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Showing posts with label Derrick Rose. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Derrick Rose. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Does D.Rose need a hug.... or what?


MIAMI -- Derrick Rose is fine.
He's finer than a physics-defying South Beach knockout.
Finer than Joakim Noah, who will be writing a check to the NBA, thanks to one angry word.
Rose is finer than the few remaining hairs on coach Tom Thibodeau's head after two straight losses.
Rose is frustrated, sure. Who wouldn't be in his situation? But he's not going to admit to showing fatigue from a grueling season of carrying the Chicago Bulls, at times, on his well-tattooed shoulders.
He hasn't lost his fast-twitch explosiveness or his rock-solid confidence. Just ask him.
"I'm fine, man," he said Monday afternoon. "Trust me. No excuses."
Then he flashed a toothy grin that is familiar only to those who cover him on a regular basis.
"Even I was tired, you know I wouldn't tell you," he said, laughing.
[+] EnlargeDerrick Rose
Steve Mitchell/US PresswireDerrick Rose hasn't been able to take over games in the fourth quarter against the Heat.
In the few times things have gone badly for him this postseason, Rose has stuck to a "no excuses" mantra. But he also hasn't had a reason to make excuses very often, not this season, anyway.
A few missed shots here, a couple of turnovers there. He is the MVP, after all, and the golden child of Chicago, not to mention the NBA.
But Rose finds himself at a season crossroads after two woeful fourth quarters that led to consecutive losses in the Eastern Conference finals.
In the Bulls' 96-85 loss to the Miami Heat in Game 3 on Sunday night, Rose put up just two shots in the fourth and didn't take a free throw. He had three assists, including two early when the Bulls were in striking distance, but also committed two turnovers. The Heat took a three-point lead into the fourth and outscored the Bulls 28-20 to take a 2-1 lead in the series.
In Game 2, the Bulls scored just 10 points in the fourth and Rose missed all four shots he took, converting just a pair of free throws. The Bulls had it tied at 73-all before the Heat closed the game on a LeBron James-led 12-2 run.
Rose's salad days of the regular season are a distant memory, as they should be. But it's tough to forget how clutch he was "way back when."
For instance, he finished the season as the second-best "clutch" scorer in the league, according to 82games.com, averaging 47.8 points per 48 minutes in "clutch situations," which are defined as the last five minutes of regulation or overtime, with neither team ahead by more than five points.
No one is exactly sure why Rose isn't dominating late in games right now, but it's not hard to guess. It has a lot to do with the quality of competition. Rose faced double-teams, blitzes, whatever, all season, but now he's facing long, athletic, focused players, led by the Heat's big three, who are taking turns helping out or guarding him.
Let's just say Jeff Teague and Jamal Crawford weren't exactly ideal sparring partners to get him ready for the Heat.
I remember one particular fast-break opportunity in Game 3 in which Rose raced into the paint, only to find James in front of him. Rose pulled up, and the opportunity was lost.
"It's something I've been experiencing through the whole playoffs," Rose said of the extra attention. "Every series, people have been trying to do that, and I've found a way. I think tomorrow will be a different game."
With that in mind, Rose did have more success in Game 3 near the basket. He had trouble getting to the rim in the first two games of the series, including the Bulls' long-forgotten blowout win in Game 1. But he converted on four of seven attempts at the rim in Game 3 after hitting just three of five attempts in the first two games.
In the half-court offense, the Bulls have had trouble freeing him on pick-and-rolls and the like, so Rose agreed with a reporter's suggestion that they should run more isolation-style plays for him, be they on the top of the key or from a wing. In a perfect world, you put Luol Deng and Kyle Korver in the corners and Carlos Boozer in the low block to push help defenders off the ball, and Rose is off to the races.
"That would be great," Rose said. "I think like more step-ups, things like that, more isolation-type things instead of double-teaming all the time."
Thibodeau said he just wants to see Rose making smart passes out of double-teams that will lead to baskets.
But to get that kind of one-on-one game going, Rose's teammates have to command respect. So far in this series, the Bulls' field goal percentages have been, in order: 43.7, 34.1, 41.6. In their sole win, the Bulls hit 10 of 21 3-pointers. In the two losses, they've combined to hit eight of 32.

