Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Deron Williams Traded to The Nets

  Deron Williams #8 Of The Utah Jazz And The Western Conference Moves

Nets trade for Deron Williams


ESPNNewYork.com
Deron Williams To Nets
Chris Broussard on the reported trade of Jazz guard Deron Williams to the NetsTags: NBA, Fantasy NBA, Utah Jazz, New Jersey Nets, Deron Williams, Devin Harris, Troy Murphy, SportsCenter

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Trying to rebound from the disappointment of their failed pursuit of Carmelo Anthony, the New Jersey Nets have acquired Deron Williams from the Utah Jazz in another blockbuster trade for the New York area.
The Nets will send Derrick Favors, Devin Harris, two first-round draft picks and cash considerations to Utah for the All-Star point guard.
In a separate deal, the Nets will send the expiring contract of forward Troy Murphy to the Golden State Warriors for center Dan Gadzuric and power forward Brandan Wright, sources told ESPN The Magazine's Chris Broussard.
The Associated Press reported that the Nets will also get a second-round pick in the deal and that the Warriors will buy out Murphy's contract.
Gadzuric's deal expires at the end of this season, clearing cap space for the Nets.


The Nets announced a news conference for Thursday at 3 p.m. ET at the PNY Center in East Rutherford, N.J., to introduce Williams.
Nets coach Avery Johnson said at practice Wednesday that he is "excited" about the trade for Williams.
"Rarely are you able to trade for somebody that's one of the top players at their position," he said. "We know we had to give up a lot to get him, but we felt it was worth it."
Johnson was asked if this was the Plan B all along if the Nets couldn't acquire Anthony.
"This is not a Plan B," Johnson said. "It was just one that wasn't announced. One that nobody got -- until recently. He's not a Plan B. He's a Plan A also. We've been working on this for a while."
The Jazz will get New Jersey's first-round pick this year, which is not lottery protected, and Golden State's first-round pick, which is partially protected, next year. That selection is top-seven protected in 2012 and 2013 and top-six protected in 2014. If Utah has not received the pick by the 2014 draft, then the Jazz will receive Golden State's own 2014 and 2016 second-round picks.
Sources told ESPN The Magazine's Chris Broussard that the Jazz also receive $3 million.

Nets general manager Billy King said the deal came together quickly.
"I had talked to [Jazz general manager] Kevin O'Connor yesterday," he said. "He asked me would I do something. And I said no, then I called him back and asked, 'I wonder if you'll do this.' And he said, 'Let me look at it. We talked a couple times yesterday. And then I guess he visited with his ownership. I visited with mine. And this morning we came to an agreement."
King said Williams is a building block for the Nets.
"I feel Deron Williams is the best point guard in the NBA. And when you want to try to win you need a point guard and a center, and I think we have two of the best," King said.

The Nets have Brook Lopez in the middle. He's averaging a career-high 19.4 points per game in his third season. But his rebounding has slipped from 8.6 per game last season to 5.8 this year.


Williams was an All-Star the past two seasons. In his sixth year in the league, the 26-year-old is averaging a career-high 21.3 points and 9.7 assists per game.
On Tuesday, the Knicks completed a blockbuster deal with the Nuggets that landed Anthony and Chauncey Billups. King was asked if he felt like he stole the Knicks' thunder.
"I can't worry about their thunder," he said.
King was just excited about the point guard that he ranked "No. 1 in the league."
"I honestly always felt he was the best point guard in the league, and that's no disrespect to anyone," King said. "I just honestly believe that."
Williams took some heat this month for the retirement of Jazz coach Jerry Sloan. The two had disagreed during halftime of a home loss to the Bulls on Feb. 9. Sloan retired the next day.
"Maybe arguing was the last straw, so there I am, guilty of that," Williams said at the time. "But I think anybody who believes I could force Coach Sloan to resign is crazy. He's stronger than that and personally if I said that to him, he'd probably go tell me to go do something."

More critical to Williams' situation is the fact that he can become a free agent after next season and hadn't made headway with the Jazz on a new deal. Utah could have faced the same kind of circus atmosphere that the Nuggets encountered with Anthony this season.
Unlike Anthony, who could opt out of his contract after this season and was allowed under the current collective bargaining agreement to sign an extension with the Knicks, Williams can't opt out until after next season and can't sign an extension until July 2011. The current CBA expires after this season, however, making all contract talk uncertain.
"I don't look at it as a risk," King said. "I look at it as we can sign him to an extension this summer. And he knows it. We know it. I look at it -- I don't think it's a risk."


