Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Warriors' Curry misses 2nd game in row with sprained ankle

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -- Warriors guard Stephen Curry missed his second straight game Wednesday against Memphis because of a sprained right ankle.

Curry originally was hurt in Golden State's final preseason game and aggravated the injury in the season opener against Houston before rolling on it in last Friday's 109-91 win over the Los Angeles Clippers.

"A lot of the swelling went down and now it's just a matter of trying to continue the rehab and strengthening of it," coach Keith Smart said. "We're going to give him some more time off before rushing into it. We have to err on the side of caution right now just because we're talking about playing the long haul and getting ourselves ready for the long push later on."

Reggie Williams started in Curry's place.

76ers coach Collins leaves game with illness

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Philadelphia 76ers coach Doug Collins was not on the bench for the second half of Wednesday night's game against Indiana because of symptoms related to vertigo. His return was questionable.

Associate head coach Michael Curry took over with the Sixers holding a 26-point lead at halftime.

Collins missed two preseason games because of symptoms related to a concussion he sustained on Memorial Day. He then had neurological testing and treatment for what was diagnosed as vertigo.

Rivers bothered by tweeting of in-game comments

BOSTON (AP) -- Boston coach Doc Rivers feels what is said on the court should be left on the court.

Detroit's Charlie Villanueva took it to Twitter on Tuesday night, writing on his account that Kevin Garnett called him a "cancer patient" during Boston's 109-86 road win.

Villanueva suffers from alopecia universalis, a medical condition that results in hair loss. He does not have hair on his head.

Garnett, known as a trash talker, stuck to his usual routine and did not speak to the media before Wednesday's game against the Milwaukee Bucks.

He did issue a statement before the game.

"I am aware there was a major miscommunication regarding something I said on the court last night. My comment to Charlie Villanueva was in fact: You are cancerous to your team and our league,"' Garnett said. "I would never be insensitive to the brave struggle that cancer patients endure. I have lost loved ones to this deadly disease and have a family member currently undergoing treatment. I would never say anything that distasteful. The game of life is far bigger than the game of basketball."

One of Villanueva's tweets read: "KG called me a cancer patient, I'm (mad) because, u know how many people died from cancer, and he's tossing it like it's a joke."

Rivers defended his forward while wondering why someone would need to share in-game comments.

"I actually heard what Kevin said. I was right there, what he really said is in the statement. I'm going to leave it at that," he said. "I don't like the whole tweeting thing. I'm going to state that as well. Guys talk on the court. It doesn't mean they should or shouldn't. The fact that we're talking about this, it's just silly. It really is. We had a hell of a game yesterday and we should be talking about basketball.

"Talking about what the guys said during the game, there isn't a place. I don't find a place for it."

Villanueva was bothered by what he thought he heard.

"I wouldn't even trip about that, but a cancer patient, I know way 2 many people who passed away from it, and I have a special place 4 those," the message reads.

He also wrote that Garnett talks a lot but has probably never been in a fight, and he'd love to step in a ring with him.

Boston guard Ray Allen was on the court, but didn't hear the alleged comment.

"I don't know anything about it. The first I heard about it was actually this afternoon when I was eating and ready to head over," he said. "I don't know what was said. They had words and they were kind of going at each other."

He also said players should be careful with any tweets or pictures taken off the court.

"Definitely in this day and age we come across so many people with cameras and cell phones and Twitters," he said. "The social network is such a huge thing in this day and age. You have to be consistent with your message."

Allen said he does not tweet any longer after an incident involving his account.

Madison Square Garden to reopen for Knicks' game Friday

NEW YORK (AP) -- Madison Square Garden will reopen Friday night for the New York Knicks' game against Washington following an asbestos scare that forced the postponement of a game Tuesday night.

"After receiving assurance from the city and environmental experts regarding the safety of the arena for our customers and employees, all events at Madison Square Garden, beginning with Friday night's Knicks game, will go on as scheduled," arena officials said in a statement Wednesday.

"We have been working with the appropriate experts to confirm the arena is safe since debris fell during overnight work Monday. We will announce the rescheduled date for the postponed Knicks vs. Magic game, in conjunction with the NBA, in the near future. We would like to thank the city for their assistance in this matter, and appreciate the patience of our fans."

City environmental officials who inspected the 42-year-old sports and concert hall Tuesday afternoon gave it a clean bill of health.

Debris dislodged during a cleanup of an attic space triggered two air quality detectors, but subsequent testing revealed that the particles did not contain asbestos, city officials said. The finding came too late in the day to save the game Tuesday night against Orlando, which had already been postponed.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Wednesday that even though there was no health risk, the arena's operators deserve credit for putting safety first.

"If they made any mistakes, they were mistakes in the direction of being cautious and they should be commended for that," he said. "It turns out that our Department of Environmental Protection is very satisfied that there was no asbestos there. There were no risks, and if we had more time before they had to make a decision on the game, perhaps they wouldn't have even canceled the game."

The arena is in the midst of a major renovation that will revamp the seating, add new luxury suites and create a new entrance and new public concourses. Much of the heaviest construction has been scheduled for summer months, but some work is being done year round.

Work is expected to continue through the 2013-2014 NBA and NHL seasons.

It is unclear how much of that overhaul involves abating asbestos, or whether that kind of potentially hazardous work will be confined to the offseason.

Star trio sees their stats drop as Heat's win total climbs

MIAMI (AP) -- For $327 million this summer, the Miami Heat got three players whose statistics are plummeting.

The Heat are thrilled by that development.

When Dwyane Wade, LeBron James and Chris Bosh decided to team up in Miami, each quickly said individual numbers would be irrelevant - the first time in any of their basketball lives they could have that luxury. And after winning four straight, the last three by at least 23 points, the less-is-more approach is working wonders for the Heat.

"I had too many close games last year,'' Wade said after Tuesday's 129-97 win over Minnesota. "I appreciate these.''

Through five games, Wade's scoring is down 23 percent from his early pace last season. James has gone four games without scoring more than 20 points for the first time since December 2003, and the Heat have nonetheless won all those contests. Bosh's numbers are well off his career scoring and rebounding averages.

In past years, these would represent big problems.

These days, the 'Big 3' say those are all great signs.

"I don't care about numbers,'' Bosh said. "The only number I care about is winning. You can have great games, you can have great numbers and be at the bottom of the totem pole as far as the league is concerned. I think I can speak for that, too. I've experienced it. You can do everything you want, you can average the best numbers, but if you don't win it really doesn't matter.''

The Heat are off until visiting New Orleans on Friday.

Miami's victory over Minnesota was so one-sided that James didn't get his second field goal until the third quarter, and by then the Heat had already put 77 points on the scoreboard. The Heat became the first team since Detroit early in the 2007-08 season to win three straight games by such a large margin.

True, the combined record of the four teams Miami has defeated so far - New Jersey, Orlando, Philadelphia and Minnesota - was just 4-9 entering Wednesday night's games. Which might be why Heat coach Erik Spoelstra walked off the court at the final buzzer Tuesday already thinking up ways for his team to get better.

"That's the sickness of head coaching in this business. It really is,'' Spoelstra said. "Because immediately, what I'm thinking after the game is we have to stay sharp. Are we building the right mental toughness in these games? We'll take these games whenever you can get them. Obviously, you want to play efficient, productive basketball.''

He can't question either of those two counts.

One of the many reasons why the Heat stars are seeing their stat totals dip is because they're simply not on the court long enough to pile up numbers. In fourth quarters this season, out of a possible 60 minutes of playing time, Wade has logged 24, James 25 and Bosh 27 - and of those 76 combined minutes, 30 came in the season-opening loss to Boston.

"We love being out on the court and if we could, we'd play 48 minutes, all three of us, the whole game,'' said James, who had 12 assists Tuesday night, the most ever by a Heat forward in the franchise's 23-year history. "But we know what's best for the team. And while we're out on the court, we just try to do it all.''

Wade is averaging 22.4 points, nearly eight points less than his league-best clip from two seasons ago. James is averaging 20.4 points, which would be a career-low. Bosh's 13.0-per-game pace is 11 points shy of his average last year.

Regardless, the system is working. Ask any of their last four opponents.

"Those guys are starting to click a little bit,'' said Minnesota forward Anthony Tolliver. "I know it's early, but they are starting to figure each other out.''

Not just that, but the Heat are proving, once again, that stat sheets hardly ever tell the entire story.

Wade and James are both former NBA scoring champions; they entered Wednesday ranked 15th and 24th respectively in that department this season. Bosh has a total of five offensive rebounds through five games; he had 12 games last season alone where he grabbed that many. Mike Miller is out until January with a broken thumb and ligament damage, and starting center Joel Anthony is the NBA's only player so far with more than 100 minutes (102) and less than 18 points (seven).

And they're flying out of the gate anyway.

"We have a goal,'' James said. "We have a high goal. Our long-term goal is, of course, to bring another gold ball to this franchise. There's going to be times where we got better one night and we still lose. But we won't be satisfied if we leave a game saying we could have done things better.''

Dudley in nail-biter for governor; Bradley falls in Utah

Pro wrestling's Linda McMahon was taken down in Connecticut and two former NBA centers went before voters on an Election Day when sports and politics crossed paths.

Chris Dudley, who built a long NBA career despite some of the game's most abysmal foul shooting, was still locked in a tight contest for governor in Oregon on Wednesday. The race was among the most prominent of the some two dozen across the country featuring sports figures.

Dudley, 6-foot-11 center from Yale who once played for the Portland Trail Blazers, drew on his NBA connections and among his supporters was Commissioner David Stern.

Shawn Bradley, a 7-foot-6 former BYU star who spent 12 years in the NBA, lost his bid for a spot in the Utah Legislature on Tuesday night. He was defeated by state Rep. Tim Cosgrove, a Democrat.

McMahon, the former CEO of World Wrestling Entertainment who presented herself as a shrewd businesswoman, was beaten for the U.S. Senate seat by Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal. Throughout the Republican primary and general election, McMahon was questioned about the WWE's role in steroids, the health of the wrestlers and the way wrestling portrays women.

McMahon and husband Vince McMahon turned what was once a marginal enterprise into a cash-rich empire. She besieged the state with ads and is believed to have spent at least $50 million of her own money on her campaign. Now, she's wary of a return to wrestling.

"You can't step out of WWE and expect to come back in because it moves forward and it's moving forward at a great pace,'' she said. "I wouldn't try to step back in there.''

Heath Shuler, the former quarterback for the Washington Redskins and New Orleans Saints, was re-elected to Congress from North Carolina in an important race for Democrats. Shuler, part of the conservative Blue Dog coalition, held off Republican Jeff Miller in a campaign in which the football star tried to show where he broke with his party's leadership.

Republican Jon Runyan, a former Eagles lineman who spent 14 years in the NFL, defeated Democrat John Adler in a tight U.S. House race in New Jersey. Republican Jason Chaffetz, who once kicked 10 extra points in a game for BYU, was re-elected to Congress from Utah.

Alan Page, the Pro Football Hall of Famer for the Minnesota Vikings, kept his seat on the Minnesota Supreme Court.

The U.S. Senate is losing its headline sports figure with the retirement of Hall of Fame pitcher Jim Bunning of Kentucky. Sen. Herb Kohl of Wisconsin, owner of the Milwaukee Bucks, was not up for election.

Kendrick Meek, once a defensive lineman on Florida A&M's conference championship team, was beaten decisively in the Senate race in Florida won by Marco Rubio. Meek, a Democrat, drew less than 20 percent of the vote.

Indiana's Baron Hill, a former basketball player at Furman, was caught in the sweeping Republican gains in the House. The Democrat was assailed by Republicans for backing the federal stimulus and health care bills. Norm Dicks, an ex-linebacker at the University of Washington, easily won re-election to the U.S. House from Washington.

A Virginia congressional race featured former Virginia football player Kenny Golden. The conservative Republican lost while running as an independent. In a U.S. House race in Ohio, former Arena Football League owner James Renacci was a winner. The Republican used to own the Columbus Destroyers.

Taking a swing at politics was former lumberjack champion Sean Duffy. The Republican won a spot in the U.S. House from Wisconsin and succeeds David Obey, the longtime Democrat who announced his retirement in May.

Republican Connie Mack, the great grandson of the legendary manager, easily won re-election to Congress from Florida. And Miami Dolphins rookie Nolan Carroll will have something to talk about at practice. The cornerback's mother is Jennifer Carroll, the running mate of Republican Rick Scott, who claimed the Florida governor's race when Democrat Alex Smith conceded Wednesday.

In the Tennessee Legislature, it was hardly a close call for former American League umpire Dale Ford. He ran unopposed.

In two sports-related ballot measures:

• Voters in Mesa, Ariz., overwhelmingly approved funding for a new spring training facility for the Chicago Cubs.

• Missouri voters approved tighter regulations on dog breeders, a measure promoted by St. Louis Cardinals manager Tony La Russa.

