Showing posts with label liberty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label liberty. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Dream Defeat Liberty in Atlanta; Four Game Losing Streak Ends




Iziane's levitating act! "Watch me make this ball disappear!"

(As usual, Craig Cappy provides a great gallery of pictures right here from SportsPageMagazine.com. Click and see the pics!)

The box score is here.

Pierce W. Huff tells the story for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Some basic stuff about the Tulsa game soon.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

10/2010 - Liberty 91, Dream 79: Doghouses and their Construction



The Dream came up short in New York, 91-79. Well, come up short is probably the wrong word as the Dream never led at any time during that game. After winning six straight to start the season, the Dream have lost three of their last four. For some fans, that means that its time for panic to set in. The Dream play again at home on Sunday against the Silver Stars on a game scheduled for NBA-TV and no one knows if they should look forward to it with expectation or dread.

Once again, WNBA Live Access delivered a dud. I might try to catch this game if it's archived, but it seems that me (and my computers) and Live Access are simply never going to get along. I watched a short of a halting version of the game for the first half before frustration set in. Most of the time, I could hear the audio, but the New York announcer got so many elementary facts wrong - who knew that Alison Bales was a rookie? - and even had trouble providing an accurate score. It was just damned frustrating, although I did see Leilani Mitchell - all 5-5 of her, soaking wet - block a shot from Shalee Lehning. (Hint: It's not a good idea to begin your shot from somewhere below your knees.) In 76 career games Mitchell only has six blocked shots.

So let's look at the box score and see if we can learn anything:

Box score quarters: The Liberty won the first three quarters of the game. Unlike the previous matchup, the Liberty avoided a Dream comeback in the second half. The Dream got close in the third quarter, when an Angel McCoughtry layup with 6:56 left closed the gap to 46-44. The only quarter the Dream won was the fourth, and by that time the Liberty's lead was in double-digits.

Dean Oliver's Four Factors

Field goal percentage: The Liberty were the better shooters - they hit 47.1 percent of their attempted shots (32-for-68) compared to the Dream's 44.0 percent (33-for-75). But if the Dream were a better rebounding team, then why didn't they make up the 2.9 percent gap?

The answer is that the Liberty were far more effective with the 3-pointer than the Dream were. Atlanta was 2-for-13 from 3-point land. The effective field goal percentage for Atlanta was 45.3 percent. However, the Liberty went 9-for-20 from 3-point range. Leilani Mitchell hit all three of her 3-point attempts. So did Sidney Spencer. New York's effective field goal percentage was 56.3 percent, so if you're looking for a key to New York's victory, it was that their long-range bombing knocked us off the court.

Turnovers: New York 14, Atlanta 15. However, Atlanta had two more team possessions than New York, so New York's turnover percentage is just a sliver higher.

Offensive rebound percentage: Atlanta whipped up on the Liberty on the glass, with a 34.1 percent-15.6 percent advantage in offensive rebounding. Lyttle and de Souza both had double-doubles, but without scoring from everyone else it was wasted.

Free throws: A clear advantage to New York. New York was the best free throw shooting team in the W coming into this game, and Atlanta was the worst. The results tell the story:

Atlanta: 11-for-21, 52.4 percent
New York: 18-for-19, 94.7 percent

In a high-fouling game - the Dream had 21 personal fouls, the Liberty had 19 - every trip to the free throw line was another nail in Atlanta's coffin on both sides of the court.

And now, let's look at the individual players.

Erika de Souza: She had 21 points and 10 rebounds overall, shooting 9-for-13. However, she had four personal fouls and went 3-for-8 at the free throw line. Ugh. Even so, Erika's shooting accuracy made it a good game for her and she was the Dreamer of the Game.

Sancho Lyttle: 15 points, 14 rebounds. And three steals! However, she had four personal fouls and three turnovers. As it turned out, Lyttle only played 28 minutes and De Souza played 30. Without watching the game, I assume that fouls kept them on the bench more than they should have been. Still, good game for Lyttle as well.

Angel McCoughtry: 12 points, 3 rebounds, 3 assists. McCoughtry only played 19 1/2 minutes of the game.

Given the Chicago-Atlanta game where the Dream fell by double-digits because McCoughtry ended up in Coach Meadors's doghouse. McCoughtry's 19 minutes for the game was the fewest minutes McCoughtry has played in a game since the preseason. This has led some fans to ask if McCoughtry has ended up back in the doghouse. Yes, McCoughtry's 6-for-12 shooting was more than decent but her -14 in raw plus/minus meant that the team slid backwards when she was on the court. She had three dimes, so I can't believe it was a case of selfishness.

We do know that McCoughtry ended up in the doghouse last year, if only briefly. Frankly, it's just too damned early in the seson to make catastrophic predictions, and professional athletes are great at looking ahead and not looking back.

Kelly Miller: 0-for-4, including 0-for-2 from the 3-point line. However, Kelly had six assists in the game. Whether Kelly Miller was being asked to perform Lehning's duties of push and get out of the way, I don't know. Besides, four shots taken are sometimes more than Lehning takes in a game.

Armintie Price: 4 points, 5 rebounds. Played 16 minutes, but she had five personal fouls.

Yelena Leuchanka: We're now getting into the realm of mediocre play. Four points, and she hit both of her shots. However, two personal fouls and a turnover in only 12 minutes played. Leuchanka had only two rebounds. One plus: Leuchanka's raw plus/minus was +0 in her 12 minutes on the court - her presence there neither hurt nor helped the team.

Iziane Castro Marques: Iziane should have done better at wiping the popcorn grease from her hands. Yes, her 17 points were second overall for the Dream. However, five of those points came from free throws. Outside of that, she was 5-for-15 from the floor and 2-for-7 from three point range. It was another night of Iziane taking crazy shots that didn't go in.

Alison Bales: Two points. 2-for-4 from the line in 10 minutes played. Two rebounds. -1 in raw plus/minus. Meh.

Coco Miller: The other Miller had 4 points in 2-for-4 shooting, only playing eight minutes.

Shalee Lehning: Okay, now we've reached the "bad game level". In the 14 1/2 minutes that Lehning played, she took two shots, and missed both of them. She had only one assist. Leilani Mitchell blocked one of her shots. She was pretty much negated when she was on the court. The last time Lehning played this poorly in 2010 it was when the Seattle Storm took her to school.

Lehning has to move her game a step up to stay in the WNBA. It didn't happen during this game.

Brittainey Raven: You can't blame Raven - at least she tried. Played 2 1/2 minutes, took a shot and missed it. When you're only getting a handful of minutes a game, you gotta make those shots.

As a result, both Shalee Lehning and Brittainey Raven both were both Bad Dreams - and Lehning's hogging up most of the bed space.

Okay. File it and forget it. The San Antonio Silver Stars come to Atlanta on Sunday. Let's be there to cheer on the Dream and sweep the Silver Stars for the season.

Dream Loses 91-79 Against Liberty on the Road



The Liberty were leading from the beginning and the Dream were never really in it. Here's the writeup from the New York Daily News.

Here's Newsday's take.

Take from our pals in the Associated Press.

The New York Post also reports here.

One from our pals at Swish Appeal:

As an autograph collector, Atlanta is quickly becoming one of my favorite teams to deal with. They seem to actually like people. Again, everyone on the team was willing to stop and sign, which means that we are now the proud owners of a t-shirt signed by, among many other people, the entire roster of the Dream. That kind of behavior is good for the league. Plus, you get the added hilarity of Iziane Castro Marques noshing on popcorn and hurriedly wiping her fingers off on her shooting shirt between signatures and apologies.

