HOUSTON (AP) -- Kevin Martin scored 22 points to lead the Houston Rockets to a 109-102 preseason win over the Memphis Grizzlies on Wednesday night.
Rockets upend Grizzlies 109-102 (Yahoo! Sports)
2012
The Jeremy Lin revisionist history begins in New York
2012
Remember Jeremy Lin? Sure you do. Good kid, impressive numbers, came from nowhere to save the New York Knicks from yet another season of irrelevancy last season.
But after a historic run at the point guard position, Lin committed the cardinal sin, in New York City terms, of looking elsewhere for employment. The Houston Rockets offered Lin an impressive contract, and New York bade him farewell. The Knicks will start the year with Raymond Felton and a wizened codger who bears a vague resemblance to Jason Kidd at the point position.
[Fantasy Basketball '12: Play the official game of NBA.com]
Still suffering from the effects of a knee injury, Lin hasn't exactly lit Houston on fire. And that has brought out the gleeful told-ya-so types in the New York media. As Tom Ziller at SB Nation notes, Mitch Lawrence of the New York Daily News is among those helping New York Knicks fans "remember" that hey, maybe Jeremy Lin wasn't all that great after all:
Lin didn't have microfracture surgery or tear his ACL, so we can now safely assume that he's one of the world's slowest healers. But let's also remember that even before his storybook career in New York effectively ended [in March], he was anything but a premier athlete. Any problem he might have because of the knee in the future is going to make the Rockets' $25 million investment look even more ridiculous than it did last July.
Lawrence also goes the "anonymous source" route in ripping Lin, a move Ziller calls "pure cowardice."
[Related: Royce White attempting to secure a bus for some Houston road games]
It's possible that Lin was a lightning-in-a-bottle, flash-in-a-pan, pick-your-cliche shooting star, and that the Rockets did indeed overpay. But Lin did what no other player since Patrick Ewing and John Starks has been able to do -- make people outside of New York care about the Knicks. Slicing him to pieces before he's even played a regular-season game for Houston smacks of spurned love. And if there's one thing that sportswriters, and particularly New York sportswriters, can't stand, it's to be left behind. Expect much more of this out of the Big Apple as the year goes on, whether or not Lin plays up to expectation.
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Witherspoon scores 17, Spurs beat Rockets 116-107 (Yahoo! Sports)
2012
HOUSTON (AP) -- Wesley Witherspoon scored 17 points to lead the San Antonio Spurs to a 116-107 win over the Houston Rockets in a preseason game Sunday.
Martin scores 17, Rockets beat Hornets 95-75 (Yahoo! Sports)
2012
HOUSTON (AP) -- Kevin Martin had 17 points to help the Houston Rockets beat the New Orleans Hornets 95-75 in a preseason game Friday night.
Rockets forward Jon Brockman still can’t fully see out of his left eye after injuring self in elastic band incident
2012
One of the offseason's weirdest stories rolled down the RSS-feed pike last month, when Jon Brockman — the hard-nosed, tough-rebounding, adult-onesie-wearing forward who'd come to the Houston Rockets as part of the draft-day deal that sent Samuel Dalembert to the Milwaukee Bucks — injured himself during a workout at the Toyota Center when the elastic band he was using to stretch out "apparently slipped off his foot and the recoil hit Brockman's right eye."
At first blush, that sounds like some "Three Stooges"-level slapstick, and given Brockman's penchant for the goofy (seriously, check that adult onesie link again), it seemed like a random and funny turn of events, not unlike when that lady on "The Amazing Race" rocked herself with that watermelon. But then you read that Brockman had been hospitalized with the injury, and that he stayed in the hospital for three days, and it doesn't seem all that funny.
And now, five weeks later, you read a report from Rich Myhre of the Everett, Wash., Herald — Brockman grew up in nearby Snohomish, Wash., and played his college ball at the University of Washington — about how Brockman's still seeing an eye specialist and has yet to join his Rockets teammates for training camp, and it seems downright scary:
"He was in an unbelievable amount of pain," [Brockman's agent, Greg] Lawrence said by telephone on Thursday. "Everybody who knows Jon knows he can take a good amount of pain. He's not one to complain about anything. But that was pretty painful and uncomfortable for him.
"I don't know if he ever completely lost his vision, but it was very blurry. He couldn't make anything out."
Oddly enough, according to Lawrence, it's the eye that wasn't initially reported as having been directly affected that's holding up the 25-year-old forward's return to the game:
Brockman, who has not been available for comment since the injury, has regained full vision in his right eye, "but the left eye has been slower to come around," Lawrence said. "That's the one (doctors) are waiting on getting the full picture on. But they know there was no structural damage and the retinas are still attached, so everything's fine. It's just healing, and there's really not much they can do to stimulate the healing process."
The accident caused blood and other fluid to collect behind the eye, "and as that drains out they can see more and more," Lawrence said. "As the fluid dissipates they can get a clearer picture to make sure there was no nerve damage. But so far everything they've been able to see looks good."
First off: Yikes. "Blood and fluid to collect behind the eye" is never something you want to hear, read or envision, let alone experience. Secondly, it's great to hear that "everything [the doctors have] been able to see looks good" — I mean, I would imagine that a pool of collected blood fluid behind an eyeball is pretty far from my definition of something that "looks good," but the fact that Brockman's progress has been positive and he is "eventually expected to make a full recovery" is obviously great news for Brockman and his family.