Kobe says he'll play for U.S. in 2012 if wanted

(AP) -- Mike Krzyzewski has a commitment from another top recruit: Kobe Bryant.

Bryant told the U.S. basketball coach he would play in the London Olympics in 2012 if the Americans want him there.

The 32-year-old Lakers guard was a guest on Krzyzewski's SIRIUS XM radio show Tuesday when the Duke coach asked Bryant about London.

"You guys want me there, I am there and I'm ready to defend," Bryant said. "And then when you guys need me to put some points on the board, I'll do that, too."

Bryant confirmed his interest in wearing the red-white-and-blue again Tuesday night after scoring 23 points in Los Angeles' 124-105 victory over the Memphis Grizzlies.

"It's a huge honor to be a part of that," Bryant said.

Bryant was a starter on the U.S. squad that won gold medals in 2008 in Beijing, but hasn't played for the American team since then. He sat out the world championships this summer, recovering from right knee surgery following the Lakers' taxing championship run to Game 7 of the NBA finals.

Bryant will turn 34 in August 2012, and his two-time defending champion Lakers appear to be loaded for two more long playoff runs after making the last three NBA finals. Yet Bryant scoffs at worries about the wear and tear on his body in the early weeks of his 15th season with the Lakers.

"If anything, I'll just be Mariano Rivera - come in in the last two minutes," Bryant said, referring to the Yankees closer.

Beijing stalwarts LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Carmelo Anthony, Dwight Howard and Chris Paul also skipped the Istanbul tournament, while Kevin Durant led the remainder of the U.S. team to its first world championship in 16 years.

Anthony and Paul already have said they would love to return for another Olympic run. The Americans will have next summer off, already qualified for the Olympics with the world title won by Durant and a supporting cast including Lamar Odom, who's off to an outstanding start with the Lakers despite his extra summer work.

Wolves' Beasley leaves game after hard fall

MIAMI (AP) -- Michael Beasley's return to Miami ended painfully for the Minnesota forward, who was helped to the locker room after a hard fall while driving for a score against his former team.

Beasley landed awkwardly after making a layup with 8:10 remaining until halftime, immediately grabbing his left hip after falling on his side to the court. He got up and took a few steps, face writhing in pain, before going down again near the Timberwolves' bench and needing assistance to reach the locker room.

Beasley was quickly diagnosed with a bruise and was getting X-rays, which were negative, the Timberwolves said.

It was Beasley's first game back in Miami after spending two seasons with the Heat, who traded him in July for second-round picks in 2011 and 2014. Beasley had been Minnesota's leading scorer through the season's first three games, averaging 14.7 points.

By league rules, his night officially ended when he was unable to shoot the resultant free throw, which was eventually taken by Kosta Koufos. Given the amount of pain he appeared to be in while being aided to the locker room, it didn't appear likely that Beasley would be returning anyway.

He finished with 11 points on 4 of 9 shooting in 10 minutes, including a one-handed slam off an offensive rebound midway through the opening quarter.

Wizards' Arenas could return to practice Wednesday

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Washington Wizards expect Gilbert Arenas to return to practice Wednesday after missing the first three games of the season with a strained tendon in his right ankle.

Arenas sat out Tuesday night's home opener against the Philadelphia 76ers but looked in good form as he took shots on the court before tipoff.

Coach Flip Saunders said he thinks Arenas will practice Wednesday ahead of the team's next game on Friday against the New York Knicks.

No. 1 overall pick John Wall was in the starting lineup for the Wizards despite spraining his right ankle in Saturday's loss to the Atlanta Hawks.

Suns reward Dudley with four-year extension

PHOENIX (AP) -- The Phoenix Suns have extended the contract of forward Jared Dudley, the team's hustling defender and sharpshooter off the bench the past two seasons.

The four-year, $17 million deal with a player option for a fifth year takes effect next season. That would keep the fan-favorite Dudley under contract until at least the 2014-15 season and possibly the next one as well.

New Suns president of basketball operations Lon Babby called Dudley "a valued member of what makes this franchise special.''

Dudley came to Phoenix along with Jason Richardson in a 2010 trade that sent Boris Diaw and Raja Bell to the Charlotte Bobcats.

The agreement was reached Monday night just minutes before the deadline for extending contracts of 2007 first-round draft picks. If Dudley hadn't signed, he would become a free agent at the end of this season. It was the first significant move of the new front-office regime set up after Steve Kerr chose not to stay on as general manager.

Babby, a former agent, said it is difficult to negotiate long-term deals with the NBA labor situation so uncertain.

"I feel pleased because he's the kind of player and person that makes this franchise,'' he said. "It was challenging to get it done in this environment but hard work and good faith prevailed.''

Dudley will get $4.25 million each season, beginning in 2011-12, and can add additional money through incentives.

The scrappy, 6-foot-7 player from Boston College and 2007 ACC player of the year was drafted by Charlotte as the 22nd selection overall.

Richardson was considered the big prize in the Charlotte trade, with Dudley something of an add-on. But Suns coaches had heard of the player's potential and he meshed perfectly with Phoenix's up-tempo, rhythmic style.

He had a breakout 2009-10 season with career bests in virtually every category. He averaged 8.2 points, 3.4 rebounds and 1.5 assists while playing in all 82 regular-season games and all 16 playoff contests.

One of the team's best defensive players, Dudley led the Suns in steals with 81.

But he was noticed mostly from 3-point range, where he was the most accurate of the array of sharpshooters assembled by the Suns. He led the team by making 45.8 percent, fourth-best in the NBA.

In his first three NBA seasons Dudley made 38 3s. Last season, he made 120.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Team USA Notebook: McMillan Preparing to Have Fernandez in Training Camp

ISTANBUL -- Portland coach Nate McMillan wouldn't mind at all seeing Rudy Fernandez stay with the Trail Blazers.

McMillan, a Team USA assistant, was asked by FanHouse if his hope is the disgruntled swingman will remain with the team.

"He's a great player,'' McMillan said. "He's a good player. A talented player. Very talented.''

Asked further about the subject and McMillan said, "He is in my notes for training camp. All right.''

Fernandez, unhappy with his role in McMillan's offense, wants to be traded and already has been fined $25,000 by the NBA for that demand having been publicly issued. Through his agent, Andy Miller, Fernandez told The Oregonian two weeks ago he intends to not report to training camp even though he has two years left on his contract.

McMillan spoke to Fernandez, a member of the Spanish national team, two weeks ago when Team USA was in Spain to play exhibition games, but has not divulged specifics of the conversation. But McMillan said he hopes to speak with Fernandez again by this weekend in Istanbul.

Team USA and Spain both have advanced to the quarterfinals of the World Championship. The teams are on opposite sides of the bracket but could meet in Sunday's gold-medal game game at the Sinan Erdem Dome.

"We haven't talked (in Istanbul),'' McMillan said. "But we'll talk.''

McMillan cares deeply about trying to straighten out this matter.

"That's my player,'' McMillan said. "He's my player. That's how I'm approaching it. When I see him, I'll talk to him. I'll wish him luck. And if we get the opportunity to meet each other, then we're going to looking to beat each other. But that's my player.''

For how much longer is anybody's guess.

London Calling

Not that there was much doubt, but USA Basketball chairman Jerry Colangelo figures forward Kevin Durant can make plans to spend the 2012 Olympics in London as a member of Team USA.

"I think you would assume Durant is going to be on the team. That's one,'' Colangelo said of players off this summer's Team USA outfit marked for London.

Colangelo could see a scenario in which the 2012 Olympic team is mostly a combination of players from the 2008 Olympic team and from this team. None of the players from 2008 opted to play this summer.

But Colangelo stressed it's obviously still extremely early in the process. There are 35 players in the pool now for 2012, with 22 having been on the 2008 Olympic team or on this team. There are some top players in the pool to have not participated in either event and some could be added, namely Clippers forward Blake Griffin.

"We'll always have a fluid roster,'' Colangelo said. "You're always going to have some turnover going forward because players need to look forward for that opportunity. It's not like with some of the countries that we play against, they'll have the same guys playing two or three Olympics in a row or World Championships. But that's not going to be the case with us. It just can't be. It's not realistic.

"The Olympians (from 2008) played three years, took a year off and now we have a new group. It's all about the equity and everybody's earning equity.''

Colangelo said Team USA officials could face extremely difficult roster decisions in 2012 if a good number of players from 2008 and 2010 all want to play in London.

"That's good,'' Colangelo said. "I like those kind of decisions.''

For now, Durant, Team USA's leading scorer with a 17.7 average, was pleased to hear Colengelo say his tickets looks punched for London.

"I hope so,'' said the Oklahoma City star. "So I'm going to do my best but keep that in my mind. I've got to continue to keep working hard.''

Russia Next

Team USA next faves Russia in a Thursday quarterfinal. The Americans, who got a favorable draw for the knockout round, are big favorites. But coach Mike Krzyzewski is taking no team lightly.

"We're beatable. We're not unbeatable,'' said Krzyzewski, whose team took Tuesday off and will practice Wednesday in preparation for the game. "But I've been fortunate to be the U.S. coach for the last five years, and there's no one in our country with a greater feeling of respect for the international game. I just think there are so many good teams, so many great players... We just have to work hard and be our best and that might be good enough to win.''

The Americans last played Russia in the Worlds in 2002, winning a group game 106-92. Russia defeated Team USA 66-64 in a semifinal at the 1998 Worlds, but that was an American team without NBA players due to the lockout.

For Turkish fans, Hedo Turkoglu’s still gold

ISTANBUL, TURKEY—From the 20-foot-high facing of an overpass bridging a six-lane highway on the southwestern edge of this massive city, his face beams down.

In and around the Sultanahmet area — the gorgeous, centuries-old home of the Blue Mosque and Hagia Sophia, the two most recognizable landmarks of this historic city — his face adorns billboards and buildings at almost every turn.

He is there in the port and around the arena, omnipresent.

And when you mention Hedo Turkoglu’s name around these parts, people perk up.

“Hedo? He is No. 1,” said 31-year-old Bora Nebioglu. “The best.”

There are tens of thousands of Raptors fans who may not agree with the assessment of Nebioglu, a hotel worker who says he’s an avid fan of the Turkish national basketball team. But that’s a rather parochial view of the 31-year-old Turkoglu, the one-year Raptors washout who seems to be the singular face of his national team at the world championship here.

Even though he had been playing so-so, averaging about 10 points in Turkey’s first-round games while shooting just 32 per cent from the field, there can be no denying his popularity.

“Everybody likes Hedo,” Nebioglu said before Turkey routed France 95-77 in the first playoff round Sunday night. “He was our first player in the NBA. He is the captain of our team. We are all very proud. Turkish people are very proud of him.”

And very familiar with what he’s done in his career. Nebioglu, who was quick to point out that fellow Turk Mehmet Okur has an NBA championship ring (won in 2005 with Detroit) while Turkoglu is still searching, knew immediately what Turkoglu’s year with the Raptors was like.

“He was very good in Orlando but he did not play well when he was in Toronto at all,” said the restaurant worker. “He will be better with Phoenix Suns, we are sure.”

No one here seems to be the least bit concerned by what went wrong in Toronto. They know he was a Raptor, isn’t one anymore, and just revel in his time with the national team.

“For us, he brings great pride,” said Nebioglu.

Basketball may play second fiddle to soccer in this country (“It is that way in all Europe. What can you do?” Nebioglu said with a shrug) but not for this two-week period. The 15,000-seat Sinan Erdem Dome was packed for the easy win over France and the hype is never-ending. There are huge pennants bearing the likenesses of the national team everywhere and Turkoglu is front and centre on all of them. He responded with one of his best games of the tournament, scoring a team-high 20 points and dishing out a team-best three assists.

“His impact on the team is unimaginable,” said Turkey’s Sinan Guler. “The way he played today (energizes) everybody else and the country, of course. When you hear his name being said on the announcements, everybody’s screaming louder than for anybody else.”

To many, it’s as if Turkoglu never set foot in Toronto. They love him for what he does for the Turkish program. They remember what he did the year before he spent with the Raptors.

“He’s probably the No. 1 sports guy in Turkey right now because of the way he played, especially with Orlando,” said Guler.

Turkoglu was not available to reporters after Turkey’s win, blowing off a group of about 100 by taking a back exit from the court. It certainly won’t damage his reputation here, much the same way people shrug off his year with the Raptors.

“I don’t know what happened in Toronto,” said Nebioglu. “He did not play well, but we don’t care about that much as long as he does well for Turkey. He is ours.”

Offseason of change continues for Miami Heat's LeBron James

On July 8, LeBron James announced he was taking his talents to South Beach'' to play for the Miami Heat. Not only would his zip code be changing, but his uniform number as well. He has chosen to wear No. 6 next season.

