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Basketball Betting

Let’s Pump the Brakes on Wembanyama

Dusting off the old typewriter to get some stuff off my chest about the upcoming NBA draft and the narratives that are being spread about the top prospect, Victor Wembanyama. Is this what 23 is? Getting so worked up on a Friday night about an 19-year old that you put all other plans aside to rant on your blog that no one reads. It’s kinda great.

Earlier this week Adrian Wojnarowski went on ESPN to spout an outrageous and unfair quote, “This is the most highly-anticipated player to ever enter the NBA,” Wojnarowski said. “This is maybe not only the greatest prospect in the NBA’s history, (he’s) maybe the greatest prospect in the history of team sports.” This just got me so fucking angry. Woj is 54 years old, which means he was of functioning age for when LeBron was coming up through the ranks in the early 2000’s. Before the internet was what it is now, LeBron had his games televised on ESPN and commentated by some of their best comentary teams. The way LeBron saw the court at that young of an age is something we had never seen and haven’t seen since. Wemby is 7’5 and his potential is limitless, but he doesn’t facilitate like LBJ. LeBron just broke the all-time scoring record and he’s a better passer than scorer. I would say Wemby is more interesting than LeBron, but not a better prospect.

Now to the other things that angered me about this…. ALL of team sports?? Woj cmon now. First off, coming out of high school, Kareem had won all of the NYC high school titles, and then went into college and won all of the NCAA titles in his three years on varsity at UCLA. Coming into the NBA Kareem was just as hyped as Wemby, it was just a different time so it wasn’t covered like it is now.

BUT the most egregious part of all of this is the blinders that Woj has on for basketball. Let me remind you of a young man named Tiger who can hit the shit out of a golf ball. Tiger Woods was 4 years old and going on TV shows and showing off his putting and chipping skills and his dad labeled him as the next big thing. He arrived on the tour and then went and ripped off one of the most dominant stretches in all of sports history. From 1997-2013 Tiger was 126 under par in Majors… Second place was 125 OVER par. Tiger was in the spotlight for every conscious moment of his life and was expected to be the best ever as a CHILD. Wembanyama couldn’t dribble until he was ten.

Now this might come off as Wembanyama hate and it’s not that. He’s great and I think he’ll change the Spurs. He does things on the court that have never been done before but this comes at a risk. Guys his size are much more injury prone and we just saw it with Chet Holmgren missing his whole rookie year with a foot injury. Seven-footers have a terrible history of foot injuries, and Woj saying things like this about a guy with such a risk of injury is just setting him up for failure. We’ve seen top prospects like Greg Oden (taken before KD) Sam Bowie (taken before MJ) get injured before they ever get a chance in the league. Then guys like Bill Walton and Yao Ming shined bright but eventually flamed out due to foot injuries. Putting expectations on this young man is dangerous and Woj being one of the most prominent figures in the NBA being the one who said it is stupid and he should know better. Also.. Scoot Henderson may just end up having a better career, not because of talent or potential, but because of his build and likelihood that he will hold up over time. I mean look at this motherfucker. That’s a dawg. Could this be an MJ/Bowie situation? I hope not. But this shouldn’t be a LeBron vs the field situation either.

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Basketball

Nikola Jokic Put on a Clinic Yesterday

It was your typical NFL Sunday with crazy finishes, the Eagles winning and the Cowboys losing a game they probably should have won. But the most impressive performance yesterday came on the hardwood.

Nikola Jokic put up a mind-boggling stat line of 40-27-10 yesterday against the Hornets. He is coming off of back-to-back MVP seasons, and honestly, he probably deserves a third this year. There is no team that has a bigger drop-off when their star is off the floor than the Denver Nuggets, and this was evident last night. The offense runs as a well-oiled machine when he is on the court, where everyone knows their role, how to cut, and where to stand. When Jokic subs out, the machine gets jammed up when a washed-up DeAndre Jordan subs in and can’t even catch the ball on a pick-and-roll.

Jokic was getting whatever he wanted, but his go-to attack was catching the ball either at or above the free-throw line, facing up, and dominating Nick Richards or Mason Plumlee. Whether it was an easy mid-range, a power dribble to a spin, or just throwing his shoulder into his man and getting to the middle for his baby hook/floater, he was unstoppable.

The main reason I love watching Jokic play is that he makes it look so easy. He uses angles and smart positioning to get the easiest looks possible. My favorite play of his is when he is off-ball and finds himself underneath the basket. Most post players in that situation get out of the lane to get to the baseline dunker spot, or go and situate themselves on the block and look for a post touch, but not Jokic. He uses this as an advantage and gets the defender on his back and pins them right underneath the basket, and he has such soft hands, his teammates just have to put it within a few feet of his massive frame, and it will either be an easy layup, or the defender will be forced to foul.

