Metta World Peace wants the Lakers to try to go 73-9, because ‘you try to snatch records before you leave this earth’

18 Sep
2012

In case you've been distracted by other stuff, like the Mars Rover landing or the Chicago teachers' strike or the TomKat/K-Stew and R-Pattz splits, the Los Angeles Lakers have had what you might call an eventful offseason. They traded for Steve Nash, then they signed Antawn Jamison, then they traded for Dwight Howard, then their signature star won a gold medal and their stalwart Spanish (former) second banana won silver by being an all-world low-post force. They'll enter the upcoming season among the favorites to take the 2012-13 NBA championship alongside the defending champion Miami Heat and runner-up Oklahoma City Thunder, whose top guns, Lebrun James and Kevin Durant, recently made some headlines by working out together during the offseason (despite the fact that they did it last year, too).

During a recent radio interview with Max Kellerman and Marcellus Wiley on ESPN 710 AM in Los Angeles, transcribed by Chris Fedor of Sports Radio Interviews, enigmatic Lakers forward Metta World Peace said he would have loved to take part in the LBJ/KD workouts, "but they're Nike guys and Nike guys like to stick together." (The former Ron Artest is a BALL'N guy, which I'm sure is the only reason why they didn't invite him along.) But while World Peace does think players can learn something from one another in training, he doesn't see anything that James or Durant gleaned from their workouts helping them much, because "the way the Lakers look initially, I can't see nobody getting past us at all, so I don't think they're going to have a chance to see each other in the championship."

Pretty confident, Metta. But are you "make reckless claims about historic dominance" confident?

What he thinks about the team possibly not having Dwight Howard at the start of Training Camp:

"We definitely want to beat the Bulls record and go 73-9, that's definitely something that I want to do. Whoever is out there at the beginning of the season then we gotta get it. It's as simple as that. We just have to go get it. [Host: So that Bulls record is something you're thinking about?] No question. You try to snatch records before you leave this earth. You gotta try to do a lot of great things so it's definitely a goal. With Dwight Howard, [Steve] Nash, Kobe [Bryant], myself, Pau [Gasol] and then [Antawn] Jamison and a lot of great additions, it's something that's possible."

Well, then.

First off, solid answer to the question you were asked. "What do you think about Dwight missing some time?" "Well, we definitely want to win 73 games." Asked and answered, counselor. Moving on!

Now, to the meat of the matter: This is obviously going to be very difficult to do.

The 1995-96 Chicago Bulls are considered by many to be the greatest team in NBA history, and while reasonable people can argue that assessment — some might prefer the depth and array of weapons on the 1985-86 Boston Celtics, or the dominance of the Wilt-and-West-led 1971-72 Los Angeles Lakers, or another of the myriad great teams lauded in league lore — it's inarguable that no other team's even won 70 regular-season games. Two others (those '71-'72 Lakers and the follow-up '96-'97 Bulls) have won 69, two (the '66-'67 Philadelphia 76ers and '72-'73 Celts) won 68 and four (the '91-'92 Bulls, '85-'86 Celts, '99-'00 Lakers and '06-'07 Dallas Mavericks) won 67.

To win more than 85 percent of your games over the course of an 82-game season, you need to be consistently excellent, consistently healthy and consistently lucky; to suggest that a Lakers team that's integrating key new pieces like Howard, Nash and Jamison alongside Gasol and Kobe will be able to hit the ground running that smoothly and maintain its forward momentum no matter what seems like an awful lot to ask.

And that's even before you remember perhaps the most important feature — whereas the '95-96 Bulls had a 32-year-old Jordan who'd played just over 800 total NBA games, was entering his first full season following his minor-league siesta and was out for blood following a playoff defeat at the hands of the upstart Orlando Magic, the Lakers' star shooting guard is two years older, has nearly 600 more games on his odometer and took a slight (but real) step backward last season. The Lakers should be good, and could even be great, but considering all that'd have to go right (plus the fact that they'll face an improved Los Angeles Clippers team four times, have four matchups with the defending Western Conference champion Oklahoma City Thunder, a pair of contests against the defending world champion Miami Heat and a tough seven-game road trip in early February), that level of all-time achievement seems like a bit of a stretch.

