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  #76  
Old 05-07-2006, 11:20 PM
docetboy docetboy is offline
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I watched today's containment of the Mavericks from Section 213. Beautiful game, loved the end result. A 'W' is a 'W', no matter how you got it.

Now imagine if we played this game with more than 36 hours rest and with the refs calling 25% of the flagrant fouls that they missed.... It would of been a repeat of the Kings 39 point R1G1 loss........
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  #77  
Old 05-08-2006, 12:15 AM
macallan25 macallan25 is offline
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Disagree. Mavericks didn't play well.........even with a 5 day rest. And I saw no flagrant fouls and I watched the whole game. What I did see....as with every Spurs game....is a bunch of diving and flopping by Manu Genobli and a complete bitch fest by the biggest whiner in the NBA...Tim Duncan.

......And Jerry Stackhouse is an idiot. had a complete open lane to the basket with 3 seconds left (Dampier had the paint blocked out) and he steps out to the three point line and shoots an air ball.
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  #78  
Old 05-08-2006, 12:59 AM
BobbyTheDon BobbyTheDon is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by KSigkid
Have to love Kobe completely disappearing in the 2nd half of the biggest game of the season.

Kobe Bryant is a fucking idiot


War Clippers
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  #79  
Old 05-08-2006, 11:05 AM
Steeltrap Steeltrap is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by BobbyTheDon
Kobe Bryant is a fucking idiot


War Clippers
He has proven that he's Kobe B**** Bryant.
That was ridiculous.
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  #80  
Old 05-08-2006, 11:51 AM
KSigkid KSigkid is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by Steeltrap
He has proven that he's Kobe B**** Bryant.
That was ridiculous.
Tony Kornheiser and Michael Wilbon made a good point on PTI (my favorite ESPN show at this point). If Kobe's going to invite the MJ comparisons, he has to play like MJ. If Raja Bell had pulled something like that on Jordan, he would have responded by scoring 60 on him the next time out.

Bryant responded by only showing up for one half. It was a very weak performance in so many ways.
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  #81  
Old 05-09-2006, 03:12 AM
BobbyTheDon BobbyTheDon is offline
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I freaking love TJ Simers

Bryant Just Quit, and the Suns and Clippers Play On


PHOENIX — Great news here, of course, for the Clippers who began round two of the playoffs without Kobe Bryant.

How awful would it have been for the Clippers to have signed the guy, finally make the playoffs — only then to learn Bryant is liable to tank it at any time?

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The fact is, after the Lakers' last performance, the best scorer in the game can no longer be trusted.

In the seventh game of a playoff series, a game in which Bryant scored 23 points in the first half, Bryant returned to the floor with the Lakers down by 15 to take three shots and score one point.

What if he had taken the same approach a few years back when the Lakers found themselves down by 15 in the fourth quarter only to rally, win and eventually claim an NBA title?

Amazingly, the media in L.A. gave Bryant nothing but a free ride after the Lakers went dead against the Suns.

HEY, THE GREATEST CLOSER IN THE GAME TOOK THREE SHOTS IN THE SECOND HALF OF THE SEVENTH GAME OF A PLAYOFF SERIES AND SCORED ONE POINT!

That's a shocking story!

Something had to be said at halftime inside the Laker locker room to irritate Bryant, igniting the immaturity that apparently still rests deep inside, thereby throwing him into a full-blown pout. And we've seen that before. Sacramento a few years back immediately comes to mind.

I guess we'll have to wait for Phil Jackson's next book to learn what really happened behind closed doors.



SOME PEOPLE liken Bryant to Michael Jordan, but help me here, can anyone point to a moment in Jordan's career when he tanked it with the season on the line?

It's one thing to shoot and miss and lose the big game, they have both done that. But to shut it down, only pass the ball — and finish with one assist, Bryant cheated every Laker fan who sat there telling his friends, "You watch, Kobe will bring us back."

Forget about the score, the inept play of Bryant's inconsistent teammates, the Lakers' chances to eventually win that game. It's all irrelevant.

There is nothing short of knowing that his leg has been sawed off to think Bryant, the "Love me or hate me" and "Just do it!" competitor that everyone has known him to be, would be limited to three shots in the second half of a seventh game of a playoff series.