And from SportsPageMagazine.com:

“As a leader of the team, we have players who look up to me and expect a lot, but at the same time it shouldn’t be about that,” Pondexter said. “We need players to get into their own and look to be aggressive offensively, because it’s not about me, it’s about the team.”

It looks like we had a lot of press for this game. It's a pity that it ended up with a Dream loss. After a 6-0 start the Dream have lost three of their last four.

The Dream got as close to two points in the third quarter, 46-44, but that would be as close as they got. They shot 52 percent at the free throw line - 11 for 21.

Cappie Pondexter had another great game with 25 points. Leilani Mitchell had 11 points.

More later.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Atlanta vs. New York, Friday June 11



Who: The Atlanta Dream (7-2) take on the New York Liberty (3-4) in an Eastern Conference Game.

The Dream are led by Angel McCoughtry, who is scoring 21.6 points per game. Sancho Lyttle (14.3 ppg/10.0 rpg) is an All-Star post, and Iziane Castro Marques (14.9 ppg) will be playing on the Brazilian national team at the end of the season with Erika de Souza (11.8 ppg/9.8 rpg). Cappie Pondexter, a new acquisition by New York, leads the Liberty both in scoring (19.7 ppg) and assists (5.4 apg).

What: The second of four regular season games against the New York Liberty. On May 23rd, the Liberty lost at home 86-77 to the visiting Dream which was Atlanta's first ever win at Madison Square Garden.

Where: Madison Square Garden in New York City.

When: Tipoff is at at 7:30 pm Eastern time, Friday, June 11. The game will be available on WNBA Live Access.

Why: Once again, it's a battle between Atlanta at the top of the conference and the Eastern Conference's bottom-dweller. The last time that happened this year, it ended poorly for the Dream. The Dream ended the season last year 1-3 against the Liberty, but now they've won two straight against New York and have the conference's best road record at 5-1. The Dream have also had six days off.

Oddly enough, the last time the two teams played Cappie Pondexter had an above-average game, scoring 21 points in the loss. The Liberty won the first half of the game but the Dream won both quarters of the second half. Iziane Castro Marques caught on fire, scoring nine of her 13 points in the last six minutes of the game. Furthermore, the Liberty were flattened on the boards, outrebounded 38-25 over the course of the game. The Liberty are the best free-throw shooting team in the WNBA at 83 percent and the Dream are dead last at 66 percent but unless the Dream make a lot of fouls it won't help the Libs.

Atlanta is favored only by two points at covers.com. This might be a very interesting game if your computer will cooperate.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Linkfest 2010




Planting the seeds of victory?

All kinds of links to talk about.

First, the picture above of Iziane Castro Marques gardening comes from the Atlanta Dream Facebook page. Click the link and catch some pics of the Dream helping out the Atlanta community.

Next, the battle for the MVP might have taken place Tuesday night and the WNBA agrees. Angel McCoughtry and Lauren Jackson were just named Chasing the Title has an interesting post about the value of the various lineups. The most effective lineup during Seattle's game was that of K. Miller-Price-McCoughtry-Leuchanka-Bales. One of those names might spread terror to an opposing team, but probably not more than one.

Q McCall at Swish Appeal finds out why Marynell Meadors cut their first round draft pick in 2010, Chanel Mokango, before the season started:

I think her chances are really good in this league. I think she needs to get some experience and the only reason I cut her is because Allison Bales beat her out. But it was simply because she did not have any experience and she’s only been playing since she was 15 so she’s very young in her game but she’s gonna be pretty good.

Jayda Evans at the Seattle Times has a game thread of Storm-Dream.

Alexis Hornbuckle of the Tulsa Shock was suspended for two games for a DUI that took place last year in Detroit. How come it took so long for anyone to find out?

A brand new jersey sponsorship: the New York Liberty jerseys will be sponsored by the Foxwoods Resort Casino...a casino in Connecticut.

Each of the above links deserves a full post, but neither will get one, at least not right now.

T. Fitz Johnson of the Atlanta Beat and Kathy Betty of the Atlanta Dream form an ownership brain trust.


Finally, Jonathan Landrum Jr. of the Associated Press writes about the Dream's change from chumps to champs. Check it out.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Vacation is Over




Angel McCoughtry surveys her world.

Every molecule of my body aches. But I'm back.

I didn't get a chance to see Atlanta's victory over the New York Liberty at Madison Square Garden. Rebecca saw the game, however, and her report is here. Tara Polen over at SportsPageMagazine.com took a lot of pictures, all of which are right here.

Did I say every molecule of my body aches? Yes, I'm did. Have a few things to take care of, but regular (??) posting should resume.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

PER and the Triple Trade


The biggest thing in WNBA news is a three-team trade centered around the Phoenix Mercury's Cappie Pondexter. With Phoenix struggling with cap space, they send Pondexter and Kelly Mazzante to the New York Liberty. The Libs send Shameka Christon and Cathrine Kraayeveld to the Chicago Sky, and the Sky's Candice Dupree finds herself in a Mercury uniform.

I decided to look at the weighted Player Efficiency Ratings (PER) of all parties involved in the trade. The parenthesis indicate the minutes played by the given player - the resulting career PER is weighted by minutes.

Weighted Career PER

Dupree: 19.85
Pondexter/Mazzante: 21.63 (4110)/12.24(2852) : 17.78
Christon/Kraayeveld: 15.19 (5382)/13.24(3915) : 14.37

It look like at least in the short term, the winners are going to be the New York Liberty. If they can figure out a way to not play Kelly Mazzante - the weakest player involved in the trade - it's an even bigger win, but I suspect that the Libs need all the players they can get. Pondexter is entering the peak years of her career and as they say, "Pondexter can move product" - she's popular and fun. New York seems to have an affinity for players that have names that others find hard to spell, but I think that Pondexter is less likely to be misspelled than Cathrine Kraayeveld.

In the long term, the winner might be the Phoenix Mercury. Dupree isn't as good as Pondexter, but she's two years younger and there's more upside. Dupree is already a three-time All-Star and playing for a WNBA champion can't hurt her pedigree.

I suspect the losers are going to be the Chicago Sky. They lose their franchise player and Christon is two years away from the red light going off in her palm. However, Christon's last two years have been better than the previous years. Kraayeveld will just be glad to play.

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Anne Donovan to Seton Hall; Libs Screwed (Again)?



According to the good people at RebKell, it looks like Anne Donovan - the head coach of the New York Liberty after Pat Coyle was fired in mid-season - is going to take the job at Seton Hall University. It would be her first college coaching job.

From NorthJersey.com:

Seton Hall went 9-21 overall and 1-15 in the Big East this past season, the worst of (Phyllis) Mangina’s tenure.

Fan comments on RebKell sum it up:

If Seton Hall- a team that laid SUCH an egg against UConn that Geno damn near called out the administration for negligence, lost to Morgan State, got bitchslapped by Colorado, and was absolutely shredded by one of its alumnae- is a better gig than the Liberty, then what does that say about the Liberty?

Coaching in college is 100 times harder then the W!
You don't leave your W job, which is pretty damn well paid, for a job with a pathetic program that will take you 80-120 hours a week, every week, for the next I don't know how many years, for a college job even if it pays more unless you really hate where you are!


The Liberty are a franchise in crisis. I suppose the management is happy with being the Chicago Cubs of the WNBA. The season ticket holders, however, might have another opition.

UPDATE: It might be Patty Coyle instead of Anne Donovan:

Seton Hall, which accepted the resignation of Phyllis Mangina shortly after the Big East tournament, is said to be seriously considering former New York Liberty coach Pat Coyle....

It wouldn't be the first time a dead tree sports reporter didn't know anything about the WNBA and got the most elementary facts wrong.