Then again, it's worth remembering that those '95-96 Bulls didn't operate under optimal conditions, either, as our Fearless Leader wrote in his 2010-11 Miami Heat season preview:

The [1995-96 Bulls] didn't have Dennis Rodman for the first month of the season, due to a calf strain, and for a spell in early spring after a suspension. A team that saw Scottie Pippen work on an MVP level for the first half of the season, and then limp around with a bad back and bum ankle for the second half of the season. A year that saw Toni Kukoc struggle with a back injury late, Luc Longley struggle with confidence all season long, and Michael Jordan still struggling to get his NBA legs back.

Despite all that, they won 72 games. They had so many chances, so many reasons, to lose a few more, and they didn't. [...]

When I think of the 1996 Bulls, I think of a struggle. I think of Jordan and Pippen and Ron Harper really gutting through the finals against Seattle. I think of those February and March road games, where it seemed like it was a floor-bound Michael just having to take teams down by himself.

In terms of sheer will to win, there are few NBA players more competitive and relentless than Bryant and Nash, and despite the occasional jeers from those who continue to read "European" as a synonym or "soft," Gasol's long since proven his bona fides as a gamer. We know Howard can be a game-changing force in the middle on both ends of the floor, and that the pick-and-roll he figures to run with Nash should be devastating, and that the addition of those two All-Star bookends should make the L.A. offense all but unguardable at times. We know the Lakers will be able to score a lot of points on just about anybody; that much seems secure.

What we don't know yet is how healthy and effective Howard will be coming off back surgery, how well World Peace will fit in as a floor-spacing small forward in the Lakers' starting five (he's reportedly worked extensively on canning the corner three this offseason) and whether a bench led by the likes of Jamison, Jordan Hill, Devin Ebanks and Steve Blake can outstrip the contributions of folks like Toni Kukoc, Bill Wennington, Steve Kerr and the immortal Jud Buechler, which you figure they'd need to, because this Laker team doesn't have the two best players in the league, like those '95-96 Bulls did.

Also, the idea that you should try to go 73-9 doesn't quite track, because the goal is to win a championship, not to win the most regular-season games, and with as many veterans as the Lakers will feature, coach Mike Brown might be better served to rest some weary legs to keep his guys fresh for the second season come springtime.

(Also, the whole "Mike Brown isn't Phil Jackson" thing could nip Metta's plan in the bud.)

It's not impossible, but it's improbable. Of course, if there's anyone in the NBA who seems well equipped to perform the improbable, it's the man who delivered a Canadian weather forecast, booked roles as a detective in a Lifetime movie and an "overtly sexual vampire elder," won a race at the "Yo Gabba Gabba!" Olympics and released a not-really-suitable-for-work 10-minute rap video all in the same summer. It's hard to bet against a man who has that kind of control over reality. And before preseason, when everybody's undefeated and can dream of going 82-0, why would you?

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Dwight Howard reprises role as Rock Callahan on Disney cartoon ‘Kick Buttowski: Suburban Daredevil’ (VIDEO)

18 Sep
2012

Great news, fans of Dwight Howard's voiceover work! The Los Angeles Lakers center is back, one would presume by popular demand (no Clipse and Cam), to lend his vocal gifts to the Disney XD cartoon series "Kick Buttowski: Suburban Daredevil" in a new episode airing this Saturday, Sept. 22, at 11 a.m. Eastern and Pacific.

The show follows the exploits and adventures of a pint-sized, 13-year-old Evel Knievel-type called Kick — although, like Papa Doc, his real name is Clarence — who patterns himself in part after actor Rock Callahan, a giant, muscly action star voiced by Howard. In the episode airing Saturday, Callahan not only inspires Kick, but actually portrays the young daredevil in a movie-within-the-cartoon (which, as Trey Kerby notes at The Basketball Jones, is a little confusing) in which he must defeat a villain known as The Dark One, voiced by "Around the Horn" host Tony Reali, which is obviously completely reasonable and sensible. (Reali is following in the footsteps of his "Pardon the Interruption" colleagues Tony Kornheiser and Michael Wilbon, who previously portrayed police officers on "Kick Buttowski.")

