Life of a gaander...

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Shannon Brown Posterizes Mikki Moore!


SS: That's a nice looking dunk!
The NBA season is fast approaching and if this dunk is any indication, Shannon Brown is in midseason form.

The Lakers and Warriors were in Anaheim last night in preseason action and midway through the 2nd quarter with the Lakers up 8, Shannon Brown got a steal and took it coast to coast, ending with a complete and total posterization of Mikki Moore.

I know that we are in the middle of the football season and the baseball playoffs are underway, but I for one am really looking forward to the NBA season.

 

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Why the NFL should punt Rush Limbaugh's Ownership Bid

NFL Should Punt Rush Limbaugh's Ownership Bid

Posted Oct 07, 2009 9:30PM By Kevin Blackistone (RSS feed)

Rush LimbaughSix years ago, ESPN's NFL Countdown crew sat silent as a new addition to its show, the bombastic right-wing commentator Rush Limbaugh, suggested Eagles black quarterback Donovan McNabb was overrated by a sports media concerned about looking politically correct. ESPN pulled the plug on Limbaugh a few days later and the Countdown crew the next weekend apologized for having abdicated its responsibility to address Limbaugh's outrageousness.

On Tuesday, it was reported that Limbaugh was part of St. Louis Blues owner Dave Checketts' group that wants to buy the city's NFL team, the Rams. I can't sit idly by like the Countdown crew did so regrettably.

The NFL indirectly dismissed Limbaugh before. It shouldn't accept him back unless he wants to buy a ticket. After all, this is a man who said:

-- Of President Obama: "Adolf Hitler, like Barack Obama, ruled by dictate."

-- Of Michael J. Fox's struggle with Parkinson's disease: "He is exaggerating the effects of the disease. He's moving all around and shaking and it's purely an act... This is really shameless of Michael J Fox."

-- Of a black caller to his radio show: "Take that bone out of your nose and call me back."

-- Of the NAACP: "The NAACP should have riot rehearsal. They should get a liquor store and practice robberies."

-- Of the Abu Ghraib prison abuse scandal: "This is no different than what happens at the Skull and Bones initiation, and we're going to ruin people's lives over it, and we're going to hamper our military effort, and then we are going to really hammer them because they had a good time."

-- And how could I forget, of the NFL: "Look, let me put it to you this way: the NFL all too often looks like a game between the Bloods and the Crips without any weapons."

It is true that freedom of speech in the country is a protected right. Limbaugh can say whatever he likes and so can you and I. Indeed, he hasn't been taken to court and convicted for any of his repugnant statements and repulsive viewpoints.

But that doesn't mean a potential business partner or employer can't refuse him like a restaurant does of diners who refuse to don shirts and shoes. They can and the NFL should.

If the league accepted whatever bid the group including Limbaugh puts up, it would be a slap in the face to at least two-thirds of its players, and that is selling short the other third. If the league accepted whatever bid the group including Limbaugh puts up, it would be a slap in the face to at least two-thirds of its players, and that is selling short the other third. The two-thirds I am referring to are the NFL players who are black. The other third are players of every other hue, including white players who are likely to be far more enlightened and accepting of people of color -- people they've lined up next to and counted on -- than Limbaugh.

I'd hope that if the NFL did make such a foolishly unnecessary move to accept the Limbaugh group that black and white players would do as Limbaugh seems to threaten and turn the clock back to, oh, let's say, 1964, the period when black folks were marching in the streets and standing up to goons to demand our full inclusion in this country. That year, at the AFL All-Star Game in New Orleans, black players threatened a boycott -- and their white teammates joined them -- after many of them were refused service because of their race at several New Orleans hotels and eateries. Buffalo Bills black star Cookie Gilchrist organized the effort and it forced the game to be moved to Houston.

That was the first boycott of an entire city by a professional sports event. Black NFL players would do themselves a disservice not to pick up and walk away from a Limbaugh infested NFL ownership. Imagine how powerful a denouncement of intolerance that would be? This is a league that couldn't find a way to integrate its ownership with a group that included one of its most-beloved superstars, the late Walter Payton. How could it justify making room for Limbaugh?

That is yet another reason it would be public relation's suicide for the NFL to vote Limbaugh into its ranks and, I would hope, commercial suicide for it as well. At the very least it could be suicide for the Rams. What black player would want to toil for someone like Limbaugh if he didn't have to?

I'm hard-pressed to imagine any current owners wanting Limbaugh in their boardroom, either. They make appearances to be an apolitical lot, donating money to both sides of the political line of scrimmage. After all, when they want to build new stadiums they tend to want political support and taxpayers' dollars and that is more difficult to come by when your political bent is well-defined and it is, as Limbaugh would make it, to the extreme.

