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Inside the NBA Posted: Wednesday March 12, 2003 9:40 AMThe Blazers have been reenergized with Scottie Pippen running the show By Ian Thomsen
Cheeks was hoping to go easy this season on Pippen, who started slowly after undergoing minor knee surgery last summer. But when the Blazers staggered to a 3-6 start, Cheeks made Michael Jordan's former lieutenant the point man. The Blazers have been on a 37-16 roll since. Pippen paid similar dividends when Cheeks turned him into a point guard during the second half of last season. While the position is still relatively new to Pippen -- he was a small forward during his first 14 NBA seasons, including 11 in the Bulls' triangle offense -- the responsibilities aren't. "He handled the ball the majority of the time in Chicago and pushed the tempo," says Pacers coach Isiah Thomas. "The difference is that he's calling a lot of the plays." Pippen is an old-fashioned pass-first floor leader, while the Blazers' other point guards, Damon Stoudamire and Jeff McInnis, are scorers as well as passers. Their style works for teams that struggle to put five scorers on the floor, but that isn't a problem for the Blazers, who are deep but don't have a single go-to guy. "It would be easier if I had a 25-point scorer so I could know who should be shooting the ball," says Pippen, who is averaging 11.0 points and 4.5 assists. "I have to know when I have to give this [or that] dog a bone and keep everybody happy." Pippen may be the Blazers' savior, but he is also their worst critic. In December he told SI that winning the championship this season would be "impossible because of the makeup of our team," and he isn't backing away from his contention that team president Bob Whitsitt and owner Paul Allen have spent unwisely in building a $100 million roster. At the same time, Pippen insists he would like to re-sign with Portland when his contract, worth $19.2 million this season, expires this summer. "I say what I feel, but I can back it up," says Pippen. Issue date: March 17, 2003
For more Inside the NBA see this week's issue of Sports Illustrated, on newsstands Wednesday, March 12. Click here to subscribe to SI.
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