matters, even if I can sympathize. The attendance thing? Does not need to be confused with the Rudy issue. If you want to win and think Gay is the way to get there, re-sign him. Don’t try and hold the fans hostage, because that’s not going to work. The people that care if you re-sign Rudy Gay? They’re already coming to the games, decked in blue. Furthermore, as much as it may suck, turning the issue into you being vilified, even if true, is not going to help matters. Who cares who the owner is? Ask Clippers or Warriors fans.

These complicating factors make it really difficult to get a good sense of the real problem here: Rudy Gay isn’t worth a max contract. He’s not worth anything near it. There are players younger than Gay with worse numbers that you can look at and say “That’s going to be a complete player.” With Gay, you’re left with the fact that he’s a pivotal part of this team and yet he’s not clocked in all the time. O.J. Mayo has his struggles. He’s gotten better at the rim, he’s killer from outside, but he has his shooting slumps and gets worn down on defense. But OJAM’s clocked in on every play, every night. Gay is clocked in for about 3/4 of the time. That other quarter is when you can’t figure out where he is or what he’s doing. The things Gay is tremendous at, creating that shifty leaning sideways runner, dunking in the open floor, nailing big shots, these are all valuable components for a contributing piece, not a centerpiece.

Neither Mayo, nor Gasol, and definitely not Randolph (due to age, not effort) may be the future of the Grizzlies, but you can look at their games and see them either becoming those primary components, or laying the foundation of a supporting cast for a true superstar. Gay doesn’t even work in that model, because he demands so much money. But if the Grizzlies let him walk, they’re unlikely to get a true superstar in return, through trade or free agency. They’re handcuffed by the market, and in return, are trying to handcuff the fans.

And the result is simply that both sides are tearing the Grizzlies apart, in what should be a hopeful time for them.

The Triple Double That Never Should Have Been

Baron Davis logs a season-high 27 points to go with 12 rebounds and 12 assists. His restoration is no longer a novelty. Clippers fans have never been treated to a player whose combination of charisma and skill assert this level of authority over a game. Elton Brand’s better games were often dominant, but you knew what he was going to do and you watched him apply those skills with proficiency. Baron’s performances are creative and operatic. I’d forgotten, and it’s fun to remember again and see them up close on a regular basis.

via ClipperBlog.com Blog for the Los Angeles NBA Clippers Fans » Blog Archive » Memphis 104, Clippers 102.

It’s typical that I select the one piece from KA’s brilliant game recap that I want to nitpick to post. In actuality, click over for the usual great combination of video analysis and a look in the effect of missing Camby and Kaman last night.

Now.

Chris Herrington pointed this out via Twitter last night:

Big difference — other than the “evacuation effect” — has been Mayo switch on Davis. 17-9-9 in first, 8-3-3 in second (so far)

Now, am I pointing this out because I spent an hour and a half tweeting at the Memphis Grizzlies to switch OJ onto Davis, and when they did it worked? ABSOLUTELY. There is no sweeter joy in a blogger’s world than being right. It’s like candy for my ego. NOM-NOM-NOM.

I had been saying it all day, even commented (GASP) over 3sob.com about it. Mayo’s the type of defender that pesters you. He’s not going to body you up, or neutralize you. He’s not Shane Battier, but he’s going to work his face off to pester you, to annoy you, to pressure you, and then he’s going to create turnovers off of it. Mayo gets more steals off of non-gambles with perimeter pressure (as opposed to interior/driving swipes, where most steals come from) than any player I’ve seen.

Now, you compare that with Conley, who is long, and athletic, and can defend shots with that body, but isn’t quick or controlled enough to apply pressure.

Baron’s the same Baron he’s always been. Which means, if you pester him, annoy him, make him work, he’s going to shut down. 8 points, 3 rebounds, 3 assists isn’t shut down, but it’s also not tearing a new orifice in the face of my team. Putting Conley on him was saying “here, here’s an easy start to getting to the rim. We’ll challenge you at the point of your release, which is where you’re best, instead of attacking you at the perimeter.”

