#41
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Dont' give me your Arenas crap that West cant' guard him. West is a good aggressive defender. He helped the team. HE has merits.
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The Main Course...the chosen or frozen entree?! |
#42
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If he could get rid of the contract he would because in place of Z, you could get a guy like Pachulia and then another decent wing player for the same cash or you could just save the money. This isnt play money chuck. |
#43
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#44
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"If Michael was at the point, we forced him left and doubled him. If he was on the left wing, we went immediately to a double team from the top. If he was on the right wing, we went to a slow double team. He could hurt you equally from either wing -- hell, he could hurt you from the hot-dog stand -- but we just wanted to vary the look. And if he was on the box, we doubled with a big guy. Hmmmm. Seems to me Michael was double a lot in the perimeter which YOU said doesnt happen in the NBA. And if he was doubled, wouldnt the guy doubling be leaving a man open? LOL. Why can't you just admit, just once, maybe you made a mistake? |
#45
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#46
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#47
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Ilgauskas has one more year left. He's retiring after this year. They will absolutely pay him to back up Shaq and play 20 minutes a game. It means nothing to them. This upcoming year is it for them. They don't have to win the championship...but I think they have to get to the finals and make a good showing to absolutely ensure what's his name stays.
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The Main Course...the chosen or frozen entree?! |
#48
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__________________
The Main Course...the chosen or frozen entree?! |
#49
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#50
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At this point, Z is a bad contract. At ten million, if he wasnt, there would be no need for a 38 year old shaq. |
#51
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Here is a quote from SI from Michael Jordan himself in regards to the Jordan rules: "Sometimes I wish I could be my teammates looking at that defense," says Jordan. "It must be nice. But it isn't nice for me." Jordan took the attention of the defense. If they double, someone is open. You said earlier in the thread teams don't double on the perimeter in the NBA. What gives? Are you going back on that now? If a team has to double one man, a player is going to be more open than if that defense didnt have to double. Im sorry you dont/cant grasp this basic fact. |
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#56
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Put the cheeseburger down and try it some time. If you can't grasp that, you should stick to watching baseball. |
#57
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If you would like we could have a three point shootout this summer? Of course as many cheeseburgers as I eat I would only play for money. I can easily swing by Washington on my way to Saratoga and pay for my trip. |
#58
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Jason Kidd on the subject:
"I could sit and watch from the bench," Kidd said. "[LeBron] is so talented, he's going to get guys wide-open shots. So we'll look at free agency and what happens for me next year." I guess Jason Kidd doesnt know what he is talking about either. |
#59
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To answer the first question, no, you dont need kobe or lebron on your team to shoot uncontested threes. The point is that guys like that are going to create so much attention that three point shooters are going to get more unconteted looks. |
#60
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This should settle it:
http://wp2.medina-gazette.com/2009/0...his-own-magic/ The ball is now in the Orlando Magic’s court. Actually, it’s in the hands of LeBron James at the top of the key, with the Cavaliers small forward having yet to use his dribble, but for the first time in the Eastern Conference finals, it is Or-lando that now faces a major adjustment. If Magic coach Stan Van Gundy doesn’t come up with a way to slow down James in Game 6 tonight at Amway Arena, the series could be coming back to Cleveland for Game 7 on Monday. “It is just too easy for him right now,” Orlando center Dwight Howard said. “He’s catching it in his sweet spot and it’s one dribble to the basket. We’ve got to make it a little tougher on him.” James, who is averaging 41.2 points, 8.6 rebounds and 8.2 assists in the series, had 37 points, 14 rebounds and 12 assists in Cleveland’s 112-102 win in Game 5. The last player to put up at least those numbers in a playoff game was Oscar