Archive for the ‘NBA’ Category

Lebron To The Heat!?!?!

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

Who know where Lebron will go? Nobody! But the ESPN hype machine cannot stop producing “sources” and other things that indicate he is going here or there. My best source is Jared Dudley and Chad Ochocinco who say the Knicks.

Sir Charles Barkley as GM for the Suns?

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

TNT analyst and Hall of Famer Charles Barkley, who says he wants “that challenge,” would listen if the Phoenix Suns wanted tooffer him the general manager’s job.

No word on whether he’d hire Kenny Smith to be his director of basketball and Ernie Johnson Jr.,to be his traffic cop and run interference after one of Barkley’s brutal assessments.

“I don’t think it’s a good job right now,” Barkley told Arizona Republic columnist Dan Bickley. “But I would listen to the Suns because I love Phoenix. I would listen to Robert(Sarver) out of respect for working in Phoenix. But I’ll be honest: I would not re-sign Amar’e Stoudemire.”

Barkley, who has no unspoken thoughts, was just warming up.

“I wouldn’t do it for three reasons. One, his knees; two, his eyes; and three, he wants a maximum deal. Now, he’s a terrific player. Don’t get me wrong. But at this stage of his career he’s never been the best player on his team. That’s not a max player.”

Barkley’s assessments would go all the way up to the owner’s office.

“Let’s not kid ourselves: Just because you have a lot of money doesn’t mean you know anything about basketball,” said Barkley, who played four seasons for the Suns. “I don’t think (Sarver) made his money in basketball. He made his money in banking. We don’t get stimulus packages in the NBA.”

NBA Draft Winners and The Sole Loser: Canada

Friday, June 25th, 2010

The BA Draft came and went last night with many newly minted millionaires in the process. Must be an exciting time for players, teams, and fans but there are always those teams that had a great draft so we will look at those teams.

  • Detroit Pistons- Taking Greg Monroe at number 7 was a great pick. Monroe is arguably the most skilled big man since Tim Duncan so the sky is the limit for him. ALready know for his passing, Monroe needs to improve his aggressiveness and show the passion for the game that is necessary for a NBA star. I think he will be a steal at 7 in a couple of years. There second pick, 36, was also a big value pick. Terrico White out of Ole Miss can jump out of the gym and may be able to use that to become a good player. Time will tell but he has the chance to be a top 15 player in the draft.
  • Houston Rockets- They got Patrick Patterson at 14! He may be a little undersized but he plays hard down low and has a good outside game as well. I see him as a Jamison type player. Great pick to play along side Yao, if he ever gets un-injured.
  • LA Lakers- As much as I hate the whiny b***h Kobe, the Lakers got two high potential players in the second round that may be able to help the team immediately. Devin Ebanks at 43 is a steal and Derrick Caracter at 58 may turn out to be the steal of the draft as it seems that he has turned a corner and matured to an adult. I hate Kobe.
  • Sacramento Kings- With all the s**t hitting the fan in Arnold-town, the Kings really needed to give these fans something to cheer about and they did it in a BIG way. Drafting Demarcus Cousins at 5 and Hassan Whiteside at 33 immediately improved their bigs and now have a great pick and roll combo for the next 10 years. My favorite draft of anyone and hopefully they will pick up next year and start winning.

The Loser- Canada

Not only are they going to lose the only thing that keeps their team and their country relevant for basketball, Chris Bosh, they try to draft a lefty PF to replace him. Good thought they need a power forward but then they got ED DAVIS. That is a f**k you from the state of NC to Canada.

