President Daryl Morey responds to Ty Lue’s criticism of Sixers stars

Philadelphia 76ers president Daryl Morey responds to Los Angeles Clippers coach Ty Lue’s criticism of the team’s stars.

The Philadelphia 76ers have a unique star duo in the form of Joel Embiid and James Harden. The two of them are elite scorers in this league and they do it by scoring at all three levels while taking a high number of free throws.

Embiid takes 11.8 free throws per game while Harden takes 8.4 per game. The two of them have an elite skill of being able to draw fouls on opponents as teams haven’t found a way to stop them without fouling them.

Los Angeles Clippers coach Ty Lue made a controversial statement saying that if one took away the free throws from Embiid and Harden, they wouldn’t even be top 10 scorers.

President Daryl Morey took to Twitter to deliver a response to Lue.

Morey has a good point. When players are as talented as Embiid and Harden, they’re obviously tough to stop. Teams have trouble defending them without fouling and the Sixers have benefited from that with their two stars. That’s something Lue and the Clippers learned in Friday’s Sixers win over LA on the road.

This post originally appeared on Sixers Wire! Follow us on Facebook!

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Clippers coach Ty Lue takes shot at Sixers stars for taking free throws

Los Angeles Clippers coach Ty Lue seems to take a shot at the star duo of the Philadelphia 76ers due to their free throws.

The Philadelphia 76ers are led by a star duo in the form of Joel Embiid and James Harden who are so tough to defend that all teams can truly do is foul them when they get a full head of steam.

Embiid is averaging 29.8 points per game while averaging 11.8 free throws per game while Harden is averaging 22.6 points and is averaging 9.9 free throws per game during his time in Philadelphia. The two of them are so tough to defend and the Sixers have been benefitting from what they can bring to the offensive end.

As they were getting ready to take on the Los Angeles Clippers on Friday, which turned out to be a 122-97 win for Philadelphia, coach Ty Lue was asked about what they can do to stop the star duo and Lue gave an interesting answer about how to stop them.

Lue has a good point in the way that they both get to the foul line, but at the same time, free throws are a part of the game. Embiid and Harden are so elite that they draw fouls and they make life so tough on the opposition. Drawing fouls is a skill and the two of them have mastered that.

This post originally appeared on Sixers Wire! Follow us on Facebook!

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Meet Joe Abunassar, the forefather of private trainers who has helped turn hundreds of NBA prospects into pros

“That dude runs Iron Man races. He is very committed.”

Now that the NBA offseason is officially underway, it’s impossible not to think about how much the players have been through in the last year.

LeBron James and Anthony Davis secured the franchise’s 17th title on Oct. 11, then returned to practice a few months later so that the NBA’s 2020-21 season could, in fact, start in 2020. James would go onto labor through an ankle injury in April, and Davis was sidelined with a groin strain. The Lakers were ultimately eliminated in just the first round of the Western Conference playoffs.

The league has said that injuries are actually down from a year ago, though, and it’s not like the quality of the basketball has suffered. All in all the league’s quick turnaround is a testament to how well players are conditioned, and that’s thanks to the proliferation of private coaches.

Joe Abunassar is one of the forefathers of that profession, and the owner of IMPACT Basketball in Las Vegas is as busy as ever. He’s had to work with pro clients — accustomed to the regular rhythm of the year — to stay in shape while simultaneously preparing his college-aged clients to stand out in a year unlike any other.

“It’s been a long journey for me,” Abunassar told For The Win. “Every year we are adding; every year we are learning from our guys.”

JaQuori McLaughlin, who was named Big West Conference Player of the Year last season, was a driving force back in March, leading UC Santa Barbara to the NCAA men’s basketball tournament for the first time in a decade.

Before playing in Las Vegas Summer League for the Golden State Warriors, McLaughlin was working out with Abunassar twice a day. They focused on lifting weights and perfecting his jump shot as well as keeping a keen eye on his diet and his sleep schedule.