King added that did he not look at the trade "as a gamble."
"I look at it as we've just acquired a player that's going to be a cornerstone of our franchise for a long time," he said.
In fact, King has already tried to sell Williams on what he considers to be a bright future for the Nets.
"I think we still have assets and young players that we can build, and that's what I was talking to Deron about as we go forward," King said. "Once we go forward with this deal, we're projected to be about $19 million under the cap this summer, and going forward we'd be roughly $26 million under the cap even further down the road."
Did King think that the confrontation with Sloan had something to do with the Jazz trading him?
"I don't think it really did," he said. "I just think they looked at what was being presented and made a good decision."
Harris has played three-plus seasons in New Jersey after starting his career in Dallas. He has made one All-Star team and is averaging 15.0 points and 7.6 assists this season.
Favors, who was a major piece along with Harris in the Nets' proposal for Anthony, was the third overall pick in the past NBA draft. He's averaging 6.3 points and 5.3 rebounds in 19.5 minutes per game this season.
"I really feel strong about losing he and Devin," Johnson said. "I was just getting to know Derrick. Obviously I have a relationship with Devin so losing both of those guys is pretty tough."
O'Connor said the trade was a "win-win" situation for both teams.
"We feel that we've addressed a current need at point guard with Deron's departure, as well as the future with draft picks and a big man," he said. "To do so we had to give up an All-Star, but we feel like this is a win for both sides."
Sloan, reached by The Associated Press Wednesday morning at his second home in Illinois, was aware of the trade but didn't want to say much.
"I have no reaction to what the Jazz are doing. We wish him well," Sloan said of Williams. "We wish the Jazz well. Good luck to Deron."


Sloan then said he had to "go rake some leaves right now."
New Jazz coach Ty Corbin, 0-3 since replacing Sloan, received the news as he left for a shootaround in Dallas, where the Jazz were facing the Mavericks on Wednesday night.
"My initial reaction is that I'm going to miss Deron. He was a good player for us," Corbin said. "I've been with him his entire time in the NBA as an assistant coach and now as a head coach for a few games, and we're going to miss him. I wish him well as he moves forward, and we'll have to work our way through it."
King said that the Nets and Jazz are still working on all of the players passing physicals before they can play for their new teams.
The 6-foot-3 Williams was selected third overall in the first round of the 2005 NBA draft by Utah from Illinois. He has averaged 17.3 points, 3.2 rebounds, 9.1 assists and 1.0 steals in 35.6 minutes per game for his career.
In 439 career games, including 406 starts, he has shot .466 (2,725-5,848) from the field, .358 (511-1,427) from three-point range and .808 (1,615-1,998) from the free throw line. In 44 career postseason games, Williams has averaged 21.1 points, 3.7 rebounds, 9.6 assists and 1.2 steals 40.4 minutes, while shooting .458 (308-672) from the field and .796 (238-299) from the line.
Williams was expected to be one of the headliners of the 2012 free agent class along with 2008 Olympic teammates Dwight Howard and Chris Paul, and the small-market Jazz could have faced losing him for nothing.
Now Williams could become the face of the Nets when they move into their new arena in Brooklyn for the 2012-13 season.
New Jersey has been desperate to make its first score under new owner Mikhail Prokhorov. The Nets talked with LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh last summer and when that failed they turned their attention to Anthony. They quickly bounced back from the disappointment of missing out on him with Williams.
The trade was a stunner on the day before the NBA's trading deadline. Williams was expecting to play with the Mavs in his hometown of Dallas when the deal was agreed to.
"Utah traded DWill??" Paul wrote on his Twitter page, adding hashtags with "EpicFail" and "notagoodlook."
Harris' head has to be spinning as well. Just Tuesday night, the Dallas Mavericks were talking to the Nets about re-acquiring Harris, according to sources. The Mavericks had shown interest in the point guard in January and told the Nets the sides should talk again if New Jersey didn't ship him out in an Anthony trade.
Sources said Dallas turned down a New Jersey proposal of Harris for Caron Butler, Mavs rookie Dominique Jones and a first-round pick.
Sources told ESPN.com's Marc Stein on Wednesday that a big reason the Mavs wanted Harris is because they knew that the Jazz liked him. Dallas thought it could use Harris in a deal to pry Williams from Utah.
Information from ESPN The Magazine's Chris Broussard, ESPN NBA Insider Chad Ford, ESPN.com's Marc Stein, ESPNNewYork.com's Mike Mazzeo and The Associated Press was used in this report.


