Monday, January 18, 2010

Brown, Robinson, Wallace to compete in 2010 Sprite Slam Dunk

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Nate Robinson soared over Dwight Howard to win the 2009 Sprite Slam Dunk title.

NEW YORK -- 2009 Sprite Slam Dunk champion Nate Robinson of the New York Knicks will attempt to become the first three-time winner of the competition when he defends his title on NBA All-Star Saturday Night, Feb. 13, at American Airlines Center (8 p.m. ET on TNT) in Dallas. Robinson will compete against the Charlotte Bobcats' Gerald Wallace and the Los Angeles Lakers' Shannon Brown.

The 2010 Sprite Slam Dunk participants were unveiled today at a special event at New York's Pennsylvania Station, where artist Dan Dunn brought each player's image to life in a speed painting display on giant canvases.

2010 SPRITE SLAM DUNK COMPETITORS
Participant Team Pos. Ht. Wt.
Shannon Brown L.A. Lakers G 6-4 205
Gerald Wallace Charlotte F 6-7 220
Nate Robinson New York* G 5-9 180
DeMar DeRozan Toronto** G 6-7 220
Eric Gordon L.A. Clippers** G 6-3 222
* - indicates 2009 winner
** - will compete in the NBA All-Star Dunk-In to determine fourth dunker

The Toronto Raptors' DeMar DeRozan and the Los Angeles Clippers' Eric Gordon will compete in the NBA All-Star Slam Dunk-In, a single-round slam dunk competition that will be held at halftime of the T-Mobile Rookie Challenge & Youth Jam on Friday, Feb. 12. Fans will be able to vote via SMS text message and at NBA.com to determine who will advance to the Sprite Slam Dunk the following night.

In Phoenix last year, Robinson, who also won the event in 2006 in Houston, edged defending champion Dwight Howard of the Orlando Magic, and in the process converted a dunk that became an instant classic. Robinson, who won the 2006 event by dunking over 1986 champ Spud Webb, used Howard as a prop this time around, slamming the ball through the hoop after leaping over the 6-11 center. Robinson's final dunk was a reverse alley-oop off the bounce that he brought down to his knees before stuffing it through.

"From capes and kryptonite to blowing out candles and leaping over legends, Sprite Slam Dunk has produced some of the most creative moments in NBA All-Star history," said Ellen Lucey, director, sports marketing, Coca-Cola North America. "It's only fitting that we reveal this year's dunkers with a spark of creativity as Nate, Gerald and Shannon prepare to wow fans by pushing their performance to new heights in Dallas."

The only back-to-back Slam Dunk champions were Chicago's Michael Jordan (1987, 1988) and the Golden State Warriors' Jason Richardson (2002, 2003). The only other two-time winners were Atlanta's Dominique Wilkins (1985, 1990) and Miami's Harold Minor (1993, 1995).

The two dunkers with the highest first round scores will advance to the final round. The dunker with the lowest total score from the first round will compete first in the final round. Dunks then will alternate until each player has completed two. Time limit rules still apply. In the final round, fan voting polls will open via SMS TXT message and at NBA.com. The combined results from SMS TXT voting and NBA.com will determine the champion.

The Sprite Slam Dunk and T-Mobile Rookie Challenge & Youth Jam are part of NBA All-Star 2010, which also includes the NBA All-Star Slam Dunk-In, Foot Locker Three-Point Shootout; Taco Bell Skills Challenge; Haier Shooting Stars; NBA All-Star Jam Session presented by adidas; and the 59th NBA All-Star Game.

Sprite, the world's leading lemon-lime soft drink, has been the official soft drink of the NBA since 1994 and the title partner of the All-Star Slam Dunk competition since 2003.

Below is a list of previous winners Sprite Slam Dunk winners

SPRITE SLAM DUNK YEAR-BY-YEAR WINNERS

1984 -- Larry Nance, Phoenix
1985 -- Dominique Wilkins, Atlanta
1986 -- Spud Webb, Atlanta
1987 -- Michael Jordan, Chicago
1988 -- Michael Jordan, Chicago
1989 -- Kenny Walker, New York
1990 -- Dominique Wilkins, Atlanta
1991 -- Dee Brown, Boston
1992 -- Cedric Ceballos, Phoenix
1993 -- Harold Miner, Miami
1994 -- Isaiah Rider, Minnesota
1995 -- Harold Miner, Miami
1996 -- Brent Barry, L.A. Clippers
1997 -- Kobe Bryant, L.A. Lakers
2000 -- Vince Carter, Toronto
2001 -- Desmond Mason, Seattle
2002 -- Jason Richardson, Golden State
2003 -- Jason Richardson, Golden State
2004 -- Fred Jones, Indiana
2005 -- Josh Smith, Atlanta
2006 -- Nate Robinson, New York
2007 -- Gerald Green, Boston
2008 -- Dwight Howard, Orlando
2009 -- Nate Robinson, New York


Champs back on top at the midway point

Through Sunday, 593 NBA games are in the books for the 2009-10 season, which means we've got just 22 to go to reach the official midpoint of the season. That will come Wednesday, once eight of the night's 13 games have been completed.

Though it seems like the first half of the season has flown by, we're starting to wish the postseason was almost here. But then we get instant classics like Thursday's Cavs-Jazz game (or either of the other games the Cavs played this week) and we can appreciate the daily thrills of the regular season.

To offer more perspective on how much can go down between now and April 14, here's a look at where things stood exactly one year ago...

• Kevin Garnett had played in 42 of the Celtics' 43 games.
• The Lakers were No. 5 in the Power Rankings.
• Jameer Nelson was healthy and Rafer Alston was a Rocket.
• The Pistons were in fifth place in the East.
• The Thunder had the worst record in the NBA (8-34).
• Trevor Ariza had started just one of the Lakers' 39 games.
• Carmelo Anthony was in the middle of a 10-game absence with a broken hand.
• Quentin Richardson was four trades from being a member of the Heat.

A lot can happen in the next three months. Stay tuned.

• Last Week: West playoff picture gets crowded

Hero Team of the Week: Charlotte (3-0)
Zero Team of the Week: Sacramento (0-3)

High jumps of the week: Charlotte (+5), Indiana (+5), Four teams (+4)
Free falls of the week: Golden State (-4), Five teams (-3)

East vs. West: The West is 131-96 (0.577) in inter-conference games, but the East was 16-10 this week.

Pace: Possessions per 48 minutes (League Rank)
Off: Points scored per 100 possessions (League Rank)
Def: Points allowed per 100 possessions (League Rank)
The league averages through Sunday are 95.4 possessions (per team) per 48 minutes and 104.1 points scored per 100 possessions.

NBA.com's Power Rankings are just one man's opinion and are released every Monday during the season. If you've got an issue with the rankings, or have a question or comment for John Schuhmann, send him an e-mail. You can also follow him on twitter.


