Sunday, May 31, 2009

Was Mo Williams Calling LeBron Spoiled?

LeBron James didn't stick around Saturday night to speak with anyone about the fall of his Cleveland Cavaliers, leaving the point guard who failed him to speak in his behalf.

King James might not be happy this morning with how he was portrayed -- Mo Williams made him sound like a spoiled child.

Williams meant well when he started talking about the frustration that James was feeling, and why after James showered, he put on his headphones, ignored everyone around him, then walked to the team bus without talking.

Magic mull return of Jameer Nelson for NBA Finals

"The Magic are encouraged by Jameer Nelson's rehabilitation so much that they will evaluate the possibility of the all-star playing in the NBA Finals against the Lakers, the Sentinel has learned. Magic President Bob Vander Weide said the team is exploring whether Nelson can return after undergoing shoulder surgery Feb. 19. He hasn't played since he was injured Feb. 3 against the Dallas Mavericks. Although Nelson wouldn't be in prime condition, Vander Weide said, "the chance to get an all-star point guard on the floor for 15 minutes a game ... you'd have to look at that." The Magic had ruled him out for the season and the playoffs, and as late as a week and a half ago General Manager Otis ..."

see details: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/sports/basketball/magic/orl-sportsmagic-cavaliers-notes-31053109may31,0,4909212.story

NBA Finals Schedule 2009: Los Angeles Lakers vs. Orlando Magic

The schedule for the 2009 NBA Finals is set, and it doesn't include LeBron James. Will powerhouse Dwight Howard lead the Orlando Magic to their very first championship? Or will Kobe Bryant and the Lakers pull it off after missing out on the crown last season? Tune in to find out and check back with NBA FanHouse for coverage throughout the Finals.

2009 NBA Finals Schedule

No. 1 Los Angeles Lakers vs. No. 3 Orlando Magic
- Game 1: Thursday, June 4 - Orlando at L.A. - 9PM ET on ABC
- Game 2: Sunday, June 7 - Orlando at L.A. - 8PM ET on ABC
- Game 3: Tuesday, June 9 - L.A. at Orlando - 9PM ET on ABC
- Game 4: Thursday, June 11 - L.A. at Orlando - 9PM ET on ABC
- Game 5*: Sunday, June 14 - L.A. at Orlando - 8PM ET on ABC
- Game 6*: Tuesday, June 16 - Orlando at L.A. - 9PM ET on ABC
- Game 7*: Thursday, June 18 - Orlando at L.A. - 9PM ET on ABC

source: http://nba.fanhouse.com/2009/05/31/nba-finals-schedule-2009-los-angeles-lakers-vs-orlando-magic/

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Lakers beat the Nuggets to earn another trip to the NBA Finals


"The Los Angeles Lakers are going back to the NBA Finals. The Denver Nuggets are done for the season. With precision on offense, with solid defense, with drive and determination, and with Kobe Bryant taking charge, the Lakers took apart the Nuggets, winning 119-92 in Game 6 to clinch the Western Conference finals, 4-2. Bryant had 35 points, 10 assists and six rebounds. His three-pointer right in the face of J.R. Smith gave the Lakers a 101-82 lead and forced Denver Coach George Karl to call a timeout. Bryant walked to the Lakers bench with 6:13 left, knowing that the Lakers were headed to the Finals for the second consecutive year. They had been called soft when the Boston Celtics ..."


see details: http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-lakers30-2009may30,0,5975109.story

Friday, May 29, 2009

James says Olympics, not playoffs, pose the greatest pressure

"For years, LeBron James has said he doesn't believe in pressure as a disarming answer to any question that includes the word itself. Of course this isn't true. In fact, he's somewhat of an expert. With that understanding, when James was asked to compare the Cavs' situation heading into Game 5 of the Eastern Conference Finals down 3-1 to the Orlando Magic to the stress of trying to win a gold medal in last summer's Olympics, he said the pressure levels aren't close. "I definitely feel the pressure was bigger with the Olympics than it is here," said James, who has been in contact with Team USA coach Mike Krzyzewski several times during the playoffs. "A lot of people may say different, but ..."

see details: http://www.cleveland.com/cavs/index.ssf/2009/05/cavaliers_insider_20.html

Brown opts to remain in NBA draft

"Xavier junior Derrick Brown is staying in the NBA draft, a fact new coach Chris Mack has known for a few weeks. With Mack watching from the stands, Brown told ESPN.com after Thursday's first session at the NBA draft combine in Chicago, "I'm not going back to school." Brown said he graduated and the coaching move of Sean Miller to Arizona and the elevation of Mack from assistant to head coach had little effect on his decision. "I feel I was going to do this regardless," said Brown. "Coach Miller is my guy." Brown said his versatility as a 6-foot-8 forward is something "NBA teams need." "This is something we've know for three or four weeks," said Mack of Brown's decision. "I've been in his ..."

see details: http://sports.espn.go.com/ncb/news/story?id=4213690&campaign=rss&source=NBAHeadlin

Derrick Rose's grade was changed at Simeon High

"A teacher handed Derrick Rose a "D" in the last semester of his senior year at Simeon High School. But by the time the University of Memphis got the future Bulls star's transcript, the "D" had been boosted to "C." Rose was one of four Simeon athletes who benefited from a one-month grade boost in June 2007, sources told the Chicago Sun-Times Thursday. The grade changes were outlined in a 2008 report by the Chicago Public Schools inspector general, a report that did not name Simeon or Rose. However, sources said, Rose was among four Simeon basketball players whose grades were temporarily inflated after their graduation -- just long enough for them to be reflected on transcripts sent to ..."

see details: http://www.suntimes.com/news/education/1596666,derrick-rose-simeon-grades-cheat-memphis.article

The season continues: James' brilliant fourth quarter keeps Cavaliers alive

"The Cavaliers made several statements on Thursday night. The most important may have been the one they made to themselves. They can beat the Orlando Magic, a concept that has seemed doubtful at times during this rocky Eastern Conference finals. They can do it playing their own way, even if it means having to absorb body blows and intense and sometimes unrelenting pressure. The Cavs took what they hope is their first step in a comeback by out-battling the Magic, 112-102, in Game 5 at The Q. It was a high-scoring game that saw an early 22-point lead turn into an 8-point deficit with stunning swiftness, not your typical Cavs effort. But it also showed just what it is going to take to ..."

see details: http://www.cleveland.com/cavs/index.ssf/2009/05/the_season_continues_james_bri.html

Thursday, May 28, 2009

LeBron James Stands Alone in Game 5

LeBron James just wasn't ready yet for the season to end, willing his Cleveland Cavaliers to a Game 5 victory Thursday night to keep this Eastern Conference final alive.

