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Saturday, January 12, 2008

Carmelo Anthony, Anthony Carter, and Linas Kleiza Lead the Nuggets Over the Magic 113-103; Nene is Out Indefinitely Due to Unknown Ailment

The Nuggets, for about 10 days, had all of their players except the little used Steven Hunter off of the injury list, but things have deteriorated very quickly again, to where the Nuggets are once again a team much more hurt by injuries and ailments than the average team in the NBA. Nene has taken an indefinite leave from the Nuggets to tend to a personal medical issue, which he is not disclosing. Injuries resulting from basketball must be disclosed, but injuries and ailments not caused by basketball may be kept private, and Nene has wisely elected to keep the specifics of his ailment private for now.

But everyone read between the lines of the press releases and of the Coach Karl mini interview on the Nene situation. From this reading of the tea leaves, there was a lot of speculation among fans of the Nuggets that Nene has a serious problem, up to and including some kind of cancer. This news broke just after his fine game in Phoenix, and just when fans including me were starting to believe that it was really possible that both Kenyon Martin and Nene, the two good power forwards on the team, would actually be playing most or all the rest of the season to include any playoffs. But now we are back to the norm for the Nuggets, which is that you always have at least one very expensive big man out, and usually out for a very, very long time.

Nuggets 1 wishes peace and good health to Nene.

A.I. on Nene: "He's family, Life is way more important than the game of basketball. We just want him to get his situation straightened and get back to the team as soon as possible. He needs to take care of himself first."

Due to all the injuries and me wanting to go over this Magic game in some detail, part 3 of the J.R. Smith fiasco story has been postponed again, to the next game report, which will be for the Bobcats game.

Without Nene, the Nuggets may not even make the playoffs, thanks to the Trailblazers shocker. I don’t know what is more shocking, how well the Trailblazers are playing, or how well Coach Nate McMillan is coaching. Right now, you have to think that McMillan is going to be the Coach of the year. Just when the Nuggets catch a break with Utah loosing a bunch of games, the Trailblazers win practically everything on their schedule.

Eight-year NBA veteran Chucky Atkins has averaged 10.7 points, 1.8 rebounds and 3.6 assists in 608 games for seven teams. He is supposed to be the starting point guard, but has turned into yet another health disaster for the Nuggets. Atkins underwent successful surgery on Friday, January 11 to repair a right groin/abdominal strain, also known as a sports hernia. Atkins is expected to be sidelined for a minimum of eight weeks. That will leave Atkins precious little time, about a month if he’s lucky, to try to work back into shape for the playoffs. It most likely will not happen.

I am beginning to seriously think that the combination of the following may cost the Nuggets a playoff spot this year:

1. Nene being out for most or all of the season.
2. Chucky Atkins being out for most or all of the season.
3. J.R. Smith having his playing time sharply limited by his Coach, who over estimates his negatives and underestimates his positives.
4. Bobby Jones has been waived and can not be retrieved, since the Grizzlies have him now.
5. The Trailblazers seem to be for real, and seem destined for a low seed playoff berth this year, something that upsets all of the calculations of West Conference playoff possibilities.
6. Lack of anything approaching a system on offense, resulting in way too much inconsistency and way too many turnovers.

Now if Kenyon Martin goes out again, you can take it to the bank that the Nuggets will not make the playoffs. Actually, if almost anyone goes out for a long stretch, say a month or more, it will probably not be possible for the Nuggets to make the playoffs this year
.
The whole report, with many other topics, is at the link.
Original Story: http://nuggets1.blogspot.com/2008/01/car....
Points for this article:

Now if Kenyon Martin goes out again, you can take it to the bank that the Nuggets will not make the playoffs. Actually, if almost anyone goes out for a long stretch, say a month or more, it will probably not be possible for the Nuggets to make the playoffs this year.

The Orlando Magic so far are a good but not a great team. They came in to this game with a fantastic road record of 16-6, and they have C Dwight Howard, who is scoring, rebounding, and blocking the heck out of the ball to be one of the very best players in the NBA so far. But the Magic lack another star player to go along with Howard, and so they are probably destined to win just one playoff series before losing in the Eastern Conference round of four (the East semifinals). PF Rashard Lewis, playing his 1st year for the Magic after 9 straight years for the Supersonics, has been a relative disappointment, as his shooting accuracy and his rebounding have been less than what they were in most of his years in Seattle. On the other hand, SF Hedo Turkoglu is enjoying his best year yet, as his shooting accuracy, rebounding, and assisting have improved from prior years. PG Jameer Nelson, in his 4th year, has been concentrating on passing and rebounding more, and shooting less than he did in his first 3 seasons that he played for Orlando.

Orlando has yet to establish a truly impressive offensive mix, as they are hampered by a weak spot on their lineup, at shooting guard. Neither Maurice Evans nor Keith Bogans are playing very well at that position. Bogans has become a substantial three-point threat, but his shooting overall is relatively poor, his assists are few and far between, and his turnovers are excessive. Similarly, Evans shooting leaves a lot to be hoped for in the future, and his turnovers are excessive as well.

The Magic could have taken this game down to the buzzer had either Dwight Howard or Hedo Turkoglu played at their normal speed, and they could easily have won the game if both of them had played as well as usual. Turkoglu had the misfortune of having to contend with an Anthony who has decided to keep putting in more focus and energy on defending and rebounding, a change in his game which was what helped him to emerge from his big December shooting slump before Christmas.

In that slump, Anthony ended up in the wilderness, because Anthony Carter, who has played far better than anyone expected, and Allen Iverson, who has shifted into a high Iverson gear, were dominating the offense and choosing not to get the ball very much to the slumping Anthony. Then Anthony finally figured out a way to get the ball more and to use the possessions to get out of the shooting slump. He finally started to defend and especially to rebound better. Fast forward to this game, and I am sure that Turkoglu wishes that whole chain of events had not happened. Turkoglu missed all 4 of his 3-pointer attempts, and he missed 5 of 6 short and midrange jumpers. He was out rebounded by Anthony 11-7, and he committed 3 turnovers to just 1 for Anthony.

The Magic did get the memo regarding a good strategy you can use to try to defeat the Nuggets. Since the Nuggets are a bad 3-point shooting team if J.R. Smith does not play, you can try to offset Denver’s good shooting on 2-point jumpers and on their scoring at point blank range by trying to hit a lot of threes. The Nuggets do not defend the 3-point shot very well, and they in fact have more three-point shots attempted against them than any other team has.

So in the 1st quarter, with Dwight Howard handling most of the scoring in the paint, Rashard Lewis and Maurice Evans started hitting some jumpers, with Rashard Lewis getting warmed up for sinking threes by getting two of them in the opening quarter. The Nuggets could not get five layups to fall during the quarter, and the Magic were unable to get as many jump shots to fall as they wanted, and so it was a draw; it was 26-25 Magic after the 1st quarter.

In the 2nd, the Magic long range shooting strategy started to pay off. Keith Bogans nailed a 25-footer with 9 minutes left in the quarter, and it was 37-28 Magic. Linas Kleiza, whose occasionally explosive scoring has sometimes been a partial substitute for the absent J.R. Smith, made a three and 3 layups, to lead the Nuggets back to parity with the Magic, and the score stayed extremely close for the remainder of the half. It was 56-53 Magic at the half.

J.R. Smith came and went so quickly in the first 5 minutes of the 2nd quarter that his only accomplishments were negative ones: a personal foul on Bogans, a technical foul for disagreeing with it too much, and a turnover. He never got a single shot off. George Karl would not have allowed Smith out of his doghouse at all were it not for the Nuggets being short on guards due to Chucky Atkins being out and due to Yakhouba Diawara being a very poor scorer. Even so, Karl panicked very quickly regarding Smith’s poor start on the court, and he yanked him out the game after less then 5 minutes.

And with Karl, if you have been sprung from the doghouse due to an injury emergency, but then you are yanked, the yanking will have priority over the emergency. In other words, it’s more important for Karl to keep a player who has upset him on the bench then it is to deal effectively with a shortage of players due to injuries. So Smith was gone for good, and since Karl was in no mood to play the offensively challenged Diawara, and since Bobby Jones is gone, having been waived 4 days ago and then snatched up quickly by the Grizzlies by the way, just seven Nuggets were going to have to work their tails off to beat nine Magic players. In other words, it was one of those nights where the seven Nuggets who had survived the Karl gauntlet had to work harder than they would if they were playing for another team, due to having a Coach who is basically terrified of younger bench players and who may also be afraid of his own shadow.

Early in the 3rd quarter, the Nuggets got a rare glimpse of the Carmelo Anthony who lives in the alternate Universe, the Team USA Carmelo Anthony, when Anthony hit two quick threes in a row, which tied up the game at 64 each. But then PG Jameer Nelson quickly followed with a three of his own, as the Magic continued with their beat the Nuggets from beyond the arc strategy. Half-way through the 3rd, Nelson fed Lewis who swished a three, but Iverson answered that one right back to keep the Nuggets on an even keel. It was 72-71 Magic.

With the Nuggets banged up again, and with the Magic enjoying just one injury, to C Tony Battie, the two teams are probably fairly even overall, with the sheer number of players that Orlando has ready to contribute to one extent or another offsetting the star power of the Iverson-Anthony-Camby-Martin combination. So it was no surprise that this game was remarkably even for most of the way. It was still almost tied after the 3rd quarter, as it was 86-84 Magic.

But the Magic were destined to pay for having come to the contest with seemingly only one major strategy for beating the Nuggets, the three-point shot. Their defense on Carmelo Anthony was poor, and they allowed Linas Kleiza and Anthony Carter too many open looks as well.

