Thursday, January 21, 2010

Salmons still out with flu, but Hinrich back

LOS ANGELES -- Earlier in the day, the Bulls listed John Salmons' status as a game-time decision, but the veteran guard was ruled out of Wednesday night's game with the Los Angeles Clippers at Staples Center long before tip-off.

Salmons, who is suffering from the stomach virus going around the team, was so sick he didn't even travel with the team from the hotel to the arena before the game.

Salmons was scheduled to meet the team at the airport after the game for the trip to Phoenix, the next stop on the road trip.

''We'll see how he does [today],'' Bulls coach Vinny Del Negro said of Salmons. ''We'll get him some rest.''

Complicating matters is that another player in the Bulls' usual three-guard rotation -- Kirk Hinrich -- was returning to action Wednesday after missing Monday's game at Golden State with the flu.

''He's feeling better,'' Del Negro said of Hinrich. ''But he's lost a few pounds, so his energy won't be great. I'll just monitor that.''

Del Negro planned to use Jannero Pargo as the third guard in the rotation.

No. 1 is No. 4

The NBA released the list of its best-selling jerseys Wednesday, and Bulls point guard Derrick Rose's No. 1 jersey was fourth, following (in order) Kobe Bryant, LeBron James and Dwight Howard and one spot ahead of Dwyane Wade.

How surprising was the news? Even Rose was stunned when he was informed at the end of the morning shootaround.

''That's an honor just to be in that company,'' he said. ''I can't wait to get on the phone and tell my mom. I know she'll be happy for me.''

As a team, the Bulls have the fifth-most popular jersey behind the Los Angeles Lakers, Boston Celtics, Cleveland Cavaliers and New York Knicks.

Griffin surgery

Not long ago, Clippers rookie Blake Griffin, the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft last June, was targeting Wednesday for his regular-season debut. Instead, Griffin had season-ending surgery Wednesday to repair the non-displaced stress fracture of his left patella he suffered in the Clippers' final preseason game.

Love deemed too ill to play, so Gomes starts in his place

Timberwolves starting forward Kevin Love showed up for the team's morning shootaround but was sent home for Wednesday's game against Oklahoma City after he once again was deemed too ill to play.

The Wolves played their second consecutive game without Love, who participated in some of the morning shootaround.

"I thought he looked pretty good," teammate Al Jefferson said. "But he said he didn't feel too good."

Wolves coach Kurt Rambis didn't think Love looked all that good, and said Love didn't offer much resistance to the decision that he not play.

"I couldn't imagine him mustering up the energy to play," Rambis said. "He looked very lethargic and tired, and it's not like we kill the guys in shootaround. He didn't have a lot of energy, didn't have a lot of color in his face. He didn't look great to me."

So Ryan Gomes again started in Love's place, and Rambis soon called upon veteran Brian Cardinal and Nathan Jawai to fill Love's minutes at power forward while he asked Corey Brewer to defend Oklahoma City's blossoming superstar Kevin Durant.

Enduring

Wolves rookie Jonny Flynn played Wednesday with his left eye still slightly swollen after he hit his face on the court late in Monday's victory.

"It's good for young players to have to push and fight through things like that," Rambis said. "There's illness, sprained ankles, dislocated fingers, stitches, all kinds of things happen. You've just got to find a way to keep playing. I wasn't going to take him out of the game because of that. That's something he has to adjust to."

Damien on Durant

Wolves forward Damien Wilkins isn't surprised the Thunder is contending for a playoff spot in the West. He saw their possibilities up close when he played with the franchise for the first five seasons of his career.

"They're starting to become the team we all think they will become," he said.

When asked if he considers Durant a future league MVP candidate, Wilkins said, "He should be in the MVP talk this year, if you ask me. He's got this team playing unbelievable basketball. He's averaging 30 points a night. He's extremely hard to guard: Quick, long, athletic. I mean, once he learns a post-up game, he'll pretty much be unstoppable."

Keepaway

Somebody asked Flynn if he planned to bring Love chicken soup or something to help him feel better soon.

"No, I'm going to stay as far away from him as I can," Flynn said. "I don't want to get whatever he has. I love Kevin Love, but I'm not trying to get that."

Welcome back

Wolves owner Glen Taylor embraced Thunder guard Kevin Ollie, who played for the Wolves last season, during a heartfelt conversation before the start of Wednesday's third quarter.

Injury expected to keep Brandon Roy on bench for the next two games

PHILADELPHIA -- All-Star Brandon Roy most likely will miss the final two games of the Trail Blazers' East Coast trip after aggravating his balky right hamstring Wednesday night against the Philadelphia 76ers.

After banking in a driving jump shot with 1:02 remaining in the first half, Roy grabbed his hamstring and grimaced as he gingerly moved to the other end of the court to play defense. Thirty-three seconds later, after Roy was unable to sprint for a fast-break chance on offense, he limped off the Wachovia Center court with team trainer Jay Jensen and did not return for the second half.

In the visiting locker room, after the Blazers defeated the 76ers 98-90, Roy's hamstring was heavily bandaged and taped.

"Odds are high that I'll miss the next two (games) just because we want to be smart with (the injury)," said Roy, who underwent treatment throughout the second half. "They don't want me to rush right back out there. I'm sure they are going to be a lot more cautious."

Officially, the Blazers are listing Roy's status as day-to-day. He said he plans to visit a doctor for further examination today, when the team is scheduled to travel to Boston, but there are no immediate plans for magnetic resonance imaging tests. Roy originally tweaked his hamstring Jan. 2 against the Golden State Warriors and missed the previous two games with a strain.

Roy lobbied to play Monday at Washington, but was overruled shortly before tipoff by coach Nate McMillan and Jensen. But after practicing Tuesday, Roy was cleared to play. He appeared sluggish from the start, failing to reveal his usual explosiveness and poise. And when he finally decided to push himself, Roy overdid it.

"I wasn't 100 percent, but I felt good enough to go out there and play," Roy said. "As the game was going, I felt like I could start picking it up more and more. And that's kind of when it happened. I was holding back a little bit on some things. When I got to the basket and I missed that left-handed layup (in the first quarter), I was like, 'Ah, it's short.' So I had to tell myself, 'Either you got to explode or you can't play.' So I started trying to play a little bit."

But a little bit proved too much.

Roy said his hamstring felt worse after the game than it felt earlier in the week, with pain shooting "all the way up" his leg, rather than lingering in one spot. Roy played 18 minutes, finishing with 10 points, four rebounds and two assists.

Afterward, he limped away from the Wachovia Center resigned to live by the same sage advice he's been delivering to all the other injured Blazers this season: Be patient.

"The biggest thing now is I've got to be patient and I'm sure they're going to make me be more patient this time," he said. "I just have to listen to them and be honest with my body. Even though I feel mentally I want to play, I've got to understand if I ... feel it, I can't go out there."

Ginobili downplays Argentine paper's report

Spurs guard Manu Ginobili has a message for fans concerned about comments he made in an Argentine newspaper report indicating he expects to become a free agent this summer.

“Just because I don't expect the Spurs to extend my contract before it expires does not mean my days as a Spur are over,” Ginobili said before Wednesday's game at the AT&T Center against the Utah Jazz.

The article in Clarin, an Argentine publication that has fervently followed Ginobili's career since he came to the Spurs, appeared on Wednesday morning.

Ginobili said he was concerned some of his comments weren't properly understood, especially as they related to his belief the Spurs won't offer him a contract extension before his current contract expires on June 30.

“In Argentina, the term ‘extension,' as it is here, doesn't exist. The fact is, they can re-sign me before the deal is over. They took ‘extend' to mean even after it is over, instead of re-sign. So they are two different terms.”

Ginobili, who has played for the Spurs since the 2002-03 season, is in the final season of the deal he signed in the summer of 2004, when he was a restricted free agent. At $10.73 million, he is the fourth-highest paid Spurs player, behind Tim Duncan ($22.2 million), Richard Jefferson ($14.2 million) and Tony Parker ($12.6 million).

