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Nets 101, Celtics 93: Closer to a clinched seed

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The gist of it

Avery Bradley is a high level defensive guard, so you’d expect him to ride Deron Williams the length of the floor for 30-plus minutes when his Boston Celtics took on the Nets last night. Instead, Bradley rode the pine most of the night – rendered useless by three Williams-drawn fouls - while D-Will proceeded to pick apart one of the league’s best defenses.  Williams led all scorers with 29 points on 9-18 shooting, dished out 12 assists with only 1 turnover, and most importantly, enabled Joe Johnson to look comfortable on the floor three games after returning from injury.

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Nets 104, 76ers 83: The Reggie Evans Experience

The gist of it. 

REG-GIE EV-ANS. Clap clap clapclapclap.

REG-GIE EV-ANS. Clap clap clapclapclap.

Do I have to say more? Okay, I’ll keep going.

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What does it mean that Jay-Z is selling his shares?

From reliable Yahoo bomb-dropper Adrian Wojnarowski drops a minor bomb: Nets minority owner Jay-Z is beginning the process of selling his shares with the team so that Roc Nation Sports, his newly announced agency launched in conjunction with Creative Artists Agency, can represent basketball players without any of those pesky ethical conflicts. Hov himself is trying to get certified as an agent, and is presumably trying to throw a brick into the still waters of major representation after yanking away top free agent Robinson Cano from the usually untouchable Scott Boras. (Or at least be more successful than Master P, who tried and failed to get into the game back in the ’90s.) According to Woj, they’d like to get the deal done before June’s draft so that they can pursue this year’s class of rookies, but there’s no specific rush. “CAA and Jay-Z are taking time to carefully formalize the arrangement on the basketball end,” he writes. “and are sensitive to making sure he exits the Nets partnership in a way that is respectful to the organization.

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The inevitability of Gerald Wallace’s lost confidence

The New York Post has a mildly distressing comment from Gerald Wallace on his shooting struggles, which haven’t disappeared as the year has worn on. “I’ve never been in a situation where the coaching staff didn’t have confidence in me and my teammates didn’t have confidence in me,” he said. “But, to the point of saying that, I’ve never been a shooter, either. I’ve always been a slasher, a guy who gets to the rim, gets to the basket.”

That Wallace hasn’t found many opportunities to drive to the rim is understandable—he’s the fourth scoring option in the starting lineup, which is saying a lot when the fifth player is Reggie Evans. But if the lack of opportunity has bled into his confidence and negated his ability to score anywhere, which he’s more or less admitting it has, that presages something a little more ominous about how the rest of his four-year deal might go. We’ve watched too many games where Wallace will unsuccessfully post-up for fail to finish inside, and it’s not just the eye test confirming this; according to mySynergySports, he ranks 100th in isolation plays, 156th in posting up, 147th as a cutter, 191st in transition, 281st as a spot-up shooter, and 183rd everywhere else. (As in, the average number of points he generates per play of that kind.)

Those are just brutal numbers, and it doesn’t take a Hollinger to note that the Nets will be that much more lethargic in the playoffs if he isn’t up to speed. In just a few seasons, Wallace has gone from being The Guy on a Charlotte team to a role player—and it seems clear now that he hasn’t made the necessary mental adjustment. If it doesn’t happen this year, there’s always the off-season.

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Nets 105, Bobcats 96: Say goodbye to your teeth

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By Dakota Schmidt (@dakota_schmidt)

Have you ever had an annoying relative that you just can’t get rid of because they latch on to you and don’t let go? I had that feeling when I was in bed watching last night’s game. I knew from the start that Brooklyn should win and Charlotte should not—one team is a four seed, one team is tuned into the NCAA tournament to scout its next overwhelmed rookie—but the Bobcats were persistent little buggers, and wouldn’t give up. Brooklyn’s own inconsistencies that lasted for the majority of the game, and thus there really wasn’t a “dagger” moment even though the outcome appeared to be certain from the start.

