Ball Don’t Lie’s Indispensable Twitter Must-Follows: The Ink-Stained Wretches

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 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 the first installment of five, here are the Ink-Stained Wretches. All follower counts are as of September 16th, 2012:

Benjamin Hochman — Nuggets news, natch, stories from the road, in-game insight and envy and heartburn-inducing cheeseburger reviews. Also, a strain of fandom for the television epic 'Dallas' that only an 80's refugee or bored college freshman could understand. Also, mustache.

Bethlehem Shoals — The former FreeDarko mastermind says he's out of the game, for now, but he remains a wretch as FD's 'Macrophenomenal Pro Basketball Almanac' and 'Undisputed Guide to Pro Basketball' sit perilously close to our laptop as we write. His influence on the great The Classical, and most mindful modern sportswriting, lives on.

Bruce Arthur — Not strictly an NBA columnist — he'd have to spend his time working with the Raptors, after all — but one of the finest all-around general columnists in North America, and a devastatingly on-point Twitter presence. Also potentially a bearded criminal mastermind from the future, we're not entirely sure.

Chris Ballard — Sports Illustrated's longtime, longform NBA scribe is also a must-read author and apparently a must-choose swingman if you're ever divvying up sides for a pickup game.

Darnell Mayberry — Even if the Thunder were still winning once out of every five tries, Mayberry's a beat writing giant. Few pull off the between-game notes roundup like Darnell, and his Twitter feed reflects that.

Eric Koreen — Eric comes off as a cheerful, cool Twitter presence full of funny quips and asides until he drops a link to his latest column and … damn, nailed it. Great tweets, and even better work at the day gig.

Frank Isola — The image is correct: Frank's a badass. He also breaks stories, somehow rises above the Dolan-era Knicks with perspective intact, and is an inspiration for any college-age journalism student that wants to know if you can make it in this business while remaining a quite-sufferable smart-aleck.

Gary Washburn — We thought this even before realizing the lineage — Washburn churns out one of the few must-read Sunday notes columns left in a newspaper world hamstrung by an internet that's already beaten the physical press to the punch. Factor in the notes column's history (Globe alumni Peter Gammons perfected it, ex-Globester Peter May wrote a fantastic one for years, and Marc J. Spears expertly followed his turn), and that knowledge goes down a little smoother.

Howard Beck — Beck's been a beat giant for years, back to his time at the Los Angeles Daily News covering the Shaq'n'Kobe Lakers, leading through his time trying to keep a straight face with Isiah Thomas' Knicks and last year's needless NBA lockout. Even if his timeline served as a feed to his Times work, the follow would be worth it. Luckily, it isn't; Beck's a funny cat who knows his way around 140.

Ian Thomsen — SI's Boston-based hoophead drops all manner of column-y links (great catches, interview-wise) and in-game notes from his Twitter feed.

Ira Winderman — The Larry O'Brien trophy is in Miami, and you need a source within the walls that Pat Riley has probably already bugged with Nixon-era listening devices he won eBay. More often than not, Ira's your guy within those walls. You need him within those walls.

Jack McCallum — Jack has only been on Twitter for a few months, but great writers make their presence known immediately. They can't help it. McCallum, who filed the copy that detailed the Magic/Bird Finals' of the 1980s that had you stomping your feet while waiting for that latest Sports Illustrated to show up in that mailbox three decades ago, recently released a fantastic Dream Team memoir.

Jeff McDonald — This Spurs beat writer is valuable not merely because the Spurs are always around, but because he's someone whose sense of humor seems very appropriately attuned to the wry, veteran, Gregg Popovich-led group.

Jerry Zgoda — Notes and notes and notes and links and notes and columns and gamers and notes from the man following what figures to be one of the more entertaining teams in the league over the next few years.

Jon Krawczynski — It's hard to stand out as a writer within the confines of both wire work, and to-the-second post-game deadlines. Somehow, for a while now, Krawczynski has stood out; and his Twitter feed reflects that.

K.C. Johnson — Covering the Chicago Bulls takes a measured approach; you'll have to jump from dealing with championship contenders to full-on tankers in the blink of an eye, along with the odd coach/GM shove-fest. Johnson's been That Guy for a while now, full of all sorts of info as he attempts to wrangle something (anything!) out of a franchise (coaching staff, and roster) we'd hardly classify as "discursive."

Kevin Ding — If we had a quarter for every blog post that was sourced with, "according to the Orange County Register's Kevin Ding …," we'd probably be able to spend the rest of September playing Ms. Pac-Man because YOLO. Ding is fantastic, doing fine work while embedded with these Laker nutters.

Marc Berman — Berman of the Post breaks stories, always fun, and he's always down for a game of "Spot the Plant." Cracks aside, Berman's got his sources, his good stuff, and he's a necessary component if you want to pay attention to these Knicks from afar, or just a few blocks away. Plus, he wants to hear from you!

