Archive for the ‘Just Sports’ Category

Presenting Your 2010 NBA Champions

Friday, June 19th, 2009

The Lakers.

Phil Jackson will be back. Kobe will be back. Gasol will be back. And allowing for a trade here and there, every other key component in their arsenal will return, too. Yeah, they’ll re-sign both Trevor Ariza and Lamar Odom. They’d be foolish not to. And those players would be foolish to look for green elsewhere when they have tasted championship glory here. They’ll be offered enough to stay, and they will. Everyone will.

Lamar Odom has often been referred to as a talented player who sometimes doesn’t play up to his ability when his mind is elsewhere. And the Lakers overall this past season, especially during the playoffs, were referred to in the same terms. So it is no surprise to hear so many people say that when Lamar plays well, the Lakers are unbeatable. He’s sort of a microcosm of the team itself. Immensely talented and unstoppable when running on all cylinders.

The Lakers have the offense, the rebounding, the intelligence, the athleticism and the quickness to repeat next year. They also have the defense when they decide to play defense. All of those ingredients carefully blended together in chemistry lab has molded a team that has to be favored to win again in 2010. Still a young team, they’ll be stronger and more experienced. And they’ll want their hunger satisfied again. At least one more time.

2010 is the year that old stars will continue to be super, and new stars for the Lakers will break out. Mark my words. They will surpass what any other team has done in NBA history. And they will have fun doing it, too.

Something’s Foul in the NBA

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

It does not matter which team you are rooting for, I think that everyone agrees that the refereeing in the NBA playoffs has been pretty foul this year.

Lost in the translation has been whether an act is a foul, a flagrant one foul, a flagrant two foul, or just incidental basketball contact. And was that a question, a passing comment, trash talking or a technical foul? The only thing consistent has been the inconsistency of it all.

For now, let’s put aside the missed goaltending calls, the missed travelling calls, the missed player’s stepping out of bounds, and the missed decisions on knocked the ball out of bounds. It’s not that thes are rare errors. Heck, there’s probaly at least a dozen bad / missed calls that fall into these categories every game. It’s just that the foul situation is particularly perplexing. And every foul called or not called not only has an immediate effect on a game, but also a possible cumulative impact on the overall outcome.

In the closing seconds of game 4, with the game no longer in doubt, the Lakers got the ball and pushed it up the court and flipped it to Paul Gasol who was waiting for it under the basket.   Much to the disgust of Mickael Pietrus, Gasol decided to dunk the ball. So Pietrus rushed at him with both fists clenched and gave him a sharp double forearm punch in the back.     A cheap play, meted out as punishment against a player for scoring when there was no reason to do so.

He was not playing the ball.  He was not attempting to stop the shot.  He was just looking to inflict some physical harm, and pretty much said so in the verbal confrontation with Gasol when the play was over.  The ref’s called a flagrant one foul on the play, but it was clear this would probably be upgraded to a flagrant two foul with Pietrus suspended for game 6 when the league office took a look at the replay.

Of course, what is obvious to a fan is not so obvious to Stu Jackson.  He deemed that no further action was warranted against Pietrus.  Huh?

In his explanation, Stu Jackson said, “”What I saw Pietrus do was slightly wind up, make contact with Gasol with both of his arms in Gasol’s back.  A flagrant foul-penalty two for excessive contact or more severe contact typically results in a more physical outcome for the offended player.  Sometimes they involve injury. But this particular foul did not fall into that category of excessive. A reasonable person could argue that it approached that, but given past flagrant fouls that we’ve reviewed, we — or I — felt that it fell in the category of a flagrant foul-penalty one.”

Ok, let me get this straight.  Because Gasol is tall and was able to grab onto the rim to protect himself from injury, it was ok what Pietrus did.  But if Gasol slipped and fell and suffered a career ending injury, then the foul might have been upgraded?   Unlike normal society, the calls have nothing to do with the act itself and the intent of the act?  So small guys can punch big guys all they want because the big guys won’t feel it so much, but big guys better not lay a finger on on the smaller players, or else?    Hmmm.   I wondered whether Stu Jackson was bullied when he was a kid.

Mike Lee   www.BeedoSafety.com

Elastic Man

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

He’s never been an All star, but Lamar Odom is one of those background NBA players who can really take over a game when he puts his mind to it. He’s not Superman. He’s not Flash. He’s the Elastic Man.

When he played for the Clippers, I disliked Lamar Odom. Part of that was probably because he came to the NBA from the University of Rhode Island where he played for Jim Harrick. And Jim Harrick had previously been at my cherished UCLA. Harrick led the Bruins to a national championship in 1995, but he quickly fell out of favor for in-game coaching blunders, and very few of the Bruin faithful were said to see him go.

The second part of my feeling against Lamar was because he played for the Clippers. I’m a Lakers guy, and several years ago, it was difficult to even tolerate the Clippers. So Lamar had two strikes of guilt-by-association going against hiim. And when he was spotlighted on the NBA radar for repeated violations of the anti-drug policy (which led to a suspension in 2001), he really fell from grace.  Now that didn’t mean I didn’t see his potential as a player; he just wasn’t a person I would ever put on my Christmas card list.

When he joined the Lakers in 2004, I had very mixed feelings.  Certainly, Shaq had to be dealt somewhere because his antics had grown old.  But it didn’t seem as if Miami had given us enough in return.  While I still think we should have held out for Dwayne Wade to be packaged in the trade, I eventually got over it. This was despite the fact that the Lakers would not play up to championship form over the next several years.

After the first month of the 2004-2005 season, as I was enjoying one of my Wednesday dinners with my youngest son, I took a bold step in a different direction. I proclaimed Lamar Odom as one of the most athletes in the NBA. He has length, agility, quickness, touch, and a feel for the game. He can drive, shash and score, rebound, shoot from outside, pass and defend. He’s a great team player, but his weakness is probably his unselfishness. And after watching him for a month in a Lakers uniform, I came not only to recognize and appreciate his skills more, but I came to like him as a person.

By all accounts, Lamar is a nice guy. It’s one thing to hear players and sports reporters say it, but it’s also something that’s easy to see yourself. In an interview, Lamar speaks honestly, openly and from his heart, with no worries about political correctness, and no need to spew forth cliches. It’s refreshing to hear a player acknowledge when he’s not playing well and what he needs to do to improve, just as it is appreciated when he recognizes the contributions of other players, whether they be teammates or opponents. He’s humble and polite. And he remembers his upbringing everyday by writing the initials of his grandmother (who raised him) and his infant son Jayden who died in June 2006.

He’s had a tough life, and a checkered career with flashes of greatness, but he always bounces back. When he feels the passion, feels the joy, he is truly unstoppable. His wingspan is far greater than normal for a person of his size, and sometimes it seems like his arms keep going and going and going as he stretches out to snare a rebound or push the ball to the basket. He bends, but doesn’t break. He’s the Elastic Man.

Of course, with his sweet tooth, Lamar might prefer to be called the Taffy Man.

Mike Lee   www.BeedoSafety.com