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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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Postgame Notebook: Grizzlies 85, Wizards 76 — Tayshaun Prince in the Grindhouse

The Lead: After playing their first game without Rudy Gay Thursday night in Oklahoma City, the Grizzlies came home to welcome their new players into the lineup for the first time, with better results.

Tayshaun Prince had a nice night in his Grizzlies debut.

Despite never practicing with the team, veteran Tayshaun Prince looked like he’d been with the Grizzlies all season. Prince entered the game midway through the first quarter and knocked down his first shot — a mid-range jumper off a Mike Conley feed — 16 seconds later. About half an hour of court time later, the game ended with the ball in Prince’s hands after a defensive rebound and a nine-point win.

In-between, Prince showcased a versatile two-way game: Scoring on mid-range jumpers and long-limbed drives (14 points on 7-11) shooting. Going into the post when Darrell Arthur was able to space the floor at power forward, drawing attention and setting up Arthur for open jumpers (3 assists). Making nice post-entry feeds (perhaps the most underrated advantage he has over Gay). And closing out on shooters. His back-to-back jumpers in the final three minutes allowed the Grizzlies to finally pull away after playing roughly even with the Wizards most of the night.

“He’s a veteran,” Lionel Hollins said of Prince’s debut. “When you’ve been around, there are not any new plays. There are new calls to plays. Once you recognize what the sets are then you learn the calls and can be in the right spot. He’s a high-IQ player.”

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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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Game 42 Preview: Grizzlies vs. Nets

The Grizzlies embark on the second half of the season tonight against a Brooklyn Nets team that’s gone 10-1 in January and is pushing its way up the Eastern Conference standings.

This is likely to be a much tougher test for the newer-look Grizzlies than the Lakers provided Wednesday night.

As always, three thoughts:

Zach Randolph, All-Star

1. Zach Randolph: All-Star: The Grizzlies will welcome Zach Randolph tonight as the franchise’s first two-time All-Star. It was very unclear how All-Star selections were going to shake out for the Grizzlies this year. It could have been Randolph or Marc Gasol or both or neither. Any of those outcomes would have been defensible, with the final three spots presumably coming down to five worthy candidates — Randolph, LaMarcus Aldridge, and David Lee, who all made it, and Gasol and Stephen Curry, who did not.

Prior to yesterday’s announcement, I did a quick survey of media picks around the web. Of the 11 I found, only one — CBSSports.com’s Ken Berger — had no Grizzlies on the team. Two — ESPN.com’s Marc Stein and Ethan Sherwood Strauss — picked both Randolph and Gasol. And the other eight all had Gasol making it over Randolph. Still, I wasn’t surprised the coaches went the other way. Randolph’s per-game stats (16-12-1) are a little more impressive than Gasol’s (13-7-4), and Randolph has the easily digestible pegs of “second in the league in rebounding” and “first in the league in double-doubles.” For Randolph, it’s an outside affirmation of his full return from last season’s knee injury.

Gasol’s offense has waned along with the team’s over the past month, but his chief calling card is his rock-solid but rarely flamboyant defense, where he anchors the conference’s best unit. The choices of Joakim Noah and Tyson Chandler in the East proves the coaches don’t ignore defense for the sake of scoring averages, but in Gasol’s case, with so much worthy competition, his subtle excellence on that end wasn’t enough.

Gasol will be matched up tonight with another “snub” in Nets center Brook Lopez, who is having a bounce-back season with the Nets, averaging 19 points a game on 52% shooting.

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Month to Month: The Grizzlies’ December Slide was Offensive.

Mike Conleys trouble finishing at the rim was just one component of his December struggles.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Mike Conley’s trouble finishing at the rim was just one component of his December struggles.

The Grizzlies came out of November with the best record in the league and the best month — 12-1 — in franchise history. December was decidedly less kind, with the team stumbling to a 7-7 record on the month, including losing three of their past four games heading into tonight’s contest in Boston, and now clinging to fourth seed in the West instead of jockeying with the Thunder, Clippers, and Spurs for conference pole position.

What went wrong in December? It’s pretty easy to narrow down. The defense, led by Tony Allen’s shut-down work on the wing and Marc Gasol’s more subtle but perhaps more meaningful anchoring in the paint, has remained elite. After allowing only 96.2 points per 100 possessions in November, the team allowed only 96.6 in December, and currently ranks second in the NBA behind Indiana. (All specific stats per NBA.com. Team rankings per ESPN.com.) The rebounding has actually improved at both ends of the floor, with the team leading in the NBA in offensive rebound rate and tied for fifth overall.