“It was huge for me,” McLaughlin recently told For The Win. “I was a good shooter coming in but he helped me tweak a few little things, like having a stronger base when I shoot and having a higher follow-through. I was working on my consistency, shooting the same shot every single time, so that was the main thing.”

***

The Sacramento Kings finished 31-41, a few spots out of the play-in tournament, but the season gave rise to hope for the future. Tyrese Haliburton, the No. 12 selection in 2020, far exceeded expectations and looked like a potential foundation player.

For that, in no small part, Haliburton credits some of his time with Abunassar. With such an uncertain timeline for when games would be played in 2020, the Iowa State product opted to focus more of his time on work with a trainer.

“I was really working very hard,” said Haliburton, during a recent conversation with For The Win. “Some people get to this draft process and they like to relax and they think they have made it. But for me, I really turned it up. That was important for me. I took those months of the pandemic and the months of uncertainty and used that as growth for my game instead of using it as an excuse by any means and just chilling.”

Haliburton is one of several players around the league who spent the extended offseason in 2020 with Abunassar, who has worked with some of the top names in the league for more than two decades.

He has become a favorite among agents hoping to help their clients get in the best shape of their lives before the NBA draft, and recently helped a new group, including McLaughlin, that played through a stilted college season unlike any we’ve seen before.

But Abunassar is hardly unaccustomed to adversity — or to making his own way.

Back in the late 1980s, Abunassar was a student manager under head coach Bobby Knight for the Indiana Hoosiers men’s basketball team. He got his first coaching gig as an assistant at the University of Wyoming.

After a few years there, he had the opportunity for a new job at Bowling Green University. But during that offseason, he was asked if he would be willing to help out a few players who were preparing for the 1995 NBA Draft. Those prospects were Joe Smith, who went No. 1 overall, and future league MVP and champion Kevin Garnett.

Abunassar ended up falling in love with the training process and rose to prominence working alongside Chauncey Billups, Tayshaun Prince and Ty Lue early in their playing careers during the late 1990s.

“He’s been around pros,” Haliburton said. “He’s seen all the way from All-Stars to guys who were out of the league in a couple of weeks. He’s seen everything, so he understands it. So he was able to teach me tricks of the trade and how I can stay in this game for a long time.”

***

It’s all about replicating a professional environment.

At his gym, the players arrive in the morning and visit with the medical staff, doing anything needed in terms of stretching or treatment just like they would in an NBA facility. They then get on the court for an hour and a half to work on skills training. Then, they spend another hour and a half in the weight room before breaking for lunch, prepared by IMPACT’s nutritionist.

After lunch, they return for a second session, which is usually shooting. This is also an opportunity for a player to work on a specific focus they need to improve. Others, like Kyle Lowry, return at night for pilates. The full day of work is a customizable program that involves recovery, treatment, strength and conditioning as well as the work on the basketball court.

During the course of the pandemic, Abunassar closely monitored the restrictions from the NBA while also following no-contact guidelines from the state. All offseason, he and his staff constantly pivoted in order to safely run the gym.

“Everyone in the world had to adjust for what is going on this year,” Abunassar said. “It’s going to take everyone a little bit longer to get into peak form but I think everyone understands that.”

For players like Haliburton, the pre-draft process was also different in that prospects weren’t flying in and out for workouts between their meetings with NBA teams. Instead, because these players were in the gym for six consecutive months, Abunassar notes that his clients had more time to improve their bodies and their games.

Before his rookie season, Denver Nuggets big man Zeke Nnaji was able to gain fifteen pounds of muscle, radically transform his body. Meanwhile, in that same group, Dallas Mavericks rookie Josh Green was able to restore his perimeter abilities and get his shooting touch. Haliburton told us that he had a pretty radical body transformation as well.

Haliburton came into the pre-draft process at 168 pounds and weighed in at 185 pounds by the time his sessions with Abunassar concluded. Altogether, he gained about 17 pounds — including a lot of muscle.

“Joe had a big input on that, especially while we were in his facility,” said Haliburton.

During his time in Abunassar’s gym, Haliburton said that he also had the chance to work with some basketball legends.

