Flip Saunders Wizards interview, plus Ernie Grunfeld quotes

The Washington Wizards recently named Flip Saunders their new head coach. Here’s what Saunders said to the media about the team and his new job:

Saunders on if he studied the Wizards throughout the season: “I studied them a lot, but it’s tough to judge this team without a premier player like Gilbert (Arenas).  Then of course Brendan (Haywood) was hurt and he’s an anchor on defense, and (DeShawn) Stevenson was hurt.  You had so many injuries so it’s tough to really judge the team, but what you can do is evaluate the talent of the young players.”

Saunders on the young players: “I think the young players have a lot of potential.  I have a saying that potential is what you’re capable of doing, motivation determines what you do, and your character and attitude determines how well you do it.  With our young players it’s important for the coaching staff and the veteran players to help those players understand what time of character and attitude they need to be professional and be successful in this league.”

Saunders on Gilbert Arenas: “The thing I love about him more than anything else is his competitiveness.  I look forward to the opportunity to work with him.  I’m sure that I’m going to learn from Gilbert and he’s going to learn from me.  I know Gilbert wants to win more than anything.  In the texts and conversations that we had, that’s the main thing that we’ve talked about.  I think that he’s ready to take the step in order to do that and have people follow him.”

Saunders on what it takes to get a team to the conference finals: “I think the biggest thing is that when I say ‘team’ the word ‘sacrifice’ goes along with it.  You have to be willing as individuals to sacrifice any individual role you have for the team to have success.  I believe in teams with high assists and low turnovers.  I believe in what I call the hockey assist; sometimes it’s the assist that leads to the assist that’s the most important play.  Those are the things that as a coach you keep on driving into your team.  As you work with them and see the success of it, it keeps on growing.”

Saunders on defense: “From a technical standpoint, you have to be able to defend.  A lot is talked about the huge playbook that I have.  It’s about 60 percent defense and 40 percent offense.  People don’t talk much about what I do defensively, because offense is more creative at times, but when the players walk into that gym defense is going to be a priority.  If you talk to the coaches that have coached against teams that I’ve had, no one has ever said that our teams didn’t defend.”

WIZARDS PRESIDENT ERNIE GRUNFELD

Grunfeld on hiring Flip Saunders to be the 22nd head coach in franchise history: “This is a very exciting day for us.  This is a new beginning.  Flip was our top priority in this coaching search.  What we were looking for was someone with credibility, an NBA background, and experience in the regular season and in the playoffs.  Flip coached in the conference finals four out of the last five years that he coached in the NBA.  That’s what we want to get to and even higher than that.  He’s a well respected person and I think he’s a great fit for our team right now with the type of players we have.  He’s an X’s and O’s man.  He pays attention to detail and I think he’s extremely underrated on the defensive end.  We all know that we want to improve in that area.  He plays a fun brand of basketball.  He likes to get up and down the floor, which I think the players enjoy and the fans enjoy watching.  We’re looking to get back to where we feel we belong, and that’s the playoffs.  Once we get to the playoffs, we want to make some noise.  I think this is the man to lead us there.”

Grunfeld on hiring a new head coach: “This was a very wanted job.  A lot of people called who were interested.  Doing our due diligence we were able to make contact sometime around the All-Star break (in February).  There were a lot of people who called that had a lot of interest, but when we went through everything and did our due diligence, I felt like he was the top candidate.”

More on Saunders: “He brings the whole package to the table.  He brings credibility and a lot of knowledge, and with knowledge you get respect.  My biggest concern is to win basketball games.  You hire a coach and you let him coach.  Everybody has a little bit of a different system and everybody does things their own way, but the bottom line is to win games. He’s a veteran guy and I like the fact that he came up the hard way.  He coached in college and he coached in the CBA.  He was Coach of the Year in the CBA, and it takes a lot to coach in the CBA.  He paid his dues and when he came to the NBA he had a lot of success.  He’s had seven 50-win seasons.  We were looking for someone who is a winner both in the regular season and in the playoffs, someone who understands X’s and O’s, and someone who has coached elite players before.”

Grunfeld on the focus during the offseason: “The next order of business is the draft.  We have the lottery on May 19th and then we find out exactly where we pick, and then of course in June we have the draft.  As Flip mentioned, we have six players on this team that are 23 years old or younger, so player development is crucial for us in the offseason.  It’s a difficult offseason and I think Flip is very much in favor of helping the players.  We have some very solid veteran players but we also have players that need that development, so we’re going to be focusing on that.  The thing you can control is player development, so we’re going to be focusing on that. After the draft, we’ll have summer league and we’ll continue to work and grow.  If the right opportunity comes along that we think will help us improve, then that’s something we’ll look at.”

Playoffs: Jazz and Hornets in trouble

Detroit, New Orleans and Utah are in the unenviable position of trailing their best-of-seven series 2-0.

Not including this postseason, there have been 217 best-of-seven series in which a team has gone up 2-0. Only 14 times has the team trailing 2-0 came back to win the series. The last time this occurred was last year in the Western Conference semifinals when the San Antonio Spurs dropped the first two games against the New Orleans Hornets but recovered to win the series in seven games.

The Jazz’s attempt at joining that select comeback club begins tonight in Los Angeles (10:30 p.m. ET, TNT). Making the Jazz’s task that much more difficult is its opponent, the Lakers. When winning the first two games of a best-of-seven series, the Lakers are 37-1 all time; in franchise history, they are 56-37 in Game 3 of a best-of-seven series. And since moving to STAPLES Center in 1999, the Lakers have won 83 percent of their postseason games at home (55-11).

