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The Mavericks Will Beat the Spurs

I’m putting this out for the world to see. It’s 3:06 PM on Monday, May 22. The Mavericks will win game 7 in San Antonio. Here’s why. In a seven game series, the best team almost always wins. We saw it happen yesterday in Detroit. We saw it happen last year when Dallas edged Houston in the first round of the playoffs. And I believe we’ll see it happen again tonight.

Even though San Antonio is the defending champion and they won three more games than the Mavericks this year, I still believe the Mavericks are better. They have more depth, more athleticism, and more talent top to bottom. The best team should win game 7. I believe that team is Dallas.

May the best team win.

Oh, and this is my 99th post to my blog. Seems like destiny that my 100th would be talking about the Mavericks advancing to the Western Conference finals.

Would Tony Parker Had Been Suspended?

I don’t think that you can blame officiating for losses in the NBA. There are missed calls and wrong calls that happen all the time, every game. Sometimes a player gets called for a foul when he didn’t even touch the other player, and other times a player will knock someone to the ground and won’t draw a whistle. Usually the fouls balance out, and the referees don’t dictate the outcome of a game.

If the Spurs end up winning the series against the Mavericks, I won’t blame Stu Jackson for suspending Jason Terry. It looked like Terry made a punching motion toward Michael Finley, so the suspension could be deemed as deserved.

However, I think that the NBA has proven, once again, that favortism exists. There are certain players who get away with almost everything (Tim Duncan’s traveling) and other players who have to make sure they don’t breate on another player wrong (Ron Artest). Jason Terry was another victim in this preferential, star treatment, biased league. He’s not well known by the fans throughout the league, so the league decided to use him to make a statement.

If Tony Parker, who is the Spurs starting point guard, had done the exact same thing there is NO WAY that he would have been suspended for ANY game, let alone game 6 in the Western Conference Semi-Finals. There would have been weeping, wailing, and gnashing of teeth in the streets of San Antonio if he were in Terry’s position. The tears from the fans would have made the riverwalk overflow all the way up to Austin. The league would have fined him, but they would conclude that he was making a shoving motion while trying to stand up or something along those lines.

What Terry did wasn’t smart, but I don’t think he was trying to punch Finley. He was frustrated that there were two Spurs players laying on top of him without a foul being called. He didn’t deserve a suspension.

That said, I return to my first thought. The Mavericks fate does not rest in the office of Stu Jackson. It rests on the court at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, TX. If the rest of the team can’t get it done on the court without Terry, the only people to blame are the players and coaching staff. No one else really matters.

One more thing. I wish Duncan and Ginnobli would stop acting like they’ve never commited a foul in their lives. Every time a call goes against them, their eyes shoot wide open and they stick their hands in front of their bodies. Play the game and stop whining.

Why Steve Nash is Not the MVP

Last year, everyone was blown away by the Phoenix Suns. Adding Steve Nash as their point guard, coupled with Amare Stoudemire having a breakout season, catapulted them to the best record in the NBA. They were the darling team in the media. They scored a lot of points and had a lot of fun doing it. I had no problems with Nash being the MVP last year.

This year, however, I don’t think he deserves it. There are a lot of people who will argue that Nash kept the Suns together with Stoudemire being hurt all year. There is some truth to that, but I don’t think Steve Nash is even the Suns best player this year. Shawn Marion has kept that team alive. The problem I have with giving Nash the MVP this year is that he is overated based on the system that the Suns run.

Let me go through some stats. The Suns average 87.4 FGA per game, of which 25.6 are three-pointers. Those are both the highest among the NBA. The next closest FGA is the Charlotte Bobcats (83.4) and the average for the league is about 79-80. The Suns attempt the highest percentage (29%) of their field goal attempts behind the three point line. They are dead last in free throw attempts per game (18.1), with the next closest team (the mighty Toronto Raptors) attempting five more per game. They are also dead last in offensive rebounds per game (9.4).

They do have some really bright points. They are the most accurate team shooting three pointers (39.2%) and second in overall field goal accuracy (47.8%). They’re third in defensive rebounds (32.1), and first in assists (26.6) and points per game (108.3).

In case you’re having trouble grasping the big picture, the Suns are trying to beat you by shooting more shots and beating you in transition. They don’t make an effort to get the ball down low or to get to the free throw line. If they have a somewhat-open shot (especially behind the three point line) they’re going to fire it up. They have people who can make jump shots and they base their entire gameplan on using them.

They remind me a lot of a college team. Watching the NCAA tournament, I was shocked by how often teams would launch (and hit) three pointers. I could tell that some of the players were only on the team because they could hit the three and that was about it. If you’re one-dimensional in college, most NBA teams will pass on you.

What does all this have to do with Nash not deserving the MVP? I believe that the reason Nash is so successful and puts up the big numbers is because he is in a system that rewards people with his skill set. However, if you put almost any other starting point guard in the Suns starting lineup they would do almost just as well. If you look back to the 2003-04 season (the year before Nash arrived), Stephon Marbury put up huge numbers (20.8 ppg, 8.3 apg) for the Suns. The biggest difference between him and Nash is that Marbury is a shoot first, selfish player. In most systems, that doesn’t work well for the point guard. This is especially true in the Suns up-tempo, run-and-gun style.

I think the reason the Suns have done so well these past two seasons is teams just aren’t used to the style they play. Most of the time you don’t have to worry about the other team shooting a three pointer 1.7 seconds after your team just missed a shot. Like I pointed out before, the Suns are most interested in making shots from the outside. Nash just has to find the open player and get him the ball. To me, that is not what being the MVP is all about.

That’s a New Stat

I had never heard of a plus/minus reading of road wins to home losses before reading the latest Power Rankings at ESPN.com. Mark Stein points out that San Antonio has a better reading (+17) than Dallas (+15). I thought I had heard of every stat that was out there, but I was wrong. My question is, what does that stat really tell you? I know that you’re supposed to win at home, but it’s harder to win on the road, so I guess it could have some value, but it seems pretty worthless.

Mark Stein is a Genius!

For the first time this season, the Mavericks are ranked first in the ESPN NBA Power Rankings. I would be more excited about this if Stein didn’t go to ESPN from Dallas. No matter, it’s nice to see them get some respect.

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