Though it was decades after first working with Abunassar, former NBA players like Billups and Gilbert Arenas would stop by the gym and pull prospects like Haliburton aside to offer him tips before he embarked on the next chapter of his basketball journey.

***

Joe Wieskamp, who was selected at No. 41 overall in the 2021 NBA draft after three seasons playing for the University of Iowa, also spent time with Abunassar during the offseason.

“He was awesome. That dude runs Iron Man races; he is very committed. He is working out in the morning and he’s in the gym all day and he’s in the gym at night,” Wieskamp told For The Win, ahead of the draft. “Training with a guy like that who has it all together motivates you when you’re on the court. He’s been through it for more than a decade. He knows what it takes and he knows what these teams do in these workouts.”

Wieskamp said he worked with Abunassar on skill development, including sprinting into the catch and reading the closeout, getting his shots off quick after shot fake sidesteps and going to the rim.

Ultimately, for Abunassar, the core tenets of IMPACT he used with Wieskamp have remained the same during his entire time in the industry: skills training, strength and conditioning, nutrition and mentality.

“If you walk in our building, whether it’s a 12-year-old from New Jersey or Kyle Lowry, it’s all the same approach,” Abunassar said. “Guys are coming back to us because they’re getting better.”

The industry as a whole, however, has changed fairly dramatically. Back when Abunassar was getting started, most teams in the NBA did not have development coaches on their staff.

The head coach would work the players out during practice but the practice of hiring strength coaches, sports psychologists and physical therapists was far from the common practice that it is today. These days, most teams have between six to 10 employees who are strictly focused on development.

Meanwhile, in recent years, some trainers have also gained large followings on social media and become a part of the basketball influencer culture in on Instagram. That has never been Abunassar’s approach.

“I’ve been at it a long time and the real key is that we focus only on player development. We haven’t gotten involved in a lot of other things,” Abunassar said. “We are focused on what we are doing in the building, not so much on Instagram and social media and all the videos.”

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Ty Lue’s coaching record in elimination game is unbelievably ridiculous

Ty Lue is one of the best 5 coaches in the NBA and this stat proves it.

Ty Lue is one of the best five or so coaches in the NBA right now. It’s undeniable.

He might be the best coach in the league at figuring out how to adjust to whatever the opponent is doing. And because of that nack for adjustments, he’s been one of the hardest coaches to eliminate.

All we have to do is look to his playoff resume for proof of how good he is.

In total, Lue is 51-28 so far in the postseason for his career. But that’s not even the impressive part.

Lue is 10-2 in elimination games, according to ESPN’s Kirk Goldsberry. And that record stands as the best in NBA history with a minimum of 10 playoff games coached.

That’s the best mark in league history.

It’s like he just refuses to be embarrassed again after the Allen Iverson stepover all of those years ago. It’s amazing.

Sure, the sample size isn’t the greatest. But that’s an insane stat. Teams have had 12 chances to eliminate Lue in the playoffs and they’ve failed in 10 of them.

By the way, the two losses are from the Kevin Durant and Steph Curry era Warriors. That’s how good this dude is.

The Suns will get another crack at Lue’s Clippers on Wednesday night. We’ll see how he performs then.

Watch our sneaker unboxing series, Special Delivery

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Clippers Paul George says Lonzo, LaMelo Ball have star potential

After playing Lonzo and LaMelo Ball in the same week, Clippers guard Paul George and coach Ty Lue compared the two brothers.

The Los Angeles Clippers recently had the chance to play both Ball brothers in the span of a week. After being routed by the Pelicans on Sunday, March 14, Los Angeles closed the week with its own blowout win over the Hornets at home on Saturday, March 20.

Lonzo had 20 points, eight rebounds and five assists in the 20-point win while LaMelo finished with 13 points and five rebounds in his 27-point loss. Following their win over Charlotte, Clippers guard Paul George and head coach Ty Lue compared the two Ball brothers.