Maybe the most impressive thing that Jokic has done is completely saving Aaron Gordon’s career. I would love to do a deep dive on how many of Gordon’s points this year are assisted by Jokic, it has to be around 60%. In the rare occasion where he is not on the court with Jokic, he looks lost when he tries to dribble or shoot, but with Jokic, he plays perfectly off of him and is great at positioning himself under the hoop for easy dump-offs from the MVP. Just do yourselves a favor and watch these highlights from last night, or if you have time and NBA league pass, the all-possessions recap, and see the difference between the Nuggets when Jokic is on and off the court.

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Basketball Betting

$70 To $700: 12/9

A couple of bad beats last night. Zubac with 9 first-half points couldn’t buy a pass from his selfish-ass teammates in the second half to get the 10 he needed. On the wrong side of the Baker Mayfield miracle game. The Raiders had so many different ways they could have put that game away. Sengun over points was almost a loser as well. He had 14, had one of the most unbelievable poster dunks I have ever seen but it was terribly called an offensive foul. Next possession he gets called for a travel when he did not even have control of the ball and gets so frustrated he gets taken out of the game in the middle of the third quarter and didn’t even get back in until garbage time where he barely squeaked a layup in to salvage tonight. S/O Cam Akers for fumbling or else he would have easily gone over. Kyren Williams got a lot of the second-half work because of the fumble which saved my ass. Dame took over in that game which was a great omen for Simons under points, which hit easily, but after 12 first quarter points, Jerami Grant ended up with 18 which had us end up 3-3 on the night. Staying above water night one, and a few bad beats. I’m fired up for the slate tonight. Gonna stick to just one play for each team at max from now on. 

Starting Balance: $70.07

Record:3-3

Tonights Plays:

  • Giannis O30.5 points: 8 straight games with 30+ points for Giannis, and I do not expect it to stop against the Mavericks tonight. Last time they played Giannis still had 30 even in just 27 minutes. This game should be closer (unless Grayson Allen hits 7 threes again) which should allow more opportunities for Giannis.
  • Scottie Barnes O28.5 points, rebounds, assists: Barnes is playing a lot better as of late, and this number has hit four of his last five. The Magic are still banged up and Barnes should be a beneficiary of this.
  • Mason Plumlee U23.5 PRA: The Knicks and Mitch Robinson have always kept Plumlee in check, as this number is 7-1 in Plumlee’s last 8 against the Knicks.
  • Zion O7.5 rebounds: As of late, Zion is looking much healthier, and this is 4-1 in his last 5 games. Ayton will most likely be guarding Valančiūnas, leaving a smaller matchup for Zion, where he should be a monster on the boards.
  • Anthony Davis U39.5 PRA: Davis was playing like an MVP before he exited his last game with flu like symptoms. Who knows how healthy AD is, and Embiid has kept AD in check, holding him to 23, 12 and 2. This number may not seem high, but could still hit with AD Having 25, 10 and 4, so I like this spot.
  • Kyrie Irving O23.5 points: This is a total spot play against the Hawks. Dejounte Murray is out for a few weeks, and he would normally be tasked with Kyrie, so the controversial guard should be able to feast on a depleted backcourt. Recently, Kyrie has been getting a ton of 4th quarter points, so maybe monitor this one around halftime and find some value and take his second-half points over if he was off to a cold start in the first.
  • Rudy Gobert U30.5 PRA: Gobert has really struggled this year, and even without KAT in the lineup, his numbers have not been great, averaging just 10 and 9.
  • Jaden Ivy U14.5 points: Ivey has seen a decrease in minutes since Bojan Bogdanovic returned a week or so ago, and Ivey will have a tough matchup against the Grizzlies. In his last 6 he is averaging just 12 points, which includes a 10-point output against the Grizzlies just 5 days ago.
  • Grambling @Vandy U138: My first college basketball play thanks to my good friend Chris. He is great at finding value in games like this. In Chris’s words “Grambling’s offense stinks (333 in efficiency) and Vandy shuts down low majors. Vandy’s offense is also inconsistent. Vandy has only given up 3 times, and all of those were to teams that were better than themselves.”
Categories
Basketball

The Ten Commandments of Pickup Basketball

Pickup basketball is one of the best instances in this world of guys being dudes. Just show up to the gym at any given time and team up with guys you’ve never met before and play a team sport where you have to be very involved with one another. No plans, typically there’s no groupchat, just show up and play. However, pickup basketball is not a lawless land, there are a couple of unspoken rules one must follow.

