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Beyond the Arc Sports

Postgame Notebook: Grizzlies 90, Mavericks 84 — Unleashing the Beast

Marc Gasol and Zach Randolph went large and the team defense took over in a big comeback win.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Marc Gasol and Zach Randolph went large and the team defense took over in a big comeback win.

The Lead: After seeing their normally elite defense slide some in the immediate aftermath of the Rudy Gay trade, the Grizzlies have come out of the All-Star break in ferocious form. In all five games since the break, there’s been a quarter where they’ve held the opposition to 15 or fewer points: Twelve in the second against the Pistons. Fourteen in the first against the Raptors. Fifteen in the third against the Magic. Thirteen in the third against the Nets.

Tonight? How about five points in the third quarter for the Mavericks?

But it was even more than that. From the mid-second quarter until late in the third, the Grizzlies’ team defense reached beyond the normal threshold, morphing into some kind of wild, seething, pulsating beast. Flying out at shooters, darting to defensive boards, handcuffing ballhandlers, snatching and pestering all over the floor.

The second-quarter ended on a 16-4 run in the final five minutes that included six Dallas turnovers, five of those caused by Griz steals and the other an out of bounds violation spurred by defensive pressure.

Coming out for the third, the Grizzlies held the Mavericks completely scoreless for more than eight minutes and without a field-goal for nearly nine minutes. The Mavericks scored only two baskets in the entire quarter and only one was against a set defense. Spanning the quarters was a 24-0 run, a franchise record. As was the five-point quarter allowed.

The catch tonight was that the Grizzlies had to have that kind of mind-boggling defensive spurt, because it was preceded by a narcoleptic first quarter in which they gave up 38 points before falling behind by 25 points early in the second.

“I don’t know what their mindset was coming in,” Lionel Hollins said of his team after the game.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Bigs and Balance: Elevating Marc Gasol and sharing the ball will be the Grizzlies’ second-half path.

Zach Randolph has bounced back from a rough January, but dealing Rudy Gay hasnt really changed his role so far.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Zach Randolph has bounced back from a rough January, but dealing Rudy Gay hasn’t really changed his role so far.

The Grizzlies emerged from last weekend’s NBA All-Star break still on pace for the best record in franchise history but with many questions to answer over the season’s remaining 31 regular-season games.

If the team, projected to finish fifth in the Western Conference even before the trade of longtime would-be star Rudy Gay to the Toronto Raptors, slides further than that, then jettisoning Gay will obviously be seen — fairly or not, given the preexisting downward trajectory — as a turning point. But if the Grizzlies maintain their ground or better, the correction will have begun not so much with the deal itself but with the delayed acceptance of it.

The Grizzlies, from the head coach down through the locker room, wasted a few days pouting in the wake of the Gay trade, despite the fact that the team’s slide since November had coincided with Gay’s worst season since his rookie year.

The trade itself was a reminder of something we learned with the Pau Gasol deal: that, in a lot of quarters, any deal made by the Grizzlies that includes financial motivation will be seen entirely through that prism.

Make no mistake, with new controlling owner Robert Pera acknowledging some initial cash-flow issues in the immediate wake of his purchase agreement with Michael Heisley, there are legitimate questions about the wherewithal of the new ownership group. But those questions can’t begin to be answered until we see how they conduct the coming off-season. The problem with drawing such conclusions from the Gay deal, of course, is that “financial reasons” and “basketball reasons” are becoming increasingly inseparable in the NBA. Gay is set to make north of $19 million at the conclusion of his current contract without having ever made an All-Star team. In a league with strict rules that tie player payroll to methods of player acquisition, that’s a poor allocation of resources, no matter your market.

Nevertheless, the deal was disruptive, and the team seemed very fragile in its aftermath, with head coach Lionel Hollins seemingly incapable of making public statements without generating controversy and the team’s defensive effort looking near non-existent in the first half of a road loss to the Atlanta Hawks.

