Check out the advanced box score from last night’s 113-96 Nets victory over the Mavericks here.
A few takeaways from last night’s game:
- First and foremost: Check out these two shot charts.
Pretty similar, right? The first is Lopez’s shot chart in his game last season in Dallas, when he put up 38 points in a 93-92 victory. The second is Lopez’s short chart from last night’s game in Dallas. Lopez took care of offensive business in nearly the exact same fashion: hanging around the rim, shooting just one or two jumpers, and dismantling Dallas’s interior defense with cuts to the basket and post-ups that Chris Kaman didn’t know how to defend. Too bad they won’t face off in the playoffs.
- Similarly encouraging: Lopez’s 11 rebounds, 18% rebound rate, and seven big offensive rebounds. The Nets and Mavericks shot nearly identically from the field — 50.6% from Brooklyn, 50% from Dallas — but the Nets picked up nine more field goal attempts, many thanks to those second chances created by Lopez.
- I’ve said it in this space before, but it bears repeating: Deron Williams being great is starting to get mundane and I love it. He got a bit lucky hitting consecutive midrange jumpers in the fourth quarter, but Branch Rickey once said that luck is the residue of design. So, solid design, Deron Williams. A 31-point game in his hometown, a continued trend upward of shots at or near the rim, and another solid game from beyond the arc? Good start to this road trip.
- Mark Cuban’s struggle face is now my new favorite face:
I do not have the ability to make GIFs. I’m counting on you, internet.
- Another exciting thing: the Nets were down 10 after the first quarter and won by 17. That type of comeback never happened in previous years. You could often tell the direction of a Nets game after the first 12 minutes, and if they went down 10 last season after one they’d basically pack it up. Not anymore.
- Worth noting that the Mavericks attacked Lopez and Blatche inside — as most teams do — but shot a below-average mark from within five feet (14/26). Usually I think that Lopez is a good man defender in the post but struggles on help; last night I thought the opposite was true.
- Andray Blatche scored 14 points, all in the second quarter on perfect 6-6 shooting, because Andray Blatche is an indescribable maniac. He hit a fadeaway over Dirk Nowitzki and the space-time continuum began to rip.
- Mirza Teletovic and MarShon Brooks were the first two players off the bench (with Keith Bogans), played about a two-minute stretch in the first quarter… and then sat until garbage time. Neither player did anything of consequence in either stretch.
- The Big 3 of Joe Johnson, Deron Williams, and Brook Lopez was a +13 in seven minutes when they shared the floor with Role Star Hip Hop and three-point/defensive wing specialist Keith Bogans. I’M JUST SAYING.
- Reggie Evans rebounded 42% of all live rebounds and 66% of all defensive rebounds available when he was on the floor. The league average is 10%. Yawn.