Coming off an injury-plagued season that culminated when he was diagnosed last April with a stress fracture of the right ankle, Ginobili entered Wednesday's game averaging 12.5 points on 39.8 percent shooting in an average of 26.1 minutes per game. He also averages 4.4 assists, 3.3 rebounds and a team-high 1.43 steals per game.

Spurs general manager R.C. Buford declined comment, reiterating the team's position of keeping all player negotiations private.

Ginobili said he understands the Spurs' reluctance to offer a contract extension before season's end but said it was important to stress that this does not mean he expects to leave San Antonio.

“I don't expect them to re-sign me before the deal is over,” he said. “I'm going to be a free agent, and then I'm going to decide. That's the only thing.

“It's not that I'm saying I'm not going to be a Spur. That's the difference.”

Clippers get past Bulls to match last season's win total


On the day their No. 1 draft pick underwent surgery, the Clippers wanted to show the rest of their operation is functioning as best it can.

They challenged the Chicago Bulls on Wednesday at Staples Center hoping to match their victory total for the entire 2008-09 season at 19 wins.

With Blake Griffin in the house, the Clippers scored a 104-97 win over the Bulls for their second consecutive victory before heading out on an eight-game road trip.

Baron Davis scored 23 points, with 11 coming in the fourth quarter.

Chris Kaman added 20, Al Thornton returned to score 17 and Marcus Camby had 25 rebounds to lead the Clippers.

Derrick Rose scored 23 points, Luol Deng had 19 and Joakim Noah had 14 points and 15 rebounds for Chicago.

The Clippers built a 14-point lead in the fourth quarter. The Bulls cut the deficit to four points four times but could get no closer.

Davis hit a 3-pointer, a 19-footer, a jumper in the lane and two free throws in a 3-minute span after the Bulls closed in.

Clippers coach Mike Dunleavy had sat Davis for 6 1/2 minutes of the fourth period in hopes of resting him before tonight's game in Denver.

"The objective was to play him to the 6-minute mark, hopefully not have to go (with him)," Dunleavy said. "But when they made a little bit of a run, he had the rest we needed."

He might have been afforded a lot more rest if the Clippers had done better than 23-for-39 on free throws.

"I was just trying to keep myself in the game knowing I've been feeling a little better, knowing if I can get to the hole, I will," Davis said. "I wanted to save it until I needed it.

"I knew they were keying in on Chris because we were throwing it into him, milking him, so I knew I was going to be able to pull up in the lane.

"Toward the end, I just wanted to take it myself because I knew I had some freedom. I was in a good rhythm offensively just from being aggressive on the defensive end."

The repair of Griffin's left knee turned out to be a little more tricky than expected. Dr. Neal ElAttrache performed a two-part procedure to mend a left patellar fragment incision and the patellar tendon.

Griffin had suffered a nondisplaced stress fracture to the kneecap in the Clippers' final exhibition game. ElAttrache estimated the rookie from Oklahoma would be able to resume action in three or four months.

"This is a rare problem," ElAttrache said before the game. "It was the first time we had to do anything like this."

The Clippers had hoped that Griffin could work through the injury without surgery, but when the pain would not subside - even during workouts in a pool - they turned to season-ending surgery.

Griffin is expected to be able to return for training camp next fall.

During a halftime television interview, Griffin said he hopes to be ahead of where he left off upon his return.

"I definitely hope so," he said. "I'm trying to use this season to my advantage and learn as much as possible.

"It helps when you can see it up close and personal. When I go into the gym, I talk with the coaches and players and get their insights because it's definitely a different perspective when you're up close."

The Clippers got some good news on the injury front when Thornton was able to return after missing two games with a sprained ankle.

Thornton had 10 of his points in the second quarter to help the Clippers to a 50-47 halftime lead.

But they didn't come out unscathed. Guard Eric Gordon, who will participate in the All-Star Game's slam dunk competition, sprained his left big toe in the third quarter and did not return.

His backup, Sebastian Telfair, injured his groin and will not travel today. He will undergo an MRI exam to determine the extent of the injury.

NBA's David Stern endorses Sacramento arena land swap plan

NBA Commissioner David Stern has endorsed the most complicated of the new arena plans recently submitted to Mayor Kevin Johnson's task force, and not surprisingly, his reasoning relates to funding.

Local developer Gerry Kamilos - with financing provided by the Macquarie Capital of Australia and Pacific Coast Capital Partners of California - is proposing a downtown sports and entertainment complex on the city's 33-acre portion of the downtown railyard.

As Stern reiterated in a conversation on Tuesday, the most contentious issue is not where a new arena for the Sacramento Kings should be located, but how an arena would be financed.

"It's still up to the task force," said Stern, noting the complexity of an arrangement involving a land swap. "But the money is there this time, and that's good. Moving ahead, we need the mayor, the city council, the county guys, the Cal Expo board, the legislature - it's very difficult. But I haven't heard any loud squeals (of dissent). I think this has a chance."

Cleveland Cavaliers' Mo Williams out 4-6 weeks with shoulder sprain

Mo Williams

CLEVELAND -- The Cavaliers will not have guard Mo Williams for tonight's big game with the Los Angeles Lakers, and not for quite some time.

Williams suffered a left shoulder sprain Tuesday after reaching for a steal against the Toronto Raptors. After getting an MRI today at the Cleveland Clinic, team doctors have determined Williams will miss 4-6 weeks. That would put his return some time after next month's All-Star Game.

It could have been worse, the Miami Heat's Dwyane Wade suffered a nearly identical hit reaching for a ball two years ago and it ended his season with surgery.

It is a significant loss against the Lakers, who have trouble defending small guards. Williams scored a season-high 28 points in the win against the Lakers on Christmas Day.

But it is also a significant loss for any game. He's the team's second-leading scorer at 16.7 points a game. The Cavs don't have much experience playing without him: He's played 124 out of a possible 125 games since coming to the team last season.

The Cavs are also short on point guards and don't have a true backup on the roster. Delonte West, a combo guard, will start and likely get most of Williams' minutes. It will also likely mean a return to the rotation for Daniel Gibson as well.

Clippers hold off Bulls

The Clippers' regular season is now half over and the team already won as many games as it did all of last season.

Whether that's saying much depends on your point of view -- the Clippers, after all, remain under .500 at 19-22 -- but they defeated the Chicago Bulls, 104-97, in their first meeting of the season Wednesday night at Staples Center.

The Clippers won only 19 games all of last season while losing 63, with that 19th victory not arriving until April 10.

Led by point guard Baron Davis' 23 points and late-game hustle, the Clippers' offensive power also was spread among several players, with center Chris Kaman scoring 20 points and forward Al Thornton adding 17.

Forward Marcus Camby, meanwhile, had a season-high 25 rebounds.

"We didn't make it easy on ourselves," Clippers Coach Mike Dunleavy said. "But down the stretch we made some big stops" as the Bulls slashed the Clippers' once-sizable lead.

Now the Clippers leave town for an eight-game trip, starting with the first-place Denver Nuggets tonight, and the Clippers are again hobbled with new injuries.

Starting guard Eric Gordon sprained his left big toe in the third quarter and did not return to the game. Dunleavy said he didn't know whether Gordon would be available tonight.

And reserve guard Sebastian Telfair pulled a groin muscle and won't immediately travel to Denver so that he can be examined today in Los Angeles, Dunleavy said.

For much of the game, both teams briefly enjoyed big leads yet were unable to hold them, befitting two teams with nearly identical subpar records.

The Clippers, for instance, jumped out to an 11-point lead early in the fourth quarter and then struggled to maintain it, with Chicago slashing the lead to four points late in the game before Davis took charge.

"I just wanted to be aggressive and do all that I could," Davis said. "I wanted to kind of save it for when we needed it."

For the Bulls, guard Derrick Rose scored 23 points and forward Luol Deng added 19.

Griffin's surgery

The Clippers said rookie forward Blake Griffin underwent successful surgery to repair his damaged knee at the Kerlan-Jobe Orthopaedic Center in Los Angeles.

Griffin, the No. 1 pick in the 2009 NBA draft, suffered a stress fracture at the bottom of his left kneecap during the Clippers' final preseason game Oct. 23.

