The Credits: "Young Guns II: Blaze of Glory"
- Lakers 98, Blazers 107: Running Diary at Lakers.com BasketBlog
- For Lakers, it's still cold in Portland - LA Daily News
- Dave McMenamin: Kobe Bryant fan and Portland Trailblazers forward Martell Webster defends his idol - ESPN Los Angeles
- Lakers' Phil Jackson sticking with Derek Fisher - latimes.com
- Don’t expect Pau Gasol on Sunday either - The Orange County Register
- Is Artest ruining Lakers' triangle? - NBA News - FOX Sports on MSN
MUCH More after the Jump...
Recaps, Post games & Chats:
- Lakers 98, Blazers 107: Running Diary at Lakers.com BasketBlog
- LAKERS: Lakers Gameday | 01/08/10 | Blazers
- Trail Blazers make it nine in a row over Lakers in Portland - latimes.com
- Lakers' trouble with Blazers continues - The Orange County Register
- For Lakers, it's still cold in Portland - LA Daily News
- Forum Blue And Gold " Preview & Chat: The Portland Trailblazers
- TLN’s Postgame Report: Lakers @ Blazers | The Lakers Nation
- Game Recap: Lakers 98 – Blazers 107 | Lakers Nation
- Roy scores 32 to lead Blazers over Lakers 107-98 - NBA - Yahoo! Sports
ESPN Los Angeles:
- Dave McMenamin: Kobe Bryant fan and Portland Trailblazers forward Martell Webster defends his idol
- Blazers 107, Lakers 98: One big moment - Land 'O Lakers
- John Ireland Blog - Losing in Oregon isn't unique
The Los Angeles Times:
The Orange County Register:
LA Daily News:
Other Lakers Links:
- Forum Blue And Gold " A Couple Thoughts On The Losing Streak
- Curse of the Willamette continues - TrueHoop Blog - ESPN
- Pivot Points: NBA's Black Friday Consumes Lakers, Other Top Contenders | Bleacher Report
- Why Derek Fisher's Time To Retire Has Come | Bleacher Report
- Is Artest ruining Lakers' triangle? - NBA News - FOX Sports on MSN
Audio/Video:
0 recs |
57 comments
| Add comment
Comments
This sucks
I honestly thought we would win last night after losing to the Clippers and considering no one on their team was healthy.
There aren’t any major problems in lakerland but we have definitely played like crap since Christmas and it all starts on the defensive end. I realize that we have had injuries to key guys since then but I can’t wait for everyone to get healthy. I especially can’t wait for Luke to get back because he will definitely help the ball movement with the second unit. He would have been a nice addition when Ron was out.
We should kill the Bucks on Sunday but you just never know. Wasn’t easy last time…
Lamar = Laker for Life...Go Pads...Go Bolts
by mrbarneydangles on Jan 9, 2010 10:35 AM PST reply actions 0 recs
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Pete Carroll leaving USC for the Seahawks
"Just by the aura of D.J. Mbenga being there, the shot missed."
by shaqfor3 on Jan 9, 2010 11:04 AM PST reply actions 0 recs
Either that a kep on facing NCAA probes.
by wondahbap on Jan 9, 2010 11:17 AM PST up reply actions 0 recs
It would be funny if Bobby Bowden ended being the coach for USC.
by E-ROC on Jan 9, 2010 11:19 AM PST up reply actions 0 recs
i just realized
the jets vs bengals game is the battle of the two USC QB’s…
"Just by the aura of D.J. Mbenga being there, the shot missed."
by shaqfor3 on Jan 9, 2010 2:10 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
Portland’s 27-point margin from the foul line is the largest by any NBA team since March 14, 2006 (42-6, Miami vs. Utah).
by intuitive on Jan 9, 2010 1:08 PM PST reply actions 0 recs
42 to 6???
my god
"Just by the aura of D.J. Mbenga being there, the shot missed."
by shaqfor3 on Jan 9, 2010 1:28 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
Donaghy was definetely involved in that one
by desecrator09 on Jan 9, 2010 1:32 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
or the other team was more aggresive ...
"That's it?
Kinda mild- reminds me of that time my dog actually CAUGHT a squirrel.
After all those years of trying, kinda threw him. After while, he just let it go.
He looked sad, like he'd ruined something for himself."
by L-TrainFTW! on Jan 9, 2010 6:52 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
To warrant a 42-6 free throw discrepancy?
by intuitive on Jan 9, 2010 7:07 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
That was sarcasm, wasn't it?