As the 4th quarter got underway, Turkoglu missed three straight jump shots, two of which were threes, while Melo hit two straight midrange jumpers, as the Nuggets took the lead 88-86. With about 7 minutes to play, Keith Bogans nailed a 26-foot three, but Iverson to Anthony Carter was good for a layup and another tie on the scoreboard. Then Anthony Carter, who has benefited from playing with Iverson to an incredible extent, made two more driving layups, while the Magic’ Carlos Arroyo made one layup while missing two jumpers, so the Nuggets finally had a 4th quarter lead of 98-96 with 5:43 to play.

Then Orlando really started to go dry. While Turkoglu continued his long string of misses, Jameer Nelson missed two key shots for the Magic, the kind of shots that you suspect would have gone in had this game been played in Orlando. Two Carmelo Anthony layups, the second of which was off an Anthony Carter steal off Turkoglu, made it 102-98 Nuggets with 3:20 left.

In this 4th quarter, Carter was in a zone; it was as if he had learned so much from playing with and watching Iverson that he had practically become Iverson. So following the key Nelson miss on the three attempt, he took the rock from his pal A.I. and calmly swished a three himself. The Magic were now in serious trouble, because it was 105-98 Nuggets with 2:47 left. Who would have thought that Anthony Carter could be a deadly 4th quarter weapon?

I guess not all secondary players have their potentials limited by Coach Karl. If you are a short and relatively smart point guard who hustles while playing and who works overtime in practice and you have a pleasing personality, you might be the exception to the rule and have your potential maximized under Karl. You are just what Karl is looking for. In fact, you are the only thing Karl is looking for.

After a 20-second Magic timeout, 3-point ace Lewis buried a three to cut the Magic deficit to 4 points. Then Carter could not make a three. Carter should not have been attempting a three at that point. You would not see Nash, Kidd, Paul, Fisher, Parker, or the like jacking up a three with a 4 point lead with just 2 minutes left. Oh well, Carter played just about like Mike in this game, so I guess I’m just nitpicking on account of being in a very bad mood about the misfortunes befalling Nene, Atkins, and Smith. I feel like my team has become a fish that is being gutted before it’s going to be cooked, after which it will be eaten up by the top teams of the West. So stay away from me.

After the Carter miss, Lewis missed a crucial three, and then of course it had to be Carter who made the rebound. Then Allen Iverson made 1 of 2 free throws when he was fouled by Dwight Howard, and Rashard Lewis made 1 of 2 free throws when he was fouled by Kenyon Martin. It was 106-102 Nuggets with 1:15 left. Then Anthony Iverson (oops, I mean Anthony Carter) iced the Nugget’s win with a 21 foot jumper. After Turkoglu lost the ball yet again, Carter scored yet again, on a little runner. In case you don’t read the “Nuggets Made What” section, Carter scored 21 points on 9/16 shooting, and he made 11 assists, 5 rebounds, and 2 steals.

The Magic finished 10/26 from beyond the arc, which is an accuracy of 38.5%. But the Nuggets, led by the 2/2 Team USA Anthony and the 3/8 Kleiza, were an efficient 7/16 from downtown, for a percentage of 43.8%. The Magic strategy had fallen short because their defense fell short, because of Anthony Carter, and because Carmelo Anthony finally had a little success with the three.

For the second straight year, the Nuggets had an Iverson #2, if only for a fleeting moment in time. If only actual cloning was legal in the NBA. The Nuggets would have two Cambys, two Martins, three Anthonys, and five Iversons, and they would no doubt be the best team in the world.

ALERT STATUS PROBLEMS
As of January 12, 2008

The Nuggets are under an ORANGE ALERT, on account of the following problems.

INJURIES & SUSPENSIONS
1. Chucky Atkins injury 18 points
2. Nene injury 13 points

SEVERE AND UNEXPECTED PLAYER PERFORMANCE PROBLEMS
There are none at this time.

BAD OR INADEQUATE COACHING
1. George Karl has completely benched one or more players who should not be benched due to his incompetence, hatred of the player, and/or his having the ulterior motive of forcing the player off the team. The problem points would be just about the points you would have if the player were injured. J.R. Smith is benched and should not be: 15 points.

2. George Karl over relies on his starters and won’t play the non-starters enough: 1-20 Points. The severity varies depending on the circumstances, mainly Karl’s beliefs and moods, and whether the other team is playing well enough to take advantage of the Nuggets playing with not enough breathers, with too many fouls, and so forth. The current points reported are for the use, or should I say the misuse, of the reserves for the most recent games, with the most weight being given to the game being reported on here. The bad use of reserves score for this game is 8 points.

3. Lack of adequate offensive schemes: 8 Points. This would be up to 20 points, except that Iverson reduces the damage. In general terms, the team has failed to decide whether it wants Melo alone, Iverson alone, Melo and Iverson together, or neither of them to be firstly responsible for scoring enough points to keep the Nuggets in games. If it were neither, I call the name of that strategy the "share the wealth" strategy. More specifically, the Nuggets lack enough tried and tested offensive plays that they can run game after game, perfecting them as they go, and having everyone automatically on the same page for those plays.

INTENSITY, HUSTLE, AND HEART
1. The Nugget’s intensity, hustle and heart are lacking: 0 Points. It’s not anywhere near as bad as some fans sometimes think it is.

TOTAL PROBLEM POINTS: 62, which constitutes ORANGE ALERT.

ORANGE ALERT (55-74): Moderate damage is occurring to the season. The entire season is under serious threat, and you can just about forget about beating quality teams. About 3/4 of all wins against good teams will now be losses. Beating mid-level teams is much more difficult ORANGE ALERT. About 1/2 of games against mid-level teams that would have been won will be lost under this alert. Even poor teams can often beat an otherwise good team that is under this alert. Close to 1/4 of games against low level teams that would have been won will be lost under this alert. A good team has been reduced to being a mid-level team, at best, when it is under this alert.

OBSERVATIONS ON THE ALERT STATUS
Injury disaster has once again struck the Nuggets, with both Chucky Atkins and Nene out. The Nuggets are on the verge of moving into a disastrous red alert situation. The season is hanging by a rope at the moment.

RESERVE WATCH

Number of Players Who Played at Least 6 Minutes: Nuggets 9 Magic 9
Number of Players Who Played at Least 10 Minutes: Nuggets 9 Magic 9

Nuggets Non-Starters Points: 18
Magic Non-Starters Points: 28

Nuggets Non-Starters Rebounds: 8
Magic Non-Starters Rebounds: 11

Nuggets Non-Starters Assists: 3
Magic Non-Starters Assists: 3

This feature is under development, and it will be gradually expanded. The complications involved explain why there are no formal statistics anywhere on the internet on the subject of how much non-starters contribute to different teams, and also why coaches are not compared statistically the way players are. There are a lot of variables that come into the use of reserves that interfere with the objective of judging their use. Statisticians call this “statistical noise,” and if you have a substantial amount of it, then what you are trying to do with your statistics becomes very difficult or next to impossible.

GEORGE KARL CONFIDENCE IN HIS TEAM RATING (Scale of 0 to 10)
3: He's hiding under his seat on the sidelines

PLAYER RATINGS FOR THIS GAME:
You can tell how well every player played at a glance. Of the advanced statistics I have seen on the internet, this one seems to have the best balance between offense and defense. Many other advanced statistics are biased in favor of good defenders, and do not reflect the heavy importance of offense in basketball. Here is the formula for the ESPN rating of a player:

Points + Rebounds + 1.4*Assists + Steals + 1.4*Blocks - .7*Turnovers + # of Field Goals Made +1/2*# of 3-pointers Made - .8*# of Missed Field Goals - .8*# of Missed Free Throws + .25 *# of Free Throws Made

All players on each team who played at least 5 minutes are shown. The number after “game,” is how well the player did in this game, whereas the number after “season” is that player’s overall average for the entire season.

NUGGETS
Carmelo Anthony: Game 51.3 Season 38.2
Anthony Carter: Game 44.9 Season 22.0
Allen Iverson: Game 42.5 Season 41.5
Linas Kleiza: Game 29.8 Season 17.7

Marcus Camby: Game 27.3 Season 32.3
Kenyon Martin: Game 23.6 Season 19.6
Eduardo Najera: Game 1.8 Season 13.4
J.R. Smith: Game 0.7 Season 14.6

Chucky Atkins: Injury
Nene: Did Not Play-Injury
Steven Hunter: Did Not Play-Injury

Yakhouba Diawara: Did Not Play-Coach’s Decision
Von Wafer: Did Not Play-Coach’s Decision


MAGIC
Dwight Howard: Game 35.4 Season 43.4
Rashard Lewis: Game 33.8 Season 28.5
Maurice Evans: Game 27.4 Season 10.4
Jameer Nelson: Game 26.6 Season 23.7
Keith Bogans: Game 22.1 Season 16.3
Keyon Dooling: Game 17.1 Season 12.5
Hedo Turkoglu: Game 13.8 Season 31.9
Carlos Arroyo: Game 4.6 Season 13.2
Adonal Foyle: Game 4.6 Season 5.7

NOTE: these stats do not correct for the big differences in playing times. Players with small minutes would get a higher rating if they had more minutes.

OBSERVATIONS ON RATINGS:
Carmelo Anthony was superb in this game, and Anthony Carter was twice as productive as usual. Could Nuggets 1 be wrong about Carter being doomed in the playoffs? Not until and unless Carter has a big game against one of the 4 top teams of the West: the Spurs, the Suns, the Lakers, and the Mavericks.

Turkoglu, and to a lesser extent Arroyo, killed the Magic in this game. Lewis tried hard but was only a little better than his disappointing season normal. Bogans and especially Evans played very well, mostly up against Iverson. Dwight Howard is not going to be a hero every night.

