Posts Tagged Yi Jianlian
Week 13 Recap (It’s all about the…) Week 14 Pickups
Posted by fantasy hoopster in Fantasy Basketball, Fantasy Basketball Injuries, Fantasy Basketball Pickups, Fantasy Basketball Strategy on January 24, 2010
Week 13 was really all about the pickups. I haven’t seen this many players resurrect their fantasy basketball seasons/careers in a week that didn’t involve any major trades in a long while. But first, the recap…
Mo Williams
The biggest fantasy news of the week involved Mo Williams’ shoulder sprain, which will sideline him 4-6 weeks. He passed the injury bug to his replacement, Delonte West (fractured finger in shooting hand), and while I still like West over the next several weeks, it might take him a few games to heal and the another few games to regain his shooting touch, so temper your expectations.

I'm sorry, Grant Hill. This is just wrong. (Getty Images)
Corey Maggette
The biggest fantasy news of the month is Corey Frickin Maggette. I’ve hated him for years and vowed never to own him (unless I owned Dwight Howard in a roto league). Now I hate him because I vowed never to own him. He continues to put up top 10 numbers — amazingly, despite averaging less than ONE three/stl/blk per game — which is a tribute to his efficiency. (He’s averaging 29 ppg on ~15 shot attempts per game.) The fact that I want to underline this entire paragraph makes me hate him even more.
Logic says to sell high, although I probably wouldn’t do so unless I was getting a near-sure bet in return. (That GSW squad just can’t seem to stay healthy, so Maggette will likely get his minutes.) But, because of the sub-1 threes/stl/blk, once Maggette’s 55% FG rate dips closer to his career averages, he’ll likely plummet out of top 10 status back into the top 50 range. That’s still nice, but if you can snag someone like, say, Brandon Roy from a panicked owner (in a packaged deal), go for it. Hey, you never know…
ROY Race
Aided by Monta Ellis’ gimpy anke, Stephen Curry continued to take steps forward, and in my mind he took a big step ahead of the pack in the fantasy ROY race, averaging 23, 5, and 5 with a whopping 3.8 threes and 1.5 spg. Tyreke Evans, on the other hand, had a mediocre week (still averaging 20+ ppg with great percentages), although in his defense that entire SAC squad had a pretty terrible week.
And while he’s in danger of becoming an Also Ran, Brandon Jennings showed some signs of life, averaging 18 ppg and 7 apg with 2 threes/spg (albeit still shooting sub-40% from the field). The emergence of Carlos Delfino and return of Jerry Stackhouse — both of which (at least for this week) seem much more like playmakers than Michael Redd ever was this year — seems to be having a positive effect on Young Money. Sure, his big games this week also came against PGs that couldn’t quite abuse him (Aaron Brooks and Jonny Flynn), but at the least Jennings’ trade value has some life again, in case you need to unload that FG% off your squad.
And in other Week 13 news…
Randy Foye continued to hit his shots until a 3-9 dud on Sunday, which made me feel a little better about ’selling high’ on him earlier in the week. What also made me feel better: Dwyane Wade’s awesome 2 games after my deal went through. (In case you have no idea what I’m talking about, I traded Iggy, Foye, and Yi Jianlian for Wade + 2 scrubs who turned into Carlos Delfino and Drew Gooden. Robin Lopez was sadly picked up before my trade cleared waivers.)
Rashard Lewis is still missing a lot of shots, but also seems to be a more active member of the offense. There is hope…
F my life — Joakim Noah has plantar fasciitis. He seemed to be upbeat about the situation, but if he’s just being optimistic, Tyrus Thomas owners have to be thrilled. (Thomas had 6 blk in 20-something minutes against the (undersized) Rockets in Noah’s DNP over the weekend.) And by the way, here’s a message to FourPointPlay — I know you rigged my last poll!! Lol.
Andre Miller continues to excel in Brandon Roy’s absence.
Lastly, Lou Williams’ fantasy season is on life support, but if you can afford to, I’d try to wait until the trade deadline next month before bailing on him. Many think the 76ers will be active in trades, which might even include Lou but will more likely include Elton Brand or maybe even Andre Iguodala, the departure(s) of which would really help Lou’s fantasy life. If you need more immediate assistance, see below.
WEEK 14 PICKUPS
It seems like we’ve reached a point in the fantasy season where a lot of managers (namely, the ones out of contention) have checked out. This actually has a fairly significant impact on fantasy leagues — especially leagues that aren’t as deep — because it means there is a lot of talent in the free agent pool. If you’re in a H2H league where a lot of these guys are available, it might actually pay off to cut those iffy players and start churning players. (Although you probably want to hang onto some of these guys.)
Robin Lopez (42%)
Last week when I mentioned him, Lopez was owned in 7% of Yahoo leagues. That’s up to 42% now, and it should be even more. After Lopez posted two great lines to start the week, Channing Frye bounced back with a nice performance himself against CHI. But it’s telling that Lopez and not Frye got the minutes in PHO’s next game against run-and-gun GSW. Expect defenses to pay closer attention to Lopez in the future, but his starting job seems secure for now.