UPDATE II: It's Donovan going to Seton Hall. She will be going after the 2010 Liberty season. (Link is here.)

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Detroit Loses in Minnesota, Dream Get Closer to Second Place



Detroit's 75-72 loss against the Lynx tonight moves Atlanta closer to a second place finish and a home advantage during the first round of the playoffs. Atlanta needs to root for the New York Liberty tomorrow night and hope that the Liberty beat Detroit at the Palace at Auburn Hills.

Why? If the Liberty win tomorrow night, then none of the teams behind Atlanta can finish with more than 17 wins. Atlanta already has 17 wins, and there are 34 total games in a WNBA season. This means that - given a Detroit loss - Atlanta could clinch second place with either a win on Friday in Atlanta or on Saturday in Washington. This means that in the Eastern Conference semifinals, Atlanta would play the first game on the road...but the next two in Atlanta.

Let's go! L...I...B...E....

Monday, August 3, 2009

20/2009 - Dream 89, Liberty 83



And now...time to look at the post-mortem of Saturday night's win. We start with Dean Oliver's Four Factors:

Field goal shooting: The Dream shot 45.9 percent compared to 40.8 percent for the Liberty. However, we have to keep two things in mind. First, the Liberty had a bad shooting first quarter. Second....

...you have to consider effective field goal percentage. The Liberty went 5-for-15 from 3-point range; the Dream were only 1-for-9. The Liberty move up to 44.3 percent in effective field goal percentage and the Dream's effective FG percentage is 46.6 percent. The Dream's advantage doesn't look as strong.

Turnovers: The Dream had 14 turnovers. This Dream's average in turnovers - including this game - was 18.20. This was a very good game for the Dream.

For the Liberty, this was a different story: the Liberty average 16.61 turnovers, putting them at almost 10 turnovers over their average. The Dream's defense just killed them. However, 26 turnovers is no where close to the record - in 1997, there were three teams that year that turned the ball over 33 times in a game.

Offensive rebounds: One of the talking points is that this is one of the games where the Dream were out-rebounded by an opponent. New York had 17 offensive rebounds, compared to 13 from the Atlanta Dream. Offensive rebound percentage for New York Liberty was 42.5 percent compared to 30.2 percent for the Dream. The Dream were dominated....

...but remember that four of those offensive rebounds came in the last 30 seconds for the Liberty. If you didn't count those rebounds, New York's offensive rebound percentage would fall to 33.3 percent. Rebounding wasn't that decisive a factor for the Liberty.

Free throw visits: The Liberty visited the line 27 times and the Dream visited the line 33 times. However, each side only hit 20 of their free throws - a 74 percent accuracy rate for the Liberty...and a 61 percent accuracy rate for the Dream. This is the second poor free-throw shooting game in a row for the Dream. Yep, the Dream definitely need to spend some extra time on free throws.

Let's look at the Liberty:

Shameka Christon: 23 points and 8 rebounds. However, 12 of those points were scored at the free throw line (she was 12-for-13) and she was 5-for-16 in shooting, with a horrible 1-for-7 in 3-point accuracy.
Janel McCarville: 14 points, 6 rebounds and 6 assists. 6-for-16 shooting.
Loree Moore: 14 points, 7 rebounds and 5 assists. Moore was shooting 6-for-8.
Essence Carson: 12 points on 5-for-14 shooting. 8 rebounds, but she got her pockets picked by Angel McCoughtry.
The New York Bench: Only 14 points.

And now...we look at the Dream.

Angel McCoughtry: Last game, I said that McCoughtry didn't do as well as Lyttle. This game...there was no contest. She had 16 points and 7 steals, and it was her performance in the late third and early fourth quarter that helped the Dream get it very first win against New York. McCoughtry was definitely the Dreamer of the Game.

Chamique Holdsclaw: The Claw was shooting 50 percent - 8 for 16 - and had 7 rebounds. Holdsclaw says that she's no longer trying to get a double-double every night like when she was a rookie, but she came close. Unfortunately, she also had five personal fouls.

Shalee Lehning: She took three shots, and this time - she made all of them. She sort of stumbled around in the first half, but she had 3 assists. You know, this might have been Lehning's best game of the year.

Iziane Castro Marques: 16 points and 4 rebounds with 7-for-17 shooting - but those me-against-the-entire-team drives from Castro Marques have got to stop.

Sancho Lyttle: 7 points and 7 rebounds. However, Lyttle fouled out. I think the last time anyone fouled out for the Dream was Angel McCoughtry, and that was in the beginning of the season.

Coco Miller: 7 points. She also had 3-for-3 shooting like Lehning. She also took a nasty elbow to the ear at the end of the first half. Coco is tough.

Jennifer Lacy: 6 points, but her shooting wasn't as great - only 2-for-6.

Erika de Souza: 10 points, and 6 rebounds. But de Souza has been a liability at the free throw line over the last two games - on Saturday, she was 4-for-8.

Michelle Snow: Snow went 0-for-4. Zero points. However, she picked up 5 rebounds, but suffered the embarrassment of having three shots blocks.

Tamera Young: Buried under Marynell Meadors's doghouse. Did not appear in the game.

Ivory Latta: 0-for-3. Missed three free throws. Had three assists, but turned the ball over three times. Yep, it was a bad game for Ivory, and I'm going to have to dust off the demerit and give her the Still Snoozin' award. I suspect, however, that Ivory is only taking a catnap. She'll be back for San Antonio.

20/2009 - Dream 89, Liberty 83




The All American Red Heads are honored at halftime.

"You like me! You really like me!" Sally Field said this in 1985 when she won a Best Actress Oscar. And I think I heard Dream fans saying this to the basketball deities when we beat the Liberty on Saturday night, our first win in seven attempts against the Libs.

My comments follow below. Long, laborious, etc., but they follow:

1) I think this is the first time I actually saw an away coach working with the players in warmup. Anne Donovan, now the new head coach of the Liberty, was working with the players before the game. Carol Ross continues to work with the Dream players before the game.

I think that Erika de Souza must have read that post about the fact that she can't hit midrange jumpers. That was the shot she was working on with Carol Ross. Erika always seems interested in improving all facets of her game.

Ross's drills were sort of specific drills, while Donovan didn't seem to be directing the players to do anything specific - but at least Donovan was out there.

2) One again, we had the "upside down" Dream logo, where the logo faces the benches. NBA TV was broadcasting last night's game and the logo will always look like that for TV games.

3) I saw two red-haired kids wearing T-shirts that read, "I Attended the Red Head Reunion" - July 2007. This should have given fans a hint of what they might see at halftime.

4) Donovan worked with her players, and then she sat down with Marynell Meadors for the longest time. The two must have talked for about fifteen minutes or so, leading one to wonder what coaches talk about when they have informal chats.

Donovan: Well, Coyle is gone, and Blaze is next, Marynell. Looks like I'll be GM and head coach too.
Meadors: It's a sweet deal when you can get it.

5) Tamera Young might not be playing regularly, but she seems to be in good spirits. She tried a cartwheel on the court. I don't think she has the flexibility for it; you have to be a gymnast to do crap like that.

6) It was great to see the upper boxes being used again. Hmm...I wonder if Ron Terwilliger and family were at the game last night?

7) Performing pre-game was the New Macedonia Baptist Church Step Team. It's a pity that they let these guys start at 6:30 or so, because Atlanta fans are notoriously late in arriving at games. As a result, they performed in front of a virtually empty (at the time) arena.

I'm sure they did a good job, but I'm not sure. Every step performance seems pretty much like the same thing to me - synchronized hand clapping. I'm just not watched it enough to know a good performance from a bad one.

