NBA News/Injuries/etc. (3/3/11)

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hacheman@therx.com
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Daniel Gibson - G - Cavaliers

The Cavs are already calling Daniel Gibson (quad) questionable for Sunday's game against the Hornets.
This is clearly a pretty good bruise that Gibson has. He won't play on Friday and the Cavs don't sound like they're counting on him for Sunday either. Mar. 3 - 5:21 p.m. ET
Source: Akron Beacon-Journal
 

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Stephen Jackson - G/F - Bobcats

Stephen Jackson (hamstring) sat out Thursday's practice but is expected to play Friday.
The Bobcats are certainly concerned about Jackson's lingering hamstring woes, but holding him out of a game is another matter all together. If Jackson can walk, he'll play even if he is extremely limited. Mar. 3 - 4:33 p.m. ET
Source: B.J. Evans on Twitter
 

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Tyrus Thomas - F - Bobcats

Tyrus Thomas (knee) participated in the non-contract portion of Bobcats practice Thursday.
Thomas remains on schedule to return next week. Although a starting job likely isn't in the cards, Thomas could very well push for 28-30 minutes a night before long. Kwame Brown is playing poorly, Gerald Wallace is gone, Stephen Jackson's hamstring is acting up and Gerald Henderson is a wild car. Mar. 3 - 4:32 p.m. ET
Source: B.J. Evans on Twitter
 

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Josh Smith - F - Hawks </TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=bodyCopy>Josh Smith (knee) is listed as doubtful for Friday's game against the Thunder.</TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Smith's MRI apparently came back clean, but the Hawks are likely going to play it safe here. Since Smoove is still feeling pain in his knee, they'll give him another game off. Look for Jason Collins to start, but Al Horford to beast. Consider Smith day-to-day as he has dodged ligament damage.
Mar. 3 - 3:25 p.m. ET</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Source: Michael Cunningham on Twitter</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

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Glen Davis - F/C - Celtics </TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=bodyCopy>Glen Davis (knee) is expected to miss 3-5 days after an MRI showed no further damage.</TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>The patella tendon in Davis' knee is apparently just marginally strained. This should open up some extra minutes for Jeff Green and Troy Murphy, but we doubt it will be enough for fantasy owners to really feast. And with Davis expected to miss just a week at most, the timeframe for any boost will be short.
Mar. 3 - 3:00 p.m. ET</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Source: Gary Washburn on Twitter</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

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James Harden - G - Thunder </TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=bodyCopy>Coach Scott Brooks said that James Harden would likely start Friday if Kevin Durant (ankle) can't go.</TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Harden has really been playing well of late, averaging 17.0 points on 47.5 percent shooting over his last five games. If Durant sits, Harden will be a good bet for 30-33 minutes and will make for a nice spot-start.
Mar. 3 - 2:18 p.m. ET</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Source: Oklahoman</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

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Kevin Durant - F - Thunder </TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=bodyCopy>Kevin Durant (ankle) is doubtful for Friday's game against the Hawks.</TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Durant missed practice Thursday after spraining his left ankle during Wednesday's win over the Pacers. The sprain is not considered severe -- he'll travel to Atlanta and test the ankle out tomorrow before an official decision is made. We'd expect Durant to sit out as a precaution but he has a good chance to be ready for Sunday's game against the Suns. James Harden would start if Durant is out.
Mar. 3 - 2:12 p.m. ET</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Source: Oklahoman</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

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Jameer Nelson - G - Magic </TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=bodyCopy>Jameer Nelson (ankle) is a full go for Thursday's game against the Heat, as expected.</TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>The Magic will have their full complement of players tonight, including Gilbert Arenas. Nelson will hover around 30 minutes.
Mar. 3 - 1:42 p.m. ET</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Source: Josh Robbins on Twitter</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

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Rashard Lewis - F - Wizards </TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=bodyCopy>Rashard Lewis said he will make a decision today about whether to get his right knee scoped.</TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Lewis' knee has deteriorated so badly that has been able to play just 15 total minutes off the bench in the last two games. At this point, shutting it down for the season probably makes sense and he's safe to drop in all formats. Josh Howard will keep starting at small forward until his knees give out.
Mar. 3 - 1:13 p.m. ET</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Source: Michael Lee on Twitter</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