Dr. Neal ElAttrache, who performed the 75-minute operation, said before Wednesday's game that the surgery went exactly as planned. "If you had to design how this day would go, this is how I would have dreamed it up," he said.

Griffin, 20, is expected to be on crutches for about three weeks and his overall rehabilitation from the surgery is expected to take four to six months.

Gibson's return

With half of his rookie season under his belt, Bulls forward and former USC standout Taj Gibson said he's adapting to the NBA.

"Things are going well," said Gibson, adding that "a lot of friends and extended family members" were on hand Wednesday night as he scored four points in 11 minutes against the Clippers.

Gibson, who first returned to Southern California for Chicago last November against the Lakers, had averaged 8.5 points and 24.3 minutes of playing time this season entering Wednesday's game.

He acknowledged that NBA defenses are "tough" and that he was "still learning, still adjusting. But so far it's been good."

Karen Davidson: Pistons are for sale

Auburn Hills -- Pistons owner Karen Davidson confirmed Wednesday she's pursuing steps to sell the team.

In a one-sentence statement issued through a public relations agency, Davidson said: "I'm pleased, as noted by Oscar Feldman, that the limited partners concur in my decision into inquiring about selling the team."

Feldman, a former minority owner, told The News on Tuesday, that rumor of the team being for sale was "the word around town."

Hall of Fame to move up ceremony

The Basketball Hall of Fame announced Thursday afternoon that it will move this year's enshrinement date from mid-September to Aug. 13 in anticipation of the 1992 Dream Team being among the inductees of the Class of 2010.

[+] EnlargeDream Team
RaganMichael Jordan, center, and Magic Johnson are expected to be enshrined this summer as part of the Dream Team.

The official list of finalists will be announced Feb. 12, but the men's team that won Olympic gold in Barcelona for the United States and featured superstars Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Larry Bird and Charles Barkley undoubtedly will be included in that select group.

Two other Dream Team stars, Scottie Pippen and Karl Malone, also will be eligible for induction this year for the first time.

The shift to August was made, in part, to eliminate a conflict with the world championships, which will be held in Istanbul from Aug. 28 to Sept. 12. In fact, USA Basketball hopes to fly in the current U.S. team to Springfield to be present for the Dream Team's induction.

"After weighing many options, we believe the second weekend of August is a better fit for everyone involved in the enshrinement ceremonies," USA Basketball chairman Jerry Colangelo said in a statement.

The enshrinement ceremony will again take place at Springfield's Symphony Hall, where it was moved to last year for the first time to accommodate the large crowd for Jordan's induction.

Assembling the Dream Team alumni normally would be a tall order. However, Jordan likely will want to be in attendance to support his former Bulls teammate Pippen, and former Jazz point guard and Dream Team alumnus John Stockton will want to be on hand to celebrate his former teammate Malone.

Lon Rosen, Johnson's agent, confirmed Wednesday night that Johnson will be in Springfield on Aug. 13 to celebrate the accomplishments of one of the greatest teams ever assembled. The Dream Team cruised to the gold medal under the late Chuck Daly without ever calling a timeout during the entire 1992 Olympic Games.

The Hall plans a number of events and new exhibits around the enshrinement ceremonies, including a potential tribute to the Dream Team if it is inducted.

"These new plans allow the Basketball Hall of Fame to make our premier event more accessible to fans as we establish a weeklong celebration designed to reach all of the Hall's constituencies," John Doleva, president and CEO of the Hall, said.

Dalembert sees real loss, then another Sixers loss, to Trail Blazers

THE TEARS flowed from Sam Dalembert's weary eyes as he recalled the horror to which he had just subjected himself, having spent the past couple of days in his native Haiti, assessing the damage caused by last week's devastating earthquake and doing all that he could to help.

Dalembert's journey began shortly after Monday's game in Minnesota and ended just before the 76ers' game against the Portland Trail Blazers last night at the Wachovia Center.

He arrived at the arena about 15 minutes before game time, ran down the hallway, dressed hurriedly and somehow was able to collect 10 points and 15 rebounds in the Sixers' 98-90 loss.

His emotions overflowed in the locker room following the game - from grief to sadness to frustration. As has been the case for the past week, Dalembert's mind was probably far away from the game of basketball.

Yet, he still put in another productive night, although he probably couldn't recall what he had done during another loss. His every thought was back in Haiti.

"I took that trip to see firsthand what was needed and we wanted to prioritize," he said of the trip he took with Project MidiShare.

"I didn't see anything like that. I saw somebody have their leg amputated in front of me. The mosquitoes and flies were everywhere. Surgeries were performed on kitchen tables, on folding kitchen tables.

"It hurts. Problems just keep coming. There's no M*A*S*H unit over there to keep moving things around. They're still trying to locate people."

As Dalembert spoke, the emotions poured from his face like sweat during a game. He got particularly emotional when talking about people who aren't helping, especially when it comes to adoption.

"It's so frustrating," he said. "There are probably a hundred people [who want to adopt] but you have guys sitting down with the papers and all it takes is one hour to get through everything.

"What really touched my heart the most are the children, a lot of homeless children. The situation is so terrible. They need food and water.

"The doctors, they come and stay for a long period of times, but then they have to come in shifts. Most of them are working for 20 hours straight. You can see in their eyes that they are so tired. They're doing their best, then they hop in a plane, go home and sleep and then come back again 2 days later and do it again."

Dalembert plans to make more trips to his homeland. He made it out yesterday before another quake rattled the region in the early morning. His father, whose house received limited damage in the original earthquake, is still in Haiti, and Dalembert said he would not leave.

But getting out was something Dalembert had to do yesterday - mostly for his own well-being, and to be available for his team last night. He knows more bad times are ahead for Haiti, especially when the rain starts to fall. But there is only so much he can do.

"Any time soon they're going to have rain," he said. "Everything is going to push all up into the street. A lot of people don't have sandals. They're out there desperately asking for help. I tried to be strong out there, I really tried."

Somehow, Dalembert did have to play the game, and it ultimately turned out to be one with an all-too-familiar ending.

"Thunder and Lightning" is usually a term used in football, referring to a pair of running backs in which one is powerful and the other is quick.

The Trail Blazers unleashed their basketball version of "Thunder and Lightning" with guard Andre Miller providing the thuds and fellow guard Jerryd Bayless showing the speed.

The two combined for 42 points, 32 coming in the second half, as Portland (26-17) pinned another close-but-no-cigar loss on the Sixers, who are now 13-28.

It was a boost the Blazers needed as guard Brandon Roy, the team's leading scorer at 23.4 points a game, didn't play in the second half after reinjuring his right hamstring.

Miller, released during the offseason by the Sixers, was the topic of conversation among fans who again left the building disgustedly. He bruised and battered his way to a game-high 24 points, scoring 14 of them in the third quarter.

And when the Sixers started to concentrate on Miller a bit more in the fourth, Bayless countered with 14 in the final quarter, including the first eight.

"They just played well," Allen Iverson said of the Miller-Bayless tandem. "Bayless got out in transition and made a lot happen and got a lot of easy baskets. Andre played well throughout the game. They got good games from both guys. Brandon Roy didn't play and those guys stepped their game up."

And the Sixers didn't. Once again, they had their chances. And again, they couldn't find a way to get it done.

After a steal and dunk by Andre Iguodala (23 points) pulled the Sixers within two at 90-88 with 1 minute, 38 seconds left, Miller was able to get the sixth foul on Dalembert with a drive to the basket. He drained both for a four-point lead. Elton Brand then canned a short jumper to cut it to two on a botched offensive possession, but the Blazers made six straight foul shots from there on out to close out the scoring.

Forward LaMarcus Aldridge provided the inside presence for Portland, finishing with 23 points and nine rebounds.

"I thought we at least came out in the second half with a little more aggression," Sixers coach Eddie Jordan said.

"But you know it comes down to the end. They just kept driving and finishing plays even when we had some decent defense. They would find something - an offensive rebound, a late drive or a late basket. We just could not do the same.

"We could not come back and finish plays at the rim."

Brand (13 points) seemed to have a simpler solution.

"It is about putting the talent together and putting the right pieces out there at the right time so that we can defend and score at the same time," he said. "That is all it is about."