It's a season of change for LeBron as he has decided to revamp his signature, too. Since 2003, James has always signed his first name with a looping ``L'' that closely resembled the start of his uniform No. 23. Now he has tapered that with a more definable starting letter and added ``#6'' to each autograph.

``It just feels right. This marks a new beginning for me,'' said James in an exclusive interview with Upper Deck, the sole supplier of his authentic memorabilia. ``Miami represents a new chapter in my basketball career. I'm really looking forward to it. It's gonna be fun. And I'm gonna do what I can to the best of my ability to bring home a championship to that city.''

New state, new team, new uniform number; it only makes sense James would want to modify his autograph as well.

``LeBron's signature has always been in demand and now that he's chosen to change it, [Upper Deck] has the opportunity to completely overhaul LeBron's memorabilia lineup -- from team to number to design,'' said Steve Sloan, Upper Deck product manager.


U.S. breezes into quarters

ISTANBUL - Before it can win a world championship, the United States needed to start looking like a world champion.

Kevin Durant, Chauncey Billups and the rest of the Americans finally had that appearance yesterday, powering into the quarterfinals with a 121-66 victory over Angola.

“Obviously we want to stay humble, but at the same time we have to know that we can do it,” forward Kevin Love said. “We know regardless of what people are saying, that we still are the favorites and we should play and really act like it, too.”

They did, opening the knockout round with a quick knockout.

With Billups scoring 16 of his 19 points and Durant all of his 17 in the first half, the Americans saved their most impressive performance in Istanbul for the elimination stage, overwhelming the Angolans from the start after a couple of lackluster performances to close the group stage.

“We don’t want to be a team that’s going to turn it on and off,” Durant said. “I think of course we’re playing with a little more sense of urgency when you know if you lose, you go home. Guys came out and responded from those last two games.”

The U.S. forced turnovers that led to easy baskets in transition, and when forced into the halfcourt, shot 18-of-38 from 3-point range, one off the team record for 3s at worlds.

“Our guys were sharp,” U.S. coach Mike Krzyzewski said.

Eric Gordon and Rudy Gay also scored 17 for the Americans, who will face Russia on Thursday night. Gordon was 5-of-6 behind the arc.

Joaquim Gomes, who played at Valparaiso, scored 21 for Angola, which finished fourth in Group A. The Angolans advanced on a tiebreaker by virtue of their overtime victory over Germany, but had lost by 50 to Serbia, and 21 apiece to Argentina and Australia.

They were no match for the Americans, who had won the teams’ four meetings in the Olympics, starting with a 116-48 romp in the Dream Team’s debut in Barcelona in 1992, straight through to a 97-76 victory in Beijing two years ago.

Monday, September 6, 2010

US beats Angola 121-66, reaches quarters at Worlds

Competitors need apply
Garrett Ellwood/NBAE/Getty Images

ISTANBUL (AP) -- Chauncey Billups scored 19 points, Kevin Durant had 17, and the United States powered into the quarterfinals of the World Championship with a 121-66 victory over Angola on Monday.

With Durant scoring 17 and Billups 16 in the first half, the Americans saved their most impressive performance in Istanbul for the knockout round, overwhelming the Angolans from the start after a couple of lackluster performances to close the group stage.

The U.S. forced turnovers that led to easy baskets in transition, and when forced into the halfcourt, shot 18 of 38 from 3-point range, one off the team record for 3s in a world championship game.

Eric Gordon and Rudy Gay also scored 17 for the Americans, who will face either Russia or New Zealand on Thursday night. Gordon was 5 of 6 behind the arc.

Joaquim Gomes, who played collegiately at Valparaiso, scored 21 for Angola, which finished fourth in Group A. The Angolans advanced to the elimination round on a tiebreaker by virtue of their overtime victory over Germany, but had lost by 50 to Serbia, and 21 apiece to Argentina and Australia.

They were no match for the Americans, who had won the teams' four meetings in the Olympics, starting with a 116-48 romp in the Dream Team's debut in Barcelona in 1992, straight through to a 97-76 victory in Beijing two years ago.

This quickly became one of those no-contests.

The Americans lacked some focus against Iran and Tunisia in their last two games, knowing victory was certain and not wanting to embarrass opponents or get any of their own players hurt.

But they expected to be sharper after a couple of days of practice, knowing they would press, substitute frequently, and raise their overall level of play with the games finally becoming important.

The U.S. won the opening tip for the first time in Istanbul and scored the first five points. Billups and Durant nailed consecutive 3-pointers to cap a 10-0 spurt and make it 22-7, and the Americans led 33-13 after one.

Billups is playing out of his normal NBA position as a shooting guard, and he made only 4 of 19 3-point attempts in preliminary play. U.S. coach Mike Krzyzewski was asked last week if he would consider a lineup change, and he said he would look at it.

The lineup stayed the same, but Billups looked much different.

The lead ballooned to 29 late in the second quarter. Durant shot 7 of 10 in the half and Billups was 4 of 6, all from behind the arc, and Durant's 3-pointer with 7 seconds left sent the Americans to the half with a 65-33 advantage.

Derrick Rose made two straight 3-pointers and Billups added another to start the U.S. scoring in the third quarter, and the lead grew to 37 late in the period. The Americans were 6 of 9 behind the arc in the period, which ended with them leading 91-56.

Felizardo Ambrosio finished with 12 points and Roberto Fortes 11 for Angola.

Russia beats New Zealand 78-56 to gain quarters

ISTANBUL (AP) -- Russia reached the quarterfinals of basketball's world championships against the United States, beating New Zealand 78-56 Monday after Andrey Vorontsevich had 18 points and 11 rebounds.

Timofey Mozgov , Russia's 2.16-meter (7-foot-1) center who recently signed for the New York Knicks, added 16 points and seven rebounds. Russia outrebounded New Zealand 41-25 and had five blocks to the Kiwis' one.

Kirk Penney led New Zealand with 21 points.

Russia used a 13-0 run to jump ahead 29-21 in the second quarter. In the second half, a frontline led by Vorontsevich overpowered a much smaller New Zealand.

"We played great defence," Vorontsevich said. "We played like a giant fist."

New Zealand power forward Pero Cameron agreed.

"Defensively, Russia pushed us out of what we wanted to do and sometimes we settled for the outside shot a little early," he said.

It was the teams' second meeting. In 2002, New Zealand beat Russia 90-81 on the way to its record fourth-place finish at the worlds in Indianapolis.

Russia next plays Thursday, pitting coach David Blatt against his native country in what could be his final game after five years as Russia coach.

"I remember watching as a kid and crying when the U.S. lost to the Soviets in the 1972 Olympics," Blatt said. "It's kind of a circle of irony. It is kind of special and not a little bit sad."

Russia went to halftime leading 31-27, having trailed 21-18 and allowing New Zealand only seven field goals in 24 attempts.

Having forced New Zealand's best players to the bench, including Penney, Russia had a 22-10 rebound advantage after halftime.

"We really focused on attacking inside and we did get them in foul trouble," Blatt said.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

After much-needed rest, U.S. is ready for elimination play

0905-usa-practice-608-t1.jpg
Sunday's practice was shorter than the previous day's full-contact session.

ISTANBUL -- It has been a while since the U.S. National Team felt the rush of playing a meaningful game. After escaping with a win over Brazil on Monday, they played two non-competitive contests against Iran and Tunisia, followed by three days off.

The time between pool play at the 2010 FIBA World Championship and their round-of-16 matchup with Angola (Monday, 11 a.m. ET, ESPN2) allowed them to get some much-needed time on the practice floor. But now, they're ready to get back to action.

"We're highly anxious to play," Danny Granger said Sunday. "The last two games weren't exactly two really good teams, and we didn't play too particularly well. So we're definitely anxious to get back to meaningful games."

Sunday's practice in Istanbul was shorter than the full-contact session they went through on Saturday, but the team did get some work done. And at this point in the tournament, head coach Mike Krzyzewski says that he doesn't want to make things too complicated.

"We might add a certain set, because we want to go to a certain guy to highlight him," Krzyzewski said. "You don't want to add too much now, like over-coach them. You want to prepare them, but not over-coach them."

But with no margin for error in the single-elimination format of the knockout rounds, it's now time to go full throttle.

"The last two games, especially, you can't blow it all out against those teams," Krzyzewski said. "You've got to pace yourself a little bit. But now, when you're one and done, you don't hold anything back."

So starting with Monday's game against Angola, the U.S. will press more defensively, making quicker substitutions to stay fresh and aggressive.

"We'll kind of show how we're going to play every game the way we play the first one," Krzyzewski said.

Angola has been the best team in Africa for a long time, but they've never had much success at the Olympics or World Championships. Here's a profile of Monday's matchup.

Recent History

2004 Olympics - USA 89, Angola 53
2008 Olympics - USA 97, Angola 76

How Angola got here (4th place, Group A)

• Lost to Serbia, 94-44
• Defeated Jordan, 79-65
• Lost to Argentina, 91-70
• Defeated Germany, 92-88
• Lost to Australia, 76-55

The win over Germany was for fourth place in the group and what got Angola to the knockout rounds. Germany led the game by 10 with less than four minutes to go, but Angola scored 14 points in the final 3:19 of regulation to send it to overtime. They took control early in the extra period and held on for a four-point win.

Angola's offense

92.5 points scored per 100 possessions (21st of 24 teams in pool play)

Offensively, Angola is a contrast to the European offenses that flourish on ball movement. The African champions are very much a one-on-one team. They'll run pick-and-rolls, but mostly to free themselves up for a quick shot or drive to the basket. They recorded assists on just 41 percent of their field goals in pool play, the third lowest ratio of the 24 teams in the tournament.

Krzyzewski: "I think they'll attack on offense. That's their nature. That's what they do. They've been a very good attacking team."

Angola's defense

Angola plays both man and zone, and they will utilize a 2-2-1 press at times.

Krzyzewski: "Their big guys play off big guys to clog the lane. They have done zone, but their man-to-man, if they clog up, is like a zone. So I would expect more of a sloughing defense, whether it be in man or zone. We have to come down and not overpenetrate against that, but rather make passes and get movement."

Numbers of note

From a statistical point of view, Angola was the worst team to qualify for the elimination rounds. They were outscored by 19.1 points per 100 possessions in pool play.

The U.S. should attack the glass. Angola was the second worst defensive rebounding team in pool play, securing just 62 percent of available defensive boards.

Angola was above average in two key statistics defensively. They ranked sixth by forcing 20.8 turnovers per 100 possessions. And they ranked seventh by allowing their opponents to attempt just 24.5 free throws per 100 possessions.

Key players

Olimpio Cipriano -- The wing was Angola's leading scorer in pool play, averaging 14.8 points in four games. He dropped 30, hitting four of his six attempts from 3-point range, in the big win over Germany. Andre Iguodala will likely get the assignment of containing him.

Joaquim Gomes -- The big man averaged 11.6 points in pool play and had a double-double against Germany. He's a center who can step out and shoot from the perimeter, a contrast from most big men in this tournament who like to roll to the basket.

Carlos Morais -- The combo guard doesn't shoot particularly well, but he can get to the rim.


Loyalty wins out as Thomas returns to the Big D

Tim Thomas missed most of last season in Dallas to care for his wife Tricia.
Tim Thomas missed most of last season, his first with Dallas, to care for his wife Tricia.

If there ever was a summer to be a free agent, this was it. There were plenty of jobs to go around and teams looking to spend.

Tim Thomas didn't want any part of the craziness. A few informal discussions took place here and there, but Thomas knew what he wanted.

The Mavericks felt the same.

"Loyalty is definitely the best word for it," Thomas told NBA.com in his first extensive interview since re-signing with Dallas on Aug. 18.

Thomas missed most of last season, his first with Dallas. Knee surgery sidelined him initially before leaving the team in late January to deal with something much more serious. Thomas' wife, Tricia, had become ill and Tim requested a leave of absence to care for her and their family.

He never returned. He also wasn't forgotten. Thomas said every one of his Dallas teammates reached out during the trying times, as did players from around the league. Even though he had only been with the Mavericks a few months and played just 18 games, the outpouring of support from all corners of the organization touched him deeply.

"That was all I could ask for," said Thomas, who decided along with Tricia to keep the nature of her illness private.

Thomas kept tabs on the Mavericks from their home in Los Angeles. Watching the first-round exit to San Antonio was especially hard.

"It was about taking care of my wife, but I watched basketball as much as I could and I always kept up with what Dallas was doing," he said. "I reached out to everybody right before the playoffs and wished everybody well.

"Of course I watched the playoff games and thought about situations where I could have helped. It was tough to know that the guys were going to war and I wasn't there to help, but at the same time everybody was reaching out with their prayers for my wife."

When the offseason rolled around, Thomas' competitive juices were flowing again. Tricia had improved to the point where she could care for their two daughters and run the household again. Thomas was ready to give it another go.