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Richard Hamilton - G/F - Pistons </TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=bodyCopy>Coach John Kuester said that Richard Hamilton will remain with the second unit.</TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>The Pistons actually appear committed to a youth movement right now, so Hamilton will come off the bench. Look for Rodney Stuckey, Ben Gordon, Austin Daye, Greg Monroe and Chris Wilcox to be the starters going forward.
Mar. 3 - 12:57 p.m. ET</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Source: Detroit Free Press</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

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Tyreke Evans - G - Kings </TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=bodyCopy>Tyreke Evans (foot) was in Los Angeles on Tuesday for a second round of shock-wave treatment for his plantar fasciitis.</TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Evans is scheduled for third session of the treatment next week, so he does not appear close to returning to action. He was originally expected to be in a walking boot for three weeks from Feb. 22, so it appears that he remains on schedule. If Evans comes back at all this year, it likely won't be until the tail end of March.
Mar. 3 - 12:51 p.m. ET</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Source: Sacramento Bee</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

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Elton Brand - F/C - 76ers </TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=bodyCopy>Elton Brand (finger) practiced Thursday and is a full go for Friday's game against the Wolves.</TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Brand's right (shooting) pinkie finger has popped out on him twice over the last week, but it's not overly concerning. He's been able to simply pop it back in place and keep playing. Use Brand as you normally would.
Mar. 3 - 12:44 p.m. ET</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Source: Sixers on Twitter</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

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Baron Davis - G - Cavaliers </TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=bodyCopy>Baron Davis (knee) will likely make his Cavs debut Friday but will not start.</TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Davis will come off the bench behind Ramon Sessions, meaning owners should take a "wait and see" approach with B-Diddy. Look for him to be eased in with 20-25 minutes. Coach Byron Scott has clearly stated that Davis will eventually start, but until that actually happens Sessions remains a must start.
Mar. 3 - 12:37 p.m. ET</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Source: Mary Schmitt Boyer on Twitter</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

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Ronnie Price - G - Jazz </TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=bodyCopy>Ronnie Price (toe) is out for Thursday's game against the Nuggets.</TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Earl Watson will back up Devin Harris for the Jazz tonight. Price is scheduled for an MRI later today.
Mar. 3 - 12:26 p.m. ET</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Source: Jonathan Rinehart on Twitter</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

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Chauncey Billups - G - Knicks </TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=bodyCopy>Chauncey Billups (thigh) is listed as doubtful for Friday's game against the Cavs.</TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>It would be wise for the Knicks to just hold Billups out. They can beat the Cavs without Billups and Toney Douglas has proved that he is more than capable of holding down the fort. Consider Billups questionable for Sunday while Douglas becomes a strong spot-start tomorrow.
Mar. 3 - 12:15 p.m. ET</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Source: Adam Zagoria on Twitter</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

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Deron Williams - G - Nets </TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=bodyCopy>Coach Avery Johnson said that Deron Williams may leave the team for a little bit to be with his wife for the birth of their fourth child.</TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Johnson hinted that the upcoming birth could be used as a chance for Williams to rest his wrists as well. The Nets plan on "re-evaluating" Williams' situation when they get back from London, but Johnson insists that there are no plans to shut their new point guard down. Still, owners need to be prepared for the possibility that Williams will miss crucial fantasy playoff games.
Mar. 3 - 11:16 a.m. ET</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Source: Bergen Record</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

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Eric Gordon - G - Clippers </TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=bodyCopy>Despite Wednesday's impressive performance, Eric Gordon said his wrist is still bothering him plenty.</TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>You wouldn't know it by watching Gordon. He scored 24 points in 35 minutes and looked confident. He still had this to say: "I know there's going to be pain there for the next couple months." We wouldn't worry about Gordon's concerns -- he can only get healthier from here.
Mar. 3 - 10:12 a.m. ET</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Source: ESPN Los Angeles</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

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Chris Paul - G - Hornets </TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=bodyCopy>Despite some uncharacteristically poor play of late, Chris Paul says his surgically repaired knee "feels better than it has at any other point."</TD></TR><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Paul certainly looks slower and less explosive, but he says his body feels "great." Perhaps CP3 is lying to himself. Over the last 10 games, he's averaging 11.1 points, 8.4 assists, 1.7 steals and shooting 33.6 percent from the field. The only logical explanation is that his knee is holding him back. Reel in your expectations for now, but benching Paul would be crazy.
Mar. 3 - 9:52 a.m. ET</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=vaLink>Source: cbssports.com</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

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Fantasy related but good info....