It is one thing for our pro sports leagues to inherit despicable social louts like one-time Cincinnati Reds owner Marge Schott and current Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling. Among other affronts, Schott, who took over the Reds from her husband following his death, infamously once called her black players "million dollar n***ers." Sterling bought the Clippers almost 30 years ago, long before court cases revealed him to be a racist landlord.

Baseball eventually removed Schott. I wish basketball would do the same with Sterling.

The NFL can slam its door shut to Limbaugh right now. Anything less would be wholly unwise.

After all, football has become America's pastime and it is embraced even more so now because it has finally come to be the meritocracy it long purported to be. Black general managers finally dot the league. Black coaches have won and lost Super Bowls and been retreaded like their white counterparts. The black quarterback controversy that once enveloped the NFL was over and done with when Limbaugh foolishly tried to reignite it.

The only thing that needs to be torched now is the idea of Limbaugh as an NFL owner. It alone is an incendiary thought.

 

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Sorry, Shaq: NBA Bans Twitter at Games

Sorry, Shaq: NBA Bans Twitter at Games

Joining the NFL and other sports organizations in the raining-on-our-parade camp, the NBA has declared pre-, post-, and mid-game social media verboten, according to a Sports Illustrated post this evening.

According to a memo sent out to teams today, no mobile or other communication devices are to be used from 45 minutes before a game starts until after the players have finished performing their athletic duties, including postgame locker room interviews. The ban affects players, coaches, and "basketball operations personnel." We are unclear whether cheerleaders are included in this perplexingly named category.


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We're also not sure whether this ban applies to the official NBA Twitter account, which has more than 1.4 million followers, or to any of the myriad team Twitter accounts. What we do know is that the NBA will now be treating social media content the same way it would treat comments made to traditional media outlets.

The complete list of NBA players affected by this decision is staggering, but the ban also applies to other forms of social media, such as Facebook status updates. It would even prohibit the sending of text messages and emails during the prescribed time limits.

And although tweeting on the job is generally considered bad form, like all Twitter users who choose to make their professional lives part of their social stream, these NBA players are doing monumental things for engagement, brand ambassadorship, and real-time promotion. We consider the NBA's decision to make basketball less fun short-sighted and generally uncool.

However, the memo may be welcomed by many coaches and other team executives, who often prohibit the use of electronic communication devices at various times during team activities. Teams such as the L.A. Clippers and the Miami Heat already have guidelines in place that are much stricter than what was outlined in the NBA memo.

Many thanks to Mathew Ingram for the pointer and for inspiring our headline.

Does the NBA's call make sense to you? Or did the out-of-touch leadership go over the line? Let us know what you think in the comments.


Discuss

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Kobe Bryant voted NBA Athlete of the Decade...

Sporting News' NBA Athlete of the Decade: Kobe Bryant, SG, Lakers

Our choices for seven athletes of the decade--one in each sport we cover--sparked some intense debate. In the NBA, Kobe Bryant edged the Spurs' Tim Duncan.
Sporting News
Thursday, Sep. 24, 2009 - 1:18 a.m. ET
Count on this: Ring No. 4 isn't going to make Bryant complacent.
Count on this: Ring No. 4 isn't going to make Bryant complacent.
We say...

Is he the next Michael Jordan? Can he win a title without Shaquille O'Neal? Is he still better than LeBron James? When it comes to Bryant, the talking points have always missed the mark. No player in the history of the sport has been as hell bent on muscling up and improving his game every offseason. Bryant continues to set the bar on hard work, and there's no sign of anyone reaching his level in that regard.

The numbers say...

Bryant: 28.2 points per game, 5.9 rebounds, 5.2 assists, one MVP, four titles
Duncan: 21.2 points per game, 11.7 rebounds, 3.3 assists, two MVPs, three titles

You say...

SportingNews.com voting
Bryant 55%
Duncan 45%

They say...

Former Lakers teammate Shaquille O'Neal's case for Bryant: "The thing about Kobe is that, over the course of my career, I have never played with anyone who was as fierce as he is. By fierce I mean just having that extra killer instinct that you know when the game is on the line he is not going to shy away from the big shot, he is not going to make excuses. If we would go into the fourth quarter, playoffs or just some game in the season and we were within a little bit of the other team, Kobe was not going to shy away from the challenge of getting the win. He was going to take the shots."

Bryant says...

Our pick's memory of the decade: "This year meant a lot. We won a championship. It was satisfying, very satisfying, because we put in a lot of time and effort to fix things and get better. It's a great memory. I feel that we just had such a great team, such a fun team, from our chemistry to the way we executed. We went through some years and years of frustration to get to that point."