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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Carmelo Is A Knick!!!

 Carmelo Anthony #15 Of The Denver Nuggets Smiles

Other suitors came and went, but Carmelo Anthony's long-anticipated marriage to the New York Knicks appears to have finally taken place.
The Knicks and Denver Nuggets agreed to a blockbuster three-team trade Monday night that sends the All-Star forward to the Big Apple, sources told ESPN The Magazine senior writer Chris Broussard. The deal does not become official until a conference call with the league takes place Tuesday.



The deal ends the season-long trade saga involving Denver's All-Star forward and sends him where he has publicly stated he would like to play. If it goes through as anticipated, Anthony is expected to sign a three-year, $65 million extension with the Knicks, where he will play alongside good friend Amare Stoudemire.
New York gets a potentially explosive frontcourt -- Stoudemire is second in the league in scoring at 26.1 points per game and Anthony is sixth at 25.2 -- but it comes at a heavy cost.

As a part of the deal, the Knicks will send Wilson Chandler, Raymond Felton, Danilo Gallinari, Timofey Mozgov and a 2014 first-round draft pick to the Nuggets, who would get additional picks and cash, the sources said. Along with Anthony, New York would get Chauncey Billups, Shelden Williams, Anthony Carter and Renaldo Balkman from Denver.
Multiple media reports say that the additional picks the Nuggets will get are two second-round selections that the Knicks acquired from Golden State when the Warriors signed forward David Lee last summer.
The Minnesota Timberwolves got involved to help New York clear salary-cap space to accommodate its new players. The Knicks ship Anthony Randolph, the expiring contract of Eddy Curry and $3 million to the Wolves in exchange for Corey Brewer, according to multiple media reports.
The Nuggets were reluctant to take on Curry's $11.3 million salary this season for luxury-tax reasons.

"I'm glad it's over," Nuggets coach George Karl said, according to the Denver Post, which first reported the megadeal. "I'm glad it's an opportunity to reinvent. I think everybody handled it as classy as you could handle it. There's some sadness to it, there always will be."
Stoudemire was thrilled to add Anthony.
"Every team needs a 1, 1A punch," Stoudemire said. "And so with the ways that we both can score .... we're very versatile, so it's hard to guard us."
Stoudemire said he had "no doubt" the All-Star forwards and longtime friends could play together, and said Anthony would handle the move to New York as well as he has.
"It's what he wants. It's what I wanted, to come to New York and play on the big stage," Stoudemire said. "He has the same type of swag. This is what he wants and he can handle it. We're going to do it together."

As of Tuesday afternoon, there was conflicting information on what Denver plans to do with Gallinari. League sources told ESPN The Magazine's Ric Bucher Monday night that the Nuggets are looking at deals to ship him out for a draft pick once the league signs off on the trade. But sources told ESPN.com's Marc Stein on Tuesday that the team is now thinking of keeping him.

While Broussard had reported that the New Jersey Nets might try to acquire Gallinari after striking out on Anthony, there are several other interested teams with first-round draft picks to offer in exchange for the perimeter-shooting forward. Other potential suitors include the Los Angeles Clippers, Cleveland Cavaliers and Toronto Raptors.

Sources had said that Denver pulled the trigger on the Anthony deal Monday night, rather than get closer to Thursday's trade deadline, to have more time to shop Gallinari. The Nuggets might now keep him, along with Felton and Chandler, both of whom a league source said Denver was never looking to trade.



The Nuggets have explored an Anthony trade since he refused to sign the three-year contract extension worth nearly $65 million they offered him last summer. They appeared on the verge of sending him to the Nets on multiple occasions. At one point in the past month, it was reported that the Lakers even kicked the tires on an Anthony trade. But the Knicks increased their offer enough recently to get him.

The Knicks hope he can be in uniform Wednesday when they host the Milwaukee Bucks. If he is, he'll probably be wearing a different number.

Anthony wore No. 15 for his seven-year tenure with the Nuggets. He also wore No. 15 during his one season at Syracuse. But that digit will be off limits for Anthony in New York because the organization retired No. 15 twice -- once for Earl Monroe and once for Dick McGuire. When contacted by ESPNNewYork.com late Monday night, a team official said he was unsure which number Anthony would wear with the Knicks.