TEAM (LAST WEEK) REC. BREAKDOWN
1 L.A. Lakers (2) 31-9 Pace: 96.8 (7), Off: 105.7 (11), Def: 98.4 (1)
Pau Gasol returns and all is right with the Lakers. After Friday's spanking of the Clippers, they're 20-3 with Gasol in uniform (much stronger offensively). This week is big, as they host the Magic on Monday and begin an eight-game trip in Cleveland on Thursday.
2 Cleveland (1) 31-11 Pace: 93.3 (28), Off: 108.1 (6), Def: 100.4 (4)
The Cavs could only watch buzzer-beaters that could have altered the outcome in each of their three games this week. Two of the three went their way, but their defense is getting progressively worse as they head into their rematch with the Lakers.
3 Boston (3) 27-11 Pace: 94.1 (22), Off: 106.7 (9), Def: 98.5 (2)
Rasheed Wallace returns Monday for Dallas and Kevin Garnett is expected back Friday for Portland. But at this point, you just have to hope that the Celtics are healthy by late next week, when they play the Magic, Hawks and Lakers in the span of four days.
4 Portland (5) 25-16 Pace: 90.0 (30), Off: 108.1 (5), Def: 103.6 (14)
After Friday's win over the Magic, the Blazers are 2-0 without Brandon Roy. Their offense has been red hot since the first Roy-less win in San Antonio. Over the last 11 games, they're shooting 50 percent and are scoring 115.6 points per 100 possessions.
5 Atlanta (9) 26-13 Pace: 93.7 (23), Off: 109.0 (2), Def: 103.3 (12)
You know Jamal Crawford was just itching to hit a game-winner for his new team. The Hawks have won five out of six and lead their division for the first time since 1999. They're not shooting well, but are making up for it on the offensive glass.
6 Denver (10) 26-14 Pace: 98.3 (5), Off: 109.0 (3), Def: 104.0 (16)
The Nuggets are healthy and (not coincidentally) playing well. They're now 22-8 with both Carmelo Anthony and Chauncey Billups in uniform, and their defense has been solid (101.5 rating) in the five games since Billups returned from his groin injury.
7 Dallas (4) 26-14 Pace: 94.4 (19), Off: 105.6 (12), Def: 101.9 (9)
The Mavs' defense was their strength for the first two months of the season, but since the Lakers smoked them two weeks ago, the D has been Warrior-esque. They've got a 114.7 rating and have allowed their opponents to shoot 51 percent over the last seven.
8 San Antonio (7) 24-15 Pace: 93.5 (26), Off: 107.8 (7), Def: 101.4 (7)
From beating the Lakers by 20 to scoring a total of 162 points in Charlotte and Memphis, the Spurs are your Jekyll and Hyde team of the week. They may earn that honor again if Gregg Popovich is going to hold Tim Duncan out of more games.
9 Orlando (6) 26-14 Pace: 95.1 (15), Off: 107.1 (8), Def: 100.8 (6)
Vince Carter's return on Friday after a three-game absence was underwhelming (1-for-7 from the field, 1-for-6 from 3-point range) and did nothing to solve the Magic's problems. They allowed the Nuggets and Blazers to shoot 51 percent over the last two games.
10 Oklahoma City (11) 22-18 Pace: 95.0 (16), Off: 103.0 (21), Def: 100.5 (5)
The Thunder are temporarily in ninth place, but the numbers say that if they keep their quality of play at the level it's been, they're a playoff team. Speaking of numbers, Kevin Durant has remained red hot, hitting 14 of his 18 shots against Miami on Saturday.

TEAM (LAST WEEK) REC. BREAKDOWN
11 Phoenix (8) 24-17 Pace: 98.9 (3), Off: 111.1 (1), Def: 108.0 (28)
After starting 0-3 and giving up 125 points to the offensively anemic Bobcats, the Suns will try to salvage their road trip in Memphis on Monday. After winning eight of their first 11 road games, they've gone 1-10 away from the US Airways Center.
12 Utah (14) 23-18 Pace: 95.3 (14), Off: 104.9 (13), Def: 102.4 (11)
Sundiata Gaines' game-winner against the Cavs was the best moment of the season so far. Then Gaines played just three total minutes over the weekend. Utah's defense rested and their four-game winning streak came to an end Sunday in Denver.
13 Memphis (17) 21-18 Pace: 96.2 (8), Off: 106.4 (10), Def: 107.5 (24)
The remainder of the Grizzlies' pre-All-Star schedule is home-heavy but tough, with 10 of the 12 games against teams with winning records. It starts this week with the Suns, Hornets and Thunder, three teams they're within a game of in the loss column.
14 Toronto (12) 21-20 Pace: 95.4 (13), Off: 108.6 (4), Def: 109.5 (30)
Andrea Bargnani had a nice weekend, averaging 23 points and nine boards while shooting 18-for-30 in wins over the Knicks and Mavs. He's averaging career highs across the board and already has more double-doubles (seven) than he did last season.
15 Charlotte (20) 19-19 Pace: 93.4 (27), Off: 99.4 (26), Def: 98.5 (3)
At 7-1 and with six of the wins over teams with winning records, the Bobcats are the league's best team of 2010. They're just 1/2 game behind Miami for fourth place in the East, and they host the Heat on Wednesday to end a six-game homestand.
16 New Orleans (13) 21-18 Pace: 94.3 (20), Off: 104.0 (16), Def: 105.3 (19)
The Hornets have won eight of their last 10 games and can make even more noise in their next 10. They play the Spurs, Nuggets, Blazers, Suns, Thunder and Grizzlies (twice) between now and Feb. 3. They're 6-7 against other West teams with winning records.
17 Miami (15) 20-19 Pace: 93.6 (25), Off: 104.3 (14), Def: 103.4 (13)
In six games with the Heat, Rafer Alston has played in three times as many wins (three) than he played in over 27 games with the Nets (one). After a 3-3 trip, the Heat are home for just five of their next 18 games, but their opponents are relatively weak.
18 Houston (16) 22-18 Pace: 95.5 (12), Off: 103.6 (18), Def: 104.1 (17)
January has not been kind to the Rockets, who are 2-5 and have allowed their opponents to shoot 48 percent this month. Their triple-OT win over the Wolves was their eighth straight at home, but the streak was snapped on Friday by the Heat.
19 Chicago (22) 18-20 Pace: 94.9 (17), Off: 98.3 (28), Def: 101.5 (8)
The Bulls have won four straight thanks to strong defense for three games and a career-high 37 points from Derrick Rose against the Wizards on Friday. Opening their seven-game trip against the Warriors and Clippers, they've got a shot at getting to .500.
20 L.A. Clippers (18) 17-22 Pace: 94.2 (21), Off: 102.3 (23), Def: 104.6 (18)
If Rasual Butler's and Baron Davis' potential game-winners went in, the Clippers' week would have been much different. Though they were missing Chris Kaman, they have their defense (118.1 rating, opponents shot 49 percent) to blame for their four losses.

TEAM (LAST WEEK) REC. BREAKDOWN
21 New York (19) 16-24 Pace: 95.9 (10), Off: 103.5 (19), Def: 105.4 (20)
The Knicks have cracked 100 points just four times in their last 17 games, partly because they're playing at a slower pace. But they've also been pretty inefficient offensively. Chris Duhon has shot 6-for-29 from the field as they've lost four out of the last five.
22 Milwaukee (21) 16-22 Pace: 96.1 (9), Off: 99.4 (25), Def: 102.0 (10)
The Bucks' six-game trip comes to an end Monday in Houston. The trip has seen both their worst offensive game (against the Lakers) and worst defensive game (against the Blazers) of the season so far, but they did come up with a win over the Warriors.
23 Indiana (28) 14-26 Pace: 100.1 (2), Off: 99.2 (27), Def: 103.9 (15)
The Pacers' offense showed some signs of life as they won three straight, but it went dead against the Hornets on Saturday. Roy Hibbert and Dahntay Jones combined to shoot 19-for-31 in that game, but their teammates combined to shoot 19-for-57.
24 Philadelphia (26) 13-26 Pace: 93.6 (24), Off: 103.9 (17), Def: 107.2 (23)
Not only is Samuel Dalembert leading the charge to aid earthquake victims in Haiti, but he's also playing his best basketball. Over the last six games, he's averaging 13.5 points, 14.3 rebounds and 2.8 blocks, while shooting 73 percent.
25 Detroit (29) 14-25 Pace: 90.9 (29), Off: 100.2 (24), Def: 106.9 (22)
Thanks to some improved defense and some weak opponents, the Pistons have followed their 13-game losing streak with three straight wins. After Monday's visit to New York, they have a six-game homestand, but five of the six are against winning teams.
26 Sacramento (23) 15-24 Pace: 97.1 (6), Off: 104.0 (15), Def: 107.7 (26)
The return of Kevin Martin hasn't helped the Kings' offense. In his two games back, they were held to 86 points by two bad defensive teams: Philly and Washington. Their trip only gets tougher, as they visit Charlotte, Atlanta, Orlando and Miami this week.
27 Washington (25) 13-26 Pace: 95.9 (11), Off: 102.3 (22), Def: 106.2 (21)
The Wizards are 2-5 since Gilbert Arenas was suspended. They've actually been better offensively (105.9 rating) and worse defensively (110.3) than they were with him, though they did hold the Kings to 37 percent shooting in Saturday's win.
28 Golden State (24) 11-27 Pace: 103.1 (1), Off: 103.5 (20), Def: 108.7 (29)
Monta Ellis has scored 30-plus in 10 of his last 14 games and had one of the slickest plays of the season so far. But 30-point games and nice highlights haven't been able to overcome the Warriors' injuries and porous defense. They're 5-17 since Dec. 1.
29 Minnesota (27) 8-33 Pace: 98.7 (4), Off: 97.1 (29), Def: 107.6 (25)
Al Jefferson had 26 rebounds in Wednesday's triple-overtime loss in Houston. He had two rebounds in Friday's 25-point loss in Memphis. Of course, it's tough to get boards when your opponent shoots 59 percent from the field.
30 New Jersey (30) 3-36 Pace: 94.8 (18), Off: 94.9 (30), Def: 107.7 (27)
It doesn't seem possible, but the Nets are getting worse. After his 2-1 start, coach Kiki Vandeweghe is 1-17, with no signs of progress or any sort of identity on either end of the floor. New ownership and major changes can't come soon enough.