There was nothing complex about Cleveland's fourth quarter strategy against the Orlando Magic. It was give the ball to James at the top of the key, step back and see what wonder he could create.

It was all LeBron, all the time down the stretch. And it was impressive – even by the highest MVP standards.

As good as 37 points, 14 rebounds and 17 assists may sound for James, his fourth-quarter flourish was even more impressive in this 112-102 victory. James either scored or assisted in 32 of the 34 points in the fourth.

Cavaliers 112, Magic 102: Recap | Box Score
Magic Lead 3-2 | Next Game: Saturday @ Orlando, 8:30 PM ET


If he wasn't scoring, he was making sure one of his teammates did when it mattered most. While everyone marveled at this one-man show, and the Magic kept waiting for him to wear down, he never faltered.

It wasn't like he was playing point guard and moving the ball. It was James holding the ball like it was a last possession, waiting to make his final move. Except, he did it from start to finish of the fourth quarter.

"You never want to disappoint the home crowd. It was win or go home,'' James said. "You have to do everything sometimes.''....................

see details: http://nba.fanhouse.com/2009/05/29/lebron-james-stands-alone-in-game-5/

RoundCast: Karl's Strategy Backfires

In Game 5 of the Western Conference Finals, George Karl made sure that Kobe Bryant wouldn't be the one to beat the Nuggets all by himself. Karl sent two defenders at Kobe as soon as he got the ball, which was a pretty big change from the way he chose to defend Bryant through the first four games of the series.

Will Brinson and I discussed the change in philosophy, as well as the fact that Denver's bench players (we're looking at you, J.R. Smith and Chris Andersen) were largely ineffective as the Lakers went on to take a three games to two lead in the series.

All that, plus some thoughts on the probability of the Magic being able to close out the Cavs in Game 5..............

Quality, then control for Lakers

The Lakers didn't need to be rougher or tougher in Game 5 of the Western Conference finals against the Denver Nuggets. They didn't need to slug anyone in the nose to make amends for a lackluster result 48 hours earlier.

No, the Lakers merely needed to move the ball smartly around the court. They needed to take and make open shots. They needed to rebound better and play defense with more determination. They needed to play like title contenders again.

Mission accomplished.

The Lakers regained control of the series with a 103-94 victory Wednesday night at Staples Center that moved them within one win of a second consecutive trip to the NBA Finals. They can advance with a victory in Game 6 on Friday in Denver.

If a Game 7 is necessary, it will be Sunday at Staples Center.

"It means we responded to the challenge," Kobe Bryant said. "Denver is a tough team, and the way they beat us in Game 4, I think there were alot of people having doubts. But we did a good job to respond to the challenge."

The teams were deadlocked at the end of the first, second and third quarters, only the fourth time in NBA playoff history that's happened. Oddly enough, the Lakers have been involved in all four games, most recently in 1964 against the St. Louis Hawks.

It was tied 25-all at the end of the first quarter, 56-all at halftime, then 76-all at the end of three quarters. The Lakers then opened the fourth quarter by going on an 11-0 run, building an 87-76 lead after Shannon Brown's jump shot.

The Lakers, who had 11 consecutive defensive stops during a stretch that spanned from near the end of the third quarter into the fourth, maintained a modest lead the rest of the way. The Lakers outscored the Nuggets 27-18 in the final period.

"Some of those stops I was amazed at," Lakers coach Phil Jackson said. "We were hustling, working really hard. We left guys open for shots (but) we were still able to recover to get back to guys who were taking shots."

Bryant scored a team-leading 22 points on 6-for-13 shooting in 45 minutes. He also had five rebounds and a team-leading eight assists.

Bryant played more of a set-up role than in recent games, as per the Lakers' game plan.

"That's what we asked him to do," Jackson said of Bryant's pass-first mentality. "He probably could have had more (assists) if we had hit some more shots."

Lamar Odom added 19 points, a team-leading 14 rebounds and a playoff career-high-tying four blocks in a reserve role. Pau Gasol had 14 points, 10 rebounds and five blocks in 45 minutes, and Trevor Ariza and Derek Fisher each scored 12 points.

"I think this was one of our best games of the year," Odom said two nights after the Lakers suffered a 120-101 loss to the Nuggets in Game 4 at Denver.

Carmelo Anthony led Denver with 31 points on 9-for-23 shooting. Kenyon Martin and Chauncey Billups added 12 apiece for the Nuggets, who shot only 38.6 percent compared to 48.7 percent for the Lakers."


see details: http://www.dailynews.com/sports/ci_12465710

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Surgery spurs Kevin Garnett

"There were no unexpected obstacles for team physician Dr. Brian McKeon when he entered Kevin Garnett's right knee yesterday - which means the 2009-10 Celtics season has started off on the right foot.

Spurs were removed during the procedure at New England Baptist Hospital, and McKeon, assisted by Drs. Michael Belkin and John Richmond, were obviously pleased to find no structural damage.

"They didn't have to touch the tendon," Celtics director of basketball operations Danny Ainge said in a telephone interview. "They never thought they would.

"There were really no surprises throughout the procedure. They just went and cleaned out some wear and tear and got rid of the spur in the back of the leg."

Garnett played just four games after straining the knee Feb. 19 at Utah. He was unable to go in the postseason as the Celts were eliminated in the second round.

In a statement from the team, Ainge said, "After this successful surgery, Kevin can now begin to focus on rehabilitating his knee, returning to top physical shape and fully preparing for the 2009-10 season."

Added coach Doc Rivers in the release, "I expect Kevin to return to active duty in full force and be that consummate two-way professional that he has shown all of us throughout his fantastic NBA career."

The fact that Garnett and the Celtics are not active now in the NBA playoffs has followers of the team wishing a decision made before the season could be revisited. Garnett's spurs showed up then, but they were not deemed a significant problem."