Dose: One Man's Trash
The past two weeks have been nothing short of amazing here at Rotoworld basketball headquarters, as we've enjoyed the biggest spike of traffic in our site's history in the basketball section. Approaching the heart of baseball draft season you can't find a single ballplayer in our top-10 searches over the past week, whereas Troy Murphy has been searched a record 12,000 times. There are a lot of theories for the huge increase of interest in fantasy basketball, but my take on it includes a bit of everything.

For one, whereas fantasy football is a lot like poker – you get in with the best hand and hope your team doesn't get decimated by injuries or timeshares, the best owners usually win out in fantasy basketball. And unlike fantasy baseball, which is tremendously stat-driven and requires a broader look at trends over the long-term, fantasy basketball boils down to two things – is a guy playing now and is he producing.

Owners don't have to wait 30 days to determine that Bengie Molina isn't hitting the slider, and a season's worth of work doesn't go to waste when Tom Brady blows his knee out – at least, not nearly as often. When things go haywire in basketball, like in Detroit for instance, owners can cut bait with a guy like Tracy McGrady and move on.

This perfect mix of simplicity and skill gets played out every night like a locomotive out of control. Owners come home from a long day's work, flip on NBA TV, get their laptop out and login to Twitter, and take part in the show with Doctor A., Adam Levitan, Matt Stroup, Ryan Knaus, and yours truly. We've created basketball's biggest chat room with one singular goal in mind -- #winning.

There's no more waiting for overnight news, and we're timing the race to the waiver wire with the seconds-hand now. In the process, folks are getting their fantasy fix seven days per week, hitting F5 on Rotoworld's NBA Player News page with the fervor of a ferret on crack. We give you information in seconds, we digest it, and we spin it so you don't have to. Whether we're right or wrong – you guys are the first to know, and by the emails and tweets you send us, you have become some of the most knowledgeable basketball minds on the Internet today.

It's a tremendous thing to be a part of, and I often have to pinch myself when thinking that I get to be in the eye of the storm every single night. The past two weeks have been some of the most riveting in the history of fantasy basketball, and that is why I believe we have gathered in mass. It's the game we love, with the people we love, and in some cases complete strangers. It's the chance to take part in this great game that the vast majority of us will never have in reality.

And best of all – the chance to show 11 other owners that we're simply better than them.

Follow the entire Rotoworld NBA crew right here:

Steve Alexander a/k/a Doctor A
Matt Stroup
Adam Levitan
Ryan Knaus
Aaron Bruski

One Man's Trash

Marcus Thornton killed owners on draft day. Going from hero to zero in a Monty Williams nanosecond, it wasn't just owners that were shaking their heads – all of New Orleans did the same thing. But the Hornets were winning, and Thornton's defensive deficiencies seemed to justify Williams' decision to put him under a rock. Any signs of life were squashed with successive DNP-CDs, and then in a sideshow trade that swapped him for Carl Landry, we all asked ourselves, 'could it be?'

Well, the one-man scoring wolfpack answered the question last night, scoring 26 points on 11-of-18 shooting (including four treys), a night after wowing an emotional Kings crowd with a 29-point performance that brought the desperate crowd something they haven't seen much of – a win. And like any good fantasy pickle, the potential return of Tyreke Evans (foot) and presence of Jermaine Taylor loomed largely.

Not anymore. He probably isn't available in your league anymore, and if he is, stop reading and grab him now unless your roster is full with guaranteed producers during the fantasy playoffs. Jermaine Taylor has been minimized, as Thornton started the second half of last night's game, and Taylor finished with 10 points in just 15 minutes (and four points coming with Portland not defending late). As for Evans, we simply don't know what his mindset will be playing for the team without a city right now. If Evans does come back, there is already talk that he could play at PG (Beno Udrih sell-high alert), and barring a faceplant by Thornton there is a very good chance that Paul Westphal finds a way to keep him on the court.

It's all in the wrist

Eric Gordon returned last night for the Clippers, and despite the fact that he is playing through pain, he went on to score 24 points on 8-of-18 shooting . For all intents and purposes, Gordon is back and Randy Foye (two points, 20 minutes) is done. I'm not entirely sold that Gordon can make it through the rest of the season, and he's a shutdown candidate at a minimum, but I'm more interested in the case of Deron Williams and Monta Ellis. Williams (bone bruise left hand, right wrist) said on Wednesday that he believes he needs 3-4 weeks of rest to get healed, though he will play in Friday's game across the pond. Ellis' right (shooting) wrist bothered him last night, though you couldn't truly tell by the 21 points on 9-of-20 shooting with three rebounds and four assists.