Anthony led the Nuggets to the playoffs in each of his first seven seasons in Denver after winning a national title at Syracuse as a freshman and had them positioned for another playoff run this year. But Denver advanced out of the first round just once during that time.

He stood to become the headliner of the 2011 free-agent class but didn't want to risk free agency knowing a new collective bargaining agreement could cost him millions. But once he refused to accept an extension with the Nuggets -- and put his Denver mansion on the market last year -- the Nuggets' new front-office team of general manager Masai Ujiri and team president Josh Kroenke had to begin trade talks so they wouldn't risk losing him and getting nothing in return as the Cavaliers did with LeBron James and the Toronto Raptors did with Chris Bosh last year.




There were persistent rumors Anthony wouldn't take the extension if traded to the Nets, which was a prerequisite for them agreeing to a trade. He instead gets his apparent wish to join a Knicks team that is in sixth place in the Eastern Conference and in position for its first playoff berth since 2004.

But the Knicks will make their postseason run without the core of the team. Felton, Gallinari, Mozgov and Chandler were four of New York's top six players, and there is some thought that the Knicks gave up too much to get Anthony, a sensational scorer headed to a team that doesn't necessarily need more scoring.

However, the Knicks felt they couldn't pass on the opportunity to land a 26-year-old superstar once he became available. Assuming he extends with the Knicks, Anthony -- as well as Stoudemire -- would be under contract for four more seasons, though the uncertain salary-cap situation could wreck New York's plans to be spenders over the next two summers.

The Nets wanted Anthony, hoping the Brooklyn native would be the face of their franchise when they open the new Barclays Center in 2012. Though he never publicly confirmed the speculation that he wouldn't have signed an extension with the Nets, he did note Friday during the All-Star Weekend in Los Angeles that the Knicks were further along after acquiring Stoudemire last summer.

Anthony met with both Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov and Madison Square Garden chairman James Dolan over the weekend and hoped there would be a resolution before he returned to the Nuggets. That indeed happened -- he was excused from practice Monday so he could remain in California to appear on Conan O'Brien's show.


The Nuggets made out well, considering they could have lost Anthony for nothing in the summer. The Nets' offer, centered around rookie Derrick Favors and draft picks, would have meant a rebuilding situation. With the New York trade, the Nuggets get a solid point guard in Felton (17.1 points, 9.0 assists per game) to replace Billups, a young small forward in Chandler (16.4 ppg, 5.9 rpg) to play Anthony's position and add a 7-footer in Mozgov. Gallinari either adds 15.9 points and 4.8 rebounds per game or nets a draft pick. Either way, the Nuggets will have acquired options in the draft while having the talent to remain relevant in the Western Conference playoff chase.
Denver kicks off the post-Melo era against Memphis on Tuesday night.

Karl said he'll miss Billups, a hometown favorite and consummate professional who helped Denver reach the Western Conference finals in 2009, when the Nuggets nearly eliminated the eventual champion Lakers.



"I think Chauncey will go down as one of the greatest winners," Karl said. "His record of seven or eight conference finals is, I mean, that's incredible. I think that's who he is, that's what he stands for. He brought one of them to us. Last year we had a miserable ending. I think there's many people, including myself, that will be sad for Chauncey. I know he loves Denver and we love him, but things happen. There's decisions that have to be made.

"I'm 100 percent behind the decision we made, even though it will be dangerous and there won't be the veteran point guard back there," Karl added. "Felton, I thought was having a great season this year. But I think Ty [Lawson] and Felton are going to have a great challenge to live up to what Chauncey has given us in past years."

Asked who his starting point guard would be, Karl said, "Probably Ty," then got into his maroon SUV and drove away.
Information from ESPNNewYork.com's Mike Mazzeo and Ian Begley, and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Kobe Wins MVP!!!!

LOS ANGELES -- LeBron James racked up a silky-smooth triple-double. Kevin Durant dropped 34 points in 30 minutes. Amare Stoudemire slammed and jammed his way through Staples Center for 29 points.

And the NBA's younger stars still were thrilled when Kobe Bryant took home one more MVP trophy from the All-Star Game Sunday night.



"Everyone wanted him to get the MVP," said Miami's Dwyane Wade, last season's MVP. "He came out very aggressive, as aggressive as I've seen anybody in an All-Star Game."