Orlando Magic one win away from Finals after beating Cleveland Cavaliers

Appropriately enough, a living, breathing 7-foot timeline of the franchise's past and present sat a few feet from the court.

The Orlando Magic crept within one victory on Tuesday night of making it to the NBA Finals, their first appearance since a certain onlooker named Shaquille O'Neal led the team to the title round in 1995.

In a fiercely played classic, the Magic defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers 116-114 in overtime at Amway Arena to take a commanding 3-1 lead in the Eastern Conference finals.

The Magic now have three chances to knock out the league's best regular-season team and end the club's 13-year dry spell, much of it coming after Shaq exited as a free agent a year after being swept in the title round by the Houston Rockets.

Dwight Howard, often viewed as the second coming of Shaq, scored 10 of the Magic's 16 points in OT.

The Magic seized home-court advantage from the top-seeded Cavs in Game 1, and can oust them from the best-of-seven series in Game 5 on Thursday night at Quicken Loan Arena.

A loss to Cleveland would have tied the series at 2-2, giving the Cavs two of three remaining games at home.

Ousting LeBron James won't be easy. He will not go quietly, probably placing little stock in this historical trend that says this thing's over: Teams that go ahead 3-1 in seven-game series have advanced 95.6 percent of the time.

"When you have a guy like him on the other side of the court, you're a long, long way from it being over," Magic Coach Stan Van Gundy said.

After James' 3-pointer, Rashard Lewis made just 1 of 2 free throws for a 116-114 lead with 3.2 seconds on the clock. James tried to duplicate his Game 2 heroics, but this 3-pointer at the buzzer missed."


see details: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/sports/basketball/magic/orl-sportsmagic-game4-27052709may27,0,6353521.story

Insider-trading suit against Mavericks owner Mark Cuban has first hearing today

"Mark Cuban's lawyers are about to get their first day in court to convince a federal judge that an insider trading lawsuit against their client should be thrown out.

A hearing on a motion to dismiss the civil case is scheduled for today. In November, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission accused Cuban of trading on insider information in a Canadian company called Mamma.com in 2004.

The SEC says Cuban sold his shares in the company after receiving confidential information about a company plan to sell additional shares in a private offering. Cuban dodged a $750,000 loss by selling his shares, the SEC says.

Cuban's lawyers have not conceded that Cuban agreed to keep the information confidential. But Tuesday's hearing will focus on their motion to dismiss the case based on the contention that Cuban owed no fiduciary duty not to trade on the information........."


see details: http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/spt/basketball/mavs/stories/052409dntexcuban.28fb0e8.html

Denver views Game 5 as the all-important game in series with Lakers

"The Denver Nuggets view tonight's Game 5 at Staples Center as all-important in the best-of-seven series against the Lakers. Why? Because the Lakers have the home-court advantage, and if the series, which is tied at 2-2, happens to go to seven games, the Nuggets know the difficulty most NBA teams have faced of trying to win on the road in the deciding game. "My focus to them is [tonight's] game is our must-win game, almost as much as" Game 4 was, Denver Coach George Karl said Tuesday before his team watched film of Monday night's impressive victory over the Lakers. "We right now have, I think, made somewhat of a move. The challenge then is [for the Lakers] to try to figure us out a little ..."

see details: http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-nuggets27-2009may27,0,2336200.story

Down, nearly out: Magic's 3-point onslaught pushes Cavaliers to brink, 116-114, in OT

"For the slightest of moments, when the ball was just a few precious feet from the basket, it looked like LeBron James had one-upped himself. Only this time the law of averages, even superstar averages, caught up. His prayer from somewhere around 35 feet went unanswered at the overtime horn of Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals. The fact that the Cavaliers were in position to need what would have qualified as another career shot to win a game says it all. James' near miss made it another near miss for the Cavs, 116-114, in overtime at Amway Arena. The Orlando Magic, who seem be to relentless in their playmaking and talent pool, are now just one victory away from representing the East ..."







see details: http://www.cleveland.com/cavs/index.ssf/2009/05/magics_3point_onslaught_puts_c.html

RoundCast: LeBron Done in Cleveland?

Bloggers knee-jerking on the phone + roundtable style = RoundCast.

Okay, we might be overstating it, but the fact of the matter is that a spectacularly played Game 4 of the Eastern Conference final led Moore, Watson and I to discuss LeBron James' future ... both immediate and long term.

After Cleveland managed to take last night's game into overtime, the Magic then reversed the fortunes of this series with a strong overtime period before putting the Cavaliers in a do-or-die situation. Unfortunately, that's a scenario that involves Mo Williams "not being horrible" and "being a man of his word." We take him to task, naturally.

see details:
http://nba.fanhouse.com/2009/05/27/roundcast-lebron-done-in-cleveland/

Magic Closing Book on Cavs

ORLANDO -- The wonderfully-hyped, LeBron James Magical Ride to the NBA Finals is on life support now. His box of miracles may be empty.

The Orlando Magic have too many weapons to overcome. The 3-point shower is coming from all sides.

The Magic took an almost insurmountable 3-1 lead in the Eastern Conference finals with a 116-114 overtime victory Tuesday night. The series resumes Thursday in Cleveland, but the prospects are not good for the Cavaliers.

In NBA conference final history, there have been 47 times in which one team has led a series 3-1. The team with the lead has prevailed in 44 of them. For Cleveland, it's only a matter of time now.

Magic 116, Cavaliers 114: Box Score | Howard Close to Suspension
Magic Lead 3-1 | Next Game: Thursday @ Cleveland, 8:30 PM ET

"We've got to have the killer instinct if we want to win a championship," said Magic center Dwight Howard. "We're not done yet. We've got to finish it.''

While James had another brilliant game -- 44 points and 12 rebounds – he was a facing a myriad of scorers on the other side. As good as he is, it's like fighting off an army........

see details: http://nba.fanhouse.com/2009/05/27/magic-closing-book-on-cavs/

Dwight Howard Close to Suspension

ORLANDO -- Dwight Howard promised everyone he could control himself going into Game 4 of this Eastern Conference final against Cleveland.

Well, he lied.

Howard played well Tuesday night – dominated overtime in this 116-114 victory – and he left Amway Arena one victory away from a trip to the NBA Finals.