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Bulls 92, Nets 90: Down and out against a depleted team

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The gist of it

I don’t know how the Bulls do it, but they did it again. Missing five rotation players, enough for a starting lineup, and facing a higher seeded team playing a much anticipated home game after two weeks on the road, they ground it out after falling behind by an early double digits before sticking it to the Nets in the end—on a Nate Robinson dagger, no less. Give Tom Thibodeau credit for wringing O negative from a stone, because it doesn’t seem to matter who’s on the court for the Bulls—they hang around long enough to get a final few chances, and then execute as well they can. You might’ve expected the Nets to be more dialed in after returning to the Barclays Center, but it was an oddly un-even night: Joe Johnson clearly wasn’t fully there after missing his last five games, and the team battled with its usual third quarter effort issues. That early lead was swiftly evaporated by the end of the third quarter, and though a bout of back-and-forth hysterics toward the end made things exciting, the Nets failed to put this one away. A tough loss, but at least they held up in the end rather than disappearing completely. (Yes, I’m an insistently glass half-full dude.)

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D-Will is done with cortisone, and that’s a good thing

From the New York Daily News’s Stefan Bondy comes a report about how Deron Williams is done taking cortisone injections for the rest of the season, after receiving three rounds of treatment this year. Apparently, the injections he took in February were successful enough that he’ll be able to ride out the rest of the year more or less pain free. He’s still tearing things up since the All-Star break, lest you thought his number had dipped: 22 points per game on 47/43/86 splits, playing a game that’s looked much faster and decisive compared to the beginning of the season.

That’s a good thing, too. When I was at the Sloan Sports Analytics Conference last month, I talked with a doctor named Philip Skiba about the risk/reward factor of using steroids for recovering from injury, and the fact that cortisone shots are administered to athletes as a standard treatment. “Cortisone is something you give to someone—which isn’t a great idea either, by the way—but you’re sort of reducing inflammation so they can play, you’re not adding anything to them,” he said. They’re not a long-term solution, was his point—they’re something that temporarily reduces pain, but can lead to tendon damage if taken too often. That Deron feels healthy enough to avoid another round should be encouraging, not just as the playoffs get started but for the future.

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Nets 115, Cavaliers 95: What a way to end a road trip

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The gist of it

The Cleveland Cavaliers are not necessarily going to make a go of things, but that’s not their fault—they’re young, injury-depleted, bad on defense, giving non-negligible minutes to a (surprisingly-effective-but-still) Luke Walton, etc., especially not when their best player is active in just his second game in the last three weeks and when the other team is looking to slam the door on a mostly successful road trip. Confirmation bias, maybe—”The Cavaliers are bad and the Nets are good, so that’s how this will go”—but really no other way to look at it when Brooklyn is up by 30 as they’re shooting 75% in the second quarter. That was a theme of this concluded road trip, which the Nets finished 5-3 overall: the Nuggets game aside, their games were either blowouts over mediocre-to-bad teams, or close losses to playoff teams. (I’ll ignore Phoenix’s torrid comeback and just remember the first half.) Which is why a few minutes into the fourth quarter, with the Nets up by a hefty margin, I realized I’d begun idly playing the Nyan Cat web game in spite of my better instincts, since it was a more compelling spectacle than the Cavaliers were providing.

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‘Hello Brooklyn’: Behind the Nets’ most ubiquitous T-shirt

busta sportiqe

Brooklynites love vintage t-shirts, or at the very least, vintage-inspired t-shirts. (A sweeping generalization, but let’s stick with it.) Brooklyn fans have been quick to forget the team’s New Jersey days, though, and one of the most conspicuous things missing from the inaugural season in Brooklyn is the sight of the old logo at the Barclays Center. Establishing a new identity was no easy task, and to complement the slate of official Adidas team gear the Nets knew that they needed to partner with an apparel brand capable of supplying casual clothing to a fashion-conscious borough.

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