"I wanted to come back and help my team, but things happened in the household," he said. "The team allowed me to go and to try to work things out. When things started going downhill, they allowed me to stay home and take care of what's most important -- your family. I really appreciate that from them. I'm happy that everything worked out as far as my wife's health."

Thomas began to work out and talked to his agent, Bob Myers, about his options. Most teams were hesitant to look into the 14-year veteran with seven teams on his résumé, though some were interested given Thomas' track record. The Mavericks were one of those interested teams.

"There were a lot of talks, but nothing got as far as an actual contract," Thomas said. "When my agent talked to Dallas and Dallas said they would love to have me back, it was a no-brainer. I definitely wanted to put myself in a situation where you have a chance to win an NBA championship."

The two sides agreed on the same contract Thomas signed last summer -- a one-year deal for the veteran's minimum ($1.35 million). Whether more money was out there, Thomas wasn't about to chase it. There was unfinished business and the chance to repay a debt in Dallas.

Loyalty won out.

"That's the right word -- loyalty," he said. "Everything I went through, the organization was just great. From being hurt and having surgery to my wife's health, they were just great. From the basketball side of it, they know what I'm capable of doing if I'm healthy and they know also I just want to sacrifice for the team. I just want to win. That's the bottom line."

The Mavericks are just glad to get Thomas back.

"We knew it was tough on Tim and his family last year," owner Mark Cuban said. "Our policy is that family always comes first. So we certainly were trying to offer any help we could and to stay on top of the situation. With the new season getting ready to get started, we are excited to have Tim back. His size and ability to stretch the court will be a big help to us."

Thomas isn't a difference-maker, but the Mavericks are counting on the 6-foot-10 forward to shore up some shortcomings that arose last season. He brings much-needed depth behind Dirk Nowitzki, giving Dallas length and the ability to space the floor with his 3-point range.

And while the absence was unintended, it did his body some good. Thomas, 33, has only played close to a full season once in the last five years.

"I've had a long time off, so I have fresh legs, but then again it's been 14 years, so time will tell," he said. "I feel great right now. I'm ready to go and I want to get back into the whole flow of practicing and playing and being able to compete. I want to be around the guys and enjoy the game."

When it came down to deciding where, Thomas couldn't imagine being anywhere else.

"I just felt loyal to Dallas for what they did last year letting me take care of my family," he said. "I just want to give it another shot. I feel I can help. I keep going back to that word -- loyalty."


Forward-thinking Collins already dreaming big in Philly

Doug Collins
Doug Collins says he's got the plan to re-ignite the spark between Philadelphia and the 76ers.

If he had been one of the Wright brothers, he'd have invented the jet engine before the propeller plane. If he were a caveman, he would have thought of the radial tire before the wheel.

Thus, it should surprise no one that Doug Collins is a few steps ahead of the pack in his return to Philadelphia as coach of the Sixers.

"It will feel great to have old excitement and electricity back in the city and back in the building," he said. "We're gonna have a team that the people will respond to. We're gonna have meaningful games late in the season. We're gonna have a playoff atmosphere and all that brings."

Never mind learning to crawl when you can simply stand up and break into an all-out sprint. That has always been the Collins way from the time he was an All-American at Illinois State, the No. 1 overall pick in the 1973 Draft and a brilliant but star-crossed guard for the Sixers to all of his three previous three NBA coaching stops.

On the court and off it, he's always been an exposed nerve end, someone who practically hums like a tuning fork when you stand next to him, the equivalent of a fireworks display that lights up the sky and then quickly dissolves into the night.

"I think at 35 years old, you could say that, maybe at 45," Collins said, nodding his head. "I don't think that's the case at 59. I'm a grandpa now with four grandkids and I think you see things differently. I think you get older with vision and a perspective that changes.

"When you're younger you just roll up your sleeves and you're gonna fight the world and make it all right and stuff. Then, in the words of the late Chuck Daly, you learn to pick and choose your battles."

Daly, the Hall of Famer who guided the Pistons to back-to-back NBA championships and the Dream Team to Olympic gold in 1992, used to call it "selective hearing."

Collins calls it just one of the things he's gleaned from all of the other coaches he came in contact with during his past seven years as a TNT analyst after being fired by the Wizards following a two-year stint during Michael Jordan's comeback in 2003.

"I always knew I was gonna do it again," he said. "I always knew I was gonna coach again. I was not gonna rush back into it. It was gonna pick a situation that I thought fit who I am and what I do as a coach. I've always gone to teams that have been down and have some talent. I feel like I'm a teacher. I feel that I create an environment where guys get better.

"The one thing I've felt is that wherever I've gone, the teams have gotten better. We won more games. I've always felt that wherever I've left has been better for me being there and I don't mean to say that in an arrogant way."

Collins took over a Chicago team with Jordan and Scottie Pippen that finished 30-52 in 1986 and had them at 47-35 and in the Eastern Conference finals when he was let go in 1989. Detroit was 28-54 the season when he arrived in 1995 and he had them at 54-28 two years later. In Washington, during Jordan's comeback, the Wizards had consecutive 37-45 seasons under Collins, but that was up substantially from the 19-63 team he inherited.

Now the Sixers, after consecutive playoff first-round losses in 2008 and 2009 that many believed was underachieving, are coming off a loud 27-55 belly flop of a season that got coach Eddie Jordan fired after less than one year on the job.

The right opportunity came along just when Collins was ready to scratch that itch again.

"I wasn't going just anyplace," he said. "I'd had five or six other opportunities in recent years and just said no. There are only two cities -- Philadelphia or Chicago -- that I said I would go to. I almost went to Chicago two years ago. Then [Bulls owner] Jerry Reinsdorf and I talked and he said, 'I don't want to turn our personal relationship into a business' and I understood.

"That left Philly. I waited and this came out. It was right because of my wife and my family. My wife and I had lived there before and were comfortable. My daughter lives just outside the city. The grandkids are there. I have friends in Philly."

Not to mention memories having helped pick the Sixers up off the floor once before. As a rookie, Collins joined a team that had set the NBA's worst ever record of 9-73 the year before. He soon became a vastly underrated four-time All-Star on a star-spangled lineup that included Julius Erving, George McGinnis and Darryl Dawkins that won all the headlines but no championships.

He looks now at a roster that features talented young pieces in Andre Iguodala, Jrue Holiday and No. 2 draft pick Evan Turner. He sees a Boston team that is still the class of the Atlantic Division, but getting older, along with New York, New Jersey and Toronto that are either in transition or in trouble.

He was a fiery bundle of optimism walking into each of those previous jobs, but left burned and wilted like a used candle. So at a time when Steve Kerr was quick to jump from the hot seat of being the general manager in Phoenix to taking over Collins' job behind the TNT microphone, the question is why would he want to put himself through it again?

"I just feel like I'm in the best spot I've ever been as a coach," Collins said. "I'm driven. But so are Phil Jackson, Larry Brown, Gregg Popovich and Jerry Sloan."

The head bobs, the eyes dance and that high-pitched voice can still go up another octave when he's running down the young roster and over all of the plans he has for his old/new town this season.

"It's ready, the city is so ready," he said. "I do know and understand the emotion and excitement when things are right. I've been in this situation before. I know what it feels like in Philadelphia to get it going again."

Doug Collins, ahead of the pack as usual, is already there again.


These players could be looking at big decline this season

Lamar Odom & Kevin Garnett
For differing reasons, Lamar Odom (left) and Kevin Garnett could be staring down a tough 2010-11 season.

One year, a player seems on top of the basketball world, enjoying the high as well as the view below. The next year, he's falling without a parachute, wondering when he'll finally land, and how hard.

This happens. This is sports. Everyone declines, even the greats, unless they leave before their feet touches the ground. Just like taxes and a Mark Cuban rant toward a referee, it's inevitable. And it usually doesn't happen suddenly; most of us can see it coming, for a variety of reasons: age, competition or a change in team dynamics.

That said, here are 10 players who appear most vulnerable to a slide in 2010-11, and why:

Amar'e Stoudemire (Knicks): He lost Steve Nash and he gained a potentially hostile crowd. Those are the hazards facing Stoudemire in his new digs. The Nash factor is very real; Stoudemire owes a bunch of his highlights to a point guard who excelled in the pick-and-roll and knew how to deliver the ball. As for the New York atmosphere, it might get gruesome should the Knicks falter and/or their new big man fail to meet the steep expectations. If you recall, Stoudemire was a bit touchy last spring when he was called out in the postseason. Therefore, is he too sensitive to deal with media that's triple the size of what he saw in Phoenix, and twice as skeptical?

Vince Carter (Magic): This may be a contract year for Carter, and if that doesn't motivate him, nothing will. The scenario in Orlando doesn't favor his odds of getting an extension. He shot 43 percent during the season and 40 in a poor postseason. Plus, J.J. Redick is poised to make a push for the starting job. Clearly, the Magic are ready to move on, if Redick does cut significantly into Carter's minutes. Anyway, Carter's best years were in Toronto and New Jersey. His stop in Orlando mirrors many others who migrate to Florida. They come to slow down and eventually retire.

Yao Ming (Rockets): After missing all last season and limping through stretches of recent seasons, can he ever be a 20 and 10 guy again? It is possible Yao can shake off the rust and be an All-Star. Or, his best years are well behind him. Nothing is certain for a player who could have revolutionized the center position had he stayed healthy from foot and knee issues. Instead, his health will remain a question until his body demonstrates otherwise. Also, his surroundings are a bit different than the years spent with Tracy McGrady, a tandem wrecked by injuries to both players.

Tony Parker (Spurs): It's a contract year for Parker, and therefore, risky to say he's headed for a spill. But it's also undeniable that his numbers fell across the board last season. And would you say, without hesitation, that this is the same Parker of two seasons ago, when he posted career highs of 22.0 points and 6.9 assists a game? If Parker were still on top of his game, would the Spurs think about listening to offers for him (as they supposedly did this summer)? Or wait before giving him an extension? Parker is certainly not old (only 28) or in his twilight (he's one of the top five or six point guards), but perhaps not as dangerous as before. With George Hill hungry for playing time (and eventually, money), Parker has every reason to turn back the clock.

Baron Davis (Clippers): In two seasons with the Clippers, Davis has shot 39 percent and averaged 15 points a game. That's not the kind of production the Clippers thought they'd get after handing him the big bucks. Just the same, Davis thought he'd be playing with Elton Brand. Regardless, something's seems amiss in this marriage, at least so far. The Clippers can only hope Davis is motivated by a lineup that welcomes Blake Griffin.

J.R. Smith (Nuggets): Great skills, fragile maturity. Those warring factions have kept Smith from his true potential. One episode is usually followed by another with Smith, who can't seem to shake drama. He averaged 15.4 points a game last season, the highest of his career, and was a legit sixth-man candidate. Then he followed it up with a scuffle this summer. He's in a contract year, but can money set him straight?

Kevin Garnett (Celtics): KG managed to ignore body aches and the persistent pull of gravity to come up big in spurts during the playoffs and The Finals. But anyone can plainly see KG is slowly regressing from All-Star level. He still has the will and the smarts to outplay most big men, but is exposed over the season and playoffs. At this point, the days of KG getting 20 points, 10 rebounds and two blocks a night are likely gone.

Lamar Odom (Lakers): His shooting percentage and scoring average has dipped the last three years, and he seemed noticeably average during the championship run. Odom still has value to the Lakers as a rebounder, but the rest of his game has faltered. Once the Lakers cease winning championships, his weaknesses will become magnified. And that could happen this season.

Mo Williams (Cavaliers): Does he take on added importance and responsibility with LeBon James gone? Or does the absence of LeBron, who opened lanes and gave teammates open looks, mean fewer easy baskets for Mo? Suspect the latter. Williams must create his own chances now, and also feed Anderson Varejao and Antawn Jamison because, for the most part, LeBron was Cleveland's point guard. Now, it's Mo's "team," so to speak.

Elton Brand (Sixers): For the fourth straight year, Brand's scoring average dropped (from 24.7 in 2005-06 to 13.1 last season) along with his rebounding (once double-figures, then 6.1 rebounds a game last season). He blamed the system, which will be changed by new coach Doug Collins, whose priority is making Brand a top-10 power forward again. Maybe Brand was a victim of bad coaching the last few years. Or perhaps Brand, who'll turn 32 this season, is past his prime. With three years left on a roughly $16 million-a-season contract, Brand carries a hefty price as a second or third option.


Riley keeps plugging along as Warriors iron out their future

Larry Riley
Larry Riley is interested in staying put as the Warriors' GM ... if that's what the new management wants.

Larry Riley isn't interested in a conversation about his job status. Sure, Riley wants to stay on as Warriors general manager through the upcoming ownership swap, but campaigning or justifying his work isn't his style. A humble and straight shooter, Riley prefers to do his job. Not talk about it.