In a turbulent world, Gaines' story brings joy

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Sundiata Gaines' moment in the spotlight came as the clock wound down last Thursday in Utah.

Covering sports is a great way to make a living. But there are days, weeks even, when it isn't a barrel of laughs.

Consider baseball, whose on-field renaissance keeps getting plowed over by the latest steroid confession, the latest being Mark McGwire's weepy, orchestrated admissions, leaving writers trying to ascertain what was legitimate remorse and what was self-serving pablum.

The NFL has a pending labor storm on the horizon, with the possibility of a work stoppage in 2011 looming. (So, too, does the NBA.) There's always domestic violence and, occasionally, cartoon violence, the fallout of which we've dealt with in Washington the last couple of weeks.

Then, there came a calamity that crossed over into the sports world, one to which no human is adequately equipped to respond: an earthquake of devastating power and destruction which killed tens of thousands in Haiti, the home of the 76ers' center, Samuel Dalembert. Sammy D has always been a quirkly player, but his philanthropic side has never been challenged, and it was never in greater need and demand than this week, when he asked for the NBA's help for his stricken country. Sometimes, you feel like anything you give is like a rock being thrown into a great canyon. How could it possibly do any real good?

So it was a genuine joy to spend some minutes this week with a kid with a great story, a great smile and a great name, who had a great first week on the job and hit a great shot Thursday night to beat a great player and his great team.

The young man is Sundiata "Yata" Gaines, and if you've at all been paying attention, he's the 23-year-old NBA Development League callup for Utah who hit the game-winning 3-pointer last Thursday to beat LeBron James and the Cavaliers -- on the last day of his 10-day contract.

"I knew they kept you here for some reason," joked Ronnie Brewer afterward. But of course, there was a back story, which indicates, again, how some teams seem to always be "lucky" and find guys like Gaines, while others don't.

Gaines first got onto the radar of Utah's general manager, Kevin O'Connor, in 2008, when he led the University of Georgia to an improbable Southeastern Conference Tournament championship. That was the year a tornado struck the Georgia Dome during the Mississippi State-Alabama quarterifinal game and postponed Georgia's quarterfinal game with Kentucky to the following day. That meant Gaines and the Bulldogs had to win two games in one day just to make the tournament final, after winning just four conference games during the regular season.

Gaines simply recalled his days playing AAU ball, and Georgia beat both Kentucky and Mississippi State, becoming the first team in more than 40 years to win two tournament games in the same day. The Bulldogs then completed their incredible run by beating Arkansas in the final, and Gaines was named tournament MVP.

"It was definitely a confidence booster," Gaines said. "At the time, as long as we didn't play Tennessee, I felt like we had a great chance to win it. And we didn't play them. We played Arkansas, and I knew we had a great chance of beating them. Me and my teammates, I just wanted to build confidence in my teammates, and they all followed my lead ... I just had confidence in myself."

But despite finishing his Georgia career first in school history in steals, second in assists and ninth in points, Gaines didn't get drafted after his senior season. NBA scouts weren't sure about his jumper, so Gaines went to Europe to work on it, playing for NGC Cantu in Italy last season, where he averaged 13 points in just under 32 minutes per game.

"For me, at first I didn't really want to go," he said. "But it was a great opportunity for me. I played a lot of minutes at the point guard position, which I started playing in college. I never was a true point guard growing up, so I had to learn the position. I'm still learning now. The professional game, how to pick and roll, how to play different defensive schemes. I mean, that helped me out so much."

Cantu wanted to keep him, but Gaines hadn't given up on the NBA yet, and after he spent the summer in camps with the Knicks, Mavericks and Hawks, he went the NBA Development League route after being taken 15th overall in the first round of the draft by the Idaho Stampede.

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Sundiata Gaines has taken a long path to Utah.

"I was shocked he was there," said Idaho's first-year coach, Bob MacKinnon, by telephone Sunday. "I'm from back east, and I had known about him back to when he was at Archbishop Malloy (High School, in New York). I knew he was a very good player and had people from Malloy talk very highly of him."

The NBA D-League operates at cross purposes. Guys have to improve their games to get a look from NBA teams, but that very act of improving often comes at the expense of team cohesion and chemistry. It's a delicate act that can throw a lot of teams off balance. Gaines needed to work on his defense off the ball, staying focused -- something he's had problems with during his career -- as well as continuing to develop his point guard skills. At 6-foot-1, he wasn't going to get very far as a shooting guard.

"He wants to get better, and that's what our league is all about," MacKinnon said. "He was like a sponge. He would come in and ask questions, what he needed to work on, what his deficiencies were, and then he'd come in and work on them. He was one of those guys that, when you're saying something, you wonder who's really listening, and he was the first guy to go out there and work on them ... on the ball, he's very good, stays in front, and although he's small, he's strong. He improved every day at it and just kept getting better and better. That's what people in the league told me they needed to see him do, and he was doing it."

Even though Gaines didn't start for the Stampede, which is the affiliate for the Nuggets and Blazers (guard Patty Mills, Portland's second-round pick, is on the roster, along with recently released Cavs guard Coby Karl), he still led Idaho at 23.9 points per game (fourth overall in the D-League), 6.9 assists and 2.3 steals (both third in the league). And Gaines didn't complain about coming off the bench.

"We play more a possession game than a minutes game," MacKinnon said. "He told me, 'Coach, it doesn't matter if I start or not,' which is a great thing to hear from a guy. If you do get called up to the NBA, it's not like you're getting called up to start. They do want to see if you can come off the bench. Last year, when I was at Colorado, and we won the championship, I had Sonny Weems sent to me by the Nuggets. He came off the bench and he was fine with it, and now he's doing the same thing for the Raptors."

O'Connor went up in early January to see a game between the Jazz's D-League affiliate, the Utah Flash, and Idaho. Everyone assumed that O'Connor was there to see Dontell Jefferson, his own guard prospect who's been tearing up the league, before bringing him back to Salt Lake City, where the Jazz were dealing with injuries to backup point guard Ronnie Price. (Utah's point guard depth took a hit when the Jazz essentially gave away first-round pick Eric Maynor to Oklahoma City last month in a deal for injured forward Matt Harpring, who is unofficially retired. The move saved Utah more than $8 million in potential luxury tax payments this year.)

But O'Connor had a different callup in mind.

On Jan. 5, Utah's Dave Fredman, the team's longtime scout and former GM of the Flash, went up to Idaho to get a player. Gaines didn't know it was going to be him. There was barely time to say goodbye ("We're happy for you," MacKinnon says, "but we don't want to see you back again").

