Gerald Wallace

Gerald Jermaine Wallace’s per game stat line for the month of March in 15 games: 7.1 points, 4.1 rebounds, 2.3 assists and a 34.3% shooting percentage.

No, that isn’t a belated April Fools joke. Those are Crash’s actual stats. Worse, Wallace shot an abysmal 14.3% from three point land to go with the 34.3% overall from the field.  Crash has never been a great shooter, but to put things in perspective, he is a 46.9% career shooter and still a 40.0% shooter for the season as a whole.

The more he's tried, the worse he's done. In 13 games in January, he shot 4.7 shots per game for 42.6% (26/61); then in February he shot 6.9 times per game for 39.8% (33/83). This past month, Wallace hoisted up 7.2 shots per game for the weak 34.3% (37/108).

As Devin has written, and Nets fans that have eyes have noticed, part of the shooting woes have nothing to do with shooting at all. Crash has gone through an inexplicable streak of missing layups, including St. Patrick’s Day against the Hawks, when he missed six of seven layups. Wallace, never one to make excuses for his poor play, had this to say after the loss: "Make a shot. A layup, something. Any f--ing thing. F---. Throw trash in a trash can. Anything. See anything go in."

And the threes? In January, he was 30.8% (8/26) from beyond the arc, in February it was 33.3% (10/30). Then came March. Crash shot at least one three in all 15 March games but only converted in four of them, going 14.2% (5/35). Again, no one is expecting Wallace to be the second coming of Anthony Morrow, but something a little closer to his career average of 31.5% would be nice.

To be fair, Wallace did do a better job in March of getting to and converting from the foul line. In February the 6’7” forward  went to the line only 1.75 times per game for a Dwight Howard-esque 47.6% (10/21). In March, he increased that to 2.7 trips per game for a 68.3% (28/41) rate. While that’s still below his career average of 71.9%, it is above his season average (65%) and a marked improvement from February.

Not to be lost in the putrid shooting month is Wallace’s solid 1.7 steals per game, 0.3 more than his season average and a good indicator of Crash’s continued indefatigable effort on the herringbone. Wallace and his hustle remain fan favorites, as evidenced by the reaction from commenters in February when we dared to posit that maybe, just maybe, the 2012 trade that brought him to Jersey was one of the worst in franchise history. Everbody loves Crash (#NBASitcoms), but it is also ok to point out that a three point shooting percentage in the teens might be criticism-worthy.

So on behalf of Gerald Wallace, goodbye March. You brought us Rand Paul’s #filiblizzard and the end of the Miami Heat’s win streak. But you also brought us one of Crash’s worst shooting months in his 12 year career. Good Riddance.

 

 

New York University Professor Jonathan Zimmerman argues that college sports hurts higher education because schools overspend on athletes and lower admissions standards:

Colleges in the Football Bowl Subdivision – the most competitive of the Division I programs – spent an average of nearly $92,000 per athlete in 2010, according to a January study by the American Institutes for Research. For the student population at large, the average per capita spending was less than $14,000.

He says evidence now shows this rarely leads to higher sustained alumni giving and that few schools make back the investment through TV deals:

True, some programs bring in rich revenues via TV contracts, ticket sales, and concessions. But fewer than one-quarter of FBS programs generate more money than they spend. The others rely on institutional subsidies and student fees to keep their sports teams going.

What's more, Zimmerman argues, schools lower admissions standards. In fact, the impact on admissions is far greater for athletes than through affirmative action for minorities.

While affirmative action for minorities continues to cause controversy across our higher education system (they have an 18 to 24 percent advantage in admissions), almost nobody objects to the much greater affirmative action that we grant to athletes.

One other issue Zimmerman doesn't mention. With colleges taking more and more foreign students, colleges have ever fewer slots for non-Athlete Americans. Read the whole piece here

 

The NBA regular season is nearing a finish and with that, a clear pecking order is starting to show in the Atlantic Division. But, with three teams sure to appear in the Eastern Conference playoffs, the Atlantic Division has plenty of story lines. To flesh some of those out, we're hitting you with a Sunday roundtable, but because this topic is so important we're shifting from our normal three-man crew to four. Boom.