One of the assistant coaches in this building for the Clipper-Sun playoff game said he had lost all respect for Bryant after witnessing him quit Saturday night, and if memory serves, this guy was one of Bryant's biggest promoters.

NBA Commissioner David Stern spoke to the media before the Clipper playoff opener with the Suns, and while he was here to give Steve Nash the most-valuable-player trophy, I asked him whether he thought Bryant had tanked it against the Suns.

"No," Stern said. "I take Phil and Kobe at what they said, that they were trying to get the front court more involved," which was good news, because knowing right away that he wasn't going to be straight with everyone, there was no reason to hang around for the rest of his "everything is good in the NBA" interview.

"I've missed L.A. writers," a sarcastic Stern said, and here I've always thought he had the power to fix that, but I'm guessing even the NBA commissioner has no idea which Kobe Bryant is going to show up to work these days.



STERN SAID, "It's great to see the Clippers in the playoffs," but I had my doubts, and asked him, "Are you really happy to have the Clippers in the playoffs?''

"I can't say that," he said, while contradicting himself, "but once every 30 years" is good.

I guess we know who he would have been pulling for in the Hallway Series.



THE NBA is going to have to rely on the Clippers to keep the Los Angeles market interested in the playoffs. And that would be Elton Brand's cue to show the country why he should have received considerable MVP attention.

Brand, playing in front of Duke Coach K, who will be working again with Brand in preparation for the Olympics, put up Bryant-like numbers playing hard the entire game. Can you imagine Brand ever tanking it?

"It's too late in the season to take positives from losses," said Brand, who had 40 points, a Clipper-playoff record, and isn't everything the Clippers do these days, a Clipper-playoff record?



SAM CASSELL went to the floor clutching his face late in the fourth quarter, and remained down while the Suns attacked at the other end. The Clippers finally got the rebound, called timeout and Cassell went to the referee to plead his case. A television replay, though, showed Brand slugging Cassell in the face by accident.

I assume it was an accident.



CUTTINO MOBLEY pulled a Smush Parker and went 0 for 5 from the field in the first three quarters.



ONE THING to consider with this NBA fad of passing out matching T-shirts to the hometown crowd. They did that in Miami, and with the Heat getting whipped, the crowd — all dressed in white — looked as if they were collectively waving the white towel of surrender.



TODAY'S LAST word comes in e-mail from Andy Holderness:

"I really liked your Oscar De La Hoya columns. He seems like a good guy and I'm glad he pulled the upset. Maybe this November you could follow Karl Dorrell around the week before the USC game."

I'd rather follow Pete Carroll, and see whether he has to visit anyone in jail.

*

T.J. Simers can be reached at

t.j.simers@latimes.com. To read previous columns by Simers, go to latimes.com/simers.
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  #82  
Old 05-09-2006, 04:22 AM
macallan25 macallan25 is offline
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Scoop Jackson was on Steven A Smith's show today and he said that he thought that something must have gone down in the locker room at halftime....and it led to Bryant's performance. He noted how both Bryant and Jackson said the exact same thing at the end of the game concerning the matter and he made some other interesting points. It does seem really odd.

And KSigKid, you are exactly right. Finally all of the people comparing Micheal Jordan and Kobe Bryant...can shut up. Michael Jordan didn't tank....ever. Probobly the most clutch player in history....or atleast our era. And yes, if someone close lined him the day before....he would have came out the next game.....smiled, and dropped 50-60 on him and then call his momma when it was all said and done with.

If anyone should start being compared...its Lebron. If he stays healthy he can legitimately play for 20 more years.....could be scary what he could do. But first he has to win six championships and lead his team to the most wins in history.
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  #83  
Old 05-09-2006, 09:23 PM
JenMarie JenMarie is offline
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Unhappy

I'm probably the lone Kings fan here but...

http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=ap-kings-adelman

Adelman out after eight years with Kings
By GREG BEACHAM, AP Sports Writer
May 9, 2006

Geoff Petrie, president of basketball operations for the Sacramento Kings, announces Tuesday, May 9, 2006, in Sacramento, Calif., that Kings coach Rick Adelman will not receive a contract extension after leading the Kings to eight consecutive playoff appearances. Sacramento was eliminated from the playoffs on Friday by the San Antonio Spurs.

