[The DC Council -- After each Wizards game: setting the scene, rating the starters, assessing the bench, providing the analysis, and catching anything that you may have missed. Unlike the real DC Council, everything here is over the table. Click here for cumulative DC Council 3-star ratings over the course of the season. Game 62 contributors: Dan Diamond (@ddiamond), Adam McGinnis (@adammcginnis) and John Converse Townsend (@JohnCTownsend).]
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Published in
2011-12 Wizards,
DC Council,
John Converse Townsend,
Milwaukee Bucks,
Wizards Game Coverage |
No commentsTags:
beno udrih,
brandon jennings,
carlos delfino,
chris singleton,
drew gooden,
ekpe udoh,
ersan ilyasova,
Jan Vesely,
John Wall,
jordan crawford,
kevin seraphin,
Milwaukee Bucks,
mo almond,
mo evans,
monta ellis,
nene,
scott skiles
[The DC Council -- After each Wizards game: setting the scene, rating the starters, assessing the bench, providing the analysis, and catching anything that you may have missed. Unlike the real DC Council, everything here is over the table. Click here for cumulative DC Council 3-star ratings over the course of the season. Game 53 contributors: Rashad Mobley (@Rashad20) with on-hand coverage at the Verizon Center and Kyle Weidie (@Truth_About_It) from behind the television screen.]
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Published in
2011-12 Wizards,
DC Council,
Milwaukee Bucks,
Wizards Game Coverage |
3 CommentsTags:
brandon jennings,
brian cook,
cartier martin,
chris singleton,
drew gooden,
ekpe udoh,
ersan ilyasova,
Jan Vesely,
John Wall,
jordan crawford,
kevin seraphin,
luc mbah a moute,
Milwaukee Bucks,
Randy Wittman,
roger mason,
shaun livingston,
shelvin mack
[The DC Council -- After each Wizards game: setting the scene, rating the starters, assessing the bench, providing the analysis, and catching anything that you may have missed. Unlike the real DC Council, everything here is over the table. Click here for cumulative DC Council 3-star ratings over the course of the season. Game 34 contributors: Adam McGinnis (@adammcginnis), Sam Permutt and Kyle Weidie (@Truth_About_It).]
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Published in
2011-12 Wizards,
DC Council,
Milwaukee Bucks,
Wizards Game Coverage |
6 CommentsTags:
ersan ilyasova,
JaVale McGee,
John Wall,
jordan crawford,
maurice evans,
mo evans,
Nick Young,
Randy Wittman,
roger mason jr,
trevor booker

The Washington Wizards start the second half of their season to nowhere with the ol’ road-home back-to-back. Tonight they’re in Milwaukee, where they lost their third game in as many at the beginning of the season to the Bucks 102-81 (where Roger Mason Jr. also played without being eligible), and tomorrow night they return to D.C. to take on Dwight Howard and the Orlando Magic. Want to check out some key Wizards mid-season stats? Click here. Otherwise, tonight’s 3-on-3 features Kevin Chouinard (@AnaheimAmigos) of Behind The Buck Pass, along with TAI’s Adam McGinnis (@adammcginnis) and Kyle Weidie (@Truth_About_It). Three questions, three answers starts now…
#1) Bucks PF Ersan Ilyasova is averaging 19.2 points and 10.2 rebounds over his last five games, highlighted by 29 points and 25 rebounds in a recent win over the New Jersey Nets. Washington starting PF Trevor Booker has emerged as a key performer for the Wizards and is averaging 10.6 points, 6.9 rebounds over his last 14 games. Which player will come out on top in their match up?
KEVIN CHOUINARD: Amazingly, both Ilyasova and Booker are 24 years old, even though Ersan debuted in the NBA back in 2006. Among qualified players, Ilyasova has the sixth-best rebounding percentage. He’s relentless at tipping the ball until he gets it. Ersan is also the Bucks’ best and savviest interior defender with Andrew Bogut out. On the other hand, Booker has a chance to develop in the ways that Ersan hasn’t. Booker is assertive in traffic; Ilyasova pump-fakes himself out of rhythm. He can’t catch the ball on the move, and he has zero post game. It’s all tip-ins and jump shots for Ersan.
ADAM McGINNIS: Both Ilyasova and Booker are playing some of the best basketball of their professional careers in the past month so this should be a key one-on-one battle. Ilyasova is a tough guard because he can scrap down low and has ability to knock down 3-pointers, shooting just under 39-percent from long range. Booker’s low-post game has improved; he is able to get shots off effectively with both hands and he is shooting a respectable 50-percent from 10-15 feet. The key will be if Booker can stay out of foul trouble, as this plagued him in the Sacramento loss before the All-Star break and rendered him ineffective. Ilyasova will get his points but Booker will make him work for it, and Trevor will have a bounce back offensive back game.
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When Washington and Toronto matched-up in Canada last Friday night, Amir Johnson of the Raptors came off the bench to score 18 points and grab 13 rebounds in a 106-89 win over the Wizards. ”They’re making him look like an All-Star,” someone probably said, also noting that this Washington franchise has seemed peculiarly deft doing so over the years. During my time following the team since 1990, nights like Johnson’s certainly don’t seem like an anomaly. But just how good is Washington at making otherwise mediocre opponents look like All-Stars? And how does Washington compare to other teams?
I used the glorious Basketball-Reference.com database to search for answers. First I needed to set up some requirements:
- Since Johnson is the subject, I wanted someone who has scored at least 18 points and grabbed 10 rebounds off the bench. Certainly a guard could look like an All-Star with 17 points and 8 assists off the bench, as would a non-starter scoring 25 points in a reserve role (ignoring other stats), but I eliminated them for this particular exercise. Also, you could certainly have a no-name starter put up All-Star stats, but assuming he’s starting with other quality talent, his success is somewhat dimmed. A bench player it is.
- The player’s team has to win the game. Because All-Stars, or at least All-Star efforts, always are victorious, right? (No, not right, but just another factor of elimination for this post.)
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Published in
2011-12 Wizards,
Stats |
No commentsTags:
alan henderson,
amir johnson,
Andray Blatche,
billy owens,
charles davis,
charlie villanueva,
chris andersen,
chris gatling,
christian laettner,
dino radja,
ersan ilyasova,
etan thomas,
gheorghe muresan,
greg anderson,
hot plate,
hot rod williams,
JaVale McGee,
jerry reynolds,
john williams,
kelvin cato,
kwame brown,
lamarcus aldridge,
lorenzen wright,
loy vaught,
marcus camby,
marcus fizer,
ron anderson,
Thaddeus Young,
thurl bailey,
toney douglas,
tyrone nesby