I laughed when I read it because I thought you were referring to yesterday’s blog.
"Failing to plan is planning to fail."
by Busboys4me on Jan 10, 2010 12:07 AM PST up reply actions 0 recs
just wondering...
was there bad officiating yesterday?? like did portland really get all the calls? or were the lakers just not that aggreesive on the offensive end and portland was?
by matthewmafa on Jan 9, 2010 1:36 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
it was some of both but when we did get aggressive in the second half,
like when Kobe got elbowed in the head, we didnt get anything whistled against them. It was bullshit. But yeah, they mostly took jumpers in the first half.
by desecrator09 on Jan 9, 2010 1:44 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
Asked about his 14-for-37 shooting and five turnovers while clearly bothered again by his fractured right index finger, Bryant said: “Somebody had to do something. … Something had to be done.”
Bryant scored 32 points, but missed most of the shots he created against Martell Webster.
“I had some good looks,” Bryant said. “I just missed ’em.”
http://www.ocregister.com/sports/bryant-228331-lakers-gasol.html
by intuitive on Jan 9, 2010 1:32 PM PST reply actions 0 recs
yeah i read that in the newspaper earlier today
that basically says that nobody has the balls to step up on the team so the dude with the 2 broken fingers has to carry the load which is BS
by desecrator09 on Jan 9, 2010 1:45 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
It's not BS
sorry but I gotta disagree with you, while Kobe keeps attacking all game, everyone else attacks in moments throughout the game. Its effort, I can see Kobe’s effort a mile away but soon as any other Laker don’t get a call or get bumped off their spot, they quickly wither away and in an ongoing game where you need points and stops, Laker players can’t be napping with their lack of effort. I will take Kobe beat up hands and effort over Bynum and LO’s fully functional fingers and lack of effort anyday.
There are basic Fundamentals that are needed to move forward in this game. Always keep your guard up at all times to avoid being caught in a trap. Overcome the fouls that will be commited against you REBOUND AND PRESS ON. ADJUST to the LimeLight: ALL-STAR PLAYERS ARE ALWAYS THE CENTER OF ATTENTION. Know what your role is and play your position. Find a game plan and execute it. REMEMBER YOU ONLY GET OUT OF THE GAME WHAT YOU PUT INTO IT.
by BrittneyM on Jan 10, 2010 12:53 AM PST up reply actions 0 recs
and I gotta agree with Kobe
someone has got to do something cause who else is gonna score consistantly, who can we really count on in this lineup to put the bucket in the hole? LO takes to many jumpers and contested jumpers, Bynum has not made good desicions down low with the ball when the double team comes, Fisher…ohh Fisher gets beat up on defense, Ron Artest doesn’t look the same after the fall and hasn’t had an impact since returning on Offense or Defense and then the bench, do I really need to say whats wrong with them so who are we left with Kobe Bryant trying to make dollar out of 15 cents. Lakers need Gasol and soon. This is just what I’ve seen from the past two games.
There are basic Fundamentals that are needed to move forward in this game. Always keep your guard up at all times to avoid being caught in a trap. Overcome the fouls that will be commited against you REBOUND AND PRESS ON. ADJUST to the LimeLight: ALL-STAR PLAYERS ARE ALWAYS THE CENTER OF ATTENTION. Know what your role is and play your position. Find a game plan and execute it. REMEMBER YOU ONLY GET OUT OF THE GAME WHAT YOU PUT INTO IT.
by BrittneyM on Jan 10, 2010 1:02 AM PST up reply actions 0 recs
Just curious
Is there a site that shows how many shots in the paint the Lakers took compared to the Blazers. Personally, I hate and I try to not blame refs for anything. That to me is an excuse. But I’m just curious if the numbers would show that the Blazers just attacked the basket more than the Lakers which would account for the free throw discrepancy. Also, I think the Lakers were in the penalty with team fouls early on in the second half which means that any foul from that point on would be a free throw.
"If you want to find the dumbest guy in the room just find the first guy to tell you how smart he is." - JG
by PURPLE AND GOLD FOR LIFE on Jan 9, 2010 3:46 PM PST reply actions 0 recs
Thank you sir
Much appreicated.