"Once he said my name, I mean, it was the best thing that ever happened to me," Gaines said. "This is what I've dreamed about since I was four years old, playing in the NBA, developing and being a superstar in the NBA. When I got the opportunity I was just happy to be here."

Gaines didn't have long to get used to being in the big league; when Deron Williams injured his wrist and Price's shoulder tendinitis flared up, Gaines was thrown in quickly, playing 21 minutes for Utah against Memphis. Things calmed down a little the next three games when Williams came back, and Gaines finally had his first real practice with the team last Wednesday, which gave him an opportunity to show if he really had picked up the playbook as quickly as he'd claimed.

The next evening, Gaines was thrust into the spotlight again, when Williams aggravated the sprain early in the fourth quarter against Cleveland. There was Gaines, feeding Carlos Boozer for an and-one; there was Gaines, completing his own three-point play to help Utah build a 12 point fourth-quarter lead. But there also was Gaines, being harrassed into a couple of turnovers by Mo Williams' tough fullcourt D as the period went on. Sloan brought back Price for the stretch run, with Utah up 12, but no one was prepared for what happened next.

LeBron went insane, scoring 16 points in less than four minutes: 3-pointer, three-point play, three-point play, free throw, 3-pointer off an offensive rebound following a miss of his second free throw, ridiculous 28-foot 3-pointer with 40 seconds left, giving Cleveland a seemingly insurmountable lead. But Sloan started fouling, the Cavs missed just enough to keep Utah alive, Kyle Korver made an amazing shot from behind the basket, and the Jazz got the ball down two with five seconds left.

Utah was supposed to run a double screen for Korver, but Cleveland saw it coming and jumped it, leaving Korver with two options: 1) force up a shot over a double-team, or 2) move the ball. So he swung it to Price, whose options weren't much better, and Price swung it to Gaines, about 26 feet out on the right wing. Cleveland's Anthony Parker got a hand in Gaines' face, but Gaines knows how to score: only Kenny Anderson and Kenny Smith scored more at Malloy than he did.

Swish. And bedlam. His teammates, led by Boozer, he of the $68 million free-agent deal and the uncertain future, rushed the court to tackle him. Gaines wound up standing on the scorer's table, gesturing to the delirious crowd.

"I was so excited, I found myself trying to jump," Sloan said.

It was Gaines's first NBA 3-pointer.

"I was watching it," MacKinnon said. "When he made that shot, I got about six text messages from his teammates. I knew if the ball got to him, he was going to shoot it, because he's a confident guy. It made the hair on my arms stand up."

Even the Cavaliers' response was appropriate. There was no "Aww, isn't that cute?" in the Cavs' locker room. Cleveland's fighting for a championship this season and for James' future this summer, and anything that deters from that mission, even for one night, is no laughing matter. The Cavs were ticked off. James, who almost never shows any true anger in public, was brusque and snapped headphones on after a brief session with the press, wheeling his bag behind him with a don't-mess-with-me-now look on his face.

I loved it.

These guys play to win, not for the money -- well, not just for the money.

All it did, though, was earn Gaines another 10 days. There really is no guarantee he'll be around the rest of the season, though it's very unlikely he wouldn't be. But even if that happens, no one can take away Jan. 14, 2010, and what Sundiata Gaines, named after an ancient king of Mali, did to LeBron James and the Cavaliers.

"The crazy thing about it is, I was sitting on the bench, and I just dreamed about it happening," he said. "I said I knew Ronnie was going to have the ball, and he was going to pass it to me, and I was going to catch it, and I was going to win the game."

The whole night -- the fight of the Jazz, the briliance of James, the way Sloan and the Jazz honored the game by playing it until the very last second, Gaines' miracle -- made me remember what it was that drew me to the NBA all those years ago, and what's kept me around all these years, and what makes all the travel and time away from loved ones worth it, and why I love the game so.

Dribbles

Fifty years ago today, an almost-accident almost changed the NBA's future, horribly so.

On Jan. 18, 1960, the DC-3 plane carrying the Minneapolis Lakers' basketball team made a crash landing in a cornfield in Carroll, Iowa, after the plane had lost almost all power en route from St. Louis to Minneapolis and got lost in a blinding snowstorm.

The plane contained future Hall of Fame forward Elgin Baylor, then in his rookie season with the Lakers, and guards "Hot Rod" Hundley -- who later went on to a distinguished career behind the microphone as the radio and TV voice of the Utah Jazz --and Bob "Slick" Leonard, who became a terrific coach for the Indiana Pacers and is on the team's radio broadcasting crew. (Jerry West was a year away from joining the Lakers, for their first season in Los Angeles.)

The team had lost a game to the Hawks in St. Louis and was flying back home when the trouble began.

"We were playing cards, and then the lights went out, and it got cold," Baylor told me on the 40th anniversary. "And for a while, the pilot didn't say anything. And finally everybody wanted to know what was going on, and he said the only thing that was working was the generator. (Not) the instrument panel, nothing. They couldn't see anything."

After several harrowing minutes, the pilots were able to get low enough to see that the only place they could ditch the plane was in a cornfield. (They were lucky that the bad weather had prevented the farmer from pulling up the corn stalks, which slowed the plane down enough to come to a safe stop. Another 75 yards ahead was a huge ravine, into which the plane almost certainly would have fallen and crashed if not for the corn.)

I bring up the anniversary for two reasons. One, my NBA.com colleague, Steve Aschburner, has a great column this week which details Leonard's recollections of the landing. And, two, I got word this week that there is a home movie of the crashed plane taken by a Carroll resident the morning after the landing, as well as film of the now-fixed plane leaving the cornfield.

Lisa Christensen, whose grandfather, H.T. Hall, took the original 8 mm film, informed me that the city of Carroll is holding a 50th anniversary "celebration" of the incident tonight that will feature the plane's co-pilot, Harold Gifford (here is a link to a long radio interview with Gifford talking about that night that Lisa provided). And if you want to see the film -- which Lisa and her husband, Eric, converted from the VHS tape her grandfather made of the 8 mm film into a DVD -- you can see it this week on NBA TV.

Top O' the World, Ma!

(Last week's ranking in brackets)

1) L.A. Lakers [2] (31-9): Made up for Clippers' win a week ago with 40-point beatdown of crosstown rivals Friday.

2) Cleveland [1] (31-11): Mike Brown has dialed up the right combos all season.

3) Atlanta [6] (26-13): Hawks overtake slumping Magic for first in Southeast.

4) Boston [3] (27-11): I'd be worried about Pierce's and Garnett's knees, except Glenn Rivers says they're fine, and he's a doctor.

5) Dallas [4] (26-14): Amazing stat from the Dallas Morning News' Eddie Sefko: Mavs have trailed by at least 10 points in 22 games this season.

6) Denver [7] (26-14): Shoot you out, shoot you in, shoot you back out.

7) San Antonio [8] (24-15): Ginobili starting to get his legs back.

8) Portland [9] (25-16): Beat Orlando without Roy Friday. There's nothing left to say about the job Nate McMillan is doing this season.

9) Utah [NR] (23-18): Jerry Sloan throwing the kids into the deep water.

10) Orlando [5] (26-14): Magic has gone past a funk into "truly concerning" territory.

11) Phoenix [10] (24-17): If the Suns keep going south, expect the Stoudemire trade talk to explode.

12) Houston [11] (22-18): Rockets grumbling about defensive slippage.

13) Oklahoma City [14] (22-18): Durant is the new Predator.

14) Toronto [12] (21-20): Raptors need Turkoglu to get himself going in second half of season.

15) Miami [13] (20-19): Offense has improved with Skip running the show.

Team of the Week

(1/11/10-1/17/10)

Charlotte (3-0): Home wins over three Western Conference playoff teams: Houston, San Antonio and Phoenix, by an average of better than 16 points per game. Quietly, the Bobcats have become one of the toughest teams to play at home, with a 17-4 mark, and loudly, Larry Brown has them playing defense, leading the league in points allowed. Gerald Wallace is making an All-Star push. Only a lousy road record keeps Charlotte from being a potential real factor in the East.