1. Fill in the blank: _________ will win the Atlantic Division?

  • Justin DeFeo: The Knicks - I think the Nets have a slightly softer schedule than the Knicks to end the season, but with a four game cushion, I'd expect the Knicks to cling to their lead and wrap up the Atlantic Division for the first time in nearly 20 years. By the way, Nets fans should lose no sleep over the Division title, but whats more important here is avoiding Miami in Round Two.
  • Andrew Gnerre: The Knicks. The Nets are 4 games back with nine to play. The Knicks schedule is much tougher (eight of their 11 remaining games are against playoff teams), but that's just a lot of ground to make up on a team that's won seven straight and looking more like that group from November. And good for them. I'd hate to see them go 20 years without a division title. Unrelated, the Nets have won the division four times since 2002. Oh I'm sorry, did I say "unrelated?" I meant to say "very related and SHOTS FIRED."
  • Max Weisberg: Knicks. You can blame this on the Nets’ inability to “finish the deal” as well as the Utah Jazz organization. Multiple times were the Nets a half game back of the Knicks in March, and each time, things didn’t pan out. 3/17, the Nets trailed the Knicks by a half game and couldn’t beat the team from Atlanta that unloaded Joe Johnson on them in a salary dump this summer. 3/18, a helpless Jazz team who at the time, was a half game back of the Lakers for the 8th spot, couldn’t beat a severely depleted Knicks team IN UTAH.
  • Benjamin Nadeau: The New York Knicks will win the Atlantic Division. There's just too much that needs to happen at this point for the Nets to take the crown. It would probably involve rushing back Joe Johnson before he's healthy too. It would really be nice to move up to 2nd or 3rd, to avoid Miami as long as possible, but I'm not really sure if PJ is the type of coach that will concern himself with the Atlantic Title. There's just far too much inconsistancy here from the Nets to catch the Knicks now.

2. The most dangerous team in the Atlantic Division in the playoffs is ________.

  • DeFeo: Again, its the Knicks. Tyson Chandler has a chance of being the most dominant defensive player and Carmelo Anthony the most dominant offensive player in any given series, including one with Lebron James in it and that should scare any team. Also, their three-point happy attack adds a bit of variance to every game.
  • Gnerre: Just like, physically? The Celtics because Kevin Garnett is an unhinged maniac. But in terms of winning games? The Nets. I know that when hot, the Knicks have looked better this season, but it's close enough to the playoffs for me to flip the switch to full-blown irrational fan mode. Vintage Deron, Breakout Brook and Healthy Joe haven't all showed up to the same game yet, but they could. And that's a better team than Melo going nova surrounded by JR Smith and old guys. Speaking of old guys: Et tu, Kenyon?
  • Weisberg: Highest seed. Going into the playoffs, I believe that the Nets will be a better team than the Knicks. Unfortunately for Brooklyn though, they are currently sitting 3.5 games (assuming Knicks win tonight, Nets lose tonight) back of NY in the standings with 9 games to play. What this means is that they will likely get the four seed. And if they advance past the first round, they would have to play a team in the second round that just won 27 games in a row and are the defending world champions. Goodnight Brooklyn.
  • Nadeau: The Brooklyn Nets are easily the most dangerous team. It seems, at times, that the Knicks' season is unraveling more and more by the day, if it wasn't for a surging J.R. Smith, the Nets might have the division lead right now.If the Knicks can get all their pieces back and healthy, it could be a different story, but Felton has been garbage lately and any team that starts Kenyon Martin at this point has more issues than the team that starts Reggie Evans. Nets, somehow, play better team ball and that will benefit them in the playoffs.

3. T/F: An Atlantic Division team has any shot to beat Miami.

  • DeFeo: False. The Nets have not been competitive with the Heat since The Decision and although the Celtics and Knicks could pose a threat, no team in the East can win four out of seven.
  • Gnerre: False. Very false. If I knew any other languages I'd be saying the word "false" in those languages right now to drive the point home. The only team in the league with a chance to beat the Heat is the Spurs, no matter what that elderly man on the bus back to Jersey from the Nets-Grizzlies game says. (That guy thinks the Pacers can beat the Heat; that guy thinks so many things.) But yeah, this is false. Very falska.
  • Weisberg: Only true if ALL of these things occur before the playoffs; First, LeBron James will have to abruptly retire and announce that he is going to attempt a career in professional baseball. Second, an asbestos leak must occur inside American Airlines Arena, thus forcing the Heat to play all four of their “home” games inside their opponent’s arena. Third, Chris Bosh must get so upset from the first and second events occurring, that he goes and punches a fire extinguisher and is forced to miss the entire series. So yes, it is possible.
  • Nadeau: False. It's tough, as a fan and somebody that spends so much time caring about this team, it's always hard to take off your homer glasses sometimes. But this one is easy, there's really nobody in the Eastern Conference in Miami's league this season. I think there's something to be said about the way Chicago played and rattled them last week (hard, physical fouls, refusing to let them get dunks, transition points at any cost) and if other Eastern Conference teams adopt that strategy, they could steal one or two. The problem is winning four. I don't think anybody is beating Miami this year, unfortunately, and it's possible that only San Antonio can take them from the West.