"If you want to find the dumbest guy in the room just find the first guy to tell you how smart he is." - JG
by PURPLE AND GOLD FOR LIFE on Jan 9, 2010 4:02 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
Well from the link Dex gave
It was pretty obvious that the Lakers were the ones attacking the rim.
They had more shots at the rim, more shots closer than 10 feet.
The blazers had more shots from 16-23 feet than us, and converted them at an insanely high level (something like 63% or so). We hit only 20% something percent from that range.
Soooo… discrepancy in calls looks pretty legit after seeing those numbers.
by 99bc99 on Jan 9, 2010 7:35 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
Do those numbers count attempts where the person was fouled?
In Bayless I trust.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><>
by staylost on Jan 9, 2010 8:17 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
Couldn't tell you actually. One of the stat guys probably knows.
Still, 63% from 16-23 feet and a huge discrepancy in foul calls offers an excuse.
The other thing is, Portland just beat our ass.
Add those two things together and well, you have last night’s game.
by 99bc99 on Jan 9, 2010 9:18 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
I know I can't complain and I don't wanna blame the refs but facts are facts
and Blazers got 29 more points at the line, Lakers lost by 9, that hurts, that can effect a game and ya’ll can’t tell me Lakers weren’t trying to draw fouls also when attacking the paint but they weren’t getting the whistle. It hurts even when I play, to get pushed then get no call but then when you push back the same way they get the call, I’m sorry but in basketball that hurts and makes you wonder at times.
There are basic Fundamentals that are needed to move forward in this game. Always keep your guard up at all times to avoid being caught in a trap. Overcome the fouls that will be commited against you REBOUND AND PRESS ON. ADJUST to the LimeLight: ALL-STAR PLAYERS ARE ALWAYS THE CENTER OF ATTENTION. Know what your role is and play your position. Find a game plan and execute it. REMEMBER YOU ONLY GET OUT OF THE GAME WHAT YOU PUT INTO IT.
by BrittneyM on Jan 10, 2010 1:12 AM PST up reply actions 0 recs
or 27 more points at the line
but whatever it was, it was a difference, one-sided calls are never even in basketball.
There are basic Fundamentals that are needed to move forward in this game. Always keep your guard up at all times to avoid being caught in a trap. Overcome the fouls that will be commited against you REBOUND AND PRESS ON. ADJUST to the LimeLight: ALL-STAR PLAYERS ARE ALWAYS THE CENTER OF ATTENTION. Know what your role is and play your position. Find a game plan and execute it. REMEMBER YOU ONLY GET OUT OF THE GAME WHAT YOU PUT INTO IT.
by BrittneyM on Jan 10, 2010 1:27 AM PST up reply actions 0 recs
No
but it does do some damage to the “Portland was just more aggresive” meme nonetheless.
If you include the “attempts” where fouls were called for Portland, it’s about even on shots in the paint.
by C.A. Clark on Jan 10, 2010 12:14 AM PST up reply actions 0 recs
Yes, but I think we need to remember we need to look at it from the perspective of the whole season
I wouldn’t say the Lakers have gotten the short end of the refing stick the whole year, so that’s why you have losses sometimes. That’s why they play so many games to determine EIGHT playoff spots. No one in B Ball can claim they don’t ever get a break.
by Cool Dudes on Jan 9, 2010 11:33 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
Not entirely true
Some teams just don’t get calls. Listen to the Donaghy interview. Some refs hate people who complain on every call (think Kobe, Andrew, and Sasha). They will not get a break or an accurately called game unless its mandated. Watch the games. Some teams are kept in games and not allowed to run away. The Lakers are one of them. I think it comes from the top, because even though WE would love it, a 76-6 Laker team would not be best for the Association.
"Failing to plan is planning to fail."
by Busboys4me on Jan 10, 2010 12:14 AM PST up reply actions 0 recs
HOW BOUT THEM COWBOYS!!!!!!
Great game!!!! They beat the Dog Shit out of Philly!!!!
"Failing to plan is planning to fail."
by Busboys4me on Jan 10, 2010 12:15 AM PST up reply actions 0 recs
This is a LOL
and destined for sports blooper archives
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HHk7gpEGkmI
JR. Smith thinks that Tyreke Evans swishes the three pointer, and takes the ball out of bounds … except Tyreke actually barely grazed the rim and missed!