Team of the Weak

Sacramento (0-3): The Kings got Kevin Martin back, but didn't put up much of a fight in losses to Orlando and Eastern doormats Philadelphia and Washington. The week's only good news is, for the 495th time, the city and the NBA's negotiators announced a new arena proposal.

Nobody Asked Me, But ...

Has it been 10 years since Bobby Phills passed away?

Yes, it has.

If you're of a certain age, you may not remember Bobby Phills, who was one of the league's true good guys, sort of like a 6-foot-6 Derek Fisher -- a straight-up, no-nonsense fellow who garnered the respect of teammates and opponents.

Phills was the captain of one of the last incarnations of the Charlotte Hornets, a defensive demon who played for the great Ben Jobe at Southern University and made himself into a solid NBA two guard, one who could score (he was one of the league's better 3-point shooters for a time) but was most proficient at locking folks up.

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Ten years ago, Hornets' captain Bobby Phills died.

But on Jan. 12, 2000, the 30-year-old Phills died in an automobile accident near where the team practiced and played, the old Charlotte Coliseum. He was driving way too fast on Tyvola Road, spun into oncoming traffic and struck another car. Even though he was wearing his seatbelt, Phills died at the scene of massive internal injuries, leaving behind a wife and two children.

The accident was made all the more hurtful for the team because Phills' best friend, guard David Wesley, saw the accident in his rear view mirror. The two men were driving back from practice, both going too fast, but Phills lost control and Wesley did not. It was a shattering loss for the Hornets, who never really could replace Phills on the court or in the locker room.

His widow, Kendall Phills, runs a philanthrophic foundation in her late husband's name and has remained in the Charlotte area with her children, Trey and Kerstie. Wesley, who finished a 14-year NBA career with Cleveland in 2007, has moved to Texas with his family and is looking to get into coaching after spending the 2008-09 season at his alma mater, Baylor, as student manager while he completed his undergraduate degree work. Kendall Phills and Wesley were, and remain, good friends. I did a story on the two on the one-year anniversary of Bobby Phills' death, and was amazed that Kendall Phills never was angry with Wesley or held him responsible for her husband's fatal accident.

"Sometimes, I'm walking through the house, and I'll look at a picture of Bobby, and I'll go 'Bobby!,'" she said in 2001. "Because he's supposed to be here, with me and my family. So that's the hard part. And that's the times I get angry. But I'm not angry at God. And I'm definitely not angry at David Wesley."

There's a great story in the Charlotte Observer this weekend by Scott Fowler that recaps the last 10 years in the lives of the Phills and Wesley families, and shows how they've all managed to cope with their grief and loss and try to make something positive out of something so tragic. It's terrific. Take 15 minutes, sit down, and read it.

... And Nobody Asked You, Either

It's known as "facial" profiling. From Andrea Cavalli:

I wanted to know what do you think about the NBA players getting labeled as "thugs" whenever someone gets in trouble. Other sports (i.e. football ... just today a player got arrested for trying to choke his wife) have much more troublemakers than the NBA does (and not just because they have more players). Yet it's NBA players who are considered the worst. I find it unfair and annoying. Baseball and hockey have way more brawls than the NBA does (and way worse)...

As an NBA fan it's frustrating to look at the over-the-top reaction many sports columnists who hate NBA basketball have (besides, why do they write about the NBA if they hate it so much? Why not stick to those sports they actually enjoy?). Arenas and Crittenton got in trouble? Fine. Let's write countless articles about ALL NBA players being criminals, thugs, scary-looking, resembling inmates etc (those are some of the things I have seen in the wake of Arenas' gun incident). As if other players were responsible for Arenas and Crittenton actions. Blame those two players, not everyone else. For instance, are you telling me Kevin Durant is a criminal because of Arenas' actions? How silly is that? Do those people know anything about the NBA?

You don't hear me disagreeing with you, do you, Andrea?

Why are you looking at me like that? From Toni Brody:

I am a SF native who grew up a Warriors fan (now live in DC and gave up on the Warriors in the late 90s and have been a rabid Spurs fan ever since); the Warriors, for all their dysfunction, never made Arenas the "face of the franchise" as the Wizards did (granted, it was always clear he wanted out of the organization). He was a head case with the Warriors as he was with the Wizards; the Wizards just labelled him "goofy" or "quirky" to help sell him to their fans (enabled by the media that let them get away w/it). As Tim Duncan said in your interview with him, that personality would NEVER last (would never have been drafted or signed) in the Spurs' locker room (although I wonder how Jackson lasted there two seasons).

I feel sorry for Arenas to an extent as his behavior (and he may have some form of mental illness) was overlooked and, perhaps, encouraged. He never understood the limits of how far he could go before he crossed the line.

A lot of folks are taking the media to task for not being harder on Arenas and calling him out for his antics. I'm guilty. I admit it. I was taken in by Arenas' game, his charm and his refreshing approach. Perhaps I should have stood up and tsk-tsked him at All-Star in 2007 when Gilbert, during a timeout in the fourth quarter, joined the trampoline team and dunked off the trampoline. Maybe I should have ripped him when he said he could never even think of yelling at his teammates, because he was a big kid and who would take him seriously in that role? But I'm not going to apologize for liking the young man, immensely. Still do. And I hope he can get back on the court soon, whether in Washington or somewhere else, because I don't think he has a lot else in his life besides the game.

MVP Watch

(1/11/10-1/17/10)

LeBron James (35 ppg, 7 rpg, 7 apg, .571 FG, .758 FT): As focused, and as dominant, as I've ever seen him in the closing minutes against Utah Thursday -- and as angry afterward. You see this guy dancing and singing with his teammates on the sidelines sometimes, but don't you ever, ever think he doesn't want to win.

Kobe Bryant (18.7 ppg, 1.7 rpg, 2.3 apg, .577 FG, .778 FT): Playing possum, as Phil Jackson says, or truly injured? That back looked pretty jacked up against the Spurs.

Dirk Nowitzki (23.7 ppg, 8 rpg, 2.7 apg, .527 FG, .846 FT): Passes the 20,000-point plateau, and becomes the first European player to do so. When Nowitzki started playing basketball seriously in the mid-90s, Vlade Divac and the late Drazen Petrovic were the standard bearers for European players in the NBA. The Diggler is the new yardstick.

Tim Duncan (19.3 ppg, 10 rpg, 3 bpg, .600 FG, .444 FT): Healthy scratch on the second night of a back to back, against Oklahoma City on Wednesday. Coach Gregg Popovich says he'll do that more often the second half of the season to keep Duncan fresher for the postseason; the Spurs have nine sets of back-to-backs remaining.

Brandon Roy (1 game: 22 points, 1 rebound, 4 assists, 3 steals, 7-10 FG, 7-7 FT): Makes his MVP watch debut even though he was limited with a hamstring pull that kept him out of Friday's game against Orlando. But Roy has been the key to Portland's incredible run through its slew of injuries and illnesses. As good a clutch performer as there is in the game.

Dropped out: Dwight Howard

By the Numbers

12 -- Consecutive victories by the Hornets over the Clippers after Wednesday's 108-94 win, a streak dating back to Jan. 8, 2007.

36 -- Points needed by Tim Duncan for 20,000 in his career, a mark reached by Dallas' Dirk Nowitzki against the Lakers Wednesday. Nowitzki became the 34th player in league history to reach the plateau.

600 -- Career NBA coaching victories for Washington's Flip Saunders after the Wizards' win over Sacramento Saturday. He became the 22nd coach to reach the plateau.

I'm Feelin ...

1) Sam Dalembert, leading the NBA's response to the earthquake in Haiti. What makes it even more touching is that Dalembert is not new to the cause of his homeland; he has been back several times over the years, helping UNICEF and other organizations that try to help that impoverished country. He did a public service announcement the night of the earthquake and has been tirelessly doing media ever since, while also still playing for the 76ers.