NUGGETS REAL PLAYER RATINGS—EXPLANATION
A Great New Feature from Nuggets 1

The Real Player Rating reflects reality better than the gross player rating, since it washes out differences in playing times among the players. The straight up player rankings are obviously heavily affected by how many playing minutes the various players get. With many teams, you can rely on the coach to give his various players roughly the playing time that makes the most sense for his team. Unfortunately, some coaches bring other factors besides actual performance into their rotation decisions. Therefore, it makes good sense to introduce a new and extremely important statistic that Nuggets 1 calls the Real Per Minute Player Rating. As the name implies, this is the gross ESPN player rating divided by the number of minutes. The statistic is called Real Player Rating for short.

This statistic allows anyone to see whether or not players who play only a small number of minutes are doing better than their low gross rating will indicate. You can spot diamond in the rough players who are not getting all the respect and playing time due to them. At the same time, it will allow anyone to see whether players with a lot of minutes are playing worse than, as well as, or better than their gross rating shows.

In summary, the Real Player Rating allows the reader, at a glance, to see exactly how well each player is doing without regard to playing time, which is subject to coaching error and subjective and less important factors such as a player's personality. The Real Player Rating provides the real truth-pure knowledge not available anywhere else.

SCALE FOR THE REAL PLAYER RATINGS
1.60 More Rare Superstar Plus-Above Normal Even For Michael Jordan
1.40 1.60 Superstar Performance Plus-A Michael Jordan Type Game
1.20 1.40 Spectacular Performance
1.05 1.20 Star Performance
0.90 1.05 Outstanding Game
0.80 0.90 Very Good Game
0.70 0.80 Good Game
0.60 0.70 Mediocre Game
0.50 0.60 Poor Game
0.40 0.50 Very Poor Game
0.25 0.40 Bad Game-Near Disaster
Less 0.25 Total Disaster

NUGGETS-MAGIC REAL PLAYER RATINGS
All players who played 5 minutes or more are included. Any player who played only 5-9 minutes is noted.

1. Linas Kleiza, Den 1.419
2. Carmelo Anthony, Den 1.315
3. Anthony Carter, Den 1.247
4. Maurice Evans, Orl 1.015
5. Allen Iverson, Den 0.988
6. Keyon Dooling, Orl 0.950
7. Dwight Howard, Orl 0.932
8. Keith Bogans, Orl 0.884
9. Jameer Nelson, Orl 0.831
10. Rashard Lewis, Orl 0.786
11. Marcus Camby, Den 0.738
12. Kenyon Martin, Den 0.621
13. Carlos Arroyo, Orl 0.460
14. Adonal Foyle, Orl 0.460
15. Hedo Turkoglu, Orl 0.373
16. J.R. Smith, Den 0.140…Smith played only 5 minutes.
17. Eduardo Najera, Den 0.086

OBSERVATIONS ON THE REAL PLAYER RATINGS
In the friendly confines of the Pepsi Center in Denver, Kleiza and Carter played two of the best games of their respective careers. Carmelo Anthony was spectacular, while Iverson was merely outstanding in this one.

Dwight Howard is a better player than what he showed in this game, and Rashard Lewis should in theory be a better player than what he showed. Camby and Martin were a little off but it didn’t mean much, mostly because of the Turkoglu disaster.

The Najera disaster was the first one in many, many moons.

NUGGET’S PLUS—MINUS
This tells you how the score changed while a player was on the court. All Nuggets who played at least 10 minutes are shown.

Anthony Carter: +17
Carmelo Anthony: +14
Marcus Camby: +13
Kenyon Martin: +8
Linas Kleiza: +5
Allen Iverson: +2
Eduardo Najera: -1

OBSERVATIONS ON PLUS—MINUS
This is additional confirmation that Carter was a superstar for this game. Anthony and Camby were more trouble for the Magic than were Iverson, and Najera.

NUGGETS MADE WHAT?
All Nuggets who played at least 5 minutes are shown. The order is from lowest to highest in real player rating.

Eduardo Najera played 21 minutes and was 0/5 for 0 points, and he made 3 rebounds, 1 block, and 1 assist.

J.R. Smith played 5 minutes and made 1 block.

Kenyon Martin played 38 minutes and was 5/11 and 3/4 from the line for 13 points, and he made 6 rebounds, 3 steals, 1 block, and 1 assist.

Marcus Camby played 37 minutes and was 4/9 for 8 points, and he made 12 rebounds, 3 blocks, 2 assists, and 1 steal.

Allen Iverson played most of the game, 43 minutes, and was 6/15, 1/3 on 3’s, and 8/13 from the line for 21 points, and he made 13 assists, 5 rebounds, 1 steal, and 1 block.

Anthony Carter played 36 minutes and was 9/16, 1/3 on 3’s, and 2/3 from the line for 21 points, and he made 11 assists, 5 rebounds, and 2 steals.

Carmelo Anthony played 39 minutes and was 11/20, 2/2 on 3’s, and 8/10 from the line for 32 points, and he made 11 rebounds, 2 assists, and 1 steal.

Linas Kleiza played 21 minutes and was 7/13, 3/8 on 3’s, and 1/1 from the line for 18 points, and he made 5 rebounds and 2 assists.

NEXT UP
The next game will be Monday, January 14 in Charlotte to play the Bobcats at 5 pm mountain time. Neither the Nuggets nor the Bobcats will be playing on back to back nights.

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

The Real Defending Champion Suns Shoot the Lights Out on the Nuggets in Phoenix, 137-115

The Phoenix Suns would be the defending Champions of the NBA were it not for what was apparently a taunting ploy done by ace actor Robert Horry of the Spurs in last spring’s Suns-Spurs series. Horry flagrantly fouled Suns all-star PG Steve Nash in such a way that the Suns thought he might be injured and removed from the series. Then the resulting potential fight situation induced Boris Diaw and Amare Stoudemire to leave their seats on the Phoenix bench and to come on to the court a few feet. Then these two players were not allowed to play in the next game of the evenly matched and fiercely competitive series, which was up until then the best playoff series of the year. Horry, of course, was also suspended, but Horry was maybe 15% of the combined value of Diaw and Stoudemire.

So San Antonio then had a major artificial edge in the next game, which was in Phoenix and which was game 5 of a best of 7 series that was tied 2 games a piece. As sports fanatics will tell you, game 5 of a best of 7 series that is tied 2 games a piece is usually the most important game of the series, because the team that loses that game would have to win two straight after that in order to win the series, which is extremely difficult when you have two evenly matched teams.

Sure enough, the Spurs won game 5, with a huge 4th quarter comeback against the Suns, who had been reduced by that quarter from being the best offensive squad in basketball to being offensively challenged. The Spurs prefer to grind out their wins and, once Diaw and Stoudemire were removed from the scene, that is exactly what they were able to do without too much trouble in that decisive game 5. Then in game 6 back in San Antonio, the Spurs used the “6th man,” their crowd, and the home court advantage in general, to get their shooting mojo on, and they eliminated the cheated Suns 114-105.

There was to be no glorious game 7 due to what could be called the “Horry and Stern incident.” For anyone who doesn’t know, David Stern is the Commissioner of the NBA, who threw the book at the Suns and was very sarcastic toward the Suns and their fans to boot. Stern had to cancel his planned trip to Phoenix to watch game five, for fear that his mere presence might ruin the whole atmosphere and possibly be a security risk. Horry and the Spurs won yet another Championship, which was almost meaningless since he and they already had several, and because of the virtual or actual cheating. And Horry’s flagrant foul led to the partial ruination of the 2008 playoffs.

Many, many folks in Phoenix will always believe that the foul on Nash was staged to generate suspensions of Suns players and, even if it wasn’t, the rule should not have been enforced because Diaw and Stoudemire never went more than about 10 feet on to the court, and because they never came close to other players who were considering whether to fight, and there wasn’t actually a fight anyway.

Still others think that the rule is completely asinine and should be thrown out completely. They think of it as a free speech type issue: what is the harm of a player coming on to the court as long as he doesn’t fight? How do you know that a player coming on to the court might reduce the chance of a fight amongst the players who were out there during the incident, rather than increase the chance?

There was speculation after Phoenix was cheated that the rule would be modified but inertia and other bureaucratic and public relations factors made that a long shot and, sure enough, the same relatively stupid rule is still in effect.

Once the Suns were eliminated by the Spurs back in San Antonio in game 6, most close NBA observers, including yours truly, concluded that the Spurs could not possibly lose in the West finals or in the NBA Championship. And we also concluded that the Spurs did not really deserve to be the 2008 Champions, because they did not at all defeat the Suns in a fair fight. Whether they actually cheated their way to victory or not, the end result was as if they did cheat. Ratings were down a little, but only a little, because most fans of the NBA are too casual to know in advance, for example, that LeBron James and his Cavaliers had no chance against the Spurs in the best of 7 games Championship.

So in my view, the Suns are the real defending Champions of the NBA this year, because I am convinced the Suns would have won the series 4 games to 3, and possibly even 4 games to 2, had the critical 5th game been played in Phoenix without any Suns suspensions. Therefore, I am reporting that the real defending Champion Phoenix Suns buried the Nuggets in Phoenix 137-115.

The Nuggets were playing on back to back nights, having flown down to Phoenix overnight shortly after having beaten the 76’ers in Denver. The Suns, who lost at home to the Hornets two nights earlier, and who were charged up by a morale booster speech given to them by their General Manager Steve Kerr, were in no mood to mess around, and they immediately set about the routing of the Nuggets with an incredible display of the art of jump shooting and especially 3-point jump shooting. The Suns made 9 of their first 10 shots, and they scored 46 points in the 1st quarter, although the soon to be subdued Nuggets scored 36 themselves in the 1st.