Howard first appeared on the show in the premiere episode of its second season, which aired back in April 2011 while Howard was still a member of the Orlando Magic. While not a regular on the show, his Rock Callahan has become a recurring character, a distinction also held by the likes of comedian Maria Bamford, former "SNL" cast member Will Forte, the great Brian Doyle-Murry and, of course, Fergie.

During an appearance at San Diego Comic-Con to promote the cartoon last year, Howard said he helped "shape the Rock character," according to Doug Williams of ESPN.com, investing himself deeply in the creative process by making sure the cartoon Dwight had broad shoulders, too:

"He's a laid-back superhero," said Howard. "He's just so cool. Actually, I got it from 'Shaft,' because that's one of my favorite movies. You can kind of see the resemblance between Rock Callahan and Shaft. They're just so cool."

Maybe it's just me, but I'm not sure I hear or see either Richard Roundtree or Samuel L. Jackson in Rock Callahan ... if anything, with that extend-o-goatee, I'm seeing Kendrick Perkins more than anything else. (It is perhaps worth noting that the show features a female character named Kendall Perkins, who is described as one of Kick's primary rivals and also perhaps a love interest, which is, it seems to me, a very clear allusion to the contentious and familiar relationship that Howard and Perkins developed in their myriad Eastern Conference battles in the latter half of last decade.) Maybe now that Perk has jettisoned his long, pointy chin hair, Howard can grow his own and bring Callahan to life. I'm sure that'd go over big in his new Hollywood home.

Video via espnfrontrow.

Tags: Buttowski, cartoon, Daredevil, Disney cartoon, , episode, kick, Kick Buttowski, Kick Buttowski: Suburban Daredevil, , , Rock Callahan, The Los Angeles Lakers
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We've known for some time that Iman Shumpert likes to rap, recording under the name "DeBeau" before the New York Knicks drafted him and releasing more music under his own name after a left knee injury ended his rookie season during the Knicks' first-round playoff loss to the Miami Heat. We've also seen him show the capacity to kick rhymes a capella, coming off the top with no instrumentation at a February party for Knicks season ticket holders that also saw former teammate Landry Fields sing a Travie McCoy song.

Given his skills on the mic, his willingness to go in spoken-word style and his predilection toward dressing like a member of the Native Tongues crew, it's not much of a surprise to see Shumpert get up on stage at venerable New York City music venue The Village Underground to share a poem he'd written about his late aunt. What is kind of surprising, though, is how affecting it is — even without a clearly overcome Shumpert choking up in midstream, even if you've never lost anyone to cancer, even if you've never lost anyone at all.

[More NBA: Orlando Magic fan sues franchise over use of her image in ads]

The sophomore-to-be's got a way with words; it's just a shame circumstances dictated him showing us this way. Our condolences to Shumpert and his family.

In on-court news, Shumpert is not only upright and walking again (as you can see in the video above), but also dunking off one leg and continues to target a return to the court somewhere between December and February, aiming to provide a second-half boost for a Knicks team that looks thin at the two-guard.

Video via hoopdrive. Hat-tip to Sekou Smith at NBA.com's Hang Time blog.


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Orlando Magic fan sues franchise over use of her image in ads

17 Sep
2012

NBA fans are devoted to their favorite teams, often spending lots of money for little in return. For the most part, that transaction is accepted — fans stay loyal, and teams reward them with wins, playoff appearances, and sometimes even championships. Or, like me, those people are Golden State Warriors fans, and they spend entire decades feeling bitter due to little return on their investments.

However, regardless of a team's success rate, there are very few instances in which a team has reason to pay a fan with real-live American (or Canadian) currency. Of course, being the face of an advertising campaign would seem to qualify. And that's why one Orlando Magic fan is suing the franchise for using her image on ads all over town. From Stephen Hudak for the Orlando Sentinel (via TBJ):

The Orlando Magic billboard featuring Kristi Slavin's face shouted, "BE LOUD." And now she is. Slavin has sued the basketball franchise, claiming it used a photo of her face and upper body — without her permission — in a marketing campaign. The picture, taken at the Amway Center during the Magic's 2011 playoff run, shows the fan, now 30, in a Dwight Howard jersey, her arms raised and cheering. [...]