Noah and Korver, two key complementary scorers, have been all but nonexistent in that role, and Boozer is coming off his only high-scoring game of the series. I guess this is why everyone was wishing a 2-guard would land in the Bulls' lap for nothing.
"He's faced every possible defense all year long," Thibodeau said. "The big thing for us is we have to hit some shots to open things up for him. When he's in the open floor, he's very hard to guard. He's very difficult in pick-and-rolls, he'll find seams and hopefully he'll get going."
With so much on the line, Rose admitted that he and his teammates let the situation get the better of them in Game 3, worrying about foul calls and arguing with referees.
Rose has led with a stoic intensity that buttressed Thibodeau's Buddhist monk-like devotion to living in the present. Those days are gone, too. Now the Bulls have to cancel out the mounting pressure and about 19,000 screaming Heat fans.
"It's one thing to have a passion about the game," he said. "But when you start bringing emotions into the game, I think that's when you can really get in trouble."
The Bulls are in trouble, and there's no sense ignoring it. Can Rose lead them out of it? That's what we're waiting to see.
Rose hasn't disappointed this season, and Chicago hasn't lost three in a row. In Game 4, the former will decide whether the latter remains true.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

2011 NBA Playoffs: Source: Chicago Bulls Guard Derrick Rose is the NBA's MVP


CHICAGO -- Chicago Bulls guard Derrick Rose is the youngest Most Valuable Player award-winner in the history of the National Basketball Association, according to a source familiar with the situation.
The 22-year-old Rose was widely expected to win the award after leading the Bulls to a 62-20 record and No. 1 seed in the playoffs.
Rose said Monday night that the league has yet to tell him anything about the award.
"Not yet. Still hearing from it," he said. "But right now, I'm sorry to say that's the last thing I'm thinking about. I'm sorry."
Rose is expected to be notified of his victory Tuesday and be presented with the award during Wednesday's Game 2 against the Atlanta Hawks, according to the source.
Michael Jordan was the last Bulls player to win the award. He won it five times, with the latest being 1998. Earlier in the season, Jordan said Rose deserved the award.
Rose ended the two-year MVP reign of LeBron James, who spurned the Bulls and bolted from Cleveland to form a superstar triumvirate with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami. The 22-year-old Rose also supplanted Wes Unseld as the youngest MVP. He was 23 and was the rookie of the year and MVP with the Baltimore Bullets for the 1968-69 season.
"I think it's great. I think he's very well-deserving," teammate Joakim Noah said. "I think it's a situation where everybody knows it's his. It's not like somebody else deserves it. It's for him and I'm happy for him, but there's really no time to celebrate it right now. We're in a dogfight against Atlanta."
The Bulls lost Game 1 of their second-round series to the Hawks on Monday night, 103-95.

The Chicago-born point guard had a breakout third season, averaging 25 points, 7.7 assists and 4.1 rebounds. After a summer with the U.S. National team, Rose made a significant leap.
Rose, the No. 1 pick in the 2008 draft and rookie of the year, started his first All-Star Game this year after making the team as a reserve last season.
He carried a team that saw its top two big men,Carlos Boozer and Noah, miss significant time with injuries. His fellow starting guard Keith Bogans averaged just 4.4 points per game. Still, the Bulls never lost more than two games in a row.
"Well deserved," Boozer said. "I've been shouting his praise all season for what he's been able to do for our team. I'm proud of him, he deserved it."
Rose's MVP candidacy was criticized by some, but not by his teammates. After Rose scored 30 in a 97-81 win over Boston in early April, Noah said, "If this game doesn't put the stamp on the MVP vote, I don't know what else you can say."
Rose ranked seventh in scoring and 10th in assists, making him the only player this season in the top 10 in both categories. The only other Bulls player to do that was Jordan in 1988-89, when he led the league in scoring (32.5 points) and finished 10th in assists.

Throw in a 4.1 rebounding average, and Rose joins another elite group. He's the seventh player in league history to average at least 25 points, 7.5 assists and 4.0 rebounds, along with Jordan, Oscar Robertson, Jerry West, Larry Bird, Wade and James, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.
In the postseason, he's been just as impressive.
He scored 39 and 36 points in the first two playoff games against Indiana. Then he shook off two sub-par performances not to mention a sprained left ankle to score 25 points in Game 5 as the top-seeded Bulls closed out what had been a tight first-round series with a 116-89 victory.
Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau won the Coach of the Year award Sunday. The two will be the 12th duo in NBA history to win both awards.
"He's humble, he's coachable. It doesn't matter if the 12th man on the team says something to him, he's going to look you in the eye and listen to you and nod his head and try to do it better," teammate Kyle Korver said. "That's just the kind of guy he is. And that is so rare. That is so rare. So to be on his team, to watch him grow this year, he's really matured as a [player]. And he's still raw. He can still get a lot better. That's the scary thing. And he will because he works really hard. And he's got great people around him, coaching him, and helping him out."

