Obsessedsportsnut's Blog

February 17, 2016

Giants vs Warriors : Bumgarner vs Curry

Filed under: baseball, basketball — Tags: , — Jonathan Lee @ 4:40 pm

Pitchers and catchers report to training camp today! We’re less than two months away from opening day! Baseball is almost back!

Living in the Bay Area, it’s impossible not to be excited about the rest of this NBA season. Will the Warriors break the Bulls’ record of 72 wins and go undefeated at home? Will the Warriors repeat as NBA champions?

It’s also impossible not to be excited about the upcoming San Francisco Giants season. For starters, it’s an even year, which means they should be planning another parade down Market Street again, right? The Giants also had a pretty impressive offseason, signing Johnny Cueto, Jeff Samardzija, and Denard Span.

The parallels between the two franchises are numerous. Both are the only two Bay Area franchises to win a title in the past 20 years. Both are lead by a strong ownership group and front office, as the core of both championship teams have been built through the draft.

And both teams are lead by the most humble, egoless stars in the game: Stephen Curry and Madison Bumgarner, who are arguably the two most underpaid players in their respective sports.

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February 10, 2016

How realistic is 73 wins for the Warriors?

Filed under: basketball, Uncategorized — Tags: — Jonathan Lee @ 4:32 pm

During the midst of the Warriors 24-0 record to start this NBA season, many questioned whether or not the 1995-96 Bulls’ record of 72 wins was in danger. I thought it was foolish to even consider 73 wins, as no other team in NBA history has ever had more than 69 wins, achieved twice by the 1971-72 Lakers and the 1996-97 Bulls.

But as the Warriors continued to pile on the wins, the thought of 73 wins got more and more real. The Warriors need to win 25 of their last 30 games to get to 73 wins. That’s a 83.3% win percentage. With a win tonight, they will be at a 92.3% win percentage.So how realistic is it for the Warriors to reach 73 wins? As I looked at the schedule, it’s not as implausible as I once thought.

Let me explain.

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February 5, 2016

Ranking the 2016 Warriors in terms of Importance

Filed under: basketball — Tags: — Jonathan Lee @ 9:00 pm

1. Stephen Curry

The past couple weeks, I tried to come up with reasons to put Draymond at the #1 spot, but I just couldn’t justify it. Curry’s the league most unstoppable player, the most explosive offensive player in NBA history. As he goes, the Warriors goes.

  • Win share/48 of 0.338 – Win share/48 is an advanced stat that determines who much a player contributes to a given win. The NBA record? Kareem Abdul Jabbar’s 0.3399 in the 1971-72 season. Curry is only .0019 behind Kareem’s. This 2015-16 season is better than the best season of Jordan, Lebron, and Wilt.
  • 232 3-pointers in 47 games – If the season ended today, Curry would finish 10th all time in 3 pointers per season. He’s only 7 3-pointers behind Klay’s total from last season. No player has ever made 300 3-points in a season. Curry’s on pace to shatter his own record of 286 and hit 400.
  • +/- of 15.9 – When Curry is on the floor, the Warriors outscore their opponents by close to 16 points. The highest +/- since 2000? Curry last year at 11.2. Lebron’s best? 10.6 in his 2008-2009 year.

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July 25, 2010

The Rise of Jeremy Lin

Filed under: basketball — Tags: , — Jonathan Lee @ 11:41 pm

I’m really not sure what’s left to be said about Jeremy Lin that hasnt been mentioned in the press yet.

“Asian American Bay Area kid who led his high school to defeat Mater Dei in one of the biggest upsets in California basketball history, who then went on to have a standout college career at Harvard. Despite not being drafted in the 2010 NBA Draft, he impressed numerous general managers and executives with his play at the NBA Summer League with the Dallas Mavericks including a sensational performance against John Wall, which caught the eyes of the Lakers and the Warriors, who eventually sign him to a contract.”

Jeremy Lin’s road to the NBA has been an inspirational one to many people. Ive had the pleasure of following his career from Palo Alto all the way to Harvard to the Dallas Mavericks, and it’s been a joy to see him grow as a player. He attends a sister church of mine and has been a youth counselor at our joint summer retreats. At these retreats, I’ve the opportunity to play against him on a couple occasions, and I have to say I’ve never felt better after being taken to school so badly…

Anyways, the one thing I’ve noticed about Jeremy is that he’s taken advantage of every opportunity that he’s given to impress. While playing in the Ivy League, Jeremy never really had the opportunity to impress on a national level, since most people dont really follow the Ivys. However, during Jeremy’s junior and senior years, Harvard schedule 4 games against Big East and ACC opponents, Georgetown, Uconn, and Boston College twice. During Jeremy’s junior year, Harvard played Boston College, who was coming off a win over the #1 ranked North Carolina Tar Heels. In this game, he lead Harvard to a huge upset over BC where we saw Jeremy drop 27 points, 8 assists, 3 rebounds, 6 steals, and 2 blocks. The next year, he lead Harvard to another victory over Boston College, and hard losses to Uconn and Georgetown.