But the team rallied to play a competitive second half in Atlanta, and, afterward, team leaders such as Marc Gasol and Tony Allen responded with tough-minded comments that went beyond the usual locker-room platitudes. A day and a half later, Hollins used his pre-game press availability to finally end the mourning. He didn’t pretend to approve of the deal, but he did re-engage the season’s challenge.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Postgame Notebook: Grizzlies 99, Warriors 93 — When a Win is More Than a Win

The Grizzlies set a new tone, on and off the court, Friday night.

The Lead: With his team standing at a crossroads in the aftermath of last week’s Rudy Gay trade and its attendant controversies, Lionel Hollins used his pre-game media availability for a “calming-the-waters” address that was at once emotional, positive, and tinged with defiance. An hour later, his team took the floor and replicated that tone.

The first half was thrilling if out of character: A team that has, at times, struggled to top 85 points in a game blasted out 63 in the half, with more than 30 in each quarter. And how those points were generated was even more unlikely than the score itself: On 7-15 three-point shooting, with Tony Allen (13 points on 5-5 shooting) and Austin Daye (12 on 4-5, including 3-4 from deep) leading the way.

That was never going to be sustainable, and the third quarter, in which the Grizzlies scored only 14 points and allowed the Warriors, for the first time, to gain a lead, was all too familiar.

But the fourth quarter was vintage “grit and grind” Grizzlies. Marc Gasol made plays from the post. Zach Randolph battled on the block. Tony Allen moved onto the Warriors’ top scorer, Stephen Curry, and chased him ragged, with Mike Conley fighting through screens to stick to 6’7” shooter Klay Thompson and make it possible.

The best all-around performance since the trade?

“Definitely,” said Hollins after the game. “And against a very good opponent. I thought our team played really well. It was a baby step in terms of coming back and being a good team, which we haven’t been, and playing with passion and energy. I’m proud of the effort tonight.

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The Exchange

A new era of Memphis Grizzlies basketball dawned last weekend when the Grizzlies played their first home game without Rudy Gay. While there are many angles to the trade that sent Gay out of Memphis, the simple lineup swap of Gay for veteran Tayshaun Prince will have the most immediate impact. And the contrast, at least stylistically, could be dramatic.

Gay, at 26, is one of the NBA’s great athletes, but his often erratic play has, so far, prevented him from reaching the all-star level for which he’s long seemed destined. Prince, who will turn 33 later this month, is a 10-year vet winding down a fairly illustrious career for lifetime role player.

Physically, Prince is both longer and lighter, a slender 6’9″ with one of the NBA’s most eye-popping wingspans. Where Gay’s game is predicated on leveraging his athletic advantages, Prince’s game is all about the combination of length and savvy.

Prince’s wingspan allows him to play well off shooters to deny drives and yet still contest jump shots. It allows him to handle the ball on the block while keeping it away from the prying hands of post defenders. It allows him to shoot over opponents, especially in the paint, even without Gay’s ability to jump over them.

The key is going to come on the offensive end, where the Grizzlies will be exchanging usage for efficiency. This season, Gay’s “used” — via shot attempts, turnovers, or assists — more than a quarter of the Grizzlies’ possessions when he’s been on the floor but has done so with the worst shooting of his career and a typically rocky turnover rate. Prince, by contrast, typically uses fewer possessions but does so with better outcomes. But this trade-off will be tricky for the Grizzlies, who will no longer be able to rely on Gay’s shot-creation as a bailout option.

Prince is a versatile scorer who does most of his work from mid-range (where he consistently shoots better than Gay), but he can also work from the post and is a solid but not prolific three-point shooter — something that’s not likely to change, despite the team’s dire need for more outside shooting. Prince won’t score as much as Gay did, but the team can reasonably hope he’ll score more efficiently while helping facilitate better shots for others.

And that’s the biggest advantage Prince will have over Gay. Prince is both a better passer and less turnover-prone. In his career, including this season, Prince has almost always had more than twice as many assists as turnovers. Gay’s usually struggled to break even. Where the offense would often stagnate with the ball in Gay’s hands, Prince can be expected to make quicker, more sound decisions. Prince has spent his career using his versatility to be a positive-outcome player as a third or fourth option, and you could see this materialize instantly in his weekend debut.