Yet the dark cloud over his head has grown more ominous. Howard received his sixth technical foul of this post season Tuesday, leaving him one away from an automatic one-game suspension that will follow him until this season ends.

The fear now is that the threat of a suspension will restrict the emotional play that often makes him so dominant. Or the Magic will be playing a game in the NBA Finals without him.

Howard was called for his technical Tuesday for taunting Cavs center Anderson Varejao, who had tried to wrap up Howard with a high bear hug, only to have the Magic center dunk over him anyway. Varejao was called for a personal foul. Howard got a technical because he paused over Varejao and flexed his muscles.

The technical irked both Magic coach Stan Van Gundy and Howard.

"You do start to feel like he's a marked man. That's a pretty tough technical foul to get,'' Van Gundy said. "You start to feel like they really are looking for him. Varejao grabs him by the shoulders going up. To me, that's a bigger problem than him making noises when he makes the basket. I guess there is no problem grabbing a guy by the neck, but if you celebrate the basket, that's a bigger problem.''

Howard, who got a technical in Game 3 for saying something toward the Cavs bench, said he was surprised by the technical Tuesday, especially after promising that he would keep his mouth shut and his elbow in to avoid one.

"All I was doing was playing with emotion,'' Howard said. "I wasn't taunting anyone. It was a tough play. He grabbed me around the neck, but I made the shot anyway. I understand the consequences. I might really have to use the duct tape [on my mouth] now.''

see details: http://nba.fanhouse.com/2009/05/27/dwight-howard-close-to-suspension/

Rafer Alston Orlando's Unlikely Hero

ORLANDO -- Rafter Alston doesn't shoot the ball well every night.

But he sure knows how to pick his spots.

Alston became one of the unlikely heroes Tuesday night when the Magic beat the Cavs, 116-114, in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference final, delivering a career playoff high 26 points.

The Cavs made the same mistake that Philadelphia made in the first round and Boston made in the second round, leaving Alston open to help defensively on the Magic stars. And as usual, Alston made them pay, bringing back memories of his playground days when he become the legendary "Skip-to-my-Lou.''

He made 10 of 17 shots and six of 12 from 3-point range, scoring 20 of his points in the second half after playing only nine minutes because in the first half because of early foul trouble.

He scored the Magic's first 10 points in the second half, keeping them close when the Cavs threatened to run away.

"It fueled us when I came out strong after halftime because we were able to thrive off that,'' he said. "I'm probably not the most consistent one we have making threes, but tonight was my night.''

Alston had similar games against Philadelphia and Boston. In Game 6 of the first round, when the Magic closed out the Sixers, Alston hit 8 of 16 shots for 21 points. In Game 7 against Boston, he hit three of seven 3-pointers for 15 points. In the Magic's Game 3 victory over Cleveland on Sunday, he hit six of 13 shots for 18 points.

"It's been a challenge for me, all throughout the playoffs,'' he said. "Philadelphia dared me to shoot it, and I burned them. Boston dared me to shoot it, and I burned them, too, at their place. This is a make-and-miss league. Right now I'm able to knock them down.''

Alston was the Magic's mid-season pickup from Houston after they lost Jameer Nelson for the season because of his shoulder injury. At times, he has struggled with his shot. He is shooting 40 percent from the field. During the regular season, he made only 38 percent of his shots.

"You can almost taste it, this opportunity to get to the Finals. We understand we have to win one more, and it's not going to be easy,'' he said. "We're enjoying this ride, but we also understand we've got some work to do yet.''

see details: http://nba.fanhouse.com/2009/05/27/rafer-alston-orlandos-unlikely-hero/

Losing Won't Tarnish LeBron's Legacy

ORLANDO – There is now a 95.6 percent chance LeBron James will not make the NBA Finals. If you think that makes him a failure, there's a 100 percent chance you are wrong.

I don't want to turn Cleveland 's Game 4 loss into a LeBron gush-fest, but you could almost hear the haters warming up in the bullpen Tuesday night. Before you start throwing high hard ones at James, take it from someone who knows.

"I'm very proud of our guys to keep hanging in there with what he's doing in this series," Stan Van Gundy said.
Magic 116, Cavs 114: Recap | Box Score | Howard in Danger
Magic Lead 3-1 | Next Game: Thursday @ Cleveland, 8:30 PM ET


He was not talking about Zydrunas Ilgauskas. He was talking about the guy who is averaging 42.3 points a game. The guy who might have sent Van Gundy's uncle to his final resting place had the last shot gone in.

It didn't, and now the Cavaliers are one game away from having their 66-win season declared a failure. That will be laid on you-know-who's shoulders. It will go something like this:

see details: http://nba.fanhouse.com/2009/05/27/losing-wont-tarnish-lebrons-legacy/

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Jayson Williams Busted After Bar Fight

"Cops busted disgraced former basketball star Jayson Williams yesterday after the accused killer punched out another bar patron in North Carolina, police said. The dust-up outside the Ugly Monkey Party Bar in Raleigh at about 2 a.m. yesterday led to Williams' arrest on one count of simple assault. The former New Jersey Net was released on $1,000 bond. Williams, 41, and his alleged victim reportedly argued inside the club over a pushing-and-shoving incident. "He [Williams] was very cooperative during the investigation and very cooperative during the arrest," said police Capt. T.L. Earnhardt. Legal experts said the incident could have an impact on Williams' bail, as he awaits retrial in the ..."









see details: http://www.nypost.com/seven/05262009/news/regionalnews/jayson_busted_170990.htm

Dream Matchup of Kobe-LeBron Fading As Deeper Teams Rise

DENVER -- For all the weird smack-talking from those Nike puppets, all the relentless marketing pushes by a sports-drink firm that suggests Kobe Bryant and LeBron James are on "a collision course," guess what? They might be headed for a Porsche-Hummer crash instead, which would be a colossal waste of ad-world brainpower and, when you consider the megastars excluded, our great entertainment loss in June.

No one is pondering a Denver vs. Orlando matchup, least of all ABC, which would watch in horror as a compelling postseason marked by fat cable ratings suddenly fades to black in the NBA Finals. "I'm sure the world does want Cleveland and the Lakers, the best two players in the world and the chance to see them in a seven-game series," said Nuggets star Chauncey Billups. "But I don't want to see it. And I'm trying my best to make sure it doesn't happen."

