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Jan7
Behind Enemy Lines: 5 questions with Daniel Sagal of LABallTalk
Filed under: News; Tagged as: Andrew Bynum, Bob Delaney, Daniel Sagal, Derek Fisher, DJ Mbenga, Gerald Wallace, Josh Powell, Kevin Garnett, Kobe Bryant, Lamar Odom, Marco Belinelli, Mike Miller, Mitch Kupchak, Monta Ellis, Pau Gasol, Richard Jefferson, Shawn Marion, Trevor Ariza5 CommentsTraded some Q&A material with Daniel Sagal of Laker-devoted LABallTalk in advance of tonight’s game, which should be fascinating on many fronts, including most especially whether the crowd will turn on the team when the Lakers go on their inevitable 20-4 run to seize command of the game.
Other things to watch for:
** The number of fans wearing bags on their heads.
** The number of fans holding signs, a la Guns ‘n’ Roses, asking “Where’s Monta?”
** Whether Bob Delaney will continue his streak of Warriors-Lakers games.
In any case, on to the Q&A:
48minutes.net: So, does Mitch Kupchak highlight Andrew Bynum’s line on the boxscore after every game and then leave it in Kobe Bryant’s locker? And, more seriously, is Bynum the piece that puts this team over the top this season?
LABallTalk: I highly doubt Kupchak is too happy with Bynum right as he has proven to be somewhat lazy and immature. You hear about all the guys working their butt off in the gym and in practice trying to improve while Andrew only does what he is asked. I’d like to see him grow up a bit more but I supoose that will come with age.
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Dec22
Thoughts on Game Nos. 27 & 28: Why the Biedrins-Turiaf pairing worked
Filed under: News; Tagged as: Andris Biedrins, Boris Diaw, Brandan Wright, C.J. Watson, Don Nelson, Emeka Okafor, Gerald Wallace, Jamal Crawford, Juwan Howard, Keith Smart, Kelenna Azubuike, Larry Brown, Marco Belinelli, Raja Bell, Raymond Felton, Ronny Turiaf7 CommentsBy Geoff Lepper
48minutes.netWarriors coach Don Nelson has admitted on multiple occasions that his team’s small lineup couldn’t match up, talent-wise, with what the opposition put on the floor on a given night.
Against Charlotte on Saturday, that equation was flipped on its head: it was the Bobcats who couldn’t hang with the Warriors’ two-tower configuration of Andris Biedrins, Ronny Turiaf and three wing players.
For one 6 1/2-minute stretch in the third quarter, the Warriors outscored the Bobcats 23-6 using a lineup of Biedrins, Turiaf, Kelenna Azubuike, Jamal Crawford and Marco Belinelli (replaced near the end by C.J. Watson). That was the turning point in Golden State’s 110-103 win; the stretch ended with the Warriors up 81-69, and Charlotte never got closer than five points after that.
The Turiaf-Biedrins lineup played a total of 10:37 on Saturday, after getting some (less successful) run against the Atlanta Hawks on Friday:


Those two games represent the fifth- and sixth-highest total of playing for the Turiaf-Biedrins configuration this season, and you have to wonder how much of that is due to any added influence has gained Keith Smart as the team’s defensive coordinator.
Smart has no problem using the young bigs — recall the game in Houston when Brandan Wright didn’t sniff a second of playing time until Nelson was ejected, and then Smart brought in Wright almost immediately, helping spark one of the team’s only decent stints on the evening — and dumping small ball when necessary.
Of course, it might just be simpler than that. During most of the 23-6 stretch, Charlotte’s Larry Brown, who never met a 12-year veteran he didn’t like, was trying to get by with Juwan Howard at the 4 alongside Emeka Okafor, and the Warriors pinpointed that spot as something to exploit.
Howard was overmatched by Turiaf at both ends of the floor; in 12 offensive possessions, the Warriors ran their screen-roll with Turiaf as the big four times, scoring a total of eight points on those plays. Turiaf also handed off the ball twice in the high post to a curling Crawford, who knocked down an open 3-pointer off one of them with 5:17 left in the third.
There are distinct differences in the Warriors’ S/R with Turiaf as the screener versus Biedrins. Since Turiaf’s own offensive arsenal features much more mid-range jumpers (as opposed to Biedrins’ game, which is much more based on rolling through the lane), he’s able to sell out…
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