[外電] Stand and Deliverance
Stand and Deliverance
Brand's Time Finally Comes on Big Stage
May 19, 2006
J.A. Adande
This column had to be about Elton Brand. The season came down to this
game, and this season was about Elton Brand.
Sure, Sam Cassell was the sensei, infusing the Clippers with his dozen
years of NBA experience. But the Clippers would not have reached the
next level had Brand not advanced his game.
We saw new things from Brand this season, especially his expanded
shooting range and his ability to deliver clutch baskets. Thursday
night, with the Clippers facing elimination by the Phoenix Suns in Game
6, Brand showed something else: a Terminator-like determination.
He backed his man down and scored. Turned and drove and scored. He
pulled up for jumpers. You didn't need Photoshop to put these images
together for the big picture: Brand shot every time he faced single
coverage, right down to the final Clippers basket in their 118-106
victory that forced Game 7 in Phoenix on Monday.
"I had that mentality," Brand said. "I'm thinking that I'm ready to go.
Whatever happens is going to happen, but I'm going to go down fighting,
and fighting hard."
The only thing going down was his shot through the net, 14 times in 21
tries, to give him a stat line of 30 points, 12 rebounds, five blocked
shots and three assists.
At halftime he had 15 points and was leading the … wait a minute. Not
again. Why is it that something always happens to steal the attention
from Brand? His 40 points in the series opener went to waste when he
sat for a stretch in the fourth quarter and the game got away. He made
the biggest shot of his career to give the Clippers a three-point lead
late in Game 4, only to be upstaged by Cassell's three-point basket the
next time down the floor. He scored six points early in overtime to give
the Clippers the edge in Game 5, then Raja Bell wiped it out with that
three-pointer in the final three seconds and the Suns won it in double
overtime.
Thursday night, who should pick this moment — of all times — to turn
into George Gervin but Quinton Ross. He made eight of his first 10
shots, including a jumper just before the halftime buzzer, to score 16
points in the first two quarters.
But Brand wasn't about to let anyone take this from him, as he
demonstrated by snatching a rebound away from Ross. Nothing personal.
But this one belonged to Brand. Not even 15 second-half points by Corey
Maggette, who finished with 25, could deny Brand his moment.
Brand didn't have the headline season. He wasn't the guy who put up an
81-point night in Staples Center.
What he did that was so remarkable was to make such a leap this far into
a good career — something rarely seen seven years in.
Brand said the extra effort this season came from the uncertainty around
the team. If it was going to be only him and Maggette, he'd better be
ready or else it would be another year without a playoff appearance.
It wasn't only the two of them. The Clippers added Cuttino Mobley, then
Cassell.
Still, Maggette called Brand "our MVP."
The Clippers don't try to conceal anything. Coach Mike Dunleavy didn't
reveal his starting lineup when he met with the media before Game 6,
but he did share the offensive focal point.
"We know where our bread and butter is: Elton Brand," Dunleavy said.
Has the phrase ever been more appropriate? Brand isn't fresh-baked
focaccia topped with sun-dried tomatoes, buffalo mozzarella and a basil
pesto spread. Bread, butter. Period.
It's appropriate that Mike Tirico called this game for ESPN, because
Tirico is like the Elton Brand of broadcasters. He doesn't hit you with
the hip catchphrase or the crazy inflection. He's just there all the
time, bringing you the relevant information, whether it's basketball,
football or golf.
That's Elton Brand. He didn't break off a single move that made you go
"Oooh." Not a single nominee for SportsCenter's top 10 — just short-range
jumpers, rebounds and putbacks.
You have to appreciate the game to appreciate Brand.
Steve Nash has bookend most-valuable-player trophies, so who's better
qualified to discuss Brand's value?
"I think that obviously, he's a handful in the low post," Nash said.
"In this series he's also blocked a lot of shots, he's also had a ton
of assists, coupled with the fact that he's really been a terrific
shotmaker, not just from the block…. He's really been so efficient
offensively that it puts a lot of pressure on our defense."
Offensive efficiency is the key to this series for the Clippers. Phoenix
feasts on bad shots and turnovers. Brand kept both to a minimum on a
night when even Cassell rushed shots and got sloppy with the ball.
It was the greatest night of Brand's greatest season.
And all it did was get them another game. For Brand, there's always
something more to do.
*
--
你們認為海南高高在上,位於雲端嗎?他們真的就這麼高不可攀嗎?
他們的成績的確是有目共睹的。以他們過去的戰績來看,我們和海南的確有天壤之別。
但是----
我在睡前,都會想像著有一天......
我每晚都在腦裡描繪我們和海南大學附屬高中參加IH的戰況。
從那一年前起,每晚都如此!
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 65.165.13.166
討論串 (同標題文章)
完整討論串 (本文為第 1 之 2 篇):
LaClippers 近期熱門文章
102
512
PTT體育區 即時熱門文章
192
300