2) Jamal Crawford, just like it was in the park in Seattle, Friday night. Pretty amazing last 10 seconds from the Hawks in stealing one from the Suns.

3) Vinny Del Negro, who made a smart move getting Derrick Rose off the ball more by putting Kirk Hinrich in the starting lineup. Freed from having to get everyone else going, Rose has gotten himself going after a slow, injury-plagued start.

4) That was a good 66-minute effort Wednesday, Clippers and Rockets.

5) Prayers for Isiah Thomas, who lost his mother, Mary, the matriarch of the Thomas family, last week at the age of 86. It is safe to say that Isiah would never have made it out of the south side of Chicago if not for his mother, who stared down gang members that wanted to "recruit" her son as they had his older brothers with nothing but her own fierce will. And a shotgun. I saw and chatted with Mary Thomas a few times in the early 90s when her son's Pistons were about to conquer the NBA world, and if you want to know why Isiah Thomas became the best little man ever to play the game, you didn't need more than a few seconds in her presence.

6) Prayers, also, for the family of Teddy Pendergrass, the R&B legend who died of cancer Thursday. "Close the Door" is on the short list of great couples songs. Appreciations here and here.

7) Manu Ginobili, magician.

8) Jim Caldwell, vindicated. The Colts' head coach was heavily criticized from outside (and, reportedly, inside) the locker room for opting not to go for the perfect regular season by resting his starters in the last two games when Indy was 14-0. Now, the Colts are rested, refreshed and one game away from the Super Bowl. They will not take Peyton Manning out in the third quarter next week against the Jets, I'm certain.

Not Feelin' ...

1) The almost certain end of Agent Zero in Washington. Sad.

2) Pretty poor effort against the Brandon Roy-less Blazers on Friday, Orlando. Pretty poor effort most of this month, Orlando. What is going on down there?

3) Whatever it is -- Donald Sterling's bad karma, as Phil Jackson tweaked last week, or something else -- that ended Blake Griffin's rookie season before it began, with a knee injury that didn't get better quickly enough.

4) Homerism run amok. To the local broadcasters doing NBA games (not all of you, and especially not you, Joel Meyers in L.A., who isn't afraid to criticize the home team): we get it. You want your team to win. But you ruin so many games with your whining and complaining about every other call, and how refs "shouldn't make that call at this point in the game," which is part of why the league has such a perception problem with its officials in the first place.

5) Rush Limbaugh, jerk. I don't care what your politics are, and Lord knows you don't care about mine, nor would I try to make mine a part of this column. You come here to read about basketball. But Limbaugh's assertion that we shouldn't give money to Haiti when it's been hit with one of the worst natural catastrophes in history because of some ridiculous argument about taxes is one of the meanest things I've ever heard a human being utter. One time, when the late Tom Snyder hosted the Tomorrow talk show on NBC, he interviewed some white supremacist, who spent 15 minutes or so spitting out his hate rhetoric. At the end, Snyder looked at him and said, "It has not been my pleasure having you on tonight." Precisely.

6) Utah's retro green. Sorry, just never going to go for it.

7) I know I should know who Snookie is and why she's important. I do not.

8) The NFL playoffs, 2010. El Busto, as Dan Issel might have said.

Tweet of the Week

I'll have whatever Sundiata Gaines is having.
--Former Jazz and current NBA Development League (Springfield Armor) guard Morris Almond (@FreeMoAlmond), approx. 2 a.m., Friday, minutes after Gaines' incredible game-winner against Cleveland.

Mr. Fifteen

This week's Mr. Fifteen is Memphis Grizzlies center Hamed Haddadi, the first player from Iran to play in the NBA. The 7-foot-2, 24-year-old has played in just 12 games this season, totalling eight points in 48 total minutes behind starter Marc Gasol and Memphis's first-round pick, Hasheem Thabeet. It's not what Haddadi had hoped to do this season, after helping put Iran basketball on the map in international competition the past few years. His 31-point effort in the title game of the 2007 FIBA Asia Championships led Iran to victory over Lebanon and qualified Iran for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the first time in 60 years Iran played in the Games (the country didn't field teams from 1952 to 1988 and didn't qualify in four tries from 1992 to 2004).

Last summer, Haddadi again starred for Iran, leading his country to victory in the Asia Championships, a tournament in which Haddadi was named Most Valuable Player after Iran defeated a Yao Ming-less China in the title game. That victory qualified Iran for this year's World Championships in Turkey, and a first-round draw with the U.S. men's team. He has turned down good offers to play overseas to continue his dream of being in the NBA.

Haddadi made news earlier this season when a pregame photograph was taken of him shaking hands with the Kings' Omri Casspi, the first Israeli-born player to make the NBA. But Haddadi wants to make his mark on the court and not get caught up in the world's events that have made Iran and the United States political enemies, facing one another as potential adversaries in war instead of in sports.

***

Me: How do you stay prepared when you're not sure you're going to play?

Hamed Haddadi: It happens to me all the time, they don't play me, but I'm ready for play. It's hard. It's hard, because you don't know if you'll play for 10 games in a row. They put you in the game and your conditioning is not good, and you can't play. But sometimes that happens. I must be ready. I must be ready for the game, playing. If they give me some time, I use it for good, not bad. If they should give me a chance, very good. I try my best. I try my best to help the team in practice or in games. I try.

Me: Do you look at practice as your games?

HH: Yeah. The problem is we don't have the chance in practice, too. In practice, if they give me time, I try my best. I'm going to play in practice. I'm going to show myself, you know? It's OK. I'm happy, I'm very happy we win, we win these games. My teammates play awesome. Awesome. I'm very happy with it. I'm not worried about it, I don't play. I want to play. But now we win, we win these games. It's normal I don't play.

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Hamed Haddadi is still learning the NBA game.

Me: What do you learn playing against Marc Gasol in practice?

HH: Before the game, in the warmup, we play one-on-one with Marc. He is smart. He's really, really smart. He can shoot, his hook shot is very good, his discipline is very good. His foot (speed), the leg is so fast. It's hard to stop him. It's hard to stop him. He's played better than last year, I think. We shot together, and last year was not good enough. His play is up now this season. Play very good now. Last year he can't block shot. This season, blocks two or three a game. One night he has six blocked shots. Awesome.

Me: Did you show him anything about the art of shot blocking?

HH: No. He learns himself, you know? He's smart. Now he can jump. He can play basketball. He played professionally in Spain, and Olympic Games, and went in the Europe league, EuroChampionship. Now he's NBA.

Me: What was the experience like for you when Iran won the Asia championship?

HH: My teammates, we have good team. My teammates, we play like six years together. We know how to share the pass, share the basketball. If you don't pass the basketball, you find the open man. We don't play selfish. I really appreciate my teammates back home in Iran. We have everything. We have point guard. We have one shooter, we have everything good, and the five is me. With our play, with our team, it was very good for us.

Me: For you personally, what did that give you in terms of confidence?

HH: I don't understand this word ... what is confidence?

Me: Did you feel after that, that you could play against anybody?

HH: Oh, yeah. Before we play, like 2007, we play most of the teams, like Serbia, like Argentina. We play Olympic Games (Iran lost all five of its games in Beijing), all the big teams. The team in Asia Games, Asia teams is not good enough. But you have China. China's big, too. You have joining up, you have some international players, different countries. Lebanon and Qatar. But I'm very happy for the next summer, we play big, big teams. U.S., same group. I think this is chance for me.

Me: What has that team done for basketball in Iran?

HH: We touch everything. Five years ago, we don't have chance to go to Asia Games. We lost all games in Asia. But now we're going to World Championships. We go to Olympic Games. We've got two championships in a row. This is our goal. Now we want to play good. We want to play good in World Championships. We don't (think we'll) win. We try to win. We try to win. I think we'll have a couple of wins, one or two. I promise that ... back home we didn't have anything. We had one court and we all play, all the teams, we practice there, they play there. Now it's much better.