The lawsuit, filed last month by Winter Park attorney Hank Hornsby, contends the Magic profited from the commercial and promotional use of Slavin's face and body, but the team neither compensated nor consulted her. Magic spokesman Joel Glass said the team was aware of the lawsuit, but he would not comment further.

In the lawsuit, Slavin said the ads, banners and billboard have caused "uncomfortable and embarrassing encounters and questions" from friends, family and co-workers. The document alleges her public image was altered by the unauthorized use. "People have asked her, 'When did you get into modeling?' '' Hornsby said.

Slavin, a social worker who assists mentally ill and homeless clients in Seminole County and volunteers to help children who have been sexually abused, did not seek attention, Hornsby said. He described her as a private person who would not comment for this story.

The lawsuit seeks damages in excess of $15,000, the statutory limit for a civil claim in Circuit Court.

Trey Kerby has already made the requisite joke about the shame of being outed as a Magic fan in the post-Dwight Howard era, so we can abstain from that business here. We should also probably decline to discuss the merits of the case, which are for the lawyers to figure out. Although, with $15,000 in damages at stake and blog publicity now in full effect, my guess is it will get settled out of court.

When reached for comment, Dwight Howard said he just hopes Miss Slavin still likes him.

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Nets sign Dennis, Mays, Scott for training camp (Yahoo! Sports)

17 Sep
2012
NEW YORK (AP) -- The Brooklyn Nets signed free agents Stephen Dennis, James Mays and Carleton Scott.
Tags: , , Carleton Scott, James Mays, , , Scott, , Stephen Dennis, , ,
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Among its more obvious problems, one particularly frustrating aspect of last year's NBA lockout was that teams had to stuff the offseason signing period, training camps, and attendant game-planning into just a few weeks. It was all very rushed, and it showed in the early parts of the season.

Then-new Houston Rockets coach Kevin McHale dealt with issues beyond the expected deficiencies in precision. In fact, McHale says he might have gotten along with his veterans better if they'd had a full training camp to get used to each other. From Jonathan Feigen for The Houston Chronicle (via EOB):

"It's much more comfortable just knowing that we're here, planning with the coaches, having players coming in and out, being able to talk to them about what we're envisioning," McHale, 54, said. "We're just getting a comfort level with each other as opposed to having the lockout lifted, two days and then getting started."

Last season, the first time most Rockets players heard McHale's voice (unless they were fans of NBA TV or "Cheers" reruns) was when he was furious with the terrible and revealing first practice. As players pushed back, objecting to his changes and demands, McHale often cited the lockout and inability to forge relationships before he began the December rush to the season.

McHale has a point, because successful relationships between players and coaches are often built on mutual trust and expectations. Squeezing that important training camp time into such a short period was bound to create some confusion and troublesome moments, particularly for a new coach. On top of that, Rockets players also have to contend with the fact that they're often mentioned in general manager Daryl Morey's trade proposals, which can make them more uneasy than usual.

But McHale was also hired while the lockout was a reality, and he had plenty of time to plan for his first practice with the knowledge that the usual getting-to-know-you stuff would be compressed. Which is to say that, in some way, starting the first practice with righteous anger over a lackadaisical performance might not have been the best idea. The proper way to react to unfortunate situations isn't to do what you'd normally do and hope it works — it's to adjust the plan accordingly and reveal the extremes of a personality gradually.

That's not to say that McHale didn't have the right to scream at his players — he's a coach, after all, and coaches often have to scream. But the issues he had with veterans weren't just a matter of poor circumstance. McHale played a role, too, and acknowledging that could make him a better coach in the future.

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J.R. Smith has been pretty relentlessly entertaining throughout his NBA career, and his brief tenure with the New York Knicks has been no exception. Whether checking into his first game after joining the team in February with an absolutely remarkable haircut or going for late-night bike rides with Knicks fans, posting pictures of his girlfriend's hind parts on Twitter or throwing down an emphatic monster dunk while down double-digits in a game and playoff series in which the Knicks were getting destroyed, Smith has been a regular source of blithe nonsense that fans seem to find exhilarating and cringe-worthy in equal measure (and, often, at the same time).

