Porterville Recorder

More NBA games off, as league continues struggles with virus

- By TIM REYNOLDS

The NBA gave Orlando coach Steve Clifford a call recently, telling him he had to do a better job of keeping his mask on during games. Clifford didn’t argue. “Yes, sir,” he said. Nobody would argue the need for utmost of caution in the NBA right now.

The league has endured a rough week — 12 games postponed since Sunday amid positive COVID-19 tests for some players and potential exposures determined through contact tracing keeping others off the floor for several days. The latest three postponeme­nts were announced Friday; Cleveland’s

games at Washington on Sunday and Monday are off because the Wizards won’t have enough players — and Memphis’ game at Minnesota, scheduled for Friday night, was called off a couple hours before game time because the Timberwolv­es didn’t have enough to play.

“The NBA’S been

put him several different places within a formation, then it increases his value, and the value that he creates for his teammates.”

Indeed, the Rams don’t use Ramsey exclusivel­y as a shutdown corner. Staley’s scheme has employed Ramsey in multiple roles throughout the season, and his job often changes from play to play.

But having the option to remove an opponent’s top receiver from its quarterbac­k’s targets is an invaluable asset. Just ask Packers defensive coordinato­r Mike Pettine, who can assign the swaggering­ly talented Alexander — a secondteam All-pro — to shut down anybody.

According to Pro Football Focus, Ramsey (0.53) and Alexander (0.64) allowed the fewest yards per snap in the league among cornerback­s with at least 400 coverage snaps.

“Just from a schematic

standpoint, it’s nice knowing how good we can feel about his matchup and basically eliminatin­g potentiall­y one side of the field,” Pettine said. “You just love his approach, his personalit­y. How much he loves it. And he has the mentality that a corner has to have. This is not a guy who lets one bad play turn into several. Hey, if he has a bad play, he shakes it off and it’s on to the next one, and that’s contagious.”

Knowing what an offense isn’t going to do — throw at a top cornerback, for instance — is an important piece of informatio­n. But Pettine points out another valuable asset provided by most of these top cornerback­s: A confidence that spreads throughout the defense.

“I’m not always the tallest and biggest person out there, but I have that confidence that I’m the best,” Alexander said. “My skills and talents showcase that. I bring it out. I bring that inner confidence out on the field by my play, by how I talk, how I’ve got

handshakes with everybody on the team. That comes from confidence. I’m not afraid to display that.”

The absence of elite cornerback­s is felt almost as powerfully as their presence.

Ward, Cleveland’s top receiver-stopper, missed last week’s playoff win over the Pittsburgh Steelers with COVID-19. Without Ward or parttime starter Kevin Johnson on the field, Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger passed for 501 yards against Cleveland’s backups.

Ward is expected to play Sunday when the Browns face Patrick Mahomes and Kansas City’s high-octane offense, and he’s likely to match up frequently with Chiefs speedster Tyreek Hill, who has 15 receiving TDS.

Ward might not change the result by himself, but Browns coach Kevin Stefanski knows their chances improve with Ward on the field.

“Denzel is very, very competitiv­e,” Stefanski said. “I’ve been very impressed to watch him

work . ... I think you’ve seen in the games, he’s made impactful plays when he’s out there, so that’s something that is very impressive to me.”

Top cornerback­s are huge advantages, but they aren’t everything in the consummate team sport.

Oddly enough, the remaining playoff team perceived to have the least dominant cornerback­s is defending champion Kansas City, the favorite to make it back to the Super Bowl. Yet Charvarius Ward and Bashaud Breeland were solid enough to rank the Chiefs’ secondary in Pro Football Focus’ top 10, among other accolades.

“Some of the best cornerback­s happen to play on the best teams, that’s all I can say,” Bills safety Micah Hyde said. “I don’t think having great corners is going to take you to the playoffs. Obviously, you need a great team to be there. But there are some very talented corners and some very talented teams.”

 ?? AP PHOTO BY JEFFREY MCWHORTER ?? Orlando Magic head coach Steve Clifford shouts instructio­ns to his players during the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Dallas Mavericks, Saturday, Jan. 9, in Dallas.
AP PHOTO BY JEFFREY MCWHORTER Orlando Magic head coach Steve Clifford shouts instructio­ns to his players during the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Dallas Mavericks, Saturday, Jan. 9, in Dallas.

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