It was 78-59 Suns at the half and 106-90 after 3 quarters. But the Nuggets were not going to stop a runaway locomotive in the 4th quarter, and the outcome was never in any doubt. The last 6 minutes was garbage time.

The Suns, led by Marcus Banks, who was 7/8, were 20/31 from long range, or 64.5%. The Nuggets, who are poor in 3-point shooting without J.R. Smith playing, were just 4/13, or 30.8%.

Overall, the Suns shot the Nuggets right out of their arena and into the desert, as they made 50 of 93 shots overall, or 53.8%. The Nuggets made 41/96 of their shots, for 42.7%. You very seldom see a shooting percentage gap exceeding 10% in a game, but you did in this one as the Suns played like the Champions that I believe they really are.

The Nuggets made 23 offensive rebounds as they missed about a dozen layups. Carmelo Anthony made 14 rebounds, 7 of which were offensive, but he himself was 6/10 on layups. Allen Iverson, who seems to always shoot just as well as usual even in the face of a monster team, was 7/15, whereas Carmelo Anthony, who is lucky to shoot as well as usual when up against a monster team, was just 6/10 on layups, 2/6 on jumpers, 2/4 from the line, and 9/21 overall for 20 points. So Melo went to the line just twice, while the business as usual in the face of a monster team Iverson was 10/20 overall, and 10/13 from the free throw line, for 32 points.

Melo took a few shots that Carter has been taking lately, as Carter was too busy trying to defend the likes of Steve Nash and the 7/8 from downtown Marcus Banks. Welcome to Phoenix, Mr. Carter. It’s definitely not a lottery type of team that you are up against this time. G-F Linas Kleiza was even more shut down than Carter was, by the likes of Grant Hill and Leandro Barbosa. Both Carter and Kleiza ended up with very poor game ratings according to the Nuggets 1 Real Player Ratings.

Marcus Camby, who has seen monster teams many times in his career and can not be put off by them, was 5/8 on jumpers and 6/11 overall, for 13 points. Camby made 3 blocks, as he continues to lead the NBA by a wide margin in blocks. Camby’s front court assistant Nene was excellent in this game, with 9 rebounds and 12 points on 5/10 shooting in just 23 minutes. But Kenyon Martin was no where near his usual.

As he so often is by the best teams, Anthony Carter was partly shut down, specifically in this case by Nash and Banks, and his ability to distribute to his teammates was very negatively impacted. The Nuggets made just 17 assists in total, while the in the zone Suns wowed their fans and their coaches with 32 assists. Both teams had their turnovers under control, which was one of the few notable good features of this game for the Nuggets.

When will Nuggets other than Camby, Anthony, Iverson, Martin, Smith, Nene, and sometimes Najera be able to play well against a great team? When they get a new coaching staff which can teach and motivate them to hold their ground in the face of a monster team? Yes, I think that’s the answer. Or can Kleiza and Carter teach themselves to play the same way against a monster team that they do against a poor team? No, generally young or inexperienced players don’t teach themselves, unfortunately, though it would be nice if they did. In fact, Mr. Karl would be a wonderful Coach if youngsters would only teach themselves.

The 3rd installment of the report on the J.R. Smith fiasco has been postponed to the next game report, the one for the Magic game. In it, I will show why the Nuggets will lose in the 1st round unless J.R. Smith is ready and able to sink threes and to get his layups, dunks, and steals as well.

ALERT STATUS PROBLEMS
As of January 8, 2008

The Nuggets are under a YELLOW ALERT, on account of the following problems.

INJURIES & SUSPENSIONS
1. Steven Hunter injury 4 Points

SEVERE AND UNEXPECTED PLAYER PERFORMANCE PROBLEMS
There are none at this time.

BAD OR INADEQUATE COACHING
1. George Karl has completely benched one or more players who should not be benched due to his incompetence, hatred of the player, and/or his having the ulterior motive of forcing the player off the team. The problem points would be just about the points you would have if the player were injured. J.R. Smith is benched and should not be: 16 points.

2. George Karl over relies on his starters and won’t play the non-starters enough: 5-30 Points. The severity varies depending on the circumstances, mainly Karl’s beliefs and moods, and whether the other team is playing well enough to take advantage of the Nuggets playing with not enough breathers, with too many fouls, and so forth. Karl will normally be in the 5-20 range, but it could spike to as much as 30 in the event of the benching of a major player such as Kenyon Martin. The current points reported are for the use, or should I say the misuse, of the reserves for the most recent games, with the most weight being given to the game being reported on here. The bad use of reserves score for this game is 10 points.

3. Lack of adequate offensive schemes: 10 Points. This would be up to 20 points, except that Iverson reduces the damage. In general terms, the team has failed to decide whether it wants Melo alone, Iverson alone, Melo and Iverson together, or neither of them to be firstly responsible for scoring enough points to keep the Nuggets in games. If it were neither, I call the name of that strategy the "share the wealth" strategy. More specifically, the Nuggets lack enough tried and tested offensive plays that they can run game after game, perfecting them as they go, and having everyone automatically on the same page for those plays.

INTENSITY, HUSTLE, AND HEART
1. The Nugget’s intensity, hustle and heart are lacking: 0 Points. It’s not anywhere near as bad as some fans sometimes think it is.

TOTAL PROBLEM POINTS: 40, which constitutes YELLOW ALERT.

Since we are on the border between grey and yellow alert, both are described here:

GREY ALERT (30-39): There are relatively minor problems leading to a small threat against the success of the entire season. It is still possible to beat quality teams, but it will be more unusual to beat a quality team, because about 1/4 of what would have been wins against good teams will now be losses when there is a GREY ALERT.

YELLOW ALERT (40-54): Minor damage is occurring to the season. The entire season is under medium threat. Beating quality teams is much more difficult and will be pretty rare. About 1/2 of all wins against good teams will now be losses. Beating mid-level teams is a little more difficult. About 1/4 of games that would be wins agsinst mid-level teams will now be losses. Beating low level teams is still relatively easy, but no longer almost a sure bet. A good team has become in between a good team and a mid-level team when it is under a YELLOW ALERT.

OBSERVATIONS ON THE ALERT STATUS
Praise be to the most high, if there is a most high, because the Nugget’s front court is all playing now, and no important player is having any serious slump problems, and because the Nuggets are therefore no longer in yellow alert or worse. The Nuggets are just borderline yellow alert at the moment. But don’t party too hard yet. We will be back in a damaging yellow alert if and when either the injury prone Martin or the injury prone Nene go out again, and in a very damaging orange alert if they are ever both out. And as the Spurs game on January 3 showed, the Nuggets need both Martin and Nene in to make up for their offense being trashed by a quality defensive team.

Another reason not to party about the sports medicine miracles is that the alert status has moved from green alert to borderline yellow alert as a result of an increase in the actual and, more importantly, the projected damage caused by George Karl’s rotation mistakes. He has now totally removed J.R. Smith and largely removed Chucky Atkins from playing time, and that spells d-o-o-m for the playoffs, pure and simple. Carter is playing very well against lottery and mid-level teams here in the regular season, but he will be no match for the top flight guards that he will come up against in the playoffs, whereas Atkins does have some playoff experience with the Lakers. And the Nuggets will not be able to offset the very tough defending they will face in the playoffs without good 3-point shooting and, quite honestly, they have to have Smith just to be assured of being mediocre in 3-point shooting. Being good would require someone else to step up and join Smith and Kleiza as major players on the Nugget’s 3-point shooting squad.

RESERVE WATCH

Number of Players Who Played at Least 6 Minutes: Nuggets 9 Suns 9
Number of Players Who Played at Least 10 Minutes: Nuggets 9 Suns 9

Nuggets Non-Starters Points: 34
Suns Non-Starters Points: 50

Nuggets Non-Starters Rebounds: 22
Suns Non-Starters Rebounds: 8

Nuggets Non-Starters Assists: 5
Suns Non-Starters Assists: 13

This feature is under development, and it will be gradually expanded. The complications involved explain why there are no formal statistics anywhere on the internet on the subject of how much non-starters contribute to different teams, and also why coaches are not compared statistically the way players are. There are a lot of variables that come into the use of reserves that interfere with the objective of judging their use. Statisticians call this “statistical noise,” and if you have a substantial amount of it, then what you are trying to do with your statistics becomes very difficult or next to impossible.

GEORGE KARL CONFIDENCE IN HIS TEAM RATING (Scale of 0 to 10)
3: He's hiding under his seat on the sidelines

PLAYER RATINGS FOR THIS GAME:
You can tell how well every player played at a glance. Of the advanced statistics I have seen on the internet, this one seems to have the best balance between offense and defense. Many other advanced statistics are biased in favor of good defenders, and do not reflect the heavy importance of offense in basketball. Here is the formula for the ESPN rating of a player:

Points + Rebounds + 1.4*Assists + Steals + 1.4*Blocks - .7*Turnovers + # of Field Goals Made +1/2*# of 3-pointers Made - .8*# of Missed Field Goals - .8*# of Missed Free Throws + .25 *# of Free Throws Made

All players on each team who played at least 5 minutes are shown. The number after “game,” is how well the player did in this game, whereas the number after “season” is that player’s overall average for the entire season.