 

SN PLAYERS OF THE YEAR

2001: Allen Iverson
2002: Tim Duncan
2003: Tim Duncan
2000: Shaquille O'Neal
2004: Kevin Garnett
2005: Shaquille O'Neal
2006: LeBron James, Steve Nash
2007: Dirk Nowitzki
2008: Kobe Bryant
2009: LeBron James

--Contributing: Sean Deveney, Steve Greenberg

A longer version of this story first appeared in the Sept. 28, 2009, edition of Sporting News magazine. If you are not receiving the magazine, subscribe today, or pick up a copy, available at most Barnes & Noble, Borders and Hudson Retail outlets.

Player of the Decade: Kobe Bryant

Kobe Sporting News

From L.A.’s PR desk:

Los Angeles Lakers guard and 2009 NBA Finals MVP Kobe Bryant is Sporting News‘ NBA player of the decade.

The honor is part of a 14-page tribute to the athletes, coaches and teams of the 2000s in the new issue of the magazine, which arrives this week at all Barnes & Noble, Borders and Hudson Retail outlets. SN honored one athlete in each sport and enlisted the help of teammates, coaches and legends to make a case for both the winner and runner-up.

Said former teammate Shaquille O’Neal of Bryant: “The thing about Kobe is that, over the course of my career, I have never played with anyone who was as fierce as he is. By fierce I mean just having that extra killer instinct that you know when the game is on the line he is not going to shy away from the big shot, he is not going to make excuses. If we would go into the fourth quarter, playoffs or just some game in the season and we were within a little bit of the other team, Kobe was not going to shy away from the challenge of getting the win. He was going to take the shots.”

Bryant was SN’s player of the year in 2008. But 2009 was his favorite. “This year meant a lot,” he told SN. “We won a championship. It was satisfying, very satisfying, because we put in a lot of time and effort to fix things and get better. It’s a great memory. I feel that we just had such a great team, such a fun team, from our chemistry to the way we executed. We went through some years and years of frustration to get to that point.”

Bryant also made SN’s NBA all-decade team:

FIRST
G Steve Nash
G Kobe Bryant
F Tim Duncan
F LeBron James
C Shaquille O’Neal

SECOND
G Allen Iverson
G Dwyane Wade
F Dirk Nowitzki
F Kevin Garnett
C Yao Ming

 

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Cartoon, Joe Wilson vs Serena Williams

Forget Joe Wilson; I Stand With Serena Williams

Serena Williams has been fined for an outburst during a U.S. Open semi-finals match, but the press is still churning about it, or, more specifically, about whether she's apologized enough. If only she'd yelled at the President, instead of at a line referee -- she could have raised $1.5 million and gotten Max Baucus to add unnecessary and dangerous provisions to his healthcare bill!

From Kate Harding at Salon:

[The L.A. Times' Bill] Dwyre adds, "It was an embarrassment to a sport that has made good strides recently in expanding its niche. The U.S Tennis Assn. loves to talk about its 'grass-roots' programs, geared to getting rackets into young players' hands. Now those young hands have a role model for racket-smashing and bad language." Hmm, do you suppose we'd be talking about the potential effect of this on the grass-roots programs -- aimed at inner-city children from low-income families -- if it had been [opponent Kim] Clijsters, or a white man who went on a brief tirade?

Katy Kelleher at Jezebel breaks down the 'all-American' appeal of the Williams sisters' up-and-coming opponents, quoting commenter 'heykoukla':

What a shame the Williams sisters don't have a rags-to-riches backstory. You know, like growing up in a poor neighbourhood and being

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Blame it on the Ra aha aha ah Ron.....

SS: I like the mentality on Ron's part....he knows he's got to keep it together to make things happen and that the pressure is on him to perform and act within the team concept. Oh and also not to act CRAZY! Let's see if he can do it.....will be a super interesting season!

Artest: My fault if Lakers titleless in '10

SAN DIEGO -- Pardon Ron Artest if he's a bit geographically challenged and had no idea that San Diego has a big league baseball team, even though he was wearing a Padres cap.

This much he's sure of -- if his Los Angeles Lakers don't repeat as NBA champions, fans can point their fingers at him.

"They should. That's exactly what should happen if we don't repeat," the star forward said during a visit to promote the Lakers' exhibition game against the Denver Nuggets at the San Diego Sports Arena on Oct. 23.

[+] EnlargeRon Artest
AP Photo/Philip Scott AndrewsRon Artest, professing his newfound affection for Southern California, signed a five-year deal worth $33 million as a free agent in July.

"They won last year, and I'm the new addition. The fans expect to repeat. Everybody in L.A. expects a second ring. And if we don't then yeah, they should point it right at me, throwing tomatoes and everything."

Artest joined the Lakers as a free agent on July 8, signing a five-year deal worth about $33 million. He is the team's only addition, essentially switching places with Trevor Ariza, who left the Lakers to take Artest's spot with the Rockets.