The No BS Draft Rankings: “Where the bitches at that suck the d***”

Thursday, June 24th, 2010
  1. John Wall- He may be a jackass and will undoubtably get Kentucky in trouble again but he is an amazing PG and I look forward to watching him when its legal for him to get paid.
  2. Demarcus Cousins- Bad Character, Great player, not much else to say
  3. Evan Turner- Finally a reasonable person get ranked. He will be a great Brandon Roy type player for years to come
  4. Derrick Favors- Athletic Long and Lazy. We will see if he grows up and can play.
  5. Al-Farouq Aminu- Versatile, but a loser see if he can get his stuff right and play some ball

1 Player Not to Drat: Ed Davis

He sucks, has no skills, and I heard him once ask somebody “Where the bitches at that suck the d***” D-Bag

The Cavs Are Done

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

And LeBron James, without saying or doing anything, isn’t helping.

Izzo, who spurned up to $30 million from Cleveland to stay at Michigan State, was owner Dan Gilbert’s No. 1 choice to replace Mike Brown as the Cavs’ coach, a position that might stay vacant until James, the superstar and free-agent-on-deck signs in Cleveland — or elsewhere.

Izzo’s decision Tuesday to remain with the Spartans has further muddled a complex situation for the Cavs, who are preparing for next week’s NBA draft and the July 1 opening of free agency without a coach or a front-running candidate and they have no idea of James’ plans.

Last week, general manager Chris Grant said the club’s mantra is patience during a search that is showing no signs of ending anytime soon.

“We’ll wait as long as we have to wait,” he said.

It was assumed if Izzo turned them down that the Cavs would initiate a possible fallback plan: Byron Scott. But other than a one-hour phone interview by Grant, the Cavs have not gone any deeper with Scott, the former New Orleans and New Jersey coach working as a TV analyst during the finals.

Gilbert and Grant are not commenting during the search, so it is not known if they intend to bring Scott in for a meeting.

Scott’s agent, Brian McInerney, deferred all comments to the team about its interest.

Scott would likely talk to Gilbert, but it’s doubtful he’ll commit to anyone before seeing how things progress between Phil Jackson and the Los Angeles Lakers after the season. Jackson, who will be 65 in September, may retire or he may not want to come back if owner Jerry Buss forces him to take a pay cut.

Scott won three championships as Magic Johnson’s backcourt partner on L.A.’s “Showtime” teams and has dreamed of coaching on Hollywood’s stage. Scott has a strong relationship with Kobe Bryant, whose endorsement could mean everything to Buss.

Gilbert has shown a willingness to go beyond his comfort zone to land his man, and an offer like the one he discussed with Izzo, a coach with no NBA experience, would certainly pique Scott’s interest.

It’s also possible the Cavs could make another run at Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski and former New York and Houston coach Jeff Van Gundy. But Krzyzewski recently said he’ll never leave the college game, and Van Gundy has made it known that he enjoys the TV broadcast booth and isn’t ready to rush back into coaching at the sake of family stability.

“I miss a lot of parts of coaching, not all parts, but a lot of them,” Van Gundy said during the Celtics-Lakers finals. “But that doesn’t mean it’s right timing when there are kids involved. So when people say that (he should be coaching), I think they forget that if you were single the decision might be one way, but if you have children involved it might be a different way.”

There are candidates to choose from. The bigger issue for the Cavs, though, remains James.

They can’t promise a potential coach that the two-time MVP will be on their roster after July 1, so it’s possible Gilbert will wait for a decision from James before hiring his next coach. It’s not ideal, but it may be Cleveland’s best and only option at this point.

Cleveland has had informal discussions with Milwaukee assistant Kelvin Sampson and former Atlanta coach Mike Woodson, both of whom could get interviews. But the Cavs only spoke with them as a safety net in case the whirlwind courtship with Izzo dissolved.

It did, and Izzo admitted the uncertainty about James’ future was a major factor.

Izzo didn’t speak directly with James, but got some needed information from people close to the All-Star.

“I felt comfortable with the things I needed to know,” Izzo said. “If LeBron would’ve stayed, that doesn’t mean that I would have been there. It was not the only factor. Was it a big factor? Sure it was.”

And for any other prospective Cavs coach, it still is.