Kirk Hinrich

j41181

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Nov 23, 2008
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Captain Kirk has been playing brilliant ball for several games now. He's been SUPERB on both ends. I applaud Vinny Del Negro for inserting him to the starting lineup. Hinrich seems to have regained some of the form he's had in his first 4 seasons. Keep it up, Hinrich!

No doubt Hinrich is one of the best defensive guards in the entire NBA!
 

Colonel_Reb

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Saw this article in the AJC today. I thought it was interesting that they spotlight a White player who isn't exactly a "star" but who has a reputation as a fierce defender. It has a few interesting comments, good and bad.

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<h1 ="articleline">Under their skin</h1>

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By Steve Hummer



The Atlanta Journal-Constitution



Asked about the relationship with his new point guard, Hawks forward Marvin <nobr style="color: rgb238, 17, 17;">Williams
FT_10x10a.png
<obr></span> spent hardly any time on the little spat he had with Kirk <nobr style="color: rgb238, 17, 17;">Hinrich
FT_10x10a.png
<obr></span> a couple seasons back.

Ah, that was nothing, he said. Hinrich has been in plenty more heated
disputes while playing his static-cling defense over eight NBA seasons.
Boston's Rajon Rondo flung him into the scorer's table during the 2009
postseason. Back when Pat Riley coached Miami, he accused Hinrich of
trying to reinjure Dwyane Wade's sore wrist. He and Detroit's Richard
Hamilton have a long, proud misunderstanding.


Guys tend to take it personally when you guard them at the
subcutaneous level. As Hinrich's dad, Jim, the hard-boiled old high
school coach, says, "He gets after it, and there are a lot of guys in
the NBA who don't like to be guarded. There are a lot of players in the
NBA who don't guard. I know he has aggravated a number of players in the
NBA because he doesn't back off."Â



No, in the heat of that long-ago game, Hinrich and Williams simply
exchanged some colorful colloquialisms, banked their technical fouls and
moved on.


What Williams remembers far more was Hinrich as a concept. Back in
2005 during Williams' one collegiate season, the name was drilled into
him and his fellow North Carolina Tar Heels whenever they slacked.



Before moving to Chapel Hill, Roy Williams had coached Hinrich at
Kansas, and had taken his former guard with him in spirit. Marvin
Williams can still hear his coach's voice, bellowing when he wanted to
challenge a player's toughness: "Kirk Hinrich wouldn't take that."Â



"Seemed like we heard it every day,"Â Marvin said.


It is the Hawks' turn now to try to feed on the Hinrich example, first hand.


Setting example


The acquisition of Hinrich on Feb. 23 was not a deal that figured to
compete for headlines with, say, the Carmelo Anthony passion play in New
York. On a purely statistical level, Hinrich's career averages of 13.2
points, 5.7 assists and 1.3 steals per game do not distinguish him from
Mike Bibby (15.3, 5.7 and 1.2), the point guard the Hawks shed.


The Hawks wanted to get a little
younger at the position â€" Hinrich is 30, Bibby 32. But the move had
additional undertones. This largely was a late season effort to add some
coarse grit to the team, to lend it some toughness in the place of any
miracle infusion of talent.



"I'm hoping that our team will kind of take on Kirk's personality,"Â said Hawks
coach Larry Drew. "He's a very serious player. A very focused player.
He brings a business approach. If you have a point guard who brings that
type of approach, somehow it rubs off on the other guys."Â



The past 12 days have demonstrated both the promise and the limitations of the Hawks'
Hinrich maneuver. In his first game at Philips Arena with his new team,
Hinrich hectored former Bulls teammate Derrick Rose into a 5-for-21
shooting night during a Hawks'
victory. They then lost the next three games at home, along the way
being outclassed by New York and badly exposed by the Lakers.


The Hawks had only 25 games left
in the regular season when they traded away Bibby, Maurice Evans,
Jordan Crawford and a first-round pick for Hinrich and center Hilton
Armstrong. So rushed was his indoctrination that, when he joined the
team on a West Coast swing, Hinrich's first practice was held in a hotel
ballroom, tape on the carpet marking out a make-believe court.