Since I think this site has more pictures of Robin Lopez than it can handle, I'll give Delfino some well-deserved publicity. (Getty Images)
Carlos Delfino (33%)
I’ll let the numbers speak for themselves: 16.5 ppg, 9.3 rpg, and 3.5 apg with 3.0 threes and 1.5 spg in 4 games last week. Who knows if this can last, but you want to own Delfino while we all find out.
Drew Gooden (21%)
Gooden was projected by many to be the starting C in Dallas when the year began, but due to injury and Erick Dampier’s strong play, he’s mainly played a bench role. Sunday may have just been a spot start (Dampier was a DNP-nagging injury), as Gooden probably matched up better against the more mobile David Lee anyway, but even in a bench role Gooden has quietly put up top 50 numbers (by averages) over the last month, with 10 and 8 to go along with ~1 stl/blk and great percentages before Sunday’s 15 and 16 outburst.
Delonte West (23%) and Daniel Gibson (8%)
West is the guy to own in February, but for this week Gibson will hit some threes and get some assists just being in the same building as LeBron.
Craig Smith (5%)
I mentioned that Rasual Butler (and Al Thornton) was worth long-term consideration after it was learned Blake Griffin would miss the entire season. But it’s Craig Smith who has really thrived while not having to look over his shoulder. He has solidified his place as the third wheel in that Clipper frontcourt, averaging 15 and 5 on 69% shooting over the last week.
George Hill (8%)
Hill has started three games in a row at SG and produced 16 ppg with 2.3 treys. Keep an eye on this situation.
Other guys to pick up/keep an eye on: Mike Miller (44% — slowly coming around), Corey Brewer (42% — #38 in Yahoo rankings by averages last week), DeJuan Blair (29% — see last week), Matt Barnes (40%), Brandon Rush (26% — he’s been hot since Granger returned), Rasual Butler (30%), Chase Budinger (3% — if you need 3’s in deep leagues), Cartier Martin (1%).
Aaron Brooks, Al Thornton, Andre Iguodala, Andre Miller, Blake Griffin, Brandon Jennings, Brandon Roy, Brandon Rush, Carlos Delfino, Cartier Martin, Chase Budinger, Corey Brewer, Corey Maggette, Craig Smith, Daniel Gibson, David Lee, DeJuan Blair, Delonte West, Drew Gooden, Dwight Howard, Dwyane Wade, Elton Brand, Erick Dampier, George hill, Jerry Stackhouse, Joakim Noah, Jonny Flynn, LeBron James, Lou Williams, Matt Barnes, Michael Redd, Mike Miller, Mo Williams, Monta Ellis, Randy Foye, Rashard Lewis, Rasual Butler, Robin Lopez, Stephen Curry, Tyreke Evans, Tyrus Thomas, Yi Jianlian
Week 12 Recap (Raaaaaaaandy!) and Week 13 Pickups
Posted by fantasy hoopster in Fantasy Basketball, Fantasy Basketball Injuries, Fantasy Basketball Pickups, Fantasy Basketball Strategy on January 17, 2010
Week 12 featured a franchise quickly forgetting its (once) franchise player, the return of another (once?) franchise player in Sacramento, and the continued (and now seemingly sustainable) dominance of a player playing with a purpose.
(By the way, “Raaaaaaaandy!” is actually spelled exactly correctly. It’s a reference to Aziz Ansari’s character in the movie Funny People. Check it out at LaughYourDickOff.com. Yes, you read that right.)

Randy Foye got off to such a hot start as Agent 0's replacement, you knew Fantasy Hoopster had to trade him. (Getty Images)
Randy Foye
Gilbert who? Life went on in WAS without Gilbert Arenas, with Antawn Jamison picking up much of the slack. But it was Foye who particular impressed this past week, playing the best stretch of his year, so of course I just traded him. Was it the right move? Who knows, but here’s my reasoning.
Reasons to sell high: He’s shooting well above his career FG% right now. If Caron Butler or Jamison gets traded, that might translate into more points but at a less efficient rate, which equals a bad tradeoff in my mind (at least for my particular team). Also, when Mike Miller returns that’ll likely dent into Foye’s AST totals.
Reasons to keep: Apparently he has the reins to the team. He took shots at the end of both overtimes (missing both) against Chicago. Maybe he just needed a new setting and style of offense to excel. His only (current) competition at PG is technically considered a dwarf in certain countries.
Obviously, I leaned towards the former. In my trade, I packaged Foye along with Andre Iguodala (I also threw in Yi Jianlian) for Dwyane Wade and a couple scrubs who I plan to drop for Luke Ridnour and another player to be determined. Yes, I know I overpaid, but the trade made sense to me for several reasons, which I might point out in another post if people are interested.
Also, going back to an earlier post when Arenas was first suspended, back then I decided not to drop Nate Robinson for Foye, but then quickly decided to drop Tyrus Thomas instead. I’m sure most of you have already figured out Foye is currently the hottest player of all three, although as exhibited on Saturday night, he’s not perfect.
Kevin Martin
Martin returned this week and quickly resumed draining threes again. That’s not too surprising. The more interesting subplot (or is it main plot now?) to this story involves his effect on a couple of Sacto’s rising rookies: Tyreke Evans and Omri Casspi.
