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Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Test post

Posted by thepsb on May 30, 2008

1st Round
# Team Pos Player School Notes
1 Chicago PF Michael Beasley Kansas State Beasley gives the Bulls the low-post scorer they’ve been missing, plus rebounding. Chicago will take a long look at Rose, but Beasley has to be the pick
2 Miami PG Derrick Rose Memphis Like Seattle last year, Miami can take whichever consensus Top 2 prospect falls into its lap. Rose and Wade should make an excellent backcourt
3 Minnesota C Brook Lopez Stanford O.J. Mayo would be a solid pick here, but Minnesota needs a big man to pair with Al Jefferson and Lopez is a good fit with his shooting and shot-blocking
4 Seattle SG O.J. Mayo USC Pairing Mayo with Kevin Durant sounds great on paper, but could it really work? Mayo’s got the talent to be the best player in the draft and is worth the risk
5 Memphis SG Eric Gordon Indiana Memphis has a lot of holes to fill and they would have to consider a big man such as Anthony Randolph, but its most glaring need is at shooting guard
6 New York PG Jerryd Bayless Arizona Mike D’Antoni needs a point guard to run his fast-paced offense and Bayless should be a great fit. This pick would be a good start to rebuilding the Knicks
7 L.A. Clippers SF Danilo Gallinari Italy Point guard is more of a need, but with Rose and Bayless off the board Gallinari is a sensible pick. He and Thornton should be an excellent combination
8 Milwaukee PF Anthony Randolph LSU The Bucks would be tempted to trade if put in this position, as drafting Randolph would cut into Villanueva’s and Yi’s minutes, but if they go big, it could work
9 Charlotte PF Kevin Love UCLA This would continue the Bobcats trend of picking great college players with questionable NBA futures. Love fits the Larry Brown mold as well
10 New Jersey C DeAndre Jordan Texas A&M A long, athletic center with great potential, Jordan would give the Nets their best inside scorer since the departure of Kenyon Martin
11 Indiana PG Russell Westbrook UCLA Tough call here between Westbrook and Augustin and this pick could go either way. Westbrook seems like a safer option, as he’s got much better size
12 Sacramento PG D.J. Augustin Texas Beno Udrih played well filling in for Mike Bibby, but he’s hardly a long-term solution. Augustin is the second-best pure point guard in the draft
13 Portland SF Joe Alexander West Virginia Portland gets another young, athletic forward to work with. A point guard would be ideal here, but with the top four PGs off the board, they pick a swingman
14 Golden State SF Donte Greene Syracuse The 6-10 forward is a bit of a tweener, but with his ability to play the 3 and the 4 he should be a good fit in Don Nelson’s offense.
15 Phoenix PF Darrell Arthur Kansas Of course Phoenix probably trades this pick for cash, but on the off-chance that they keep it, Arthur’s defense and athleticism makes him a good pick
16 Philadelphia SG Brandon Rush Kansas Philadelphia could go for a big man here, but Rush could fill the Sixers’ need at SG. There are concerns about his injury history, however
17 Toronto C Marreese Speights Florida As well as Rasho Nesterovic played down the stretch, the Raptors could use an upgrade at center and Speights could be a good fit next to Chris Bosh
18 Washington C Kosta Koufos Ohio State Koufos gives Washington another good option at center and as a skilled big man with some shooting range should complement Brendan Haywood well
19 Cleveland SG Chase Budinger Arizona They could opt for a center here, with their aging big men, but Budinger’s explosive offensive game could solve the Cavs’ shooting guard woes
20 Denver SG Chris Douglas-Roberts Memphis Denver might choose a point guard instead but the better option might be to take a perimeter defender to play alongside Allen Iverson.
21 New Jersey SF Bill Walker Kansas State There are still good big men available, but Walker is a good gamble here. He’s got lottery potential and it’s just his injury history that’s a concern
22 Orlando C Robin Lopez Stanford The other Lopez could help out Orlando with his defense and rebounding, especially now that Adonal Foyle is entering the final year of his contract
23 Utah C JaVale McGee Nevada McGee provides shot-blocking on a team that desperately needs it. Aside from Kirilenko, no Jazz player averages more than one block per game
24 Seattle PG Ty Lawson North Carolina After taking Mayo with their first pick, Seattle gets some help at point guard with Lawson. While he won’t start as a rookie, he could be a valuable backup
25 Houston SF Nicholas Batum France Landing Batum this late could be a steal. The Rockets could afford to bring the 19-year old along slowly, but he should be able to find a niche
26 San Antonio C Ante Tomic Croatia The Spurs could use some young blood immediately, but this late in the draft they will likely take a player like Tomic and stash him overseas
27 New Orleans PF J.J. Hickson NC State Above all New Orleans needs depth, particularly at the 4 and 5. Hickson would be an upgrade over Melvin Ely and Chris Anderson
28 Memphis PF Jason Thompson Rider A big man with an NBA body, Thompson should be able to give the Grizzlies some solid minutes at center even as a rookie
29 Detroit C Roy Hibbert Georgetown One of the biggest concerns surrounding Hibbert is his speed, or lack thereof, that wouldn’t matter in Detroit, where they play at the league’s slowest pace
30 Boston PG Mario Chalmers Kansas He would fight with Gabe Pruitt for minutes, but with his shooting ability and ball-handling skills he should be an upgrade over Eddie House

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Unmitigated Basketball Prediction

Posted by thepsb on May 29, 2008

As you may know, there is basketball tonight. Namely, the Spurs host the Lakers in Game 5 of the Western Conference Finals. You’ve probably heard hours worth of previews, so instead of discussing the Bryant/Bowen battle, or Duncan’s penchant for big game numbers, or how Ronnie Turiaf is actually the Lakers’ secret weapon, I’m just gonna cut to brass tacks. Pure gut instinct prediction! And hey, if I’m wrong, I’m wrong, and if I’m right, everyone will shower me with praise and money. I hope. I mean, it’s possible. Right? Please send me money.

That said, here it is:

Lakers 78
Spurs 91

You don’t even need to watch the game now! Enjoy!

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Eastern Conference Finals: A Battle of Incompetence

Posted by thepsb on May 29, 2008

Watching game 5, I was struck by three things:

1. The utter incompetence demonstrated by the Boston Celtics when they attempted get an open look – any open look – down the stretch. Every possession was Rondo dribbling 30 feet from the basket till there were 8 seconds left on the shot clock and then lobbing some horrid pass to Garnett or Pierce 22 feet from the basket, where they had to chuck up a heavily contested fadeaway jumper or turn it over trying to get closer. It was an embarrassing display.

2. The utter incompetence demonstrated by the Detroit Pistons, namely Rasheed Wallace, in maintaining their composure down the stretch. His technical foul was a huge difference in the game. That one point allowed Boston to intentionally foul to prevent a three point attempt, and after Stuckey missed one of two, allowed Garnett to ice the game with two free throws to put Boston up 4. If I were a Piston fan, I would be furious with him. You CANNOT get a technical foul with four or however many minutes left in the game. You just can’t.

3. The utter incompetence demonstrated by the referees in attempting to call a consistent game. First they allowed nothing, then they called everything. A bump was a flagrant foul; a neck tackle was not. It was as absurdly and poorly officiated game as I can remember seeing, and the league should be embarrassed. And as awful as Rasheed getting that technical was, those refs need to swallow their whistles. It’s an intense game; shrug it off, zebras.

This series was destined to go seven games from the beginning, and you can rest assured that David Stern has already given the officials a stern (ZING!) talking to, and we will see a clear home team bias for the last two games. We can also be certain that Sam Cassell is looking forward to his own personal version of Red Auerbach’s victory “cigar”:

UPDATE: Rasheed agrees with point 3: “All that bull(bleep)-ass calls they had out there. With Mike [Callahan] and Kenny [Mauer] — you’ve all seen that (bleep),” Wallace said. “You saw them calls. The cats are flopping all over the floor and they’re calling that (bleep). That (bleep) ain’t basketball out there. It’s all (bleeping) entertainment. You all should know that (bleep). It’s all (bleeping) entertainment.”

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NBA Mock Draft 1.0

Posted by thepsb on May 28, 2008

(Note: this was formatted on Mozilla Firefox and may not read as well on Internet Explorer or other browsers. Not much I can do about it. Blogger is just that good.)

1st Round

# Team Pos Player Notes
1 Chicago PF Michael Beasley Beasley gives the Bulls the low-post scorer they’ve been missing, plus rebounding. Chicago will take a long look at Rose, but Beasley has to be the pick
2 Miami PG Derrick Rose Like Seattle last year, Miami can take whichever consensus Top 2 prospect falls into its lap. Rose and Wade should make an excellent backcourt
3 Minnesota C Brook Lopez O.J. Mayo would be a solid pick here, but Minnesota needs a big man to pair with Al Jefferson and Lopez is a good fit with his shooting and shot-blocking
4 Seattle SG O.J. Mayo Pairing Mayo with Kevin Durant sounds great on paper, but could it really work? Mayo’s got the talent to be the best player in the draft and is worth the risk
5 Memphis SG Eric Gordon Memphis has a lot of holes to fill and they would have to consider a big man such as Anthony Randolph, but its most glaring need is at shooting guard
6 New York PG Jerryd Bayless Mike D’Antoni needs a point guard to run his fast-paced offense and Bayless should be a great fit. This pick would be a good start to rebuilding the Knicks
7 L.A. Clippers SF Danilo Gallinari Point guard is more of a need, but with Rose and Bayless off the board Gallinari is a sensible pick. He and Thornton should be an excellent combination
8 Milwaukee PF Anthony Randolph The Bucks would be tempted to trade if put in this position, as drafting Randolph would cut into Villanueva’s and Yi’s minutes, but if they go big, it could work
9 Charlotte PF Kevin Love This would continue the Bobcats trend of picking great college players with questionable NBA futures. Love fits the Larry Brown mold as well
10 New Jersey C DeAndre Jordan A long, athletic center with great potential, Jordan would give the Nets their best inside scorer since the departure of Kenyon Martin
11 Indiana PG Russell Westbrook Tough call here between Westbrook and Augustin and this pick could go either way. Westbrook seems like a safer option, as he’s got much better size
12 Sacramento PG D.J. Augustin Beno Udrih played well filling in for Mike Bibby, but he’s hardly a long-term solution. Augustin is the second-best pure point guard in the draft
13 Portland SF Joe Alexander Portland gets another young, athletic forward to work with. A point guard would be ideal here, but with the top four PGs off the board, they pick a swingman
14 Golden State SF Donte Greene The 6-10 forward is a bit of a tweener, but with his ability to play the 3 and the 4 he should be a good fit in Don Nelson’s offense.
15 Phoenix PF Darrell Arthur Of course Phoenix probably trades this pick for cash, but on the off-chance that they keep it, Arthur’s defense and athleticism makes him a good pick
16 Philadelphia SG Brandon Rush Philadelphia could go for a big man here, but Rush could fill the Sixers’ need at SG. There are concerns about his injury history, however
17 Toronto C Marreese Speights As well as Rasho Nesterovic played down the stretch, the Raptors could use an upgrade at center and Speights could be a good fit next to Chris Bosh
18 Washington C Kosta Koufos Koufos gives Washington another good option at center and as a skilled big man with some shooting range should complement Brendan Haywood well
19 Cleveland SG Chase Budinger They could opt for a center here, with their aging big men, but Budinger’s explosive offensive game could solve the Cavs’ shooting guard woes
20 Denver SG Chris Douglas-Roberts Denver might choose a point guard instead but the better option might be to take a perimeter defender to play alongside Allen Iverson.
21 New Jersey SF Bill Walker There are still good big men available, but Walker is a good gamble here. He’s got lottery potential and it’s just his injury history that’s a concern
22 Orlando C Robin Lopez The other Lopez could help out Orlando with his defense and rebounding, especially now that Adonal Foyle is entering the final year of his contract
23 Utah C JaVale McGee McGee provides shot-blocking on a team that desperately needs it. Aside from Kirilenko, no Jazz player averages more than one block per game
24 Seattle PG Ty Lawson After taking Mayo with their first pick, Seattle gets some help at point guard with Lawson. While he won’t start as a rookie, he could be a valuable backup
25 Houston SF Nicholas Batum Landing Batum this late could be a steal. The Rockets could afford to bring the 19-year old along slowly, but he should be able to find a niche
26 San Antonio C Ante Tomic The Spurs could use some young blood immediately, but this late in the draft they will likely take a player like Tomic and stash him overseas
27 New Orleans PF J.J. Hickson Above all New Orleans needs depth, particularly at the 4 and 5. Hickson would be an upgrade over Melvin Ely and Chris Anderson
28 Memphis PF Jason Thompson A big man with an NBA body, Thompson should be able to give the Grizzlies some solid minutes at center even as a rookie
29 Detroit C Roy Hibbert One of the biggest concerns surrounding Hibbert is his speed, or lack thereof, that wouldn’t matter in Detroit, where they play at the league’s slowest pace
30 Boston PG Mario Chalmers

He would fight with Gabe Pruitt for minutes, but with his shooting ability and ball-handling skills he should be an upgrade over Eddie House

2nd Round

31 Minnesota SG Courtney Lee They’re already set on big men and could use the help at SG
32 Seattle PF D.J. White Seattle adds some size and inside scoring after adding two guards
33 Portland PF Alexis Ajinca Portland can stash Ajinca overseas as their roster is pretty full already
34 Minnesota C DeVon Hardin Minnesota rolls the dice on Hardin’s lottery talent and lackluster effort
35 L.A. Clippers PF Nathan Jawai Jawai provides some depth at PF in case Elton Brand leaves
36 Portland C John Riek Tons of upside, but still very raw. Portland can afford to wait
37 Milwaukee SG Wayne Ellington The Bucks add another three-point threat to back up Michael Redd
38 Charlotte SF Davon Jefferson Jefferson’s athleticism makes him a good complement to Jared Dudley
39 Chicago PF Serge Ibaka The Bulls can wait a few years for the 18-year old to develop
40 New Jersey C Trent Plaisted The Nets take a chance on a big man with first round talent
41 Indiana PF Richard Hendrix A bit undersized, but he’s worth a look this late in the draft
42 Sacramento SF Victor Claver One of the top European prospects, he could be a bargain this late
43 Seattle SF Keith Brumbaugh Incredibly talented, but off-court issues have hurt his value
44 Golden State SG Shan Foster Excellent 3-point shooter who could find a few minutes as a specialist
45 Sacramento C Omer Asik The Kings add a raw big man with good size and defensive ability
46 Utah SF Danny Green His shooting and basketball IQ could make him a valuable role player
47 San Antonio PG Rodrigue Beaubois French point guard could become a reliable backup to Tony Parker
48 Washington SF Luc Richard Mbah a Moute Mbah a Moute could improve Washington’s lackluster defense
49 Phoenix SG J.R. Giddens Excels as a shooter and an athlete and could be a good fit in Phoenix
50 Seattle C Nikola Pekovic The Sonics stash a big man overseas rather than overload the roster
51 Dallas PF Joey Dorsey Dallas gets a defensive-minded big man to replace Desagana Diop
52 Miami PF Ryan Anderson Miami needs some size, with no reliable options at center
53 Utah SG Jamont Gordon Utah gets a combo guard who might be able to spell Deron Williams
54 Houston C C.J. Giles Dikembe Mutombo can’t be Yao’s backup forever…or can he?
55 Portland SG Robert Vaden Portland gets a shooter with deep 3-point range to fill out the bench
56 Seattle SG Malik Hairston All-around talent without one specialized skill, but he might find a spot
57 San Antonio SF Pat Calathes The point forward with a very high basketball IQ should be a good fit
58 L.A. Lakers SG Lester Hudson He’s a tweener, but the Lakers gamble on his offensive potential
59 Detroit PG Ronald Steele He could become a good backup PG in the Lindsey Hunter mold
60 Boston SG Kyle Weaver Limited scoring ability, but his defensive talent could get him drafted

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Big Shot Bob…Hall of Famer?

Posted by thepsb on May 28, 2008

Over at ESPN, J.A. Adande states his case for Robert Horry to be enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame. The article is long, but his argument can pretty much be boiled down to this:

1. He won 7 Championships
2. He made some big shots in the playoffs

Let me get two things out of the way before I dissect Adande’s piece: First, I have nothing but respect for Robert Horry, who’s a classy guy, a terrific clutch performer, and, rumor* has it, one hell of a salsa dancer. Second, my standards for inclusion in any sport’s hall of fame are incredibly high. Generally, if there’s any sort of debate over whether or not a certain player should be included, I fall on the side of “no way in hell.”

This is no exception.

Horry has had three seasons where he averaged more than 10 points a game, maxing out a robust 12.0 in 95-96. He has once averaged more than 7 rebounds per game (7.5 in 97-98). For his career, his numbers are 7.0 ppg, 4.8 rpg, 2.1 apg, 1.0 spg, 0.9 bpg. Fine, and not wholly indicative of his contributions to the many good teams he played on. But not even close to hall of fame worthy.

No problem, says J.A. Adande. His legacy of winning dwarfs his statistical insufficiency. And he trots out a precedent: K.C. Jones.

“The NBA hasn’t seen a winner like Horry in three decades. John Havlicek retired in 1978, the last member of the Boston Celtics’ 1960s dynasty to check out, and one of only six players in NBA history with a championship ring collection larger than Horry’s seven. Of those six players — Bill Russell (11 rings), Sam Jones (10), Tom Heinsohn, K.C. Jones, Tom Sanders and Havlicek (eight each) — Sanders is the only one not in the Hall of Fame. But the fact that K.C. Jones is makes the case for Horry.

Jones averaged 7.4 points, 3.5 rebounds and 4.3 assists per game in his nine-year career. Horry has averaged 7.0 points, 4.8 rebounds and 2.1 assists per game in 16 seasons. Jones proved there’s a place in the Hall for underwhelming statistics if they came on winning teams.”

Adande left out the fact that Jones, in addition to his 8 NBA titles (in 9 years!), won 2 more college championships with Bill Russell at San Francisco, an Olympic gold medal, and 2 more championships as a head coach (‘84 and ‘86 with the Celtics). Though I would deem his inclusion controversial myself, by all reports his defensive and playmaking presence was a key to those 8 championship teams. Tom Sanders, mentioned above, had better career numbers than Jones or Horry (9.6 ppg, 6.3 rpg), and 8 championships (in 13 years), and yet is deemed unworthy of inclusion.

Robert Horry won 7 championships in 16 years. He won them riding on the coat tails of Hakeem Olajuwon, Clyde Drexler, Shaq, Kobe, Duncan, Robinson, etc. Occasionally, he hit a huge (often wide open) shot late in the game, generally after one of the previously mentioned players had been double teamed. He was a very good positional defender, a solid spot up shooter, and, early in his career, an athletic asset on the fast break.

And he is not a hall of famer.

Not even close.

*There is no substantiation for this rumor. I’m starting it.

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An O’Brien Trophy Monopoly

Posted by thepsb on May 22, 2008

It’s that time of the year again, when we’ve finally gone through what feels like 18 weeks of basketball playoffs and are left with the final four, battling for another week until we’re left with only two teams. This year’s contenders are the Los Angeles Lakers and San Antonio Spurs in the West, and the Boston Celtics and the Detroit Pistons in the East. And I probably couldn’t be more disappointed.

Now, granted, Boston and Detroit are probably the most entertaining teams in the East, and the best match up for competitiveness. Indeed, it would be hard to justify wanting more of the Cleveland “LeBron James and four sandbags” Cavaliers, or any other ultimately mediocre team (though Atlanta going far would have been up there with George Mason). Similarly, San Antonio and Los Angeles were arguably the best teams in the West this year. New Orleans was a fantastic story, and I was rooting for them, but you’d be kidding yourself if you thought they would have had an answer for Kobe et al.

My big gripe with this outcome is that these four teams–Lakers, Spurs, Pistons, Celtics–are four of the eight different teams that have won the NBA championship in the last 28 years. Since 1980, only eight have won.

And saying eight makes it seem like more teams than it really feels like; in 1983, the Sixers won it all once. Similarly, the Heat won it once in 2006. So outside of these anomalies, a mere six teams out of 28-30 (depending on the year) have dominated the championship for nearly three decades. The Lakers won 8 times, the Bulls 6 times, the Spurs 4 times, the Celtics 3 times, the Pistons 3 times, the Rockets twice, and then Miami and Philly.

That’s not even looking before 1980. Let’s not forget that from 1959 through 1966, the Celtics won it every single year, and then again in ‘68, ‘69, ‘74 and ‘76. The Minneapolis Lakers also won it four out of the first five times the NBA had its modern championship. This isn’t really a modern trend; sure, there are odd teams like the Syracuse Nationals or the Golden State Warriors winning once or twice, but largely, only a handful of teams seem ever to win.

What accounts for this ridiculous streak? Dynasty is the obvious answer, almost hardly worth mentioning. You assemble a good team, and if you’re able to lock those players up, you’ll probably win it all a couple of times in a row. But these are all different time periods that the Celtics and Lakers consistently won. Doesn’t it seem a bit anomalous that they would be able to assemble such powerhouse teams so many times over history? And the franchises in Minneapolis, Detroit and San Antonio are hardly overflowing with money. After all, if money were a factor, the Knicks would have won at least once since 1973.

I’m not saying that it’s inexplicable that these same franchises keep finding ways to dominate. But it does bother me that the same teams win over and over–especially this year, where the West was the most competitive conference in NBA history, and yet we almost ended up with the same Western Conference Finals match up as last year (SA vs Utah). In a year where New Orleans, Houston, Phoenix and others seemed like legit contenders, the same teams ended up on top. And when this 28th year ends, we’ll still only have eight unique champions.

Here’s hoping that next year, we get a Memphis/Indiana finals. Screw the terrible ratings; I want to see something new for once.

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NBA Draft Lottery Fallout

Posted by thepsb on May 22, 2008

A few observations following Tuesday’s NBA Draft Lottery:

Doesn’t it just suck that two of the five best teams in the Eastern Conference next could be the two teams that picked one and two in the draft? One of my dark secrets is that I picked the Bulls to make the NBA finals before this year started (which just goes to show you should never ever listen to me). Instead they collapse, fire their coach, and are magically rewarded with Michael Beasley, who gives them exactly what they’ve been missing the last 4/5 years. It’s not quite David Robinson out for the year, the Spurs tanking and ending up with Tim Duncan, but it’s not far. Additionally, the Miami Heat go into next year with a starting lineup of Derrick Rose, Dwyane Wade, Shawn Marion, Udonis Haslem, and Blount/Zo whoever at center. That’s the 2nd or 3rd best starting 5 in the conference (also the perfect spot for D’Antoni to have ended up. Too bad for him.)

If the Knicks take Danilo Gallinari, you might as well move the team to Rome. NY will not have it.

Most Knick fans will wind up hoping for Mayo (who’ll be taken by Minnesota at 3) and will have to settle for DeAndre Jordan, who won’t be a productive NBA player for at least 3 years, or well after the Knicks will have traded him, packaged with David Lee, Q-Richardson and Jared Jeffries for a one legged version of Jermaine O’Neal.

It doesn’t matter where he goes: Brook Lopez will be a bust in the mold of Rafael Araujo.

The best player taken outside the lottery will be Kevin Love, who’ll fall to the mid 20’s over concerns about the fact that his vertical needs to measured in centimeters.

My favorite non top 2 player in this draft is Joe Alexander, who will probably go somewhere around pick 10 (Charlotte would be a nice fit for him).

I am notoriously bad at figuring out who the good prospects will be, which means that when Brook Lopez wins his sixth championship ring, I will be found at my local Food Emporium, telling Kevin Love that I prefer paper bags.

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D’Antoni: The Reactions

Posted by thepsb on May 13, 2008

Listening to WFAN sports talk radio over the last few days has thrown my world into chaos. When the D’Antoni news broke, I, for one, lept around my room in a state of unadulterated joy. “The Isiah era is over!” I cried. “We brought in a real basketball mind to be president, and a coach who won 58 games a year! Finally, we’re on the right path!”

Then I turned on the radio.

*Mike from Yonkers: “I dunno, man, I just don’t think this guy is the right fit.”
Joe from the Bronx: “Mark Jackson would’ve been a much better chance.”
Cleon from Red Hook: “It’s just more of the same. You a loser in Phoenix, you gonna be a loser in NY.”


…!
WHAT?!?!?
Are Knick fans insane?!? Has the Isiah era (like the Bush administration) left us all so jaded, so cynical, so distrustful, that we no longer have any hope for anyone who’s ever been involved in basketball?

We, as Knicks fans need to start breathing deeply and recognizing a few things:
1. We now, for the first time in almost 10 years, have good, solid basketball minds in the front office and on the bench. This is nothing to sneeze at; rather, it’s something to be thrilled about.
2. This is a full fledged rebuilding process. It’s going to take at least two, maybe even three years for Walsh and D’Antoni to put together the core of players they want.
3. Since Walsh hired D’Antoni, that means one of two things: either A) D’Antoni has signed up to coach with a style suited to the roster that Walsh is planning on putting together, or B) Walsh is committed to bringing in the players best suited for D’Antoni’s style in Phoenix. Either one of these is a good thing. This is not Isiah and Larry Brown, these are two excellent basketball minds on the same page.

Many of the complaints around D’Antoni center around the fact that he couldn’t get over the hump and win a title in Phoenix. Now, this may be a valid concern for some teams trying to get over the hump. This is not a concern for a team that’s won a little more than 200 games in the last 7 years. Let’s build a winner first, please?

*Note: I was driving, so I was unable to take down names or notes. All supposedly direct quotes in this paragraph are paraphrases, and all names are made up. It just sounds better that way.

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Reactions to Mike D’Antoni Heading to New York

Posted by thepsb on May 11, 2008

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Observations From Game 3

Posted by thepsb on May 8, 2008

A few thoughts while watching this boring if somewhat competitive game in Orlando:

1. I hate the Pistons

2. Do the Magic, collectively, have the worst hands in the NBA? It seems as though they are constantly letting rebounds fall right through their hands, getting stripped, etc.

3. Dwight Howard is not yet nearly as good as he could be

4. I really hate the Pistons

5. In about three years, watch as story after story comes out revealing Tayshaun Prince to be among the dirtiest players in the NBA. He already delivers at least two cheap shots per game with his freakish elbows; When he starts losing a step, he’ll be up there with Bowen and Stockton.

6. You know, all things considered, for such a raw deal as SVG got, it wasn’t that bad. He got to sit around, do nothing, make half a million dollars, and then take over a team with a comparable if not better foundation for the next five years. Plus he gets to live closer to Disney World.

7. Of the 40 starters left in the NBA playoffs, the Magic have the 3rd worst (Maurice Evans). The Cavaliers have the only two worse: Devin Brown, and the gangrenous corpse of Ben Wallace.

8. I f*@kin’ hate the Pistons…

9. But the Magic just aren’t ready. Pistons in 6*.

*This pick is conditional upon Chauncey Billups being able to play. Otherwise it’s a tossup.

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