Now I've been on you guys to consider your options with Williams for about three weeks now, and Jerry Sloan's best friend has been doing his part by putting up big lines on almost every outing. Now he's on the verge of being on code red with this wrist injury for the rest of the season, and could also miss time in March due to his wife's pregnancy. It may be too late to move him for equal value, but owners should consider any Round 1-2 values in a deal right now. Even if you lose on the deal, you win in a way, because 90% of something is better than the possibility of a goose egg when it counts.

As for Ellis, I'm much less concerned, but I'll be listening to any Round 1, high-Round 2 offers that come my way. He has played a ton of minutes and is pretty banged up himself, and this year he's the type that won't let anybody know he's about to go down – until he's down.

And while we're on the topic of studs, let's talk about pseudo-stud Chris Paul. He'll drop the pseudo once he starts to play like one again, but he's a stark reminder that nobody is exempt from being traded in a fantasy league. I offered this bit of advice almost a month ago to the day when he started failing the eyeball test:

Don't bury your head in the sand and hope it all works out. Start making plans now, figure out what you are comfortable getting in return for a player of his caliber, and make sure it's a lot. Again, I'm not saying that you must trade him, but sometimes a hedge against a risk is worth the cost to insure that you don't find yourself holding a total loss.

He has played at an eighth round value in 8-cat leagues over the past three weeks, and while I pointed to his knee as the culprit, and yesterday Doc pointed at free agency – it's probably both. He will most certainly improve over the aforementioned stretch, but I'll be trading him for anybody without injury risks in the first round, and could easily dip into the second or third round depending on the player.

Thunderstruck

Though the injury doesn't appear to be serious, the fact that Kevin Durant left the arena in a walking boot after rolling his ankle earlier in the night deserves top billing in this column. Replays looked pretty bad and he has hurt the ankle twice before this season, but the boot was reportedly 'precautionary.' Beat writer extraordinaire Darnell Mayberry of The Oklahoman says that his 'guess' is that Durant plays on Friday in Atlanta, and Durant was seen smiling after the game. For now, it looks like a crisis has been averted.

One crisis that hasn't been averted has been the curious case of Josh Smith, whose MRI was taken on Wednesday and the results of which have not been made available at the time of this writing. His status has been an on-and-off affair with an MRI originally scheduled, then canceled, and then re-scheduled after he felt pain that caused him to be scratched from Wednesday's game. The mere fact that the results weren't immediately passed along, with the corresponding radio silence out of Atlanta, is cause for concern – and owners can only cross their fingers and hope for the best.

Should Smoove miss any time, owners can expect more good things out of Al Horford, who single-handedly brought the Hawks back in a raucous comeback with 31 points, 16 rebounds, two steals, and his first three of the year in a huge win over the Bulls. Joe Johnson, who hit just 5-of-20 shots but still managed a nice 12-point, seven-rebound, nine-assist line, will also be leaned upon heavily if Smoove goes down at all.

Rounding out the injury report from last night are Stephen Jackson (hamstring), Glen Davis (knee), and Arron Afflalo (ankle). There is some legitimate concern out of Charlotte about Captain Jack's hammy, and with Charlotte's playoff chances fading fast it's a situation worth monitoring. Moving him while his two 30+ point games are fresh in owners' minds may not be a bad idea, though last night's 7-point stinker isn't helping matters. Davis went up for a dunk on the game's last play last night, and aside from the fact that dunking is an adventure for him anyway, he hurt his left knee on the way up and apparently has been playing on a bum knee for a couple of weeks. He's going to get an MRI today, and prior to this revelation he looked like an alright pickup after Boston sold their title hopes, er frontcourt, to the Thunder. At a minimum, he is looking doubtful for Friday's game. As for Afflalo, he rolled his ankle early in last night's game and played through it, so we'll learn a lot if his status for tonight's game isn't compromised. As of now, there are no indications that he will not play.