Two games isn’t much of a sample, but it appears as if Evans won’t be affected too much at all — he still controlled the ball for the most part and his shot attempts were still there — while Casspi’s role in the offense was reduced. This isn’t too surprising; even though Martin just signed a nice extension, I’d argue Evans is Sacto’s new franchise player now. It’s still early, but I’m glad I didn’t advise anyone to sell high on Evans. Sadly, I also didn’t have enough balls to advise trading for him from a panicked manager who might’ve sold him on the cheap. Either way, if you own Evans I’d breathe a slight sigh of relief, although everything is fluid in fantasy of course.
As for Casspi, I think some of those shot attempts might come back, but probably not at a consistent enough level for him to be mentioned in the fantasy ROY race anymore. Evans and Martin are going to get their shots, so that probably means a lot of inconsistency for the rest of the Kings, especially Casspi.
ROY Race
This hasn’t been much of a race lately, at least not between Brandon Jennings and Tyreke Evans. (Hello, Stephen Curry with your 6 stl/fouls against MIL on Friday night.) I just mentioned Evans has a great chance to retain most of his value even with KevMart back, but it’s the absence of Michael Redd that might revitalize Jennings’ season. Jennings is clearly a rhythm shooter, and he never quite found the rhythm (or volume) for his shots with Redd back. But now that he (and Andrew Bogut) are the primary offensive options in MIL again, Jennings has a chance to get back to his old numbers… although I wouldn’t expect him to shoot above 40%. If you can handle the ugly shooting, you might be able to snag him with a lowball offer.
Samuel Dalembert
Dalembert has been on a tear the entire month of January, and his last couple games have been particularly sweet. In the past, I’ve recommended him as a waiver wire pickup that people should sell high on if possible because of his historic inconsistency, but I think I’m changing my tune now, for two (non-stat-based) reasons.
Dalembert’s productivity (along with a lot of other NBA players) is often directly related to his motivation/focus. Well non-stat-based reason #1 that I like Sammy D the rest of the way is because he really plays with more passion whenever Allen Iverson is on the court. Back when Iverson was first signed by the 76ers, I mentioned Dalembert even had dreams that AI would return to the squad. Man-crush or motivation? Who knows, but it’s translated into great numbers for Sammy D.
Non-stat-based reason #2, on the other hand, is no joking matter at all. Dalembert is a native Haitian, and in the two games since the tragedy in Haiti, a lot of people have been saying he’s played with a clear focus (14.5 ppg and 16.5 rpg with 2 bpg while shooting a combined 13-15 from the floor). I hate to bring reality into a blog about pure fantasy, but if you’ve ever had something absolutely shitty happen to you in real life, I’m sure you can relate with “focusing on work” as a temporary escape. I don’t think NBA players are an exception to that, and it looks like Dalembert might be playing with a heavy heart from here on out.
By the way, there are a ton of ways to help out with the earthquake in Haiti. Here’s one organization that’s already been working there for 20 years that some friends of mine have volunteered for. It’s called Partners in Health, and I know they make a difference if you’re worried about how your donations are spent.
And in other Week 12 (fantasy) news:
As the guys at GiveMeTheRock point out, Charlotte is on a roll, led by none other than Stephen Jackson. Gerald Wallace and Raymond Felton are still playing well, but the other big fantasy news out of CHA is Boris Diaw, who is finally adjusting to his new teammate. Buy low if you can.
In LA, Pau Gasol returned from injury, and Andrew Bynum decided to put up another great line. This is encouraging news if you own Bynum, although I wouldn’t expect it to be the norm. I still expect Bynum to have many more night like this, but with some mediocre games sprinkled in.
In Chicago, Joakim Noah is on fire from the free throw line and the sole reason why I’ve risen a couple spots in that category so far this month in one roto league.
In Indiana, Roy Hibbert is on fire from everywhere… and that’s with Danny Granger and Troy Murphy back. Remember when I said he’d average a double-double with 2 bpg back when he was mired in a slump? Even I laughed at myself. Expect some inconsistency, but I’m glad/relieved I still have him in all my leagues.
WEEK 13 PICKUPS
Since my top pick from last week is still owned in less than half of Yahoo leagues, I’ll just mention Kirk Hinrich (49%) first. Okay, there. Now onto to some fresh meat.
Rasual Butler (26%)

Just in case you were wondering who that guy who keeps hitting 3's for your team looks like... (Getty Images)
Okay, so he’s not exactly fresh because this is probably the fourth time he’s made this list. Also, I alluded to this earlier in the week, but with Blake Griffin out for the year, both Butler and Al Thornton don’t have to look over their shoulders quite as much anymore. I much prefer Butler (as does Mike Dunleavy Sr.), and he has a real chance to keep up his current pace of 13.8 ppg with 1.7 threes as starting SF (including 33 pts and 4 treys versus the Cavs Saturday night), albeit with some inconsistency.
DeJuan Blair (23%)
I mentioned Blair in a recent Eye-Opening Lines post. Since then, the undersized center had 8 and 8 in a foul-plagued game against MEM. If you need a big man, check him out.