He's continued his headline-making since re-signing with the Knicks earlier this summer, openly saying some New York players would probably take it personally if the team matched the poison-pill contract that Jeremy Lin got from the Houston Rockets in restricted free agency (luckily, they didn't!), claiming the Knicks have enough talent to win a championship and then doubling down on that comment by guaranteeing a title during New York Fashion Week.

[More NBA: Orlando Magic fan sues franchise over use of her image in ads]

Whenever he's in front of a microphone, Smith is worth the price of admission. And during a basketball clinic he was running with brother and fellow Knick Chris Smith at the Monroe Sports Center in Monroe Township, N.J., Smith said he feels like he's well worth his new two-year contract, and then some. From Josh Newman of ZagsBlog:

Smith has said publicly that he had more money offered to him, but in the end, liked being home and liked playing for the Knicks. He ultimately signed a two-year contract with the second year being a player option. He will make $2.8 million this coming season under the contract. [...]

"I think anything is a bargain with me, whether I'm playing for a dollar or $20 million it's a bargain because I'm going to play hard no matter what," Smith told SNY.tv. "No matter how much I get paid, it will never affect how hard I play and I think that should be thought about when people see me next year."

On one hand, it's nice to hear that Smith's level of effort is not dependent on his paycheck. And while his practice habits have come into question in the past, owing to calling himself "not really a morning person" early in his career and racking up $1 million in missed-practice fines while playing in China last season, he certainly seemed to burn plenty of calories after signing with the Knicks for the midlevel exception of just under $2.5 million last season (a paycut of nearly $4.4 million from his 2010-11 salary with the Denver Nuggets, by the way).

Yes, he jacked up too many shots — especially 3-pointers, firing more than seven per 36 minutes of floor time — and often gambled on defense, but those are sins of commission (trying to do too much and make big plays) rather than omission (not caring enough to try). There are plenty of negative things to say about the way Smith played last year, especially in the playoffs, but he came off the bench with gusto night in and night out, and J.R. is right to suggest that that's worth noting and commending. It's also worth noting that Smith actually was something of a bargain for the Knicks last year, if you believe in Win Shares, an advanced statistical metric that aims to estimate how much an individual player contributes to team wins with his play.

According to Basketball-Reference.com's numbers, J.R. contributed 2.5 wins in his 35 regular-season games with New York. Using Arturo Galletti's formula for measuring the value of a win in a given season — total salary paid (for last year, $1,917,442,054, per ShamSports.com's salary database) divided by total number of wins available (the number of teams in the league multiplied by 41, or 1,230) — we can peg the value of a win during the 2011-12 season at $1.56 million. Multiply 2.5 Win Shares by that $1.56 million-per-win value, and by one metric, J.R. was worth $3.9 million to the Knicks last season, which is pretty good value for a guy they paid just under $2.34 million. (He gave back some of that value in the postseason, of course, kicking in -0.4 Win Shares during a nightmarish five-game performance against the Miami Heat that saw him shoot just 31.6 percent from the floor and 17.9 percent from 3-point land.)

Based on both his effort and his production-per-paycheck, yes, you can argue that J.R. Smith is something of a bargain ... just so long as you don't use J.R. Smith's definition of "bargain," because whether you are paying a player one dollar or 20 million dollars goes a very, very long way toward determining whether that player is a bargain. Every NBA player would be a bargain if he got paid $1, because the absolute minimum any NBA player can make is $473,604. For a veteran heading into his ninth season, as J.R. is, the minimum salary is $1,229,255. (I mean, this is America; I get paid more than $1, for Pete's sake.)

