Friday, March 14, 2014

UPDATE: Dad captures young son's disappointment with Steve Smith release in awesome YouTube video

Posted By on Fri, Mar 14, 2014 at 12:07 PM

Panthers fans are not happy about the recent release of wide receiver Steve Smith. Particularly upset is young Gavin, who shares his thoughts about the decision in the best YouTube video since the kid who got high at the dentist's office.

Smith, who is interviewing with the Ravens today, said yesterday if he meets the Panthers next season there will be "blood and guts everywhere."

UPDATE: Steve Smith saw the video and hit Twitter in search of the young man and his family.


And thanks to the power of social media, he was put in contact with the family.


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Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Heartbreaking as it is, Steve Smith moving on is the right decision

Posted By on Wed, Mar 12, 2014 at 3:02 PM

Editor's note: This post has been updated. This version ran in the March 20 print edition.

"This is not a democracy. It's a cheerocracy."

The famous line from Bring It On ran through my head as I watched the fallout from the Carolina Panthers releasing fan favorite Steve Smith this month. Fans took to social media, local sports radio shows - a dozen or so even gathered outside Bank of America Stadium - to protest the decision, calling the team disloyal.

But this isn't government. This is football.

Smith in 2006 - KEITH ALLISON
  • Keith Allison
  • Smith in 2006

Watching fans malign the Panthers has made it clear to me why general manager David Gettleman is paid the big money to make the tough decisions, while fans continue to be ... fans. This is not American Idol, nor is Gettleman facing a popular vote in an upcoming election. He was hired to do the job he is doing.

While former management (*cough* Marty Hurney *cough*) can be blamed for the dismal state of the team's financial affairs, it can't be overlooked that Gettleman must do what he can - as soon as he can - to right the money boat. As bittersweet as the decision is, it was time for the Panthers to move on.

Smith will collect $3 million from the Panthers even as he's released, but that's compared to the $7 million in cap room he would take up playing in Charlotte, where last year he posted career lows in catches, yards and average yards per reception, and struggled with injuries down the stretch.

The Panthers placed the franchise tag on Greg Hardy, who posed the biggest threat to their salary cap this offseason. The team now has negotiations with Cam Newton and Luke Kuechly, the two biggest building blocks of the team's future, to look forward to in the next two years. Smith turns 35 in two months, and it's time for a shift in priorities.

The problem with the so-called Panthers fans' reaction is their definition of "loyalty." People have threatened to root for Smith's new team, the Baltimore Ravens, because the Panthers haven't shown any "loyalty" to the face of the franchise. Let me remind those fans what it looks like when an organization negotiates out of loyalty.
Kobe Bryant has arguably done more for the Los Angeles Lakers franchise than any athlete in the past 30 years has done for his team (Derek Jeter is the only one who comes close). In November, the Lakers came to the negotiating table as fans and offered Bryant a $48.5 million contract extension. He has since played all of six games as his team sits tied for the worst record in the Western Conference.

As Smith's agent broke the news on March 12 that his client would no longer play as a Panther, news also broke that Bryant was not expected to play another game in the NBA this season. But at least his team is loyal.
Let us also not forget that Smith was all but gone from Charlotte of his own accord following the 2010 season. He had cleared his locker out after that dismal year, asked for a trade and even put his house on the market. Thinking he showed nothing but pure loyalty to an organization that now "shuns him" is laughable. He deserved better than to hear about the team's intentions to cut him through the media, but fans jumping from the Panthers bandwagon is a bit extreme.

I will miss Steve Smith as much as the next guy, but as a lifelong sports fan, I understand these decisions need to be made. I've watched the highlights from his famous touchdown in the 2003 playoffs a couple of times in the last few days. I'm filled with nostalgia, not misplaced anger.

I recognize the Panthers have not had a strong offseason early on. That is due in part to Hurney's mess and to management stepping on their own toes. As potential Smith replacements continue to drop from the free agency pool, patience wears thin among even the most optimistic.

The Panthers haven't, in their entire history, made the playoffs two years in a row. It may not happen the next time around either. The team paid two of the best defensive players in the league, Kuechly and Hardy, under $2 million combined last year. That was a bubble sure to burst, and re-signing Hardy under the franchise tag took up about two thirds of the Panthers' cap space.