8) One of the referees was Michael Price. Price, in addition to being a referee, is a professional comedian. Furthermore, he combines both the job of WNBA referee and comedian at the same time. He's not that funny, though - he's the Carrot Top of WNBA referees.

9) New Macedonia represented again with their Youth Praise choir, which got to perform the National Anthem. They did a good job, and what I really liked about their Anthem performance was when they got to "...and the rockets' red glare" part instead of trying to crack the upper octaves they simply brought in other singers to sing at a higher pitch.

It's the rockets' red glare that destroys a lot of solo Anthem performances. They start too high and then they have to jump up and can't reach those high notes.

10) New York starters: Moore, Carson, Jackson, Christon, and McCarville.
Atlanta starters: Lehning, Castro Marques, Holdsclaw, Lyttle, and de Souza

10a) I learned that Christon's last name is actually pronounced "Christian", as in "one who practices Christianity".
10b) It looks like that Ivory Latta is going to perpetually come off the bench.

11) They brought out the "runway lights" and lowered the house lights for the intros. Angel McCoughtry does this weird thing where she falls on the floor. I have no idea what that's about.

12) The game started with "clock FAIL". The whistle blew immediately after the jump ball and when everyone looked up at the Jumbotron the clock read 10:00. The clock was reset to 9:57. Play resumed.

13) Atlanta had problems immediately hanging on to the ball. Lehning didn't throw the ball high enough and threw it straight into Loree Moore's hands for the first Atlanta turnover.

14) However, the Libs started the game 1-for-5 and Atlanta took a 9-8 lead. Atlanta was really hustling in the first quarter, but their timing was way off. They just weren't in sync the way they were at the Phoenix game. This gave the Liberty a chance to hang in the game.

Example: Chamique Holdsclaw tries a 21 footer that ends up an airball, which ends up in New York's hands. Carson gets the rebound, and Moore uncorks a 3-pointer to put New York up for the first time in the game, 15-13.

15) One of the games that was up was "guess the player from their childhood pictures". A young girl with awful-looking bangs was the first quarter and I heard mutters of "Coco Miller". Nope. That was Shalee Lehning. The next two pics were of Tamera Young and Chamique Holdsclaw, and the audience was right on the money.

16) Atlanta, however, remained determined to beat the Liberty with "one shot" as Meadors put it after the game. Holdsclaw tried to find someone in the interior and the ball sailed over the heads of everyone gathered under the Atlanta basket and out of bounds.

By now, they put in Angel McCoughtry who started her game with a 3-pointer. Cathrine Kraayeveld answered with the 3-pointer on the other end.

17) I saw an amazing sight under the Dream basket. Michellee Snow tried a lay-up which was rejected by Ashley Battle. Then Snow got her own rebound, tried again and was rejected again, this time by Janel McCarville.

Latta and Kraayeveld swapped airballs at the end of the first quarter. The game was tied 20-20.

18) In the second, New York got off to the better start and took the lead. Leilani Mitchell was in for the Liberty and Lehning couldn't handle her defensively. Mitchell would score five second-quarter points with Lehning as her defender and New York led 30-26 at one time.

How bad was it for the Dream? We blew the in-bounds with a 5-second violation. We were definitely tense out there.

19) The Jumbotron showed a lot of fans holding signs. I like that; it individualizes the game.

One fan had a sign that read, "St. Louis Loves the Dream". We appreciate the patronage of St. Louis, definitely. Another fan had a sign that read, "Marry Me Ivory Latta". Good luck on that, buddy.

20) McCoughtry was having uncharacteristic trouble, with an overthrow and an airball. Sancho Lyttle tried a lay-up and McCarville blocked her. (McCarville was on her way to an amazing four-block night.) New York went on an 8-0 run for a 38-31 lead, their largest in the game. New York's passing game was working, McCarville was setting great screens and it seemed that the Liberty could do no wrong.

21) However, the night was not done with amazing sights - remember, Michael Price was there to treat the NBA TV viewing audience to hilarity. He unloaded a double technical foul on Shameka Christon and Coco Miller.

For new fans, a technical foul is a major violation. If you get two of those, you're out of the game. My understanding is that Shameka Christon and Jennifer Lacy were mixing it up a little, but nothing so bad as to call a technical. So Eagle Eyes decides to call the T on Miller, who is behind Christon. I don't think Coco Miller has gotten a technical foul since grade school, if ever.

New York fans have complained that the Dream had been beating up Christon all night. Hey, if there was a player on the other team who dropped 30 plus points on you the previous games, you might not want to treat that player with kid gloves. Just sayin'.

22) Maybe it was Price's humor, but the Dream snapped out of it and went on a mini 6-0 run to close back within one, 38-37. Atlanta's defense began to tighten up. McCoughtry was making good passes and we were looking a lot sharper. The half ended with the Liberty up by one, 40-39.

23) Interesting halftime stats: we were being outshot (48.5 percent to 39.5 percent) and were losing the overall battle in rebounds (20-19) but had 8 offensive rebounds to New York's 5. The Liberty had 11 turnovers, and the Dream just had five.

24) Halftime. We finally got a chance to see the All American Red Heads. The clip which I've posted on the Pleasant Dreams blog was shown in its entirety, there was much applause, and the Red Heads took center court for individual applauce. One of the Red Heads (Hart?) was wearing her Red Heads game jersey.

Afterwards, the Dream honored the winners of the tournament that had been held at Philips Arena. I would also honor those winners in this blog, but unfortunately, I had to go to the bathroom.

25) It seemed that the Dream's quest in finding their rhythm would be an unending one. Iziane Castro Marques would miss a shot despite having Erika de Souza throw a nice screen for her. The Star of Brazil's next shot would be an airball - even Iziane had caught airball fever. Janel McCarville found her way outside the Dream defense and hit a 17 footer to put the game up 48-45 for the Liberty.

26) That was okay. We had the comedy of Michael Price to keep us in stitches. Chamique Holdsclaw was charged for something called an "interrupted dribble" and the ball was turned over to New York.

Fans around me asked themselves "what is an interrupted dribble?" One hypothesized that it was a carry. Another said that it was probably in the back of the rulebook under the "etc." section. We all concluded that "interrupted dribble" was the call when you wanted to establish your importance as a referee - hey, who is going to prove that the dribble wasn't interrupted?

27) 5:45 in, things looked dim for the Dream. Atlanta had gone over the limit in fouls. The Liberty had a seven point lead, 54-47.

So, to distract the crowd, the Dream played the famous "iPod Karaoke" game. Two Dream players - Jennifer Lacy and Tamera Young - sang a song, or tried to, and some fan was asked to answer what the song was.

The song was Soulja Boy Tell 'Em's "Turn My Swag On". It was a give-away, as the song appears to be Tamera Young's favorite song.

27b) Speaking of Tamera Young - iPod Karaoke would be her only appearance in the game.

28) At 2:59, Erika de Souza was charged with an offensive foul - he third - and with the Liberty up 57-55, the crowd began letting their displeasure known with the state of refereeing in this matchup.

29) And then - it all came together.

Suddenly, the defensive switch was switched to full throttle, and the Dream began playing as complete a defensive game as you can imagine, sparked by Angel McCoughtry who had two steals. McCoughtry scored a lay-up with 44 seconds left in the third quarter to finally give the Dream back the lead, 61-59. With 22 seconds left, Erika de Souza would hit one of two free throws, and with 0.9 seconds left, McCoughtry would steal the ball from Ashley Battle to preserve a 62-61 lead for the Dream at the end of the third quarter.

30) The Liberty had turned the ball over 8 times in the third quarter for 10 points. Atlanta, however, wasn't going to let New York off the mat, not just yet.