Artest said he was proud to be making his first promotional appearance for the Lakers. He wore an all-black Kobe Bryant jersey as a tribute to his new teammate.

"It makes me more excited, gives me a better understanding of what jersey I'm actually putting on," Artest said. "So today I decided to wear the black Kobe Bryant jersey, because he is the 'Black Mamba,' and I'm really happy to be a part of this team and I'm really excited just to be an addition, an asset, to the guy, to the [Derek] Fishers and the [Andrew] Bynums and all the rest of the players."

During a wide-ranging news conference at the San Diego Chargers' media trailer, Artest drew some laughs with a few slip-ups.

"I didn't realize how far L.A.'s tentacles, or whatever you want to call them, extend, all the way to San Diego. I thought I was going to be getting some Golden State Warrior fans, because I didn't know where I was at. Most of the fans are Lakers fans, so that's great.

"And I'm also here to say that next year I'll be trying out for the San Diego Chargers, so I look forward to that. Hopefully I can play some baseball. Is there a baseball team here?"

The fans expect to repeat. Everybody in L.A. expects a second ring. And if we don't then yeah, they should point it right at me, throwing tomatoes and everything. -- Ron Artest

You're wearing the hat, he was told.

"I know I'm wearing the hat. I just love the SD. The logo looks great. I didn't realize there was a baseball team in San Diego."

A tough, physical defender, Artest had some spirited moments against Bryant when the Rockets pushed the Lakers to seven games in the second round of the playoffs.

"That was friendship what you saw out there with me and Kobe," Artest said. "That's like hard-core friendship, you know, like back in the days -- fight against your best friend when you were younger and go out and get some ice cream later? That's what that was. It was just so competitive.

"I just knew that my team was going to win. Of course we lost Yao [Ming], which hurt the Rockets. And Kobe wanted to win, and he knew his team was going to win. It was like, 'OK, I know you but I don't care nothing about you, maybe I have to step on your toes and give you a couple of elbows and get you ejected twice, whatever it takes to win, that's what I'm going to do.'"

Artest was ejected from Games 2 and 3 against the Lakers. In Game 2, he received a technical and was ejected after pointing and making a gesture near his throat after complaining that Bryant had elbowed him in the throat under the basket.

Artest was ejected from Game 3 after a flagrant foul on Pau Gasol.

It's all good now that they're all teammates.

"That's what I love about Kobe. He's so tough," Artest said. "He was great when he was younger, but he's much more competitive now. I didn't envision myself playing with him. I always wanted to play against him. I always wanted to beat Kobe Bryant. But I'm more than happy to be playing with Kobe."

A native New Yorker, Artest said he's turning into a West Coast kind of guy.

"I'm learning a lot of different ways of California. Is this Southern California?" he said, apparently not realizing San Diego is as southern as it gets. "It never rains in Southern California, huh? I'm turning into a Southern California guy. I'm happy to be a Southern Californian, or whatever you want to call it."

The Lakers open training camp Sept. 29 at their headquarters in El Segundo.

Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press

 

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Great Chick Hearn Tribute....

Tip-Off Timer: There Will Never Be a Greater Laker Than Chick Hearn

Posted Sep 21, 2009 10:00AM By Nate Jones (RSS feed)

Tip-Off Timer counts down the days until the first game of the 2009-10 season. On Monday, there are 36 days remaining.

If you lived in Los Angeles at anytime from the time the Lakers moved to L.A. in the early 1960's to the last of the Shaq/Kobe championships in 2002, you are probably quite familiar with Francis "Chick" Hearn. And even if you aren't from L.A., you might still be familiar with Chick, as he was probably the greatest play-by-play man in the history of basketball.

Chick was most known for his famous catch phrases known as "Chick-isms". The most famous of those Chick-isms is probably "slaaaam dunk" (yes, he invented the word "slam dunk").

In all my years of watching basketball, Chick might be the only play-by-play man that was able to keep up with the pace of the game. Of course his rapid fire style was born out of his pre-television days. Without television, radio play-by-play announcers had to paint a picture of the game with their words. Chick called his play-by-play style his "words eye view", and it was most certainly that.

For a time my family didn't have cable television, so I had to listen to the radio to catch Lakers home games. Trust me when I say there wasn't much of a difference between watching the games on television with Chick Hearn calling them and hearing Chick call the game on Lakers radio. He was that good. In fact, Chick was such a prolific announcer that when the Lakers played national television games, I would mute the television and turn on the radio to hear Chick call the game. I know this was a common thing for most fans to do in Los Angeles.

Outside of being the best at what he did, Chick was great because he was a consummate professional. From all accounts he loved his job and was the first Lakers employee at the arena, always preparing for work several hours before tip off. Although he loved the Lakers, he did not allow that to cloud his judgment and never fell into the blatant homerism that is epidemic amongst today's local play-by-play men. In fact, he was probably the Lakers' harshest critic. If the Lakers were stinking it up, you would here about it. If the Lakers were playing a great player, Chick wasn't afraid to give that player the proper compliments.