“They’re both fun to watch,” George said. “When they’re playing aggressive and in the flow of the game, they’re both fun to watch. They both play hard and they’re really good passers. I think they’re very underrated passers. They have the flashiness and they’re both young so their shooting is going to come. But I think both of them have star potential.”

“Just how they push the pace,” Lue added. “I think just being 6’6”, 6’7”, the way they get the ball  (from) out-of-bounds and push and get the ball into the paint or with their advanced passes, their best I’ve seen as far as being able to get downhill so fast…Those two guys, they have similar games.

“LaMelo is a little bit more flashy but other than that, they both pretty much play the right way, pushing the pace, getting guys open shots and playing really well in transition.”

While LaMelo technically plays at a quicker pace this season than Lonzo, that’s largely attributed to the playstyles of the two coaches and teams. Interestingly, they have nearly identical assist ratios with Lonzo at 27.5 and LaMelo at 26.6.

The differences in their games come in how they score with Lonzo nearly exclusively a 3-point shooter at this stage in his career and LaMelo able to create his own shot. Both, though, bring unique aspects to their teams that make them tough to defend and, as both George and Lue noted, mirror each other as well.

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LeBron James agrees to two-year, $85 million extension with Lakers

The Los Angeles Lakers will have LeBron James under contract through the 2023-24 season, according to Shams Charania.

While everybody was waiting for the Los Angeles Lakers to announce the signing of Anthony Davis, the Lakers landed an even bigger commitment for the future of their franchise and LeBron James has made it clear where he sees himself playing for the foreseeable future. LeBron James has agreed to a 2-year extension with the Lakers worth $85 million, according to Shams Charania of The Athletic/Stadium.

LeBron’s previous contract took him through the 2021-22 season, but a two-year extension would take him through the 2022-23 season in a Los Angeles Lakers uniform, according to Shams. So, he effectively picked up his player option for the 2021 season and agreed to add another year to the deal. Of course, that will also keep him in a Lakers uniform at the time that his son Bronny James, a sophomore at Sierra Canyon, could be eligible to join the NBA after graduating from high school, provided the NBA agrees to change their age requirements.

Davis is widely expected to agree to a contract this offseason and if he agrees to a three-year deal with a player option in the 3rd year, that would keep his contractual situation aligned with LeBron’s. But no matter what happens with the Davis contract, the Lakers offseason that was already a massive success for their title defense, the LeBron extension added a major W for the future of the franchise. LeBron will turn 36 on December 30 and the Lakers will start the coming season on Dec. 22.

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Los Angeles Clippers agree to deal with big man Serge Ibaka

The Los Angeles Clippers added athleticism, shooting, and size to their frontcourt by adding the former Raptors big man.

The Los Angeles Lakers have been busy this offseason but their rivals in Staples Center who were unable to hold up their end of the bargain in creating an L.A. vs. L.A. showdown in the Western Conference Finals, have made a move that should help them in their quest to knock the Lakers off of their pedestal.

The Los Angeles Clippers made a move on Saturday night to bring in veteran big man Serge Ibaka, who was a free agent this season after spending the last few seasons with the Toronto Raptors, where he won a championship in 2019. According to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, Ibaka’s deal is worth $19 million and the second year includes a player option.

Ibaka played multiple roles for the Raptors over the past few years, both starting and coming off the bench. With Montrezl Harrell joining the Lakers in free agency, Ibaka fills an important hole at the back-up center spot.

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Lakers free agency: Rajon Rondo reportedly receiving major interest from Hawks, Clippers

Rajon Rondo is a free agent after helping the Lakers win a championship and could end up across the hall.

The Los Angeles Lakers have made moves that indicate they believe they will lose Rajon Rondo in free agency and now we have a clearer idea as to why the Lakers felt compelled to trade for Dennis Schröder. According to longtime NBA reporter and ESPN contributor Frank Isola, Rondo has drawn some major money interest in the marketplace and he won’t even have to leave town for one of his biggest suitors, the Clippers.

Isola reported the Atlanta Hawks are willing to offer $15 million per year to Rondo but the guard is of the belief he will draw a mid-level offer from the Clippers.