Now, conversely, Mayo was trying to guard Gordon, which was like trying to stop a bowling ball with silly puddy. Why not put Conley/Tinsley on Gordon and make him try and create versus athleticism/veteran savvy, and have Mayo pester Davis?

Maybe if the Grizzlies had gotten out of traditional positional concepts before the game started, they could have avoided the near-triple-double AT HALFTIME.

One other OJAM note. I feared the Mayo-at-point concept since he was drafted. No way would he be able to effectively run the offense. I was wrong. Not only can he do it, he should be doing it. He’s this weird combo-guard hybrid. Swagger like a shooting guard, control like a point guard. After his last three huge shots in the 4th (three versus LAC to tie, pull-up J over Utah, three over CHA), when he hits them and his teammates go nuts? Mayo calmly turns around and walks to the bench while the opponent calls timeout, looks to his coach, and just… nods. That’s it. Dude’s a killer. And his ability to create for the offense has shown phenomenal growth this year. He’s like Ben Gordon, if Ben Gordon didn’t hold a gun to possession’s heads and ask them if they wanted to die.  I’m willing to give OJAM at Point a try.

Get It? He Calls It A “Bear Trap Game” And They Played The Grizzlies! It’s A “Pun” Or “Play On Words,” You See.

  • In overtime, the Marc Gasol hit a 7-footer, Zach Randolph hit two free throws and a tough 17-footer, and then Lionel Hollins attacked Shaq on his last two possessions. First, he used Gasol to back-screen Delonte, and Shaq didn’t get above the screen, giving O.J. Mayo a look at a three. (Although Mayo deserves many props for hitting that one.) And on the Grizzlies’ final possession of the game, Shaq correctly sagged back when Mike Conley came on the pick-and-roll. Then he bit on a nice pull-up fake from Conley, got left at the free-throw line, and watched as Conley laid the ball in, as JJ Hickson rotated off of Zach Randolph too late to stop the shot. Not a great crunch-time defensive showing from the Cavs’ new starting frontcourt, and you hope Andy fouling out down the stretch will be a rare occurrence.
  • The three new starters: a combined -31 in 75 minutes. The three starters from last year they replaced: +19 in in 85 minutes.
  • The Cavs, as a team: 18 assists to 20 turnovers. That’s not going to get it done.

via Recap: Grizzlies 111, Cavs 109 (Or, Caught In a Bear Trap Game) « Cavs: The Blog.

Krolik runs down the Cavs’ whoopsies last night, with some interesting notes on the rotation and the Big Defensive Liability.

LeBron’s tenacity was crazy last night. Krolik criticizes the team for just standing around and watching LeBron, but even then, he points out that he had a TS% of 70%, scoring the last 13 points for the Cavs. I actually took a break towards the end of the game and Paroxi-wife asked me who I thought would win the game. Immediately, I said “Probably the Cavs by eight after free throws. LeBron’s so good that when they get into a tight game down the stretch, he can literally get you points everytime down for a finite number of possessions.” And that’s pretty much what happened. The only reason the Grizzlies won was because the executed with the ball first. They got into position to win with their defense, but the only way you beat LeBron in that scenario is by scoring with the ball last, which effectively they did, not counting LeBron’s desperation three (which I half-expected him to hit).

Okay, Memphis. I’m Willing To Give This Another Shot.

Maybe most impressive about tonight’s Grizzlies win was that they did it without an impressive night from Gasol, who has been the Grizzlies’ MVP this season. Gasol came into Tuesday 26th in PERs. Even on what was a tough night against a physical Cavs team, Gasol made his impact with two key buckets late on hook shots, along with eight rebounds and four assists. His all-around game is reminiscent of a nastier version of his All-Star brother, complete with manbeard.

via Daily Dime #2 by Matt Moore- ESPN

Dear Memphis,

I know I said last time that we were through. But given how you’ve gotten yourself together, even when I was skeptical, I’m willing to reconsider. We’re not back together, I want to make that clear. But we can start seeing each other if you want. I miss OJAM spotting up and Marc with the lefty and Rudy on the break. I’m even starting to think Zach Randolph is pretty good.