Chick's biggest was probably "the streak". Chick was the Lakers play-by-play man from the 1961 season until the end of the 2002 season. Before the 2002 season, he only missed TWO Lakers games. The last game he missed was in 1965. He wouldn't miss another game for 36 straight years. So from the end of 1965 until the end of 2001 Chick didn't miss one single Lakers game, calling 3,338 consecutive games. That is a streak that almost certainly will never be broken.

When asked to name the greatest Laker of all-time, most fans would probably name Magic Johnson or Jerry West. I always think Chick Hearn. He's the one constant through every single Lakers season in Los Angeles prior to 2002. He's the thread that goes from Elgin Baylor and Jerry West, through Magic Johnson and Kareem, all the way to Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant. He's also the main reason I love basketball.

Below is a clip of Chick at work:



You can find more videos of Chick at the OldGoldenThroat Youtube page.

 

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I have to say, Jordan's HOF speech was pretty wack....

SS: Jordan sounded like a bitter old man, I mean dude you are the greatest player ever, get over it! What was that comment to his kids? "I wouldn't want to be you..."!?!? This article provides a great perspective on Jordan's pettiness.

Jordan’s night to remember turns petty

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. – The tears tumbled, flooding his face and Michael Jordan had yet to march to the microphone at Symphony Hall. He had listened to the genuine stories and speeches of a remarkable class. He had watched a “This is Your Life” video compilation of his basketball genius. Everything flashed before him, a legacy that he’s fought with body and soul to never, ever let go into yesterday.

Yes, Michael Jordan was still fighting it on Friday night, and maybe he always will. Mostly, he was crying over the passing of that old Jordan, and it wouldn’t be long until he climbed out of his suit and back into his uniform and shorts, back into an adolescent act that’s turned so tedious.

This wasn’t a Hall of Fame induction speech, but a bully tripping nerds with lunch trays in the school cafeteria. He had a responsibility to his standing in history, to players past and present, and he let everyone down. This was a night to leave behind the petty grievances and past slights – real and imagined. This was a night to be gracious, to be generous with praise and credit.

“M.J. was introduced as the greatest player ever and he’s still standing there trying to settle scores,” one Hall of Famer said privately later.

Jordan didn’t hurt his image with the NBA community, as much as he reminded them of it. “That’s who Michael is,” one high-ranking team executive said. “It wasn’t like he was out of character. There’s no one else who could’ve gotten away with what he did tonight. But it was Michael, and everyone just goes along.”

Jordan wandered through an unfocused and uninspired speech at Symphony Hall, disparaging people who had little to do with his career, like Jeff Van Gundy and Bryon Russell. He ignored people who had so much to do with it, like his personal trainer, Tim Grover. This had been a moving and inspirational night for the NBA – one of its best ceremonies ever – and five minutes into Jordan’s speech it began to spiral into something else. Something unworthy of Jordan’s stature, something beneath him.

Jordan spent more time pointlessly admonishing Van Gundy and Russell for crossing him with taunts a dozen years ago than he did singling out his three children. When he finally acknowledged his family, Jordan blurted, in part, to them, “I wouldn’t want to be you guys.”

Well, um, thanks Dad. He meant it, too. If not the NBA, he should’ve thought of his children before he started spraying fire at everyone.

No one ever feels sorry for Isiah Thomas, but Jordan tsk-tsked him and George Gervin and Magic Johnson for the 1985 All-Star game “freeze-out.” Jordan was a rookie, and the older stars decided to isolate him. It was a long time ago, and he obliterated them all for six NBA championships and five MVP trophies. Isiah and the Ice Man looked stunned, as intimidated 50 feet from the stage, as they might have been on the basketball court.

The cheering and laughter egged Jordan on, but this was no public service for him. Just because he was smiling didn’t mean this speech hadn’t dissolved into a downright vicious volley.

Worst of all, he flew his old high school teammate, Leroy Smith, to Springfield for the induction. Remember, Smith was the upperclassman his coach, Pop Herring, kept on varsity over him as a high school sophomore. He waggled to the old coach, “I wanted to make sure you understood: You made a mistake, dude.”

Whatever, Michael. Everyone gets it. Truth be told, everyone got it years ago, but somehow he thinks this is a cleansing exercise. When basketball wanted to celebrate Jordan as the greatest player ever, wanted to honor him for changing basketball everywhere, he was petty and punitive. Yes, there was some wink-wink teasing with his beloved Dean Smith, but make no mistake: Jordan revealed himself to be strangely bitter. You won, Michael. You won it all. Yet, he keeps chasing something that he’ll never catch, and sometimes, well, it all seems so hollow for him.