However, not every NBA player would be a bargain at $20 million per year; in fact, only one player could claim to be last season, and while four players made more than that — Kobe Bryant ($25.2 million), Rashard Lewis ($22.1 million), Tim Duncan ($21.3 million) and Kevin Garnett ($21.2 million) — it wasn't any of them. Using the same Win Shares-based method for figuring out how much J.R. was worth last year, we can suss out that a player would have to have put up at least 12.8 Win Shares during the '11-12 season to be worth that much, which is a list that includes one name: LeBron James, who was worth 14.5 wins for the Miami Heat last season, according to Basketball-Reference.com. If we dial it down to 12.7, Los Angeles Clippers point guard Chris Paul makes it a duo; that's it. While we admire his limitless self-confidence, J.R. Smith at $20 million ... um ... *definitely* wouldn't be a bargain.

Admittedly, it's kind of weird to think of guys like James, who made just over $16 million last year, and Paul, who made just under $16.4 million, as "bargains," but relatively speaking, they are. (And in the context of the NBA, LeBron's definitely not overpaid, no matter what America thinks.) From a different perspective, it's also a little weird to think of Smith, an often-unreliable sixth man for a No. 7 seed that got drummed out in the first round, as a bargain, too. But they were, and he was, and if he performs at about the same clip for his $2.8 million this year, he will be again.

Sure, he'd be an even bigger one if he did it for a buck, but I don't think the NBPA would take too kindly to that. As long as he doesn't try to play like he's worth $20 million a year, though, Knicks fans will probably be cool with it. (Seriously, J.R.: Less is more. Please.)

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Ball Don’t Lie’s Indispensable Twitter Must-Follows: The Multimedia Maestros

17 Sep
2012

The NBA is currently putting the "off" in its "offseason," which means it is time to recalibrate. Take the Windex to the TV, run your beer helmet through the dishwasher twice, send those retro jerseys to the dry cleaners, and check up on the correct spelling of "haterrrrz." Also, perhaps, update your Twitter follows, in order to make sure you've got everything in place that's needed to stay in touch with the NBA as training camp approaches.

Inspired by Sports Illustrated's initial "Twitter 100" (which will be updated on Wednesday), we've put together a collection of indispensable Twitter NBA must-follows — from Internet types to newspaper giants, cranks and rooters, people with brains bigger than ours, and the slicked-back on-camera folk. In the interest of fair play we've excluded all Yahoo! Sports Twitter accounts from the proceedings; but let's face it, you're definitely already following Adrian Wojnarowski and Marc J. Spears. How would you have known about any trade or signing from the last four years if you weren't?

Following the jump, take a look at our list, as lovingly compiled by the Ball Don't Lie team of Kelly Dwyer, Dan Devine and Eric Freeman. We're sure we've overlooked a few, unintentionally, so we welcome your feedback in the comments or in 140 characters or less. Fly onward, blue birdies …

In Part 2 of our five-part series, here are some Multimedia Maestros to aim your rabbit ears at. All follower counts as of Sept. 16, 2012:

Alan Hahn — Newsday's former Knicks beat writer recently made the transition to Knicks analyst on the MSG Network. MSG, of course, owns the Knicks; so we hope that will be able to keep a journalist's tone and touch behind the dial and hey everyone see that black helicopter?!?!

Andy Gray — The SI Vault isn't strictly limited to NBA photos, but because the NBA often leads the four major sports in importing and exporting "Silly," there are endless go-to NBA shots to post. It doesn't have to end at silly, of course, as the Vault is often the place to go for some breathtaking classic shots of NBA hoopsters from the Golden Age. (Pick your own "Golden Age," of course. We like the 1996-97 season. Hint, hint … Andy.)

Chris Vernon — The only local radio host (ESPN's fantastic Ryen Russillo is a national host, knows his hoops and advanced stats, but his Twitter feed is a little NFL-heavy) that both knows and understands advanced statistics. Best, though Vernon wasn't initially completely dismissive of such stats, he wasn't their biggest fan — and gradually grew to learn and understand them on record. A very cool transition to behold, from afar. He also gets great guests, knowledgeably grills them over 12th man acquisitions like few others, and is an engaging listen and Twitter follow.

Chris Webber — After a rough first year, Webber has quickly shot up the ranks to act as one of our favorite NBA analysts; both in the broadcast booth or stuck in a studio. He's able to boast a nice and light perspective without getting too loose with things, while bringing the heavy-handed tone when needed. A perfect balance, from a talented former player who had his Nike Air Huaraches firmly planted in both the Jordan and post-Jordan eras. On Twitter, Webber engages with fans and lets his followers know where his next on-air appearance will be; a needed heads-up on some nights.