As for Smith, if Gettleman can get this team to win on a consistent basis, the fans will forget all about the tough decisions that had to be made to get them there.

Bobcats fans gasped when owner Michael Jordan traded fan favorite Gerald Wallace to the Trail Blazers in 2011 for multiple future first-round draft picks and cash. Three years later, the Bobcats are playoff bound, and Wallace gets a healthy applause when he comes to town.

When asked how he feels about playing his former team, Smith said he will always be a Carolina Panther, but that if his path "happens to run through Bank of America Stadium, there will be blood and guts everywhere."
Fans won't be treated to that spectacle (the Ravens don't play in Charlotte) but the Panthers will be visiting Smith in Baltimore this fall. Everyone has until then to decide where their loyalties lie.

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Monday, March 10, 2014

Bobcats-Hornets Week in Review: To be the (7th) best...

Posted By on Mon, Mar 10, 2014 at 3:55 PM

Somewhere in the history of the Bobcats-Hornets must be the most important win ever. I'll let the people who've followed them all along figure it out, since my years in New York City left me with box scores and lowlight reels.

For me, Wednesday's win over the Pacers left me beaming like no other win ever has.

In a unique performance, Charlotte rebounded from Lebron James' unbelievable 61-point output to trounce the team with the league's best record. Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, the most visible of a bevy of defenders torched by the best player in basketball nights earlier, tortured Paul George on and off the ball. Al Jefferson punished Roy Hibbert for playing off of his jumper. Cody Zeller has been contributing and played one of the better games of his young career. And Kemba snapped his recent struggle to join in the fight.

The singular focus this team sought and achieved against the Pacers may not be duplicated the rest of the year. There were mitigating factors: the national media focus on LeBron's night, Paul George has been struggling and so have the Pacers of late, and the Pacers were on the second night of a back-to-back. This would be an easily discountable win, except, the perfectly executed team effort proved so vindicating and so indicative of the future of this franchise. It seems more clear now than ever before what kind of team Charlotte can expect.

And, of course, the struggles against two other likely playoff teams muddled that clarity. Memphis hammered Charlotte, exacting revenge from the best defensive game the Bobcats-Hornets had all season just two weeks ago. Memphis hit the three and hit it well, leaving a good defense in tatters.

And of course, the LeBron game crushed any idea of elite status. No good defense gives up 61 points to any one man - especially not two, right? Carmelo Anthony's epic day in MSG a couple of months ago already exposed the deep, hidden secret in the Bobcats-Hornets shaky armor.

If you can hit midrange jumpers, you will beat Charlotte. This comes from a dearth of big defenders. I've gone over the problematic power forward position that Charlotte hides well with exact rotations on double teams and an overall team ethos of protecting the rim. Covering the small forward position usually falls into the hands of Kidd-Gilchrist, but he struggles with big, bruising small forwards. So does the rest of the league. Forwards aren't usually 6-8/275 and all muscle and quick and don't have a devastatingly accurate shooting percentage from 18 to 25 feet.

What makes Kidd-Gilchrist a good defender also inhibits him against Melo and Bron. He can step off of most players to help the lane and shift the team defense focus to the lane. This helps against point guards and slashing big men. He has quick hands and jumps passing lanes incredibly well. All this and he can recover to his man quickly enough to prevent open shots.

If you watch on any given night, Kidd-Gilchrist will hop around in three different spots - one to deny ball entry to the post, one to create havoc in a normal passing lane and break up the flow of a possession and then one to prevent his defender from getting space enough to make him pay for being out of position so much.
That does not work against LeBron James.

Time and again, James played Kidd-Gilchrist to the lane and scored because, quite simply, he could. James remains the best player in basketball because of his superior skills with and without the ball, and placing Kidd-Gilchrist in the "bad defender" category because the best player in the world crushed him stings for fans who watch him nightly.

Same goes for the team defense. In a win against Cleveland this week, the Bobcats-Hornets lead for most of the game, used Jefferson's overpowering presence, and did what they had been doing for weeks before they played this tough part of the schedule.