<!--RW-->
Last night, redemption was spelled R-A-N-D

Whether or not Anthony Randolph truly got redemption last night is debatable, but when Kurt Rambis ran with the 'twos' last night and came out of Detroit with a win, Randolph stood on the top of the mountain with 19 points on 8-of-13 shooting, 10 rebounds, and a steal in 25 minutes. Sure, Darko Milicic was out for personal reasons and Michael Beasley (3-of-9 FG) couldn't hit the barn, but one of the most overhyped players in recent fantasy basketball history made his case.

The skinny is this – there is no safe answer. If you think that Milicic is automatically going away and that Rambis is going to give Randolph the leeway he never gave Kevin Love – you're overly optimistic. Last night's playing time pattern took a huge step away from Rambis' stated goal of bringing along Randolph slowly, and while all of Randolph's tools were on display, it's anybody's guess at this point if he can keep it up. So add him if you want, but assess your situation and whether or not you can afford stashing him for the upside, or if a safer player with a lower ceiling is a better fit.

Samardo's the name, bustin you up is his game

Samardo Samuels, who sounds more like a character from a Quentin Tarantino movie than a PF for the Cavaliers, exceeded all expectations in a career-night with 23 points on 10-of-18 shooting and 10 rebounds in 34 minutes. Virtually all of his competition for minutes is hurt. Semih Erden is dealing with a shoulder issue, Luke Harangody left last night's game with a hip pointer, and Joey Graham is still on a minute-limit with his knee issue. Watching last night's game, what caught my eye is his physical play, and after the game what caught my eye was the praise heaped upon him by Gregg Popovich. I'm ready to call him a must-add in most formats, if anything because he should continue to get 30+ mpg, and J.J. Hickson sometimes forgets to rebound the ball.

Also from the Gregg Popovich player-tree, Alonzo Gee took over the starting SF job in Cleveland and responded with a season-high 18 points, seven rebounds, and two threes. He got the job because Christian Eyenga was struggling with his weak-side defense, and once his offensive game went in the toilet it was time for Byron Scott to make the move. Similarly situated as Eyenga from a fantasy perspective, Gee is worth an add in many cases, but the fact that Eyenga is still going to be around should keep owners from dropping a player with consistent value.

Always send your 'A' team

The trade that sent Gerald Wallace to Portland was a major buzzkill for owners of Nicolas Batum, and to a lesser degree Wesley Matthews, as well. We cautioned owners to take a wait-and-see approach, however, and that's because we weren't quite sure who, if anybody, would take the biggest hit. Nate McMillan took a step toward helping all three out by declaring that once Rudy Fernandez (flu) was back, that he was going to slide LaMarcus Aldridge over to center and bring Marcus Camby (knee) off the bench.

This is a great move in terms of reality basketball, in my opinion, if anything because the Blazers have no frontcourt depth to speak of. They also keep their best players on the court for more minutes this way, and while they give up some size, they do it with an extremely athletic bunch. The big losers here are Camby's owners, but they might also benefit since his knee's health is a real concern. He won't be a must-start player coming off the bench, but if last night's four points, 13 rebounds, one assist, and one steal are any indication, he'll still have some utility and the blocks will certainly come. And while we've insinuated through our blurbs that the only direction that Batum and Matthews' value could go is down, we probably should have done a better job in communicating that they could also hold steady, too, which appears to be the case.

Made in Detroit

I don't want to delve into the mind of John Kuester too much here, but Rodney Stuckey has emerged as the team's PG, Ben Gordon is providing low-end fantasy value starting at SG, Austin Daye is starting at SF with Tayshaun Prince's back either injured or not, Greg Monroe is now a must-start player, Tracy McGrady has fallen out of the rotation, and Richard Hamilton is looking like he has a job now coming off the bench. All of this could change, but I'm starting to get the sense that aside from Daye and Prince possibly swapping places, that we're looking at the new rotation. Daye went off for a career-high 22 points, four rebounds, three assists, two threes, and a block, and is a fine roster stash for his ever-elusive upside, but I'm having a hard time reconciling the fact that Prince is in a contract year. If he's healthy, my guess is that he will play, and Daye will have to find his minutes somewhere else – perhaps at PF instead of Chris Wilcox.

The Sun rises with Brooks and sets with Carter

This is not a 'run out and grab Aaron Brooks' moment, but I have to admit that I'm intrigued enough to consider stashing him if things keep up. If you forgot everything you knew about the guy and watched him play last night you'd recall the player that gave the Lakers fits in the playoffs. On the other side of the spectrum is Vince Carter, who left last night's game with a mouth laceration, and has become droppable and a shell of the shell of his former self.