Literally - in the space of one minute of play - Angel McCoughtry stole the ball four times from Liberty players. Three times, the victim was poor Essence Carson.

Those four steals accounted for six Dream points. By the end of Angel Mccoughtry's Magic Minute, the Dream had a 74-64 lead over the Liberty and the crowd was in ecstacy.

31) Up 74-68, Marynell Meadors made an inexplicable substitution - Chamique Holdsclaw, who was doing really well, was substituted for Coco Miller. That one left us scratching our heads.

Miller, however, would score the next Dream basket and Sancho Lyttle - who had four personal fouls - scored a couple of free throws to give the Dream a 79-68 lead with 4:54 left.

32) New York, however, was determined to fight their way out of that hole. They wanted that season sweep, and they wanted it bad. They went on a 6-0 run to close the game to 79-74 with 3:22 left. During the run, Lyttle picked up her fifth personal foul.

One of the most egregious sins - a 3-point attempt by Iziane Castro Marques with three New York defenders in front of her and no Dream player under the basket.

33) With 2:25 again, Michael Price came out for his final bow of the night. After some colliding under the New York basket, Sancho Lyttle stepped over a fallen New York player. It was what you call a "slow step over" - not trying to step on her, but just trying to get out of the fallen player's way to get to the other end of the floor.

Price hit Lyttle with her sixth personal foul. Lyttle was out of the game. (Price will be at the Hah Hah Hut when he's not refereeing WNBA games. Two-drink minimum.)

34) The Dream, however, were not to be denied. McCoughtry's lay up with 1:31 to go put the score 86-76. However, Shameka Christon rolled off five straight points - basket + free throw + basket. With slightly under a minute, the score was 86-81 Atlanta. Twenty seconds later, Christon would drive to the basket and the Liberty cut Atlanta's lead to two possessions, 87-83 with 38.5 seconds to go.

35) New York wanted the ball back, and fouled McCoughtry on the in-bounds play. The Dream - which has been having trouble with its free throws recently - hit both shots to take an 89-83 lead.

36) Thirty-one seconds left. The Libery have the ball, and need to score.

You'd need to hit freeze-frame on your DVD to determine what happened next.

Christon attempts jump shot from 20 plus feet.
Misses.
Janel McCarville gets the rebound. She tries to hit the bucket from point blank range.
Misses.
Then, McCarville gets her own rebound. Once again, point blank range against a swarm of Dream bodies.
Misses.
McCarville rebounds it, sees that the Dream are in full control of the point, and passes it out to Christon on the perimeter.
Christon misses.
Loree Moore gets the rebound. She kicks it out to Essence Carson who is also on the perimeter.
Carson misses.

This time, Chamique Holdsclaw gets the rebound.

The clock has gone from 29.9 seconds to 0.9 seconds. There's nothing left to the game. The Claw hangs on, and the Dream have their first victory - every - against the Liberty.

The Liberty turned the ball over 26 times. The Dream defense and Angel McCoughtry were a major part of that. And that Dream defense in the final thirty seconds was nothing short of astonishing.

Great game. I don't know if I'll do a statistical post-mortem today, though. Maybe tomorrow.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

Dream Beat Liberty on Defense 89-83 on Saturday



In Julius Caesar, Marc Anthony said "Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant never taste of death but once."

Clearly, William Shakespeare was never an Atlanta Dream fan. In Atlanta, the valiant taste of death a thousand times...per game. But we saw it through and finally beat the Liberty for the very first time, 89-83.

More on this turn of events tomorrow. Celebrate the win.

All American Red Heads Honored at Tonight's Game

Another reason to go to tonight's game: the All American Red Heads, a barnstorming team from the days before organized professional women's basketball, will be honored at halftime.

Here is a clip of the Red Heads from their heyday. I think the Red Heads are too old to do stuff like this anymore, but here's a taste of the amazing skills they brought to the court from the late 30s to around 1980.

I've shown this clip before, but it's worth seeing again.



P. S.: The sad part is that the players might not get a chance to see this clip. While we watch this at halftime, the players will be with the coaches.

Friday, July 31, 2009

Atlanta vs. New York, Saturday August 1st



Who: The Atlanta Dream (9-10) take on the New York Liberty (6-11) in an Eastern Conference battle. (And not, not an Ashley Battle.)

The Dream have Chamique Holdsclaw (14.8 ppg) as well as All-Star Team members Sancho Lyttle (13.6 ppg) and Erika de Souza (10.9 ppg). Shameka Christon (18.2 ppg) and Janel McCarville (11.8 ppg) are the mainstays of the Liberty.

What: The final game this year against the New York Liberty. The Dream have lost at home 93-81, then on the road 71-69 and 89-86, all losses from this year. The Dream are 0-6 all time against the New Yorkers.

Where: Philips Arena, Atlanta GA

When: Tipoff is 7:00 pm Eastern on Saturday, August 1st. Arena opens one hour before tipoff. For everyone out there who wants to be on TV, this one will be shown on NBA-TV as well. Bring your signs.

Why: Well first, New York and Atlanta traditionally don't get along, so there should be a thematic battle right there - Arrogant Northerners vs. Ignorant Hillbillies. (I think that's the theme of every Mets/Braves game.) Atlanta sports teams hate New York, New York saves its ire for the other New England teams and views Atlanta as an imposition.

Furthermore, the last two matches against the Liberty were very close, coming down to the last minute of play. Cathrine Kraayeveld sank two free throws with 11.5 seconds left for the 71-69 loss and Shameka Christon had a 32-point career high when she sank two free throws with 4.9 seconds left in the second game that put it out of reach for the Powder Blues.

The Dream have never beaten the Liberty, and they know it. A little bird told me after the Phoenix game, there was only one thing written on the Dream's locker room whiteboard: "NY 0-3 LAST CHANCE!!!" Last chance until 2010, anyway....

...or on the rare chance that the Liberty make the post season. The Liberty are suffering, unexpectedly sitting in last place in the Eastern Conference after losing three straight games. They lost 78-75 to the Mystics last night at home last night and get rewarded by going two weeks on the road. They're 12th in the league in scoring and 12th in field goal percentage. If there was any time in the world to put a team on the ropes, this is it.

Unfortunately, the Liberty seem to wake up when they play the Dream. It's time to close the chapter on this bedtime story for good.

UPDATE: The Liberty are trying to beat us again. They just fired head coach Patty Coyle. You know, "best interests of the team", yadda yadda yadda. Surrrrrre. They did this with us in mind to get that "new coach" bounce. I just know it.

Monday, July 20, 2009

17/2009 - Liberty 89, Dream 86




Who wants it more?

Before I begin the write-up on the Dream-Liberty game, I want to go back in time to the Dream-Fever game a few days ago.

For awards in that game, I'd have to have given the Dreamer of the Game to Erika de Souza, and furthermore, I'd have to say that de Souza's performance was the best performance by a Dream player so far in 2009. Try to argue against it. 23 points. 14 rebounds, with 7 offensive rebounds. 10-for-15 shooting. Whenever Erika even got close to the basket, it seemed that she was hitting that wonderful bank shot of hers.

As for the Bad Dream, I was tempted to award it to "The Atlanta Dream Bench". There's nothing in the "rules" that says that the demerit can't be given to a group of people - and really, looking at the bench, there's not much difference between any of them.

Starters: 63 points
Bench: 16 points

To paraphrase Rebecca of the Game Notes of Doom blog, the Dream bench was made of FAILamantium. I don't think I've seen such a discrepancy between the starters and the bench in a long time (except for Lehning, who just played like a bench player). Basically, Castro Marques, Lehning, Lacy, Miller, Snow and Young were all pretty much the same exact amount of useless. For various reasons, Jennifer Lacy, Shalee Lehning and Coco Miller become the first ever shared winners of the Bad Dream award.