Instead, the slide has been almost entirely the result of a massive regression — some might say correction — on the offensive end.

In November, the Grizzlies scored 105.6 points per 100 possessions and, at one point, were among the league’s top five offenses, drawing media attention across the league for their suddenly elite offense. In December, they’ve nose-dived to 96.3 points per 100 possessions and have now fallen to 20th in overall offensive efficiency, matching last season’s mediocrity.

Pretty much all the good things I wrote about the team’s offense here and here have reversed or declined since November gave way to December, as the offense has gotten slower and grown more stagnant — more reliant on isolation plays from top scorers Rudy Gay and Zach Randolph and on mid-range jumpers from nearly everyone.

The early dynamism — with offensive improvement built on more three-pointers, more free-throws, and a faster pace rather that simply better overall shooting — has mostly disappeared.

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Postgame Notebook: Grizzlies 108, Suns 98 — Z-Bo Pushes That Boulder to the Top of the Hill

Z-Bo: Man of the Match, and then some.

The Lead: The word of the game: Sisyphean.

The Grizzlies entered the night as the only team in the NBA without a legitimate “bad” loss, but for most of this one it sure felt like the Suns were going to hand them one.

A disastrous first quarter-and-a-half featuring 12 Grizzlies turnovers put the home team in a 16-point hole, their biggest deficit of the season. But, with Tony Allen missing the game, Quincy Pondexter and Darrell Arthur came off the bench to ignite the Grizzlies defense and pick up the team’s energy, spurring a 16-4 run that pulled the Grizzlies to within a couple of buckets.

But every time the Grizzlies would get the boulder near the top of the hill, it would roll back down. On eight different occasions between the late second quarter and late fourth quarter, the Grizzlies cut the Suns lead to four or less only to have the Suns answer with a basket. A Shannon Brown drive. A Markieff Morris three. A Luis Scola jumper. A Goran Dragic bank shot. A Dragic three. A Marcin Gortat jumper. A Jared Dudley three. A Jermaine O’Neal jumper. Answers coming from everywhere.

It’s common in NBA games for teams to expend so much energy coming back from a big deficit that they run out of gas before they can cross the finish line, and this one sure felt that way. But a three-foot Zach Randolph runner with 1:30 left in regulation finally pushed the boulder on top of the hill, if only for a minute. And a short Rudy Gay jumper with the shot-clock off and a subsequent defensive stop sent it to overtime. And that’s when Zach Randolph — magnificent all night — planted that damn rock.

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Postgame Notebook: Grizzlies 103, Raptors 82 — An “Ante Up” Third Quarter Overwhelms Toronto

Tony Allen, kidnapping fools in the third.

The Lead: For awhile, this one seemed like a repeat of Monday’s game against Cleveland, with the Grizzlies playing down a level against weaker competition for a long stretch to start the game. But it seemed worse in a way, with Mike Conley back at the helm and the Raptors — playing on the second night of a back-to-back — showing a little less fight than the Cavs had.

But, this time, the Grizzlies didn’t wait until the fourth quarter to amp up their team defense and put the game away. After a 48-47 first half, the Grizzlies overwhelmed the Raptors with a 33-14 third quarter in which it took the Raptors more than eight minutes to notch their second made field goal of the period. This 22-6 Grizzlies run included four steals and two blocks from Grizzlies perimeter players, and was spurred by Tony Allen, who has been rounding into better all-around form after a rough start offensively. But this was the first time this season that Allen seemed to be in full “Ante Up” form. One steal from Kyle Lowry became a breakaway bucket. Then Allen kidnapped DeMar DeRozan, taking the ball away on an attempted jumper and finishing on the other end with a rare one-hand dunk that capped the 22-6 run and effectively ended the game.

Man of the Match: If Allen’s eruption was the most memorable aspect of the game, Zach Randolph was again the team’s best all-around player. On the day that I wrote about Marc Gasol’s passing exploits, with was Randolph tonight who was dropping dimes, doubling his previous season high with 6 assists. Randolph added 17 points on 7-10 shooting and 13 rebounds. With floor-stretching Raptor power forward Andrea Bargnani banged-up and not active, the entire frontcourt was a mismatch in the Grizzlies favor in this one, with the Grizzlies’ big-man rotation combining for 54 points and 30 rebounds while their Toronto counterparts mustered only 16 points and 14 rebounds. Marreese Speights, struggling with his shot for most of the season, contributed 18 and 12 of that, on 7-11 shooting. Speights needed one of those, and Lionel Hollins attributed his improved play to a strong practice the day before.