A few things are going on here. One, Steve Nash is no sure thing to stick around during the offseason, and Brooks is now his successor. Two, while Jared Dudley would also benefit from a demotion or shutdown of Carter, Brooks is more than capable of playing SG next to Nash, too. Phoenix won't get away with it for long stretches, but they'll gladly take the mismatch on the offensive side if it means keeping their best players on the floor. Third, the Suns are currently 1.5 games out of the playoffs and surrounded by Utah and Houston on the outside looking in behind Memphis. Should they fall out of playoff contention, don't think they won't start playing Brooks to get him ready for next year.

Is all of that enough to run out and pick up Brooks? No, but I'll be watching with my hands pressed together like Montgomery Burns.

Four Quarters of Fury

First Quarter: George Hill reminded owners why he needs to be owned in all formats with 22 points, five boards, and five assists, while DeJuan Blair patched things up with his owners by double-doubling with 14 points, 10 boards, and a block. It's not going to be smooth sailing, but the fact that Tim Duncan will be rested is the tiebreaker here. Anthony Parker hit just 1-of-7 FGs for three points, five boards, and two assists, but with Daniel Gibson getting shut down for at least Friday's game due to his lingering quad injury, I think owners should have patience. Parker could be a victim of the youth movement, but Baron Davis' (knee) health risks also add a level of security here. Speaking of Davis, he is expected to debut on Friday, which ends the gravy train for Ramon Sessions' owners, but Sessions should still be stashed indefinitely. He could be huge down the stretch in the very possible event that Davis gets shut down or loses interest. The Pacers got throttled last night, and we would caution owners not to look into much about that game – they will improve. The same thing goes for the Bobcats, whose 40-point loss was the worst in their history. If anything, the potential injury to Stephen Jackson gives owners of D.J. Augustin, Boris Diaw, and Gerald Henderson more hope. Also, give Tyrus Thomas (knee) a look – he could return to a depleted lineup in a week and Diaw isn't winning any awards lately. On the other side of the coin were the Nuggets, who can't wipe the smiles off their faces now that Melo is gone, with virtually the entire team showing mediocre-to-decent fantasy production in the blowout win over the Cats.


Second Quarter: Kirk Hinrich didn't have a great fantasy outing last night with just three points, two boards, and two assists, but he held Derrick Rose to 5-of-21 shooting, and should be just fine as a fantasy asset once he gets acclimated. There is no position battle here with Jeff Teague. Dorell Wright played through an ankle issue and hit just 4-of-14 FG, but had 14 points, six boards, three assists, one steal, two blocks, and a three, proving why he can't leave lineups. Stephen Curry could be due for a hot streak if Monta Ellis' wrist issues continue to worsen, and scored 29 points with nine rebounds and five assists. There's so much hate out there for a guy who hasn't dropped below second round value all year, and ranks No. 6 overall in 8-cat on a per-game basis on the season. The Wizards are a mess and could mail their season in at any time, if they haven't already. Nick Young had 31 points and Andray Blatche is over his case of 'South Beach hip,' scoring 20 points with nine boards, six assists, a steal, and a block. Blatche is one of my favorite guys to own because of how amazingly offensive it is that he is a fantasy stud when he is so terrible in reality. Chase Budinger set owners' expectations too high last week, and it's also possible the Rockets' fourth game in five days has been a bit much for his untested legs, as he had another pedestrian outing with 11 points, a three, and not much else. He'll probably be better than this going forward, so stay patient depending on your options.

Third Quarter: Jonny Flynn had his first good game of the year, handing out a career-high 14 assists with eight points and two steals in 30 minutes off the bench. He was tearing up Ben Gordon and Will Bynum, who aren't exactly known for their defense, but was shut down when Rodney Stuckey was put on him. Luke Ridnour hit all five of his shots and by no means did anything to lose his job last night, and this looks like a case of Kurt Rambis running with his second-unit while they were hot. I won't be adding Flynn in any 14-team formats, nor do I think that Ridnour owners should panic just yet. If you can find me a Minnesota basketball writer or fan that thought Flynn was worth a pile of beans before last night I'll wash your dog, so give it a game if you can before dropping lukewarm-hand Luke. Trevor Ariza left last night's game with a strained left adductor, and owners can only hope that it is the reason his playing time has been clipped. I don't own him anywhere, but if I did, I would be moving on. Serge Ibaka went off for seven points, 12 rebounds, and six blocks, and congratulations are in order if you stuck with him this long. James Harden scored another 20 points last night, and he should be owned in 12-team leagues. He really looks sharp.