Chuck Swirsky — Stuck in a Twitterscape with endless amounts of would-be comics attempting to out-dark each other (trust us, we follow and enjoy them all), the Bulls radio play by play is a beacon of positivity and good vibes. If you don't believe us, give him a follow and hang around for his first tweet of the day — it'll usually get you appreciating that sunrise (even if you've been up all night). Oh — and Chuck calls a heck of a game, too. He even interacts with fans during timeouts via his Twitter account.

David Locke — If Chris Vernon brings the advanced stats to the pregame mid-afternoon shift, David Locke represents in-game. The Jazz play by play man seemingly spends his summers at Synergy on an unending quest to bring his followers — Jazz fans or otherwise — the latest in overlooked scouting reports and statistical evaluation.

Jeff Wade — One of our favorites to follow during a game, Wade's tweets from the floor of the American Airlines Center during Mavericks games are rambunctious (rambunctious, I say!) and usually on-point. Funny and sharp, Wade also wins points for having his adorable kid in his Twitter avatar.

J.E. Skeets — The former Ball Don't Lie editor has been a ground-breaker in myriad ways, but his take to Twitter in July of 2008 helped usher in a wave of NBAniks that previously thought the service just another online distraction with a goofy name. It still is just that, actually, but it's made better for the presence of Skeets — who relays his team's own The Basketball Jones work with some of the Internet's finest daily works via re-tweet.

Jim Paschke — One of our favorite local play-by-play men, Paschke is a must-follow during the season for his work as the voice of the Bucks on Twitter, engaging with fans and media alike as the league navigates through what can be a slog of a season between autumn and spring. Also, this.

John Ireland — For a team with a rabid and often unhinged fan base, Laker fans are curiously surrounded by a group of even-keeled media types that tend to help keep things in check. Our look at the best of the NBA's newspaper industry was full of them, and Ireland (on radio or the sidelines) is no exception. Trips to Los Angeles (and that two-hour, 12-mile drive on the 405) are always tolerable because of Ireland's radio work, and his Twitter account reflects that.

Mark Boyle — Mark Boyle is hilarious, friends. Mark Boyle is very, very funny and you should follow this funny man because he is hilarious.

Matt Steinmetz — Steinmetz has done it all around the Warriors, working as a beat reporter, TV analyst, and now local radio host. His Twitter feed might be currently full of Raiders and Athletics-tinged tweets as he covers the Bay Area, but midseason his timeline is a must-view when the rest of the league settles in for the night and those nutty Warriors take to the court out on the left coast.

Mike Trudell — Smart dude, fine tweets, excellent coverage. Trudell's a great writer who does most of his work on the Lakers' home website, but he's hardly a homer on his way toward breaking down a team that we'll never tire of watching intelligent analysts break down.

Nate Jones — Jones brings a knowledgeable old-school approach to a new'ish format — his work in marketing the various clients under the Goodwin Sports representation umbrella never comes off as cloying or schlocky. Rather, he's a true student of the game (and, uh, law books and stuff), a former NBA blogger, and an unmitigated NBA must-follow.

NBA — Stands for "National Basketball Association."

Pete Pranica — Memphis' play-by-play man offers heaps of in-game and postgame insight, smart re-tweets, and plenty to follow during the regular season. During the offseason? Mostly cheerleaders and Mooncastles. Fine by us.

Ralph Lawler — For a while, there, some of us thought Ralph's Twitter account was a parody. No man should have all that smooth, we thought, as he drove into wine country with his lovely wife, cheerily tweeting away once he got there. Turns out, it is Lawler — one of the best play-by-play men of all time, as engaging a listen on air as he is a necessary follow on Twitter.

Rick Kamla — Owner of the finest avatar on Twitter. Possibly the inventor of LinkedIn.

Sean Grande — A funny, smart, growly sort of cat that not only calls a great game but comes through with a significant Twitter presence that we like a lot. Imagine Bill Burr, if he cleaned up his language by 98 percent and knew about the ins and outs of Doc Rivers' rotation and which 37-year old Celtic was limping that week.