Me: But soccer's still bigger?

HH: Soccer's bigger. You don't win enough, and the people back home is not happy with soccer. But they're happy for basketball and volleyball. We make them very happy, you know? Very happy, our people back home.

Me: Are you going to be like Yao was for China, in terms of getting even more people interested in the sport?

HH: China, first is basketball, I think. The paper, the TV, I think they're don't looking for us, for basketball players. Just soccer. Because the people are thinking about soccer. Don't pay attention for basketball. But now, is better. Maybe a couple, three years, I'll be same as Yao. If I play in NBA. If I don't play, nobody sees.

Me: So it's important that you play?

HH: Now they leave a message on my fan page -- why you don't play? Why ask your coach why you don't play? I said, it's OK, we win, we win this game now. It's OK. I'm not happy, but I'm happy we win this game. I must play to be the same as Yao.

Me: Is there one thing that is the biggest misconception about your country?

HH: Nobody knows my country. Now is better. Now is better. But last year, I come here, my teammates ask me questions. Do I have a car? Do I have suit, or shoes? I said yeah, I have shoes. We have shoes. The (wrong) thing on us is, do you have camel? You don't have any shoes. We drive camel, not cars. No. Iran is big country, is huge country. I love my country. We have beautiful things. We have something to do. Now it's better.

Me: What was your feeling when you shook hands with Casspi?

HH: Just play basketball. I don't talk about ... what's the name?

Me: Politics?

HH: Politics. My English ... last year, I couldn't ... I'm sorry. But I don't think about politics. I want just to play my basketball, you know? He's a basketball player, and basketball players, you just say hi. You don't talk about politics or anything.

Me: You're a sportsman?

HH: Yeah, I'm a sportsman. I don't want to continue thinking about politics. No.

Me: Do you think you'll stay here through your contract (Haddadi is signed with Memphis through 2011) or will you go back to Europe if you can't play here?

HH: If my contract is finished and I find a contract, I say. It's my dream, in the NBA. If not, I go. My agent, he talks to all teams. I don't know. I have one more year on contract. It's long, it's long. NBA is long season. We have 40 games left, maybe we go playoff. I hope, I wish for playoffs. And we have one more year. I have chance to play maybe next season.

They Said it

"Gilbert used extremely poor judgment and is ultimately responsible for his own actions."
--Excerpt from Washington Wizards statement, after Gilbert Arenas pleaded guilty to one count of felony gun possession in D.C. Superior Court Friday.

"The Celtics are a veteran team. They have a great coach and he's been coaching. We have a fairly new coach, a fairly new system. So it doesn't even compare. The Celtics and the Nets, it just doesn't compare in all honesty. You can't compare the two."
--Nets guard Chris Douglas-Roberts, speaking the unvarnished truth about the gulf between the Boston and New Jersey franchises at the moment to the Newark Star-Ledger.

"I saw everyone getting up and you start thinking of bombs and tornadoes, snipers. You don't know what's going on."
--Grizzlies guard O.J. Mayo, telling the Los Angeles Times his reaction when FedEx Forum was evacuated for 17 minutes last Tuesday during the Memphis-Clippers game after a water main break in the building led to flooding and to a fire alarm going off.


Thunder have pieces to make push for Raptors' Bosh

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Chris Bosh and Kevin Durant are both among the top eight in scoring this season.

Kevin Durant and Chris Bosh on the Thunder frontline together. By Feb. 18? Why not?

Oklahoma City is loaded. With talent. With picks. With cash. When pondering future seasons of a Thunder program that starts but doesn't end with Durant, visions surface of a serious Western Conference contender.

But why can't it be this season? Isn't this franchise in position to make a major move in a conference that has more of its share of quality teams though none, outside of the defending champion Lakers, are overwhelming.

OKC is hanging in the playoff race and has beaten plenty of big boys with a college-age roster. Imagine that roster with Bosh or Joe Johnson or Dwyane Wade right now. (We're realistic enough not to throw LeBron James in the mix.) As far-fetched as it sounds, the Thunder own the assets to make a deal like Bosh work before the trade deadline next month.

If the Raptors felt compelled to move Bosh, and there are plenty of rumors out there to support such a notion, Oklahoma City general manager Sam Presti could make a serious play for the lefty power forward. Not only is OKC comfortably under the salary cap, but the franchise has another two first-round draft choices this June and nice pieces to export across the border.

Would a deal of, say, ever-improving third-year forward Jeff Green, a pair of No. 1s and another youngster with potential, Serge Ibaka or D.J. White, interest Toronto? If Raptors general manager Bryan Colangelo was certain Bosh was walking this summer, does such a package from OKC make sense?

Thunder players would certainly welcome a player the caliber of Bosh. Bringing in a three-time 25-year-old All-Star who has averaged 20 and nine for his career may accelerate the Thunder's contending process by a year or two.

Would there be a better set of forwards in the West now and five years from now than Durant and Bosh?

"I've never thought about that, to be honest," said Durant, 21. "Of course I love these guys in the locker room. I feel if we keep these guys around and stick together for a long time, we'll be all right. But I've never thought about getting a guy like Chris Bosh or Dwyane Wade or anyone else."

Basketball players tend not to think as baseball players as the trade deadline approaches. Every July, hardball squads in contention or on the brink openly talk about bringing another arm or bat into the clubhouse for the stretch run. It's just part of the summer ritual.

But when's the last time you heard someone in a locker room wonder about snagging another rebounder or 3-point specialist?

"I don't know if basketball players ever talk about that stuff," said Nick Collison, a six-year veteran and the longest-tenured within the Sonics/Thunder franchise. "I haven't heard any talk about that.

"We've been through a ton of changeover over the last two years, so I think we're kind of used to things happening and not knowing what's going to happen. I think a lot of teams on the brink don't know for sure and GMs don't know until they get the right call."

Presti hasn't been shy when it comes to making deals. He shipped Ray Allen to Boston during the 2007 Draft and ended up with the pick that led to Green. He's moved several vets that weren't part of the future for better fits and more draft choices. He traded for Thabo Sefolosha last season and rookie Eric Maynor last month. He signed and brought Nenad Krstic back from Europe.

Presti understands as well as anyone the pressures within the job and the expectations outside the organization. Fans in Oklahoma City are certainly happy with the results so far -- last season's victory total (23) can be matched at the halfway point Monday afternoon at Atlanta -- but why not shoot for the moon and the Lakers now?

"We're always trying to improve, just like our players on the court," Presti said during a state-of-the-franchise press conference last week. "But we're trying to be intelligent about how we do that and sometimes our best decisions are the decisions we don't make, and sometimes things work out, sometimes they don't. We're just trying to shift the odds with good preparation and good thought.

"I can't anticipate what we're going to do. I think certainly by acquiring Eric when we did, we felt that was a decision that helped us both in the immediate and in the long term. We feel good about that acquisition and we still have an opportunity as the season rolls along to look at other things."

Thunder coach Scott Brooks isn't waiting for that one extra star to put the team over the top. It might be different if most of the roster were around 26 or 27 years old and fighting for a playoff spot. With nine players currently 23 or younger, Brooks is really just concentrating on development.

The wins are gravy.

"I put pressure on the guys to do two things and we talk about it constantly: to play hard and to play for each other," said Brooks, an early contender for Coach of the Year. "And if we do that, at the end of the game we're going to be in good shape. I don't know if we're going to win it, but we're going to put ourselves in position to win some games. Regardless of expectations that's really what we do."

The conventional wisdom is that Presti holds onto the cap space again this offseason because the franchise has to start paying Durant, Green and Russell Westbrook over the next few years. Since that money is going to be spent anyway, it wouldn't break to bank to spend it on an elite player from the 2010 class provided one of the current Thunder young studs is swapped in the process.

"I trust that Sam is going to make the right move for this team," Durant said. "Whomever he brings in, I'd be totally happy with. He's done a great job so far."