NUGGETS
Allen Iverson: Game 40.6 Season 41.5
Carmelo Anthony: Game 32.6 Season 38.2
Marcus Camby: Game 27.6 Season 32.4
Nene Hilario: Game 24.9 Season 14.0
Kenyon Martin: Game 15.0 Season 19.6
Eduardo Najera: Game 15.5 Season 13.4
Anthony Carter: Game 14.0 Season 22.0
Linas Kleiza: Game 10.2 Season 17.7
J.R. Smith: Game 9.7 Season 14.6
Yakhouba Diawara: Game 3.2 Season 5.8
Von Wafer: Game -1.6 Season 1.2

Chucky Atkins: Did Not Play-Coach’s Decision

Steven Hunter: Did Not Play-Injury

SUNS
Shawn Marion: Game 64.5 Season 35.3
Amare Stoudemire: Game 39.3 Season 38.6
Marcus Banks: Game 37.3 Season 9.8
Grant Hill: Game 32.6 Season 28.7
Steve Nash: Game 31.4 Season 38.2
Leandro Barbosa: Game 24.6 Season 26.6
Brian Skinner: Game 10.2 Season 10.4
Boris Diaw: Game 9.9 Season 15.2
Raja Bell: Game 9.7 Season 18.5

NOTE: these stats do not correct for the big differences in playing times. Players with small minutes would get a higher rating if they had more minutes.

OBSERVATIONS ON RATINGS:
Any player who does twice as much as Carmelo Anthony in a game where Anthony does well might as well not be of this world. Shawn Marion is in a League and World of his own, along with Allen Iverson, but even Iverson has only rarely had a game as productive as Marion had here. The NBA promotional motto right now is “where amazing happens,” and it certainly did happen for Shawn Marion and the Suns in this game.

Carmelo Anthony seldom plays as well as he can against the Suns, I think he gets a little nervous when he sees a team loaded with players about as talented as he is. Nene is storming back from the wilderness, game by game. As for Anthony Carter, I have been warning and I will continue to warn between now and when the Nuggets go over the cliff that, while Anthony Carter is frequently very good or outstanding against poor and some mid-level teams, he seldom plays well against the best teams in the NBA, most of which are found in the Western Conference and one of which is who the Nuggets will meet in the playoffs. I see most of the train wrecks that are coming towards the Nuggets, and this one is definitely coming unless Chucky Atkins works his way back into the point guard slot by the time of the playoffs around the 20th of April.

Marcus Banks is roughly the J.R. Smith of the Suns, a talented young player who sometimes doesn’t get playing time because the Suns are loaded with talent amongst their starters, while Banks is not accomplished enough to be a starter. Banks is an even better 3-point shooter than J.R. Smith, as was demonstrated in this game where he was an amazing 7/8 from long range, but he does not have the drives to the hoop for layups plus the fouls potential that Smith does. And while his turnovers are fewer in number than Smith’s, his steals are also fewer in number. But unlike Smith, Banks does not have his personality put under a microscope for evaluation by his Coach. Assuming Banks is not an active criminal, refusing to practice at all, or in some other dire straights, all Suns Coach Mike D’Antoni cares about is to what extent Banks can be a net positive for his high flying Suns.

NUGGETS REAL PLAYER RATINGS—EXPLANATION
A Great New Feature from Nuggets 1

The Real Player Rating reflects reality better than the gross player rating, since it washes out differences in playing times among the players. The straight up player rankings are obviously heavily affected by how many playing minutes the various players get. With many teams, you can rely on the coach to give his various players roughly the playing time that makes the most sense for his team. Unfortunately, some coaches bring other factors besides actual performance into their rotation decisions. Therefore, it makes good sense to introduce a new and extremely important statistic that Nuggets 1 calls the Real Per Minute Player Rating. As the name implies, this is the gross ESPN player rating divided by the number of minutes. The statistic is called Real Player Rating for short.

This statistic allows anyone to see whether or not players who play only a small number of minutes are doing better than their low gross rating will indicate. You can spot diamond in the rough players who are not getting all the respect and playing time due to them. At the same time, it will allow anyone to see whether players with a lot of minutes are playing worse than, as well as, or better than their gross rating shows.

In summary, the Real Player Rating allows the reader, at a glance, to see exactly how well each player is doing without regard to playing time, which is subject to coaching error and subjective and less important factors such as a player's personality. The Real Player Rating provides the real truth-pure knowledge not available anywhere else.

SCALE FOR THE REAL PLAYER RATINGS
1.60 More Rare Superstar Plus-Above Normal Even For Michael Jordan
1.40 1.60 Superstar Performance Plus-A Michael Jordan Type Game
1.20 1.40 Spectacular Performance
1.05 1.20 Star Performance
0.90 1.05 Outstanding Game
0.80 0.90 Very Good Game
0.70 0.80 Good Game
0.60 0.70 Mediocre Game
0.50 0.60 Poor Game
0.40 0.50 Very Poor Game
0.25 0.40 Bad Game-Near Disaster
Less 0.25 Total Disaster

NUGGETS-SUNS REAL PLAYER RATINGS
All players who played 5 minutes or more are included. Any player who played only 5-9 minutes is noted.

1 Shawn Marion, Pho 2.016
2 J.R. Smith, Den 1.940…Smith played only 5 minutes.
3 Marcus Banks, Pho 1.865
4 Amare Stoudemire, Pho 1.638
5 Grant Hill, Pho 1.482
6 Nene Hilario, Den 1.083
7 Allen Iverson, Den 1.041
8 Carmelo Anthony, Den 0.988
9 Steve Nash, Pho 0.981
10 Marcus Camby, Den 0.952
11 Eduardo Najera, Den 0.861
12 Leandro Barbosa, Pho 0.848
13 Kenyon Martin, Den 0.652
14 Brian Skinner, Pho 0.567
15 Anthony Carter, Den 0.467
16 Linas Kleiza, Den 0.408
17 Raja Bell, Pho 0.388
18 Boris Diaw, Pho 0.354
19 Yakhouba Diawara, Den 0.291
20 Von Wafer, Den -0.320…Wafer played 5 minutes.

OBSERVATIONS ON THE NUGGETS-WARRIORS REAL PLAYER RATINGS
Nene, Iverson, Anthony, and Camby were all solid performers, but the Suns were in another galaxy for this one.

Once again, J.R. Smith played extremely well in extremely limited minutes, in what is becoming a more and more bizarre pattern. Smith is slowly but surely becoming more and more attractive to other teams, even as his minutes, mostly garbage time minutes by the way, are too limited to do much of anything for the Nuggets.

Also, have you noticed recently that in most games Nuggets players appear at the bottom of the ratings? That’s most likely because of the little attention to and respect for the Nugget’s reserves that the coaching staff pays. The coaching staff seems to think that reserve players should teach themselves stuff like offensive strategy and how to have a competitive, tough attitude, and that is like thinking that your field of wheat is going to grow corn just by wishing it so. The Nuggets too often get almost nothing from their players off the bench. Except of course from J.R. Smith, from which they get almost everything.

Amazing happens. In this game, Shawn Marion, J.R. Smith, Marcus Banks, Amare Stoudemire, and Grant Hill proved that amazing does happen sometimes. Unfortunately, four out of those fives amazements were Suns, and the other one is being run off the Nuggets.

NUGGET’S PLUS—MINUS
This tells you how the score changed while a player was on the court. All Nuggets who played at least 10 minutes are shown.

Yakhouba Diawara: +1
Nene: +0
Linas Kleiza: -9
Marcus Camby: -10
Eduardo Najera: -14
Anthony Carter: -19
Carmelo Anthony: -19
Kenyon Martin: -19
Allen Iverson: -21

OBSERVATIONS ON PLUS—MINUS
Of all the Nuggets, it is Nene and Camby who were and will probably in the future be most important in attempting to slow the Suns’ juggernaut down. Nene and Camby get enough rebounds to at least prevent a lot of 2nd chance scores by the Suns, and to prevent a substantial number of in the paint points being scored. Those two factors will be crucial if the Nuggets meet the Suns in the playoffs and the Suns are not shooting the lights out from outside the paint in general and from beyond the arc in particular. Also, while Camby blocks a lot of shots, Nene blocks a fair amount of penetration. And then Martin is great at rotating out to defend those deadly perimeter shooters. So the Nuggets could in theory defeat the Suns in any game where the Suns shooting is off. How off it would have to be from normal is the question that remains to be decided.

NUGGETS MADE WHAT?
All Nuggets who played at least 5 minutes are shown. The order is from lowest to highest in real player rating.

Von Wafer played 5 minutes and was 0/2 on 3’s for 0 points.

Yakhouba Diawara played 11 minutes and was 1/2 and 0/1 on 3’s for 2 points, and he made 1 rebound.

Linas Kleiza played 25 minutes and was 1/6, 0/1 on 3’s, and 3/6 from the line for 5 points, and he made 7 rebounds and 2 assists.

Anthony Carter played 30 minutes and was 1/6, 1/2 on 3’s, and 2/2 from the line for 5 points, and he made 5 assists and 4 rebounds.

Kenyon Martin played 23 minutes and was 4/10 and 3/3 from the line for 11 points, and he made 5 rebounds and 1 assist.

Eduardo Najera played 18 minutes and was 3/6 and 1/3 on 3’s for 7 points, and he made 5 rebounds, 1 assist, and 1 steal.

Marcus Camby played 29 minutes and was 6/11 and 1/1 from the line for 13 points, and he made 6 rebounds, 3 blocks, and 2 assists.

Carmelo Anthony played 33 minutes and was 9/21 and 2/4 from the line for 20 points, and he made 14 rebounds, 1 assist, and 1 steal.

Allen Iverson played 39 minutes and was 10/20, 2/4 on 3’s, and 10/13 from the line for 32 points, and he made 3 assists and 2 rebounds.

Nene played 23 minutes and was 5/10 and 2/5 from the line for 12 points, and he made 9 rebounds, 2 assists, 2 steals, and 1 block.