Fourth Quarter: Toney Douglas went off in place of Chauncey Billups (thigh) with 24 points, four rebounds, and five assists, but with Billups possibly playing Friday his time in the spotlight will be short-lived. Shawne Williams (16 points, four treys, four boards) and him will battle for the scraps going forward, and owners should simply watch to see if one of them can emerge with consistency. As mentioned earlier, Jared Dudley is worth watching to see if Vince Carter gets moved to the bench, and put up 15 points with five boards and some other goodies. Channing Frye got embarrassed in his return matchup with KG, who punched him in the junk in their last outing, scoring just four points before leaving after suffering an eye contusion in the same collision that sidelined Carter. There are no indications the injury is serious at this time. Troy Murphy made his debut and left his lungs on the court, missing all three shots he took on his way to one point in 13 minutes. Yes, folks, he is brutally out of shape. Don't hesitate to grab a hot free agent while he gets thrown into the fire, as there's not a ton of upside there and it's a bit disappointing that he didn't keep himself in better shape. Chris Kaman broke out, and while he should have been owned in all 12-team leagues prior to last night, he made the case stronger with 21 points, nine boards, and a block. DeAndre Jordan also played well with eight points, 16 boards, a steal, and three blocks, and is worth a look if he was dropped. As for Mo Williams, his ankle injury isn't anything a move to Southern California to play with Blake Griffin couldn't help, and he put up 17 points with 11 assists, though his 5-of-14 FG mark was a buzzkill. I have this odd feeling he's going to finish strong.

Thursday Night Lights

The Magic head to Miami to take on the Heat and Denver heads to Utah, which for me is a nice championship contender-game to mix in with two teams with new personnel. We may also get treated to Mike Bibby's debut in Miami, which will be better in reality than in fantasy. There are no real injuries that we're waiting on, so owners can sit back and enjoy the ride. See you on Twitter, folks.
 

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Fantasy related but good info....



Stew: Good Daye to You, Sir
We shall review the surging values of Wes Johnson and Marcus Thornton, plus ponder a buy-low opportunity on Kirk Hinrich in due course. But first, we begin this week's Stew, as is our custom, with a little bit of…

TRENDSPOTTING

Three on the Rise:

Rodney Stuckey: He's still not hitting many threes, but you otherwise have to like the way Stuckey has looked in his last six games: 20.3 ppg, 4.5 rpg, 5.5 apg, 1.7 spg (and 0.5 threes). His elevated value is largely contingent on Tracy McGrady remaining off John Kuester's friends list, but for the moment it looks like a frustrating season for Stuckey could have quite an encouraging finish.

James Johnson: I mentioned him here last week, but am throwing the name up there once more because I'm still seeing some room on the bandwagon given that Johnson is owned in just 7 percent of Yahoo leagues. Since arriving in Toronto, the No. 16 overall pick in 2009 has posted 9.0 ppg, 5.0 rpg, 3.0 apg, 1.3 spg and 1.8 bpg. And on Tuesday night, though Jay Triano maddeningly kept his minutes in check (in part because Sonny Weems randomly got hot off the bench), Johnson still responded with a 13-5-3 line, including a steal, two blocks and a three. Add him.

Austin Daye: Nothing is guaranteed here, but the preseason sleeper has finally been getting some consistent run lately from the aforementioned Kuester (35 minutes per game in his last three), and has responded by averaging 15.3 ppg and 2.0 threes during that stretch (including a 22-4-3 line on Wednesday). I wouldn't expect consistency, but the potential in scoring, threes and blocks makes Daye worth a flier.

Three on the Plummet:

Darren Collison: Since dropping 22 points on Feb. 12, Collison has averaged a rather mundane 10.3 ppg, 4.8 apg and 1.1 spg, shooting 1-for-10 on threes and 35.8 percent overall in his last eight games. He should bounce back to some extent, but is still looking like anything but a dynamic option for the remainder of the season.

Boris Diaw: In three games since the Bobcats traded Gerald Wallace, the all-too-often disinterested Bobcats PF has posted 5.0 ppg, 6.0 rpg and 3.0 apg. If he's on your roster, chances are you ask yourself at least every other day why he's there. Simply put, his random good games don't outweigh the bad ones. Cut him loose and let someone else deal with the frustration.