I want you to know that it wasn’t the same without you, but also that I can live without you. I don’t want to be in one of those relationships. Kevin Arnovitz’ incessant late-night crying is enough to make me want to stay away forever, and only see the Lakers. But that’s not me. So I’m willing to give this another shot. Please don’t make me hate you.

Love,
Matt

Typical. I Root Against Them, And They Start Winning. I Hate Sports.

When the national media claimed that adding Zach Randolph and Allen Iverson was going to blow up the solid young locker room, it was like, “What solid young locker room?” With Iverson out of the picture, however, a nice little bit of camaraderie is starting to appear.

The terrifying part is that Zach Randolph has been a part of it. Z-Bo has been saying the right things to the press. He has been sharing the ball. He hustles, at least as much as he can hustle. He cleans up Rudy and O.J.’s out-of-control messes. Over the past couple games, Randolph has constantly had his arms around Rudy and Marc’s necks, and I don’t think he’s just tired from all that hustling.

Zach Randolph is acting like a veteran leader for this team, especially for Marc Gasol and Rudy Gay. Is it a surprise that those two are rocking with their backs to the basket? Yes. It is a surprise. I think I know the culprit. And I like it. That doesn’t mean I want to see Rudy stop dunking or want Marc Gasol to start shooting that one handed post shot that should never, never freaking ever, go in — but it is encouraging.

via Lover’s Embrace: Memphis Grizzlies Blow Out Kings 116-105 – Straight Outta Vancouver.

Hey, look, Memphis is ‘only’ 5-9! Progress! I can’t believe I’m saying this, but Randolph looks like a great pickup. What DJTurtleface says here is true. Randolph has been a leader. He is taking care of the young guys. He is playing hard on both sides of the ball. I don’t know what to do. I’m scared. Hold me.

I can’t decide if I should keep rooting against them for their own good and so I can gloat when Randolph gets them all arrested in some sort of debacle, or if I should forgive Randolph for past crimes and embrace this bizarre, incomplete team.

The Grizzlies Are Hugging It Out

Fine, so the Memphis Grizzlies apparently had one of these meetings after the Houston debacle. Big deal, right?

But then they go out and beat (an admittedly depleted) Minnesota. Then they come in Wednesday night and play an utterly dominating game against the Clippers, leading wire-to-wire. Even though the victory came against a discombobulated Clipper team on the second night of a back-to-back roadie, the Grizzlies showed us some things we haven’t seen much of this season — Defense for one. Lots and LOTS of assists. Rudy hustling a bit on defense and not forcing (many) shots. Even Hasheem scored a couple of buckets and blocked a shot or two.

via What Goes On Behind Closed Doors | 3 Shades of Blue.

It’s sad that I’ve gotten to the point of openly rooting against this team because of their management.  I love watching Gasol play, he’s the best player on the team right now, OJAM’s going to break through a wall one of these games, and Rudy Gay had the most focused game I’ve seen from him, possibly ever, in the last game. Even Marcus Williams is playing well, and he’s a reclamation project. So really, it’s just Randolph.

You’ll notice a lack of Randolph quote in Chip Crain’s piece on the team meeting and how they talked about coming together as professionals. Maybe the quotes are out there and I haven’t seen them. And don’t get me wrong, Randolph is playing great this season. His assists have dropped off (two assists total in the two wins), but he’s two points from the vaunted 20 and 10 average.  And he’s the only starter anywhere close to positive plus/minus.

So why can’t I let it go? Is it just pride because of how much I hated them bringing in Randolph and Thabeet when they had Gasol? Mostly.  But I think a large part of it is that I see Randolph as a ceiling capper for them. He’s going to play well, they may even improve as a team. But they’re not going to come into their own as a unit, like OKC or Portland. It’s going to be “the young guys and Zach.” And since Randolph’s not likely to improve, there’s always going to be a limit on what they can accomplish. Tonight would be a huge step for them in making something relevant out of this win streak, even against depleted Philly. More on this, well, kind of, in this afternoon’s 15 footer.