In these 4 games against these top teams, he averaged 24.25 points, 4.75 assists, 4.75 rebounds, 3 steals, and 1.25 blocks. His season averages were 16.4 points, 4.4 assists, 4.4 rebounds, 2.4 steals, and 1.1 blocks. These 4 games put Jeremy on the map, and made his name known to the entire sporting world.

After the Uconn game, coach Jim Calhoun (who’s won 2 national titles and is one of the top 5 college coaches in the game said this about Jeremy: “He’s a terrific basketball player. What I really like about him is he’s athletic, more than you think so. He controls his temperament to a really nice tempo. He knows how to play. He’s one of the better kids, including BIG EAST guards, who have come in here in quite some time…I really love his composure. There are a lot of teams that come through here… I can’t think of a team that he wouldn’t play for. (Jeremy Lin) really has great, great composure on the court; he’s got change-of-pace dribbles; he’s really, really good.”

After graduating from Harvard, he made a successful showing at the Portsmouth Invitational, which showcases some of the best college players who are not sure draft picks.

Because of his play, the Dallas Mavericks signed him to their Summer League team, where he went on to impress many many people, clearly showing everyone that he belongs and deserves a chance to play in the NBA.

After this performance, the rest is history. This past week he signed a contract with the Golden State Warriors.

This signing is a win-win situation for both parties.

For Jeremy, getting this contract is the culmination of many years of dedication and hard work, and to get a contract with the team that he grew up loving has to be one of the best feelings in the world. Compared to other teams that were interested in him, the Warriors have a very very thin back court. After Monta Ellis and Stephen Curry, the Warriors dont have much depth. Depending on how he plays in training camp and improves overall, Jeremy has a very real chance of getting decent playing time come the regular season. Had he gone to the Lakers he would have been stuck on the bench behind Derek Fisher and Steve Blake. Had he gone to the Mavericks, he would have been stuck behind Jason Kidd and Rodrigue Beaubois. Yes he probably would have learned tremendously from Fisher and Kidd, but he would not get any playing time come game time. By going to the Warriors, he has his best chance of playing at Oracle Arena…and plus…he’s playing for the Warriors. What an opportunity!!

For the Warriors, this is very very smart low risk, high reward investment. Financially, they are committing very little to Jeremy Lin. Reports have the contract at two years, including a $500k salary with half of it guaranteed and the rest incentives based. The 2nd year is a team option meaning that they would have the say in whether to bring him back for a 2nd year or not. However if you look at this from a marketing point of view, the Warriors will probably make this money back by the tickets they sell. Using a very conservative estimate, assume that the Warriors sell an extra 100 seats/game because of this signing. That’s 41 games x 100 seats x $50/game. That’s already $200,000. Throw in jersey sales (Im definitely buying one), and this signing can mean a ton of revenue for the Warriors.

From a business point of view, this is a very smart move. But this would be a total insult to Jeremy if you were to say that this signing was purely done for marketing. The Warriors definitely saw enough talent and potential in Jeremy to be a solid role player off the bench behind Stephen Curry and Monta Ellis that they wanted to bring him in and try to develop him. This is an investment. I truly believe that Jeremy can make it in the NBA, but then again, he might not be able to cut it. It was a chance that the Warriors were willing to take. If he makes it, its great for everybody. If he doesnt, they didnt invest that much financially in him that they would get hurt by the move. Like I said, low risk, high reward.

I’m truly happy for Jeremy Lin and what he’s been able to accomplish so far. I definitely will be heading out to more Warrior games this season to cheer him on. However, it makes me happier to see his faith in God shine throughout everything. I leave you with a recent interview conducted with ESPN.

How important is the [Asian-American] identity stuff?
You know, it’s important but not as important as my being a Christian. That’s first and foremost the most important thing to me when it comes to my identity.

Is it more important to your folks?
No. We believe in the same thing. That’s how our house is and how I was raised. We’ve always taken our Christianity and our walks with God as our first priority.

June 24, 2010

Weekly Recap: 6/17 – 6/24

I’ve realized for a lot of people, my blog posts are their only connection with the sports world. I know its weird…I find it shocking when people dont have espn.com set at their browser homepage.

So, I’ve decided to create a “weekly recap” post that take a look at some of the bigger stories in sports this past week. Just a warning to my non-Bay Area readers, I’ll probably be heavily Bay Area biased…so be aware.