For Charlotte, the road gets easier now. They went 2-3 while playing four very good opponents - sorry, Cleveland. The next few games shape up nicely. Washington has been good lately but essentially have Charlotte's milieu. They beat bad teams and struggle against good ones. Denver and Minnesota are winnable games. Milwaukee's pathetic record speaks for itself. After that, they get some playoff teams that will test the new boundary the Bobcats-Hornets strive for, the one that thrashing the Pacers may have gained them. As the Ric Flair adage goes: To be the best, you gotta beat the best.

Charlotte's march toward respectability labors on after a win for the Era of Mediocrity's still-thin annals.

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Monday, March 3, 2014

Bobcats-Hornets Week in Review: Storms before the calm

Posted By on Mon, Mar 3, 2014 at 3:10 PM

With quiet for six straight days, it was as if the schedule makers knew the Bobcats-Hornets were about to play four out of the best five teams in the NBA. With some rest, confidence coming off of a winning streak and integration of new players, Charlotte had a fighting chance against teams with better records and better talent.

Unfortunately, the first two of those games proved too difficult.

In neither game did they look entirely overmatched. They showed some determination as the offense sputtered against the Spurs on Friday. The addition of Gary Neal could prove huge as the schedule eases up in a week. Efficient in limited minutes, Neal could see this team use him correctly - as a shooter first and primary ballhandler second. When Neal played in San Antonio, he did so as a relatively unknown player. The Spurs management and coaching staff often find these kinds of players and turn their careers around. In Neal's case, they built his résumé around shooting as a second unit hybrid point guard/shooting guard. As his career continued outside of San Antonio, his handle deteriorated. His turnover rate rose and his place in the league looked shaky. Some of that could have been due to his role on an awful Milwaukee team.

Charlotte's interest in Neal, however, could be his resurgence. The team has a bevy of guards who need the ball to score, including the also acquired Luke Ridnour, to curtail his weakness and focus him on hitting open shots when they are available.

He did that well on Friday, scoring 15 points in 23 minutes. His range comes in handy since Charlotte mainly operates from 18 feet and in when Al Jefferson plays. That gives Jefferson someone to find off of double teams and it gives Kemba a reliable shooter to find when he drives the lane.

Of course Neal's talent will be more evident as the team gels with the new players and they aren't playing the best teams in the league every night. Charlotte struggled to score late in the game because, well, the Spurs play great basketball. The Bobcats-Hornets lost to the Spurs the same way all teams do. An opponent consistently having a boatload of talent, great coaching and terrific execution will do that.

So, when the 4th quarter problems began, it seemed inevitable. The Bobcats-Hornets got the "they keep hanging around... " tag from the announcers, not unlike a low seed in the NCAA tournament, but that phrase usually means the underdog shouldn't be playing this well.

Contrasting from that performance, Charlotte's defense stood no chance against the unrelenting attack that the Thunder pressed. With too many weapons and a healthy Russell Westbrook beginning to play better, the Thunder worked over a usually better-than-average defense. If not for some untimely Westbrook turnovers, the Bobcats-Hornets would not have "hung around" until the 4th quarter. While again resilient, the team just could not get stops at any point.

Couple the bad defense with a tightly called and physical game and the real problem with being a playoff team arises. Charlotte, to use one of my least favorite phrases in history, ain't got the horses. What the team learns during a rough stretch of the season may be incalculable, but what the fans learn is imminently measurable. Even if the Bobcats finish strong, they are light years away from championship contention.

The Thunder roster looked so maximized comparatively. Steven Adams and Hasheem Thabeet contributed. Reggie Jackson, a backup point guard, dominated Walker and Ridnour. Perry Jones had a monster dunk that broke the will of the Bobcats defenders. Derek Fisher continues to flop his way onto every contender imaginable.

Putting it another way: on an 8-24 night for league MVP candidate Kevin Durant, the Thunder won going away. Sure, the game was closer than it looked, but the Thunder proved how long Charlotte has to go to contend.

Yet, the Bobcats-Hornets will soldier forward to play the Heat and Pacers next week before starting a nice stretch of winnable games. What they endure now could be a testament for the homestretch. They gave two championship-caliber teams a tough game before folding under the pressure of greatness. Some will look at their record and scoff, but the fans know that while the Bobcats can't contend, they can certainly compete.

The schedule makers did not plan for that.

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