Luke Ridnour (38%), Ersan Ilyasova (38%), and Carlos Delfino (6%)
I mentioned these guys last week, and I still like them to benefit from Michael Redd’s season-ending injury (roughly in this order). At one point earlier in the year, Ridnour was actually ranked in the top 50 as he was an efficient source of 3’s and ast. Meanwhile Ilyasova had already been solid in recent weeks, while Delfino exploded for 28 pts in his last game.
Robin Lopez (7%)
I’ve been waiting for Lopez to eat into Channing Frye’s minutes all year and it finally happened last week. In PHO’s two most recent games, Lopez averaged 12.5 ppg and 4.5 bpg in 27 mpg (all season highs). One of the games was a blowout; one was highly contested. I’m not sure if this is a trend, but pay close to attention if you need blk.
Some guys I’ve spent plenty of ink on already:
Mike Miller (37% — no official word on return, but should be owned in most leagues), Martell Webster (47%), Matt Barnes (29% — if you’re worried about Rashard Lewis, it’s actually Barnes and not Vince Carter who is hurting him more)
Some other guys to keep an eye on:
Corey Brewer (34%), Jonas Jerebko (7% — back in the starting lineup…for now), Delonte West (21%), Steve Blake (10% — still hitting 3’s as a sub), Vladimir Radmanovic (5% — check status), Chuck Hayes (12% — last week’s averages were inflated by a monster 3OT game, but he was relevant earlier in the year), Earl Watson (10%), Jared Jeffries (1% — still a cheap source of stl/blk), James Posey (5%), Shannon Brown (2%), DeAndre Jordan (3% — check Chris Kaman’s status)
Al Thornton, Allen Iverson, Andre Iguodala, Andrew Bogut, Andrew Bynum, Antawn Jamison, Blake Griffin, Boris Diaw, Brandon Jennings, Carlos Delfino, Caron Butler, Channing Frye, Chris Kaman, Chuck Hayes, Corey Brewer, Danny Granger, DeAndre Jordan, DeJuan Blair, Delonte West, Dwyane Wade, Earl Watson, Ersan Ilyasova, Gerald Wallace, Gilbert Arenas, James Posey, Jared Jeffries, Joakim Noah, Jonas Jerebko, Kevin Martin, Kirk Hinrich, Luke Ridnour, Martell Webster, Matt Barnes, Mike Miller, Nate Robinson, Omri Casspi, Pau Gasol, Randy Foye, Rashard Lewis, Rasual Butler, Raymond Felton, Robin Lopez, Roy Hibbert, Samuel Dalembert, Shannon Brown, Stephen Curry, Stephen Jackson, Steve Blake, Troy Murphy, Tyreke Evans, Tyrus Thomas, Vince Carter, Vladimir Radmanovic, Yi Jianlian
Week 10 Recap (Starring Gilbert Arenas as a Washington Bullet) and Week 11 Pickups
Posted by fantasy hoopster in Fantasy Basketball, Fantasy Basketball Strategy on January 3, 2010
Three explosive fantasy guards dominated the headlines in Week 10, with only one of them doing it for the right reasons.

Are you ready for your mug shot, or, er, close up, Mr. Arenas? (The Canadian Press)
Gilbert Arenas
Is that a gun in your pocket or are you just happy to… Oh. That is a gun in your pocket. Agent Zero made headlines for all the wrong reasons this week as he inexplicably brought/stored three guns at work. In his defense though, he’s kind of a bonehead (and the guns were unloaded). There are sources reporting everything from Hibachi trying to pull off a practical joke gone awry to Arenas and teammate Javaris Crittenton going Alien vs. Predator on one another over a gambling debt. I have a feeling it’s a little closer to the former, but regardless of the intent, this doesn’t bode well if you own Arenas.
Some people, including Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo sports, think Arenas could be in store for an extended suspension. David Stern is hard to predict, but if he decides to make an example of Arenas, Caron Butler and Randy Foye (in theory) would enjoy an immediate jump in value. We should all know Arenas’ fate by Monday. Keep your fingers crossed if you spent a third round pick on him.
Nate Robinson
KryptoNate came back down to earth on Sunday, but I think you can forgive him after his 41-pt, 6-reb, 8-ast effort on Friday night — single-handedly carrying the Knicks over the Hawks. In his post-game interview, Robinson seemed genuinely humbled by his month layoff at the hands of Mike D’Antoni, and more importantly, in the game he seemed hungry. He’s still available in 47% of Yahoo leagues. (I added him in one league over the weekend.)
And on a side note, Larry Hughes hasn’t played the last 2 games.