"This is not a game for boys. This is a game for men." - Phil Jackson
by Gils_Keloids on Jan 9, 2010 10:02 PM PST reply actions 0 recs
Good Article
Nash, Hill, Bryant going the distance to extend mileage
Jan. 6, 2010
By Ken Berger
CBSSports.com Senior Writer
Steve Nash probably doesn’t drink much fine wine these days, considering a pillar of his basketball longevity plan is this: no sugar. But if he did, Nash would be a walking, dribbling, toasting embodiment of what vino and point guards have in common as they age.
Nash turns 36 next month, which can only mean he’ll be even better after he blows out the candles. He is the ultimate case study in how a player can refine and improve his game with each flip of the calendar. In leading the Suns to a 22-13 start, Nash is making an early case for his third MVP award with a career-high 11.2 assists and .539 field-goal percentage, plus his highest scoring average in three years (18.4).
His teammate, 37-year-old Grant Hill, should be broadcasting or coaching NBA games by now, not playing in them. He was the third pick of the 1994 draft, and only Jason Kidd and Juwan Howard from that first round are still playing. (Jalen Rose is broadcasting, while Monty Williams and Aaron McKie are coaching.) Hill’s career seemed destined for a premature end when he missed significant portions of four seasons in the first half of the 2000s with chronic ankle injuries. The same guy is now seriously thinking about playing into his 40s.
On a different team but in the same division is Kobe Bryant, who at 31 shouldn’t be included in this company until you look at his odometer. Bryant, in his 13th season, is seventh among active players with 35,802 career minutes. Motivated by his usual competitive demons and fourth championship last season, Bryant is having what many believe is his best overall season. He hasn’t missed a game in three years, and his minutes are back up to a pre-30-year-old rate of 38.5 per game. And there’s quality to go with the quantity; Bryant is shooting a career-high .485 from the field and is averaging a league-high 30.2 points as he chases his third scoring title.
“I’ve been able to stay relatively healthy,” Bryant said in a recent interview. “Nothing really major, injury-wise. I feel great.”
Nash, Hill, and Bryant aren’t the only examples of NBA longevity, but they’re the best. Boston’s Big Three are starting to break down. Allen Iverson, taken 12 spots ahead of Bryant and 14 ahead of Nash in the 1996 draft, has arthritis. We won’t know for sure if Tim Duncan still has it until the playoffs come. I’m not so sure the Cavs wouldn’t have the same record — or better — without 1992 No. 1 pick Shaquille O’Neal.
“For me, there are three pillars: proper training techniques, diet and sleep,” Nash said. “If you’re winning those three battles, then I think you’ve got a chance to stay at a high level.”
Nash isn’t winning those battles; he’s crushing them. A breakdown of his stats from age 26-30 to 31-35 shows a significant increase in every major statistical category except steals. Minutes per game have held steady at about 34, yet points per game (from 16.4 to 17.6), assists (from 8.6 to 10.8), field-goal percentage (from .480 to .516), and 3-point percentage (from .424 to .450) are all up. His game has gotten better, and so have his habits. Nash has learned to make sleep a priority, and he eschews synthetic sugars and artificial or processed foods. There’s nothing artificial about the results.
“A lot of the physical stuff stayed the same for me,” Nash said. “But I’m open and continually looking for better practices and incorporating recovery into my routine.”
In some ways, Hill has found age more difficult to accept. The one-time heir to Michael Jordan’s throne is sometimes the fifth option in the Suns’ offense after spending the opening act of his career as a leading man. The first thing the years stole was his vertical, but Hill has come to grips with the fact that he can’t soar like he once did. Maybe it’s because there was a time when he thought he might not make it to 30 in the NBA, much less 40.
“Those years when I didn’t play and I was hurt, I believe in the theory that there’s less mileage, less wear and tear on the rest of the body,” Hill said. “You look at guys who have come in the league after me — Kevin Garnett, Paul Pierce, Ray Allen — those guys have more miles on their bodies than I do. I might be 37, but I feel like I’m 30.”
Steve Nash says ‘proper training techniques, diet and sleep’ is what does it for him. (Getty Images)
Steve Nash says ‘proper training techniques, diet and sleep’ is what does it for him. (Getty Images)
While battling those ankle injuries, Hill became fanatical about diet and conditioning. Since returning to a full-time role with the Suns over the past three seasons, Hill’s scoring has dipped well below his career average of 18.2 points per game, but his rebounds and offensive rebounds have increased each year. This season, he’s shooting a career-high .444 from 3-point range. He has found other ways to impact games.