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Bulls--Knicks Recap


NEW YORK -- The New York Knicks slipped on green uniforms and looked like an entirely different team.
A little like the one that used to protect the paint at Madison Square Garden.
Amare Stoudemire and Raymond Felton each scored 20 points, and the Knicks limited the Chicago Bulls to two baskets in the first 10 minutes of the fourth quarter, pulling away for a 103-95 victory Saturday.
Swatting shots and picking off passes with a dominant defense that would have made the 1990s Knicks proud, New York didn't allow a field goal for more than 8 minutes after the game was tied early in the final period.
"We did a beautiful job defensively," Stoudemire said. "They're a really good defensive team, but for us, we've been talking about defense now for the past -- actually the whole year -- but more so the past week about communicating, helping the helper, so it's really showing."
Wilson Chandler and Danilo Gallinari added 15 apiece for the Knicks, the NBA's highest-scoring team but 28th in defense. Yet it's been hard to tell lately they struggle on that end, as they held Oklahoma City to 98 points on Wednesday and followed by blocking 10 shots and coming up with 12 steals in this one.
Stoudemire anchored the defensive effort, grabbing 10 rebounds and blocking six shots. Rookie Landry Fields finished with 14 points and 11 rebounds for the Knicks, who improved to 21-25 on Christmas. Felton had 12 assists and Chandler also grabbed 10 boards.
Wearing Christmas colors, the Knicks beat Chicago for the second time this season, winning the series for the first time since 2000-01.
"It's real important because we're chasing them. Hopefully we can do that," Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni said. "One thing is you know we play them three games. We won two so we get the tiebreaker, so now that helps. It's the little things. A lot of basketball to be played but you've got to beat these teams, at home especially."
Carlos Boozer had 26 points and 19 rebounds for the Bulls, who lost for just the second time in 11 games.
The Bulls flopped in their first Christmas game since 1997, committing 22 turnovers that led to 23 points. They fell to 9-6 on the holiday, including 2-3 against the Knicks.
"To their credit, I thought they played good defense," Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau said. "I think we have to execute when we are being doubled-teamed. We've got to make plays. We didn't do that tonight."
Derrick Rose had 25 points, eight assists and seven rebounds for the Bulls, but also committed seven turnovers. He was stopped a couple of times by Stoudemire, nodding his head in agreement after his shot was blocked in the first half, and then getting hit on it after a drive in the second, when the two exchanged words.
"That's basketball. He was trying to stop me going to the hole. It's just a basketball play," Rose said. "It's going to get physical, especially if someone keeps driving. That's what he's supposed to do."
Back-to-back baskets by Ronnie Brewer and Rose tied it at 87 with 10:11 left before the Knicks, who were allowing 107 points per game, started playing the defensive basketball that was once their trademark.
Chandler and Felton each had two baskets in a 10-0 run as Chicago missed 11 of its first 13 shots in the period. Chandler's bucket made it 97-87 before Boozer ended the Bulls' drought with 1:52 remaining.
"I didn't pay attention to [the drought], but I could tell our defense was doing great," Felton said. "We were getting turnovers, shots that they normally probably hit they weren't hitting. We were getting out on fast breaks, running the ball back at them. It's just fun basketball."
The Bulls later got within six, but missed a chance to get closer when Kurt Thomas threw a pass out of bounds, and the Knicks held on to win the matchup of teams who have been the best of the East lately outside of Boston and Miami.
Neither team pulled off the major free-agent score it was looking for, but the moves they did make have paid off nicely. Stoudemire and Felton have the Knicks (18-12) off to their best start in a decade and searching for their first playoff berth since 2004. The Bulls are 9-4 since Boozer debuted after missing the first 15 games with a broken right hand.
With the Bulls wearing red, the court certainly looked festive. But the basketball was pure ugly at the start.
The Bulls offset their nine first-quarter field goals by turning it over nine times, handing the Knicks 10 points that helped New York take a 21-20 lead. Chicago's sloppy play continued early into the second, when Boozer powered into the lane and shot the ball over the basket and out of bounds -- not a turnover, it but served the same purpose.
But the Bulls, despite missing injured rebounding leader Joakim Noah, made up for their struggles by overwhelming the Knicks on the backboards, outrebounding them 31-21 in the half and converting 12 offensive rebounds into 19 second-chance points. Boozer made a jumper in front of his bench as time expired to give Chicago a 54-52 halftime lead.
The Knicks then hit six 3-pointers in the third quarter, punishing the Bulls from behind the arc like they did while ringing up 120 points in their victory in Chicago last month -- the highest total the Bulls have allowed this season -- and took an 85-83 lead to the fourth.
Game notes
Thibodeau was a Knicks assistant for seven years. ... Felton has had double-digit assists in six straight games, three shy of Micheal Ray Richardson's franchise record set from Dec. 23, 1979 to Jan. 8, 1980.