  1. In a competitive game, get back on defense
    • There is nothing worse than a cherry picker. Both playing against one and having one on your team. Giving up easy baskets because someone is too out of shape to run back on defense is not fun. The arguments of “if you don’t like it stay back with them” and “why don’t you do it” are horseshit. This is supposed to be fun and there is nothing fun about wide-open layups. If it’s the last game or two of a run and everyone is tired, this rule is of course different, but if you sense a game is competitive, just get back on defense.
  2. It’s almost never that serious
    • Part of the fun of pickup basketball is beating the dudes who take it too seriously and try to talk actual shit. Just don’t be the guy that other people go home saying “fuck that guy, what was his issue?” If you’ve never had that conversation with people on your team, I hate to break it to you but you might be the one taking it too seriously.
  3. No undercutting, pushing people from behind
    • Turning an ankle and catching accidental elbows should be the only injuries that take place in a pickup run. It has never once been a good idea to go underneath someone when they’re going up for a dunk/layup. It has genuinely never been the right play to push someone square in the back after they get by you. If you get beat just be a man and don’t do something that might injure someone. I was playing outdoors once and blew past an old head and went up for a layup and he pushed me into the metal pole underneath the hoop. Got up to confront him and he threatened to pull a gun on me. Once again, it’s never that serious.
  4. Win by two
    • My biggest pet peeve is people playing 1s and 2s, since anyone who knows fractions understands that 1s and 2s is a completely different game than the regulation 2s and 3s. That has been accepted as a norm and I live with it, but one thing that I cannot live with is people who play straight up, especially in 1s and 2s. It makes games more competitive at the end and should just be a rule of thumb.
  5. Shooting around while waiting your turn
    • Getting warmed up while a game is going on is totally fine and normal, but there is nothing worse than oblivious pieces of shit who don’t notice when the active game is coming down on the hoop they are shooting on. Totally fucks up the pace of play and is an extremely easy problem to avoid. Just be aware and considerate and it should never be a problem.
  6. Dap up after a game or a run
    • If you’re running multiple games with the same people, it is okay to wait until after everyone’s last game to exchange pleasantries. If it’s a winner-stay situation, it is common courtesy to say good game and high-five the other team, even if they sucked or kicked your ass. Don’t be the irrationally angry guy who storms off because he thinks his team “sold” on him. No dude you took 80% of the shots and went 4/25 from the field, you’re the one who sold on your team asshole.
  7. Don’t overly hog the ball
    • Everyone has been a part of a game where off-ball movement isn’t a thing and it’s mostly iso ball. That’s totally fine and it’s fun to see what everyone has in their bag. But the only way that works is if everyone gets their turn. A good baseline is never having three straight possessions where you don’t pass the ball, unless you’re hot. Nothing at all is worse than the guy who thinks they’re good because they take every shot, not because they MAKE every shot.
  8. If you’re gonna wear accessories, make sure you’re good
    • Another easy way to put a target on your back is by non-ironically wearing unnecessary accessories to a run where you don’t know the people. If you’re bad and have a shooting sleeve on, yes I am going to say “let him shoot” and most likely put my shoulder into you for an easy layup. I don’t make the rules (yes I do bozos).
  9. Keep the arguing to a minimum
    • Another rule to try to keep the game going. This might be a little bit of the old guy yelling at clouds but I don’t care. I go to the gym to play basketball, not to yell at each other over what may or may not have been a shooting foul. Shoot for it if you can’t come to a decision. Nothing is worse than someone trying to recreate their move with the game stopped and explaining why it’s not a travel (if this ever happens it is 99% of the time a travel).
  10. Stopping an open layup by grabbing someone
    • It’s not game seven of the finals. Hell, it’s not even intramurals. If someone has an open layup let them make it. It’s funnier if they miss it organically. And now take fouls are banned in the NBA, so don’t do it it pickup.
Categories
Basketball

Draymond is a Great Teammate

If you haven’t seen the video of Draymond Green knocking out Jordan Poole, it is a punch that would make Mike Tyson proud.

Do not be duped by the fake pictures on Twitter of Jordan Poole’s face but I believe that Poole’s face was definitely worse for the wear after acting as a roadblock for Draymond’s fist.

I believe this is exactly the spark that the Warriors need as they look to repeat as champions. The people calling this a sucker punch are idiots. Obviously, words were exchanged between the two, and when Draymond got in Poole’s face and then shoved Draymond away, he was very foolish to not protect his face. He has been teammates with Draymond for a while now and had to know a punch was a possibility and should have put his hands up.

Credit to Poole for recognizing that and agreeing that Draymond should not be suspended for the dust-up. That shows the respect Poole has for Draymond as a teammate and person. Now Draymond is taking time away from the team, and let me say, throwing a punch at a younger unruly teammate is an all-time way to get out of training camp, well done Dray. Latrelle Sprewell tried a similar tactic during his time with the Warriros, when he choked his coach, was asked to leave practice and then returned 20 minutes later to throw a punch. That ended up being a 68-game suspension, so Draymond must have really done his homework and decided that the best way to get away with violence at practice is to throw a punch at someone you know has to look up to you. Absolutely genius move and that’s why Draymond will go down as one of the greats of the 2010s and 20s.