Adrian Wojnarowski, Andrew Bynum, Anthony Randolph, Beno Udrih, Brandon Jennings, Brandon Rush, C.J. Watson, Carl Landry, Carmelo Anthony, Caron Butler, Chauncey Billups, Derrick Rose, Donte Greene, Eddie House, Ersan Ilyasova, Gilbert Arenas, Jarrett Jack, Jason Thompson, Javaris Crittenton, Jeff Foster, Jose Calderon, Kevin Durant, Kevin Garnett, Kevin Martin, Kobe Bryant, Lamar Odom, Larry Hughes, Lou Williams, Luc Richard Mbah a Moute, Luis Scola, Martell Webster, Matt Barnes, Michael Redd, Mickael Pietrus, Mo Williams, Nate Robinson, Omri Casspi, Pau Gasol, Paul Pierce, Rajon Rondo, Randy Foye, Rasheed Wallace, Rasual Butler, Ron Artest, Roy Hibbert, Spencer Hawes, Tony Allen, Tony Parker, Tracy McGrady, Trevor Ariza, Troy Murphy, Ty Lawson, Tyler Hansbrough, Tyreke Evans, Yi Jianlian, Zydrunas Ilgauskas
Week 9 Recap (All Carl Landry wants for Christmas is his 2-pt buckets) and Week 10 Pickups
Posted by fantasy hoopster in Fantasy Basketball, Fantasy Basketball Injuries, Fantasy Basketball Pickups, Fantasy Basketball Strategy on December 27, 2009

Elbows to his face aren't the only high-percentage shots Carl Landry is taking lately. (Getty Images)
Week 9 featured the return of some quality fantasy backups, the emergence and re-emergence of some efficiency experts, and the re-emergence of an inefficiency expert.
Tyrus Thomas, Leandro Barbosa, and Jameer Nelson
All three guys returned this week, and I’m pretty psyched to have all three on one of my squads (Thomas and Barbosa as of two weeks ago). Thomas made the biggest noise with a 21 and 9 performance vs. the Hornets Saturday night, while Barbosa had a couple solid games and Nelson was a little up-and-down. Needless to say, all three should be taken in most formats.
Zach Randolph and Carl Landry
Meanwhile, two guys who started off the season with fairly pedestrian numbers have really stepped their games up over the last several weeks. Don’t look now, but Z-Bo is averaging 23 and 14 in the month of December on 51% shooting from the field and a ridiculous 92% from the stripe. Meanwhile, Carl “All I want for Christmas is my two front teeth” Landry has averaged 17.6 and 5.6 on a whopping 63% from the field and 86% from the stripe (and with a nice 7 attempts per game).
They’re also both relatively cheap trade targets, for different reasons. Landry, because he’s still relatively unknown, and Randolph, because he’s traditionally known as only a “points and rebounds” guy, which is still mostly true (he’s also at 1.1 spg over the last month), but his efficiency has translated into a #28 ranking by Yahoo averages over the last month. (Landry is #44.) Both will likely drop off some, but if you’re going to target either, you can probably get Landry at a much better value, although you might want to wait for him to stop having 20-point games before making an offer.
(And speaking of efficiency, I also wanted to note another potentially “cheap” guy. Raymond Felton is ranked a ridiculous #14 over the last month, shooting 53% from the field and 90% from the line. Again, he likely can’t keep that up, but he looks to have turned a corner with his improved shot selection.)
Al Thornton, Anthony Parker, Blake Griffin, Brandon Jennings, Brandon Rush, C.J. Miles, C.J. Watson, Carl Landry, Chris Douglas-Roberts, Delonte West, Earl Watson, Gilbert Arenas, Jameer Nelson, Jarrett Jack, Jose Calderon, Kevin Martin, Kyle Lowry, Leandro Barbosa, Martell Webster, Michael Redd, Mo Williams, Omri Casspi, Quentin Richardson, Rasual Butler, Raymond Felton, Serge Ibaka, Stephen Curry, Tyreke Evans, Tyrus Thomas, Yi Jianlian, Zach Randolph
Week 8 Recap (T-Mac plays “7 Minutes in Heaven”) and Week 9 Pickups
Posted by fantasy hoopster in Fantasy Basketball, Fantasy Basketball Injuries, Fantasy Basketball Pickups, Fantasy Basketball Strategy on December 21, 2009

7 minutes in heaven? Seventh graders are getting more play than T-Mac is right now... (Getty Images)
In Week 8, some of the most important fantasy happenings occurred off the court, with several fantasy stars on the verge of returning to the court. It also featured Superman returning to form, T-Mac getting “out-played” by seventh graders, and a possible new contender in the fantasy ROY race.
Lou Williams, Jameer Nelson, and Tyrus Thomas (and Marreese Speights)
Hopefully you heard some of my barking (as well as some of the guys on my message boards) and were quick enough to pick up Williams, Nelson, or Thomas over the past week. Williams actually already returned to action with a subpar outing versus the Clippers, but with Allen Iverson out at least a week due to arthritis, Sweet Lou will have plenty of time to get back into form… and before we know it, Iverson will be the one adjusting to him instead of the other way around.
Meanwhile, Nelson is expected to return early in Week 9, while Thomas will likely return at the end of the week. And another guy who returned to the lineup after an extended absence and has already turned in 3 solid (including one great) game is Marreese Speights. With both Elton Brand and Samuel Dalembert healthy and playing decently, I’m not expecting too much consistency from Speights. But if you need help at C, he’s definitely worth a look, and he’s only taken in 30% of Yahoo leagues right now.