Bryant won his record-tying fourth All-Star MVP award Sunday night with 37 points and 14 rebounds in the West's 148-143 win over the East. Bryant was well aware he had a chance to tie Bob Pettit's mark -- and so were his fellow All-Stars.

"He deserved it," Durant said. "Thirty-seven and 14? That's unbelievable numbers. I wanted him to get 40, but the old fella kind of tired out a little bit."

Both All-Star teams seemingly deferred to Bryant for much of the night, finding him on fast breaks and clearing a path for his dunks -- a rarity these days for Bryant, who prefers to conserve the bounce in his aching knees. Bryant even threw down a slam against James' defense in the third quarter, following it up with a 3-pointer.

So enjoy it, Kobe. Hidden in all the adulation and goodwill around hometown All-Star weekend was another common theme: That's the last prize that will come easily to the Los Angeles Lakers' five-time champion guard this year.

LeBron's Miami Heat, K.D.'s rising Thunder and the archrival Boston Celtics won't make it nearly as easy for Bryant to claim his sixth championship ring. The Lakers are still title contenders, but they went into the break with three straight losses and serious questions about whether this veteran team can get motivated for a three-peat run.

Bryant plans to deal with all that Monday at practice in El Segundo.

[+] EnlargeKobe Bryant MVP
Kevork Djansezian/Getty ImagesKobe Bryant hoists his NBA record-tying fourth All-Star Game MVP trophy.


"We're looking forward to it," Bryant said of the stretch run. "We're up for the challenge. Pau [Gasol] and I have been talking this whole time about looking forward to it, and getting back at it. We've been in communication with the rest of the fellas, and we all can't wait to get started."

Until taking over the starring role on Sunday, Bryant said he spent the weekend attempting to cede the spotlight to James and his Heat teammates, or the four Celtics All-Stars, or even Clippers rookie Blake Griffin.

"I've been there, you know what I mean?" Bryant said. "It's not about that for me at this point in my career. It's very important for the game to continue to have young stars emerge. ... It's important for me to step aside. It's about me coming out and performing and staying healthy, and doing the right things after 15 years."

Although Bryant is just 32, the Philadelphia prep-to-pro star is in his 15th NBA season, and several current All-Stars -- particularly young Los Angeles natives Russell Westbrook and Kevin Love -- grew up watching his partnership with Shaquille O'Neal during the Lakers' first three-peat. That reverence is reflected throughout the season, but was particularly obvious in this exhibition.

Bryant fell short of Wilt Chamberlain's All-Star record 42 points in 1962, but not for lack of trying by his teammates. He went scoreless in the final 6:48.

"I wish we could have," New Orleans guard Chris Paul said. "But Kobe is one of those guys who has been in the league for 13 years, but it seems like he's getting younger, so he'll have another opportunity."

NBA All Saturday Night

NBA All-Star Saturday: Blake Griffin wins slam dunk contest

Comments
Clippers forward Blake Griffin goes up to dunk over a car after getting an alley-oop from teammate Baron Davis tonight in Los Angeles.
Clippers forward Blake Griffin goes up to dunk over a car after getting an alley-oop from teammate Baron Davis tonight in Los Angeles. / AP


LOS ANGELES — Blake Griffin leaped over a car and threw down a two-handed dunk to the accompaniment of a gospel choir, winning the slam dunk contest in iconic style before his hometown fans on All-Star Saturday.
The Los Angeles Clippers rookie caught a pass out of the sunroof from teammate Baron Davis and easily cleared the 2011 Kia Optima’s hood while the Crenshaw Select Choir sang “I Believe I Can Fly” at midcourt.
The inventive slam drove home the obvious point of the All-Star weekend’s silly Saturday: Griffin has both the raw athleticism and the showtime flair to be the NBA’s next big star.
Finalist Javale McGee of Washington and Toronto’s DeMar DeRozan didn’t stand a chance despite their own inventive dunks at Staples Center.

Miami's James Jones wins three-point shootout

Miami’s James Jones held off Boston teammates Paul Pierce and Ray Allen to win his first 3-point shootout at All-Star Saturday.
Jones scored 20 points in the final round, hitting four straight shots late. The star-laden Heat’s outside shooting specialist says he benefited from shooting first in the three-man final.
Although Pierce was the defending champion and Allen recently became the NBA’s career leader in three-pointers, neither could match Jones’ score in front of booing Lakers fans.