"I'm just going to do my job until it's over," he told NBA.com this week.

That's fine. Others are doing the talking for him.

A number of columns in the Bay Area this summer have praised the job done by Riley to reposition Golden State for this season and in those to come. The Warriors have undergone a personality shift by beefing up the roster, while adding financial flexibility.

They've done so in a climate of uncertainty, as the franchise waits for its new owners to assume control. A group led by Celtics minority owner Joe Lacob and Mandalay Entertainment CEO Peter Guber reached an agreement to buy the Warriors on July 15. League approval is expected to take 60-90 days, meaning it could be mid-October before the issue is resolved.

That's two weeks before the start of the regular season. Not exactly the optimum time to make wholesale changes like firing your GM and coach. That would appear to bode well for both Riley and coach Don Nelson.

Riley, especially. As Nellie hangs in an odd limbo as the league's all-time wins leader, Riley continues to win support. Riley freely admits all that Nellie has done for him through the years, including bringing him to Golden State as an assistant coach four years ago.

The Don hated losing Riles to the front office as assistant GM in 2008. Many close observers speculated that Nellie would lose the stomach for coaching -- again -- without his trusted confidante on the road. The Warriors were losing. Nellie's misery needs company, Bud Light and cigars. Riley shared in all three.

Riley's worth to the bench is one thing. His value since moving upstairs should mean a gig through the Warriors' next coaching change, whenever that may happen. The Warriors haven't enjoyed an offseason of Miami proportions, but it's energized the fan base and started to balance the roster.

David Lee is on board, giving the Warriors a legit power forward who averaged about 20 points and 12 rebounds last season. Lee, 27, was acquired in a sign-and-trade that cost Golden State former lottery pick Anthony Randolph.

Riley understood the risk in giving up on Randolph, a 6-foot-11 jumping jack who's only 21. He stands by the decision, which was his.

"I made the evaluation and decided that's the way I wanted to go," he said.

Riley made the deal, which included signing Lee to an $80 million contract, with the full blessing of current owner Chris Cohen. Riley hasn't been handcuffed by Cohen or hesitant to pull off a deal that the new owners might second guess.

Riley is doing his job until someone tells him not to. Until that day comes, he's looking for ways to improve. Twice this summer he sent assistant Stephen Silas to work with Monta Ellis in Jackson, Miss. Assistant Keith Smart was dispatched to Latvia to tutor Andris Biedrins.

"I don't know how far we can go, but I know we're going to be better," Riley said.

Lee's addition gives Golden State potentially three frontline players along with Stephen Curry and Ellis. The Warriors also signed Dorell Wright to shore up the small forward position and traded for guard Charlie Bell.

"I like the way our locker room looks right now," Riley said. "I feel like we've changed the team and we've added some dimensions we didn't have previously."

That chiefly being rebounding and toughness. There were losses this summer, mainly Anthony Morrow and C.J. Watson. But Riley isn't done dealing. Another veteran presence to the bench is a priority, with free agent Louis Amundson being a top target.

There's also $14 million in expiring contracts -- a sizable asset come February. And then there's Carmelo Anthony. Reports last week that listed Golden State as a possible destination Melo. If the Nuggets do decide to field offers for Anthony, expect the Warriors to be aggressive.

"We are going to look for ways to improve our team," Riley said.

As for Nellie, he wants to finish out his Golden State contract. He's got a year left and has remained engaged -- to the point Nellie remains engaged -- in the team's offseason activities. Nelson wasn't part of the Draft, by design, but did attend Summer League team in Las Vegas to evaluate the team's prospects.

Nellie repeatedly says he "knows nothing" when it comes to his future with Golden State's new owners. It's probably best to keep it that way. Riley is Nellie's best ally if a case is made for a less complicated coaching transition to take place after the season.

Riley's voice has been heard for a while now. No reason that shouldn't continue.


Turkoglu helps Turkey rally past France

ISTANBUL (AP) -- Turkey used a 21-4 run spanning the second and third quarters on Sunday to eliminate France from the basketball world championship with a 95-77 win.

Phoenix Suns forward Hedo Turkoglu scored 20 points and Sinan Guler added 17 for Turkey, which played its first tournament game in the new Sinan Erdem Dome. A nearly capacity crowd of 15,000 -- including 22 members of Turkey's national football squad sitting courtside -- watched the home team make shoot 35 of 55 from the field in the round of 16 game.

Turkey's reward is to play Slovenia on Wednesday in the quarterfinals.

"Everybody knows the fans in Turkey are loud," France's Boris Diaw said. The red-clad masses didn't disappoint in this one, constantly cheering their team from before the tipoff through Guler's layup at about three minutes left in the first half to put Turkey up 32-24.

Turkoglu, who more than doubled his points-per-game average from Turkey's five preliminary round wins, then sparked the decisive run as he flashed the same point forward skills that helped propel his former NBA team, the Orlando Magic, into the 2009 NBA Finals.

He drove past Diaw and whipped a pass over Ali Traore to a diving Oguz Savas for a layup. Savas was fouled on the shot and made the free throw. On Turkey's next possession, Turkoglu drove around France's defense again, this time for a layup of his own.

"We did make mistakes, especially on defense. We missed our defensive rotations two or three times and gave them easy layups," French coach Vincent Collet said.

The Turks took a 43-28 into halftime, then scored ten straight points - including back-to-back Turkoglu threes - to open up the second half.

"At this time it was almost over," Collet said.

About the only bad news for the Turks came with 5:13 left in the third, when guard Kerem Tunceri apparently hurt his right foot in a collsion with Nando de Colo and limped off the court with help from teammates.

By the end of the third quarter, the game had taken on more the feeling of a fiesta than competition. The Turkish players slapped hands, chest bumped and smiled as they went to the bench for the break, and the crowd chanted and did the wave. Not even two consecutive Batum dunks to close the gap to 71-49 early in the fourth quarter stopped their singing.

Turkey made nine of 19 three-pointers, while France made 12 of 24, but scored ten fewer field goals.

Diaw, who plays for the Charlotte Bobcats, scored 21 points. De Colo added 15 for France, which had started strong in the preliminary round with three straight wins but fell to its group's fourth-seeded spot after losing its last two games. Collett said he wished France could have played other teams from Turkey's preliminary round group.

"It would have been better to play Russia or Greece, but not Turkey this year. Not this Turkey especially," Collett said.

Slovenia trounces Australia 87-58 at Worlds

ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) -- Jaka Lokovic scored 19 points and Slovenia hit 16 of 33 3-pointers to eliminate Australia 87-58 Sunday in the round of 16 at the World Championship.

Lokovic's corner 3-pointer in the game's opening seconds sparked a 12-0 run and Slovenia never looked back. Primoz Brezec of the Milwaukee Bucks had 12 points and Goran Dragic added 10 points and eight assists for Slovenia.

Slovenia's guards cut into Australia's interior defense all game for easy looks or passes to wide-open perimeter shooters.

``We did a poor job of getting to their 3-point shooters,'' Australian coach Brett Brown said. ``We pride ourselves for playing hard, tough defense. We don't have great athletes, we aren't very quick.''

Australia didn't score until Joseph Ingles' layup 4 1/2 minutes into the game. Australia's 6-foot-6 Brad Newley blocked 6-10 center Gaspar Vidmar's two-handed dunk from behind as time ran out in the first quarter with Slovenia leading 16-8.

``We chased the whole game, defensively, offensively from start to finish,'' Brown said.

Lakovic led Slovenia with 11 points in the first half as Slovenia hit 8 of 17 3s.

``Our tactic was to shoot a lot from 3-point because the Australia defense was playing very tight'' inside, Slovenian coach Mehmed Becirovic said.

The Australians, meanwhile, couldn't get on track. When Patrick Mills of the Portland Trail Blazers threw up an airball with seconds left in the half it was the seventh miss of seven 3-point attempts for the Boomers in the half. Australia made only 18 of 58 from the field for the game.

Ingles and Mills had 13 apiece for Australia.

Slovenia made 5 of 8 three-pointers in the third quarter to build a 71-45 lead. Lakovic and guards Sani Becirovic and Dragic continued to carve into the Australia's defense. Slovenia finished with 18 assists to five for Australia.

``There's not much to say when you look at these stat sheets,'' Australia forward Matthew Nielson said.

Navarro scores 22 as Spain eliminates Greece

ISTANBUL (AP) -- Juan Carlos Navarro scored 22 points for Spain in an 80-72 victory that eliminated Greece from the basketball World Championships on Saturday.

The Spaniards made 8 of 18 3-pointers and used a 13-3 run in the fourth quarter to push ahead during the game in the round of 16.

Greece closed within 72-68 on Vasileios Spanoulis' layup with 1:01 left in the game, but Ricky Rubio answered with two free throws.

Rudy Fernandez of the Portland Trailblazers scored 14 for Spain.

Dimitrios Dimantidis and Nikolaos Zisis each had 16 points for the Greeks, which has lost to Spain seven straight times. Sofoklis Schortsanitis added 13 points.

Game comes down to free throws as Serbia nips Croatia

ISTANBUL (AP) -- Oklahoma City Thunder center Nenad Krstic had 16 points and Aleksander Rasic scored five points in the last 21 seconds to help Serbia edge Croatia 73-72 in the round of 16 at the basketball world championship Saturday.

Croatian guard Marko Popovic made two free throws with 5 seconds left to tie the game at 72, but Rasic was fouled by Davor Kus as he attempted a shot with 1 second left.

Rasic made a free throw and Croatia was eliminated when Popovic's full-court shot fell short as time expired.

"The game was very, very tough this night,'' Serbia coach Dusan Ivkovic said. "It was necessary to play 40 minutes just to beat a very good team like Croatia.''

Rasic finished with 15 points for Serbia. Popovic led Croatia with 21 points, and Roko-Leni Ukic and Marko Banic 10 apiece.

"I'm not satisfied that we have made just the round of eight,'' Ivkovic added.

Croatia was 5 of 24 on 3-point attempts, while Serbia hit 5 of 15.

Serbia made eight of its first eleven field goals in the first major international basketball game between the Balkan neighbors who fought a war in the early 1990s. But Croatia outrebounded Serbia 10-2 and took a 27-19 lead going into the second quarter.

Serbia narrowed the gap to 34-36 at halftime, and in the third quarter the teams traded the lead eleven times.

Serbia took a 65-57 advantage with three minutes left in the game, but Popovic had seven points down the stretch to lead Croatia back.

After Popovic missed his last attempt, he slid into the opposing bench, and laid still, face down, as the Serbs celebrated. Serbian coaches helped him stand.

"You can't be happy when you lose like this,'' Croatia coach Josip Vrankovic said. "It's a really hard game, but what can we do?''

Bucks sign second-round draft pick Hobson

MILWAUKEE (AP) -- The Milwaukee Bucks have signed second-round draft pick Darington Hobson.

The 6-foot-7, 210-pound junior was taken 37th overall out of New Mexico in this year's draft.

Terms were not disclosed when the signing was announced Friday.

Hobson averaged 16.4 points, 8.8 rebounds and 3.6 assists over three college seasons, the first two at Eastern Utah. Last season at New Mexico, Hobson averaged career-highs in rebounds (9.3) and assists (4.6) while scoring 15.9 points and shooting a career-best 36.1 percent from 3-point range (39-108).

Hobson was the Mountain West Conference's Newcomer of the Year and Player of the Year. He was also named a Third Team All-American by The Associated Press.

Hawks beef up frontline, add veteran center Thomas

ATLANTA (AP) -- The Atlanta Hawks have signed free agent center Etan Thomas to add bulk in the frontcourt.

The 6-foot-10 Thomas spent most of his career with the Washington Wizards but finished last season with Oklahoma City. He's averaged 5.8 point and 4.8 rebounds per game over his eight-year career, which includes 74 starts.

Hawks coach Larry Drew says Thomas will add veteran leadership and physical toughness.

Terms of the contract were not released.

Penney scores 25 to guide New Zealand into next round

IZMIR, Turkey (AP) -- Kirk Penney scored 25 points to help New Zealand surge into the knockout round of the basketball world championships with an 82-70 win over France on Thursday.

New Zealand has won three straight games after losing its first two to clinch third place in Group D. They will face Russia on Monday.

Mika Vukona finnished with 15 points for New Zealand, which built a 39-25 halftime lead by hitting 8 of 17 3-point attempts.

Yannick Bokolo had 13 points and Nando de Colo added 10 for France, which finished fourth after losing its last two games and will face Turkey on Sunday.

Germany breezes past Jordan in final FIBA game for both

KAYSERI, Turkey (AP) -- Tibor Pleiss scored 23 points to give Germany a 91-73 win over Jordan on Thursday in a match between two eliminated teams at the basketball world championship.

Lucca Staiger had 16 points and Jan Jagla 14 for Germany (2-3), which finished fifth in Group A.