J.R. Smith played 5 minutes and was 1/2 and 6/6 from the line for 8 points.

NEXT UP
The next game will be Friday, January 11 in Denver to play the Magic at 7 pm mountain time. Neither the Nuggets nor the Magic will be playing on back to back nights.

Monday, January 7, 2008

Allen Iverson is the Superstar as the Nuggets Defeat the 76'ers 109-96, and Part 2 of the J.R. Smith Fiasco Story

The 76’ers caught up early in the 2nd quarter, and almost caught up half way in the third quarter, but they were chasing Allen Iverson, who ruthlessly sliced through, shot over, and picked apart his former team, as the Nuggets pretty much led from start to finish and defeated the Philadelphia 76’ers 109-96. It was one of Iverson’s very best games of the year, as he favored slashing to the hoop even more than usual and converted almost every time he did so. As is so often the case, he led both teams in being fouled on charges to the hoop, and his jump shot was good enough to do additional damage to the over matched 76’ers. How about 3/6 from long range for a team that is relatively hurting for 3-point shooting, and 14/25 overall for 38 points? How about 8 assists, and it would have been more had Anthony Carter not been finding everyone everywhere for 15 dimes? Iverson simply cleaned up against the rebuilding mode 76’ers, and nothing former Nuggets PG Andre Miller and PF Reggie Evans could do was going to make any difference in this game. Iverson was not stoppable.

Worrying about how the Nuggets are going to beat one of the top teams of the West when Carmelo Anthony gets only 16 shots will be left to another day; maybe the Nuggets will be smart enough to know that, while Iverson can dominate the offense and lead the Nuggets to a lot of wins against losing teams, that will usually not be possible against the top winning teams of the West. Or maybe David Stern will in fact ban the 3-point shot before the playoffs start. Or maybe the Spurs, Suns, and Lakers will decide to pack their bags and move to an Italian league.

If you can’t beat the Nuggets in 3-point shooting, you generally can’t beat the Nuggets, because they are very easy to beat in 3-point shooting. The Nuggets have more threes attempted against them per game (21) than any other team. They don't defend it very well, and smart teams know that this is one way to try to offset Denver's frequently great scoring on twos and free throws. The Sixers, along with the Hawks, are the worst 3-point shooting team in the NBA, so I guess they weren’t qualified to try to beat the Nuggets with the long range swishes. The Nuggets, thanks to Iverson, finished 6/15 on threes, while the 76’ers were 4/10.

Overall, the 76’ers were just 39/95, which is 41.1%, while the Nuggets were a much stronger 44/93, which is 47.3%. Anytime the difference in the percentage of shots that go in is greater than 5 percent, the better team wins most of the time. That’s why the intense made you miss defending you see especially in the playoffs and especially in the West Conference is so important in winning games. The Nuggets kept their turnovers within reason, as Carter made an outstanding assist/turnover ratio of 3.75 while Iverson’s was a strong 2.67.

Marcus Camby, who added 7 blocks in this game and now has 129 for the season, is in a zone of his own in the League, far ahead of everyone in blocks per game at this point. Camby was almost unbelievable in blocking last year, and finished 1st in the League by a very substantial margin, with 3.3 blocks per game, well ahead of 2nd place Josh Smith, who made 2.9. In the NBA playoffs, Camby edged out Tim Duncan to be the number one playoff blocker. This year Camby is beyond great and is completely unbelievable. Camby this season is the Michael Jordan of blocked shots. He has 3.8 blocked shots per game, far ahead of Josh Smith again, who is getting 3.1 blocks per game so far.

Iverson is leading the 2007-08 Nuggets offensively, Camby is leading them defensively, and Carmelo Anthony is in the back seat enjoying the ride. As long as the team is winning, Anthony doesn’t really care that Iverson is a little ahead of him in scoring. I guess it must be nice to be like Anthony and to not worry about tough times ahead. I’m not usually like that, I’m usually worried about the big problems that loom on the horizon. Those big problems would be, at a minimum, the Spurs, the Suns, and the Lakers. Melo will not be able to beat any of those teams in the playoffs while riding in the back seat

Now I will continue on with the J.R. Smith fiasco report, part 2. In part 1, which was in the Timberwolves game report, I showed that the benching of J.R. Smith as of the 1st of the year was more obnoxious than most of George Karl’s benchings, many of which are very obnoxious, since Smith played extremely well in limited minutes in the last 4 games before his benching. I then went on to explain the most likely motivation of Karl for not giving Smith significant playing time, that he wants him to be traded to another team, against the wishes of the Denver front office and against the wishes of Smith himself. I then made a big attempt to explain why Karl has come to hate J.R. Smith to the point where he refuses to teach him or to play him in significant minutes.

Karl doesn’t even want Smith on the bench anymore, he wants him gone. And Karl knows full well that Smith could be getting good playing time on a good number of other teams, such as the 76’ers for example. So Karl is giving Smith just enough playing time to showcase his scoring and disrupting defending, while not giving him anywhere near enough time to advance his career as a Nugget, or to give the Nuggets the full benefit of Smith being on the roster.

Here in part 2, I will show, using just 2007-08 statistics, that Smith is one of the better players on the Nuggets even while being jerked around on playing time and being the only Nugget under a lot of pressure to try to get more playing time.

J.R. Smith might have a really dumb or lazy agent. At worst, Smith is the 6th best player on the team. If the Denver front office doesn't want him to go, and they definitely do not, but Karl doesn't want him to play, the player, the agent, or both are supposed to apply some pressure in order to get the player off the bench, by demanding a trade if at least a minimum amount of playing time is not provided. Otherwise, Smith is just a hostage in a dispute between the front office and the Coach.

I have seen J.R. say in the media that he doesn't want to leave, so that may be what is stopping the normal course of events when a good player is benched. He's too young to realize that if you are a major pro athlete, you lose mega bucks if your career is held down by artificially low playing time for more than a year or so. Not to mention that your actual playing skills might be reduced to one extent or another. The longer the lack of playing time goes on, the worst these effects get, and Smith is now coming up on the 1-year anniversary of when Karl first started to really hate him.

I will now kill two birds with one stone, giving you all of the most important per 48 minutes performance measures, and at the same time showing just how valuable J.R. Smith is to the Nuggets. The Real Player rating which is in every game report is a per time measure as well, but it combines all of the important things that players do on the court into one number, and also puts differing weights on the various things, with the higher weights going on the things that are more valuable toward the objective of winning the game.

A per 48 minutes basketball performance measure tells you how many or how much of whatever is being measured a player or a team would get in 48 minutes of playing time. Since 48 minutes is the length of a non-overtime game, the measurement tells you how many or how much of whatever is being measured a player would get if he played for the whole game. It measures each player without regard to actual playing time, so it washes out all differences in playing time, and equalizes the playing field for all players, whether they are getting too much, the right amount, or too little playing time.

NUGGETS POINTS PER 48 MINUTES
First 32 games of the 2007-08 season

Player and Points per 48 Minutes
1 Carmelo Anthony 32.88
2 Allen Iverson 30.85
3 J.R. Smith 25.61
4 Linas Kleiza 22.65
5 Bobby Jones 17.77
6 Kenyon Martin 17.76
7 Nene 14.67
8 Anthony Carter 13.87
9 Von Wafer 13.29
10 Eduardo Najera 13.22
11 Yakhouba Diawara 12.58
12 Marcus Camby 12.33
13 Chucky Atkins 11.44
14 Steven Hunter 7.58
15 Jelani McCoy 4.50

Here you can see that J.R. is the third most productive scorer on the Nuggets per unit of playing time. Smith remains ahead of Kleiza despite Kleiza's big year so far and despite Smith being at least as inconsistent in 3-point shooting this year as last. A player who gets more than 24 points per 48 minutes, or more than a point every 2 minutes on the court, is relatively rare in the NBA, and represents real talent that will in almost all cases earn that player a starting slot and playing time of 22-38 minutes a game. Smith’s playing time for the 2007-08 season is now in the high teens and is dropping, of course, with every game he is benched.

Let’s see how Smith stacks up in the NBA as a scorer:

NBA PLAYERS WHO GET 24 OR MORE POINTS FOR EVERY 48 MINUTES OF PLAYING TIME-2007-08 SEASON AS OF JANUARY 7, 2008

Player, Team, and Points per 48 Minutes
1 Kobe Bryant, LAL 35.18
2 Lebron James, CLE 34.81
3 Amare Stoudemire, PHX 33.73
4 Carmelo Anthony, DEN 32.91
5 Carlos Boozer, UTA 31.97
6 Manu Ginobili, SA 31.19
7 Allen Iverson, DEN 31.18
8 Tracy McGrady, HOU 31.04
9 Dwyane Wade, MIA 30.79
10 Richard Jefferson, NJ 29.93
11 Kevin Martin, SAC 29.79
12 Michael Redd, MIL 29.77
13 Dirk Nowitzki, DAL 29.30
14 Shaquille O’Neal, MIA 29.21
15 Chris Bosh, TOR 29.01
16 Kevin Durant, SEA 28.77
17 Yao Ming, HOU 28.35
18 Tony Parker, SA 27.95
19 Chris Paul, NO 27.71
20 Dwight Howard, ORL 27.62
21 Corey Maggette, LAC 27.62
22 Leandro Barbos, PHX 27.52
23 Josh Howard, DAL 27.32
24 Gilbert Arenas, WAS 27.19
25 Tim Duncan, SA 27.00
26 Baron Davis, GS 26.95
27 Vince Carter, NJ 26.94
28 Al Jefferson, MIN 26.55
29 Wally Szczerbiak, SEA 26.46
30 Kevin Garnett, BOS 26.42
31 Rashad McCants, MIN 26.37
32 Paul Pierce, BOS 26.28
33 Antawn Jamison, WAS 26.19
34 Andres Nocioni, CHI 26.09
35 T.J. Ford, TOR 26.07
36 Ben Gordon, CHI 26.02
37 Caron Butler, WAS 26.00
38 J.R. Smith, DEN 25.88
39 Jason Richardson, CHAR 25.79
40 Stephen Jackson, GS 25.46
41 Al Harrington, GS 25.45
42 LaMarcus Aldridge, POR 25.38
43 Richard Hamilton, DET 25.34
44 Rudy Gay, MEM 25.29
45 Eddy Curry, NY 25.22
46 Gerald Wallace, CHAR 25.14
47 Hakim Warrick, MEM 25.13
48 Joe Johnson, ATL 25.06
49 Zach Randolph, NY 25.00
50 David West, NO 24.87
51 Pau Gasol, MEM 24.84
52 Deron Williams, UTA 24.79
53 Brandon Roy, POR 24.72
54 Josh Smith, ATL 24.69
55 Nate Robinson, NY 24.66
56 Mike Dunleavy, IND 24.54
57 Chauncy Billups, DET 24.40
58 Luol Deng, CHI 24.34
59 Hedo Turkoglu, ORL 24.25

There are only 37 players in the NBA who score more points per 48 minutes (or any number of minutes) on the court than Smith does.