Stephen Curry wins skills competition

Golden State’s Stephen Curry beat Oklahoma City’s Russell Westbrook in the final round to win the Skills Challenge early on All-Star Saturday at Staples Center.
A three-person team from Atlanta won the Shooting Stars competition in the first event at the NBA All-Star weekend’s silly Saturday.
The program was expected to be highlighted by Clippers rookie Blake Griffin’s much-anticipated appearance in the slam dunk contest.
Curry also played in the Rookie Challenge on Friday night. The Warriors’ slick guard twice navigated the basketball obstacle course with ease, beating a field also including Los Angeles-area native Westbrook, Derrick Rose and Rookie Challenge MVP John Wall and New Orleans’ Chris Paul, who missed a layup.

Friday, February 18, 2011

T- Mobile Rookie Challenge & Youth Jam

evansrookie608.jpg
Sacramento's Tyreke Evans captured the T-Mobile Rookie Challenge MVP award in 2010.
Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

Last year's winning rookie stars become the hunted

Posted Feb 17 2011 1:56PM

What: T-Mobile Rookie Challenge & Youth Jam
When: Friday, Feb. 18, 9 p.m. ET
Where: Staples Center
TV: TNT

The T-Mobile Rookie Challenge & Youth Jam showcases the NBA's best young talent in a showdown between first- and second-year players.
Some of the league's best young players -- including Chris Paul, Carmelo Anthony, Kevin Durant, Rudy Gay and Russell Westbrook -- have participated in this game in recent years.
This year, Los Angeles Clippers dunking phenom Blake Griffin -- the No. 1 pick in the 2009 Draft -- will play, as well as Washington Wizards rookie John Wall, the No. 1 pick of the 2010 Draft.
Last season's Rookie of the Year and the Rookie Challenge MVP, Tyreke Evans of Sacramento will not play due to a foot injury. He is being replaced by the Thunder's James Harden.
Below are the rosters for the 2011 T-Mobile Rookie Challenge & Youth Jam:
ROOKIE TEAM ROSTER
Eric Bledsoe, L.A. Clippers, G
DeMarcus Cousins, Sacramento, C
Derrick Favors, New Jersey, F
Landry Fields, New York, G
Blake Griffin, L.A. Clippers, F
Wesley Johnson, Minnesota, G
Greg Monroe, Detroit, C
Gary Neal, San Antonio, G
John Wall, Washington, G

Coaches:Mike Budenholzer -- San Antonio Spurs
Amar'e Stoudemire -- New York Knicks
Kevin McHale -- NBA TV/ TNT analyst
SOPHOMORE TEAM ROSTER

DeJuan Blair, San Antonio, C
DeMar DeRozan, Toronto, G
Stephen Curry, Golden State, G
* Tyreke Evans, Sacramento, G
Taj Gibson, Chicago, F
James Harden, Oklahoma City, G
Jrue Holiday, Philadelphia, G
Serge Ibaka, Oklahoma City, F-C
Brandon Jennings, Milwaukee, G
Wesley Matthews, Portland, G

Coaches:Lawrence Frank -- Boston Celtics
Carmelo Anthony -- Denver Nuggets
Steve Kerr -- TNT NBA basketball analyst

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Phil Jackson's last game at the Garden!!!

  Kobe Bryant #24 Of The Los Angeles Lakers Dribbles

In Jackson's last visit Kobe went for 33 points which could have been easily 50. Kobe had 19 in the 1st period. Kobe also had 10 rebounds with 2 assists, Gasol also added 20 points. In the last 5 games at the Garden Kobe averages 40ppg. The Lakers won easily 113-96.

Streak ends at 26!!!



After losing 26 straight, the Cavaliers beat the Clippers in OT. With a couple of key blocks by Hickson and 34 by Jamison, it was jut enough!!

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Jerrsy SLoan Resigns!!!

