Overall
Roughly a 3rd of the way through the season the Nets remain competitive sitting at 15-15 (10-5 at home) which is good for 5th in the Atlantic Division and 11th in the East. However, the team is only a half game out of the playoffs in an improving East and has shown lots of promise of late, winning their last 4 games. For the season the Nets have made some nice improvements, especially in the rebounding department, where despite a low average on a per game basis (49.3) they are actually out rebounding the opposition for the season. Offensively they have been very inconsistent as one would expect with a young team relying on so many first and second year players to contribute, but the offense has been better of late although overall for the year it is a dreadful 99.9ppg averaged, the 5th worst number in the league. Despite the low ppg average the team has managed to be the 3rd ranked team in the league in Assists per game at 25.4. On defense the team has shown steady improvement over the season in allowing 102ppg, which is the 7th best number in the league. Overall, the team is a work in progress and it shows, but the talent is starting to come around and the team hopes to be competing for a playoff spot all year. Now lets look at how the players have done so far.
Starters
Emilio Yeager, Center: Yeager has shown flashes of the talent that made him the 7th overall pick last June. For the season he has averaged 10.5ppg, 9.0rpg, 2.1apg, 1.0steals and 1.0blocks. The team is very happy with his contributions and thinks he will have a big off season and make the leap to one of the better bigs in the division next season. Grade B-.
Jerry Mcanally, Forward. Mcanally still hasn’t quite been as consistent as the team would like but he is showing they made a wise choice, picking the scoring forward 3rd overall two drafts ago. On the year the combo forward is averaging 21.9ppg, 7.4rpg and 2.6apg while showing at least a willingness to defend, which was lacking his rookie year. The team sees a bright future for Mcanally and the team with him on it. Grade B.
Morris Harper, Wing. Harper has shown why the team was so excited to see him in action this year after an excellent off season and the silky smooth second year player has rewarded the team by averaging 19.4ppg, 5.7rpg, 2.7apg and 1.1steals. Like all young players consistency can be an issue, but Harper still has oodles of potential and is just scratching the surface on what he can do on the court. However, he is becoming the type of player you can build a team around. Grade A-.
Louis Rozier, SG. Rozier played great off the bench and finally earned starters minutes where he averaged 19.8ppg on .556 shooting. If Rozier can be a steady 15+ ppg option for the team at SG, they will be a much more consistent team on offense. The big question is if the team is going to try to iron out a new contract for Rozier or see what they can get for him at the trade deadline. Grade B.
Will Child, PG. The reigning Rookie of the Month, Child is still a work in progress but has a flair for running the offense, although his decision making at times leaves a lot to be desired. For the season the rookie is averaging7.9ppg, 3.7rpg, 8.4apg, 1.6steals, and 2.9turnovers. Obviously the team hopes the turnovers will go down overtime but thinks they have found a longterm solution at PG for the team. Grade B-.
The Bench
Pete Krug, Post. The wide-bodied Krug has played extremely well this year averaging 10.7ppg, 7.4rpg and 1.5apg mainly off the bench. The question is does the team want to keep the burly forward or will he be sent to a contender in need of rebounding and girth downlow before the deadline? Grade B+.
Franklin Reed, Post. The 4th post, Reed has averaged 3.3ppg and 5.4rpg in spot duty for the team. On a one year exception deal Reed could be one and done in NJ. Grade C.
Bruno Walker, Swingman. Walker may never live up to the huge contract given to him by former management but he is a versatile player who does a bit of everything. For the season he is shooting over 50% from the floor while averaging 5.6ppg, 2.7rpg, 1.3apg in about 15mpg. Grade C.
Trey Giles, Wing. Another veteran expiring deal Giles has started to produce better of late and for the year is averaging 5.4ppg and 3.8rpg off the bench. Could easily be trade forward at the deadline. Grade C+
Darren Peters, Guard. The 2nd year player has really not made the leap the team had hoped, although he oozes potential to the point where the team probably won’t trade him. For the season, Peters is averaging 3.9ppg 2.5rpg, and 1.1apg off the bench. Grade D (But the team still thinks he has a bright future).
Eduardo Hanson, PG. Hanson, acquired from division foe Washington in the off season has been a great addition as a backup PG producing 6.4ppg, 2.6rpg, 3.5apg, and 0.8steals in about 16mpg. The team would be confident in starting Hanson and thinks he gives them excellent depth at the PG spot. Grade B+.
Closing
The team is showing signs of what it can be, I stress can because they are not there yet. The team needs a longterm solution at SG and another good defensive/rebounding post before they will be a true contender. However, they should stay in the race for the playoffs this year and could make the playoffs and prove to be a tough out in the East.
Swishes and Bricks Sim VII
The team had the best sim of the young season going 4 and 0 and improving to 15-15 overall. Here are the swishes and bricks from yesterdays sim.
Swishes
- Defense, Defense, Defense: No longer playing matador defense the team held opponent to 40.5% from the field in allowing 90ppg in an undefeated sim. If the team can maintain some semblance of defense effort the team will be a tough Win for anybody in the East.
- Babysteps on offense: Although by no means a juggernaut on offense, the team was much improved on that end of the court this sim averaging 100.8ppg and committing a paltry by our standards 12.8 turnovers per game. If this keeps up the team will win more than they lose the rest of the season.
- A SG, A SG, What What. A SG: The team has been plagued by the lack of a consistent starter at SG all year but Louis Rozier has stepped up and shown that he maybe that player, averaging 19.8ppg on .556 shooting (35-63). if he can keep it up and Trey Giles continues to fill the 6th man role well (11ppg 5.6rpg 1.2steals 1.0blocks last sim) the team will have productive instead of paper depth.
Bricks
- Shooting Offense: The team still struggle percentage wise, which made TNT analyst Hubie Brown very irritated: “When you are talking about the Nets, you are talking about a team that had a good offensive week and shot 45.2% from the field and only broke the 100 point barrier once in 4 games. This tells us two things. First, that this team just isn’t very adept at scoring the basketball and when you are talking about scoring the basketbal,l you are talking about the ability to put the brown thing in the round thing, ok. Now the potential is there to put the ball in the basket, so maybe over the rest of the season the team will improve as young teams tend to do. Secondly, this means the fans are not getting their free chalupa most games, and you know there is nothign worse than hungry fans leaving an NBAD arena after spending upwards of $100 dollars on tickets for the game and not getting their free dollar menu item from a local fast food establishment. The team needs to address item number 2 as quickly as possible or this will be a long season in New Jersey.”