This is why he’s a terrible basketball executive because he still hasn’t learned to channel his aggressions into hard work on that job. For the Charlotte Bobcats, Jordan remains an absentee boss who keeps searching for basketball players on fairways and greens.

From the speeches of David Robinson to John Stockton, Jerry Sloan to Vivian Stringer, there was an unmistakable thread of peace of mind and purpose. At times, they were self-deprecating and deflective of praise. Jordan hasn’t mastered that art, and it reveals him to be oddly insecure. When Jordan should’ve thanked the Bulls ex-GM, Jerry Krause, for surrounding him with championship coaches and talent, he ridiculed him. It was me, Jordan was saying. Not him. “The organization didn’t play with the flu in Utah,” Jordan grumbled.

For Jordan to let someone else share in the Bulls’ dynasty will never diminish his greatness. Just enhance it. Only, he’s 46 years old and he still doesn’t get it. Yes, Jordan did gush over Scottie Pippen, but he failed to confess that he had wanted Krause to draft North Carolina’s Joe Wolf. Sometimes, no one is better with a half a story, half a truth, than Jordan. All his life, no one’s ever called him on it.

Whatever Jordan wants to believe, understand this: The reason that Van Gundy’s declaration of him as a “con man” so angered him is because it was true on so many levels.

It was part of his competitiveness edge, part of his marketability, and yes, part of his human frailty.

Jordan wasn’t crying over sentimentality on Friday night, as much as he was the loss of a life that he returned from two retirements to have again. The finality of his basketball genius hit him at the induction ceremony, hit him hard. Jordan showed little poise and less grace.

Once again, he turned the evening into something bordering between vicious and vapid, an empty exercise for a night that should’ve had staying power, that should’ve been transformative for basketball and its greatest player. What fueled his fury as a thirtysomething now fuels his bitterness as a lost, wandering fortysomething who threatened a comeback at 50.

“Don’t laugh,” Michael Jordan warned.

No one’s laughing anymore.

Once and for all, Michael: It’s over.

You won.

 

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Great article on the politics behind the Oregon football player suspended for fighting

SS: Great perspective by Dave Zirin on the hypocrisy of college football for their reaction to fighting incident between Oregon and Boise St. Any sports fan should sign up to his blog and get his weekly columns.... http://www.edgeofsports.com

LeGarrette Blount and the Politics of the Punch

Beneath the veneer, college football is a multi-billion dollar spectacle of unpaid labor and unhinged fandom. The 2009 season opened in Boise, Idaho and flashed it's underbelly to the world. The game started with a mandated sportsmanship initiative, as 14 players from the Boise St. Broncos and the Oregon Ducks shook hands at midfield. It ended with one of the 14 players, LeGarrette Blount of the Ducks punching Boise St's Byron Hout in the jaw.

 

Without question, what Blount did is entirely unacceptable. But without question, the punishment that's been levied against Blount outstrips the crime. First year Oregon coach Chip Kelly has announced that while Blount can keep his scholarship, he is banned from the team for the season. This is a devastating blow for the senior running back because it ends his collegiate playing career. After a stellar junior season where Blount set a school record for touchdowns and averaged seven yards a carry, he is done. One NFL scouting director told ESPN's Todd McShay, "In the matter of five minutes, Blount just went from second- or third-rounder to completely undraftable."

 

Now the perfectly predictable pile-on is playing out in the press. As John Canzano for the Oregonian wrote, "...what we have here is a low moment that can not be greeted with tolerance.....The Ducks running back should be arrested and charged with assault today." Please spare us the sanctimony. If every player who ever threw a punch in the high-octane, adrenalized world of sports was banned like Blount, there wouldn't be a National Hockey League. Dozens of basketball players including Larry Bird, Julius Erving, and Shaquille O'Neal would have been booted from the NBA. Ron Artest would be in Gitmo. The difference between Blount and the rest is that players in the NHL, NBA and other sports have a degree of power. They have unions, collective bargaining and an appeals process. Blount has nothing. Despite all the stadiums he filled during his junior year, he, like all college players, is powerless.

 

If Blount could appeal, he'd have a decent case to get this suspension lightened. It was not a "suckerpunch" as much of the media calls it but a direct response to provocation. Following Boise State's 19-8 victory over Oregon, which saw Blount rush for a humiliating -5 yards on 8 carries, Hout slapped Blount on the shoulder and talked smack. We still don't know what Hout said but it was bad enough that Broncos coach Chris Peterson can be seen grabbing Hout and pulling him away.

 

Boise St. officials have already said that Hout would receive no punishment for the precipitating act. This is not to excuse Blount, but explain that many of the highlights are telling only half the story. Also emerging unpunished is whatever fool runs the big screen at Boise St.'s stadium. In front of the partisan crowd, Blount's jab was shown repeatedly, working the crowd into a state of full froth.