Next we’ll look at assists, but for this and the following measures, we’ll limit our look right now to just the Nuggets. In future Nuggets 1 reports, I’ll show the NBA leaders in assists, steals, blocks, and turnovers per 48 minutes.

NUGGETS ASSISTS PER 48 MINUTES
First 32 games of the 2007-08 season

Player & Assists Per 48 minutes
Anthony Carter 8.8
Allen Iverson 8.0
Chucky Atkins 5.1
J.R. Smith 4.8
Carmelo Anthony 4.7
Marcus Camby 4.4
Yakhouba Diawara 3.1
Von Wafer 3.0
Linas Kleiza 2.7
Eduardo Najera 2.5
Nene 2.5
Bobby Jones 2.5
Kenyon Martin 1.7
Steven Hunter 0.0
Jelani McCoy 0.0

J.R. is 4th in assists, roughly equal to Atkins and Anthony. Is Smith one of the better assists players in the NBA? No, but he’s not rock bottom bad as Karl wants you to think either. In a future report, we will see exactly where Smith, Iverson, and all the top players in the NBA rank in terms of assists (and steals, blocks, and turnovers) per 48 minutes.

NUGGETS STEALS PER 48 MINUTES
First 32 games of the 2007-08 season

Player & Steals Per 48 mins.
1 Carter 2.7
2 Iverson 2.6
3 Martin 2.6
4 Smith 2.2
5 Najera 2.0
6 Anthony 1.7
7 Wafer 1.5
8 Camby 1.4
9 Atkins 1.3
10 Kleiza 1.2
11 Nene 1.2
12 Jones 1.2
13 Diawara 0.5
14 Hunter 0.0
15 McCoy 0.0

On a team that is leading the NBA in steals, Smith is 4th in steals per minute. Anthony Carter and Kenyon Martin have been phenomenal, because Iverson has never failed to be the best on his team in steals.

NUGGETS REBOUNDS PER 48 MINUTES
First 32 games of the 2007-08 season

Player & Rebounds Per 48 minutes.
1 Camby 19.9
2 Nene 14.9
3 Hunter 12.6
4 Martin 11.1
5 McCoy 10.5
6 Najera 10.1
7 Anthony 8.7
8 Kleiza 8.3
9 Jones 7.4
10 Smith 5.2
11 Carter 5.0
12 Diawara 4.6
13 Wafer 4.4
14 Iverson 3.4
15 Atkins 3.2

J.R. Smith leads all Nuggets guards in rebounding, though Carter is breathing down his neck.

While he is not yet back to where he was last spring in getting the ball in the basket, Nene is at least rebounding well already.

Notice that, while Diawara is a relatively good made you miss defender, he is neither a good scorer nor a good rebounder, so even though he is an very accurate 3-point shooter, he can be benched with me getting just a little upset about it instead of enraged like I am with the Smith benching.

NUGGETS TURNOVERS PER 48 MINUTES
First 32 games of the 2007-08 season

Player & Turnovers Per 48 Minutes.
1 Atkins 1.0
2 Diawara 1.5
3 Najera 1.9
4 Camby 2.1
5 Martin 2.3
6 Hunter 2.5
7 Kleiza 2.6
8 Carter 2.9
9 Jones 3.2
10 Iverson 4.0
11 Wafer 4.4
12 Nene 4.5
13 Smith 4.7
14 Anthony 4.7
15 McCoy 6.0

The Nuggets are dead last in the NBA in turnovers. I call otherwise good players who turn it over a lot "high rent" players. The trouble is, the Nuggets have too many high rent players. Most teams can only afford about 2 of them, but the Nuggets have 4 of them who deserve playing time despite their turnovers: Iverson, Nene, Smith, and Anthony.

The Nuggets are paying a huge price in terms of turnovers for their almost complete lack of offensive structure. They absolutely have to be at least a little less wild and a little more structured on offense if they hope to win a playoff series. And on a team that is loaded with high rent players, J.R. Smith is an obvious target for a coach who wants to reduce the turnovers by putting more careful and conservative players in the game.

However, the Nuggets can not win in the playoffs without the production of J.R. Smith. So the only way the Nuggets can be favored in the playoffs is if J.R. Smith is allowed to play, but at the same time, the coaches and the players work together on ways to reduce turnovers overall. In other words, the Nugget’s coaches need to attack the problem and not attack one player who is part of it.

NUGGETS ASSIST/TURNOVER RATIOS
First 32 games of the 2007-08 season

Player & Assist/Turnover Ratio
1 Atkins 5.10
2 Carter 3.03
3 Camby 2.10
4 Diawara 2.07
5 Iverson 2.00
6 Najera 1.32
7 Kleiza 1.04
8 Smith 1.02
9 Anthony 1.00
10 Jones 0.78
11 Martin 0.74
12 Wafer 0.68
13 Nene 0.56
14 Hunter 0.00
15 McCoy 0.00

Atkins has not been able to score much yet but at least his basic distribution skills seem to be intact.

Even with his high number of turnovers, J.R. Smith has an assist/turnover ratio that is not good, but not the complete disaster that Karl has in his mind.

One of, but not the only reason, that Karl can get away with benching Smith and almost forfeiting the playoff series is that Smith’s specific top skills other than 3-point shooting are somewhat expendable on the Nuggets right now. The Nuggets are getting plenty of points overall, and plenty of steals, without J.R. Smith. It is obvious that J.R. Smith would be much more of a stand-out star on at least half of the other teams in the NBA.

ALERT STATUS PROBLEMS
As of January 7, 2008

The Nuggets are under a GREY ALERT, on account of the following problems.

INJURIES & SUSPENSIONS
1. Steven Hunter injury 4 Points

SEVERE AND UNEXPECTED PLAYER PERFORMANCE PROBLEMS
There are none at this time.

BAD OR INADEQUATE COACHING
1. George Karl over relies on his starters and won’t play the non-starters enough: 5-35 Points. The severity varies depending on the circumstances, mainly Karl’s beliefs and moods, and whether the other team is playing well enough to take advantage of the Nuggets playing with not enough breathers, with too many fouls, and so forth. Karl will normally be in the 5-20 range, but it could spike to as much as 35 in the event of the benching of a major player such as Kenyon Martin. The current points reported are for the use, or should I say the misuse, of the reserves for the most recent games, with the most weight being given to the game being reported on here. The bad use of reserves score for this game is 15 points.

2. Lack of adequate offensive schemes: 12 Points. This would be up to 24 points, except that Iverson reduces the damage. In general terms, the team has failed to decide whether it wants Melo alone, Iverson alone, Melo and Iverson together, or neither of them to be firstly responsible for scoring enough points to keep the Nuggets in games. If it were neither, I call the name of that strategy the "share the wealth" strategy. More specifically, the Nuggets lack enough tried and tested offensive plays that they can run game after game, perfecting them as they go, and having everyone automatically on the same page for those plays.

INTENSITY, HUSTLE, AND HEART
1. The Nugget’s intensity, hustle and heart are lacking: 0 Points. It’s not anywhere near as bad as some fans sometimes think it is.

TOTAL PROBLEM POINTS: 31, which constitutes GREY ALERT.

GREY ALERT (30-39): There are relatively minor problems leading to a small threat against the success of the entire season. It is still possible to beat quality teams, but it will be more unusual to beat a quality team, because about 1/4 of what would have been wins against good teams will now be losses when there is a GREY ALERT.

OBSERVATIONS ON THE ALERT STATUS
Praise be to the most high, if there is a most high, because the Nugget’s front court is all playing now, and no important player is having any serious slump problems, and because the Nuggets are therefore no longer in yellow alert or worse. But don’t party too hard yet. We will be back in a damaging yellow alert if and when either the injury prone Martin or the injury prone Nene go out again, and in a very damaging orange alert if they are ever both out. And as the Spurs game on January 3 showed, the Nuggets need both Martin and Nene in to make up for their offense being trashed by a quality defensive team.