The full midlevel, which is around 9.3 million per year, would be a significant raise for Rondo who played the last two seasons for the Lakers on the vet minimum. Rondo was also one of the first calls Anthony Davis made after joining the Lakers. However, it’s clear Rondo’s job with the Lakers was completed on October 11 and now the next job is to get a raise while still being on a team with championship aspirations.

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Long Island Nets head coach Shaun Fein joins Kenny Atkinson on Clippers staff

Kenny Atkinson is living the Los Angeles life now, and he has taken a few people from Brooklyn to California with him.

Kenny Atkinson wasn’t able to land a new head coaching job after he and the Brooklyn Nets parted ways back in March — right before the COVID-19 pandemic led to the NBA’s hiatus and the shutdown of other sports.

But, the former Nets head coach did manage to find a new home with a contender in the Western Conference after Ty Lue took over for Doc Rivers as head coach of the Los Angeles Clippers.

Now an assistant coach under Lue, it appears Atkinson has brought a little bit of Brooklyn with him to Los Angeles.

The Clippers announced Shaun Fein and Beau Levesque have both joined their organizations.

Fein was with the Nets organization for the last four seasons, most recently serving as head coach of Brooklyn’s G League affiliate, the Long Island Nets. He will be a player development coach for the Clippers.

Levesque will hold the title of player development and video coach after spending the last two seasons in Brooklyn, most recently working as an assistant video coordinator/player development assistant.

Harden reportedly gave top coaching endorsements to Ty Lue, John Lucas

Marc Stein: “Houston didn’t hire either of the candidates Harden endorsed the strongest to replace D’Antoni: Tyronn Lue and John Lucas,”

Per Marc Stein of The New York Times, Rockets superstar James Harden gave his “strongest endorsements” in the team’s recent head coaching search to Clippers coach Tyronn Lue and Houston assistant John Lucas.

As it turned out, of course, Dallas assistant Stephen Silas eventually got the job. Accordingly, Stein reported Tuesday that other NBA teams are wondering “how perturbed Harden is” by that development.

“Houston didn’t hire either of the candidates Harden endorsed the strongest to replace Mike D’Antoni: Tyronn Lue and John Lucas,” Stein writes in his latest newsletter, which was published Tuesday afternoon.

It’s worth noting that the Rockets probably never had a realistic chance at Lue. Though he did interview in Houston for the job, he took the job in Los Angeles only days later. Lue was already familiar with the Clippers, having been the top assistant last season to Doc Rivers. It’s also the league’s second-largest market with one of its most talented rosters, all with one of the NBA’s richest owners (Steve Ballmer) funding the team and in a city where he already lived. Lue staying in Los Angeles was and is understandable, and it was probably his choice, rather than Houston’s.

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Lucas, on the other hand, was available to the Rockets at the time of their decision to hire Silas. However, it’s plausible (if not likely) that Harden’s initial preference was largely based on the fact that he already had a relationship with Lucas, who was D’Antoni’s director of player development since 2016. If that’s the case, it would seem that further conversations with Silas might have since bridged that gap.

It was reported that the Rockets would confer with their players about the coaching finalists before making a decision, so it’s hard to imagine that they would make a hire if Harden wasn’t on board with it.

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Historically, Silas has reportedly had strong relationships with the NBA stars that he’s coached, which would seem to offer hope that he and Harden will hit it off — if given time to get to know each other. It’s also worth noting that Silas is said to be “working hard” to keep Lucas on the staff, reportedly in a more prominent coaching role on the bench.

Per Stein, new GM Rafael Stone is the “biggest backer in the organization” of Lucas, which could further boost the odds of a deal getting done. Should the 66-year-old stick around, and especially if it’s in a bigger role as an assistant, that would likely be viewed favorably by Harden.

In Tuesday’s newsletter, Stein says that rival teams are wondering how long it might be until the Rockets seriously entertain trading Harden. But Stein, as is the case with many other national NBA reporters, says the Rockets “are adamant that Harden will not be shopped.” Now 31 years old, he is under contract in Houston for at least two more seasons.

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