And now, on to yesterday's game. The announcer was Mike Crispino - wasn't he the announcer of the Dream/Fever game? I suspect he wanders the land with a hobo's stick and bindle, announcing games for a glass of water and a crust of bread. The Liberty started Loree Moore, Shameka Christon, Essence Carson, Cathrine Kraayeveld, and Janel McCarville. The Dream started Sancho Lyttle, Erika de Souza, Chamique Holdsclaw, Iziane Castro Marques and....

...Shalee Lehning, who had won a second straight start. There was also the addition of a hyphen to Izi's name - it has become "Castro-Marques", at least on her jersey. I'll have to contact the Dream organization to see if this is now the official spelling of Izi's name.

Anyway, the game started poorly from both sides - they looked horrible. The Dream started off 2-for-8 and home team New York started 1-for-8. Atlanta built a lead, but New York then had the lead, and then lost the lead again to Atlanta, adn then got the lead back. I don't think either team was more than six points away from the other. By the end of the first, the score was 18-16 in favor of New York.

There was some smart guard play from both sides. Lehning, about to be forced out of bounds, threw the ball off of Essence Carson's leg. Leilani Mitchell made a great ball save near the end of the first quarter. However, this wasn't a game whose defining characteristic would be great point guard play.

As Atlanta's fans watched the game on Live Access, we got to see the Liberty's regular dance team, the Torch Patrol. C. Vivian Stringer of Rutgers University stopped by to watch the game. New York fans hoped Stringer might provide Vaughn a few tips.

The Liberty started the second quarter hot - their first three field goals were all 3-pointers, two by Cathrine Kraayeveld. Face it, we can't defend the three. You know it, I know it, the league knows it. Sancho Lyttle had three fouls and that put Sancho on the bench. New York was starting to build up a lead.

This was the time that my WNBA Live Access faded out on me. I think it knew that it just didn't want me to see the second quarter. While Mike Crispino was talking about the play of "tuh-MEH-ra Young" - or the lack of it - the Liberty were building up steam. With Atlanta up 25-23, it didn't take long before the Libs were up by 10, 37-27.

It was getting hot out there. Michelle Snow lost the small amount of cool which the basketball deities provided her, and they never provided Snow much of it. Snow threw Shameka Christon to the floor, and all Snow got for her trouble was a flagrant foul #1. Then Izi decided that she wanted to jabber with Tiffany Jackson, I believe. Frustration was starting to show.

The only impression it must have given the Liberty was that we were a team in meltdown. New York would be the only team that would score in the second quarter after the altercation. They finished the quarter 44-29, up by 15. They had scored 21 points to Atlanta's 6 points after Atlanta was up 25-23.

How bad had things gotten? Shalee Lehning was leading the team in rebounding. When your point is leading in rebounds, you have a problem.

New York was simply shooting better than we were - about 41 percent to 34 percent, and we had no 3-point power. We were getting the offensive rebounds, but we kept sending the Liberty to the line. We had only been to the line four times - we hit each of our free throws - but New York had visited the line 14 times. Without our shooting power, this looked like it was going to be a disastrous game.

The halftime show wasn't helping setting our stomachs. For halftime, they brought three singers up to sing covers of songs. A girl named Ashley sung "Listen" by Beyonce fairly well. Nikki sang a cover of Seal singing "People Get Ready" with a lot of cracking in the high registers. And someone named Jenna sang...well, to be brutally honest, I don't know what she sang. It was incomprehensible and sounded like a banshee in a blender. (Jenna won the contest, but the audience might have been applauding the Worst Singer. New Yorkers like their fun.)

The third period started horribly. Izi picked up a technical just a few minutes in - jabbering at a referee? The Liberty was still in its high gear, and the Libs built up a 20-point lead, 57-37.

Most people would have shut off the Live Access or gone home if they were at MSG. It looked up until that point that the Dream had just -- well, there's no nice way of saying it. They quit. They were playing that "Ole" defense, where the matador waves his cape as the bull blows by him. The Dream were just waving their capes, thinking about the next game and where they were going to eat after this game.

And then...Chamique Holdsclaw must have told herself, "To hell with this. I'm not going to look into the mirror and say 'Claw, you just quit'. I don't care if we're eighty points behind, I'm not going to quit." And she didn't. She began getting the fouls and scoring the free throws. The Liberty went over the limit and Holdsclaw went to the line a few times. She moved up to around 16 points scored for the game. If there's such a thing as "intangibles", then Holdsclaw was proof of that, and the attitude was contagious.

The Deram began to wake up. They went on a 14-2 run. Then, Claw added a couple of more free throws. The score was now 59-55 and despite the fact that the Liberty would finish the quarter 10-for-22 on 3-pointers after 30 minutes, New York had clearly become complacent. They would score the 3-pointer and sit and admire their handiwork - only to look down the court and find Izi on the fastbreak, having already answered with two points of her own.

With Atlanta down 70-62, the Libs fouled Izi when she was attempting a 3-pointer. It hurt, because every time Atlanta went to the free throw stripe, they scored. Izi sank all three attempts and the score was 70-65. Mitchell tried to get a shot off at the buzzer, but no dice. The Dream had sank 19-for-19 from the free throw line, and were down by five going into the last quarter.

Both teams were now shooting equally well, except from 3-point range. The Dream were beginning to take the advantage in rebounds. At the free throw line, the Dream were pinpoint. The game was now winnable for Atlanta.

Dream fans watched the Timeless Torches perform - yet another New York Liberty dance team, their skills would be honored at the All-Star game. I wondered if the fat black guy who wears #20 was going to make an appearance on the Jumbotron again.

For the first couple of minutes in the fourth, scoring was hard to come by. Essence Carson managed to put New York up by seven, but Lyttle - one of three Dream players with four personal fouls - got a shot and a free throw (the Dream moved to 20-for-20) to close the score to 74-70. And then, Lyttle scored again.

74-72.

Then Latta went to the hoop, and missed it, but Erika de Souza got the rebound and banked it back in.

74-74. After a 20-point hole, the Dream had come back with 5:50 on the clock. New York wisely called a time out.

With tiny balls being fired from the ball cannon to keep the fans happy, the Liberty regained their composure. The question was whether or not they could hold off a Dream team that felt that New York was on the ropes. The Liberty would take tenative leads, but the Dream had their starters back on the court and simply answered by tying the score.

With 35 seconds left, Chamique Holdsclaw scored her 25th and 26th points of the game on a pair of free throws to tie the game at 84-84. The Dream had gone 24-for-24 at the free throw line, the third best free-throw performance in WNBA history.

New York called a time out. They knew Atlanta's vulnerability - the three. Shameka Christon was on to a career high day and 15 seconds later, she nailed a 3-pointer for her 30th point. The Liberty were up 87-84 with 20.7 seconds left on the clock.

At 15 seconds left, it was up to Holdsclaw to attempt a 3-pointer. Unfortunately, she missed it. Sancho Lyttle got the offensive rebound and scored, but this left Atlanta down 87-86 with 14.2 seconds left.

Atlanta would have to foul, but inexplicably, it took ten seconds for someone to foul one of the Liberty players. With 4.9 seconds left, Shameka Christon was sent to the line in a game where free throws played paramount importants.

She hit both of them. The Liberty were up 89-86, and the Dream had the ball with 4.9 seconds left. Chamique Holdsclaw would be the player to try to redeem herself by shooting the 3-pointer...but she missed.