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- Rick Adelman made eight straight playoff appearances in eight consecutive winning seasons coaching the Sacramento Kings. His teams won two division titles while crafting an exciting new image for one of the NBA's least lovable franchises.

And it wasn't nearly enough to save his job when the Kings' owners and executives looked at their empty trophy case.

The Kings dismissed the most successful coach in franchise history Tuesday in a firing mostly motivated by the club's desire for something better than the above-average results delivered by Adelman, 14th on the NBA's career list with 752 coaching victories.

Geoff Petrie, the Kings' president of basketball operations, wouldn't give any clear-cut reasons for the decision not to extend Adelman's contract, which expires in September. But owners Joe and Gavin Maloof, apparently dissatisfied with Adelman for years, are widely thought to be behind the move.

Sacramento was eliminated from the playoffs Friday by the San Antonio Spurs, and the club wasted no time removing the final on-court link to the franchise's revitalization in 1999, when the run of consecutive playoff appearances began.

"I came to the conclusion that continuing this way just wasn't feasible," said Petrie, who also hired Adelman -- his former roommate from their playing days -- when both worked in Portland. "The dynamic that needed to be there to help it move forward just wasn't there."

The Kings also declined to renew the contracts of Adelman's four assistants: Elston Turner, T.R. Dunn, Bubba Burrage and Pete Carril, the Hall of Fame former Princeton coach who spent nine of the last 10 years as a Sacramento assistant.

Adelman, who has won more games than all but five active coaches, spent this season as a lame duck, but still got the Kings into the playoffs at 44-38 with a midseason makeover as a defense-dominated club.

Sacramento made a tremendous late-season surge after the arrival of Ron Artest, who got along well with Adelman. The notorious forward jokingly said he would play for free next year if Adelman and free-agent guard Bonzi Wells were re-signed.

Adelman's departure ends the most successful tenure by far of any coach in the franchise's peripatetic history -- from Rochester to Cincinnati, from Kansas City and Omaha to 21 seasons in Sacramento.

But although Petrie refused to acknowledge it, the Maloof brothers have been unhappy with Adelman's leadership for at least two seasons. Adelman had far more success than all the coaches in Sacramento's two decades of NBA experience combined, but his sometimes-prickly demeanor and his failure to win a championship left him less than beloved.

The family tentatively courted Phil Jackson last summer while Adelman still was under contract, perplexing and angering Adelman. This spring, the brothers could be heard yelling advice at the Kings' bench from their courtside seats when things went poorly on the court.

When pressed on the reasons for Adelman's departure, Petrie replied: "I've answered that to the extent that I can."

Petrie plans to meet with Joe and Gavin Maloof late this week to begin a coaching search. The brothers were in Las Vegas on Tuesday and unavailable for comment.

Surrounded by reporters, Geoff Petrie, president of baseketball operations for the Sacramento Kings, announces that head coach Rick Adelman will not be offered a contract extension during a news conference at the Kings practice facility in Sacramento, Calif., Tuesday, May 9, 2006. Adelman, who has been head coach for eight season starting in 1998, is the winningest coach in Kings franchise history and had guided the team to the playoffs in each year including back-to back Pacific Division titles in 2001-02 and 2002-03. No replacement for Adelman was announced.

"In theory, you would like to find someone as quickly as possible because of the draft and whatever trade opportunities can come your way," Petrie said.

Adelman, who plans to meet with reporters at the Kings' training complex Wednesday, also didn't immediately return a call seeking comment. He would be a prime candidate for any offseason vacancies, but few coaches are expected to change jobs this summer -- and Adelman might want to take a prolonged vacation after his tumultuous years with the Kings.

Adelman is 752-481 in 16 seasons as an NBA coach, the last eight in Sacramento, where he won 395 games and led the Kings to the most success in a franchise history that stretches back to the NBA's founding days, when they were the Rochester Royals.

Adelman's streak of five consecutive 50-win seasons ended this year when the Kings got off to a terrible start. But Adelman might have done the most impressive coaching of his Sacramento tenure this season, molding a cohesive team with just two holdovers from the 2002-03 season.

The Kings transformed themselves into a defense-oriented team when Artest arrived in a late-January trade for Peja Stojakovic. Sacramento won 25 of its final 36 regular-season games and pushed San Antonio in the first round of the postseason, eventually losing in six games.