 

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Deron Williams POINT GUARD

Clearly frustrated with the Jazz's aggressive, physical play -- rightfully so, because a lot of those plays didn't seem like "basketball plays" -- but played well, especially considering his previous standards for playing against his former team. I wish I felt more comfortable assessing his defense -- point guard defense is so difficult to analyze from afar because it relies so much on the team's overall defensive scheme. But Mo Williams didn't seem fazed with Deron on the floor.

Gerald Wallace SMALL FORWARD

Pass.

Brook Lopez CENTER

Led the Nets in scoring for much of the game and got involved in the offense late, which is rare. But he also threw away a few careless turnovers and outside of some nice blocks got beaten up inside both in man-to-man and help defense.

Andray Blatche POWER FORWARD

Had a good first half in tandem with MarShon Brooks and C.J. Watson and was at least a net neutral, even though he couldn't contain Al Jefferson or Derrick Favors.

Keith Bogans SHOOTING GUARD

Struggled (like everyone) in his short stint on Foyesanity and couldn't hit his shots, but it does seem odd that he didn't play at all in the final 16:45.

MarShon Brooks SHOOTING GUARD

I'm not sure you can really blame him (or any of the other Nets perimeter defenders) for Randy Foye and Marvin Williams going nova, and he did have good moments offensively. But his porous defense sure doesn't help his cause.

Reggie Evans POWER FORWARD

Not the fiery offensive performance we've come to expect but did essentially what you expect from Evans: rebounds galore and energy.

C.J. Watson POINT GUARD

One of the few bright spots for Brooklyn tonight -- efficient, smart, havoc-inducing.


 

Tonight: The 42-30 Brooklyn Nets, six games into their eight-game, 17-day road trip thanks to Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey taking over Barclays Center, take on the 37-36 Utah Jazz at the EnergySolutions Arena in Salt Lake City. The Jazz  are 26-9 at home and winners of their last three overall following a four game losing streak. The Jazz return home after beating Portland last night, 105-95, to snap a nine game road losing streak. The Nets are 4-2 so far on the road trip, losing convincingly to the Nuggets, 109-87, last night in Denver.  The Nets are 11-8 in the second half of back-to-backs, but only 1/3 when both contests are road games. Deron Williams is 0-3 against his former team as a member of the Nets.

The BK Game Streak: Play "The BK Game Streak," where you can build a streak of wins along the betting line over the course of the season. Three prizes will be awarded at the end of the year, with first prize a $200 Amazon Gift Card. Log in with Facebook to get started, vote in the box above, and good luck!

Watch & Listen: Tonight's game is broadcast on YES Network. Ryan Ruocco and Jim Spanarkel are on the call. The game is radio simulcast on WFAN, and in Spanish on WADO.

Out: For Brooklyn, Joe Johnson is OUT for the fourth straight game as he rests his sore quad. Keith Bogans will again start in his place. The Jazz will be without backup Enes Kanter for the second straight game with a dislocated shoulder.

Starting Lineups:
Utah Jazz: Mo Williams, Randy Foye, Gordon Hayward, Paul Millsap, Al Jefferson
Brooklyn Nets: Deron Williams, Keith Bogans, Gerald Wallace, Reggie Evans, Brook Lopez

Go Nets!

 

The Brooklyn Nets will called up forward Kris Joseph from their D-League affiliate, the Springfield Armor. The news, ironically enough, was broken by Joseph's fellow Armor teammate Willie Reed, whose been on his own personal campaign over the last couple of months to get the big promotion:

AP

Joseph, a 6'7" swingman who was acquired last month in a trade in exchange for forward James Mays, is Canadian born and will fill the Nets 15th roster spot that has been open ever since the departure of Damion James, who was preceded by Josh Childress. The 24-year old rookie was drafted 51st overall by the Boston Celtics in the 2012 NBA Draft but was later waived on January 6th. Joseph has only played a total of 24 NBA minutes this season and has scored a modest 7 points.