Along with health, rebounding a cause for concern for Boston

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Kendrick Perkins is the leading rebounder for the Celtics, who are 18th in the league in rebounding.

Make no mistake about it. The Boston Celtics' biggest concern this season is health.

Kevin Garnett has missed the last eight games after hyperextending his surgically-repaired right knee, Rasheed Wallace is currently on the shelf with a foot injury, Glen Davis missed the first 27 games of the season, and Marquis Daniels has played in just 17.

Garnett's injury derailed the Celtics' attempt at a repeat a year ago, and if he isn't healthy come April, they don't have much of a chance at a championship this year. But even if the Celtics are injury-free, they aren't the same team that they've been the last two seasons, because they've regressed in one key area: rebounding.

In fact, no team has regressed more on the boards from last season than the Celtics have. Through 38 games, they've grabbed exactly two more rebounds than their opponents, going from the second best rebounding team in the league last season to the 18th best this season. And the regression has come on both ends of the floor.

Celtics' Rebounding Rates, Last Three Seasons
Season OReb % RK DReb % RK TReb % RK Reb. Diff.
2007-08 0.266 18 0.744 8 0.519 4 +3.12
2008-09 0.279 8 0.756 3 0.528 2 +4.54
2009-10 0.245 25 0.733 17 0.500 18 +0.03

"It's been disappointing," Doc Rivers said of his team's rebounding decline Wednesday, "because we've actually added to our team, and you'd think we'd be a better rebounding team. And unfortunately, we just haven't been."

It's possible that the roster moves the Celtics made have had the opposite effect that Rivers was looking for. Though he's recovering from knee surgery and wouldn't be playing even if the Celtics retained him, Leon Powe (now with Cleveland) was the best rebounder in their rotation last season, grabbing 17.3 percent of available boards when he was on the floor.

The Celtics added Wallace to their frontline, but he's not a very good rebounder for a big man. With 10 guys on the floor, the average player (guards included) grabs 10 percent of available boards, and the 6-foot-11 Wallace is just above that mark at 12.0 percent. He's especially deficient on the offensive end, where he spends a lot of time on the perimeter, grabbing just 4.3 percent of available boards, less than his 6-foot-4 teammate, Tony Allen (7.7 percent).

Injuries, of course, have taken their toll. Percentage-wise, Davis has been a much better rebounder than he was last season (17.0 vs. 11.4 percent), but he's played in just 10 games thus far. And with Davis and Garnett both in uniform just three times this season, Brian Scalabrine has played increased minutes, mostly at power forward. And Scalabrine is a terrible rebounder, grabbing just 6.0 percent of available boards when he's on the floor.

Still, the biggest culprit in the Celtics' rebounding decline may be Garnett himself. At this point in the season, he's played a greater percentage (49) of the Celtics' total minutes than he did last season (45 percent), but while he's grabbing the same percentage (5.7) of available offensive rebounds as he did last season, his defensive rebounding percentage has gone down from 25.5 to 23.1.

Even though he was technically "healthy" for the first 25 games of the season, Garnett did not have his typical lift and explosiveness.

"Kevin really hasn't rebounded yet the way he can," Rivers said. "But that will come."

Still, Rivers believes it's unfair to blame the rebounding decline solely on the Celtics' big men.

"I think our biggest crutch right now is when we don't control the ball and the ball gets in deep and our bigs have to help," he said. "They shoot, and that releases their big to get to the glass. I think that's hurt us more. So it's more the dribble penetration that has been our Achilles heel right now."

Rivers isn't nearly as concerned about offensive rebounding. He'd rather his players get back and stop transition than crash the boards.

Even with their rebounding issues, the Celtics still rank second in the league defensively (allowing 98.5 points per 100 possessions) and ninth offensively (scoring 106.7). And they're first in the league in points per possession differential.

Celtics' Second-Chance Points Per Game, Last Three Seasons
Season Celtics Opp. Diff.
2007-08 12.9 12.5 +0.5
2008-09 12.7 11.1 +1.6
2009-10 11.4 13.1 -1.7

But they're scoring 1.1 fewer second-chance points per game and allowing 2.0 more than they did last season. Even if the offensive boards aren't a concern, those extra two points they're allowing are worth about five wins over the course of a season.

Five wins could be the difference when it comes to home-court advantage in the playoffs against the Cavs, Lakers or Magic. So yes, the Celtics need to get healthy. But even if they do, they need to get on the boards.

All statistics are through Friday, Jan. 15 and were compiled with the help of the NBA and StatsCube.


Brandon Roy says he will play against Wizards; Blazers overrule him, Jerryd Bayless will start

Trail Blazers guard Brandon Roy came close to playing Monday's game against Washington, but was overruled at the last minute by coach Nate McMillan and athletic trainer Jay Jensen.

After a 30-minute pregame workout at the Verizon Center, Roy declared his strained right hamstring fit enough to play.

"I'm going to go,'' Roy said. "I feel like I'm good enough to try and go, and hopefully I can play through the game. It's one of those things where unless I play I just really don't know, so I would rather go out there and give it a shot.''

However, after a meeting with McMillan and Jensen, the trio decided it was best to wait one more game before Roy returned. The Blazers play next Wednesday in Philadelphia.

Roy, who missed the Blazers last game on Friday against Orlando because of the injury, went through a light workout with lead assistant Dean Demopoulos on the court, which consisted mostly of shooting jumpers. At times, he flexed his right leg and grimaced, but he said the workout told him enough that he could play.

"It's still a little tight. It's not back to normal, still tight,'' Roy said as he headed back to the locker room. "I'm going to talk to coach and tell him I'm good to go. I don't know, he will have the last say. He says I do, but I think he will have the last say.''

McMillan, who was in his office finalizing his game plan, said he had yet to talk to Roy, but when he was told that Roy said he was going to play, he smiled, got up and went to the locker room to talk to his star.

"If he says he is going to go, that's all I need to hear,'' McMillan said.

About 10 minutes later, Roy came out of the locker room to do abdominal exercises in the hall and said that McMillan and Jensen had overruled him.

"I know where he is coming from,'' Roy said between crunches. "They said 'One more day, let's not risk it.' ''

Jerryd Bayless will start in Roy's place.

Source: Detroit Pistons not for sale now but could be soon

The Detroit Pistons, one of the NBA’s most valuable franchises, are not for sale but could be in the not-so-distant future, a person close to the situation told the Free Press this morning.

At issue is whether Karen Davidson, who assumed control of the franchise after her husband’s death last year, wants to continue to own an NBA franchise. Unknown also is what Davidson wants to do, if anything, with Palace Sports and Entertainment, the umbrella operation that runs the Pistons, the Palace, DTE Energy Music Theatre and Meadow Brook Music Festival.

According to the person, it's believed that any decision to sell the team right now would not be made solely by Davidson but by a collection of the heirs and trustees of the Davidson estate. Bill Davidson was estimated to be worth nearly $4 billion when he died March 13, 2009. The source did not want to be identified because of the sensitive nature of the situation.

Finding a buyer could be difficult during the country’s economic turmoil.

Forbes puts the Pistons’ value at $479 million, fourth-highest in the 30-team NBA.

Bill Davidson, who died at 86, purchased the Pistons from Fred Zollner in 1974. In 17 seasons under Zollner, the Pistons had two winning seasons. The next 17 under Davidson brought nine winning seasons, including two NBA titles. The franchise won a third title in 2004.

In 1978, Davidson moved the team from Cobo Arena in downtown Detroit to the Silverdome in Pontiac. In 1988, he built the privately funded Palace, one of the first NBA arenas to prominently feature luxury boxes.

According to Forbes, the Pistons trail only the $607-million Los Angeles Lakers, the New York Knicks and Chicago Bulls in terms of worth.

The Pistons’ figure represents no change from last year. Forbes released its annual rankings of team valuations early last month.

Forbes, though, called it a nightmare year for the Pistons, with Davidson’s death, on-court failures, lower ticket prices and staff layoffs. On the bright side, Forbes cited a new cable deal.