Pippen's jersey retired at Central Arkansas

pippenjersey.jpgScottie Pippen addresses the Farris Center record crowd of 5,297 during the halftime ceremony to retire his No. 33 jersey. The former Bull is joined on the court by the Central Arkansas president and athletic director, his former coaches and teammates.

"I accomplished a lot of things -- as any player would want to accomplish," Pippen said. "This is as great of an honor as any player could ever receive, higher than any All-American or gold medal."

Pippen was a two-time NAIA All-American at Central Arkansas (1986, 1987).

Celtics look for answers

Right now everyone has an opinion.

Rajon Rondo [stats], fresh off Wednesday night’s second-half collapse against the Pistons, identified the Celtics [team stats]’ greatest opponent as “ourselves.”

Paul Pierce [stats] equated these dangerous habits the Celtics have developed to “playing with fire.”

An especially subdued Kendrick Perkins [stats] stared into his touch phone and said, “At the end of the day, it’s about heart.”

Amazing. A Celtic, one whose entire game is based on brute force and passion, just questioned the heart of his team.

They still have the second-best record in the Eastern Conference, and an above-even chance of winning homecourt advantage through most of the postseason.

But they won’t get there like this.

And the issue, for now, has nothing to do with the return of Kevin Garnett, presumably for tonight’s game.

KG’s return date still could change. But the Celtics have to change.

“He’s a huge void we have to get back,” Eddie House said of Garnett. “We need him now for so many different things - his scoring, his passing, his help defense, his on the ball defense. He affects the game in so many different ways that it will be great to have him come back.”

But it would be a mistake to think that Garnett is an automatic cure.

A dismissive Doc Rivers said, “I’m not waiting on him.”

House agreed when he said, “We have to take care of what we can take care of. Last year, he wasn’t with us and we played pretty great. We just fell short in the playoffs. We know we can do it, it’s just a matter of dealing with it in the second half.

“I don’t know (what the problem is), man, I can’t call it,” he said. “But it’s an ongoing trend now, and it’s killing us.”

But until they find the solution and put it to use, all the Celtics are left with are theories.

They led by 12 points with five seconds left in the second quarter on Wednesday night, before a wild Austin Daye 3-pointer at the halftime buzzer changed the game.

They led the Mavericks by nine at halftime on Monday before capitulating over the last 24 minutes.

“We feel we’re better than we are,” said Rivers. “We get a lead, and we just put it on cruise. In the NBA, you can’t do that, and that’s what’s so troubling to me. It’s something that will be fixed, but what troubles me is that it’s something that shouldn’t have to be fixed. I know it’s the dog days and everybody is going through stuff right now, but we’re self-imposing our injuries.

“It’s clear right now,” he said. “When we get a lead we go to individual ball, guys trying to get numbers, and loss of focus.”

Witness 20 turnovers by the Celtics [team stats] Wednesday, including seven in the third quarter. Witness zero second-chance points.

“We have to get down to the bottom of it and develop some urgency,” said Ray Allen. “It’s tough to say. There are so many different stretches of the season when you have bad starts to the game, or bad quarters and finishes. At halftime, we have to get back on the floor and pump the energy back into games.”

Garnett isn’t the only player who has to carry that energy.

“We’re all at fault,” said Rasheed Wallace. “We’ve been leading by eight points or more heading into the half. Right now, we’re a team that can’t (turn it on and off). . . . I think sometimes we think we’re the Celtics and we go into other teams’ buildings and think they’re going to back down. But we have to go out and prove it.

“I know we’re a good team on paper,” he said. “But other teams get up for us like we’re their measuring stick.”

NBA makes fine point: $25K for Baby

The NBA fined Glen Davis $25,000 yesterday for his outburst Wednesday night against the Pistons in Auburn Hills, Mich., where the forward responded to a heckler with an obscene phrase so loud it could be heard on both the Celtics [team stats]’ television and radio broadcasts.

Co-owner Wyc Grousbeck, openly critical of Davis last September when he broke his right thumb during a fight with an associate, chose to keep his comments closer to the vest yesterday.

“The NBA will be fining the player,” Grousbeck said via text message. “We will keep our discussions with him in-house.”

The NBA assessed the fine for “directing inappropriate language toward a fan.”

Allen Iverson [stats] was the last player fined for this infraction, incurring a $25,000 penalty for an incident Dec. 16, 2008, while with the Pistons.

The fan Wednesday, who identified himself as Scott Zack, filed a complaint with NBA security.

Davis declined comment after the game but later posted his regrets on Twitter.

It has been an expensive week for Celtics.

Forward Rasheed Wallace was fined $35,000 on Wednesday due to comments he made about officials following Monday’s loss to the Mavericks.

Garnett a Star

Kevin Garnett’s extended time on the sideline didn’t keep him from being named a starter for the Eastern Conference All-Star team.

The Celts forward was voted in through fan balloting for the Feb. 14 contest at Cowboys Stadium in Irving, Texas. It will be his 13th career All-Star Game, second-most behind only Cleveland’s Shaquille O’Neal among active players.

Garnett hasn’t played since Dec. 28 due to a hyperextended right knee but is expected to return tonight against Portland.

All-Star reserves, selected by the coaches in each conference, will be announced Thursday.

J.R. a Maine man

Forward J.R. Giddens became the third Celtic this season sent to the Maine Red Claws of the NBDL.

Giddens, sparingly used by coach Doc Rivers, clearly was in need of some action. The expected return of Garnett lessens the need for another player.

Giddens was one of the most explosive players in the NBDL last season, when he played for the Utah Flash - the Celtics [team stats]’ former affiliate.

Forward Bill Walker and rookie guard Lester Hudson also saw time with the Red Claws this season. The C’s eventually waived Hudson, who recently signed with Memphis.

LeBron James’ 37 propel Cavaliers by LA

The Cavaliers haven’t lost their holiday spirit.

Showing the Christmas Day win over the Los Angeles Lakers was no gift, LeBron James scored 37 points, including 12 straight down the stretch, and the Cavs beat Kobe Bryant and the defending NBA champions, 93-87, last night in Cleveland.

J.J. Hickson grabbed a career-high 14 rebounds and Anderson Varejao made three free throws in the final 20 seconds as Cleveland swept the season series between the league’s top two teams. That could give the Cavs homecourt advantage if they meet the Lakers in June’s NBA Finals.

A lot can happen between now and then, but the win gave Cleveland confidence it might be able to survive despite losing Mo Williams, their All-Star point guard who sat out his first game last night and will miss at least one month with a shoulder sprain. Williams scored a team-high 28 in Cleveland’s Dec. 25 win at Staples Center.

Bryant finished with 31 points but was only 4-of-15 in the second half as the Lakers lost the opener of an eight-game road trip. Pau Gasol scored 13 for Los Angeles.

Bryant surpassed 25,000 career points in the first half, but he was unable to match James in the fourth quarter as both teams turned to their superstars.

With the score tied at 80, James hit a 3-pointer from the left side, and after a miss by Bryant, the reigning MVP dropped another jumper to put Cleveland ahead by five. James then hit another shot to make it 87-80 with 2:48 left and the Cavs looked to be in control. But Ron Artest hit a big 3 for the Lakers and Bryant made two free throws and a quick jumper to tie it at 87.

James then blasted down the left side for a layup with 40.5 seconds to go, prompting chants of “M-V-P” from the raucous Quicken Loans crowd. After Gasol missed two free throws, the Cavs called a timeout and before play resumed, James was caught by cameras rapping to Eminem’s song “Forever” before the ball was inbounded.

James then split a pair of free throws, but Varejao grabbed the rebound on the miss and was fouled by Artest. Varejao, a 66 percent shooter from the line, made both attempts for a 92-87 Cavs lead with 20.7 seconds left. Bryant misfired on an off-balance 3-point attempt and James saved the long rebound, flying into Cleveland’s bench to make the save.

As Varejao went to the line again with 4.1 seconds left, James popped his maroon Cavs jersey, making sure everyone knew who came out on top.

Nuggets 105, Clippers 85 - Carmelo Anthony scored 28 points and host Denver routed Los Angeles.

