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I wish I could have worked in Laron Profit's quote from the summer - - ``It's like a Nerf ball'' - - about the NBA's new basketball. The Lakers coaches and players apparently snapped up all the old leather balls as keepsakes when they had to go to make room for the new balls.

By Ross Siler
Staff Writer

EL SEGUNDO--The baskets are still 10 feet high, the court is still 94 feet long, the quarters still last 12 minutes each and the average salary is still in the neighborhood of $5 million a year.

But the NBA has introduced fundamental change this season - - 277 1-2 square inches worth, to be exact - - by replacing its traditional leather basketball with a new microfiber composite ball billed as the most technologically advanced in the world.

The only problem seems to be convincing the league’s players of that fact. The complaints about the new synthetic ball range from it being too hard to handle once it gets wet to sticking to players’ hands the way the leather ball never did.

The ball already has been panned by two former league MVPs in Shaquille O’Neal and Steve Nash. Even those who take a more diplomatic view, such as Kobe Bryant, say it will take some adjusting.

``I’m old-school, so I love the old-school balls that I grew up playing with,’’ Bryant said. ``But at the end of the day, a ball is a ball. Just go out there and play with it.’’

Lakers forward Lamar Odom said he would guarantee that an early-season game would be lost when a player fumbled a sure pass or missed an easy layup because the ball was too slick.

``The ball will probably slip right out of his hands,’’ Odom said.

The last time the NBA changed its ball came in 1970, when the four-panel leather model was replaced by an eight-panel leather model. The new ball, which was designed by Spalding, has been in the making for eight years and will go on sale to the public Oct. 31.

``We brought it to the NBA and said, `There’s a better way to do it,’’’ said Dan Touhey, Spalding’s vice president of marketing.

The new ball brings a consistency that the leather ball never could, Touhey said. It used to take two months to break in a leather ball and the home point guard - - or star player - - would have his choice of what ball to use in each game.

Bryant said last season he would have guard Smush Parker pass him the game ball before sending it back to the referees. Bryant’s preference was for lighter balls rather than darker ones that had been broken in to a greater degree.

That will be a thing of the past with the new balls, which are designed to be identical and need no breaking in. They use an interlocking two-panel design that has 12 percent more surface area by eliminating some of the seams on the old model.

Not that the ball doesn’t have its detractors. O’Neal not only disparaged the ball, he disparaged its creators, telling reporters in Miami, ``To change it now, whoever that person is should have their college degree revoked.’'

``It feels like one of those cheap balls you buy at the toy store, one of those indoor-outdoor balls,’’ O’Neal added. ``I look for shooting percentages to be way down and turnovers to be way up.’’

Nash, the reigning two-time MVP, wasn’t complimentary, either. The new ball can be so sticky, Nash said he wouldn’t have to lick his fingers on the court any longer.

``It’s extremely sticky and we got used to the ball kind of slipping, using the give and the sliding to make plays,’’ Nash said in a conference call. ``All the players are having a hard time making the transition and making the plays.

``Hopefully, we’ll find some common ground and some normalcy once we get used to it, but right now it’s been really difficult.’’

The NBA is following the lead of nearly all the high school and college teams in the country in adopting a composite ball. The WNBA has used such a ball for years and a version of the new ball was tested last season in the NBA Development League.

It debuted at the All-Star Game, where Bryant said some players were complaining about the grip when wet. Bryant had a chance to tie the game in the last 10 seconds but lost his handle on the ball, which he blamed for being slippery afterward.

Touhey said the new ball has been tested and proven to have a superior grip to the leather model wet or dry. The league sent a ball to each player this summer; several of the Lakers did say it is easier to palm than the leather ball.

Bryant said he has found that the new ball is slow to come out of the net because it is so sticky. That could impact teams that try to push the ball after made baskets.

There is also room for variation even with the new ball. League rules allows for teams to inflate balls to between 7 1-2 and 8 1-2 pounds of pressure; Lakers coach Phil Jackson often claims Mark Cuban inflates the balls to 15 pounds in Dallas.

Odom joked about the NBA following its dress code for players with a dress code for its balls. Bryant said he hoped it would be much ado about nothing once the season started.

``It’s just a ball,’’ Bryant said. ``Growing up, I played with all kinds of balls. I rolled up tape and used tape as a basketball. I played with a sock. I think I can play with this one. We’ll be fine. I don’t even think it’s that big of a deal.’’

5 Comments

vance said:

Ross, this is great getting this stuff early every day! Keep it coming.

Michael Teniente said:

As for the new ball. I think the new material it's created from has more of a rubber type effect as opposed to the leather ball. That means we might not be seeing soft touches off of the rim. That would affect the big men with their little shots. I mean I don't hear guys like Radmanovic complaining. I read that Kwame Brown see him make like 200 shot. I guess if it was a big deal he wouldn't be making 200 shots, now would he?

mike

Michael Teniente said:

This is why your blog won't get a lot of comments because you censor even the simpliest of things.

mike

Michael Teniente said:

Oh, sorry I thought you didn't post my comments about the L.A. Times Lakers Blog. But I see it's on another thread. I look forward to your reports.

mike

dan the man >_< aka smushcalade said:

Mike T.,

Get Em'!!

>_

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the Lakers

Elliott Teaford and other Daily News and Los Angeles Newspaper Group staff writers keep tabs on the Los Angeles Lakers from the backcourt to the front office and beyond.

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This page contains a single entry by published on October 5, 2006 6:26 PM.

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