Chamique was 0-for-3 in 3-pointers...with two of those shots taken with 15 seconds or less left in the game. If either or both of those had fallen, it would have been a brand new ball game. But it just wasn't meant to be. We were 2-for-14 on the night in 3-pointers. But even with 3-point shooting as a problem, the Dream simply decided that they weren't going to roll over and die. If there's any consolation in a loss, that would be it.

Dream Lose in New York 89-86 on Sunday




"All right. Knock it off."

We've ended up with another loss on our record, unable to get over the hill that is the New York Liberty in Madison Square Garden. The New Yawkers won 89-86 in a game that was very tight in the final quarter. If we plan on winning in New York, it might not be until 2010.

Due to the fact that work is heavy, it might be a while before we get a significant writeup - but one is coming. After that writeup, there will be a "mid-season postmortem" - the Dream have played seventeen games and the season is officially half-over.

A gallery of Atlanta-New York images can be found here.

Matt Ehalt of the New York Daily News writes here.

Doug Feinberg's Associated Press writeup is here.

The writeup of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution is...well, you tell me. Go here and see if you can find it.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

14/2009 - Liberty 71, Dream 69




At least someone out there is happy.

Okay. After many sleepless hours after last night's game, I gathered my moral strength and a few shots of bourbon and began to type the writeup for the game.

Let's not mince words - this was the worst performance of the year for the Dream. There's a lot of talk about how the Liberty played up to the Dream's level. I give props to the Liberty for the win, but the statement is simply not true - there was no level by the Dream to play up to. (Maybe both teams played half-way.)

If it wasn't for the performance of Iziane Castro Marques - of all people - it could have been a lot worse. Most of the Dream's value in that game came from her; little of it came from anybody else.

At the beginning of the game, I had a lot of trouble getting WNBA Live Access to work. This is the story of my life, but in the second quarter Live Access started coming in clear with no stops or blackouts whatsoever. The first quarter? A bit spotty. I knew, however, that Izi scored the first six points for the Dream, and that was not a good sign.

Izi's Best Performances of 2009

20 points in a Game 3 loss against the Sky
16 points and 4 steals in a Game 9 loss against the Sun
31 points in a Game 10 loss against the Lynx

I'm coining a new phrase: The Izi Effect. The Izi Effect is when a particular player has good performances that combine with a lack of effort or interest from everyone else. -all of that player's good games come during team losses.

While Liberty fans were playing some sort of bizarre on-court tic-tac-toe game in the first quarter, Atlanta was establishing a 6-point lead. The Dream were out-rebounding the Liberty 12-4, Janel McCarville was off to a horrible start and the Dream looked like they were in command. They led after the first quarter 24-16, holding the Liberty to just seven rebounds.

Atlanta was shooting 45.5 percent in the first quarter, combined with 29.4 percent from the Liberty. Teams that are ahead should be warned - do not become complacent. This is what is called a "statistical dip", where the team is just having atypically bad shooting for one quarter and should bounce back the next quarter. What I didn't suspect was that this was going to be par for the course for the Liberty in Game 14. The Liberty was just shooting terribly, and if we could keep up our shooting, we looked good.

We began to build up a lead, up to 30-19 in the second quarter. McCarville was still stinking up the joint, with zero points and nine turnovers. The New York Liberty dancers - not the Timeless Torches - were probably the only entertainment the Madison Square Garden's fans were going to get. With the lead 30-21, Meadors could finally put Latta in and give her some time to warm up.

Atlanta held on to a 10 point lead, when from the depths of the Liberty bench, Kia Vaughn suddenly remembered, "Hey! I'm a first round draft pick! I should act like one!" Maybe every other big woman in the league is terrified of the Lyttle-De Souza duo, but Kia wasn't. She scored six points - all within the span of a minute - and before we knew it, it was a game again at 35-31. Iziane Castro Marques would pick up a jump ball between Kia Vaughn and Erika de Souza - then take a jump shot, be fouled by Shameka Christon, and pick up one of two free throws as the Dream took a 36-31 lead into halftime.

We were still shooting well - 45.5 percent. The Liberty was still in the sub-20s. We had 26 rebounds and Sancho and Erika has six rebounds apiece. Janel McCarville was on some other planet somewhere, but not in Madison Square Garden.

My thoughts:

1) I've never quite been able to figure out Iziane Castro Marques. "Streaky" isn't the word for it. There are times when she looks like she's near damned unstoppable, and there are times when she plays so badly I'd swear she had money bet on the opposing team to win.

2) There is this fan for the Liberty who is a big black guy who wears his cap backwards and is wearing a #20 jersey - Shameka Christon's - who is always highlighted on the Jumbotron for his dancing skills. By "always" I mean "twice" - I saw his dancing this game, and I saw his dancing during the Liberty-Silver Stars game I was fortunate to attend.

3) There was a dance troupe which I think was called "Fresh Effects". They were there to do a tribute to Michael Jackson. They looked like kids in their high school years/late teens, and they danced pretty much not the way that Michael Jackson danced. I wondered if they had even practiced before their appearance before a crowd of unhappy Liberty fans at MSG.

I mean...my God. That was just pitiful.

4) I heard some weird background banging noise, like someone kicking the Live Access microphone at New York. Never did figure that out.

5) Is Shameka Christon's last name pronounced "Christian"? According to Mike Crispino at the microphone, it is.

(* * *)

In the third quarter, we put out the same starters - Holdsclaw, Lyttle, de Souza, Castro Marques and Miller. Loree Moore hit us with a 3-pointer as the sounds of "Mo(o)re, More, Moore" by Andrea True. The Dream began to backslide, as it were, and after leading by 11 points in the second quarter, Essence Carston tied the game at 38-38. A 3-pointer by Cathrine Kraayeveld put the Libety up 44-41.

The Dream then rolled off seven straight points to take the lead again, 48-44. Kraayeveld had her fourth foul and McCarville still hadn't scored. In the interim, there was a game on the court - for swag - where a random little boy in the Liberty audience was blindfolded and asked to locate Maddie, the Liberty's doggie mascot. You'd think this would be a simple task - the game announcer would say "hot" or "cold" and the kid would theoretically change direction. But no. The kid continued walking into a straight line, oblivious to instruction. After a point, the Liberty staff just turned the kid in a right direction and let Maddie find him.

Dumb kid. I would have let him keep walking all the way out to 34th Street and 7th Avenue.

Anwyay, with the Dream up 48-44, the Liberty tied it 48-48 on the first two points scored in the game by Janel McCarville. (I actually saw Izi let a player blow by her on defense, as if Izi was just standing still admiring something off in the distance.) The game was turning sloppier and sloppier, with both sides threatening to break 20 turnovers each before the third quarter was even over. Atlanta managed to find itself on top at the end of the third, 54-40, simply because we made fewer mistakes.

On the other hand, a lot had gone bad. Our shooting accuracy had been shredded, and despite the fact that Izi had 15 points, Loree Moore had 17 points. Furthermore, there were signs that Janel McCarville was starting to wake herself up. She hadn't scored, but she had had a lot of rebounds.

(* * *)

Random trivia: Did you know Kia Vaughn has a tattoo on her bicep which reads Kia!? It's useful when you wake up in a hotel on a long road trip and not only have forgotten where you are, but who you are.

(* * *)

With six minutes to go, we had a 58-52 lead. Even though we had regained the lead over New York in the third, we could never extend it to double digits. The Liberty always stayed within two or three possessions of the Dream, too close by to ignore. Ahead 60-58, Loree Moore cranked out another 3-pointer and with 3:24 to go, the Liberty were back up again 61-60.