Both Adelman and the Maloofs made it clear they wouldn't discuss the coach's future until after the season. Adelman met with Joe Maloof on Monday.

"We knew that it was going to be a looming issue," Petrie said. "We put it aside and concentrated on the job at hand. We were so focused on trying to get the team there, trying to reconfigure the style of play."

Adelman led the Kings to the playoffs in each of his seasons, starting with his surprising one-year revitalization of a longtime loser in the strike-shortened 1999 season.

With new acquisitions Chris Webber, Vlade Divac, Jason Williams and Stojakovic, the Kings captured the NBA's attention with their high-flying, sharp-passing style. Sacramento increased its win total in each of its first four seasons under Adelman's watch, eventually winning the club's first two Pacific Division titles while going 61-21 in 2001-02 and 59-23 in 2002-03.

The Kings reached Game 7 of the Western Conference finals in 2002 before losing to the Los Angeles Lakers and missing a chance to play for the franchise's first championship since 1951.

Adelman reached two NBA Finals during six seasons in Portland, and also spent two losing seasons coaching the Golden State Warriors. Only Pat Riley, Larry Brown, Jerry Sloan, Phil Jackson and George Karl have more victories among active coaches.
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  #84  
Old 05-10-2006, 12:35 AM
polarpi polarpi is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by JenMarie
I'm probably the lone Kings fan here but...
Nope, you're not the lone one.

This makes me very sad.
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  #85  
Old 05-10-2006, 02:08 AM
docetboy docetboy is offline
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I went to the Spurs/Mavs game today. Wait, did I say game? I mean blowout. What could go wrong for the Spurs, did go wrong. We played like shit and let Dallas put 20 up on us at our house. Atleast the compulsory blowout is now out of the way.

While I won't blame the refs for the loss, they were HORRIBLE. Many missed calls and incorrect calls. You know when San Antonio has two technicals in two minutes (when we average about 0 a game) the refs are crazy. The crowd let them know, too. Eva was shown on the telecast apparantly saying "Refs you suck!" as the rest of the 19,000 in attendance chanted it during the second quarter, which soon became "Javey (the ref) Sucks!" As the refs left the court for halftime they were booed loudly, and even louder when they came back onto the court.

While the vocal ref-hating might be commonplace at other NBA venues, it definitely isn't at the AT&T.
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  #86  
Old 05-16-2006, 02:03 PM
AznSAE AznSAE is offline
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i hope the spurs dont win 3 straight games..........

go mavs!!!
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  #87  
Old 05-16-2006, 03:40 PM
valkyrie valkyrie is offline
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Any team that beats the Spurs is A-OK with me. I liked the big giant Eva Longoria head somebody was holding when Tadpole tanked his free throws at the end. Nice.

Also, GO PISTONS. Come on now. I like you guys and you know, if hockey players think it's cool to grow beards during the playoffs, that's cool, but really, the Cavs need to go. LeBron's had that mess for a while now and I still cannot figure out what he's thinking.
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  #88  
Old 05-16-2006, 11:07 PM
AGDee AGDee is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by valkyrie

Also, GO PISTONS. Come on now. I like you guys and you know, if hockey players think it's cool to grow beards during the playoffs, that's cool, but really, the Cavs need to go. LeBron's had that mess for a while now and I still cannot figure out what he's thinking.
The Pistons will pull it off. They blew away the Cavs when they were at home and had a very close game in Cleveland. They'll win the next one, although Rasheed is questionable due to his twisted ankle.
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  #89  
Old 05-17-2006, 10:55 AM
sigtau305 sigtau305 is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by AGDee
The Pistons will pull it off. They blew away the Cavs when they were at home and had a very close game in Cleveland. They'll win the next one, although Rasheed is questionable due to his twisted ankle.

It's nice to see Rasheed eats his word after his prediction for monday was shot down. The Cavs will prevail.

GO CAVS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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  #90  
Old 05-18-2006, 12:46 AM
docetboy docetboy is offline
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Tonight was a good night.

Clevelend defeats Detroit at the Palace, taking a 3-2 series lead. That series is definitely up for grabs right now.

San Antonio defeats Dallas, forcing a Game 6 in Dallas, which will likely decide the series - If San Antonio can pull out a win, they will likely win the series as Game 7 is back in the Alamo city and the Spurs haven't lost a playoff series at home in a decade.
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