On the floor with Zach Randolph, who likes to operate on the block, Prince worked from the wing, playing off Randolph with deft post-entry passes and reliable mid-range shooting. On the floor with Darrell Arthur, who’s best from the top of the key, Prince himself went into the post, drew a double-team, and kicked it out to Arthur for an open shot.

Prince won’t resemble a “star” like Gay did. But he’ll blend, facilitate, and foster better ball movement. It’s probably not an accident that, in Prince’s pick-up-game-like debut, the Grizzlies had five players notch three or more assists.

In truth, Gay’s production has not correlated strongly with team success this season. That’s been more dependent on the play of the point guards and the post players and the team’s three-point shooting overall. And that was likely to be the case going forward, trade or not. If Prince’s divergent style can enable others to perform better, that will mean much more than his own stat line.

For more on the Grizzlies, see “Beyond the Arc,” Chris Herrington’s Grizzlies blog, at memphisflyer.com/blogs/beyondthearc.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Road Recap: Thunder 106, Grizzlies 89 — Three Issues of Ongoing Concern

Zach Randolph has been calling for the ball. Now hes likely to get it.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Zach Randolph has been calling for the ball. Now he’s likely to get it.

Last night in Oklahoma City was the absolute worst way for the Grizzlies to begin life post-Rudy Gay: On the road, against arguably the best team in the NBA, which was, itself, coming off three days rest and into a nationally televised revenge game against a team that had beaten them in their building earlier in the season. Meanwhile, the Grizzlies were still wrapping their collective heads around a disruptive trade and were playing with only nine active bodies, three of which were first- or second-year players who have relatively minimal NBA game experience.

Needless to say, it didn’t go well for the Griz. The Thunder went an entire quarter without having a possession end with a missed shot, on the way to building a 25-point lead. A bout of temporary insanity from Russell Westbrook and the Grizzlies’ pride conspired to make it a game again in the second half, if briefly, with the Grizzlies coming back to within 10 points. But then Kevin Durant did Kevin Durant things.

With all those first-graph factors in mind and considering that the Grizzlies were playing without four potential rotation players in trade acquisitions Tayshaun Prince, Ed Davis, and Austin Daye and the still-recovering Quincy Pondexter, you can pretty well ignore this loss.

But there were a couple of problems — and one pre-game grenade — that underscore some big issues going forward in terms of whether this team can maintain it’s stature post-trade:

Can Z-Bo Still Carry the Offensive Load?
Zach Randolph reacted to the Rudy Gay trade, in part, by suggesting it might allow him to become a bigger part of the offense, making this at least the third time in the past few weeks — including his Bulls post-game TV interview and his All-Star reaction — in which he’s done a variation on “give me the ball more.”

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Tipoff: Ownership News, Griz-Jazz Preview

What had been widely speculated broke officially Sunday night. As first reported by Marc Stein of ESPN.com, former NBA player agent and Sacramento Kings executive Jason Levien, who had been acting as a representative for prospective Grizzlies owner Robert Pera for the past several months, has been named to the top post in the new Grizzlies organization.

Levien will be named Chief Executive Officer and Managing Partner of Memphis Basketball, LLC (the new name for the Grizzlies’ governing organization, replacing the previous Hoops LLP), overseeing both the business and basketball sides of the organization and reporting directly to new controlling owner and board chairman Pera. There’s no exact precedent for this in Grizzlies history. Think of Levien as some union of Jerry West, Andy Dolich, and Michael Heisley right-hand man Stan Meadows. In other words, he now has more organizational power than any non-owner in franchise history. (For an inside look on how Levien’s tenure with the Kings came to an end, check out this breakdown from friend of the blog Tom Ziller.)

Pera and Levien met with members of the Commercial Appeal on Sunday, but as of Friday, representatives of the new ownership group had not been on the scene, according to multiple Grizzlies sources, and current staffers seemed uncertain about the degree of change that was looming.

The plan, apparently, is for Pera and/or his representatives to meet with team employees early this morning, ahead of the 10 a.m. public press conference to follow. As one Grizzlies employee joked, “Hopefully you won’t see a line of us walking out with pink slips when you show up.”