Elsewhere in the NBA - Allen Iverson [stats] was voted to start in the Feb. 14 All-Star Game, while Steve Nash and Tim Duncan made late moves to claim starting spots for the Western Conference.

Nash passed the inactive Tracy McGrady as the second guard, while Duncan disappointed Dallas fans hoping to see Dirk Nowitzki start by rallying past the Mavericks forward.

Joining James and Iverson as East starters were Miami guard Dwyane Wade, Orlando center Dwight Howard and Celtics [team stats] forward Kevin Garnett. Bryant was picked in the West along with Phoenix center Amare Stoudemire and Denver forward Carmelo Anthony.

Scouting report: Blazers at Celtics

TONIGHT - 7:30, TD Garden. TV - CSN. Radio - WEEI-AM (850).

THE NUMBERS 1-1: Last year’s series between teams.

0-3: Celtics [team stats]’ current losing streak.

0: Second-chance points scored by Celtics Wednesday.

WHO’S HURT For the Celtics, Kevin Garnett (knee) is probable and Marquis Daniels (thumb surgery) is out. For the Blazers, Brandon Roy (hamstring) is questionable and Greg Oden (knee), Travis Outlaw (foot), Joel Przybilla (knee) and Nicholas Batum (shoulder) are out.cw-0

WHO’S HOT For the Celtics, Paul Pierce [stats] had a 19-point first half Wednesday. The Blazers are 18-8 when Andre Miller starts.

WHO’S NOT Pierce scored two points in the second half Wednesday.

BOTTOM LINE Garnett or no Garnett, the Celtics have developed a nasty tendency to collapse after taking a halftime lead. They have lost the last two games this way. They could easily lose their fourth straight overall tonight against a young Blazers team that, though hurt, is a far sight better than the Detroit team that just beat the Celtics.

After long road, Charlotte's Wallace enjoying success

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Bobcats forward Gerald Wallace has helped Charlotte rise into the playoff race in the East.

In the Pistons' heyday of the mid-2000s, small forward Tayshaun Prince was the do-it-all player supporting Detroit's superstar trio of Ben Wallace, Chauncey Billups and Rip Hamilton. Then-Pistons coach Larry Brown often gave Prince the task of guarding the other team's best perimeter player and knew he could count on him for an understated-yet-key game-changing steal, block or basket.

Since moving to Charlotte, Brown seems to be employing a similar strategy with the young Bobcats, but on a smaller scale. While Stephen Jackson fills the role as the Bobcats' best scoring threat (a la Hamilton and Billups), it is Charlotte mainstay Gerald Wallace who is providing the glue in Charlotte's playoff dream.

After plucking Wallace from the Kings' roster in the club's expansion draft, Charlotte has watched the small forward go from simply a dunking phenom to a well-rounded player. The process hasn't been easy, though, as the Bobcats have had to endure Wallace's injury-marred seasons and obsession with the 3-point shot. Jackson, too, has had his share of burdens to bear. He almost immediately went from a little-used player in Sacramento to a go-to guy and often struggled to understand defenses.

Just two seasons ago, part-owner Michael Jordan was trying to trade Wallace. But Brown convinced Jordan to stick with the man nicknamed "Crash" and the payoff has been immense. As we've mentioned in this space before, Wallace is on pace to be one of the shortest players (he's all of 6-foot-7) to finish among the NBA leaders in rebounding (where he's currently ranked fifth and averaging 11.5 rpg).

His re-emergence as a scoring threat after a disappointing effort stats-wise last season is due mostly to his ability to crash the boards. He's second on the Bobcats in shots (12.7 per game), leads the team in offensive rebounding (2.2) and does most of his damage on tip-ins, follow dunks and one-on-one moves to the basket that he's developed over the years.

Wallace has already made a name for himself around the league for always playing hard and for the fearless way he attacks the rim as an offensive player and rebounder. With Charlotte in the midst of a six-game winning streak and the team vying for one of the top four seeds in the East, Wallace's all-around play has that playoff dream looking more and more like reality.

NBA.com's Five on the Rise is a weekly look at which young players (and resurgent veterans) have yet to reach stardom, have regained the form of their younger days and, most of all, have made the biggest impact for their team in the last week. These rankings are just one man's opinion and are released every Thursday during the season. If you have an issue with the names on this list, or have a question or comment for Jeff Case, send him an e-mail.

G. Shannon Brown, Lakers
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Much like Nate Robinson listed below, Brown made sure Monday wasn't all about the Sprite Slam Dunk contest. Brown got the good news on Monday that his dream of participating in the contest came true and then went out that evening and celebrated against the Magic. Brown put in one of his best performances of the season (and easily a career highlight) when he had 22 points and keyed an aggressive fourth-quarter run that helped L.A. turn a four-point fourth quarter deficit into not-as-close-as-it-looked 98-92 win. Coach Phil Jackson praised Brown in his postgame news conference for his hard work and dedication and Jackson has put his minutes where his mouth is. Brown is averaging 21.1 minutes per game this month and has played 20-plus minutes in seven of L.A.'s last 10 games. Granted, there are a few Laker blowouts sprinkled in that sample, but Brown -- as well as Jordan Farmar -- is finding himself playing more crucial minutes. The Lakers' second unit has at times this season not delivered, but Brown's high-energy play seems to always shine through no matter what L.A.'s other reserves are doing. As for the dunk contest? Brown is humbled to be a part of it, but is already getting dunking pointers from Kobe Bryant, who says Brown jumps higher than anyone on the team (including Bryant himself).

G. George Hill, Spurs
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Nothing like facing Chris Paul to get a player back on track. Hill (and Tony Parker for that matter) struggled in a 92-86 loss to the less-heralded Grizzlies backcourt of Mike Conley and Jamaal Tinsley. The Grizz point guards combined for 14 points, four assists and two 3-pointers while Hill and Parker put up eight points, three assists and shot a combined 4-for-16. Hill more than made up for it against Paul, putting up a solid line of his own (16 points, six rebounds) while keeping Paul to 18 points. A solid night for Hill, but as has been the case for him all season, he made a solid mark with his defense as he drew a charge from Paul with 33 seconds left and San Antonio up 94-88. That foul was Paul's sixth and helped salt away the victory for the Spurs. Hill had a solid night, too, in a 105-98 loss to the Jazz that not only gave Utah a 4-0 sweep of the Spurs, but denied Tim Duncan a milestone. Although he fouled out against Utah, Hill put up a solid line and as Gregg Popovich has taken to resting Duncan on back-to-back nights, we're hoping to see more of Hill due to lineup adjustments Popovich might have to make.

C. Chris Kaman, Clippers
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Every team needs it's "security blanket" player: the guy you can trust to keep the offense together when things get hectic. For the Clippers, that guy is clearly Kaman. While he was waiting for his sore back to heal up, the Clippers went from a four-game win streak and being in the midst of the Western Conference playoff chase to a four-game slide and battling the Kings for the Pacific Division cellar. Kaman abused the Heat's Jermaine O'Neal and Joel Anthony last week, racking up 22 points and 14 rebounds and hitting his usual variety of jump hooks and turnaround jumpers in the post. He followed that up with a Martin Luther King Day under-the-radar center matchup with Brook Lopez and was solid again with 22 points and three blocks. As we mentioned in this space last week, Kaman is clearly the Clips' go-to guy. The Clippers, for their part, were glad to see him back and know that they clearly perform better with Kaman operating from the low post than with him in a nice suit on the bench. "Even around .500 is good. He showed his value a little bit by being out as well," Clippers Coach Mike Dunleavy told the Los Angeles Times. "People are looking at it the other way, 'What's his contribution to the team?' He brings that stability to our game that we can get it either through a post-up or a pick-and-roll with him."