“I think the thing that I’m most proud of is that I went from being a guy who had the ball in his hands and now I’ve learned to have a different role and be good at it,” Hill said. “That’s not an easy thing to do. It can be humbling. But at the same time, I enjoy playing and I think I still have a whole lot to offer. I just offer it in a different way.”
In addition to heavy doses of humility, Hill also has become devoted to stretching and what he calls “legal methods of recovery.” For one thing, that means Hill spends more time with ice buckets than he does with his children. He’s also taken to studying the training methods of athletes who’ve been successful into their late 30s and 40s, such as Olympic swimmer Dara Torres, surfer Laird Hamilton and, yes, John Stockton.
“I never thought I’d have a desire to play until I’m 40,” Hill said. “Fifteen years ago, 10 years ago, I thought I’d be done by now. But I still love the game and have a passion for it, so why not? We just kind of accept the fact that as you get older, you decline and you lose it. And I do think certainly as you get older, things happen. But if you take care of yourself and really put a lot of work into it, why can’t you play into your late 30s or early 40s?”
Bryant had plenty of success with his maniacal offseason training regimen. But as he entered his 30s, he wanted to refine it with the help of renowned Chicago-based trainer Tim Grover. Nobody can argue with the results. Besides the league-leading scoring average and flurry of game-winning shots, Bryant clearly isn’t slowing down on the defensive end, either. He’s averaging more than two steals per game for the first time since the 2002-03 season, when he was 24.
Three years ago, seeking a new challenge in his offseason workouts, Bryant hooked up with Grover, who fueled Jordan’s brilliant career. Grover’s Attack Athletics gym in Chicago has become a fountain of youth for NBA stars who are serious about improving their conditioning and longevity.
“I’ve always worked my ass off in the summer time,” Bryant said. “But with Tim, it’s a different philosophy that I was looking for at this stage of my career. I was looking for something to kind of correct some of the things that I was doing before. And I’ve had great results from it.”
Given recent controversies involving high-profile clients Tracy McGrady and Gilbert Arenas, Grover thought it best to stay out of the media for a while. But his clients say Grover’s approach focuses on core strength and balance. If there’s a weakness, he attacks it. If there’s imbalance, he corrects it. Bryant credits Grover’s attention to seemingly minor details for his iron-man tendencies. For example, Bryant believes that without Grover’s insistence on strengthening his fingers, he wouldn’t have been able to play through a torn ligament in his shooting hand last season or a broken right ring finger this year.
“You’ve got to make sure everything’s in check,” Bryant said. “You can’t overload one particular area of your body and have that take away from another part. That’s how you have injuries. You have hamstring pulls, you have groin pulls, you have all this stuff going on. So you have to make sure everything is balanced out.”
As he closes in on a three-year contract extension with the Lakers and eyes his fifth title, Bryant said he can’t see the end of the tunnel yet — “But I can see the light.”
Hill, who signed a modest $6.3 million, two-year deal with the Suns last summer, can already see beyond that.
“I want to be able to do things with my kids and hopefully my grandchildren,” Hill said. “If I want to go play tennis at 50 or 60 or go on a 50-mile bike ride, those are the types of activities that I want to do.”
As the interview wrapped up at the end of a game-day shootaround, a trainer walked by and handed Hill a pillbox — the kind we’ll all use when we take so many medications we can’t remember what to take or when. Hill grabbed it nonchalantly, the way a relay runner accepts a baton. Then, he went off to what I presume was a date with a bucket of ice.
"Failing to plan is planning to fail."
by Busboys4me on Jan 10, 2010 12:04 AM PST reply actions 0 recs
Thanks for that
Please just post the link next time though.
by C.A. Clark on Jan 10, 2010 12:15 AM PST up reply actions 0 recs
In the future
Please link articles in a FanPost rather than cutting and pasting into a comment.
by DexterFishmore on Jan 10, 2010 12:15 AM PST up reply actions 0 recs
don’t start with the nash for mvp. how he has 2 and kobe only one is beyond me.
by chaucer on Jan 10, 2010 1:04 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
Scolded once more
OK. Here’s another
http://forums.hipinion.com/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=9&p=99399&sid=1e025dc86bde67e485c50bfe5453027b
Teams that need to make a deal
PER Diem: Jan. 8, 2010
Comment Email Print Share
Hollinger By John Hollinger
ESPN.com
Archive
"Failing to plan is planning to fail."
by Busboys4me on Jan 10, 2010 12:18 AM PST reply actions 0 recs
"Coach says the team plays better offensively with the veteran point guard." From The Los Angeles Times
I can’t really complain cause really who else is good enough to take Fisher’s spot?? No one on the bench I see, but I do think Fisher is hurting the Lakers both defensively at times and offensively at times. Lakers really need to get their offensive mojo back cuase they look ridiculous and defensive mojo.