There was initial hope that Hinrich would quickly benefit the Hawks' main scorer, Joe Johnson, by taking over some of the more difficult defensive chores â€" never Bibby's job description.


"Joe won't have the burden of covering the point, which he has done so often,"Â said Hawks
general manager Rick Sund. "It's a hard cover, game in and game out. I
think that will help his offense a little more."Â Still, Johnson
continued to struggle with his shot (just 39 percent from the field
through his past five games).


In the short term, Hinrich is supposed to be a productive nuisance, as he was in that first meeting with the Bulls.


In the midst of a potential MVP season, Rose testified to the effect Hinrich can have on those around him.


"In practice, it's the same thing you see in the game. He's always
working, diving, playing defense,"Â said Rose, who played his first two
seasons with Hinrich.


"Watching him play really taught me a lot, especially how to run a team."Â


Describing what it was like to play against him, Johnson uses an
image often applied to Hinrich, as well as any number of biting insects:
"He's a pest."Â



Added Johnson, "Kirk is a guy who really sticks his nose in there. He
loves taking charges. He loves the challenge of defending and
rebounding and that's big from a guard standpoint.



"He takes great angles, makes your catches tough, and he's a hard guy to get by."Â


Loves taking the charge? Isn't that like saying he loves waiting for a train â€" while standing on the tracks?


That's just what a coach's son does.


Life as coach's son


Jim Hinrich attended his only son's birth early in the morning, then
coached Sioux City (Iowa) West High to a season's first victory that
night.


Growing up in Iowa didn't provide many distractions. The center of
young Kirk's world was the high school gym where Jim coached (he's
retired now, after a 37-year career).


"I was always tough on him about doing things the right way,"Â Jim
Hinrich said. "But I never really had to get after him. A lot of stuff I
didn't have to teach, he got it by watching when he was younger."Â


Playing defense was coach Hinrich's guiding tenet.


His son absorbed that as his own.


"I don't know if it was that I just hated to be scored on, or the
competitiveness in me. [Playing defense] is something that came really
naturally to me,"Â Hinrich said.



At the AAU level, he was met with derisive calls of "Take him! Take him!"Â from the other bench when opponents had the ball.


While at Kansas, opposing fans decided he resembled Harry Potter and loaded up on the taunts.


"A lot of places picked up on that,"Â said Nick Collison, his Kansas
teammate now with the Thunder. "He's got more money now and can get a
better haircut. I hope he's outgrown that, for his sake.



"He's a guy who has always been able to find something to put a chip
on his shoulder, to talk himself into the belief that people don't
respect his game, whether it's true or not,"Â Collison said. "That seems
to help him."Â



Playing the point for the Hawks should provide him with ample new slights and doubts to exploit.


When he was in seventh grade, Hinrich was given the assignment to
write out what he wanted to do with his life. The slip of paper was to
be kept in a sealed envelope, only to be opened years later when he
could compare aspiration to reality. He forgot all about it. But his
mother discovered the envelope one day while cleaning out his old room,
opened it and read her boy's dream: To play for the Chicago Bulls. That
was shortly after the Bulls chose Hinrich with the seventh overall pick
in the 2003 draft.


Other details he never thought to include in his life's plan.


Like being traded away to Washington in the summer of 2010, the Bulls dumping his salary to go free-agent shopping.


Or spending a good chunk of his career as a backcourt tutor â€" first to Rose in Chicago, then to John Wall in Washington.


And certainly not coming to Atlanta â€" where Knicks and Lakers fans
dance in the aisles, the glass ceiling hangs as low as the playoffs'
second round, and he is counted on to be the fresh breeze in a stale
locker room.


Now we'll find out just how tough this guy is.
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DixieDestroyer

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Col.Reb, one of my DWF buddies was calling Hinrich "Harry Potter" & saying the Hawks could have done a little better...although he admitted Kirk was an improvement over Bibby.
 
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