By the way, if you missed out on any of the above guys, the next (mini) wave of injured guys returning includes Leandro Barbosa (expected to return around mid-to-late week) and in deeper leagues, Yi Jianlian (expected back mid-week).
Dwight Howard
Meanwhile, Superman returned to form, averaging 17 and 18 with 4.5 bpg in 4 games. It’s no coincidence this Superman-esque stretch occurred after a Dec. 11 game at Phoenix in which the Suns went Hack-a-Howard and allowed D-12 to only get off 1 (yes ONE) field goal attempt. I unsuccessfully tried to buy low on Howard all year in one H2H league where I already own Rajon Rondo and Andrew Bogut (FT% punt, anyone?), and that window has probably slammed shut for good now. Oh well.
Al Harrington, Allen Iverson, Anderson Varejao, Andray Blatche, Andre Miller, Andrew Bogut, Antawn Jamison, Brandon Jennings, C.J. Miles, C.J. Watson, Caron Butler, Chris Duhon, Danilo Gallinari, Danny Granger, Delonte West, Dirk Nowitzki, Dorell Wright, Dwight Howard, Dwyane Wade, Earl Watson, Elton Brand, Francisco Garcia, Gerald Wallace, Gilbert Arenas, Jameer Nelson, James Harden, Jared Jeffries, Jarrett Jack, Jason Thompson, Joel Przybilla, Jonas Jerebko, Jose Juan Barea, Josh Boone, Kevin Martin, Kyle Lowry, Leandro Barbosa, Lou Williams, Marreese Speights, Martell Webster, Mo Williams, Omri Casspi, Quentin Richardson, Rajon Rondo, Raymond Felton, Roy Hibbert, Russell Westbrook, Samuel Dalembert, Stephen Curry, Stephen Jackson, T.J. Ford, Tim Duncan, Tim Thomas, Tracy McGrady, Tyreke Evans, Tyrus Thomas, Willie Green, Wilson Chandler, Yi Jianlian
Fantasy Basketball Strategy: Week 4 Recap and Week 5 Pickups
Posted by fantasy hoopster in Fantasy Basketball, Fantasy Basketball Injuries, Fantasy Basketball Pickups, Fantasy Basketball Strategy on November 22, 2009

Don't call it a comeback, Brand's been here all year long. He's just finally making some noise. (Getty Images)
WEEK 4 RECAP
They’re Ba-aaack
Week 4 featured the return of several fantasy studs: Rashard Lewis, Devin Harris, Troy Murphy, and Pau Gasol. (Thanks for playing, Ryan Andersen and Rafer Alston. Here are some nice parting gifts…)
As for Murphy and Gasol, their fantasy impact is a little more complicated. Murphy will definitely take away some of Roy Hibbert’s stats, but I think the young center will still be valuable contributing a near double-double with 2 bpg. Meanwhile, if you didn’t sell high on Andrew Bynum before Gasol’s return, please don’t panic and let someone buy low on him these next few (or more?) games as he readjusts to Gasol. 19 and 11 might be a little much to expect, but he’ll be much better than 11 and 8 (his first game with Pau back).
On the flip side, Week 4 also saw some key injuries, including Jameer Nelson and Andrew Bogut. If you’re looking for replacements, Jason Williams has had a couple decent games thus far, while Kurt Thomas/Hakim Warrick have each had a nice game (depending on the matchup) in Bogut’s absence. (There are some more exciting pickups further below.)
They’re “Ba-aaack”
Week 4 also featured the “return” of two stud centers: Elton Brand and Al Jefferson. With Marresse Speights out of the way due to injury, Brand absolutely erupted, averaging 20 and 10 with 2.7/3.7 spg/bpg this week, good for the #2 ranking by averages in Yahoo leagues. I’m not sure what to make of this unexpected outburst quite yet, as the 76ers lost two of those games and barely beat a new-look CHA team in the other game, but I’ll have my thoughts on whether Brand is a sell high or buy low guy shortly.
Al Jefferson, Allen Iverson, Anderson Varejao, Andre Miller, Andrei Kirilenko, Andres Nocioni, Andrew Bogut, Andrew Bynum, Anthony Morrow, Ben Wallace, Beno Udrih, Brandon Jennings, Brandon Rush, Chris Douglas-Roberts, Chris Paul, Dahntay Jones, Danny Granger, Darren Collison, Devin Harris, Dirk Nowitzki, Donte Greene, Drew Gooden, Elton Brand, Erick Dampier, Ersan Ilyasova, Flip Murray, Hakim Warrick, J.J. Hickson, Jameer Nelson, James Harden, Jared Dudley, Jason Williams, Jermaine O'Neal, Jonny Flynn, Kevin Martin, Kurt Thomas, Larry Hughes, Luke Ridnour, Marco Belinelli, Marcus Thornton, Marreese Speights, Matt Barnes, Michael Redd, Mickael Pietrus, Monta Ellis, Nate Robinson, Omri Casspi, Pau Gasol, Peja Stojakovic, Rafer Alston, Ramon Sessions, Rashard Lewis, Rip Hamilton, Roy Hibbert, Rudy Fernandez, Ryan Anderson, Shaquille O'Neal, Stephen Curry, Stephen Jackson, Steve Blake, Tayshaun Prince, Troy Murphy, Tyreke Evans, Will Bynum, Yi Jianlian
Fantasy Basketball Strategy: Eye-Opening Lines from Week 2
Posted by fantasy hoopster in Fantasy Basketball, Fantasy Basketball Rankings, Fantasy Basketball Strategy on November 8, 2009

The only thing that can stop Kaman so far is Kaman himself. Or Reggie Evans' right hand. (AP)
Week 2 had plenty of surprises, including a fantasy stud who keeps getting better, some old-timers rising from the dead, some sleepers living up to the hype, and plenty of potential free agents who might be able to help your squad.