A four-year standout at Syracuse University, Joseph is a wing player who can shoot from deep. With the Armor this season, Joseph was putting up some excellent numbers; 19 PPG, 1.7 STLs, 80% FT, while shooting 43.8% from 3.

He will be the fourth rookie on the Nets this season and third international (Candian!) rookie. It is unknown exactly when Joseph will join the team.

 

In John Hollinger's playoff odds simulator, the Nets have a 1.4% chance of winning the NBA title. So you're telling me there's a chance?!

OK, 1.4% is not a very good chance, but considering there's a team named the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference, a 1.4% chance isn't too shabby. You may also look at it this way; there is about a 1.4% chance that LeBron James quits the game of basketball right before the playoffs start in order to pursue a career in professional baseball. In addition, there is about a 1.4% chance that Russell Westbrook gets arrested by the fashion police and is held in fashion jail until the NBA playoffs come to an end.

As explained by ESPN.com, here is the way in which the odds are calculated:

Hollinger's NBA Playoff Odds are based on the Hollinger Power Rankings, designed by John Hollinger.

The Hollinger Power Rankings are a measure of each team's performance in the season so far.

Based on those rankings, each day the computer plays out the remainder of the season 5,000 times to see the potential range of projected outcomes. The results reveal the most likely win-loss record for each team -- and what the odds are for each team to make the NBA playoffs, win the NBA title, win the lottery, and so on.

Other teams in the Eastern Conference fair a bit better than the Nets' 1.4%, but not by much. The New York Knicks are given a 2.4% chance at winning the title while the Indiana Pacers are given a whopping 10% chance.

As for the NBA Finals? Hollinger's odds give the Nets a 5.6% chance to make the Finals and an 13.8% chance to win the Atlantic Division. The Heat meanwhile, are given a 53.2% chance of making it back to the finals and a 26.8% chance of winning the NBA title. The OKC Thunder? Surprisingly, they're given a 29% chance to win the title.

For more on how the system works and what it means, see Hollinger's explanation.

 

As Fox Sports Florida's Chris Thomasson reports, Brooklyn Nets veteran forward Jerry Stackhouse says it is "highly unlikely" he will play next season. Instead, the newly elected first vice president of the NBA players union says that he will focus on his role with the union and making sure that the right union executive director is chosen.

"It’s not completely sold that I don’t get the bug (to play) again," Stackhouse told FOX Sports Florida before Friday's game at Denver. "But, really, I think this is an opportune time to kind of step to the forefront to do something with the union and try to make sure we select the right executive director."

Fox Sports Florida notes that all elected officials are to serve four-year terms and even though Stackhouse will likely be retired when he enters the second year of his first term, the 18-year veteran says that they are "thinking of adopting" the rule that even though a player may be retired, they are still able to serve their entire term.

Stackhouse notes that he wants to be able to communicate with the players on the doings of a union that is in somewhat disarray after seeing former executive director Billy Hunter be let go for allowing family members to take certain jobs within the union:

“I want to be a guy that will be able to deliver the information that we deal with on a day-to-day basis with our union and get the message back out to the players and get their feedback," said Stackhouse, the highest ranking member of the union executive committee behind only president Derek Fisher, an Oklahoma City guard. “I’ve played in all these eras, been through all these lockouts (1998-99 and last season). I’ve seen them all.

“The search is on (for an executive director). We’re going to find that right person to help build a union that our body can really be proud of."

FOX Sports Florida mentions as well that last year, Stackhouse had told the news source about his intentions to follow a similar path to that of Golden State Warriors head coach Mark Jackson; become involved with television and broadcasting and later become a head coach without having to be an assistant.

The 38-year old told of his desire to be involved with the game of basketball for the rest of his life:

“I’m always going to be part of the game in some capacity,’’ he said. “I’m a basketball lifer. I got a Ph.D in it.’’

 

After a blowout loss in Denver, the Nets don't have any time to dwell, traveling to Utah to take on the Utah Jazz tonight. Along with a shot at redemption, you know what that means: another shot at "The BK Game Streak," where you can build a streak predicting how well the Nets will do in each game for a chance to win a $200 Amazon Gift Card!

The game is as simple as it sounds:
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