Iziane Castro Marques hit a 3-pointer with 2:27 left to put the Dream back up 65-61. It would be the only 3-pointer the Dream would hit all night.

We still led by four points, 67-63 when Shameka Christon closed it to 67-66 with 1:10 left. With 55.2 seconds left, Janel McCarville made her last basket of the night and was chopped on the attempt by Erika de Souza. Sinking the free throw tied the game 69-69 with 43.9 seconds left.

For some inexplicable reason, we decide to chop time off the clock. With two seconds left to shoot, Sancho attempted a shot which she missed. Holdsclaw got the rebound, but she attempted an off-balance-falling-backwards shot which was probably low enough for Leilani Mitchell to block. Jackson got the rebound, the Liberty got the ball, and there were 16 seconds left to make a last-second shot.

With Kraayeveld trying to make a backdoor cut to the basket, there was a collision with someone in Powder Blue. Lacy would end up getting charged for the foul - it might not have been her, but it was somebody - and Kraayeveld went to the free throw line. Sank 'em both. New York had hit all 18 of its free throw attempts that night, and the Liberty were up 71-69.

The Dream had 16 seconds to send it into overtime. Shalee Lehning controlled the ball, brought it in - then, with no one to dish-out to, tried a left-handed jumper. Castro Marques was waiting on the wing - was the intent to get the ball to her? Lehning's shot didn't go, the ball ended up in New York's hands, and it was all over.

(* * *)

Okay, sounds like a close game, right. True, but it was a horribly played one. Last team to make a mistake wins, and the Liberty were sitting in the chair when the music stopped. We'll look at Dean Oliver's Four Factors, but not in their usual order:

Free throw visits: Both teams went to the line 18 times. The Dream were 14-for-18, and the Liberty were 18-for-18. You could plausibly claim that the game was lost at the free throw line, but the Dream had the ball at the end and a chance to send it to OT.

Turnovers: Egad. Atlanta turned the ball over 24 times. Normally, that would lose the game right there, but the Liberty turned the ball over 22 times. It was just an abysmal game, and very hard to watch.

Offensive rebounds: 15 for the Dream, and 5 for the Liberty. We out-rebounded them 45 to 28. Looks good, right?

Field goal shooting: In the most important of the factors, the Dream shot 39.7 percent and the Liberty shot 37.7 percent. We shot better than the Liberty, so why didn't we win?

I'll throw out a statistic at you: 3-point shooting

Atlanta Dream: 1-for-8
New York Liberty: 7-for-21

This is at least the third game where our opponents took 20-plus three point attempts and we took 10-minus. We don't take them because we can't hit them. They take them because we can't defend them.

In a way, you can say that 3-point shooting undoes bad field goal shooting - you might hit less often, but the impact on your shooting is greater. There is a stat called true field goal percentage, which is defined as (FG + 0.5*3P)/FGA. It's "field goal shooting + extra credit for 3-pointers".

Our field goal percentage was 39.7 percent, but our true FG% was 40.4 percent. New York's field goal percentage was 37.7 percent - but their true FG% was 43.4 percent. Counting 3-pointers means that we didn't shoot better than the Liberty - they shot better than us because they had the 3-pointer in their arsenal. Our lack of 3-point shooting was a real disadvantage, and the Liberty's free throw accuracy was just icing on the cake.

(* * *)

Let's look at how the Liberty players did:

Shameka Christon: 18 points and 6 rebound for Sista Christon.
Essence Carson: 17 points.
Cathrine Kraayeveld: 9 points, but 5 personal fouls. However, she scored the go-ahead points for New York at the end.
Janel McCarville: 7 points, 7 rebounds...and 7 turnovers.
Kia Vaughn: 8 points in just nine minutes played.

And now, time to look at the Atlanta Dream:

Iziane Castro Marques: 18 points, 8 rebounds, and 6 assists. Iziane could have very well had a triple-double if she would have just tossed the ball around some more. However, she turned the ball over 5 times and had 4 of her shots blocked. Nevertheless, Izi is very much the Dreamer of the Game.

Erika de Souza: 10 points and 8 rebounds. She had a little trouble with Kia Vaughn in that second quarter, but otherwise a good game.

Sancho Lyttle: She had 17 points and 6 rebounds - but she missed thirteen shots, shooting 8-for-21and diminishing the impact of her high scoring game. -5 in raw plus/minus. If you look at it from that angle, it really wasn't that impressive.

Angel McCoughtry: 6 points in just 16 minutes played. Only 2 fouls and 2 turnovers. She should have gotten some more time.

Chamique Holdsclaw: 9 points on 3-for-13 shooting. 8 rebounds, but 5 turnovers. Most of her good is washed out with the bad.

Jennifer Lacy: 4 points in 7 minutes played - but a zinc star on her paper for getting called for that foul on Kraayeveld at the end.

Michelle Snow: 2 points in 4 minutes. As you can see, we're down in zero-land in terms of value.

Tamera Young: Now we're at the zero border. Young, cleared to play, didn't even get off the bench. Even warming her buns on the bench, she still outperformed three players on the Dream by default.

The point guards: All of our point guards are at the bottom, and in 40 minutes of play, they combined for 3 points. It was a sad performance.

Coco Miller: The Point Guard Who is not Really a Point Guard. 7 minutes. No points. Assists: 2, Turnovers: 3.

Ivory Latta: 3 minutes. No points. One turnover. Ivory is losing the battle for playing time.

Shalee Lehning: Can she play point guard? Yes, she can. But all in all, a point guard is asked to do at least one of the following:

a) Score points: Shalee is not a point-scoring point guard. Lehning shot a horrible 1-for-6 and ended up with 3 points. And then there's that last play of the game.
b) Assists: If you can't score, you put the ball in someone else's hands so they can score. In 30 minutes, she had a total of one assist.
c) Intangibles: Okay, if you can't do the first two, you should add something else. Energy, whatever. But above all, nothing foolish, like turnovers. Lehning turned the ball over four times, and of the five missed shots, two of them were rebounded by the Liberty.

Like it or not, Lehning gets the Bad Dream of the Game. If you're out there for 30 minutes you have to do something, and Lehning didn't. By playing most of the minutes, she bears most of the responsibility.

Lehning will just have to shake it off and come back for the next game. So will the Dream, and so will the fans. One Team, One Dream. Beat the Lynx on Wednesday.

Dream Fall to Liberty on Free Throws by Kraayeveld




World's Most Difficult High Five.

For those who are still hungover, we lost at New York last night 71-69. I've been trying to forget this one but the memory isn't fading away. I'm still pretty miserable about it, because the Dream basically let the Liberty up off the mat. We had a chance to tie it at the end, but we couldn't get it done.

For those souls brave enough to look at pictorial evidence, a gallery of pictures from SPMSportsPage.com is here.

The New York Daily News article by Matt Ehalt is here.
The New York Post article by Brian Lewis is here.
The Associated Press write-up is here.

My report - I actually got WNBA Live Access to work starting in the second quarter - will be soon.

Friday, July 10, 2009

Dream on The Way to New York





A win will give the Dream a 7-7 record. The Liberty are four games out of .500. Hopefully, we can beat them this time.

Game is tomorrow night. One Team. One Dream.

UPDATE: I did have a picture of Big Smooth snoozing, but a lot of images of Imageshack have been hacked by pranksters today, and this was one of them. Thus, the replacement by Dream players on a plane.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Newest Dream-Liberty Photo Gallery





Craig Cappy has just posted his Photo Gallery of the Atlanta Dream game from June 21st against the Liberty at SPMSportspage.com.

I'm sitting at work, following the box score of today's game. No streaming internet. Dream down against the Sky in the second quarter.