The point for Gasol, 31, and Nowitzki, 33, in laboring through the NBA offseason, though, is to qualify their countries for the 2012 Olympics in London. That’s pretty likely for Gasol now, but not Nowitzki.
Playing with a career-high tan that showed he has been getting some summer vacation in, Nowitzki also had 19 points in the game but shot worse than Gasol – and had no steals or blocks compared to Gasol’s two of each. In one of the key sequences, Gasol had a block at one end and in transition got to the other end for a put-back on which he outhustled both Chris Kaman and Nowitzki despite them having superior inside position.
It was the sort of effort play that Gasol made so often in all three of Gasol’s first playoff runs with the Lakers en route to three championship rounds – but failed to make last season.
With how poorly Gasol finished the season, it’s easy to forget how incredibly effective and efficient he was early in the 2010-11 season. That work got done while Andrew Bynum was again sidelined and Kobe Bryant was slowed after offseason knee surgery. A month into the season, Gasol was having a light-hearted running dialogue with Mike Trudell of Lakers.com about being the top-ranked player in the league in fantasy basketball rankings.
No one was laughing at season’s end: Gasol averaged 13.1 points on 42 percent shooting in the playoffs.
The reality is that Gasol will be back with the Lakers whenever this lockout ends, and he’ll be great again.
He’s going to start hitting 3-pointers regularly, I’m guessing, which will only boost his fantasy basketball profile as he re-establishes himself. Even after his dramatic playoff fizzle, he stands No. 8 in Yahoo! Sports’ fantasy rankings for the coming season – ahead of No. 10 Nowitzki and No. 16 Bryant. (In the ESPN fantasy projections, Gasol is No. 12 to Nowitzki’s No. 15 and Bryant’s No. 17.)
With the softness he shows at times, you don’t think of him as a machine, but take a look at Gasol’s 2010-11 season splits:
Pre-All-Star: 18.8 points, 10.4 rebounds, 52.8 percent field goals, 82.2 percent free throws.
Post-All-Star: 18.8 points, 9.6 rebounds, 53.4 percent field goals, 82.7 percent free throws.
He is a gentle giant and a consistent monster. And the playoff failure of 2011 was a flat-out aberration.
http://www.ocregister.com/articles/gaso ... eason.html