Osama Daghles had 22 points for Jordan (0-5).

Varejao key as Brazil clinches third place in Group B

ISTANBUL (AP) -- Marcelo Machado scored 18 points, Anderson Varejao grabbed 12 rebounds in his longest stint at the world championship, and Brazil clinched third place in Group B with a 92-74 victory over Croatia on Thursday.

Brazil (3-2) bounced back from a pair of narrow losses to earn a meeting with South American rival Argentina on Tuesday. Brazil coach Ruben Magnano guided the Argentines to the 2004 Olympic gold medal.

Leandro Barbosa added 17 points and Alex Garcia 15 for the Brazilians, who had lost by two the United States and by three to Slovenia in their last two outings. They took control by hitting 7-of-10 shots in the second quarter, ensuring they wouldn't have another one go to the wire.

Varejao, who missed the first three games while recovering from a sprained right ankle, started and played 24 minutes Thursday, providing the usual energy on the backboards that he gives the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Marko Popovic scored 15 points for Croatia (2-3), which will play Group A champion Serbia on Saturday.

Turkey stays undefeated, wallops China by 47 points

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -- Oguz Savas scored 20 points as Turkey beat China 87-40 on Thursday in its final group game at the world championship.

Turkey, which had already won Group C, had a 20-0 scoring run to lead 39-13 at the break. Omer Asik's slam dunk gave Turkey a 41-point lead in the final seconds of the third quarter. Semih Erden widened the gap to 47 points with 50 seconds to go in the game.

Turkey (5-0) plays fourth-place New Zealand of Group D in the knockout stage in Istanbul.

China (1-4) reached the next round in Istanbul on points differential ahead of Ivory Coast and Puerto Rico. Russia (4-1) finished second and Greece (3-2) third.

Monday, June 21, 2010

Welcome to the biggest summer in NBA history (or maybe not)

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New Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov is poised to make a big splash this summer.

Now that a champion has been crowned, we make a natural transition to the very next season, a more important season, and reveal the team best equipped to navigate through this season.

We go from the Lakers to ... the Nets?

Yes. The Nets. A team with both a high pick in the Draft and money to spend on the most coveted free-agent class in history. In what's shaping up as potentially the craziest two weeks (or three or four or even longer) in recent offseason memory, the Nets are No. 1. And yes, we already checked: The last time "Nets" and "No. 1" appeared together was when Julius Erving and "Super John" Williamson suited up.

This doesn't mean the Nets will be declared the winner of NBA Summer 2010. Just that they, more than any team, are what the summer will be all about: drafting, signing and trading on the fly. Remaking your team, basically, if you have the tools, the guts, the smarts and, of course, the money to spend.

We could see anything happen in the next month. It could be thrilling, or it could be mild. The balance of power in the league could shift or just tilt slightly. Superstars could change addresses or stay put. Some teams will be flushed with funds and cut checks, others will cite the economy and hold tight.

The Draft and the start of the free-agent signing period will be separated by only 10 days. Expect another 10 days of recruiting, where in some cases teams and the cities they represent will conspire to make something happen. And then the signing will start in earnest.

You need a guidebook to make it through. Or maybe just an examination of the key principals involved:

LeBron

He will temporarily replace Will Smith as the king of summer blockbusters. Along with Shaquille O'Neal and Tim Duncan, he's the best free-agent catch of the last decade-and-a-half. Only difference is neither Shaq nor Duncan appeared on Larry King to talk about it. Nor did they have the back of their hand kissed by the Knicks, which will happen at 12:01 a.m. come July 1 for LeBron. If he re-signs in Cleveland, then it's officially a boring summer. If he leaves, drama. Everyone will see what he does, then react. In the free-agent game. His domino will cause all others to fall.

The New York Knicks

They did the right thing by clearing cap room for two years and putting themselves in position to buy somebody. Even if they get nobody. The big mistake was passing on Brandon Jennings in last summer's Draft and blowing a chance to strengthen their case with LeBron and other free agents. Having celebrities beg on their behalf will only go so far. The Knicks better not overpay for Carlos Boozer if all the A-listers turn them down. There is a chance they might be forced to wait for Carmelo Anthony in 2011.

John Wall

The 19-year-old will be asked to save the Wizards. The last man who arrived in Washington with a bigger burden was Obama. Wall is a flashy player with NCAA cred who will be an instant gate attraction initially. He will either push Gilbert Arenas out the door or convince the Wizards that both can co-exist together in the backcourt. Finally, he's fully expected to be a better No. 1 overall pick than the Wizards' last, Kwame Brown.

The Chicago Bulls

It's the best destination for a franchise free agent, based on talent and available money. The team has much to sell: big city, Derrick Rose, Joakim Noah. The only drawback: Michael Jordan played here. They might swing a sign-and-trade involving Kirk Hinrich and/or Luol Deng. They would become an instant championship contender with an A-list free agent. If they come up dry, they'd be just another team. The Bulls must either sign a free agent or add a solid starter before it's time to pay Rose and Noah.

Pat Riley

The Heat must convince Wade to stay in Miami and either Chris Bosh or LeBron or Joe Johnson or Amar'e Stoudemire to join. Miami must decide what to do with Michael "Super Cool" Beasley; is he a keeper or better off somewhere else? They deliver big this summer -- like in 2004, when Shaq was heisted from the Lakers -- and another championship might not be far behind.

Chris Bosh

He's widely assumed to be the FAMLTG: Free Agent Most Likely To Go. It is no secret that he loves Toronto, but hates his team. He might be better off as the No. 2 player on a team, rather than the hoss. He never took the Raptors anywhere special during his time, but at least one suitor will ignore that. Bosh will probably get max money although there's no consensus that he's worth it. Not sure if he was yanking chain or not, but did ask fans their opinion on what he should do.

Collective bargaining

It's the Elephant in the room. It has everybody but the Knicks scared to death about what the next labor agreement might bring, or might not bring. Teams are wisely expecting the worst and therefore staying financially flexible. The uneasy dance between players and owners might be the primary reason why some free agents will not see anything more lucrative than the mid-level paycheck.

DeMarcus Cousins

The next superb big man, or team headache? Lottery teams are still trying to decide which is the truth. Nobody wants to be the one who passes on him and nobody wants to be forced to take him. He has wonderful hands and touch around the basket. His maturity is in question, yet his upside is so enticing. Sounds like he's destined to be a Clipper.

Gordon Hayward

Does the half-court shot at the buzzer fall in his next lifetime, here in the NBA? He became famous for carrying Butler to the title game against Duke, in a real-life Hoosiers moment, and nearly making the heroic game-winner. However, was hardly a bold-faced name on the scouting and Draft charts before the Tourney. He could turn into a one-hit wonder, or keep the Cinderella sneakers on for 10 more years.

Joe Johnson

He's probably not cut out for the Hawks, considering he insulted the fans during an uninspired playoff run. He's a very good scorer who's respected around the league, but not a game-changer. Johnson wants max money, but lacks max charisma or max credentials. He's the best player on the second-tier free-agent level, and could be a considerable help in Chicago or Miami or New York should he become teammates with a first-tier free agent.

Dan Gilbert

The point man in the LeBron Sweepstakes. He could see his franchise's value drop as much as $100 million should LeBron pack and flee Cleveland. The Cavs' owner took it upon himself to dump Mike Brown and part ways with Danny Ferry, two key figures in the Cavs front office. Has he turned the keys to the club over to LeBron? He says no, but July 1 will tell.

Mikhail Prokhorov

The billionaire Nets owner wants to make a big splash. He must first do it in Newark. He came up with the cash to hire Avery Johnson. If free agents shun New Jersey, then Rutgers might draw more fans next season than Nets. With a savvy hand, could make the franchise a winner in time for the move to Brooklyn. Or Nets will simply get lost in a sea of Knick fans.


These questions matter most during offseason limbo period

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Free agents like Dwyane Wade (right) and Joe Johnson could reshape the NBA landscape this summer.

Almost no one remembers the Weimar Republic. Or Gerald Ford. Or the Gemini Space Program. Or 1980s music. (Trust me. I came of age in the '80s. People remember disco, even though they claim they hated it, and they remember the emergence of grunge and rap, and hip hop, but generic, Huey Lewis and the News Heart of Rock and Roll '80s music? I defy you.)

These are all examples of bridges, of people and times that were the halftime act between great or infamous periods in time. They got you from Point A to Point B in history, but they hold little or no historical significance of their own -- or, at least, history that anyone who's not a German studies major can recall.

We are at such a period in NBA history.

We are just coming off one of the great Finals in recent history, between the league's two most celebrated teams, a championship series that produced the highest TV ratings in 12 years, and an exciting if not well played seven-game classic. We are 10 days away from the start of the most anticipated free-agent negotiating period in league history, with a half-dozen of the NBA's biggest stars all becoming free agents, able to change the landscape of the league with a single nod of the head -- or nods, if they decide to go somewhere together.

And this next week and a half?

The von Hinderburg Era.

We know that what we've just gone through was something big, and that something even bigger is on the horizon. We are in a holding pattern, a waiting room, stuck on the telephone, on hold for the next 240 or so hours.

So, where are we now? What are the questions that will begin to be answered Thursday night in New York with the Draft, where some teams will begin to fill in the blanks, and others will keep their powder dry for another week?

Here are 10 questions that are unanswerable now, in Huey Lewis' NBA, but whose answers will become very clear around Independence Day.

1) Can the Lakers three-peat?

Yes, if Phil Jackson comes back. We should know the answer by Friday; Jackson reiterated after Game 7 that he would take about a week to decide whether he wants to return to L.A. next season. Even if that means a pay cut, as has been rumored for weeks, with owner Jerry Buss unwilling to shell out another $12 million -- even for a guy that now has won the Finals 11 times in 13 tries.

Kobe Bryant said he's been begging Jackson to give it another go, but Jackson has a lot of issues to sort through. More than one source indicated during The Finals that Jackson grew quite weary this season keeping Ron Artest in the fold, watching Artest struggle mightily in the Triangle, begging him not to hoist ill-advised threes. Artest even copped to it in the Lakers' locker room after Game 7: "my coach didn't want me to shoot it!,", he squealed after making the biggest shot of his life, a 3-pointer with a minute left that kept the Lakers' lead at six points and just about ended Boston's rally hopes.

Even if the Lakers opted to move Artest, or Lamar Odom, or don't keep Jordan Farmar or Luke Walton off the bench, as long as they have Bryant and Pau Gasol and Andrew Bynum and Derek Fisher, the roster isn't the issue. The head coach is.

2) Can the Cavaliers put a representative team on the court without LeBron James?

Boy, it's hard to see a way out of that one. But it's possible.

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J.J. Hickson (left) and Mo Williams would be two of the Cavs' cogs if Cleveland ends up LeBron-less.

It's conceivable that Cleveland could find takers for all of the one-year or partially guaranteed contracts on its books for '10-'11, a list including Anthony Parker, Sebastian Telfair, Leon Powe and Delonte West (only $500,000 of his $4.2 million for next year is guaranteed if he's waived by August 2). That would clear $10 million off of Cleveland's cap total. But the Cavs would have to renounce their rights to LeBron and Shaquille O'Neal to get their respective eight-figure cap holds off the books, and they would certainly do that if it became clear to them that James was bolting (it would seem highly unlikely a team with enough room to offer James a max deal would then agree to a sign-and-trade deal with Cleveland, since that would likely result in that team having to sacrifice several players to the Cavs to make the numbers work -- which would defeat the whole idea of bringing James aboard).

If all that happened, Cleveland would have a little bit more than $38 million committed to six players: Antawn Jamison, Mo Williams, Anderson Varejao, Jamario Moon, Daniel Gibson and J.J. Hickson. But you can't go into a season with six players, obviously; you need a minimum of 12 players under contract. So even though Cleveland would technically have enough money under the cap to go after a max player, a significant portion of that room would have to go toward minimum contracts for enough players to be in compliance with league rules, or second-round draft picks, assuming the Cavs have no desire to trade into the first round by Thursday and thus have to pay guaranteed first-round money to someone.

There's the skeleton of a reasonable competitive starting unit in Williams, Jamison and Hickson. But there's certainly no one that causes opponents to stay up nights.

3) Who would coach the Celtics if Doc Rivers takes a year off?

For all the talk about my NBA TV colleague Kevin McHale, why wouldn't Wyc Grousbeck insist that GM Danny Ainge take over? In a time when owners throughout the league are trying to save as much scratch as possible, and are extremely reluctant to pay what coaches have been used to getting in recent years, it's hard to see a scenario where the Celtics would lock themselves in for three or four years of paying top (or, close to top) dollar for a coach presiding over an aging roster that everyone acknowledges is hard to handle. What big-name coach would take $2 million or so per year for that?

So, Ainge, who has experience as a head coach, knows the quirks of his personnel better than anyone on the outside possibly could and wouldn't break the bank if he added bench duties to his management portfolio.