 

The running back says that he was punched and hit with a chair by Boise fans, which led him to become enraged and eventually removed from the field by assistant coach Scott Frost and two police officers. Creating a cauldron of violence amidst unpaid "student athletes" is apparently just fine but when the violence spills out of acceptable boundaries, people want Blount's head on a pike.

 

To call for Blount's arrest and celebrate his expulsion from the team is to be party to hypocrisy. Football is a profoundly violent sport. Player's bodies are destroyed, and their life expectancy is shortened with every down. In the United States, the average life span for NFL players is 55, more than two decades less than a typical male. Go to an NFL retirement dinner and it's literally like going to a Veterans of Foreign Wars banquet. Dave Meggyesy who played in the '60's once said to me, 'When you sign an NFL contract, you sign away your right to have a middle age.' We are fools if we express shock that this violence does not remain contained in the three hours on Saturday or Sunday. And now, amidst the violence, powerlessness, and the fandom run amok, here is LeGarrette Blount, without a roadmap to redemption.

 

If he expresses his regret openly and honestly and had the chance to play again this season, he could begin to undo the damage. In the twisted moral world of sports, as Michael Vick will discover, playing well is the only way to win back the love. Unfortunately, absent that option, LeGarrette Blount is stuck in youtube purgatory: an endlessly looping clip of his worst moment defining him for the immediate future.

 

[Dave Zirin is the author of "A People's History of Sports in the United States" (The New Press) Receive his column every week by emailing dave@edgeofsports.com. Contact him at edgeofsports@gmail.com.]

 

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Surprising but true...the 09 Lakers were the 9th most statistically dominant teams EVER. Props kb24!

SS: I know this is old, but I just came across this and was really surprised....

Ranking the NBA Finals teams: 1-10

Ranking the NBA finalists: 1-10 | 11-20 | 21-30 | 31-40 | 41-50 | 51-60 | 61-66

 

The Formula

For both the regular season and playoffs, I looked at two factors: win-loss record, and average scoring margin. Every regular-season win was worth two points, with the 1999 participants having their wins prorated to an 82-game season. Similarly, every playoff win was worth four points, but each playoff loss docked a team four points -- this helped differentiate between champions who went 15-2 (like the 1991 Bulls) and those who went 15-9 (like the 1988 Lakers).

For scoring margin, I took the team's season scoring margin and divided by 15 -- basically, a one point per game increase was worth 5.47 points in this formula. For playoff scoring margin, I did the same thing but multiplied by four -- since most teams played about four times as many regular-season games as playoff games, this made the two virtually equal.

Finally, I added 15 points to the score of each team that won a championship. Why 15? (A) Because that amount meant that every champion rated ahead of the runner-up from the same season; and (B) Because the valuation seemed about right -- the same as 7.5 regular-season wins.

From there, only one other tweak was necessary -- adjusting for those teams in the earlier years who didn't have as many early-round playoff games in which to rack up points. Teams who didn't play a first-round series got 12 extra points; teams that played a best-of-three got six points; teams that played a best-of-five got three points. That's an approximation, obviously, but it mirrored what other teams in their situation actually did.

We've had 33 NBA Finals matchups since the NBA-ABA merger, so we at ESPN.com decided to rank all 66 teams that have played on the NBA's biggest stage in the modern era.

Of course, that means we're sorting out the greatest of the great, and you can find those teams listed below.

But it also means that we have to find a place for an NBA Finals team that finished the season with a 40-42 record, believe it or not -- you can find them here.

And, yes, we've figured out the worst NBA champions of the past 33 years -- no, it's not the 2006 Miami Heat, though they were close.

As you might have guessed, I devised a little formula to help me get through this task.

My premise is we want to look at three factors in rating greatness: regular-season performance, postseason performance, and finally, whether the team won a championship. See the box to the right for all the gory details.

As you'll see, the way the numbers shook out produced a ranking that conformed very much with conventional wisdom, with a few interesting exceptions.

In other words, the list below is how I'd rank them even without a formula, more or less, but it's nice to know the numbers have my back.

Now, on to the list:

 

 

Hands down, the greatest team of all time. How can you choose another when these guys won 72 regular-season games and 14 of their first 15 in the postseason? The Bulls were so good they were first in both offensive and defensive efficiency, and outscored their opponents by 12.2 points per game.

 

With names like Jordan, Pippen, Rodman, and Toni Kukoc, not to mention a coach like Phil Jackson, this team was pretty much unbeatable -- in fact, seven of its playoff wins were by 17 points or more. The only nit to pick was the Bulls' consecutive losses to the Sonics in the Finals, but they were up 3-0 by then and seemingly bored with how good they were.