Nuggets 120, Lakers 101: Recap | Box Score


If Kobe and LeBron are the stars of the big show, they also share the same dilemma: They don't have enough help around them, unlike a team such as the Nuggets, who flashed the requisite skill, depth, energy and rebounding aggression to thrive Monday night even when their own star, Carmel-O Anthony, extended his rut to three full quarters and 11 minutes of a fourth without a basket -- an 0-for-14 vapor zone that finally ended just before halftime of Game 4. To be fair, he was dehydrated, fighting a stomach virus and playing on a sprained ankle.

details: http://jay-mariotti.fanhouse.com/2009/05/26/dream-matchup-of-kobe-lebron-fading-as-deeper-teams-rise/

Lakers seize up instead of seizing the day

"Carmelo Anthony was limping, dehydrated and ineffective, but the Lakers were somehow in worse shape. Fatigue didn't stop the Lakers, but the Denver Nuggets definitely did, tying up the Western Conference finals with a 120-101 pounding in Game 4 Monday night at the Pepsi Center. Anthony's pregame stomach illness, coupled with a sprained right ankle suffered in the second quarter, gave the Lakers hope of taking an overwhelming series lead. But the distinction between hope and reality was as hard-hitting as the Denver altitude, the Lakers rarely challenging in the least-contested game of the series. Game 5 is Wednesday at Staples Center. The Nuggets devastated the Lakers in the rebounding ..."








see details: http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-lakers-nuggets26-2009may26,0,5679891.story

Cavaliers Sell a Stake to Chinese Investors

"The deal that may give a group of Chinese investors a minority stake in the Cleveland Cavaliers and its arena signals the first significant investment in a major American sports franchise by investors from China. The Cavaliers, who are led by LeBron James, the N.B.A.'s most valuable player this season and perhaps its biggest star, said they agreed over the weekend to sell a 15 percent stake in the franchise and its Quicken Loans Arena to the group, which is led by Kenny Huang, a Chinese-born investor who has also brokered marketing deals with the Yankees and the Houston Rockets, and a Hong Kong conglomerate. The deal must be approved by the league's board of governors. If the sale is ..."

see details: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/26/sports/basketball/26nba.html?_r=1&ref=basketball

Nuggets, Lakers set ESPN record

"The nation's NBA fans love the Nuggets. And the Lakers. And the intense overall playoff action. The Nuggets' loss to the Lakers in Los Angeles on Tuesday was the most- watched basketball game (NBA and college) in ESPN's 30-year history. More than 8.1 million viewers watched all or part of the Lakers' 105-103 victory. The second-most watched basketball game in ESPN history? The Nuggets' 106-103 victory at the Staples Center on Thursday, which produced more than 7.9 million viewers in the cable universe. Other numbers of note: • This two-game Nielsen ratings audience average was 36 percent higher than the first two of the 2008 Western Conference finals, aired on TNT, featuring the Lakers and ..."








see details: http://www.denverpost.com/nuggets/ci_12443809

Williams guarantees victory

"It wasn't as braggadocios as Joe Namath's guarantee that his New York Jets would beat the Baltimore Colts in Super Bowl III. But when point guard Mo Williams was quasi-manipulated into guaranteeing a Cavaliers' win in tonight's Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals, he got the attention of the assembled media. ''Yeah, we're down 1-2 but there's nobody on this team [who thinks], definitely not myself that thinks we're not going to win the series,'' Williams said Monday afternoon. ''Yeah, it's going to be tough. We know that. We get this game tomorrow and we go home, we have homecourt advantage. We don't see ourselves losing two out of three at home.'' Williams' statement can be seen as ..."

see details: http://www.ohio.com/sports/cavs/46029282.html

Nuggets pounce in Game 4

"Sure enough, there was a WWE-style rumble Monday at the Pepsi Center. While World Wrestling Entertainment put on its scheduled show at the Staples Center, the Nuggets put a stranglehold on the Lakers at the Pepsi Center, winning 120-101 and tying the Western Conference finals at 2-2. The only thing missing was a folding chair to Kobe Bryant's head. "They just kicked our (expletive)," said the Lakers' Bryant, who scored a game-high 34 points. Denver's big men were sensational. No other word for it (well, you could translate it, and thus Nene would say in Portuguese: "sensacional"). So was super-sub J.R. Smith, who threw in 24 points. But the beatdown came in the paint, where the Nuggets had ..."

see details: http://www.denverpost.com/nuggets/ci_12447212

Monday, May 25, 2009

Nuggets even Western finals against Lakers at 2-2

DENVER -A dominating effort on the boards and a great performance by the bench helped the Denver Nuggets overcome a below-par effort from an ailing Carmelo Anthony.
The Nuggets beat the Los Angeles Lakers 120-101 on Monday night, evening the Western Conference finals at two games apiece.
Chauncey Billups and J.R. Smith scored 24 points and Kenyon Martin had a double-double as the Nuggets posted their eighth blowout of the postseason but first against Los Angeles following three games that came down to the final seconds.
The Nuggets didn't need to worry about a botched inbounds pass in the closing seconds like the ones that cost them wins in Games 1 and 3, although Kobe Bryant had another monster fourth quarter in a furious attempt to put a stranglehold on the series that shifts to Los Angeles for Game 5 Wednesday night.

One Big Question: Can Nuggets Close?

Three games into the Western Conference finals and we know a couple of things for certain:

One, that the Nuggets are giving the Lakers all they can handle; and, two, Lakers fans don't like it when you say their team feels like an underdog.