Michael Cunningham — This isn't a shot at an expertly-crafted, on-deadline gamer; but to the fan the notes column filed after the pregame noise can be just as necessary. Even more so than gamers in a way, now that we can receive updated scores on our virtual reality phones. Cunningham's work in the space between is excellent.

Michael Grange — Grange knows his hoops, and though he doesn't exclusively tweet or write about the NBA, he's still the first writer we've seen utilize advanced basketball statistics in a hardcover coffee table book about the league.

Michael Lee — Perhaps the best thing you can say about Michael Lee is that he has a sense of humor needed to ably cover the Washington Wizards. Maybe the best thing you can say about him is that he runs a Wiz blog in his off time that rivals those that run Wizards blogs full time; and one that rivals his fine work both in gamers and notes columns. Maybe the best thing to say is that his Twitter feed encompasses all of this.

Mike Bresnahan — You don't follow Mike Bresnahan because you have to, merely because he covers the league's most famous team for its area's biggest newspaper. You follow him because he pulls it off, expertly, weaving in news and notes with a columnist's touch on a beat writer's word count.

Mike Monroe — Monroe's irascible, hilarious style has been a must-read since his time at the Denver Post. A perfect fit covering the Spurs, Monroe showcases his strength in spotting league-wise trends, and his in-game Twitter work is worth your watch.

Mike Wells — Indianapolis is relative small beans in comparison to bigger leagues with four newspapers per team, but the emerging Pacers are sometimes the focus of this league, and Wells does yeoman's work covering the up and comers. As an NBA junkie, the fact that Wells appears averse to taking it easy during the summer months is much appreciated.

Paul Coro — With Steve Nash's departure, the Suns are unfortunately on their way toward becoming an NBA afterthought. That doesn't seem to bother Coro, who is as embedded and sourced as beat writers come, covering the team with an exacting style while sharing helpful re-tweets (never underestimate the re-tweet you have missed) along the way.

Peter Vecsey — He's Peter F'n Vecsey.

Rick Bonnell — NBA fans were really denied some fantastic work when the Charlotte Hornets left North Carolina in 2002, mainly because we lost two good years of Bonnell's beat work. Back on board with the Charlotte Bobcats, even if the Bobcats aren't, Rick's damn good reporting and emerging Twitter presence is something to pay attention to.

Roland Lazenby — Roland covered the Jordan-era Bulls and Phil Jackson-era Lakers like few others, he's an NBA historian that has endless amounts to share, and should be one of the first Twitter follows for any hoops fan setting up their first account. Sometimes, these things are simple.

Stefan Bondy -- Bondy is one of our newer favorites, the type that can fit a columnist's edge into a what is typically a mundane tale of day-to-day NBA "entertainment." His between-game work will be leaned quite a bit as the Nets make their Brooklyn debut in 2012-13.

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Tags: Darnell, , , Illustrated, Mayberry, , Sports Illustrated, ,
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Dwight Howard won't be back to live NBA action for a bit, as he'll miss the beginning of training camp and the start of the preseason while continuing to strengthen his lower back following April surgery to repair the herniated disk that ended his 2011-12 campaign. When he does come back, though, he'll be wearing the purple and gold of the Los Angeles Lakers, thanks to a four-team megadeal that made the Lakers a championship favorite and consigned the Orlando Magic to the ranks of the rebuilding.

The trade ended Howard's protracted and indelicate attempts to exit Orlando, a months-long tire fire in which Howard repeatedly made decisions that seemed to anger and disgust not only Magic fans, but just about everyone following the fiasco. This, it appears, was not his intention.

In an interview with ESPN.com's Ric Bucher filmed for the network's regularly televised "Sunday Conversation" segment, Howard said he doesn't "have any regrets" about the way things transpired (which makes sense, because after it all, he wound up moving from Orlando to Hollywood, playing alongside Hall of Fame talent and putting himself in position to again contend for a title) except for a wish that "some of the lies and some of the things being said didn't come out the way [they] did" (which makes sense, because Dwight definitely didn't want the whole "I secretly asked management to fire my coach" thing to come out the way it did).

No regrets, then, but some valuable wisdom gleaned:

"That's one of the lessons that I learned, you know. I can't make everybody happy," Howard told Bucher.

Man, you ain't kiddin'.

While trying to decide how to handle his business, a lot of conflicting thoughts and images kept running through Howard's mind, including the epic backlash that followed "The Decision."

"And it was a tug of war between my feelings and the fans and everybody else and their feelings and what happened to LeBron. And I saw him — everybody hated him for leaving Cleveland and what he did," Howard said of LeBron James' free-agent move from the Cleveland Cavaliers to the Miami Heat in 2010. "I never wanted anybody to hate me, you know. I wanted everybody to love me, you know, like me, for sticking around and doing what they wanted me to do. And making everybody else happy. And that was a valuable lesson for me, you know.

"I can't make everybody happy."

