Wednesday, June 9, 2010

After Game Three, I'll Never Give Up On Derek Fisher Again

I had a good look at Derek Fisher for two seasons, starting in 2004. At the time, Fisher had been bumped from his starting point guard spot with the Los Angeles Lakers when they signed Gary Payton to run the team. Fisher opted out of his contract and became a free agent, attracting interest from my team, the Golden State Warriors.

He was the starting point guard on a team with Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O'Neal. He played tough defense and hit big shots, but he was never the focal point on their star laden team. But he was a winner. The Warriors thought that he would blossom and become more than who he was in LA, but it never happened.

Fisher was given a boatload of money to the tune of 37 million over six years. They had to overpay him to get him and saw Fisher as the leader of a young team. He was there to help the nucleus of Jason Richardson, Mike Dunleavy, and Troy Murphy gel, and to bring the veteran leadership that the team lacked.

In short, Fisher's stay in Oakland wasn't a successful one. He shot and scored more in Oakland than at anytime in his career, but the Warriors finished with identical 34-48 records. By the time the Warriors traded him, they had a new point guard in Baron Davis, and gave Fisher away to Utah for three guys who you may have never even heard of (Keith McLeod, Andre Owens, and Devin Brown).

I had given up on Fisher because Baron Davis was everything he wasn't. Davis ran the club, was the premier scorer, the most popular player, and became the guy they needed Fisher to become if they were going to win. But Fisher would come back to haunt them.

In the second round of the 2006-2007 NBA Playoffs, the "We Believe" Warriors ran into the Utah Jazz after knocking off the number one seed Dallas Mavericks. Derek Fisher wasn't any different in his role with Utah than he was with the Warriors. In fact, his numbers were worse. But he gave the Jazz a jolt that stayed with them all series long.

Fisher's young infant daughter had retinoblastoma, which is a rare eye cancer. Fisher's status for the series was up in the air but in game two, he made a reluctant return in the middle of the game and helped the Jazz win the game and eventually the series. It stood out as the moment of the entire playoffs. How can you give up on a guy like that?

Fisher asked out of his contract with the Jazz because he wanted to be in a big city where he could get the best medical care for his daughter. The Jazz allowed his contract to be voided and Fisher ended up back in Los Angeles with the Lakers, giving up many millions of dollars in order to come back. His 2007-2008 season with the Lakers was one of the best of his career and he helped the new Kobe-led Lakers get back to the NBA Finals, even though they lost to the Celtics. Last year, he had one of the worst years of his career since he became a starter, but the Lakers were a juggernaut and won the championship.

And this year, he had the worst regular season of his starting career. And I gave up on him again. After game two of this year's NBA Finals in which Fisher looked slow and lethargic, I thought Phil Jackson should start playing Jordan Farmar more because he was able to get to the basket where Fisher couldn't.

I was wrong. Dead wrong.

Derek Fisher was the hero in game three. He was he difference. Playing the most minutes that he played all season long, he came up big when he usually does; the fourth quarter. Fisher was 6-12 from the field, scoring 16 points and his defining moment of the game was scoring on a swooping lay-up going one-on-three (Garnett, Perkins, and Allen) and seemingly being fouled by all three as well.

But where he did his best work was in defending Ray Allen. In game two, Allen went off, hitting a NBA Finals single-game record eight three-pointers and doing so a lot of the time with Fisher chasing him around the court. In game three, Allen was 0-13 shooting and was the invisible man again with Fisher chasing him around the court. Allen might've just been off, but Fisher attacked him harder as if he took game two personally.

Derek Fisher's numbers may be on the way down. He may eventually lose his starting job on this Lakers team over the next couple of years. But never again, will I give up on the guy. He comes up too big in too many big situations.

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