4) How do the Pistons rebuild their frontcourt?

They're taking a look at Baylor forward Ekpe Udoh and Georgetown forward Greg Monroe in the final days before Thursday, and while that doesn't mean for certain that they're taking one of those bigs with the seventh pick in the first round, it would seem odd to waste precious time before the Draft looking at two guys you have no intention of selecting. So the guess here is that if the Warriors, picking sixth, take Monroe -- who they gushed over after his workout this weekend -- the Pistons would take Udoh. If Golden State is throwing up a smokescreen to get Detroit, the Clippers (picking eighth) or Utah (ninth) to try and move up to take Monroe, the Pistons may not bite and just take Udoh, whom they know very well from his first two years at the University of Michigan before he transferred to Baylor.

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Trading Tayshaun Prince is one way the Pistons might go to beef up their frontcourt.

Failing that, it would be a shock if Detroit didn't move Tayshaun Prince and his expiring contract soon after July as part of a package to get the Pistons the size (Carlos Boozer?) they need.

5) Do the Clippers need yet another young player on their roster?

No, which is why they're trying to move the eighth pick as we speak, which would clear even more cap room for L.A.'s still-active fantasy that it can get James to come to Tinseltown.

6) Will the Wizards do more than just draft John Wall? They have major cap room.

They do, but new owner Ted Leonsis is loath to go after big-ticket free agents, seeing how poorly that worked for him early in his stewardship of the NHL's Capitals (if you want to see him jump, sneak up behind him and yell "Jagr!" at the top of your lungs). Leonsis has instructed management that he wants to build through the Draft, which is why Washington, which already has three of the top 35 picks Thursday, is looking for another pick. There are some who would love to use that extra pick, likely another second-rounder, on DaSean Butler, the dynamic West Virginia forward who tore his ACL in the Final Four and is hard at work rehabbing to be ready for next season.

7) What does Riles have in his back pocket?

All I know is that every time he's had major cap room, or time to come up with a plan, he's found big-time talent: Alonzo Mourning (trade with Charlotte in 1995), Tim Hardaway and Juwan Howard (1996, though Howard had to go back to Washington after the league accused Riles of breaking cap rules to come up with the loot for Howard's offer), and Shaq (trade with the Lakers in 2004). Miami's been too quiet for any other team not to have the heebie-jeebies.

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Pat Riley has a history of coming through with a big move when he has the resources.

8) Who is the player that will almost certainly be traded on Draft night?

Minnesota forward Ryan Gomes. His 2010-11 salary of $4.23 million is only guaranteed for $1 million for next season, so a team that acquires him on June 24 can save $3.23 million in cap room by July 1 if he's released. You can't find that kind of savings anywhere east of your area Target on President's Day. It may well wind up that Gomes is traded on Thursday, released on Monday and re-signed by Minnesota to a new contract later in the summer.

9) You still think the 76ers may not take Evan Turner?

Not as much as a week ago. Even though last week's trade of Samuel Dalembert for Spencer Hawes and Andres Nocioni would clear a path for Philly to draft Georgia Tech forward Derrick Favors, I'm hearing that Doug Collins really is impressed with Turner, the Ohio State guard. It's just too easy to plug Turner in at shooting guard where he and Jrue Holliday can grow together as a young, improving backcourt, leave Andre Iguodala at small forward and Elton Brand at power forward, with either Mareese Speights or Hawes at center. The Sixers' major improvement next season won't come through the Draft, and certainly not through free agency, but with Collins on the bench.

10) Didn't you say there would be 10 questions?

Yes, I did. But it's 5:07 a.m. My brain is congealing into a puddle. Would you settle for nine? Unless someone has a question about the Von Papen Deal.

Dribbles

Politics, Chris Dudley recalls, rarely came up in an NBA locker room when he was a player.

"Really, guys would talk about cash," Dudley said on the phone last week. "They were shocked, especially the rookies when they got that first paycheck. Politically, it wasn't something that was a major source. When (President) Clinton had his issues it was definitely a big topic, but they would also have conversations. I remember talking to Terry Porter about how do we get schools to do a better job? How do we help to break the cycle in the African-American community? They weren't necessarily Republican-Democrat conversations; they were more life conversations. How do we do better?"

It is a question the 45-year-old Dudley is now trying to answer for an entire state. The 16-year veteran, who played for five teams as a shot-blocking, lane-clogging, free throw-butchering big man, is a neophyte politician, but he's started off with a bang, winning the Republican nomination for governor in his native Oregon in his first foray into statewide politics.

Dudley beat out two other major challengers and got 40 percent of the Republican vote in the May 19 primary, setting up a November showdown with Democratic candidate and former governor John Kitzhaber to succeed incumbent Gov. Ted Kulongoski, who is leaving office early next year after serving two terms, as required by state law.

Until last year, Dudley was safely ensconsed in his post-playing life. His NBA career, which included becoming secretary of the players' union, featured stops in Cleveland, New Jersey, Portland, New York and Phoenix, as a physical 6-foot-11 center with good timing who developed a terrible hitch at the free throw line that got so bad he often drew opponents into the lane before he let go of the ball.

(I covered a 1989 game when Dudley missed five free throws in one painful trip to the line -- he missed the first, missed the second, got a third because of a lane violation, missed that, got a fourth because of another lane violation, missed that, then missed the fifth after a third lane violation.)

He had started the Chris Dudley Foundation in 1998 to help fellow diabetics like himself (he was diagnosed in high school and played with the disease in the NBA without incident) and had put his economics degree from Yale to good use as a wealth management partner in his native Lake Oswego, Oregon. In Lake Oswego, he volunteered as a coach at the local high school, which had a rising star forward named Kevin Love in 2006.

"I would just say that Chris is an amazing human being," Love, now the Timberwolves' rising star forward, texted late Sunday night. "Comes from a great area and a great family. He has impacted and influenced my life and other people's lives from a basketball perspective. But now he is impacting people on an even greater level."

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Ex-NBA center Chris Dudley aims to make a big impact in politics.

Indeed, politics called to Dudley from a distance. His grandfather, Guilford Dudley, was the U.S. ambassador to Denmark during the Nixon and Ford administrations in the 1970s. Chris Dudley had twice testified before Congress about diabetes research and funding. And he'd gotten increasingly frustrated, he said, with the state of affairs in Oregon. After raising more than $300,000 in donations for a speculative political committee, Dudley decided to think big instead of starting out on a city council or in a mayor's office.

"Nonprofits do great, great work, but you realize how much is done by government," Dudley said. "Governor was kind of something that came up. The more I explored it, the more it made sense. Our state is at a critical juncture and it needs help and needs help now."

Oregon's unemployment rate has hovered above 10 percent for most of the last 18 months, after falling from a high of 11.5 percent in April, 2009, according to recent employment figures. Mass layoffs hurt the state throughout the winter of 2008-09.

Dudley's own political philosophy, he says, evolved from his admiration of several politicans. He eschews specific labels when it comes to his politics, saying that he's planning a campaign that appeals across party lines.

"I guess it comes from Lincoln and the rights of individuals," he said. "A belief in small government, or at least government that's closer to the people. My family's split. Some are Republicans, some are Democrats. I think it really comes back to the fundamental belief of believing in the individual instead of a bigger government ... my inspirations growing up were JFK and Ronald Reagan. Different ends of the political spectrum, and in a lot of ways they were more similar. The bottom line is big ideas and optimism. As a country we can do so much better. That was our generation in a big way."

In seeking the governor's office, Dudley is the latest ex-NBA player who turned to politics after his playing days ended. Bill Bradley, of course, served three terms in the U.S. Senate from New Jersey and sought the Democratic presidential nomination in 2000 after winning championships with the Knicks in 1970 and 1973. Former player Tom McMillan served three terms as a Congressman from Maryland. Hall of Famer Dave Bing followed a very successful business career in Detroit with victory in the mayor's race in 2009. And former Suns All-Star guard Kevin Johnson is in his first term as the mayor of Sacramento.

Dudley has spoken with Johnson -- his former teammate in Cleveland at the beginning of their careers, and in Phoenix near the end -- about the pitfalls and challenges of political life.

"Obviously, we're contemporaries," Dudley said. "K.J. was involved in the non-profit world. I've had mine for 15 years. We've been ... trying to have a positive impact and realizing you can do a lot on the government side. That's probably pretty similar."

Dudley has also gotten help, he says, from his former Trail Blazers teammates like Porter and Jerome Kersey, who retired in the Portland area. NBA commissioner David Stern and deputy commissioner Adam Silver have also provided advice. Former NFL star quarterback Drew Bledsoe, who grew up in nearby Walla Walla, Wash., and relocated to Oregon in retirement, has also helped out, and Dudley was planning to speak with Bradley on the phone late last week.

He had to learn about politics on the run, taking part in 15 debates during the Republican primary season and learning to chop his speeches into 30-second bites. He worked six or seven days a week, crisscrossing the state time and time again to push his message of private-sector job growth. Dudley will have at least two debates with Kitzhaber, who served from 1995-2003.

"We're going to have to deal with spending issues, because we're having real problems," Dudley said. "We're on an unsustainable path. And education and trust. People just don't trust the government right now ... in the state of Oregon, we've had 23 years of one-party rule, and we need to go in a different direction. Things aren't working. We're only leading in unemployment, hunger and homelessness."

Being a pro basketball player was very helpful in helping him understand how a campaign works, Dudley said.

"You start off with the idea of a team, where you're working with people from completely different backgrounds," he said. "On a team you're going to have people from every which-way. In the NBA it's (the goal) to win a championshp; in Oregon it's doing the best for the state. But you have to work within a team structure. I think the discipline from sports is very important. The discipline, the dedication. And I'd also say the idea of beliving in yourself and sort of dreaming big things.

"You have to really believe and have a sense of optimism to be successful in the NBA. Being involved during the labor negotations was helpful as well. That was a good background for me, having those tough negotiations and having that expireince, but also being able to see issues from both sides."

Top O' the World, Ma!

(Final Finals edition)

1) L.A. Lakers (2-0): Who'da thunk it: Ron-Ron was the best player on the floor in Game 7 of the Finals? Incredible.

2) Boston (0-2): Big decisions looming for the Cs, starting with Doc Rivers.

3) Orlando: Can Magic find a young backup point guard with the 29th pick?

4) Phoenix: Search for new GM will not include long-time assistant David Griffin, who is also leaving the organization.

5) Utah: Mehmet Okur (Achilles') may not be ready for training camp, making a big at No. 9 even more likely.

6) Cleveland: Byron Scott to the rescue? Somebody has to right the ship, and fast.

7) Atlanta: Hawks ownership continues to insist that the team is not for sale, only seeking minority investment.

8) San Antonio: Huge news: Tiago Splitter, the Spurs' 2007 first-round pick, may finally come over from Spain next season.

9) Chicago: Thibodeau officially introduced on Wednesday.

10) Oklahoma City: Thunder, at 21st and 26th in the first round, can add to their young nucleus.

11) Denver: If Nugs are talking Ty Lawson for the 10th pick, they must be in love with someone specific.

12) Portland: Kevin Pritchard is going out fighting, saying he's the best man for the job.

13) Dallas: Mavs surely will move up from 50th overall, hoping to find another Roddy Buckets.

14) Milwaukee: Bucks deny making a promise to VCU center Larry Sanders with the 15th pick.

15) Miami: Picked up Mario Chalmers' option ($854,000) without impacting ability to be major free agent players.

16) Charlotte: Hope this works out for Darius Miles. My expectations aren't high.

Nobody Asked Me, But ...

Why does God allow one person to suffer so very, very much?

Rest in peace, Manute.

Words can't express the sorrow that your family and friends and former teammates must be feeling today.

Manute Bol, who'd made helping people in his native Sudan the cause of his life as an NBA player and after his retirement, died Saturday morning n Virginia, the victim of kidney disease and a second disease that had caused his skin to flake off. After looking like he'd turned the corner last week, Bol's condition worsened suddenly, and he died at 47.

"I will never know how he carried on with so many physical problems but I do know that if a man's wealth can be measured by endurance of pain, determination to help the poorest of his friends and family as well as total strangers, and the dignity to carry on against all odds, Manute is the richest man to ever have played in the NBA," wrote John Zogby, the president of Zogby International and a board member of Bol's charity, Sudan Sunrise, on the charity's website Sunday.

There is nothing left to say but to again ask that the NBA family come together now and do something to help Manute's cause and organization (www.sudansunrise.org), which seeks to promote reconciliation between warring religious groups in his native Sudan. Manute was trying to raise money to build 41 schools in Sudan that would teach any children who enter, regardless of their ethnic background or religion.