– NBA News

Game 3 is often must-win

Memo to San Antonio and Dallas, Portland and Houston, Boston and Chicago, Orlando and Philadelphia, and Atlanta and Miami: If you plan on advancing to the semifinals, winning Game 3 of your tied series is No. 1 on your to-do list.

All time in NBA postseason play, a best-of-seven series has been tied after the first two games 161 times. The winner of Game 3 has gone on to win the series 76 percent of the time (122-39). The home team’s record in Game 3 with series tied 1-1 is 89-72 (.553).

There are two Game 3s tonight that fall into this category. The Bulls host the Celtics (8 p.m. ET, TNT) and the Spurs visit the Mavericks (8:30 p.m. ET, TNT). At home, the Bulls hold an all-time postseason record of 105-34 (.755) – first among existing NBA franchises. Dallas is 41-26 (.612) at home in the playoffs. San Antonio (59-81, .421) and Boston (100-144, .410) have the second and third, respectively, best road winning percentages in the playoffs.

– NBA News

Hawks more than a one-man team

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (Sekou Smith) reports: “I know we’ve been cast as a one-man team in the past,” Hawks forward Josh Smith said, referring to captain and All-Star Joe Johnson. “But the truth is, that’s never really been the case. Never. “And that’s really the beauty of our team, when you think about it. We’ve got six or seven guys that can get going at any time and change the game for us. You never know who it’s going to be.” In Sunday’s Game 1 romp over Miami, it was Smith serving as the catalyst on both ends of the floor. He finished with a game-high 23 points, 10 rebounds and three steals in the Hawks’ 90-64 win. “The beauty behind that is Joe Johnson doesn’t care. Mike Bibby doesn’t and Flip Murray doesn’t and Mo Evans doesn’t and Zaza Pachulia doesn’t,” Hawks coach Mike Woodson said. “That’s how you build a team. When guys could care less about who’s going to get the glory and just pass the baton around, it makes winning the top priority.”

Rockets-Blazers team connections

Connections: Rick Adelman still ranks as the second winningest coach in Trail Blazers history behind Jack Ramsay, racking up a record of 291-154 (.654) in the regular season and a 36-33 (.522) mark in the postseason … Adelman twice coached the Trail Blazers into the NBA Finals, qualifying Portland for the playoffs in all six of his seasons … Elston Turner also served as an assistant coach with Portland … T.R. Dunn was drafted by Portland with the 41st overall pick of the 1977 NBA Draft, spending his first three NBA campaigns with the Trail Blazers … R.J. Adelman was a four-year letterman in basketball at Willamette University in Salem, Oregon … Pat Zipfel joined Houston after serving three seasons as an advance scout with Portland … Rockets guard Aaron Brooks was an All-Pac-10 standout at the University of Oregon … in the 2008 NBA Draft, Houston traded the draft rights to Nicolas Batum (25th overall pick) to Portland for the draft rights to Darrell Arthur (27th overall pick) and Joey Dorsey (33rd overall pick) … Rockets guard Von Wafer played eight games with the Trail Blazers in 2007-08 … Houston guard/forward James White was originally selected by Portland in the second round (31st overall) of the 2006 NBA Draft before having his rights traded to Indiana … Portland center Joel Przybilla was selected by Houston in the first round (9th overall) of the 2000 NBA Draft before Milwaukee acquired his draft rights.

Donyell Marshall can still shoot sometimes

Philadelphia 76ers forward Donyell Marshall is about 83 years old, and most fans forgot he even existed. But he stepped up nicely Sunday.

The Philadelphia Daily News (Marcus Hayes) reports: Donyell Marshall’s 11 points in the first 11 minutes of the fourth quarter helped the Sixers complete a comeback from an 18-point deficit to win, 100-98, in Game 1 of their first-round playoff series against the Magic. He entered facing a 14-point hole. He hit three of four three-pointers. He made it happen. He had played as many minutes five times this season, most recently 10 games ago. He looked fresh. “He turned the game around,” coach Tony DiLeo said. “He spread the floor for us offensively. Guys could not help as much. I am not surprised. He’s a professional. He’s always ready to play.”

Anthony Johnson dunks in game 1

Sunday afternoon the Orlando Magic are hosting the Philadelphia 76ers in Game 1 of the 2009 NBA playoffs round 1.

And at the very end of the first quarter, Magic guard Anthony Johnson, who is about 93 years old, saw an opening, drove right down the middle of the paint and threw down an enthusiastic one-handed slam. And he did it despite big, tall, shot-blocker Theo Ratliff running over to help.

Magic bench player Marcin Gortat was so excited, he ran a few feet onto the court in celebration, until coach Stan Van Gundy grabbed and pulled him away from a potential technical foul situation.

76ers need more home fan support

I’m looking at attendance stats for the 2008-09 season, and notice that the Philadelphia 76ers had the lowest average home attendance of any team that qualified for the playoffs.

The Wizards and Clippers, who were absolutely awful this season, had more fans at their home games than the Sixers did.

With 41 wins and 41 losses, Philly was good enough to land them the 6-seed in the Eastern conference playoffs. They’re a good, fun team that deserves more filled seats at home.

Post your opinion in this forum topic.

Bobcats owner says team will never leave Charlotte

The Charlotte Observer (Scott Fowler) reports:  Charlotte Bobcats owner Bob Johnson said Wednesday afternoon that he “absolutely, unequivocally” would never move the team out of Charlotte, but he left open the possibility of selling his majority stake in the NBA franchise to Michael Jordan. His comments came as his team wrapped up its season with improved play but projections of roughly $35 million in cash losses over the next two years, people familiar with the situation told the Observer. In an exclusive interview with the Observer, Johnson said his close friend Jordan would be an excellent owner for the Bobcats and could possibly buy the majority share in the team whenever Jordan came up with the proper financing.