2015-2016 NBA Regular Season - MDA to HOU - All-NBA - Harden snubbed - Anthony Davis is broke

Status
Not open for further replies.
I want Curry to go for 100 points.

If he can't get it by next game, then he should obviously retire. Damaged goods.
 
Last edited:
Holy cow, Karl-Anthony Towns is still a teenager?? 
eek.gif


sick.gif
 @ the thought of  how his the league can be over the next 5-10 years from now. Like a kid in a candy store.
 
Good gracious those Hawks unis are terrible. They actually make the Clips new stuff look ok.
 
what's j lin thinking about? when he does his hair. you think he's all like "yeah this looks dope"
 
I feel like i've seen/heard nothing at all about the Spurs so far. How is LeMarcus looking in their system?
 
 
I feel like i've seen/heard nothing at all about the Spurs so far. How is LeMarcus looking in their system?
 
SAN ANTONIO -- Even after LaMarcus Aldridge  notched a double-double (10 points, 11 rebounds) for the first time as a Spur in the club's 102-75 victoryFriday over the Brooklyn Nets, he admitted he's "not even close" to the player San Antonio signed.

That's not because of a decline in skills or any injury as much as it is Aldridge simply "doing what new guys do," according to Spurs coach Gregg Popovich, who courted the team's most prized acquisition over the summer along with a host of others in the organization before signing him to a four-year max contract worth more than $80 million.

"It's not the same. I'm not the same person here that I was in Portland," Aldridge said. "I don't feel like they need me to be that person all the time. It's learning how to be myself in the offense. I haven't figured that out yet. I feel like the whole [team philosophy of] 'good to great passes' [is] in my head all the time. Hopefully as the season goes on I'll figure it out. But right now, I'm just trying to fit in."

LaMarcus Aldridge notched his first double-double as a Spur on Friday but said he's "just trying to fit in" with Tim Duncan & Co. AP Photo/Bahram Mark Sobhani

As one of six Spurs to score in double figures in the team's first win of the season, Aldridge continues to search for his niche in a San Antonio offense intent on handing him and Kawhi Leonard  the keys to run the show. Aldridge and Leonard (team-high 16 points to go with 10 rebounds) flashed glimpses of how the Spurs might look in the future as they transition away from heavy reliance on Tony Parker  and Tim Duncan.

But the next evolution can't take place until Aldridge becomes completely comfortable. While Aldridge made strides Friday night as the Spurs outscored the Nets 34-17 in the third quarter (60-28 in the second half) to blow open the game, four of his five buckets on the night came on putbacks.

Aldridge also passed on shots against the Nets he probably would have taken during his days in Portland.

"He's gonna defer here and there, try to fit in," Popovich said. "It's natural."

Aldridge doesn't deny the coach's observation.

"I've always been the main guy. I've always gotten the ball a lot," Aldridge said. "I'm trying to learn how to play in the offense, trying to learn how to get my shots out of the offense. [I'm] just trying to learn how to move the ball [the way the Spurs do it] and get shots. Pop keeps telling me to shoot it, but it's a process for me. I'm definitely not playing like myself right now. I can't be selfish here. I'm just here to win. Tonight, we won. I played good defense down low. I felt like I got some good blocks on defense, and I crashed the boards. So if we can win every game like that, I'm fine. I don't [look to shoot]. We'll figure it out, though."

When Aldridge joined San Antonio in July, coming off a season in Portland in which he averaged a career-high 23.4 points to go with 10.2 rebounds and 1.7 assists, some observers saw a player who clashed with the Spurs' style of basketball.

Aldridge arrived having led the NBA in 2-point attempts in each of the past three seasons with a steady array of long jumpers and turnarounds, highlighted by his ability to stretch the floor by spotting up and creating open 3s for teammates in pick-and-pops.

"Each game gets better. I think it's a process for all of us, how to use me. For me to find my spots I'm gonna have to be aggressive," Aldridge said. "But now, I think I'm just getting offensive boards, and that's fine for now. We understand it's going to be a process for us to be more comfortable out there, be sharper. As the season goes on, things will be better."
 
How is this dude Steph so slim but pumping from 30+ feet repeatedly is beyond me.

Dude has become one of the league's favorite people to root for.
 
 
 
I feel like i've seen/heard nothing at all about the Spurs so far. How is LeMarcus looking in their system?
 
SAN ANTONIO -- Even after LaMarcus Aldridge  notched a double-double (10 points, 11 rebounds) for the first time as a Spur in the club's 102-75 victoryFriday over the Brooklyn Nets, he admitted he's "not even close" to the player San Antonio signed.

That's not because of a decline in skills or any injury as much as it is Aldridge simply "doing what new guys do," according to Spurs coach Gregg Popovich, who courted the team's most prized acquisition over the summer along with a host of others in the organization before signing him to a four-year max contract worth more than $80 million.

"It's not the same. I'm not the same person here that I was in Portland," Aldridge said. "I don't feel like they need me to be that person all the time. It's learning how to be myself in the offense. I haven't figured that out yet. I feel like the whole [team philosophy of] 'good to great passes' [is] in my head all the time. Hopefully as the season goes on I'll figure it out. But right now, I'm just trying to fit in."

LaMarcus Aldridge notched his first double-double as a Spur on Friday but said he's "just trying to fit in" with Tim Duncan & Co. AP Photo/Bahram Mark Sobhani

As one of six Spurs to score in double figures in the team's first win of the season, Aldridge continues to search for his niche in a San Antonio offense intent on handing him and Kawhi Leonard  the keys to run the show. Aldridge and Leonard (team-high 16 points to go with 10 rebounds) flashed glimpses of how the Spurs might look in the future as they transition away from heavy reliance on Tony Parker  and Tim Duncan.

But the next evolution can't take place until Aldridge becomes completely comfortable. While Aldridge made strides Friday night as the Spurs outscored the Nets 34-17 in the third quarter (60-28 in the second half) to blow open the game, four of his five buckets on the night came on putbacks.

Aldridge also passed on shots against the Nets he probably would have taken during his days in Portland.

"He's gonna defer here and there, try to fit in," Popovich said. "It's natural."

Aldridge doesn't deny the coach's observation.

"I've always been the main guy. I've always gotten the ball a lot," Aldridge said. "I'm trying to learn how to play in the offense, trying to learn how to get my shots out of the offense. [I'm] just trying to learn how to move the ball [the way the Spurs do it] and get shots. Pop keeps telling me to shoot it, but it's a process for me. I'm definitely not playing like myself right now. I can't be selfish here. I'm just here to win. Tonight, we won. I played good defense down low. I felt like I got some good blocks on defense, and I crashed the boards. So if we can win every game like that, I'm fine. I don't [look to shoot]. We'll figure it out, though."

When Aldridge joined San Antonio in July, coming off a season in Portland in which he averaged a career-high 23.4 points to go with 10.2 rebounds and 1.7 assists, some observers saw a player who clashed with the Spurs' style of basketball.

Aldridge arrived having led the NBA in 2-point attempts in each of the past three seasons with a steady array of long jumpers and turnarounds, highlighted by his ability to stretch the floor by spotting up and creating open 3s for teammates in pick-and-pops.

"Each game gets better. I think it's a process for all of us, how to use me. For me to find my spots I'm gonna have to be aggressive," Aldridge said. "But now, I think I'm just getting offensive boards, and that's fine for now. We understand it's going to be a process for us to be more comfortable out there, be sharper. As the season goes on, things will be better."
I have noticed that as well, he's been extremely passive. Its only been two games so I am not worried.

Side note I have a ticket to see them play the Knicks on Monday 
pimp.gif
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom