Friday, January 22, 2010

Posterized Contest

Who do you think is the best?  You can log on to NBA.com to vote.  

My vote is split between the Carter dunk and the Price dunk.  I give Carter a slight nod because Zo actually jumped.  Boozer didn't jump but the elevation of Price was super impressive.  

Price had the look back, though.  For that, I had to give him the final edge.  



Monday, January 18, 2010

Starbury Goes International



Hit the Snooze on the Slam Dunk Contest

The list of participants for the Slam Dunk Contest in Dallas in 3 weeks and it was a pretty big let down.

Shannon Brown- Los Angeles Lakers

Gerald Wallace- Charlotte Bobcats

Nate Robinson- New York Knicks

DeMar DeRozan (NY Knicks)/ Eric Gordon (LA Clips)- Dunk off at half time of the Rookie Game.  Winner will make the contest.

No LeBron.  No Dwight.  This contest has really lost its luster.

I would love to see one of the stars of this league step up and join the contest to give it credibility again.  LeBron would have been perfect because 1. he is an incredible dunker 2. he promised he would do it last year!

But, King James did the cost-benefit and I guess the fear of not winning is greater than the extremely marginal gain in popularity he can get in winning.

Dominique should smack you!

 

Thursday, January 14, 2010

LEast Among the League



Have you noticed recently?  The East is THIN.  Currently, there are only 5 teams above .500, one of them being a Miami team that is just 1 game over.  There are 11 teams above .500 in the West right now.

Orlando pretty much sealed it for me last night.  I don't like putting too much stock in just one game but they put up an utter stink bomb against Denver.  Dwight Howard again was a non-factor as he shot 1-7 from the field, good for 8 points, 13 boards, 1 assist, 3 blocks and 5 turnovers.  Rashard Lewis continues to be a shell of his former self, scoring 6 points on 3-9 shooting, 2 boards, 3 assists.

Orlando is not going anywhere this year.  Here are the top 3 reasons why:

3. There is no defined leader.  It is easy to blame Vince Carter for this.  He upsets the balance of this team.  But at least he is willing to step up.  Rashard Lewis and Dwight Howard have laxed into more subdued roles this year and role players have just proved too streaky.  This team does not have a true identity which always gets exposed in a big 7 game series.

2. The Magic are not sharing the ball-  They are in the bottom 5 in the league in assists.  There is no question there is a drop off from last year.  The reasons seem pretty simple.  Alston was by default the starting PG for the second half of the year and the playoffs and his role was clear; set guys up and distribute.  Hedo Trukoglu became the point forward as the year progressed and he was able to get a lot accomplished driving and either pulling up or dishing.  This opened up a lot of ball-swinging opportunities leading to open threes.  This year, the offense is built around Vince Carter which is never a good thing.  He clogs the flow and does most of his work with his back to the basket.  This plays counter to the strengths of Rashard Lewis and Dwight Howard. Also Jameer is not the traditional past-first PG.

1. Dwight Howard is exposed.  Teams are bodying him up, forcing him away from the basket, and making him work for points.  George Karl intimated that much in the post game interviews, stating that being physical and throwing bodies at Howard was a priority and pivotal in the win.  They aren't the first to realize this and they won't be the last and this is the number one reason why Orlando is not going anywhere this year.  Facts are that Dwight is very durable (only missing 3 games in his career), and extremely physically gifted (which is why he can out-rebound everyone) but he is also shy to contact and limited on the offensive end.  I am all for giving him time, considering he is 24, did not play college ball and has never in his life had to rely on actual basketball moves to dominate.  But, as of right now, he is no Shaq, he is no Hakeem, and he is not capable to carrying this Magic team.



I am really pushing for Atlanta.  I would like to see them knock off one of the big three (Boston, Cleveland, Orlando) and make it to the finals.  Boston has great chemistry but has injury issues that will probably linger the rest of the season.  In Atlanta, you see a team that has clearly defined roles and big producers.  Josh Smith has been pivotal in my opinion, learning to accept a role as the second, and sometimes fourth scoring option (forget about points, be pulled down 11 board and had 8 assists in a win last night).  He is rebounding, playing tremendous defense, only taking shots he can make, and providing the intangible intimidator-factor that is so important.  Joe Johnson has been lighting it up and Jamal Crawford gives them the bench fire that is so important in playoff runs.  As I have said before, though, I would love to see them grab one more big to fill out the paint.   Hmm... Maybe this guy?  It doesn't hurt to dream.


Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Premiere Night of Big Monday Doesn't Disappoint

Big Monday premiered last night on ESPN.  For those of you who are not aware, this is a college basketball presentation that runs from January to early March and contains a 7pm game (Big East), a 9pm game (Big 12) and a 10pm game on ESPN2 (Mountain West or WAC).

Last night didn't disappoint.  The first game was a 90 foot battle between Louisville and Villanova which contained 67 (34 for Nova and 33 for L'ville) fouls and 42 (split 21 apiece) turnovers.  Louisville jumped all over Villanova early pressuring them into several turnovers in the backcourt.  Villanova showed incredible poise, however, hanging in, keeping it close, and then turning up their pressure to boiling levels as Louisville began to tire out.

It was classic Big East basketball.  67 fouls is more than a foul-and-half per minute.  There was pressure, banging, jawing, fired up coaches, important bench players and superstar stat lines.  Last year, Villanova took Louisivile to the wire in the Wachovia Center, losing by 1 point after missing a foul shot and then several put back attempts as time expired.  One of the game notes going into this game was Scottie Reynolds inability to play well against the Cardinals.  In three years, he was averaging 6 points which is well under average.  Then last night happened.

The reason 'Nova was able to keep it close and claw back in to take over this game is Scottie Reynolds.  He was able to get to the line 17 times but was by no means reckless.  In a game fought with turnovers, sloppy play, and intensity, Reynolds coolly shot perfect from the floor for the first 37 minutes before missing is one and only shot with under 3 to play.  He finished 9-10 from the floor, including 5-5 from three, highlighted by some daggers right in defenders faces.  It was classic Scottie Reynolds and one of those games that reminds me this kid has a great shot to be a solid NBA guard.  Surfer dude Taylor King was also huge off the bench with 12 points and some spirited defense.  It was no small feat 'Nova turned this game around.

At one point late in the first half, they were down by 17.  That is the fourth time a lead of +15 has been evaporated in the Big East already showing the intensity teams must bring every single night.  It won't get any easier as Louisville needs to travel to #20 Pitt who are currently looking like one of the hottest teams in the country, while Villanova will go home to face #12 Georgetown, a strong and athletic team.

The Big East is currently boasting 3 top 10 teams in the nation and 6 teams in the top 20 and quality teams like Louisville, Notre Dame, Cincinnati, and (ahem) Seton Hall are not part of them.  More of the same, more of the same....

The second game of the night was an overtime affair between Oklahoma State and Oklahoma, adding another chapter to the storied Bedlam rivalry. Oklahoma edged out State to take their series lead to 125-88.  
 
Great start for Big Monday....

Friday, January 8, 2010

New York Delivers



Let me start by a little back-pat.... My prediction of Knicks-98, Bobcats-96 was close. Actual score Knicks- 97, Bobcats-93.

I am not going to lie, the National Championship stole my attention so I didn't get to watch the game but from what I saw in highlights and box scores, it was good basketball as expected.  The Knicks had to battle back from down 10 late in the 3rd quarter.  They took the lead early in the 4th and controlled the end game.

Nate Robinson is getting a lot of air time after throwing down a ridiculous slam but the question I have to ask is how good is he for the Knicks?  On one hand he is a high energy guy that gives the players and fans a healthy shot of life.  But he also coughed up the ball 6 times in 19 minutes, including 4 in the final period.  Thats some dangerous ball control if you ask me.  Nate has a place on any team but its only a few notches above mascot.  Basically, be positive, throw down sick dunks in warm ups, do elaborate hand shakes and chest bumps during introductions, wave a towel on the bench, do silly little dances behind the coach during time outs, and log about 10 minutes of tough defense, diving on the floor and taking it to the hole.  That's it!  If he can't accept that role, he is not good for any team he plays on.

That being said, Wilson Chandler is a beast.  Not only did he have to split his time guarding the 'Cats two best players who have very, very different offensive skills (StephJackson and GWallace) but he also poured in 27 points, 6 assists, and 7 rebounds while shooting 11-17 from the floor.  I was able to sneak an interview with Chandler after the game and this is what he had to say on his performance.

Seriously, though, he held Wallace to 13 points on 12 shots and while Jackson scored 26, he had to chuck up 26 shots to get there.  Translation: Wilson Chandler was the man for the Knicks once again.

Meanwhile, Galli shot 11 threes.  This guy is a black hole.

The Knicks are currently a half game behind Charlotte and Milwaukee who hold the 7 and 8 spots in the East, respectively.  So... if the Knicks can keep up .500 basketball, they are in a good place to take the 7 spot which at this point will afford them a first round match up against the Cavs and their future starting forward, LeBron James :)

This guy is only a memory....


Thursday, January 7, 2010

Pac 10 on Life Support

Remember 1995?  If you lived on the West Coast of the US it was a wonderful time.  San Francisco won their league-best 5th Super Bowl against Cali opponent, San Diego. Yahoo was founded in Santa Clara, California.  The OJ trial was sweeping America.  Steve Nash was lighting it up at Santa Clara University. Also in 1995, the heralded UCLA men's basketball program was winning its most recent National Championship.  On that roster was an unheralded sophomore guard by the name of Cameron Dollar most famous for inbounding the ball to Tyus Edny for the full court scramble and last second lay up in the 2nd round of the NCAA tournament against Missouri.

That is my lame attempt at a relevant introduction for Cameron Dollar.  After his career at UCLA, Dollar went right into coaching at the collegiate level.  To his credit, he has worked his way into his first head coaching position at the Division 1 level this season.  And this barely happened.  Seattle University, his current team, entered Division 1 as an Independent school this season.  For the last 30 years, they had been playing at the Division II level.  So there you go... Seattle University is now a Division I basketball team and their coach is Cameron Dollar.

That being said, the Pac 10 is garbage this year.  I am not being mean, they are bad.  UCLA is a paltry 7-8 and that includes losses to Cal State Fullerton, Portland, and Long Beach State.  Stanford is .500 with losses to San Diego and Oral Roberts.  USC has a self-imposed post season ban which means no post season tourneys whatsoever.  Most "Bracketoligists" have the Pac 10 earning 2 bids this year to the big dance.  TWO.  Translation: the west is off.  Things that should be up are down.  Its craziness.

And that brings us to last night.  Cameron Dollar took his newbie Division I squad into Corvallis, Oregon to face Pac 10 heavyweight, Oregon State.   Seattle didn't just beat them.... the crushed them, humiliated them, left them naked shivering on the floor.  How bad?  Tied for the worst lost loss in school history and now stands as the worst  home loss in school history.  The final score was 99-48.  A 51 point massacre.  And this was with Seattle's leading scorer and 9th in the nation, Charles Garcia, only scoring 2 points in the first 35 minutes before scoring 8 in the final 5 minutes.  I just can't make sense of it.  A total beat down.  The Pac 10 is just a mess.

One Game Tonight... Better Than You Think



Tonight is really about the BCS National Championship (Can we even call it that?  Do I even want to get into this?  All I am saying is a 8-team BCS tournament beats National Championship contenders sitting around and waiting for over a month).  But if you are looking for an NBA fix, there is one game you will find... Knicks-Bobcats.

And I know what you are thinking.  You would rather rearrange your sock drawer, but listen up.  Here is my case.


  • Charlotte has put together a road winning streak against good competition including the Cavs where it once was impossible to win.  
  • Gerald Wallace has legitimately put himself in a position to make a run at Defensive Player of the Year with nearly 11 boards, a block and 2 steals a night and he will be matching up with the very-difficult-to-contain David Lee.  Both guys have good size and athleticism. 
  • Stephen Jackson has been doing his job problem free in Charlotte and his numbers are up.  He deserves a watch.  
  • This game actually has playoff implications as the Bobcats are currently sitting 7th and the Knicks have been on a good role as of late.  In the East, being around  .500 should guarantee the playoffs and these are the important games. 
  • Bobcats 2, Knicks 1 in the series.  Knicks need to defend the home turf as they barely did last time the two met in a seesaw game that saw Acie Law's potential game tying layup blocked with under 5 seconds left. 
  • Both teams have cap space to clear and expiring contracts to get rid of.  They have swirled in recent trade talks so some guys may be "on display".  Unfortunately this may include break-out performer, Danillo Gallinari.
  • Nate Robinson has been getting more time, Larry Hughes has not.  Say what you want about Nate but this is a good thing for fans of the game.
So I hope I have sold you.  Give the game a chance.  You might be surprised to find out that a lot of teams in the League are playing good basketball right now.  

Bold prediction- Knicks 98- Bobcats 96


Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Not Again....

Not that I want to be right about this or that it is even fair to relate the two events but all I am saying is that on November 18 right after the University of Tennessee men's basketball team poured in 124 points in a smack down on UNC Asheville, I warned them here on this blog to beware of the Karma Train (obviously Bruce Pearl is not a reader and that is a shame).

Then this happened.  Four of the top 8 players in Bruce Pearl's rotation, including stand-out senior "leader", Tyler Smith, were arrested after a speeding stop.  In the car police found an open alcohol container, bag of marijuana, and a hand gun with an altered serial number.  WHAT?  Really?  You couldn't have left the drugs, open alcohol and hand gun at home?  Where could you possibly be heading on a winter's night in Knoxville, Tn where these things are in need?  I obviously have a lot of questions but the real losers, once again, will be the fans of Tennessee basketball.  The four players are suspended indefinitely and I can't see this ending well.  Chances are Tyler Smith will end up in the D League and get a shot at the NBA, and the two junior players and one sophomore player will transfer to another school and get a second chance.  Tennessee basketball will suffer and I hope Mike Hamilton, the Athletic Director steps up and sends a message.

In a big picture realization, NFL players are constantly ending up on the wrong side of the law, Gilbert Arenas and a team mate just turned their locker room into the Wild Wild West, and former NBA star Jayson Williams (infamous for shooting, killing, covering up and getting away with murdering a man) was found drunk and injured in his car wrecked on the side of FDR early yesterday morning.

Obviously, pro sports should be carrying the torch in cleaning up these glaring problems and has failed to do much.  Between Mike Hamilton/Bruce Pearl and David Stern, it should be interesting to see what steps are taken in the coming days.

Look out for Tennessee, suiting up under-manned tonight for the first time against UNC Charlotte.  Looks like another long season for the Vols...

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Michael Jordan, LeBron James Is Not


 

Call me a hater.  That's ok.  LeBron is a physical FREAK of unrelatable proportions.  I can't fathom how gifted an athlete he is.  He has an unselfish flare that makes him a likable team mate.  Certain things in basketball are a birthright; size, agility, court awareness (I think that last one stems from a self awareness that is cemented at early ages when a child recognizes he is, in fact, gifted and capable of doing the things he wants to do very well).  There are other qualities more of the Wes Welker mold that are earned through either being told you are not good enough or being held back by some seemingly insurmountable force.  From my point of view, LeBron has never felt the need to harness these qualities.  Has success been to his disadvantage?

Success may be the wrong word here.  I mean, if you really think about it, LeBron "succeeded" as a 14 year old when his face was being slapped all over magazines, message boards, and recruiting sites.  I first heard about LeBron in an article when he was a sophomore in high school.  I wish I could find it now.  From what I remember, we were being told you are about to witness a basketball phenomenon unlike any ever seen.  A hybrid Magic Johnson/Karl Malone with Jordan skills.  I couldn't really believe what I was reading.  It wasn't until one year later at the Sovereign Bank Arena in Trenton when I saw a Junior LeBron James vs. Senior Carmelo Anthony that it started to take form.

Walking away from that game, I tried to rationalize the pure skill.  A 6'8 guard with a man's frame (not yet filled out but you could see from the shoulders to the legs it was only a matter of time), who surveyed the court like a Pro Bowl free safety, saw angles before they developed and had the athleticism to exploit them, embraced the palpable energy surrounding him, and (gulp) played within himself.   It was all too much.  Celebrities were showing up at high school games, Kobe Bryant was sending him text messages, the media was gushing.  In Post-Jordan basketball, LeBron is the second-coming.  The first true litmus test of the Jordan legacy.  And that is not a knock at Kobe.  LeBron is just in a rarefied air and everyone knew it from the very beginning.

But that was just it.  The crown before the throne.  The decadence was inevitable.  Granted, LeBron has handled it all pretty well.  Where many guys would have (or did) implode, he has kept it all together and thrived.  He used the blue prints of the Michael Jordan's and Jay Z's to craft an image.  But that image was of a singular icon, a persona larger than any arena, let alone locker room could ever hold in.  And that is at the core of why LeBron will never be on the same level as Michael Jordan... on the basketball court.

Now let's go back to last spring when the Cavs, obvious front-runners in the East, were bounced from the playoffs by a versatile Magic team.  LeBron has consistently owned the spotlight in big moments and big wins but was visibly absent in this big loss.  He walked off the court without offering a single handshake, not even to his friend and Olympic team mate, Dwight Howard.  Let's stop here for a moment.  This is unsportsmanlike and shows a bad example to kids, but he is competing on the highest level.  Of course we don't want to see him laughing and sharing hugs with Magic guys but at least face the music.  At least acknowledge the loss and lead your team off the court instead of walking off alone, bare-chested, cementing your masculinity.  What was worse and even more indefensible was the no-show at the post-game interview.  Mo Williams was left to take the fire from the media alone.

I have a really hard time swallowing the second part.  For a guy who is (in)famous for the pre-game look-at-me rituals with the baby powder and the elaborate dance moves in the introductions, a guy who has his own branded shoe line, a series of successful commercials, his face plastered all over the world, and a slogan "We Are All Witnesses", he failed at the most crucial role of a superstar... to take the heat when its hottest.


The problem here was that LeBron's ego was bruised and that is not something he is willing to stand up to.  After all, he has been crowned already.  He has been branded 'Chosen 1".  This guy doesn't lose.  But the Cavs do which means their front man does too.

Later that summer, LeBron's image would take another hit when he was engaging in a pick up game at his own camp.  Xavier sophomore, Jordan Crawford ripped down a two-handed jam over LeBron.  It was a humanizing moment, something that can draw fans even closer to the stars they love.  But LeBron would have none of it, demanding all tapes be seized to "lock" the incident, which was pure foolishness in a digital age where the incident could have been tweeted as it occurred.  A moment which could have cemented LeBron's lovable side in millions of viewers turned into an ugly insult to a kid trying to play Bron Bron's game, a lost lucrative opportunity for the struggling freelance cameramen present, another tarnish on the Nike face, and all the world got was this t shirt.


Contrastingly, at one of his own camps, Micheal Jordan was once beat in a one-on-one contest by the CEO of Ariel Investments.  Rather than stink about being beat on his own turf, MJ made light of the situation admitting 'everyone gets beat, dunked on, and crossed over, it happens' and spun a little marketing gold out of it.

What's the point in all of this?  The point is LeBron misses the point.  There is a time to be a cold-hearted, ruthless assassin (which is when you are competing on the court) and there is a time to be the laid back common guy who everyone likes.  Very few athletes understood that like Jordan.  No one out-competed Jordan on the court when it mattered.  But when the game was over, he knew his role and he lived up to it.

A few weeks ago, LeBron was playing a game in Oklahoma City and after barreling into the stands, proceeded to take some fries from the fan he landed on.  He then mock cleared his throat and proceeded to brick the free throw.  Later in the game he gave congratulations to James Harden of the Thunder when he made a nice play.  Point?  He doesn't get it.  When its time for playing and laughing, he is afraid his ego will get hurt.  When the cameras are on and everyone is watching, he will crack the jokes because it is good for the image.  MJ may have the well-documented closed-eyes foul shot with Mutombo but that is hardly the same.  Rather than a ploy to garner a following, it was a cold-hearted attempt to break the young Mutombo's psyche, mid game.

Don't be fooled.  LeBron is a near-meticulously crafted specimen on two fronts- athletics and marketing.  LeBron and his marketing team are going to great lengths to make you believe he is something.  It makes for great commercials but that is not how a champion is made.

Michael Jordan refused to lose.  He didn't take that lightly.  And, even more important, he knew what carrying the load meant.  He was fierce about it such as when a low-key intra-squad scrimmage between the '92 Dream Team became physical and players egos got involved.  Jordan took over every facet of the game driving hard and often, stepping into passing lanes, screaming and hounding his defenders and d'ing the ball hard.  When a call went his way, Magic barked "What is this, Chicago Stadium?" to which MJ fired back, "No, I'll tell you what it is.  It's the 90s, not the 80s."

Jordan owned that turf.  He never let up.  Till this day, Bobcats coach Larry Brown still reminds his team not to incite the aging Jordan for fear he has one more comeback in him.

Now its a new decade, LeBron's decade.  He will make the most money, wow the most crowds, sell the most sneakers, score the most points, and fill the stat sheets like no one else in the modern era but something tells me he will not have the most championships.  And why should he?  He has his crown.  He is a made man.  He is a global icon.  And we are all witnesses.