Robertson in 1963 (41-15-12). The league MVP did much of his damage in the fourth quarter, when he had 17 points, four boards and four assists. James scored or assisted on the Cavaliers’ first 29 points of the period. Going back to the end of the third quarter, he had a hand in 32 consecutive Cleveland points. The 24-year-old did almost all his damage after receiving the ball near the top of the key, which al-lowed him to make jumpers, drive or, if Orlando tried to double-team, pass to team-mates for wide-open looks. “The game is basically all LeBron, all the time,” Van Gundy said. “It is a difficult area to double-team him in. It’s a difficult part of the floor because of his shooters and his passing. “You play him one-on-one and it is real tough. He makes shots. If he gets into the paint, it’s automatically a foul. It becomes very, very difficult.” It will remain difficult as long as Mo Williams and Daniel “Boobie” Gibson, who were a combined 9-of-13 from behind the 3-point arc in Game 5, continue to make shots. “That’s something that as a unit, players and coaches, we came up with trying to exploit their defense with all our shooters out there,” James said. “Having a live dribble ei-ther at the top of the key or the free throw line is key for me and our team. It adds a threat of me jabbing, jabbing, taking a shot or getting to the paint and either taking a shot or creating for my teammates. Any time you are as dangerous as I am, or the best guys in this league, it makes you that much more dangerous because they don’t know what you are going to do.” The Cavaliers have used that offensive set before, but they went to it extensively down the stretch of Game 5. Once James gets the ball, the play calls for two Cleve-land 3-point shooters, in this case Williams and Gibson, to go to opposite corners. Two big men, usually Anderson Varejao and Zydrunas Ilgauskas, station themselves near the base-line, a few feet outside the lane. With James in the old-school, triple-threat position – shoot, drive or pass – it becomes extremely hard to double-team him. Send a guard at him and the 6-foot-8, 250-pounder simply passes over the top to that person’s man, as he did in finding Gibson for two 3-pointers and Williams for one in the fourth quar-ter. Try to send a big man and he hits a cutter, which is what happened when Varejao converted a three-point play. Play him straight up, which is what Orlando attempted to do for long stretches with 6-6, 215-pound Mickael Pietrus, and James shoots a jumper, drives to the hole or draws fouls. “We didn’t do anything tricky,” Brown said. “We just gave him the ball right there at what we call ‘The Nail’ and said, ‘Get us some good looks, Big Fella.’ “We just felt that would be open with the way they were trying to double-team LeBron. It gave him an opportunity to make plays minus the double-team. If they chose to double, then he was going to pass the ball. We just had to have guys on the perimeter make wide-open shots.” There is no easy way for Orlando to counter the play. The Magic can try to deny James the ball, but he’s just too big, fast and strong. The best Orlando can really hope for in that regard is to force James to catch the ball a few feet beyond the 3-point arc, so at least he has to dribble in order to get into serious attack position. The Magic can also hope Williams, who was 6-of-27 on 3-pointers through the first four games of the series, and Gibson, who was a complete non-factor in Games 1, 2 and 3, don’t continue to make shots. In addition, Orlando has Defensive Player of the Year Howard to protect the inte-rior and contest shots, but relying on him too much runs the risk of serious foul trouble. Howard, who has fouled out three times and has been whistled 27 times overall in the series, picked up his fifth personal in Game 5 on a James drive midway through the fourth quarter and his sixth with 2:22 to go. Both resulted in three-point plays for James, who found a way to get his body into Howard’s before the 6-11, 265-pounder could get into good position to block or alter his shot. “If you allow a guy like that to get space, he is able to jump and create and block shots,” James said. “That’s how he gets a lot of his weak-side blocks, com-ing across and blocking shots. If you don’t give him much space, if you hit him, make contact with him, it’s tough for a guy like that to get off the court.” In his press conference after Game 5, Van Gundy had already started com-plaining about James, who was 15-of-19 at the line, getting all the calls. It’s a ploy used by almost every coach in every playoff series, but the Cavaliers will continue to ride James in Game 6. “That’s what great players do,” Brown said. “Great players put the team on their back and everybody steps up. “He’s showing confidence in his teammates. He’s encouraging them. He’s talking strategy offensively. He’s talking strategy defensively. Just his mental awareness, whether it’s on the floor during the game or in the huddle, is off the charts. We have to continue to have that from him |