Here are five questions heading into tonight's Western Conference Game 4:

1. Can the Nuggets come through down the stretch late in a tight game?

2. How will the Lakers handle reclaiming home-court advantage?

3. Will Kenyon Martin and Nene answer the call?

4. Were Carmelo Anthony's struggles in Game 3 a one-game thing or the start of a trend?

5. What's up with Lamar Odom?

Ans:..................

see details:
http://nba.fanhouse.com/2009/05/25/one-big-question-can-nuggets-close/

Bryant great late, but Lakers never had a chance


DENVER -He can't do everything.
But if the Lakers are going to advance to the NBA finals, Kobe Bryant might just have to.
Over four desperate minutes late in Monday night's 120-101 loss to Denver, Bryant took the first shot on seven straight Los Angeles possessions, made it to the line six times and scored 13 points in a futile attempt to catch up.
The rest of the Lakers' production: four free throws from Pau Gasol.
So, Los Angeles left Denver having regained home-court advantage, but appearing never more dependent on its admittedly exhausted star with the Western Conference finals now tied at 2.
"Yes, those are actions we have to go to and they're drastic actions," Lakers coach Phil Jackson said of the Kobe-or-nothing strategy at the end.
A good strategy? That's up for debate. Gasol went 8-for-11 for 21 points. He's shooting 62 percent for the series. But the only way he could get his hands on the ball late in this game was to grab an offensive rebound.
"You tell me," he said. "I don't think there's many people who would say there's something right about it. I wish we would take more advantage of our inside game, because it's pretty effective. It's unfortunate we don't recognize it enough."
Gasol may be effective but he's not a game-changer.
The Lakers only have one of those.
Bryant was attached to an IV in the locker room after Game 3, when he hit a 3-pointer and five free throws late to help the Lakers take a late lead and keep it in a 103-97 win.
He finished with 34 points on Monday and is still averaging 36 for the series.


Magic doing their best to stop Cavs' coronation

ORLANDO — If not for an instant-classic LeBron James three-pointer in Game 2, the Eastern Conference finals would be all but over. Instead, the Orlando Magic lead 2-1 against top-seeded Cleveland, raising eyebrows of fans — and splitting the eyebrow of Cavaliers guard Mo Williams.

"A lot of people were ready to crown them before the start of the playoffs and definitely after the second round," says Orlando guard Anthony Johnson, whose elbow resulted in four stitches to Williams' left eye in Game 3. "Now, we're two wins from the Finals."

full history: http://www.usatoday.com/sports/basketball/nba/2009-05-25-magic-cavs-inside-preview_N.htm?csp=34

Spirited Response

"History says the team that wins Game 3 in a tied series ends up winning the whole thing most of the time. But a history lesson wasn't needed Sunday night; the naked eye is enough to tell the direction the Eastern Conference finals appear to be going. The Orlando Magic just seems to make the Cavaliers look like the un- derdog, their top- seed status and history- making regular season simply notwith standing. The Magic out played the Cavs again in Game 3, winning, 99-89, to take a 2-1 se ries edge. The Cavs now need three wins in the next four games to reach The Finals. The Magic seem better equipped. "We were able to overcome the dagger from the other night," Magic coach Stan Van Gundy ..."

see details: http://www.cleveland.com/cavs/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/sports/1243240297284421.xml&coll=2

Lakers want to assume control

DENVER - Carpe diem. Seize the moment. Seize the day.

Seize control of the Western Conference finals.

The Lakers vowed to do all of the above in Game 4 tonight against the Denver Nuggets at the Pepsi Center. They said Sunday they learned their lesson after seizing nothing of significance the last time they played a Game 4 with a 2-1 series lead.

Two weeks ago Sunday, the Lakers strolled onto the court and got their heads handed to them by the Houston Rockets. That defeat meant the difference between a short and sweet series victory and a lengthy, drawn-out battle with the Rockets.

The Lakers needed seven games to eliminate the Rockets in their second-round series, and they're still paying the price for having to play an extra game or two. They were weary beyond words after taking a 103-97 victory from the Nuggets in Game 3.

Kobe Bryant needed intravenous fluids in order to refuel after scoring a team-leading 41 points Saturday night.

He said his wife called him after the game and said he looked terrible. He also said he went right to bed after the game and slept for 10 hours.

"Brutal," he said. "We've got two more series (this one and the NBA Finals). We've just got to get through it. There's two more series and we've just got to get it done, got to get it (freaking) done. We can be tired in August.

"We were in this position in the last series. We've got to come out with more focus, more energy, and............

see details: http://www.dailynews.com/news/ci_12444559?source=rv


Cleveland Cavaliers lose to the Orlando Magic, 98-88, in Game 3 of 2009 NBA Eastern Conference finals

"History says the team that wins Game 3 in a tied series ends up winning the whole thing most of the time. But a history lesson wasn't needed Sunday night; the naked eye is enough to tell the direction the Eastern Conference finals appear to be going. The Orlando Magic just seems to make the Cavaliers look like the un- derdog, their top- seed status and history- making regular season simply notwith standing. The Magic out played the Cavs again in Game 3, winning, 99-89, to take a 2-1 se ries edge. The Cavs now need three wins in the next four games to reach The Finals. The Magic seem better equipped. "We were able to overcome the dagger from the other night," Magic coach Stan Van Gundy ..."

see details: http://www.cleveland.com/cavs/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/sports/1243240297284421.xml&coll=2

Magic bounce back vs. Cavs for 2-1 lead

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - LeBron James had no shot.
Dwight Howard scored 24 points - 14 on free throws - and Rafer Alston added 18 as the Orlando Magic, sick of seeing replays of James' dramatic Game 2 buzzer-beater, downed the Cleveland Cavaliers 99-89 on Sunday night to take a 2-1 lead in an Eastern Conference finals getting nastier by the minute.

ames scored 41 on just 11-of-26 shooting and missed five free throws in the fourth quarter. But once again, Cleveland's superstar didn't get enough help from his teammates. Mo Williams, who needed four stitches to close two gashes around his left eye after being elbowed in the first half, Delonte West and Zydrunas Ilgauskas shot a combined 13-of-37.

Game 4 is Tuesday night.

The first two games of the series in Cleveland were each decided by one point. This one was resolved by elbows, shoves and hard fouls.

Howard, Ilgauskas and Cleveland's Anderson Varejao all fouled out as the officials called 58 personals, handed out two technicals, a flagrant and spent half the night stepping between players on both sides as tempers flared inside an overheated Amway Arena.

"We just kept fighting. That's what we got to do, we fight to the end," Howard said. "We can't worry about nothing, we can't worry about the calls, can't worry about nobody else. We just got to get out there and play."

When the referees weren't making peace, they were sending players to the free-throw line.

Unlike Games 1 and 2, the Magic didn't fall behind by double digits and need to rally. They got out fast, stayed close despite Howard's early foul trouble and put the Cavs away at the line.