He needed $18,000 as of last week to complete construction on the first school. That is, literally, nothing to players and coaches who make millions. I will happily donate the first $250 toward reaching the goal of $18,000, but I need help. Here is a link to the donations page of Sudan Sunrise. If you love the NBA or were ever in any way entertained by Manute Bol, whose smile masked his incredible pain and suffering in this world, give. Now.

... And Nobody Asked You, Either

Some folks wear the same glasses as I do. From Thomas Grooms:

Being an African-American, I really enjoyed your writing on the racial changes in Boston, and with the Celtics. I was born and raised in the Roxbury/Dorchester area. I'm now living in South Carolina. But to be an outsider you are correct. I was part of the migration to East Boston in the 1970s and the busing issues security. Been on the receiving end of unfair police misconduct because of my race. I have not been to a Celtics game since 1985, when fans used to yell "I smell a cigar, no its a Ni----". They never acknowledged what [Robert] Parish, [Cedric] Maxwell, Tiny [Archibald] or the late Reggie Lewis did. Reggie Lewis was always a visible Celtic in the inner city ... he would (be there) on Thanksgiving, give out meals to those in need at Northeastern University. He would go there to work out. He never shunned you if you said hello. Though I was not a Celtic organization fan. I did admire, and respect the individual players. I recall how they always made it seem like Larry Bird did everything. But because of the help he had, he was able to do that. If he did not have the players around him. He would have been like Jordan when he 1st came to Chicago. I am happy for the new Celtic staff, and players. And I continue to pray not just in Boston (b)ut all around, that change is coming.

The Celtics' more diverse crowd is just a snapshot of a sliver of progress, I think we'd both agree, Thomas. But it's still progress.

But the Redhead should get his due. From Jon Duke:

birdparish2300.jpg
Memories of the Celtics' Big Three of the 1980s brought out differing viewpoints from readers.

I want to commend you on taking a very difficult issue and very nearly threading the needle on the role of race and the Boston Celtics. However, I do feel you missed, as most of our generation does, the incredible steps made by Red Auerbach and the Celtics of the 1960s in advancing the role of African-Americans in sport, let alone the NBA. Though I am a tad younger than you, I grew up watching the '80s Celtics and couldn't help but notice the racial divide between the Celtics and Lakers. It helped define the fans who rooted for their respective teams, but I also think that it is far too easy of a device in determining the character of the franchise ...

Your article accurately relates that the vast majority of fans follow the view that the Celtics were the "white team" and that belief continued until the arrival of [Paul] Pierce and [Antonie] Walker. My only beef is that while the number of fans who followed the Russell Celtics were minute, the progress made by Red [Auerbach] and that crew is unrivaled in American sport by one franchise ...

My only wish is that there is a fuller discussion of race and the Celtics that admits the race identification of the '80s Celtics, but also celebrates the actions by the team in the '50s and '60s. Certainly there were significant problems with this time period (you correctly note the vile and reprehensible behavior in Russell's bed in 1965), but the same could be said of the treatment of Jackie Robinson and yet the Brooklyn Dodgers and Branch Rickey are celebrated for the progress they brought to baseball.

David, I am by no means an expert on this subject. I'm a 31-year-old white guy from Maine who loves the Celtics and appreciates fine writers like yourself who cover the world of sports. We did not have one African-American in my entire high school, so your experiences far outweigh my own through your travel of various points across the sporting map. I only feel that a reasoned and thoughtful take such as your own on this issue was worthy of my own two cents.

None of us are experts on this, Jon, and you're certainly allowed your opinion. We go by our own experiences in everything. But you are right in pointing out that Auerbach was indeed a pioneer when it came to putting African-American players on the court and believing that Russell was the only person that could succeed him as coach -- and not thinking twice about the implications.

And now, an opposing view. From GW Welsh:

Keep playing the race card David I'm disappointed in your article and your motives. One of the first black coaches in NBA. I'm so sick of this Celtics are racist (stuff) and now the team is all black that makes it ok to like them ... that statement is racist. I'm Native American and give two craps about the color of skin your blood is carried in this is the NBA that got an A in that dept.

Seems like your the one that harbors ill will still "So I rooted. Oh, how I rooted for Ewing, and Mark Jackson, and Mo Cheeks, who led the Knicks to an upset victory on the road to win the series. That it was quiet rooting didn't make it any more ethical, and it's not a memory that makes me especially proud. But that day, I wasn't a sportswriter for The Washington Post; I was a black man in Boston, and you had to choose sides, and I made my choice." Oh and do your research: three out of the five officers were African-American and the guy that eventually got arrested for the robbery looked like Dee Brown.

Shame on you! We love our players and Bill [Russell] is still my favorite he did more than you'll ever do because he isn't hateful. I'm not African-American or Irish-American ... I'm Native American. And if you do your history lessons, all three were hated on everywhere during the early times. If you ask me, you're a racist and it will never change you can't even root for a team with a white player on it but now that it is mostly African-American then its ok, lame and outdated and that, my friend, is scary.

Wow, G-Dub, where to begin? It's racist to point out that Boston had a terrible history when it came to race? The "early times," I guess, stopped around 1989, when Charles Stuart said a black man shot him and killed his wife and black men of every size and shape were stopped and questioned in Mission Hill. Did you not read the part where I said that white sportswriters in Boston were nothing but generous and friendly to me, and that the Celtics were nothing but professional to me, up to and including Red Auerbach? And that things are much, much better now? And where you got the idea that I said I can't root for a team with a white guy on it. ... well, I don't know where you got that. But you're entitled to your opinion. One thing, though: as my friend David Steele wrote so eloquently years ago, race is not a "card" to be played in any "game."

Let's argue about something else. From Kevin Sanders:

Are the Hawks trying to save money with the selection of [Larry] Drew as the coach? This does not seem like an upgrade to [Mike] Woodson and other candidates probably took themselves out of the running due to the compensation. These are not the power moves that I would expect from an organization trying to be in the top six teams in the league.

Maybe they are, but that has nothing to do with Drew's qualifications, Kevin. He's been on an NBA bench as an assistant coach for almost 20 years. And he deserved a chance to succeed or fail on his own, with a good team, instead of being put behind the eight-ball with a terrible squad, as so many first-time coaches are.

As always, send your Finals interrogaries, Draft illuminations and snark to daldridgetnt@gmail.com. If you write it (first and last name, please), and we like it, we just might print it -- though we might also trim it for space reasons. You da men and women.

Playoffs MVP Watch

(6/14/10-6/17/10)

1) Kobe Bryant (2 games: 24.5 ppg,13 rpg, 2.5 apg, .349 FG, .818 FT): Captured his second Finals MVP award with a strong fourth quarter, though he struggled mightily throughout the series and through most of Game 7 to find a shooting rhythm. But Bryant's focus and will, playing through injuries that would have crippled most others without complaint or excuse, was the iron upon which the Lakers built a back-to-back championship season. He now has a leg up on Tim Duncan and Shaq for Player of his Generation, and it's hard to see anyone catching him now that he's in front.

2) Pau Gasol (2 games: 18 ppg, 15.5 rpg, 2.5 bpg, .400 FG, .632 FT): His scoring effectiveness against Boston lessened as the series went on, but Gasol was huge in Game 7, getting on the glass early and often in helping Los Angeles bludgeon the smaller Celtics when it counted. With two NBA titles to now go with his gold medal and MVP award at the 2006 World Championships for Spain, along with a silver with Spain at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, and his 2003 NBA Rookie of the Year award, is it not unreasonable to opine that Gasol is now the most accomplished international basketball player of all time?

3) Rajon Rondo (2 games: 12 ppg, 6.5 rpg, 8 apg, .458 FG, .250 FT): It was fitting that the Celtics' last shot of Game 7 was Rondo missing a 3-pointer, because his inability to consistently shoot from the perimeter was his Achilles' heel against L.A., and the one thing he needs to master in order to make himself unguardable. The Lakers dared him to shoot anywhere beyond the foul line. Otherwise, Rondo had a brilliant postseason and was by far the Celtics' best player. There may be some rebuilding approaching in Boston but it won't involve the C's quicksilver point guard.

4) Paul Pierce (2 games: 15.5 ppg, 7 rpg, 2 apg, .379 FG, 1,000 FT): The Truth only made his mark in one game of the Finals, but was clutch against Miami, Cleveland and Orlando in leading Boston through the playoffs. Will he now void the final year of his contract -- a gargantuan $21 million -- to join the rest of Free Agent NBA? Or can he afford to do that at age 32, with a lockout looming after next season?

5) Ron Artest (2 games: 17.5 ppg, 5.5 rpg, 2.5 spg, .448 FG, .800 FT): You can snicker, but who was bigger in the last two games against Phoenix in the Western Conference finals and throughout The Finals with his lockdown 'D' on Paul Pierce? Who was the only guy in Forum Blue and Gold that didn't play Game 7 like there was a piano on his back? Queensbridge's own Ron-Ron, who hit a monster three with a minute remaining to help clinch the title, and then engaged in hilarity afterward here and here. I have no idea if he was at all coherent during any of it, but God, it was fun to watch.

Dropped out: Ray Allen

By the Numbers

7 -- Number of teams in NBA history that have come back from a 3-2 deficit to win the championship, after the Lakers rallied to win the last two games of the Finals against Boston to capture their 16th franchise title.

$2,000,000 -- Cost of the Lakers' victory parade Monday, which will be picked up by the team.

28,203,000 -- Viewers for Game 7 of the Finals between the Lakers and Celtics, making it the most-viewed Finals game since Game 6 of the1998 championship series between Chicago and Utah, when Michael Jordan won his last championship with the Bulls.

I'm Feelin' ...

1) Look, nobody's told me anything officially yet, but any sentient being that's been paying attention believes Steve Kerr will ultimately wind up back with us at TNT. I hope that's right. Steve was always a pleasure to work with and, like a lot of his management brethren going into the Summer of '10, was under incredible pressure the last two years to keep his team competitive while saving his owner as much money as possible. Working in TV is work, but it's not the same thing. Hopefully he's back annoying Marv and Reggie real soon.

kerr300.jpg
It may not be long before Steve Kerr (left) is back working with TNT's NBA crew again.

2) Nobody wins or loses with more class than Derek Fisher, who also got a fifth ring with the Lakers last week, and continues to make anyone who doubts his postseason abilities look real, real dumb.

3) Ditto Doc Rivers. Selfishly, it would be great if he returned to coach the Celtics next season, but the pull of being there for his son Austin as he navigates the waters of big-time recruiting -- Austin, a rising high school senior in Florida, is considered by many college scouts to be the top shooting guard prospect in the nation -- is strong.

4) Kendrick Perkins sat there for almost half an hour Wednesday, the night after he wrecked his knee and lost a chance to play in Game 7 of the NBA Finals, and answered variations on the same question over and over, with tears in his eyes. One of the gutsiest things you'll ever see.

5) There is hope in the world.

6) Desperation, meet Eliot Ness.

7) TV work is great. Writing is necessary. But nothing's more important to me than being a good father to my two sons and emulating the example that my dad, James, set for me. Happy Father's Day to all the guys who put in a day's/week's/month's/year's/lifetime's toil for no other reason than that it is the right thing to do for their families.

Not Feelin' ...

1) The season is over? We have to wait 17 weeks or so until Opening Night, 2010 (and why do I think Oklahoma City, Los Angeles, Orlando and wherever LeBron winds up will be involved)? Dang.

2) 'Sheed. Don't retire.

3) We missed Javie, Wunderlich, Forte, Palmer and Bavetta during this playoff run. And, frankly, the officiating wasn't as good night in and night out in the postseason without them in some combination.

4) I will never understand why a team winning a sporting event triggers the riot/burn the car/jerk gene in so many people.

5) Probably too much to expect Tiger to win the U.S. Open on Father's Day, right? Karma and all.

Tweet of the Week

NO ONE ... And I mean NO ONE should EVER com par kobe Bryant to my dad an say that is anywhere near close to my dad He's jagging this game
-- Marcus Jordan (@SASBMJ), Thursday, 9:11 p.m., Michael Jordan's youngest son, during the first the first half of Game 7, when Bryant shot just 3 of 13 from the floor and forced several shots against Boston. Bryant rallied with 10 fourth-quarter points to lead the Lakers to an 83-79 victory and the Finals championship, and was named MVP of the series.

They Said it

"He absolutely will try and play next year."
-- Gary Moore, Allen Iverson's longtime personal manager, telling the Associated Press last week that the 35-year-old Iverson, who left the 76ers for good in March after missing several games to deal with his daughter's illness, will try it again next season.

"And I am pleased to say that I am here for life at Michigan State."
-- Michigan State coach Tom Izzo, 55, announcing last week that he was turning down the Cleveland Cavaliers' five-year, $30 million offer to stay in college basketball.

"That's a good question."
-- Happy Walters, the agent for Amare Stoudemire, when I asked who in the Suns' organization would be handling negotiations with him about his client after the decision of former GM Steve Kerr to no longer seek a contract extension of his own.