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Artest
to Rockets: Hilarity, Championship to Follow
by, Mike Mandlin
When the news broke that the Houston Rockets had acquired
Ron Artest, I was ecstatic. I'm a huge Rockets fan,
and acquiring Artest immediately makes them strong contenders.
An All-NBA defender, Artest also gives the Rockets a
scoring trio rivaled only by Boston, San Antonio, Phoenix,
and the Lakers. My head is still spinning with the tactical
merits of the deal, but I was also once the kind of
kid who would take something from every container in
the family bathroom, and half the stuff in the kitchen,
stir it in a bowl, and hope for an explosion. As Ron
Artest is the most batshit crazy player in NBA history,
this trade is truly a frosted
mini wheats experience for me.
Batshit
Crazy
My
favorite Ron Artest story comes from back in his rookie
year. Apparently, he supports a lot of people, and bought
them all kinds of electronics at Circuit City. So since
the Bulls didn't practice on Sundays, Ron Ron applied
for a part time job with Circuit City, so he could get
the employee discount. The Bulls found out when Circuit
City called them, because Artest had listed GM Jerry
Krause, as a reference. Artest explained, "I thought
it would be fun. And I had a friend who worked there."
That story and his reaction more or less characterizes
Ron Ron's entire career. He's there to have fun,
and everything else is noise.
Artest
has demonstrated many, many times that he has no idea
what's appropriate and what isn't. Sometimes, it's kind
of awesome,
and sometimes it's kind of awesome as long as he's not
on your team, like when he wanted to take time off to
promote
his CD; he didn't, and the Pacers briefly suspended
for the request. Instead, he just shaved the name of
his label, Tru
Warrior, in his hair. Sometimes his Artestness is
not awesome. The only thing funny about the clip
is ever-annoying reporter Jim Gray's quavering voice.
Even more illustrative than the brawl clip, Artest's
disconnect is striking in this calm, composed
interview he gave, a while after the incident. He
doesn't even rationalize his actions; he explains them,
without a hint of regret. The only time he sort of acknowledges
that assaulting an asshole fan was a bad idea is, "I
definitely should have passed, on that one." And
of course, most ironically, discussing the beer-throwing
fan, Artest explains, "You can talk all day, but
you know, there's a line, people know that, you know,
people know what they should and shouldn't do."
The brawl is one of many...hiccups
in Artest's career.
Tango
and Cash
When
he keeps the insane between his ears and out of the
commissioner's office, Ron Ron's pretty awesome. I didn't
know much about him, coming out of St. John's, just
that Knicks fans were furious when the Knicks drafted
Frédéric
Weis (it's even better in French) instead of Artest,
but I've been a big fan since he joined the league.
I love watching great defense and Artest is masterful,
with an inimitable style. The mostly annoying Charley
Rosen called it best, a ways back, comparing Artest's
defense to Michael Jordan's. There's not much finesse
or craftiness to the method, just I'm stronger, faster,
meaner, and hungrier, and you won't get past me. His
superior athleticism that tenacity makes Artest an unsurpassed
one-on-one defender. He also plays solid help defense,
though not on the level of the NBA's other premier wing
defender (and new Rockets teammate) Shane
Battier. Team defense frequently entails playing
off the ball, requiring constant recognition and adjustment
to everything that's happening on the court. For the
most part, Artest just smothers his guy. Here's
a good example. At the end of the clip Manu
Ginobili tries to take Artest to the rim (which
Manu
does as well as anyone in the game) but Artest,
perpendicular to Ginobili, matches him stride-for-stride.
Ron Ron's the Orlando
Pace of the NBA, a quick-stepping wall.
One
of the best things about this deal is that we'll get
to watch Battier and Artest play together. Battier is
the anti-Artest (in more
ways than one) he's all craft. The guys Battier
covers are almost always stronger and faster-though
never more desirous-but they just don't seem to get
around him much. Jonathan
Feigen notes of Battier's chops: "A lot of
times you see great scorers get good numbers on Battier
then go 2 for 9, 1 of 6, in the fourth quarter because
he is so relentless." Battier's a notch below Artest,
one-on-one, but is unsurpassed as a team defender. It's
going to be a lot of fun watching those two styles work
their magic on the court at the same time, the Rocket's
very own Tango
and Cash.
He
Scores Pretty Good, Too
Well,
sort of. Artest is a very capable offensive player,
but until he got to Sacramento, he was woefully inefficient.
Before then, his career high FG% was .428 and his best
three-point % was .336, both in '02-'03. In his first
half-year in Sacramento, he was horrific, shooting 38%
and 30% from three. But his next two seasons were vastly
better, upping his career high FG% and three-point %
in each year. He frequently praises former Sacramento
and current Rockets head coach Rick Adelman, attributing
much of his improvement to Adelman's coaching. Frankly,
I don't care if it's Adelman or The Great
Pumpkin; when Artest hits over 36% of his three-pointers,
complimenting his excellent penetrating and finishing
abilities, he's an extremely effective offensive player.
Fit
in Houston
Artest
can defend either forward spot, and nearly always has
a strength or speed advantage over his opponent, so
with Battier at the 3, the Rockets may well start Artest
at power-forward. His rebounding, however, isn't power-forward
material. Artest focuses so much on covering his own
man, typically the opponent's best scorer, that he's
busy challenging the shot, not boxing out to rebound
the miss. With Yao
Ming a good, but not great rebounder, and Battier
and Tracy
McGrady nothing special on the boards, lack of rebounding
may be an issue for the Rockets, if Artest starts at
the 4-spot. Feigen thinks Artest would be best coming
off the bench as the 6th man, but getting starter minutes
and finishing games, with Battier. I'm sort of leaning
in that direction, myself. The Rockets already have
two high-quality power-forwards, second year players,
Luis
Scola and Carl
Landry, both good rebounders. Landry has even been
used as a backup to Yao, in small lineups.
This
much is clear, Artest is the third best player on the
Rockets, and will be on the floor for at least 35 minutes
a game, in one position or another. The Rockets will
employ a variety of unusual lineups this year, at times
going with McGrady at point, Artest and Battier the
swingmen, and Landry or Scola at power-forward, with
Yao being Yao, of course. On a team seasonally devastated
by injuries to its two best players, now adding a third
player who has managed to find his way off the court
in various ways, too much depth is the best problem
the Rockets can have. If that remains the case through
the year, and Yao, TMac, and Ron Ron all manage to play
70+ games at, or close to, full strength, the Rockets
will be champions.
www.michaelmandlin.blogspot.com
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