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Postgame Notebook: Grizzlies 84, Cavaliers 78 — Winning Ugly Without Mike Conley

His double-double streak ended, but Zach Randolph still came up strong.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • His double-double streak ended, but Zach Randolph still came up strong.

The Lead: With Mike Conley a late scratch due to “flu-like symptoms,” the Grizzlies got a taste of life without their starting point guard, and it was not good. With Conley out and the quick, pesky defense of Cleveland’s Anderson Varejao keeping Marc Gasol from operating as comfortably out of the high post as he has for most of this season, the Grizzlies offense struggled all night, to the tune of a season-low 84 points against what has been, statistically, the second-worst defense in the NBA.

For most of the game, the Grizzlies’ out-of-sorts O wasn’t much worse than their curiously flat-footed D, allowing a Cavs team playing without their own starting point guard — emerging star Kyrie Irving — to shoot 48% and take a 69-62 lead into the fourth quarter. It was the first time this season the Grizzlies had trailed after three quarters.

But the Grizzlies clamped down defensively in fourth quarter, finally bringing full grit-and-grind intensity to an otherwise sleepy Monday-night game against a low-profile opponent.

The Grizzles began the fourth with six consecutive stops and ended the game with a series of big defensive plays in the last three minutes: A forced shot-clock violation while clinging to a two-point lead. Marc Gasol picking up a charge to stop a Cleveland fastbreak. And two Tony Allen steals in the final 1:18, the second off Varejao along the sideline. The second came with the shot-clock off and Cleveland down four, forcing a foul and essentially sealing the game. Allen swaggered along the sideline, slapping hands with the front-row fans.

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Road Recap: Grizzlies 107, Thunder 97 — If You Don’t Know, Now You Know

Rudy Gay went large against the Thunder.

A double-digit home win on Sunday against one of the reigning NBA Finalists, the Miami Heat, felt like a breakthrough, with a raft of national attention following in its wake. But this follow-up double-digit win over the the other reigning NBA Finalist felt like a confirmation: This year’s model of the Memphis Grizzlies is, until further notice, one of the very best teams in the NBA.

You could put a mild asterisk on the Heat win if you really wanted, based on Wayne Ellington’s career night. But there was nothing extraordinary about this one, unless you count Rudy Gay going head-to-head against one of the NBA’s two best players and coming away with something close to a draw. But Gay’s done that before. He did it on Sunday too.

Instead, this victory felt encouragingly ho-hum. Unlike most of the Thunder’s opponents so far this season, the Grizzlies got off to a slow start, struggling to get their new-and-improved offense in gear and escorting the Thunder to the foul line at the other end. But, as the game wore on, the Grizzlies’ — get this — superior overall talent wore the Thunder down, and the Grizzlies maintained a decent lead the whole second half.

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Road Recap: Grizzlies 108, Bucks 90

Jerryd Bayless has rebounded from his pre-season shooting struggles.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Jerryd Bayless has rebounded from his pre-season shooting struggles.

The Grizzlies improved to 3-1 on the season with a third consecutive commanding win over a team with legitimate playoff aspirations. Marc Gasol continued his versatile, efficient excellence (14 points, 9 rebounds, 5 assists on only 8 field-goal attempts). Zach Randolph continued to dominate on the boards (a game-high 13; he leads the league with a 15.3 average). Rudy Gay continued to find lots of shots (20) without quite connecting on enough of them (7).

But the real story last night was the performance of the Grizzlies’ bench. Marreese Speights went off for 18 points and 9 rebounds in only 22 minutes, while the perimeter trio of Jerryd Bayless, Wayne Ellington, and Quincy Pondexter combined to shoot 6-9 from long-range. Bayless has hit a three-pointer in every game so far (50% overall), which is encouraging after his poor shooting in the preseason. Assuming Pondexter’s development into a viable three-point shooter was one of the reasons I projected the Grizzlies to be a slightly better overall three-point shooting team even after losing O.J. Mayo, and the early returns are good, as he’s 5-9 from long-range through four games. Ellington hasn’t quite found his groove yet (3-9), but his sufficient defense and overall strong effort level has made him a general plus as a deep reserve.

The cherry on top of this one was three uneventful garbage-time debut minutes for rookie Tony Wroten Jr.