Another reason not to party about the sports medicine miracles is that the alert status has moved from green alert to grey alert as a result of an increase in the actual and, more importantly, the projected damage caused by George Karl’s rotation mistakes. He has now totally removed J.R. Smith and largely removed Chucky Atkins from playing time, and that spells d-o-o-m for the playoffs, pure and simple. Carter is playing very well against lottery and mid-level teams here in the regular season, but he will be no match for the top flight guards that he will come up against in the playoffs, whereas Atkins does have some playoff experience with the Lakers. And the Nuggets will not be able to offset the very tough defending they will face in the playoffs without good 3-point shooting and, quite honestly, they have to have Smith just to be assured of being mediocre in 3-point shooting. Being good would require someone else to step up and join Smith and Kleiza as major players on the Nugget’s 3-point shooting squad.

RESERVE WATCH

Number of Players Who Played at Least 6 Minutes: Nuggets 9 76’ers 9
Number of Players Who Played at Least 10 Minutes: Nuggets 8 76’ers 9

Nuggets Non-Starters Points: 24
76’ers Non-Starters Points: 33

Nuggets Non-Starters Rebounds: 14
76’ers Non-Starters Rebounds: 15

Nuggets Non-Starters Assists: 2
76’ers Non-Starters Assists: 7

This feature is under development, and it will be gradually expanded. The complications involved explain why there are no formal statistics anywhere on the internet on the subject of how much non-starters contribute to different teams, and also why coaches are not compared statistically the way players are. There are a lot of variables that come into the use of reserves that interfere with the objective of judging their use. Statisticians call this “statistical noise,” and if you have a substantial amount of it, then what you are trying to do with your statistics becomes very difficult or next to impossible.

GEORGE KARL CONFIDENCE IN HIS TEAM RATING (Scale of 0 to 10)
3: He's hiding under his seat on the sidelines

PLAYER RATINGS FOR THIS GAME:
You can tell how well every player played at a glance. Of the advanced statistics I have seen on the internet, this one seems to have the best balance between offense and defense. Many other advanced statistics are biased in favor of good defenders, and do not reflect the heavy importance of offense in basketball. Here is the formula for the ESPN rating of a player:

Points + Rebounds + 1.4*Assists + Steals + 1.4*Blocks - .7*Turnovers + # of Field Goals Made +1/2*# of 3-pointers Made - .8*# of Missed Field Goals - .8*# of Missed Free Throws + .25 *# of Free Throws Made

All players on each team who played at least 5 minutes are shown. The number after “game,” is how well the player did in this game, whereas the number after “season” is that player’s overall average for the entire season.

NUGGETS
Allen Iverson: Game 58.2 Season 41.5
Carmelo Anthony: Game 39.3 Season 37.9
Marcus Camby: Game 38.7 Season 32.6
Anthony Carter: Game 32.9 Season 20.9
Kenyon Martin: Game 24.0 Season 19.6
Nene Hilario: Game 16.5 Season 14.0
Eduardo Najera: Game 14.0 Season 13.7
Linas Kleiza: Game 13.5 Season 17.3
Chucky Atkins: Game-1.8 Season 6.1

J.R. Smith: Did Not Play-Coach’s Decision
Bobby Jones: Did Not Play-Coach’s Decision
Yakhouba Diawara: Did Not Play-Coach’s Decision
Jelani McCoy: Did Not Play-Coach’s Decision
Von Wafer: Did Not Play-Coach's Decision

Steven Hunter: Did Not Play-Injury

76’ERS
Andre Igoudala: Game 32.3 Season 32.3
Andre Miller: Game 32.0 Season 29.4
Samuel Dalembert: Game 27.0 Season 25.4
Thaddeus Young: Game 19.9 Season 9.0
Louis Williams: Game 18.8 Season 17.6
Reggie Evans: Game 18.1 Season 13.7
Willie Green: Game 14.5 Season 18.5
Jason Smith: Game 10.1 Season 9.7
Gordan Gricek: Game 7.0 Season 6.3

NOTE: these stats do not correct for the big differences in playing times. Players with small minutes would get a higher rating if they had more minutes.

OBSERVATIONS ON RATINGS:
It’s very simple: Iverson was huge, the Nuggets were solid as a rock, the 76’ers were about as good as they are on average, and the Nuggets are clearly more talented in basketball right now than the 76’ers. Talent is, very fortunately for the Nuggets, more important than strategy and tactics.

NUGGETS REAL PLAYER RATINGS—EXPLANATION
A Great New Feature from Nuggets 1

The Real Player Rating reflects reality better than the gross player rating, since it washes out differences in playing times among the players. The straight up player rankings are obviously heavily affected by how many playing minutes the various players get. With many teams, you can rely on the coach to give his various players roughly the playing time that makes the most sense for his team. Unfortunately, some coaches bring other factors besides actual performance into their rotation decisions. Therefore, it makes good sense to introduce a new and extremely important statistic that Nuggets 1 calls the Real Per Minute Player Rating. As the name implies, this is the gross ESPN player rating divided by the number of minutes. The statistic is called Real Player Rating for short.

This statistic allows anyone to see whether or not players who play only a small number of minutes are doing better than their low gross rating will indicate. You can spot diamond in the rough players who are not getting all the respect and playing time due to them. At the same time, it will allow anyone to see whether players with a lot of minutes are playing worse than, as well as, or better than their gross rating shows.

In summary, the Real Player Rating allows the reader, at a glance, to see exactly how well each player is doing without regard to playing time, which is subject to coaching error and subjective and less important factors such as a player's personality. The Real Player Rating provides the real truth-pure knowledge not available anywhere else.

SCALE FOR THE REAL PLAYER RATINGS
1.60 More Rare Superstar Plus-Above Normal Even For Michael Jordan
1.40 1.60 Superstar Performance Plus-A Michael Jordan Type Game
1.20 1.40 Spectacular Performance
1.05 1.20 Star Performance
0.90 1.05 Outstanding Game
0.80 0.90 Very Good Game
0.70 0.80 Good Game
0.60 0.70 Mediocre Game
0.50 0.60 Poor Game
0.40 0.50 Very Poor Game
0.25 0.40 Bad Game-Near Disaster
Less 0.25 Total Disaster

NUGGETS-76’ERS REAL PLAYER RATINGS
All players who played 5 minutes or more are included. Any player who played only 5-9 minutes is noted

1. Allen Iverson, Den 1.323
2. Marcus Camby, Den 1.173
3. Eduardo Najera, Den 1.167
4. Carmelo Anthony, Den 1.092
5. Andre Miller, Phi 0.914
6. Andre Iguodala, Phi 0.897
7. Anthony Carter, Den 0.866
8. Kenyon Martin, Den 0.804
9. Thaddeus Young, Phi 0.796
10. Jason Smith, Phi 0.777
11. Nene Hilario, Den 0.750
12. Louis Williams, Phi 0.696
13. Samuel Dalembert, Phi 0.692
14. Reggie Evans, Phi 0.670
15. Linas Kleiza, Den 0.614
16. Willie Green, Phi 0.580
17. Gordan Giricek, Phi 0.538
18. Chucky Atkins, Den -0.257...Atkins played only 7 minutes

OBSERVATIONS ON THE NUGGETS-WARRIORS REAL PLAYER RATINGS
Iverson gets the superstar Michael Jordan rating, but Camby, Najera, and Anthony were all stars. The 76’ers had no stars in this game, but Andre Miller and Andre Igoudala were outstanding. Former Nugget Reggie Evans was mediocre. Linas Kleiza was off his season pace in this one, while it looks like something is physically wrong with Chucky Atkins.

NUGGET’S PLUS—MINUS
This tells you how the score changed while a player was on the court. All Nuggets who played at least 6 minutes are shown.

Anthony Carter: +18
Marcus Camby: +12
Carmelo Anthony: +11
Kenyon Martin: +10
Linas Kleiza: +8
Allen Iverson: +6
Nene: +3
Eduardo Najera: +3
Chucky Atkins: -6

OBSERVATIONS ON PLUS—MINUS
Against the poor and some of the mid-level teams, Carter is making the Nugget’s offense work, but there is no plan on how to successfully take on the Suns, the Spurs, the Lakers, or the Mavericks in the playoffs yet. Nene is still working his way back to the playing condition he was in last spring.

NUGGETS MADE WHAT?
All Nuggets who played at least 6 minutes are shown. The order is from lowest to highest in real player rating.

Chucky Atkins played 7 minutes and was 0/4 and 0/2 on 3’s for 0 points, and he made 1 assist.

Linas Kleiza played 22 minutes and was 4/9 and 1/3 on 3’s for 9 points, and he made 3 rebounds, 1 assist, and 1 steal.

Nene played 22 minutes and was 2/7 and 2/3 from the line for 6 points, and he made 8 rebounds, 2 blocks, and 2 steals.

Kenyon Martin played 27 minutes and was 4/10 for 8 points, and he made 10 rebounds, 2 assists, 1 block, and 1 steal.

Anthony Carter played 38 minutes and was 2/7 and 1/2 on 3’s for 5 points, and he made 15 assists, 5 rebounds, 3 blocks, and 2 steals.

Carmelo Anthony played 36 minutes and was 10/16 and 3/4 from the line for 23 points, and he made 7 rebounds, 3 assists, and 2 steals.

Eduardo Najera played 12 minutes and was 4/8 and 1/2 on 3’s for 9 points, and he made 3 rebounds and 1 block.

Marcus Camby played 33 minutes and was 4/7 and 3/3 from the line for 11 points, and he made 12 rebounds, 7 blocks, and 3 assists.

Allen Iverson played for virtually the whole game, 44 minutes, and was 14/25, 3/6 on 3’s, and 7/8 from the line for 38 points, and he made 8 assists, 1 steal, 1 block, and 1 rebound.

NEXT UP
The next game will be Monday, January 7 in Phoenix to play the Suns at 7 pm mountain time. The Nuggets will be playing on back to back nights but the Suns will not be.

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