Howard, a notoriously poor foul shooter, went 14-of-19 from the line and the Magic made 39 of 51 attempts. In the fourth quarter alone, Orlando made 19 of 23 to hold off the top-seeded Cavaliers, who began the playoffs with eight straight wins and have now dropped two of their last three.

Cleveland better figure out a way to win in steamy Florida fast. The Cavs, who were thumped here by 29 on April 3, have six lost six of their last seven in Orlando.

The Magic seem to have a spell over the Cavs.

Despite his lack of help, James kept Cleveland within striking distance in the fourth and scored on a three-point play while getting Howard's fifth foul with 2:34 to play to pull the Cavs to 90-86.

Howard, wrapped up underneath, then made two free throws before James was fouled and rimmed out two at the other end. On Orlando's next trip, Mickael Pietrus, who came off the bench to score 16, grabbed a long rebound, got fouled and was pushed in the back by West, who was handed a T.

LeBron James scored 41 points in Game 3 but missed five free throws in the fourth quarter. (John Raoux / Associated Press)

Pietrus made his free throws to make it 94-86 and the Magic appeared to have things under control when Howard caught James from behind and blocked his 3-pointer. The refs saw it otherwise and called a three-shot foul on Superman, who couldn't believe it.

James made all three shots, but the Cavs were short on time. Rashard Lewis' free throw made it 95-89 and after another Cleveland miss, Hedo Turkoglu was fouled and made two more to finish the job. Turkoglu was just 1-of-11 from the floor but made 11 free throws and added 10 rebounds and seven assists.

After sitting the final seven minutes of the first half with three fouls, Howard made it through 9:10 of the third quarter before getting No. 4 - and technical No. 5 of the postseason.

He was called for pushing Ben Wallace underneath, and upset with the whistle, he said something on his way to the bench that referee Joey Crawford didn't like and was T'd up. Orlando coach Stan Van Gundy had warned his star to keep his composure because the league automatically suspends a player for one game after he receives his seventh technical foul in the playoffs.

"I didn't say anything to Joey Crawford," Howard said. "The response was to the other team. I didn't say anything to Joey Crawford. I'm not stupid enough to get in his face and say anything, so I try to keep it to the other team."

The Magic led 29-23 when Howard picked up his third personal foul with 7:27 remaining in the first half when he bumped James ever so slightly on a drive.

Less than two minutes later, Orlando was behind by five.

During the stretch, Orlando's Anthony Johnson rocked Williams with a left elbow to the face that dropped Cleveland's point guard, who laid face down on the floor for several seconds. When he got up, Williams, who was called for a block, was bleeding from his eyebrow and left cheek.

During the timeout, the officiating crew huddled and decided to call a flagrant-1 on Johnson. Williams, who had hurried from the floor for medical treatment, came back out to shoot the free throws with his eye already severely swollen. If he had not returned to shoot, Williams would not have been able to play anymore.

Gritting his teeth, Williams, looking like a boxer needing a corner cut man, made both shots and immediately headed to the locker room for stitches.

He was back on the floor with about two minutes left.

Before the game, James said he expected a physical game.

"When you play a team over and over you start to dislike them more," he said. "It just happens. It's got to be a little chippy."

details; http://msn.foxsports.com/nba/story/9414936/Magic-bounce-back-vs.-Cavs-for-2-1-lead

Lakers' Bryant: Surgery on pinkie can wait

"Remember that surgery Kobe Bryant was supposed to have on his pinkie finger after last season? Well, he's putting it off indefinitely. "I don't think I need to get the surgery," Bryant said Sunday before the Lakers practiced in Denver. "The surgery takes too long to recover from. It's pointless. "It feels fine. It's not crooked, it's just a little swollen. It doesn't bother me enough to get surgery on it. The only reason it's swollen is because I hit it in the Houston series." So if not surgery on his pinkie, what are his offseason plans? "I haven't had a break in like three years," Bryant said. In other words, he'll be getting some rest. Before he can think about resting, there's still ..."

see details: http://www.dailynews.com/sports/ci_12443741

Harsh Reality

ORLANDO -- LeBron James hit an 11-point shot at the buzzer to give Cleveland a 100-99 win over Orlando Sunday night.

That's the first paragraph you were supposed to be reading today. Instead, it's time to face reality.

There are no 11-point shots. James is not Zeus. And it will take a lot more than a last-second loss to demoralize the Magic.

"We were able to overcome 'The Dagger,' " Stan Van Gundy said.




see details: http://nba.fanhouse.com/2009/05/25/lebrons-reality-magic-simply-better/

Howard Close to Another Suspension

Dwight Howard better watch his mouth.

Although better known for his wide smile and jovial manner, Howard's on-court temper has him bordering on serious trouble as he leads the Orlando Magic deep into the playoffs.

Howard received his fifth technical foul in the playoffs Sunday night, leaving him just two away from an automatic one-game suspension. The technical count would follow him all the way through the NBA Finals if the Magic make it.

The Magic lead the Cavaliers 2-1 in the Eastern Conference finals.

"Yes, we've talked with Dwight about it. He is at a level now where we certainly don't need to be playing without him for a game," said Magic Coach Stan Van Gundy. "He needs to be careful. This is not good. It's something he should have been able to avoid."

Howard got his technical Sunday with 2:50 remaining in the third quarter, seconds after receiving his fourth personal foul. Howard spent the entire game in foul trouble. As he was walking back to the Magic bench, he turned and said something to those on the Cleveland bench. He was standing next to official Joey Crawford when he spouted off.

"Pat [Ewing, Magic assistant coach] tells me every day, to stay focused, but all it takes is one little incident. I'm going to do my best to stay away from any more problems [technicals]," Howard said. "I'm not going to get into it with the referees anymore."

Howard has been in foul trouble throughout this series, and throughout the playoffs. In 15 playoff games, he now has 66 personal fouls, which has added to his frustration level.

He already served one, one-game suspension in the first round of the playoffs, Game 6 against Philadelphia for throwing an elbow that hit Sixers center Samuel Dalembert.

"I'm not going to let down my team, my city," he said. "I'm not going to let anything like this get in the way of our goal, and that's to win an NBA championship."

Bad Blood Brewing Between Cavs, Magic

The bad blood is starting to boil in this Magic-Cavaliers matchup.

