Thursday, February 26, 2009

Cook now a marked man

For Daequan Cook, the acclaim that comes with being the All-Star three-point shooting champion also is a drawback. The secret is out, so every team the Heat faces is focusing on this second-year guard.

Coming out of the All-Star break, Cook struggled and it appeared he had left his winning stroke in Phoenix. But Cook broke out of his minislump in a victory over the Detroit Pistons on Tuesday night.

Aware that Cook, 21, has never experienced this kind of attention from opponents, the Heat has been reminding Cook that he can be effective without scoring.

'You have to let him know, `Dae-Dae, you're a good rebounder for us, you're an excellent defender for us, and just you being on the court is helping us,' '' Dwyane Wade said.

' `If you're not getting shots, that means the defense is leaving a guy on you and that's opening the court for other guys.' ''

This season, Cook is averaging nearly six three-point attempts a game. In the past four games, he is averaging about four a game.

He has become such an integral part of the offense that when he had no field-goal attempts in Saturday's victory over Philadelphia, it was a topic of conversation.

The team told Cook not to get frustrated.

''Hopefully going forward he continues to understand that he's not getting shots because we don't want him to get them, but other teams are taking them away from him,'' Wade said.

Cook acknowledged that being a marked man will force him to expand his offensive repertoire. It also is requiring him to be more patient.

Said Wade: ``The main thing with Dae-Dae is to keep his head up.

''There's going to come a time when he's going to help us win,'' he said.

It's happening already, and it could continue without Cook even shooting. Read more at The Miami Herald

Other Related News

The Heat spoke with Portland about Jerryd Bayless and Channing Frye, but the Blazers wanted more than Marion.

Stephon Marbury, who had been linked to the Heat, has committed to join the Celtics, the Boston Globe reported. Miami has shown no interest in Jason Williams, who wants to end his retirement. The Miami Herald

Phoenix approached the Heat

• Some post NBA trade deadline nuggets: Before the Shawn Marion trade, Phoenix approached the Heat about the idea of dealing Shaquille O'Neal back to Miami, according to an official directly involved. (The Suns considered moving Shaq because of his $20 million 2009-10 salary.) The Suns discussed taking back what they traded for Shaq -- Shawn Marion (who could have been rerouted by Phoenix to another team) and Marcus Banks. Miami had no interest in reacquiring Shaq. . . .The Miami Herald

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Two immediate needs: Daequan Cook, rebounds

Heat opponents took note of Daequan Cook winning the three-point contest at All-Star weekend. They stick to him like glue. He’s 4-for-14 from the field in the three games since the All-Star break. He’s 2-for-9 on three-pointers. The days of open shots are gone for now.

Coach Erik Spoelstra thinks Cook needs to focus on his overall game and his three-point shooting will follow.

“He’s going to have to work harder to make an impact on the game, and it doesn’t have to be shooting,” Spoelstra said. “He can make an impact without scoring. He’s been consistently one of our better defenders and he needs to get back to making an impact right away with his energy. If you do that using the karma of the game you’ll find open spots to make shots, or make a play, or make an extra pass for somebody else.”

As for the rebounding problems, the Heat ranks 28th in the 30-team league at 39 rebounds per game. Miami was out-rebounded by Minnesota, 49-24, and by Orlando, 53-28. Jermaine O’Neal should help. Losing Shawn Marion (8.7 rebounds per game) hurts.

The bigger issue, however, is the Heat gets very little rebounding off the bench aside from Michael Beasley’s 5.1 per game.

“The rebounding is definitely a concern,” Spoelstra said. The Palm Beach Post