THE RICH GET RICHER
Chris Paul
First of all, I just want to point out one of the sickest stats of this young season. As if there was any doubt who the (statistically) best fantasy player in the league is, Paul has hit a ridiculous 72% of his threes this year. (He’s only hitting 64% of his overall shots though. Slacker.)
ZOMBIELAND
Meanwhile, a handful of fantasy old-timers (some older than others) have seemingly risen from the dead to put up top-notch fantasy stats.
Andrei Kirilenko
In 4 November games, AK-47 approached his pre-Boozer/Deron AK-47 numbers with 1.8 spg/bpg to go along with 13 ppg and solid %’s, good for a top 25 Yahoo ranking by averages.
Chris Kaman
Kaman’s monster season continued in week 2. His game log speaks for itself. Sell high, anyone?
Andrew Bogut
It’s been a couple years since Bogut was a top-tier fantasy C, but last week he sure played like one, averaging 18 and 10 with 1/2 spg/bpg. With Michael Redd coming back in the next week or so, I’m not sure Bogut will continue to get 14 shots per game, but he’s clearly found his offensive rhythm again.
Allen Iverson, Anderson Varejao, Andrei Kirilenko, Andrew Bogut, Anthony Morrow, Beno Udrih, Brandon Jennings, Brandon Rush, Brendan Haywood, Carl Landry, Carlos Boozer, Channing Frye, Charlie Bell, Chris Douglas-Roberts, Chris Kaman, Chris Paul, Chuck Hayes, Corey Brewer, Daequan Cook, Dahntay Jones, Danilo Gallinari, Deron Williams, Erick Dampier, J.J. Redick, Joakim Noah, Kevin Love, Kevin Martin, Michael Redd, Mike Conley, Nene Hilario, Oleksiy Pecherov, Omri Casspi, Quentin Richardson, Rafer Alston, Raja Bell, Reggie Evans, Roy Hibbert, Shaquille O'Neal, Taj Gibson, Troy Murphy, Tyreke Evans, Tyrus Thomas, Yi Jianlian
Fantasy Basketball Strategy: Eye-Opening Lines from the Season’s First Full Night of Action
Posted by fantasy hoopster in Fantasy Basketball, Fantasy Basketball Rankings, Fantasy Basketball Strategy on October 29, 2009

Although neither of them can jump anymore, one of these O'Neals might not be fantasy-finished just quite yet... (NBAE)
Now that we’re done with those meaningless and (potentially) misleading eye-opening lines from the pre-season, how about some eye-opening lines from games that actually count. In addition to looking at some lines from guys that are probably already rostered, I’ll look at (perhaps more importantly) lines from guys you want to keep an eye on.
First, a word of caution: While it can make or break your season if you land one of these game-changing free agents that went undrafted, something that can also make or break your season is dropping one of your sleepers before he pans out. So, if you’re carrying dead weight, go ahead and jump on some of these guys. Otherwise, just keep an eye on them and be ready to pounce (like, say, during the second quarter of their third consecutive solid game — sometimes you just can’t wait until that night).
Without further ado, some eye-opening lines from the season’s first full night of action (and a few from the first night too):
STARS
Gilbert Arenas
Sure, LeBron put up back-to-back monster lines, but that wasn’t the most eye-opening performance to me. Even though I don’t own him in any leagues, it was still great to see Gilbert Arenas pour in 29 points with 9 assists in his season debut. It’s certainly not a guarantee of anything, but still, nice to see.
Danny Granger
While Kevin Durant posted a line worthy of a fantasy first-rounder with 25 and 11, those who stuck with their guns and drafted Danny Granger must quietly be thrilled with his 31 points on 5 threes. Again, it’s still early, but you geniuses may as well pat yourselves on the back (especially before Granger hurts himself).
BIGS
Nobody thrived more on opening night (and a half) than the League’s big men. Some cases in point:
Brook Lopez poured in 27 and 15 with 5 blocks, and against Al Jefferson nonetheless.