Just ask Cleveland's Mo Williams, who left Amway Arena with a four-stitch cut below his left eye and another bandage above the same eye, compliments of an elbow from Magic guard Anthony Johnson.

Williams all but called out Johnson in his postgame rant.

"Most definitely," he responded when asked if the foul was a cheap shot.

"That was the second time [for him]. We dove out of bounds in Cleveland last game, and he gave me an elbow then. This is the second time, most definitely."

The play happened with 5:44 remaining in the second period. Johnson was driving with the ball and Williams was trying to slow him. As he went to shoot, he brought his elbow into the face of Williams, who went down in a heap.

Williams got called for a personal foul on the play. Johnson got called for a flagrant foul. Williams had to be helped to the locker room but he quickly returned to make his two free throws, shortly after Johnson missed his two.

"I think it was [a cheap shot]," said Cleveland teammate LeBron James. "Mo's face was not a pretty sight. That's not called for in this game."

That play was just one foul in a game where 58 personal fouls were called.

Williams, though, said he didn't think there would be any carryover into the next game. He also said he and Johnson have no history of bad blood.

"It's the playoffs. I've got bigger fish to fry right now," Williams said. "I could not care less about Anthony Johnson. He plays 12 minutes a game. It's over with."

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Magic fans fired up for big Game 3

Nothing says playoff excitement like getting a "Go Magic" sign stolen from your lawn.

Magic chief operating officer Alex Martins was the victim of the dastardly deed during the first round against Philadelphia, but he says with a laugh, "I don't mind people taking them off my front lawn if they put them on their front lawn."


Martins has more than made up for it.

After the Magic beat the Celtics in Game 7, he arrived home to see seven signs on his lawn, courtesy of his wife and kids.

"I had about a half-dozen in my garage to give to those who wanted them and when I drove into my driveway at 4:30 in morning after coming back from Boston ... my wife and children were so excited they put them all out. It put a smile on my face at a time I was dragging from the trip."

The Magic have put smiles on fans' faces throughout Central Florida. Now that they are getting ready to host the Cavaliers in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference Finals tonight, it is easier to see that excitement building.....

see details: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/sports/basketball/magic/orl-sportsmagic-cavaliers-fans-24052409may24,0,2268236.story

NBA's Bobcats can't leave Charlotte, city attorney says

"On Friday, the Observer reported that Bobcats owner Bob Johnson was looking to sell the team, raising questions for some residents about the future of the arena.

The city agreed in 2002 to build the $265million arena. Part of the deal was that the NBA team would operate the facility and keep most of the revenue from it.

City Attorney Mac McCarley sent these answers to commonly asked questions about the city's involvement in the arena:

Q: How long is the agreement with the Bobcats?

Through the end of the 2029-30 NBA season.

Q: What happens if they're sold?

The new owners would be subject to all the same restrictions and guarantees.

Q: Can the team leave?

No. The city may seek an injunction to force the team to honor the commitment to play here, or can enforce liquidated damages of $200 million in the first five years (2005-2010), $150 million in years five to 10, and a declining balance going from $85 million in year 11 down to $7 million in year 25.

Q: What protects the city from the team leaving?

The liquidated damage provisions are guaranteed by the team and by Bob Johnson personally.

CMS offers 300-plus pages of details about budget

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools officials have given Mecklenburg County commissioners a little light reading in advance of Tuesday's joint budget meeting: more than 300 pages detailing the request for $351 million in county money for 2009-10.

At this point, it looks like it'll take an economic miracle for that wish to be granted. County Manager Harry Jones expects the schools to take a cut of almost 10 percent, like other departments and agencies the county pays for. If commissioners agree, CMS will enact the four levels of cuts Superintendent Peter Gorman has described. Those are detailed in just two pages of the mammoth budget book."


see details: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/bobcats/story/742538.html

Chinese investors close to purchasing share of Cleveland Cavaliers

"The Cavaliers already have a global star. A clutch-shooting global star at that. Soon they may
have a global partner that could help secure that global star's future in Cleveland. According to multiple sources within the Cavs, franchise majority owner Dan Gilbert has a tentative agreement in place to allow a group of Chinese investors to purchase a significant stake in the Cavaliers Operating Company, the entity that owns the Cavs and operates Quicken Loans Arena. The group is led by JianHua (Kenny) Huang, a Chinese businessman who has become successful by linking American and Chinese companies.

Huang and several of his partners were in Cleveland and attended Games 1 and 2 of the Eastern Conference finals this week. He sat in Gilbert's courtside box Friday night and watched LeBron James hit a buzzer-beating 3-pointer to even the series with the Orlando Magic at one game apiece.

"Dan Gilbert has been approached multiple times over the past few years by investors that wanted to join the Cavs' ownership group," said Len Komoroski, Cavs and Quicken Loans Arena president said in a statement.

"This has recently happened again. As has been done previously, we're in the process of reviewing the possibility presented to us. Beyond that, we do not feel it would be appropriate to give further comment at this time."

Calls to Huang's company were not returned.

The direct impact of the move is securing the future of the franchise, which has been in a minority ownership flux for the last couple years as it loses millions in attempting to build a championship-quality team around James. It will not only mean an injection of capital but will open the Cavs to business in China. The move, which has been kept mostly secret in America, is being supported by the NBA as they have encouraged development in China."

see details: http://www.cleveland.com/cavs/index.ssf/2009/05/sources_chinese_investors_clos.html


Lakers defeat Nuggets in Game 3

"He's just different. Kobe Bryant stood at the free-throw line Saturday - "couldn't feel my legs," he would say - but heard the Pepsi Center fans chanting "Ko-be sucks!" and he remembered who he is - and what the moment was. He's just different. Bryant swished a dagger 3-pointer to give the Lakers a late lead, then finished the game off at the free-throw line, feeding off the Pepsi Center silence. He admitted it was "a better feeling than hearing the roar of the (home) crowd." In the Lakers' 103-97 Game 3 victory, Bryant was the Rich Gossage of closers, giving the Lakers a 2-1 lead in the Western Conference finals with 41 points. He swiped back home-court advantage like he was Trevor Ariza ..."






see details
: http://www.denverpost.com/nuggets/ci_12437768