F. Zach Randolph, Grizzlies
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"In this league, once something happens, it follows you. You do stuff when you're young, but I'm mature, I've got my family and I just focus on basketball." That quote comes from a great video feature on Randolph on the Grizzlies' Web site that chronicles how he's gone from a summer castoff to a likely All-Star. In his last five games, Randolph has shown exactly how much he's focusing on basketball as he is averaging 23 ppg, 11.6 rpg and shooting 51.7 percent as Memphis has gone 4-1. He was impressive a over the Spurs, going shot-for-shot with Tim Duncan. But he definitely helped his All-Star cause with his play against the Suns on Martin Luther King Day on TNT. He outplayed the Suns' entire front line and outperformed All-Star shoo-in Amar'e Stoudemire in the stat column, finishing with 27 points and 11 rebounds to Stoudemire's 12 points and nine rebounds. Randolph has clearly been revitalized by his move to Memphis; he's averaging 20-plus points and 10-plus rebounds the last two months, the first time he's done that since the 2006-07 season in New York. A tip of the hat to ESPN's TrueHoop blog, too, for this nugget: Randolph has been attempting just a fifth of the 3-pointers he shot a year ago. In the past three seasons, Randolph has taken 73, 97 and 80 3-point attempts; this season, he's taken just 17 (and made four). More importantly, Memphis' wins over Phoenix and San Antonio are perhaps the most significant wins in team history since the days of Pau Gasol and proof Randolph and the Grizz are quickly forcing opponents to start taking them seriously again.

F. Gerald Wallace, Bobcats
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Don't think of Wallace as just a one-trick pony. He is of course among the top five rebounders in the league, but he's a solid double-double threat every night. He has 22 double-doubles this season, which is more than Tim Duncan, Al Jefferson, Al Horford and his former teammate Emeka Okafor have this season. Always a sneaky and quick defender, Wallace ranks among the top 15 in the league in steals (66) and steals per game (1.69) and is among the league's most efficient players, boasting a 23.9 rating -- 14th in the league in that category. We were impressed by one stretch in Wednesday night's blowout win over the Heat. Despite Charlotte being up by 20-plus points midway through the third quarter, Wallace showed his trademark hustle in one impressive stretch. First, Wallace stripped the ball off Udonis Haslem after Haslem had gathered an offensive rebound, causing the ball to go out of bounds off his leg. Then, Wallace bailed out what was a mostly-failed Bobcats possession by taking a baseline pass from D.J. Augustin and slammed home a two-handed power jam over the Heat. That stretch helped quash what was a mini-run by Miami and lifted the Bobcats to a franchise record-tying sixth straight victory.

The Next Five

G: Nate Robinson, Knicks -- Stop us if you've heard this one before: Robinson comes in off bench, goes on a scoring bing and sparks New York to a comeback win. The familiar tale (which Robinson fulfilled in a thrilling New Year's Day win over the Hawks) came true again in a MLK Day win over the Pistons. He played 33 minutes off the bench, scoring 27 points and nailed five 3-pointers as New York snapped out of a second-half daze. Oh, lest we forget, this performance also came on the day he was named to the Sprite Slam Dunk contest. The reigning slam dunk champ showed off his skills with an amazing dunk off an alley-oop pass from Chris Duhon. Robinson, as he's said several times throughout his career, wants to be known as more than just a big dunker in a small package. "I'm an all-around player," he said. "My teammates and my coach told me that I had to be aggressive, that's just who I am. They said in the last couple of games I hadn't been that aggressive."

G: Rafer Alston, Heat -- Roughly a year ago, Alston was splitting the point guard duties with Aaron Brooks in Houston. Since then, Alston has gone from Houston to Orlando to New Jersey and now, Miami. He had a solid night against one of his old teams last week (17 points, four rebounds, two assists) as the Heat notched a nice road win in Houston. More impressive than his stats was his defense on Brooks, as he held the Rockets' starting point guard to 14 points on 5-of-12 shooting and forced him into four turnovers. Brooks, who played two seasons with Alston, said he still keeps in contact with his former backcourt mate and appreciates the lessons he learned from Alston over the years. "One thing about (Alston) is he went hard every day. Practice was just like the game to him. He took everything so personal," Brooks told the Houston Chronicle. "We really battled in practice. He hated to lose, even in practice. It did make me better. I had to play through his fouls back them. It made me stronger."

F: Craig Smith, Clippers -- Rasual Butler had 33 points and Eric Gordon had 28 points as the Clippers narrowly lost to the Cavs at Staples Center, but Smith deserves a little praise in the near-upset win. He had 16 points and six rebounds and did a decent job of filling in while the frontline took a hit due to Chris Kaman's sore back. The appropriately-nicknamed Rhino had 18 points in 18 minutes of action against the lowly Nets in a Martin Luther King Day win and has is becoming more of a factor in the Clippers' rotation. He's fourth on the team in efficency rating (16.9) but the always-physical Smith is also one of the team leaders in fouls, something likely keeping him from having a bigger impact in L.A.

F: Drew Gooden, Mavs -- Gooden was a late-summer addition in the Mavs' offseason retooling and struggled to make shots early despite shooting a respectable 48.1 percent in November and 45.6 percent in December. He's actually shooting a worse percentage in January (44.1), but has made his mark off the bench. Last week, he once again shined in a reserve role as Dallas got a big win in Boston and held off Washington on the road. Gooden took advantage of the weakened Celtics frontline with 10 points and four rebounds. He played even better against the Wizards, recording 14 points, seven rebounds and four assists and made a solid mark on defense, clogging up the middle and coming away with a pair of blocks and three steals in the Mavs' close win. Entering this season, Gooden had started 396 of a possible 510 games. In Dallas, though, he's only started 10 of 36 games and is embracing his role as an energizing player off the bench. "I love the way he's taken the challenge of coming off the bench," coach Rick Carlisle told the Dallas Morning News. "He and I have talked about the challenge of being an energizer, a rebounder, a defender off the bench. It's a different type of challenge for him. He's worked at it hard and he's had some real impact games for us."

C: Ben Wallace, Pistons -- While it's hardly been a return to the good old days for the Pistons, the return of Wallace has sparked memories of his peak years in Detroit. We've kept a peripheral eye on Wallace, watching in amazement as his 35-year-old frame rumbles up and down the court, producing more productive nights than not. He's second on the Pistons in minutes played (trailing only 23-year-old point guard Rodney Stuckey) and is 16th in the league in rebounding. Last week was another "classic" Wallace game as he pulled down 21 boards in a win over the Hornets and two nights later, had 16 points and 14 boards in a loss to the Knicks. Wallace also had a nice game defensively against the Celtics and teamed with Jason Maxiell to make Rasheed Wallace's return to Detroit a forgettable one. "He's 35 years old doing big-time things," Charlie Villanueva told the Detroit Free-Press. "He's playing like he's 25. Grabbing all these rebounds and playing with a lot of energy. He still has a lot more years in this league."


Boozer, future uncertain, sticks to playing in here and now

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Carlos Boozer is averaging 19.3 points and 10.7 rebounds a game.

SAN ANTONIO -- It was the legendary pitcher Satchel Paige who cautioned against looking back. Carlos Boozer's challenge is to not get caught looking too far ahead.

Where will he be a month from now?

Once the NBA trade deadline passes on Feb. 18, Boozer could find himself launching that high-arcing jumper in Miami. Or Chicago. Or Dallas. Or Detroit. Or maybe the one place he's hoping to be.

"Right here, with the Jazz," Boozer said. "If it was up to me, absolutely. But as you know, it's not up to me."

The trade rumors are always flying at this time of the season. This year, with the economy depressed and the NBA salary cap and luxury tax threshold sinking, the skies are more crowded than over London during the blitz.

It was Boozer who floated his own escape plans last summer when he made noises about playing in Miami and Chicago. That seemed to make his expiring $12.7 million contract one of the most likely to be moved.

Now though, as the deadline draws near, the 28-year-old forward is changing his tune.

"We've won five of our last six games," Boozer said. "Things are starting to come together with our team. We're playing some good basketball. We've beaten some good teams. If it's just about basketball and trying to win as many games as you can, then I'd say keep it all together. It's that simple."

Of course, it's never that simple. The Jazz, playing in one of the league's smallest markets, will have to pay the NBA luxury tax for the first time in franchise history if they don't trim roughly $8 million from their payroll. In addition, the team is already committed to paying nearly $57 million to seven players for the 2010-11 season.