Tas Melas — Because we covered Skeets' work with Twitter in his short bio above, here should be the spot where we mention how The Basketball Jones changed the game well before most of us listened to 12 podcasts a day. Tas and Skeets, for years, got up well before the crack of anything to allow us to download a spirited, intelligent, and typically hilarious take on the ins and outs of the NBA; usually posted by the time most of us got around to finishing our second cup of coffee. That sort of pro bono commitment took years to pay dividends, something to keep in mind while we watch Our Heroes chat it up on The Score or NBATV.

Also, the Melas family's Moo Milk Bar's Instagram photos are just so, so not fair to look at if you live outside of Toronto, and we hope Tas' next innovation is a way to send cookies via Direct Message.

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Tags: , Chris Webber, , , , , tone, transition
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Bad news: Mikhail Prokhorov won’t rap with Jay-Z, for fear of ‘Renegade’-ing him

17 Sep
2012

The ribbon cutting is scheduled for this Friday, but the Barclays Center, the new home of the Brooklyn Nets, doesn't officially open until Sept. 28, when part-owner Jay-Z kicks off a nine-night homestand sure to feature a slew of surprises and special guests. We shared word last month that Nets majority owner Mikhail Prokhorov might be one of them, telling Crain's New York Business, "Yes, I will rap at his concert [...] I am in rehearsals now 10 hours a day and plan to demand joint billing."

The prospect of the 47-year-old Russian billionaire stepping on stage (in my mind's eye, dressed in a Sudeikis-evoking red adidas jumpsuit and gold rope chain) to kick rhymes about doing Jet Ski stunts in the Maldives, followed by a deafening ovation from a sold-out arena, seemed too good to be true. Unfortunately, it apparently was.

In a profile published in the October issue of Details magazine, Prokhorov backs off his statement to Crain's, shattering dreams (like Jordan) of music appreciators the world over. The full text of the Details interview isn't online just yet, but Stefan Bondy of the New York Daily News shares the grim news:

"I respect rap greatly but don't consider myself a fan," said the billionaire owner of the Nets [...] "It was a complete surprise when I was asked to rap. But when I set myself to something, I always achieve great heights. So I don't think it would be fair to rap with Jay. I could cause irreparable damage to his professional career."

This is a real bummer for those of us who wanted to see Prokhorov reprise the mic-ripping performance he put forth on that Russian talk show earlier this year, but it's a smart business move — even if Jay-Z only owns a sliver of a percentage point of the team, he's clearly a valuable member of the organization, helping catalyze the team's rebranding in tangible and intangible ways. It's best not to sour that relationship unnecessarily, even if the havoc that Prokhorov wreaks on the mic is, as Jay himself might say, "so necessary."

Then again, maybe Prokhorov doesn't need to be so cautious. After all, as someone who referred to himself as "a real Russian Eminem" during that Russian TV appearance, Prokhorov should know as well as anybody that Jay's (arguably) been bested on wax before, with the real American Eminem (in the eyes of many) outpacing Jay on "Renegade," the sole collaborative track on Jay's 2001 classic album "The Blueprint."

But despite "Renegade" going down in rap history as one of the few times Jay publicly took a backseat (and on his own album, no less), it in no way derailed his career — the five solo albums he's released since "The Blueprint" have all hit No. 1 on the Billboard charts, selling more than 10 million copies combined, and last year's "Watch the Throne" collaboration with Kanye West was one of the biggest records of 2011. Plus, Jay continued to foster a relationship with Eminem, culminating in a series of highly successful concerts that ranked among the biggest shows in the world in 2010 and a signpost of how far hip-hop had come as a marketable cultural juggernaut.

Jay's too smart to let a little thing like getting outshone get in the way of his money, Mikhail! So why not get out there and spit a little? I'm sure I can find a gold rope for you to borrow, if it'd help.

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Tags: album, billionaire, , , Crain, Crain's New York Business, Jay, Jay-Z, Mikhail Prokhorov, , , Prokhorov, Renegade
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