Yao Ming is always looking ahead.
The Houston Rockets center is off to the best start of his NBA career, averaging 26.1 points and 9.6 rebounds per game heading into this weekend. He is shooting 52 percent from the field, 86 percent from the free throw line, and has blocked 44 shots in the Rockets' first 22 games.
All-Star Houston teammate Tracy McGrady has repeatedly said that Yao is now the best center in the NBA and coaches and players who have faced the Rockets this season agree.
PHOTO: AFP
Last Saturday, after Yao scored a season-high 38 points and blocked six shots against the Washington Wizards, their coach Eddie Jordan said Yao "has an arsenal that I haven't seen before" -- and Jordan played with Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in the early 1980s.
Yao scored 38 again on Thursday and grabbed a season-high 18 rebounds in the Rockets' 109-107 loss to the Golden State Warriors.
"He is probably the best big man in the game right now," said Warriors center Adonal Foyle.
"He has the total package. He scored 38 and hardly broke a sweat," Foyle said.
But Yao, in his fifth NBA season and only 26, shrugs off the accolades he's beginning to hear routinely. When he watches film of himself, he always sees plenty he could do better.
"The last month, I've played well. I'm playing very confidently," he said. "But I'm worried about today and tomorrow, not yesterday."
Yao scored 26 points, but only five in the second half, of Tuesday's 102-94 loss to the Los Angeles Lakers. The Lakers aggressively double-teamed Yao and slapped at the ball every time he tried to dribble -- two things Yao will have to learn to overcome.
"He's commanding a lot more attention, and it's coming quicker," said Houston assistant coach Tom Thibodeau, who has traveled to China for the past two offseasons to work individually with Yao.
"Before, I think teams would wait to see how he was doing before they would commit a second defender.
Now, it's coming quicker and he has to make that adjustment," he said.
But more often than not this season, Yao has looked virtually unstoppable, showing a deft touch from almost anywhere within 12 feet of the basket.
Former Rockets coach Rudy Tomjanovich, now a scout for the Lakers, said Yao was starting to do things that Hakeem Olajuwon did when he led Houston to two NBA championships in the 1990s.
Last week, Tomjanovich scribbled notes as Yao hit 12 of 17 shots and scored 27 points at home against Golden State.
Four different Warriors tried to guard him at some point, but Yao easily dropped in hook shots and baseline jumpers and quickly pivoted for layups and dunks.
"The guy looks like he feels comfortable just about anywhere on the floor," Tomjanovich said.
"He scores on both sides of the hoop. He's also developed a great economy of movement and motion. I don't think he has to work as hard as he had to before to get certain shots off," he said.
Tomjanovich said Yao was starting to show some of Olajuwon's moves.
But he said that comparisons to "The Dream" are premature: "There's only one `Dream.' There will never be anybody like him," Tomjanovich said.
"But there are similarities," he said. "They both have great shooting touches. They both have great hands. They won't overpower you, but they can find ways to hurt you on both sides of the hoop."
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