Since I have to release a “weekly report” to my boss every week on Thursday at 2pm, I’ve decided that I’m going to try to release this recap thing Thursday afternoons as well. Yeah…multitasking at its finest.

World Cup

Probably the greatest sporting event in the world, and what I’ve been writing about for the past two weeks. I wont spend time talking about it here, though you can read about two of the bigger surprises: the US’s achievements so far and the French disaster.

The epic tennis match at Wimbledon between John Isner and Nicolas Mahut…

6-4, 3-6, 6-7 (7), 7-6 (3), 70-68. Simply…insane.

Just take a look at the records set in this game…

1) Longest match ever: 11 hours 5 minutes over a total of 3 days.
2) Longest set: 5th set lasted 8 hours 11 minutes
3) Most games in a set: 138 in the 5th
4) Most games in a match: 183
5) Most aces in a match by one player: Isner, 112
6) Total aces in a match: 215 total

This went down as the most epic tennis match ever played, and its a feat that will probably never ever be duplicated. What was absolutely stunning was the sheer quality of play throughout the 11 hours. There were 510 winners and 215 total aces, with only 122 unforced errors. The human will power shown during the entire game, and the emotions display at the completion of the game, coupled with the tremendous fan support, were all a testament to the beauty of sports.

The San Jose Sharks Offseason

After the Sharks were eliminated from the playoffs last year, talk immediately went to who the Sharks were going to sign: either Patrick Marleau or Evgeni Nabokov, two of the longest tenured Sharks and two of the fan favorites. Both player’s contracts were up, and the Sharks only had enough salary cap space to sign one of these players. Sign Marleau, lose Nabokov. Sign Nabokov, lose Marleau. It was a heated debate, with fans taking sides of one player or the other.

I took the side of Patrick Marleau, who I think is the heart and sole of this Sharks team, and someone who I wish retires as a Shark. Even throughout all the disappointments of these past couple seasons, Marleau has been the one who has always fought hard for his team.

With regards to Nabokov, he’s one of the great goaltenders of this league, but has never been able to perform well in the playoffs. Come playoff time, you need a goalie who will “steal” games and series for you, and Nabokov never came through for the Sharks. He never got “hot”. This past playoffs, Nabokov played his best ever, yet at the same time, he still let in a lot of soft goals that he should have stopped. What did this show me? Even when Nabokov plays his best, it’s really not good enough to win.

In the end, Nabokov was the one who was let go. Nabokov will be missed, as he was one of the fan’s favorite players. I wish him the best of luck.

Today, Patrick Marleau was signed to a 4 year contract, worth $6.9 million/season. This deal makes me love Marleau even more. Why? Marleau was the premier Center on the market this year, and could have attracted top money from numerous teams. While his $6.9 million/season is a lot, there are 20+ players who make more than him. He deserves to be one of the top paid players in the league, but he gave the Sharks a “hometown” discount to stay with the team.

NBA Free Agency Frenzy

And the buildup to the biggest summer in NBA history has begun, with two of the biggest players making key moves.

First, the Miami Heat traded Daequan Cook and an 18th pick to Oklahoma City for the 32nd pick in the round.
Then, the Chicago Bulls traded Kirk Hinrich and the 17th pick to the Wizards for players/picks to be announced.

While these trades might seem lopsided or unfair, they were done for one purpose only: to free up cap space to try to lure top players come July 1st. By trading away Cook and their 18th pick (who’s value is around $3 million), the Miami Heat has enough salary cap room to sign 3 max-contract players, their own Dwayne Wade and possibly two others, like Chris Bosh or Amare Stoudemire.

By getting rid of Hinrich’s $9 million contract, the Bulls freed enough cap room to sign 2 maximum-salary players from this years market, supposedly rumored to be Lebron James and Chris Bosh.

After all these deals, here’s an analyst’s projection of summer cap space.

1. New York Knicks – $34.2 million
2. Chicago Bulls – $29.1 million
3. New Jersey Nets – $27.2 million
4. Miami Heat – $26.2 million

Come July, it’ll be very interesting to see how things fall.

On a side note, The Warriors made a similar trade where they traded away Corey Maggette to Milwaukee for Charlie Bell and Dan Gadzuric. This wasn’t a trade for player quality in mind. Rather, this again was a salary dump trade. Maggette still has 3 years and $31 million on his contract, which the Bucks were willing to pick up since they’ll most likely lose John Salmons to free agency this year. Gadzuric only has $7.2 million in his last year on his contract, while Bell has $8 million over two years. By getting rid of Maggette’s insane contract, and losing Gadzuric’s contract after next season, the Warriors will too have a little cap space to try to get a quality free agent this summer.

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