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Chron: Yao needs time to grow as a player and a person

Discussion in 'Houston Rockets: Game Action & Roster Moves' started by Free Agent, Dec 3, 2002.

  1. Free Agent

    Free Agent Member

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    It appears Blinebury has firmly attached himself to Yao's jock since Hakeems retirement. Here's yet another article from him on Yao.

    Yao needs time to grow as a player and a person

    By FRAN BLINEBURY
    Copyright 2002 Houston Chronicle

    WHEN Yao Ming had finished chewing on a drumstick, tasting the mashed potatoes and savoring the chocolate dessert, he had only one question about his first Thanksgiving dinner.

    Where were the turkey's feet?

    "The rest was rather dry," he said. "I think it doesn't agree with my stomach. But in China, chicken feet are a delicacy, and maybe they would have been the best part for me."

    This is all part of the cultural exchange. Some things are an acquired taste.

    Unlike the yammering heads on ESPN, the cable access channel for amateur comedians that occasionally televises sports.

    A few years from now, when Yao has made the full adjustment to our food, our freeways and the NBA, the boys and girls at ESPN will be clawing at each other's pancake makeup to do their "live shots" with him, to call him their "dawg," to maybe even share his chopsticks.

    Boo-yah.

    For now, they and most of the rest of the national audience have as much a read on Yao as they do the Dead Sea Scrolls.

    They show him falling down while trying to guard Stephon Marbury. They show him missing shots, which happens infrequently. Then they are surprised when he plays well.

    "Man, what did y'all do to turn Yao Ming on?" screeched one of the heads through the earpiece at Steve Francis during a halftime interview from Seattle on Friday night.

    "It was just a matter of time for him to get comfortable," explained Francis, as if to a second-grade class.

    "But what did you do all of a sudden?" the head continued.

    "Nothing," said Francis. "He's only been here a few weeks."

    "Must have taken him out for some sushi," said yammering head No. 2.

    Right continent, wrong country. But if ignorance is bliss, surely there is another truckload of Emmys bound for Bristol, Conn.

    The thing about Yao Ming is that he challenges so many of the fundamental precepts that drive today's 24-hour-news-cycle, starved-for-programming, snap-judgment, give-'em-the-slam-dunks-and-home-runs-and-touchdown-dances media.

    For one, his game is far more complex and subtle than just rattling the rims with power dunks, though he is warming to the act. Yao is one who can see the whole court -- and not just because he towers above the crowd. He has great awareness of his teammates at all times and eventually should make their lives so much less stressful by feeding them a steady diet of passes for easy baskets.

    To watch Yao catch the ball with his soft hands and to see him deliver it to the open man with a basic bounce, a cross-court toss whipped over the top, or a drop behind his back on the inside is to see the modern incarnation of Bill Walton or Tom Boerwinkle, the next to take the baton from today's best passing centers, Vlade Divac and Arvydas Sabonis.

    Yao also is a 22-year-old kid living in a new country at a time when the country itself is on edge. How about if we dropped off one of the yammering heads at the airport in Shanghai, then told him to find his way to the TV studio and get ready to do that night's broadcast in Mandarin?

    On second thought, some of them might actually make more sense. But you get the point.

    For the moment, there will not be many nights such as the one in which Yao produced 30 points and 16 rebounds against the Dallas Mavericks. Not while he is still barely six weeks into his new life in a much faster, much stronger league and while his teammates are still making a Rubik's Cube puzzle out of the whole thing.

    "I can't tell you how happy I am," Rockets coach Rudy Tomjanovich said. "I'm delighted at where he is in the process.

    "The entire experience so far has been refreshing. He has given us not so much an attitude, but a presence. So warm, so friendly. He lights up a room when he enters and not just because he's so tall. He's genuine. He's a people person, interacting with teammates, everybody.

    "I'm so fortunate, blessed, to have had the chance to coach guys who are not just great players, but also special people, the kind that other people want to be around. I've had Hakeem Olajuwon, Charles Barkley, now this guy. People flock to them."

    The notebooks, the tape recorders, the minicams flock to Yao at every port of call on his maiden voyage, wanting to see if this will be the night he suddenly explodes with muscles right through his uniform like the Incredible Hulk and starts bowling over defenders a la Shaquille O'Neal.

    We need the fix today, the instant reward on the investment, whether it's from the Dow Jones index or the No. 1 pick in the draft.

    Yao is by no means ready to hoist the Rockets upon his shoulders and carry them deep into the playoffs so soon. But when you look at the landscape of the NBA and disappearing of the classic big men, you have to like the outlook.

    Olajuwon and Patrick Ewing, the ancient warriors, have finally retired. Alonzo Mourning has been short-circuited with a kidney ailment and a bad back. David Robinson is leaving after this season, and Shaq keeps threatening to take up a full-time career of rap albums and acting.

    When USA Basketball goes searching for centers to reclaim the tarnished glory for the 2004 Olympics, it will be with a lineup of suspects named Elden Campbell, Brad Miller and Jermaine O'Neal or with converted forwards such as Tim Duncan, Elton Brand and Kevin Garnett.

    So much of the talk is that the NBA is becoming a "little man's" league. How convenient then for the Rockets if they have the only dominant big man in their very midst in a few years.