Lou Williams: After averaging 17.6 ppg for an 18-game stretch between Jan. 5 and Feb. 9, Williams has dropped to 8.8 ppg on 29.0 percent shooting in his last four games. I do think he'll eventually heat up again, so even if you drop him, try not to forget he exists.

THREE RANDOM BUT HOPEFULLY USEFUL OBSERVATIONS

1. Wes Johnson, a man of fluctuating values. He has had flashes of promising play before only to detonate a stink bomb the minute he lands on my roster, but Johnson is once again looking like the versatile, multi-faceted threat that made the Wolves take him No. 4 in the Draft (17.5 ppg, 5.5 rpg, 3.3 apg, 1.5 spg, 1.5 bpg and 2.5 threes in his last four games). Kurt Rambis could still ruin him in an instant – and I'm definitely worried about the impact that Martell Webster's return might eventually have – but in the meantime, Johnson needs to be on a roster in most leagues.

2. Kirk Hinrich is looking like a very good buy-low. Perhaps he's still hindered by his lingering calf injury, but Hinrich's statistical production on Wednesday (three points, two rebounds, two assists in 31 minutes) was also hindered by the fact that he was busy harassing Derrick Rose into a 5-for-21 shooting game. Hinrich's stats with the Hawks have been ugly so far (6.3 ppg, 3.0 rpg, 2.0 apg, 0.7 spg and 1.3 threes in three games), but the points, rebounds and assists should all be on the rise soon.

3. Maybe Marcus Thornton doesn't play great defense, but Monty Williams is looking downright foolish for burying him on the bench. Thornton was playing with the relaxed air of an absurdly confident man on Wednesday night, looking somewhere in the neighborhood of unguardable en route to 26 points (giving him an average of 21.0 ppg, 1.8 spg and 2.0 threes in four games for the Kings). I still worry about Tyreke Evans coming back and at least partially ruining Thornton's fun, but overall I'm kicking myself for not sprinting to grab him in all my leagues after he was dealt.

10 QUICK-HITTING STATEMENTS OF FACT AND/OR OPINION

1) Did Jonny Flynn seize my attention with that 10-point, 14-assist game against the Pistons on Wednesday? Absolutely. Am I running to add him? Not yet. I still think Luke Ridnour will continue to hold more value going forward, and need to see another big game or two from Flynn before I'm convinced.

2) Similarly, I'm waiting to see at least one more big game from DeAndre Jordan (eight points, 16 rebounds, three blocks Wednesday) before I'm ready to buy in again.

3) To deeper league owners who missed out on the George Hill sweepstakes (or simply owners in need of points and threes), Gary Neal has posted 15.0 ppg and 2.0 threes in an average of 27 minutes over his last six games.

4) I don't trust him to sustain long-term value, but Alonzo Gee has still landed on my watch list after dropping 18 points with seven rebounds and two threes in 37 minutes on Wednesday.

5) Samuel Dalembert is doing a lovely job with scoring (12.4 ppg in his last 12) and rebounding (9.3), but the lack of blocks is officially getting annoying (just 0.6 in his last 12 games).

6) After looking lost at times from the FT line last month (including a 4-for-13 game on Feb. 2), Blake Griffin has hit 30-for-36 (83.3 percent) in his last four games.

7) Ekpe Udoh only had six points and two rebounds in his first career start on Wednesday, but the 30 minutes and three blocks both make him worth watching closely.

8) I definitely noticed Anthony Randolph's 19 and 10 on Wednesday, and do think he's worth adding. I also think you should be ready to drop him if his minutes plummet the second Darko Milicic returns.
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Editor's note: For exclusive articles, chats, projections and more, check out the Rotoworld NBA Season Pass.

9) Deeper league notice: Jarrett Jack has posted 12.4 ppg on 55.6 percent shooting in his last 10 games.

10) Perhaps it's just the aftereffects of the dubious buffalo chicken wrap I consumed for lunch, but I found myself wearing a somewhat unhappy grimace while preparing to write the name Samardo Samuels. Don't get me wrong – he's definitely worth a look after dropping 23 and 10 on the Spurs in his first career start, but based on what I've seen, I don't expect many 20-point games (or much excitement) along the way.
 

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