There are basic Fundamentals that are needed to move forward in this game. Always keep your guard up at all times to avoid being caught in a trap. Overcome the fouls that will be commited against you REBOUND AND PRESS ON. ADJUST to the LimeLight: ALL-STAR PLAYERS ARE ALWAYS THE CENTER OF ATTENTION. Know what your role is and play your position. Find a game plan and execute it. REMEMBER YOU ONLY GET OUT OF THE GAME WHAT YOU PUT INTO IT.
by BrittneyM on Jan 10, 2010 12:45 AM PST reply actions 0 recs
Beware! This is a Peter Vescey article but...........its about trading Bynum for Bosh.
A Lakers source told me the team had its sights set high, as usual, and planned to target the possible acquisition of Chris Bosh when it got closer to the 3 p.m. Feb. 18 trade deadline, and the Raptors might be more likely to move their Olympian/All-Star while still entitled to compensation.
Asked by e-mail about all of the above and whether the Raptors and Lakers have discussed a Bosh-Bynum proposal, team president Bryan Colangelo, who surely is being contacted on a daily basis regarding the availability of his franchise player — especially when the team was 11-17 — he replied in kind:
"For the record, I am not actively seeking a deal or discussing Bosh with any team, much less the Lakers.
"I haven’t traded him yet and our position has been the same. We will not make a deal just to make a deal. Our intention is to keep him here long term.
"Additionally, I have not yet offered an extension as Dwyane Wade and LeBron James both received [from their respective teams]. So technically he has not said no.
"I honestly don’t think C.B. knows what the future holds, or what he wants to do, so I would say we’re still in the game as far as his pending free agency."
The rest of the article was Vescey being Vescey.
by E-ROC on Jan 10, 2010 7:01 AM PST reply actions 0 recs
That's a tough trade to think about
I still think it’s silly to give up on Bynum. He’s only 22
by RudeMood19 on Jan 10, 2010 10:23 AM PST up reply actions 0 recs
That trade doesn't qualify as giving up on Bynum
by C.A. Clark on Jan 10, 2010 11:08 AM PST up reply actions 0 recs
So? Bosh is only 25
And he’s had better health by far than Bynum. Plus, I hate Bynum’s attitude. Bosh would be perfect next to Gasol. I’d do this in a heartbeat!
by desecrator09 on Jan 10, 2010 12:16 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
even though theres prolly about a 0.1% chance of this happening
its still fun to dream :)
by desecrator09 on Jan 10, 2010 12:19 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
i highly doubt this trade would ever occur. why would the lakers want bosh when they have gasol. hey, did the heat and cavs give wade and james an extension? i had no idea.
by chaucer on Jan 10, 2010 1:00 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
that would mean moving gasol to center and bosh to pf.
by chaucer on Jan 10, 2010 1:01 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
Doesn't Bosh play most of the center minutes for Team USA?
In Bayless I trust.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><>
by staylost on Jan 10, 2010 1:26 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
Considering Vecsey wrote the column/rumor I take it with a grain of salt.
by intuitive on Jan 10, 2010 3:13 PM PST up reply actions 0 recs
cool link about whether Kobe is having best season ever.
http://sports.yahoo.com/nba;ylt=ApxukyDGJn2Nf8P8XZEFmaLvLYF
i think he is having his best season ever.
by chaucer on Jan 10, 2010 12:58 PM PST reply actions 0 recs
i can’t wait for us to get a football team here in l.a.
by chaucer on Jan 10, 2010 1:03 PM PST reply actions 0 recs
i predict green bay will be crushed in Arizona
"Just by the aura of D.J. Mbenga being there, the shot missed."
by shaqfor3 on Jan 10, 2010 1:42 PM PST reply actions 0 recs
Something to say? Choose one of these options to log in.
On Facebook? Use Connect to join SB Nation. Share insights with fans and friends.- » Create a new SB Nation account
- » Already registered with SB Nation? Log in!

by 

