Aaron Brooks, Al Horford, Al Jefferson, Allen Iverson, Andrea Bargnani, Andrew Bynum, Brook Lopez, Chris Bosh, Chris Kaman, Danilo Gallinari, Danny Granger, DeJuan Blair, Gilbert Arenas, Grant Hill, Hasheem Thabeet, Jason Richardson, Jeff Green, Jermaine O'Neal, Jonny Flynn, Kevin Durant, LeBron James, Marc Gasol, Marreese Speights, Russell Westbrook, Shaquille O'Neal, Stephen Curry, Troy Murphy, Ty Lawson, Yi Jianlian, Zach Randolph
Fantasy Basketball Draft Rankings: 126-150
Posted by fantasy hoopster in Fantasy Basketball, Fantasy Basketball Draft, Fantasy Basketball Rankings on October 6, 2009
I’ve finished updating my draft rankings from 101-150. I’ll post it in two different entries, to make it a little more readable. Be sure to check out the complete list from 1-150 on the Draft Rankings tab, complete with one-liners.
Andrei Kirilenko, Anthony Parker, Antonio McDyess, Brad Miller, Brandon Rush, Carlos Boozer, Chris Andersen, Chris Kaman, Chris Wilcox, Courtney Lee, D.J. Augustin, Delonte West, DeMar DeRozan, Elton Brand, Grant Hill, Hakim Warrick, Jamario Moon, Kenyon Martin, Larry Hughes, Marcus Camby, Mickael Pietrus, Mike Dunleavy, Mike Miller, Mo Williams, Paul Millsap, Peja Stojakovic, Randy Foye, Samuel Dalembert, Shane Battier, Tracy McGrady, Tyreke Evans, Yi Jianlian
Draft Strategy: Don’t hate the player, hate the team
Posted by fantasy hoopster in Fantasy Basketball, Fantasy Basketball Draft, Fantasy Basketball Draft Strategy, Fantasy Basketball Rankings on October 1, 2009
Note: Since you can find some good links to fantasy basketball draft strategy here, I’ll try to focus on a few areas often overlooked.

Don't hate Devin Harris. Hate the Nets. (Marc Rasbury/Icon SMI)
Team schedule. It might sound like the most boring part of playing fantasy basketball, but sometimes it makes a world of difference, especially in H2H leagues (note: this article is mainly intended for H2H players). There are two crucial parts of team schedule:
a) How many times a team plays per week.
b) How many “Off-Days” a team plays.
As I was gearing up to write this, I came across a pretty great analysis of the former at Basketball Free For All via another site, FourPointPlay. I was planning to do something similar but they’ve already done a great job analyzing the NBA schedule on a play-per-week basis. So I’ll focus on the latter.
What exactly do I mean by Off-Days? The days where almost every team gets a day off. Your Thanksgivings, Christmases, and New Years, to name a few. But there are always some teams playing on those days, and since they’re often big primetime TV days, the teams are usually the superstar-led ones, like the Cavaliers, Lakers, and Celtics. But not always.
In H2H leagues it’s especially useful to own players on these teams (it doesn’t always have to be the superstar, mind you) because it often adds to your TOTAL GAME count for that week (assuming you don’t have a weekly cap on games). Even if you do have a cap on games, when your best players play on these Off-Days, it frees you up to use your most efficient combination of players on the days where everyone seems to be playing. Here’s an example:
Aaron Gray, Anthony Carter, Brook Lopez, Carmelo Anthony, Chris Paul, Courtney Lee, Danny Granger, Derrick Rose, Devin Harris, Eric Gordon, J.R. Smith, John Salmons, Jordan Farmar, Kevin Durant, Kobe Bryant, LeBron James, Luol Deng, Nene Hilario, Renaldo Balkman, Thaddeus Young, Tracy McGrady, Yao Ming, Yi Jianlian
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Rotoworld- Bucks SG Stackhouse ruled out w/ sore hammy - Jerry Stackhouse (G/F) Milwaukee Bucks
- Eric Gordon not in Clippers lineup on Tue - Eric Gordon (G) Los Angeles Clippers
- Alston still hasn't contacted the team - Rafer Alston (G) Miami Heat
- O'Neal, Wright will play - Jermaine O'Neal (C) Miami Heat
- Noah ditches his boot - Joakim Noah (F/C) Chicago Bulls
- Baron Davis sick, won't start on Tuesday - Baron Davis (G) Los Angeles Clippers
- Haywood may be able to play Wednesday - Brendan Haywood (C) Dallas Mavericks
- Lowry a game-time decision - Kyle Lowry (G) Houston Rockets
- Ariza cleared to play - Trevor Ariza (F) Houston Rockets
- Ellington still not cleared - Wayne Ellington (G) Minnesota Timberwolves
Adrian Wojnarowski- WojYahooNBA: Danny Granger and Channing Frye have been suspended for a game for scrap in recent game, NBA says.
- WojYahooNBA: RT @Ian_OConnor: At St. John's, the woman who shows the Big East boys how to do a man's job. http://tinyurl.com/yfp8khd
- WojYahooNBA: PJ knows he won't get another head coaching job in NBA. So if he wants to be HC again, it would have to be on campus. Still, i don't see it.
- WojYahooNBA: PJ came to hate recruiting when he left SHU in 90s, and it's only more distasteful now. He loves pro lifestyle -- even as asst. or radio-tv.
- WojYahooNBA: In past decade or so PJ Carlesimo turned down ND and St. Johns and has always told me CBB holds no appeal to him. Oregon would surprise me.
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