Utah could keep Boozer through the end of the season and try to re-sign him when he becomes a free agent next summer. Or, they could attempt to move him along in a sign-and-trade deal. Then again, the Jazz could pull the trigger on a deal in the next four weeks.

But would they do it just when their consistency and confidence is coming together?

Boozer scored 31 points and grabbed 13 rebounds in the 105-98 win that gave the Jazz their first series sweep over the Spurs since the 1997-98 season and allowed them to start the second half of the schedule within one game of last season's pace, at 24-18.

"I like the way things are going. I like the way it feels," Boozer said. "That's why my preference is to be here. Not just this year, but in the future.

"I hope that's an option. We'll see. They know. They know already how I feel. It's up to them. It's their situation. It's their money. It's their team. I'm a player.

"I'm not frustrated at all. I'm happy to be doing what I do, where I'm doing it. If I get a chance to stay longer in my career, I'll be happy. If they choose to go in a different direction, that's up to them."

All of which leaves Jazz coach Jerry Sloan in the middle.

"I don't get involved in that stuff," Sloan said. "I just coach who's here. That's what I've always done. That's all we can concentrate on. We can't concentrate on if and why.

"We sat down and talked when he came back this season. I'm gonna try to coach the best I can and he's got to play the best he can. That's how I would look at it. I think he's been very good.

"Carlos is aware of the fact that if he misses a free throw or he misses a basket, they're gonna boo him. That's the way life is, unfortunately. But he's been very good. I've enjoyed coaching him. I haven't had a problem with him through any of this.

"I understand what he's going through to a certain extent. But if you don't want those things to happen, don't come into the league. Don't get into basketball. Go get another job. That's part of the business. He's aware of that. He's been aware of it all along."

The Jazz already made one cost-cutting deal this season when they sent rookie guard Eric Maynor and the $6.5 million expiring contract of Matt Harpring to Oklahoma City.

"I have no control over that," Sloan said. "Those are the parameters we work under with our owners. We don't say, 'We need this or we need that.' We've never worked that way. We never worked that way when Larry (Miller) was alive and we don't do that with ownership now. We do the best we can with who is here and that's all we can do.

"Maynor's contract was small, but Matt Harpring's total package was big. Matt wasn't going to be able to play. It boiled down to getting quite a bit of relief, from what I understand, by only losing one player. In the end, that's a business decision. Our job is to play who's here, whatever the case may be. When you're trying to run it as a business and not a toy, then it's a different ballgame. It always has been."

Everyone in the Jazz locker room understands that.

"I don't read the papers and I don't listen to SportsCenter about any of that stuff," said Deron Williams. "I try not to think about it. I don't want to think about it."

Andrei Kirilenko shrugged.

"The talk, the rumors are always here," he said. "If it's not Booz, then it's me. We've got a core of guys who have been here now for several years. It's good feeling in this room and on the court. We don't want that to end. But if it does, well, we understand that is not basketball, it's business. After all, this is a business."

Where the clock is ticking and you can't get caught up looking back -- or ahead.


Hamstring injury to sideline Blazers' Roy 2 games

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -- Trail Blazers guard Brandon Roy will miss the team's next two games after aggravating a right hamstring injury.

Roy re-injured the hamstring late in the first half of Portland's 98-90 victory at Philadelphia on Wednesday night.

The two-time All-Star was originally injured during the third quarter of the Blazers' 120-108 home victory over the Milwaukee Bucks on Jan. 13.

Roy is averaging 23.1 points, 4.6 rebounds and five assists.

The Blazers visit the Celtics on Friday night before playing at Detroit on Saturday. Jerryd Bayless is expected to start for Portland in Boston.

Wizards face more uncertainty as 2nd half begins

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Washington Wizards have taken what seems like eons to play just 41 games, just half the NBA season.

"For me, it felt like about 86 games," guard Randy Foye said Thursday.

That's how it feels when a team has been losing, chemistry and discipline have faltered, and its star player has been to court for playing with guns in the locker room.

The tougher news? The second half could be even longer.

The status of the indefinitely suspended Gilbert Arenas remains in limbo, pending final judgments by the NBA and the courts following his guilty plea for felony gun possession.

His teammate Javaris Crittenton also remains under investigation. Prosecutors have said the charge against Arenas came from a dispute with another player over a card game. Authorities have not identified the player but investigators searched Crittenton's apartment for a gun. He has not been charged.

And the trade deadline is looming in February, when a team that is substantially over the luxury tax might want to unload some assets.

On top of it all, the franchise is being sold following the death of owner Abe Pollin.

The financial wranglings could take weeks or months, but, barring an unexpected development, Pollin's longtime minority partner Ted Leonsis will eventually assume control of the franchise and begin making his own changes.

On the postivie side, the Wizards have had a few good games since Arenas was suspended on Jan. 6. So, despite a 14-27 record, they are only 4 1/2 games out of a playoff berth amid a big batch of mediocre teams in the Eastern Conference.

"Why wouldn't I be optimistic? It's January," center Brendan Haywood said. "You've got to continue to believe in yourself and your teammates. I believe in myself and I believe in those guys in that locker room, and we believe that we can get it done."

"If we were in the Western Conference, uh," he added with a shrug, "it might be a little different story."

The coach and players can't be faulted for clinging to hope. They're not allowed to cancel the season, and, as Antawn Jamison has pointed out, the Wizards would turn into a feel-good story if they made a playoff run, a classic case of a team overcoming adversity and proving the naysayers wrong.

"We're just trying to find a cure," Jamison said, "and the only cure we can find right now is to win."

Of course, as one of the Wizards' most marketable players, Jamison might not be around much longer, win or lose.

Trying to keep a handle on it all is team president Ernie Grunfeld. Despite his impressive title, Grunfeld is hardly in the best shape to predict the franchise's immediate future -- because it depends on factors out of his control.

Will Arenas play for the Wizards again? Will the team try to void the remainder of his six-year, $111 million contract? .

There's no use committing to any action on those fronts until Arenas is sentenced on March 26, and until NBA commissioner David Stern announces how long Arenas will be off the court. All Grunfeld can do now is order almost every morsel of Arenas' existence be removed from the Verizon Center, leaving the impression that there are no plans whatsoever for Arenas to wear a Wizards jersey again.

And Crittenton? No gun was found is the search and all the Wizards can do is excuse him from practice during the investigation. He was injured and wasn't playing anyway.

Grunfeld also doesn't know who his new bosses will be. Even though Leonsis is the presumptive owner of the team, he's not calling the shots yet. Grunfeld still answers to Pollin's family until the team is officially sold.

Where Grunfeld retains a firm grasp is the trade market.

If the Wizards become realistic playoff contenders, he'll have to decide whether to keep the roster together or that it is time to move on, dispensing of longtime stalwarts such as Jamison and Caron Butler.

"I think in the last five, six games, the guys have pulled together," Grunfeld said. "We've had some nice wins and some real nice efforts, and hopefully that can continue. You always look to see if you can improve your team in some way, and we'll just keep track of everything and a see how everything flows and how the team comes together here in the next month or so. ... The players and the results will tell which direction we really have to go."

Rebuilding the franchise's reputation will be as tough as rebuilding the roster.

The atmosphere had become such that at least one player -- and allegedly two -- felt comfortable bringing guns into the locker room. Several other players saw nothing wrong with making light of the whole Arenas situation with their antics on the court before a game in Philadelphia.

Four players were fined for that, but the Wizards have otherwise treated the Arenas saga as an isolated act by a rogue athlete that couldn't have been predicted -- even though Arenas had been suspended once before by the NBA over a gun-related matter.

Asked if there's anything he wishes he had done differently, Grunfeld chose not to dwell on the past.

"We're looking forward," he said. "A lot of people felt we had a good team in place. Most people picked us to be among the top four or five teams. It just hasn't worked out like that. I think our team's started to come together a little bit."

Clippers without Gordon, Telfair against Nuggets

DENVER -- The already shorthanded Clippers are down two more players for their game against the Nuggets on Thursday.

Guards Eric Gordon (sprained toe) and Sebastian Telfair (hamstring) were both injured during Los Angeles' win over the Bulls on Wednesday but Gordon's appears less severe.