 

 

Fittingly, the great Lakers and Celtics teams are in a virtual dead heat for second place. (You'll note that I just call the Lakers "Los Angeles" in this list -- no risk of confusing them with the Clippers here.) This L.A. team nudged ahead of Boston by virtue of winning 65 games in the regular season and then trashing the West -- 11 wins in 12 games -- to make the Finals. The Lakers beat the Celtics in six, and for the playoffs as a whole outscored their opponents by 205 points -- the best of any team on this list. Seven different players averaged double figures, led by Magic with 23.9 points per game.

 

 

 

The Celtics won 67 games in '86 behind the best frontcourt ever assembled -- Bird, Kevin McHale, Robert Parish and Bill Walton -- and followed it up by stampeding through the playoffs in 15 games. They rank behind L.A. mostly because their victory margin wasn't as strong in the playoffs. On the other hand, this isn't a bad list to be No. 3 on. And few teams will ever have five players averaging at least 15 a game in the playoffs, as Boston's legendary quintet did in this postseason.

 

 

 

The Bulls' first championship team "only" won 61 games, but had a very impressive victory margin (plus-9.1 per game, the sixth best on the list) and absolutely romped in the playoffs. Chicago's 15-2 mark in the postseason was amazing considering it knocked off a two-time champion in four games (Detroit) followed by a four-time champion in five (the Lakers). The Bulls' plus-11.6 playoff victory margin ranks second among the 60 teams. Only three players averaged double figures, but I guess that's not a problem when one of them scores 34.0 per game.

 

 

 

 

 

So much for championship hangovers. The '96 Bulls were the best ever, but their successors weren't exactly chopped liver. Chicago won 69 games -- which would have tied the record were it not for the 72 wins the previous season -- and the Bulls' plus-10.8 average victory margin was also second only to the '96 edition. Their longest losing streak was two games, for crying out loud. They weren't quite as strong in the playoffs, needing six tough games to outlast the Jazz in the Finals and dropping two other postseason games, but they were plenty good. Amazingly, Jordan and Pippen were the only Bulls to average more than eight points a game in the postseason -- but 11 guys saw regular action.

 

 

 

 

The Lakers were so good in '85 and '87 that it's hard to fathom how they lost in five games to Houston in the year between. This edition won 62 games, went on an 11-2 romp through the Western Conference playoffs, then slew the leprechauns by winning Game 6 in Boston Garden to claim the title.

 

For the postseason, L.A.'s average scoring margin narrowly missed topping the list -- amazing considering the Lakers lost the "Boston Massacre" 148-114 in Game 1 of the Finals. But 10 of their 15 playoff wins came by 16 points or more -- including a win by 24 points or more in every round -- showing just how dominant these Lakers were.

 

 

These Bulls had a great regular-season run, winning 67 games and joining the '96 and '97 editions as the only teams on the list to have an average scoring margin of plus-10 or more in the regular season. The playoffs were a different story, however -- the Knicks nearly knocked them off in Round 2, and they lost by 26 at home to Cleveland in the conference finals before righting their ship and winning the title. Their seven postseason losses are the most of any team in the top 15. As with the '97 team, everyone got involved -- the Bulls used 11 players regularly and clinched the title in Game 6 against Portland when 12th man Bobby Hansen led a huge fourth-quarter rally.

 

 

 

A forgotten great team because of the lockout, the Spurs began the year 6-8 … and then went 46-7 the rest of the way, with nary a losing streak. An awesome defensive squad led by big men David Robinson and Tim Duncan, San Antonio's 84.7 points allowed per game is far and away the least of any of these 60 squads. That 15-2 postseason mark ain't too shabby either, including sweeps of the Blazers and Lakers. So stingy was the defense that only twice in 17 playoff games did San Antonio's opponent muster 90 points.

 

 

Kobe Bryant's first title team sans Shaq -- and Phil Jackson's record 10th as a coach -- was also the best of the Jackson era. That may surprise some who saw Shaq's teams steamroll to three straight titles, but those squads never had a dominating regular season and a dominating playoff run in the same season. This edition of L.A. was pretty strong in both respects, winning 65 times in the regular season and losing only seven times in the postseason; L.A.'s +166 playoff scoring margin is seventh all time.

 

 

The Celtics set a record for a champion with 10 postseason losses, so it's a bit of a surprise that they cracked the top 10. But a strong postseason combined with an impressive average margin in the playoffs put them ahead of every Bird-McHale team but one. Certainly helping the Celtics' cause was the 132-93 rout of the Lakers in the clincher, but they also won playoff games by 14,16,19, 23, 25 and 34.

Ranking the NBA finalists: 1-10 | 11-20 | 21-30 | 31-40 | 41-50 | 51-60 | 61-66

 

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