    It will take that long. For Yao to add the necessary bulk and strength in his upper body. For him to learn to establish position down in the low post, catch the ball, turn and score immediately. For him to grasp that he doesn't always have to leave his feet to block shots, thus not picking up extra fouls. That he would be a more effective defender if he simply learned to keep his arms raised straight in the air.

    Everything about Yao says he will get there, from the raw skills he has put on display, to his work ethic, to the camaraderie with his teammates and communication with coaches, to his wit and patience in dealing with the demands of his mega-fame.

    Yao went to see the new Harry Potter movie recently. "I give it five stars," he said, grinning and holding up an open hand.

    Trouble is, we feel the need to wave a wizard's wand and rate everything right now, in the moment.

    "We've turned into a business of extremes," Tomjanovich said. "Everybody expects things so quick. Whatever happened to growing up?"

    It's something to chew on at least, along with the turkey feet.
     
  2. VinceCarter

    VinceCarter Member

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    NOW THAT"S what everyone is forgetting.......this guy might be a survivor from a dying breed of players.

    TIME is the only enemy for the Rockets.

    all you idiots who want to trade Yao/Franchise/Griffin
    ..... will find out that there is something special going to happen in a COUPLE of YEARS. Be patient and wait till it happens. Griffin is 20 YEARS OLD!!! Ming 22!!!....damn i'm older than these guys and i'm still in university studying to build my future....

    Some people need to just relax and enjoy it unfold---there will be bad times--but the good times are yet to come......


    TILL THEN WATCH THE SHAQ AND KOBE SHOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:D
     
  3. Uprising

    Uprising Member

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    Great read. Nice find.:cool:
     
  4. wizkid83

    wizkid83 Member

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    Wow, another Blinerary article praising Yao, man even if Yao doesn't produce, he should be the ROY just because he made Blinerary write anything good about the Rockets. Hold up, wait a minute......OMG, the best rapper is white, the best golfer is black, and Blinerary is complimenting something about the Rockets, the freaking apocalypse is upon us.
     
  5. AroundTheWorld

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    :D
     
  6. Sane

    Sane Member

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    I don't know if it's a dying breed really. It's being revived:

    Yao Ming
    Eddy Curry
    Tyson Chandler
    Tim Duncan
    Deagana Diop (if he develops his skills)
    Illgauskas
    At some point, maybe Jermaine O'Neal
    Gasol eventually
    Olowokandi
    Shaquille O'Neal

    Future:

    Nene Hilario
    Kwame Brown
    Okur
    Kendrick Perkins 6-10 260 PF/C Ozen HSSr.
    Chris Marcus 7-1 285 C Western Kentucky Sr.
    Darko Milicic 7'0 17 years old, Yugoslavian, BIG hype
    Kosta Perovic 7-2 240 C Partizan (Yugoslavia) 1985
    Edu Hernández 7-0 235 C Real Madrid (Spain) 1983




    There is hope, and the C spot will be back to optimum strength in 2 years. By then, Eddy Curry, Kandi, Ming and Hilario will be battling for best C honors.
     
  7. robbie380

    robbie380 ლ(▀̿Ĺ̯▀̿ ̿ლ)
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    sane...its a dying american breed. did you notice how many of those you wrote are foreign? (10)

    also did you notice how many of those guys you wrote that are nowhere even close to having the chance of becoming close to the level of shaq, dream, ewing, or robinson? (everyone except ming because they lack fundamentals)

    how many of those guys are really power forwards that just become centers due to the lack of true centers?

    and how many of those guys that completely lack the ability to pass? (gasol, shaq, duncan, and ming are the only ones who can pass)

    sorry, but it is a dying breed and most of those guys you mentioned as good centers are either power forwards or jokes passed off as good centers (like ilgauskas who is shooting 35%) since there are few great ones.

    it will be guys like ming who have to revive the center position and show the importance of passing out of the post and having a strong post game as necessary to win consistently.
     
  8. Lobo

    Lobo Member

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    Look at this way - ten or fifteen years ago most of these guys would have been centers to begin with. Since then, it seems like any 7 footer with skills wants to be a power (or small) forward first.
     
  9. Sane

    Sane Member

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    We only think that way about Ming because he's a Rocket. You'd be surprised at how many sports writers/analysts rate Curry higher than Ming. Curry will be the most dominant, but Ming will be like Hakeem. Great, the best, but not dominating like Shaq.

    None of those are really PF's but J O'Neal, Chandler and Kwame.


    You still don't know how good these guys will be, because 10 years ago, C's came out ready to play. Now they're from highschool, foreign countries, or only had a freshman year.

    Ewing, Hakeem, Shaq, Robinson.

    Ming, Curry, Hilario, Duncan.


    I think you can compare. probably not as good, but that was the BEST generation of C's ever.
     
  10. DCkid

    DCkid Member

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    I am being totally objective right now. Ming will be a lot better than Curry! They're just about the same age and Ming's numbers are already better than Curry's in only his first season. More importantly, Ming has shown a remarkable amount of basketball skills on which to build, what has Curry shown other than he's big?

    Make no mistake about it, any sportwriter who thinks Curry will be better than Ming is an idiot.
     

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