Sloan leaves Jazz as epitome of consistency


Posted Feb 10 2011 7:36PM
Jerry Sloan grew up on a farm in McLeansboro, Ill. So he always knew there was a time to take the crops in.
That it came this week instead of last week, today rather than tomorrow, is irrelevant.
"You do it 'til they don't want you anymore," Sloan once said. "Or it stops being fun."
In this case, probably more than a little bit of both.
Maybe it was halftime of Wednesday night's home loss to the Bulls, following a locker room clash with star guard Deron Williams, when Sloan stopped hearing the calliope music inside his head and decided to resign as coach of the Jazz.
Or perhaps it was the week before when he agreed to a one-year contract extension through next season, but cautioned that it didn't necessarily mean he'd be around next season.
After 23 seasons standing, stomping and screaming in front of the Jazz bench, the 68-year-old Sloan was aware of the nearing expiration date stamped on his carton, but it never changed his demeanor or affected his style.
How much has the league, the game, the world changed in the time that he's been stalking those rabid sidelines in Salt Lake City?
According to the Elias Sports Bureau, 40 current NBA players were not even born when Sloan succeeded Frank Layden as coach of the Jazz on Dec. 9, 1988 and began carving out a plain-spoken, no-excuses legacy that is not likely to be matched.
"My time is up. It's time to move on," Sloan said through tears at the official news conference. "I thought about it a few days ago. It just seemed like this was the time to do it.
"I only have so much energy left. My energy level dropped off a bit....Let's move forward. That's the only thing I can tell you.
"I've had confrontations with players since I've been in the league, a number of guys. But those things are minor as far as going forward."
What was major is the impact that Sloan had on stabilizing the Utah franchise, establishing the Jazz as a perennial playoff team, and forging a common identity with his bookend superstars Karl Malone and John Stockton. Both are among the greatest players in the history of the game. Both are with Sloan in the Hall of Fame.
More than any of that, both are reflections of his respect for an honest effort.
"It's showing up every day and putting the best into whatever you are doing that tells who you are," Sloan said.
That's the simultaneously majestic and simple description of the Jazz under Sloan: workers.
The durable Malone played in 80 or more games in 17 of the 18 seasons he was with the Jazz. Stockton played in all 82 games in 16 of his 19 NBA seasons.
What all three shared was the empty feeling of having never reached the pinnacle of winning a championship, though coming agonizingly close with back-to-back losses to Michael Jordan and the Bulls in 1997 and 1998.
"Were we disappointed that we didn't win those?" Sloan has said. "Sure, but I didn't feel bad. If you go and play and you put everything into it, there's never any reason to feel bad.
"To me, the toughest part is not the losing. It's coming back after you've lost and seeing who you are then. That's the most critical thing to me. A lot of guys say, 'Oh, well, I tried. It's not quite as important anymore.' I just want to know if you're just gonna work as hard today and tomorrow. That's all I care about. I want to know if you still can pick yourself up and do it again."
For more than two decades, his teams always did.
"People always ask me what's changed over the years," said Sloan's longtime assistant and friend Phil Johnson, who also resigned. "We all evolve. We mature. But the major things have not changed with Jerry. His consistency is probably the key to all of his success.
"The basic philosophy and premise of how we want to play and how we want players to act, both on and off the court, has not changed."
Sloan's was a style that ran up a 1,221-803 career coaching record, making him the third-winningest coach in the NBA as his 23 years on the job with the Jazz made the him the longest-tenured coach in American professional sports. Yet somehow he was never named Coach of the Year.
"Hell, that's the kiss of death," he always chuckled. "They give that to you and then usually fire you a year or two later."
His was a philosophy that was cultivated from seedlings out of that hardscrabble upbringing as one of 10 farm kids raised by a single mother in McLeansboro, who rose at 4:30 a.m. to do his chores, walked 1 ½ miles and then hitch-hiked the rest of the way to school so that he could arrive for 7 a.m. basketball practice.
His was an innate, relentless drive that, early in his rookie NBA season as a player with the Bulls, had him showing up at Chicago Stadium at 4:30 p.m. for a home game, getting his ankles taped and was fully dressed in uniform and sitting at his locker when head coach Dick Motta arrived at the arena. Motta told Sloan to get a hobby.
That drive took him through an 11-year playing career, a stint with the Bulls as head coach that got him fired and then a run of nearly a quarter century in charge of the Jazz, never taking anything for granted.
"I entered every day knowing this could be my last day," Sloan said. "I know that sounds corny. I'm a corny guy."
A plain-spoken farmer at heart, who just knew when it was time to rotate the crops.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Greenbay Packers Win Superbowl XLV

Green Bay Packers' Aaron Rodgers Holds

Aaron Rodgers Superbowl XLV MVP had thrown for over 300 yards for 3TD. Being shorthanded in the secondary was no problem in the second half. At halftime it was 21-10 GB winning. The Steelers made a late rally but, it wasnt enough. The final score was 28-25.