Categories
Sports Sports Feature

ESPN Gives Gay (and Herrington) Some Love

From ESPN.com: Chris Herrington of the Memphis Flyer took the night off from being a journalist to sit in the stands and cheer with friends. He picked a good one:

“I couldn’t have asked for a better game to take off the media pass and act a fool. It was great fun to be on my feet with the fans when Rudy Gay hit that game winner last night.

“What made it even better was the awesome video the blasted from the Jumbotron seconds after Rudy hit the shot: Rudy dancing and smiling to Usher’s ‘Yeah’ while Kyle Lowry and Hakim Warrick backed him up like the Pips to Rudy’s Gladys. I don’t think the team has shown that before – and should probably be judicious in its use — but in that moment, it was perfect …

See the article and the game-winning clip here, and check out the rest of Chris’ column at Beyond the Arc.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Gay and Gasol

Before the Grizzlies moved to Memphis, I lived in St. Paul, Minnesota, where I followed the recently established Minnesota Timberwolves through a transition that is relevant to the current state of the Grizzlies.

I can remember former Wolves coach Flip Saunders saying once that, in basketball, “chemistry” means having a pecking order and having players buy into it.

When Saunders said that, he was reflecting, in part, on an earlier period in Wolves history, when the team underwent a dramatic reordering of its pecking order via the drafting of preps-to-pros pioneer Kevin Garnett, who quickly challenged incumbent frontman Christian Laettner’s status on the team. Laettner bristled at Garnett’s swift elevation and was traded before the end of Garnett’s first season.

That situation in Minnesota isn’t entirely analogous to what’s happening with the Memphis Grizzlies right now: Second-year forward Rudy Gay isn’t a talent of Garnett’s magnitude, while incumbent team star Pau Gasol is both a better player and better teammate than Laettner was.

But make no mistake: This season represents a shift at the top of the team’s pecking order for the first time since Gasol’s unexpected rookie-of-the-year campaign in 2001-’02. Gasol has been the team’s leading scorer every season of his career, but, through 17 games this season, it’s been Gay leading the way. The 21-year-old Gay is leading Gasol in points per game (18.1 to 16.6), minutes per game (34.2 to 33.8), and field-goal attempts per game (14.3 to 12.7). And, fewer than 100 games into his NBA career, Gay is still on a steep upswing.

Unlike in Minnesota, this seems to be a case of Gay joining Gasol rather than jettisoning him. Unselfish and accommodating, perhaps to a fault, Gasol is unlikely to resist sharing leading-man status with Gay the way former teammates Jason Williams, Bonzi Wells, and James Posey resisted playing a supporting role to Gasol. In fact, Gasol’s personality probably makes him better suited to being “1-A” in the pecking order than clear-cut top dog.

Fans have been clamoring for the Grizzlies to add another player as good as or — preferably — better than Gasol. Now that the team finally seems to have that player, the dissatisfaction with Gasol is unabated. It’s as if fans have gotten so accustomed to only having one all-star-caliber player on the roster that they struggle to conceive of a roster with two (or more!).

Of course, Gasol hasn’t helped with the longest stretch of mediocre play in his career. A couple of recent Commercial Appeal articles have done a good job of describing how new coach Marc Iavaroni’s more free-flowing offense has served to reduce Gasol’s previously central role in the offense: how the team doesn’t revolve around Gasol’s post play anymore and how this impacts the numbers Gasol is putting up.

But this analysis understates how poor Gasol’s recent play has been. The shrinkage in his per-game scoring and rebounding averages aren’t as important as his declining efficiency. Gasol is still getting plenty of touches in the post or on the move; he just isn’t converting them at the same rate he has throughout his career. Gasol no longer appears hurt, but I suspect his ankle and back problems from preseason are having a lingering effect — a confluence of poor conditioning, confidence, and timing seem to be holding Gasol back more than the new offense.

Unless Gasol is traded — and that doesn’t seem likely — it’s imperative that the team’s two best players play well and play well together.

The Grizzlies’ recent two-game homestand was encouraging in this regard: Half of Gasol’s eight assists came on passes to Gay. Meanwhile, Gay was more deferential to Gasol without sacrificing his own production. The ability of Gay and Gasol to maximize and mesh their respective talents could be the story of the season, and their ability — or inability — to do this may be the key to whether the current core of this Grizzlies team is one to build on or eventually tear apart.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Progress Report

At 5-16, the Grizzlies have been terrible. But astute fans knew that this season wouldn’t be measured by wins and losses. More distressing is that the team’s best bet for the future — rookie Rudy Gay — has gotten off to a similarly shaky start.

ESPN.com‘s John Hollinger, in labeling Gay “spectacular but not solid” last week, wrote in part: “I had high hopes for Gay, but so far I’m underwhelmed. The key is his shooting — at 37.7 percent from the floor, he’s been much less accurate than expected based on his results at Connecticut. He also hasn’t done much to dispel the doubts about his motor, as he’s tended to settle for jumpers rather than attacking the rim.”

This is a fair, but partial, assessment: First, there are things you miss when you don’t watch a player daily. Recently, Gay has shown small signs of progress that should pay bigger dividends over time. He’s begun moving the ball better; after garnering only two assists in his first 10 pro games, Gay tallied 11 over his next 10. And after struggling to maintain control of the ball in the face of contact, Gay has done a better job protecting the ball.

The rookie has also shown great promise as a one-on-one defender, the one vast area of the game that Hollinger’s phalanx of advanced stats don’t measure, and is already a disruptive force, using his length and athleticism to produce deflections, steals, and blocks.

But, subtleties aside, there’s no obscuring that Gay has struggled early on. His production is certainly not what fans were expecting.

Twenty games into a rookie season for a 20-year-old player is far too early to panic, but it’s not too early to allow that Gay’s projected stardom isn’t assured.

One thing is certain though: There’s also a team component to Gay’s struggles.

Gay has been at his best this season when he’s been able to get a steal on the defensive end and take off for the basket. The Grizzlies haven’t had a wing player convert his own takeaways into fast-break buckets like this since James Posey’s magical 2003-04 season, and Posey didn’t finish these plays like Gay does. Last weekend, Gay’s coast-to-coast steal and poster-worthy dunk on Clippers behemoth Chris Kamen was the clear highlight of an otherwise blasé game. This is the “spectacular” that Hollinger says obscures the lack of solidity in Gay’s game, and he’s right. But in a different team context, I suspect you’d see the spectacular a lot more often.

A quarter of the way into his rookie season, a couple of things about Gay’s offensive game have become clear: He’s much more comfortable and effective in the open floor than within a halfcourt offense. And he’s much better at finishing plays than starting them. Gay’s at his worst isolated 20 feet from the basket, where his suspect ball-handling ability and rookie tentativeness — not, as Hollinger cites, his “motor” — invariably leads to a pull-up jump shot instead of a foray to the rim.

To really thrive, Gay needs to be able to run, and he needs to play with a point guard who can get him the ball in the right spots. More than anyone except perhaps Grizzlies ticket buyers, Gay has been hurt by the devastating loss of fellow rookie point guard Kyle Lowry.

But Gay and anxious Grizzlies fans can take solace in this: Last winter, then-rookie Hakim Warrick looked just as lost and even more overmatched than Gay does right now. But after a year of seasoning, Warrick has been a breakout player in his second campaign. It might take Gay just as long, but it’s a good bet that breakout will come.

For more on the Grizzlies, see MemphisFlyer.com/grizblog.