What's not great news for Brockman and his family, though, is that more than five weeks after the incident, the blood and fluid still have not yet fully drained out, he still can't fully see out of his left eye and, while he's reportedly been cleared for running and weightlifting, he hasn't yet been approved to resume on-court work or rejoin the team. Myhre reports that Brockman's got an appointment to evaluate the left eye's progress coming up next week; if the result of that visit is anything other than, "By all means, resume full-bore play immediately," Brockman could find himself in a precarious position, roster-wise.
Less than three weeks away from the start of the season, Houston looks to have a huge glut in the frontcourt — as it stands, Omer Asik, Patrick Patterson, Chandler Parsons, Marcus Morris, Royce White, Terrence Jones, JaJuan Johnson and Donatas Motiejunas would likely be slotted in ahead of Brockman at the four and five spots on the Rockets' depth chart. More missed time would make showing coach Kevin McHale that he merits minutes much more difficult for Brockman. And even if (as we hope) he is cleared to get back to it full time as soon as possible, he's still likely to face an uphill climb and a steep learning curve after having missed preseason workouts, the start of training camp and the beginning of the exhibition schedule for a brand-new team with a brand-new system and brand-new personnel with whom to become accustomed. And with just one year and $1 million remaning on his contract, a less-than-full-strength-and-speed Brockman would be pretty easy to jettison, to boot.
Beyond that, Brockman's made his bones to this point in the NBA with his rebounding work, and especially his gift on the offensive glass, where in very limited minutes, he's shown himself to be among the league's better per-minute performers over the past three years — he's grabbed better than 12.4 percent of available offensive rebounds in each of his three NBA seasons, according to Basketball-Reference.com, and the league's top players in that category each year typically snag somewhere between 14 and 16 percent. Coming off a serious eye injury — two of them, in fact — you have to wonder if he'd be a bit gun-shy amid all that banging down low, where a stray finger or elbow could exacerbate an existing problem. (Lawrence says "the doctors are pretty confident that he can play his game and that he will not be at any greater risk for injury than anybody else," but then again, Lawrence is Brockman's agent.)
It's a crummy set of circumstances, for sure, but those look to be the circumstances in which Brockman finds himself after sustaining this freak-accident injury. Regardless of whether that worst-case scenario comes to pass, Brockman might want to ask his old Sacramento Kings teammate, Francisco Garcia, about his experience filing suit against the makers of an exercise ball that reportedly exploded while he was using it. Under normal circumstances, we might suggest the connection as a goof; here, it might just wind up being a prudent decision.
Top rookie with anxiety issue joins Rockets’ camp (Yahoo! Sports)
2012
HOUSTON (AP) -- Royce White finally got to focus on basketball Monday, joining the Houston Rockets after he missed the first week of training camp to form a long-term plan for his anxiety issues.
Top rookie with anxiety issue joins Rockets’ camp (Yahoo! Sports)
2012
HOUSTON (AP) -- Royce White finally got to focus on basketball Monday, joining the Houston Rockets after he missed the first week of training camp to form a long-term plan for his anxiety issues.
The 10-man rotation, starring a whole lot of international scouting
2012
A look around the league and the web that covers it. It's also important to note that the rotation order and starting nods aren't always listed in order of importance. That's for you, dear reader, to figure out.
C: FOX Sports North. Remember Gordon Giricek? Few of you do, which is why the Minnesota Timberwolves are going to great lengths to bolster their international scouting team in this very cool and well done feature from Joan Niesen.
PF: National Post. Amir Johnson (via Eric Koreen) will have you wanting to move to Toronto with news of this Tim Horton's-slash-Cold Stone Creamery.
SF: Rockets.com. Checking in with the fundamentals-obsessed Houston Rockets.
SG: Orlando Sentinel. A look at Mexico City-born new'ish Magic center Gustavo Ayon.
PG: NBA.com. Steve Aschburner discusses the super-small Milwaukee backcourt, one that didn't play all that well defensively in brief glimpses last season.
6th: Sactown Royalty. The detestable Maloofs are mentioned in the to-be-admired '30 Rock.'
7th: Pacers.com. Checking in with Roy Hibbert after a pretty nutty summer.
8th: Sportando. Allen Iverson won't be playing for Maccabi Haifa in two exhibition games this month.
9th: SB Nation. Want to be an NBA mascot? Why in the hell would you?
10th: Cowbell Kingdom. James Johnson, on former teammate Brad Miller: "He always sends me pictures," said Johnson with a smile. "I heard he just got a 7-foot bear just the other day. So, I don't know if I'm going that extreme. I don't if I'm that extreme yet — maybe a couple ducks or squirrels (first)."
Got a link or tip for Ball Don't Lie? Holler at me at kdonhoops (at) yahoo.com, or follow me on Twitter.
Rockets’ White a no-show at camp, cites anxiety (Yahoo! Sports)
2012
Lin, young Rockets ready for challenge (Yahoo! Sports)
2012
HOUSTON (AP) -- Jeremy Lin became a Broadway sensation, a coveted free agent and a merchandising magnet in Asia, all in less than a year.
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