"Eric's is more day to day; he's on the trip," Clippers coach Mike Dunleavy said before Thursday's game. "Hopefully for our next game. Telfair did not make the trip. He's seeing a specialist tomorrow."

The Clippers have been hit hard with injuries again this year. Blake Griffin, the first overall pick in the 2009 draft, had season-ending knee surgery Wednesday. Guard Kareem Rush is out for the season with a torn ACL in his right knee.

Los Angeles has missed 90 man games to injury this season.

"It is frustrating," Dunleavy said. "There are a lot of other teams that have been more fortunate. Unless you're one of the teams that are way under the luxury tax and have incredible depth and just keep bringing players in it's tough at times."

Kobe becomes youngest player to 25,000 points

CLEVELAND (AP) -- Los Angeles Lakers superstar Kobe Bryant is the 15th player in NBA history to reach 25,000 career points and the youngest to hit the milestone.

Bryant reached the mark by making one free throw late in the second quarter of Thursday's showdown against the Cleveland Cavaliers.

At 31 years, 151 days, Bryant got to 25,000 in 35 fewer days than Wilt Chamberlain, who finished his career with 31,419 points.

Earlier, Bryant was voted into his 12th All-Star game.

Next on the list for Bryant is Lakers great Jerry West (25,192) and former Indiana Pacers guard Reggie Miller (25,279).

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is the NBA's career leader with 38,387 points.

Thunder owners agree to pay former Sonics fans $1.6M

SEATTLE (AP) -- The owners of the Oklahoma City Thunder, formerly the Seattle SuperSonics, have agreed to pay former Sonics season-ticket holders $1.6 million to settle a class-action lawsuit.

Clay Bennett and his Professional Basketball Club, the ownership group that moved the Sonics to Oklahoma less than two years ago, reached the settlement agreement last month. It is awaiting approval from a federal judge in Seattle.

About 1,000 former season-ticket holders complained that when the Sonics moved, the team reneged on a deal to let them renew their tickets at 2006-07 prices through 2010.

The fans argued that if they had been allowed to transfer their tickets to Oklahoma City's Ford Center, where the team is now known as the Thunder, they could have then resold them at higher prices.

Bennett declined to comment Thursday.

Sprained shoulder to sideline Cavs' Williams for 1 month

CLEVELAND (AP) -- Cavaliers starting point guard Mo Williams will miss at least one month with a sprained left shoulder, a major blow to the Eastern Conference's top team.

An MRI revealed the sprain and the Cavs said that Williams, who has played in 124 of a possible 125 games since joining Cleveland before last season, is projected to be out for the "next four to six weeks" -- a timetable that could keep him out until the first week in March.

Williams is the club's second-leading scorer and top playmaker other than LeBron James. His loss figures to test the Cavs like nothing else so far this season.

"It's huge," James said before Thursday's showdown with the Los Angeles Lakers. "The last two years a lot of the reason for the success we've had as a team is because Mo has been our point guard. He has been the guy that has kept us under wraps and played in almost every single game. When you lose an All-Star point guard it hurts. It hurts a lot.

"Guys got to step up. Guys have no choice but to step up."

Williams injured his shoulder in Tuesday night's win over Toronto when he reached for a steal in the third quarter and banged into a few Raptors players. He was taken to the locker room for an examination and treatment before returning to the floor and making a key 3-pointer in the fourth quarter.

Cleveland coach Mike Brown said it is his understanding that rest should take care of Williams' injury. It's not likely he will need surgery.

On Tuesday, the Cavs initially said Williams had sustained a strain, but changed the diagnosis to a sprain, which indicates there is a tear in the shoulder.

Williams, who was an All-Star last season -- his first with Cleveland -- scored a team-high 28 points in the Cavaliers' Christmas Day win over the Lakers.

Delonte West, who is more of a shooting guard, will start in place of Williams and Daniel Gibson will return to the rotation after having his minutes reduced in recent weeks. West will be making his first start this season.

"It's tough," Brown said. "But we feel like we have a deep team. It's unfortunate Mo got hurt because he was playing really well for us and was in a rhythm. We have to see if we can hold the fort down until he's able to come back."

Losing Williams will hurt the Cavs in a variety of ways. He is one of the NBA's best three-throw (90 percent) and 3-point shooters (43 percent).

Cleveland (32-11) entered Thursday's game against the Lakers with a 3 1/2-game lead over Boston for the East's best record.

Celtics' Davis fined $25K for incident with fan in Detroit

NEW YORK -- Boston Celtics forward Glen Davis has been fined $25,000 for directing inappropriate language toward a fan, it was announced today by Stu Jackson, Executive Vice President, Basketball Operations.

The incident occurred with 8:44 remaining in the second quarter of Boston's 92-86 loss to the Detroit Pistons on Wednesday, Jan. 20 at The Palace of Auburn Hills.

Thunder lose backup forward White for 6-8 weeks

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- Oklahoma City Thunder forward D.J. White is expected to miss six to eight weeks following surgery to repair a fractured right thumb.

The Thunder say White had successful surgery Thursday. White was injured in practice Tuesday.

White is averaging 4.8 points and 1.9 rebounds in eight games this season. He had not played in a Thunder game for over a month, and spent about two weeks in the NBA Development League during that time.

White, a first-round draft pick out of Indiana in 2008, missed most of his rookie year following surgery to remove a benign growth from his jaw.

Basketball Hall of Fame moves enshrinment date to August

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) -- The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame is moving its enshrinement ceremony to Aug. 13, avoiding a conflict with the world championships.

The Hall expects to welcome its second straight decorated class, with the 1992 U.S. men's Olympic "Dream Team," plus Karl Malone and Scottie Pippen, nominated for induction. Both played on that famed team along with Michael Jordan, Larry Bird and Magic Johnson.

The enshrinement ceremonies usually take place in early to mid-September. The world championships will be held from Aug. 28-Sept. 12 in Turkey.

Jerry Colangelo, chairman of the Hall board and USA Basketball, says the change in date is for the "foreseeable future."

"After weighing many options, we believe the second weekend of August is a better fit for everyone involved in the enshrinement ceremonies," Colangelo said in a statement.

The enshrinement ceremony will again take place at Springfield's Symphony Hall, where it was moved to last year for the first time to accommodate the large crowd for Jordan's induction.

The finalists for the class of 2010 will be announced on Feb. 12 in Dallas as part of the NBA's All-Star weekend.

The Hall plans a number of events and new exhibits around the enshrinement ceremonies, including a potential tribute to the Dream Team if it is inducted.

"These new plans allow the Basketball Hall of Fame to make our premier event more accessible to fans as we establish a weeklong celebration designed to reach all of the Hall's constituencies," said John Doleva, president and CEO of the Hall.

Injured Yao enjoying team owner role in China

BEIJING (AP) -- Sidelined by a foot injury, Houston Rockets star Yao Ming says he's finding a new kind of satisfaction as owner of his former Chinese team, the Shanghai Sharks.

Yao bought out the financially troubled team's former owners in July for an undisclosed sum in a bid to revive its fortunes.

The club is presently fourth in the 17-team Chinese league, two points out of first place.

"I bought the Sharks to give them a boost and do something on behalf of Chinese basketball," Yao said in an interview with the official Xinhua News Agency appearing in newspapers Thursday.

"To be honest, they've played well this season, beyond my expectations, but we also see their deficiencies and need to toughen up in the coming seasons."

Yao saved the team after the loss of their main sponsor threatened to keep them out of the league in 2009-2010.

The 7-foot-6 center played for the Sharks from 1997 to 2002 and took them to the league championship title in the 2001-2002 season, after being runner-up in the playoffs the previous two years. The team has struggled to make the playoffs since his departure for the NBA.

Yao has dismissed speculation that the investment was a step toward retirement, although recurring injuries have raised fears that his career could be winding down.

He had surgery in May to repair a hairline fracture in his left foot and has said he wants to allow enough time for his bones to fully heal.

Yao has pledged to return Shanghai to its former winning ways while staying out of day-to-day operations and management. Captained by Chinese international Liu Wei and coached by American Bobby Donewald Jr., the Sharks also boast former Houston Rockets guard John Lucas.