Minnesota Timberwolves face tall task: Yao Ming Guarding 7-6 Yao poses problem for undersized Wolves By Don Seeholzer dseeholzer@pioneerpress.com Article Last Updated: 12/20/2008 01:50:39 AM CST The Timberwolves have faced some formidable opponents during Kevin McHale's first six games as coach, and tonight they confront their tallest order yet. At 7 feet, 6 inches and 310 pounds, Houston Rockets center Yao Ming is a handful for any team. He could be a huge problem for the undersized Wolves, who will try to beat him with quickness and maybe a little zone defense tonight at Target Center. "We've got to make sure that we make him pay on the defensive end, get him in screen-and-roll and do some stuff," McHale said Friday. "Yao is huge, a huge force for them out there." Listed at 6-10, Wolves center Al Jefferson gives away eight inches to Yao, but this apparently will be another night off for 7-footer Jason Collins, who started nine games under former coach Randy Wittman but hasn't played in the past six. Collins had a long talk after practice with McHale, who said he wants to use this tough part of the schedule to indoctrinate his young players on what it takes to play in the NBA on a nightly basis. "It's my job to stay professional and always be ready," Collins said. "When coach calls me, I'll be ready." The veteran Collins provided a brief scouting report, however, on how to play Yao, who was averaging a team-high 19.7 points and 9.9 rebounds for the Rockets heading into Friday night's game against Sacramento. "He's definitely improved over the years," Collins said. "You have to meet him early, similar to Shaq (O'Neal). As soon as crosses the three-point line, that's when the confrontation has to begin. Push him away from the basket and know where your help is coming from." If that doesn't work, there's always the option of going zone, which the Wolves worked on during Friday's practice. "I would like to get our man-to-man tied in a little bit more," McHale said, "but we're going to have to maybe play some zone and do some stuff. It's all a process. I think the team has almost exclusively done man-to-man. I agree your man-to-man has got to be your primary, but throw in some zone every once in a while." Man or zone, the Wolves will have their hands full with Yao, who is in his seventh NBA season and has developed into a solid all-around player. "He's just got better," McHale said. "I remember Yao's first two months, people were questioning how good he'd be. I'm like, 'Geez, the guy's from China. He's a young kid, first time over in America. Give him two or three or four years to let him get his feet under his belt, especially for big guys, and he'll be fine.' " Talking it out: Forward Craig Smith said Thursday's players-only meeting was a group decision and that it was good to clear the air. "It's always good to talk things out, to have that communication factor," he said. "That's with anything in life, especially with your job. If something's not going right, you've got to say something." Not much has gone right this season for Wolves (4-21), who are 0-6 under McHale and have lost 11 consecutive games, five short of the team record. Smith said there was no single theme to the meeting and that the tone was generally positive. "It has to be, but at the same time things need to be said and people don't need to take offense at it," he said. "That's just part of communication. It's being honest and being real. Everybody needs to hold each other accountable for situations. We're a growing team. We know we're going through a funk, but we've got to pick it up and stay together." Triple trouble: Yao isn't the only weapon for the Rockets, who have two other big-time scoring threats in Tracy McGrady (16.5 points per game) and Ron Artest (16.0). Houston, which took a 16-9 record into Friday night's game, has won four straight against the Wolves.
I can tell you now, it will be a tough night for Yao. Why? Because he will probably have to guard Jefferson. He is quicker and Yao will have a lot of problems... as he had last year. Wolves suck but they don't give up. We can be sure Yao will not be played 1 on 1 as he was against Kings. Like McHale said, there will be a lot of zone and fronting defense on Yao.. I am sure. We will have to get more from T-Mac.
funny how the this reporter mentioned tmac and ron-ron like they were just second level offense threats. Triple trouble: Yao isn't the only weapon for the Rockets, who have two other big-time scoring threats in Tracy McGrady (16.5 points per game) and Ron Artest (16.0).
Meetings to stop yao? Meetings to stop Tracy or Artest? No, its just make them shoot jump shots. Just Yao..... thats it.
LOL,they called a meeting to discuss what,the solution to stopping Yao getting to the paint and exploiting everything he got? Damn,that's nasty,there's no way to slow Yao down if they don't front Yao. It's only a SLOWDOWN,not a SHUTDOWN.
I think they called the players-only meeting to resolve the question of "why do we suck?" not "how do we stop Yao"... minny if memory serves, always has success against Yao. In fact, I can't really remember him have a really good game against them.
Yao better have a plan to play against Al Jefferson. That guy can stroke it from mid-range and run circles around Yao. Oh, and he can grab a few rebounds too.
Did they mention flops? The best way to defend Yao is to seat him with fouls. They can try to flop on every screen he is involve, or like last two game flops when Yao is trying to get low post position, Refs usually fall for that.
Yao has obviously found his rhythm. I think the argument about Jefferson giving Yao a hard time is exaggerated. Yao goes against PF/C every night that are quicker than he is and he usually wins the match up easily. I don't see any reason why Yao won't establish himself early tonight and make Jefferson worry about playing defense all night long. The Wolves don't have the endless supply of tall, long athletes to bother Yao like the Blazers do.
http://www.basketball-reference.com/boxscores/200802040MIN.html When they played last time, AJ got 33/16, Yao 16/5.
I don't think Yao is going to let fronting beat him anymore. His rebounds are going up this month due to the weakness of fronting and he's scoring 25.4 per game, too. This team will destroy fronting defense. Yao is getting aggressive. That's all he needed to do.
You're so right,I was wrong. Yao did step up in the 4th quarter with that big shot to steady the situation where we MIGHT lose,well,the outcome is good though. Al totally pwned Yao.Damn it,Yao should learn the lesson.