This is well-trodden territory, but still, for the sake of clarity, it's worth noting that while James earned whatever scorn he received for making a public spectacle of rejecting a fan base in the summer of 2010, he was 100 percent within his rights to pick whichever team he wanted to play for, because he had come to the end of his deal with the Cavaliers and was a free agent. Howard tried to work his escape plan while still under contract with the Magic. So, yeah. People got pissed.

That said, it's easy to understand why Howard might've gotten shook behind what happened to James, who went from being the NBA's golden child to someone whose jersey people were burning in effigy and the sport's most hated individual overnight. That seemed like a pretty rough deal; after all, nobody likes to be hated. (Well, except Kobe Bryant, maybe.)

However, this doesn't seem entirely accurate — most of the actions Howard took beginning in December, just after the end of the 2011 NBA lockout, when he reportedly demanded to be traded to the then-New Jersey Nets, seemed pretty clearly aimed at making Dwight happy, irrespective of how anybody else felt about it. In the months that followed Howard's trade demands, the six-time All-Star and three-time Defensive Player of the Year burned through every ounce of goodwill he'd built up with Magic fans since the team drafted him in 2004, creating a strained environment by continuing to push for a move even as the Magic established themselves as a clear No. 3 behind the Chicago Bulls and Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference prior to the trade deadline.

But then, just before the March 15 deadline, Howard did make a decision that seemed predicated on not wanting people to hate him, choosing to opt into the final year of his contract. But even as he presented that choice as a symbol of his loyalty to the franchise, he continued to decline to ink a long-term extension and leave the door open to exiting after the '12-13 season, which didn't do much to assuage concerns that he wanted to bolt.

Less than a month later, Magic coach Stan Van Gundy was telling reporters that he knew Howard had called for his firing, to which Howard said, "Yeah, but not recently." The atmosphere surrounding the team grew increasingly chaotic and the on-court product suffered, with the Magic going through an ugly 2-7 stretch that saw them drop in the East's standings before losing Howard to the back injury and bowing out in the first round of the playoffs to the Indiana Pacers. After the playoff ouster, Howard finally got his reputed wish, as the Magic jettisoned both Van Gundy and general manager Otis Smith, but he continued to press his trade demand, further alienating the remaining diehards who still supported him. If all that wasn't enough, Howard postponing and then canceling an appearance at his own basketball camp for Orlando youth was probably the nail in the coffin of "Dwight Howard: Person Who Is Not Hated In Central Florida." (The people of Orlando didn't seem particularly moved by Howard's too-little, too-late "thank you" newspaper ad.)

Now, though, it's September, and all parties involved have moved on. Howard's trying to get healthy and prepared to join Kobe, Steve Nash, Pau Gasol and company in L.A. Van Gundy's dropping science on podcasts and reportedly getting set to join ESPN's NBA studio show. Otis Smith's getting inducted into the Florida Association of Basketball Court of Legends, which sounds nice. And the Magic ... well, um, the Magic'll be scrappy, and Hedo Turkoglu's contract only runs two more years. Training camps start in just two weeks, so it's time for everyone involved to put this in their rear-view mirrors.

That's especially true for Howard, who we can only hope has actually absorbed the lessons he claims to have learned. I think most of us would like to see "I can't make everybody happy" joined by "I should do what I believe is right, even when it's unpopular" and "It's best to be honest and honorable, even in difficult situations," but realizing that trying to please everyone all the time is a fool's errand is no small bit of personal growth for a 26-year-old. It's just a shame it took about eight months of dragging Orlando fans through the muck for Dwight to get there.

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Three great tickets for NY Knicks Celtics game

17 Sep
2012
Hi! I am a Dutch guy who wanted to see the Knicks play with my wife and son while in NYC for 4 days. Foolishly I never noticed when booking that the game was not in Madison Square but rather in Albany. This is definitely too far to travel while spending a few days in NYC. You can buy my 3 tickets at a major discount of US 70,- off the face value price. Please email me and I'll send the link to the etickets at m.boskamp@nnek.nl
Tags: booking, , , , , Madison Square, , NY Knicks, , Square
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Jeremy Lin is still trying to sleep on his teammates’ couches

16 Sep
2012

One of the many storylines that dotted Jeremy Lin's shocking 2012 ascension from training camp fodder to an NBA Player of the Week award recipient and two-time Sports Illustrated cover subject was the so-cute tale behind his time spent on former teammate Landry Fields' living room couch. Lin, who shuttled back and forth between the New York Knicks' D-League affiliate in Erie, Pa., and the big leagues before nearly being cut by the team before his breakout February, was forced to sleep on Fields' couch while he was with New York for those factors and more — including the scrunched up lockout-influenced schedule, the fact that he and Fields were fast friends, and the centuries-long lack of real estate options in the greater New York City metropolitan area.

Signed by Houston over the summer, if reluctantly, it appears as if Lin is having the same troubles in the fourth-largest city in America. As tweeted by new Rockets teammate Chandler Parsons on Sunday afternoon, Lin can't seem to get away from couchin' it up. From Parsons' Twitter account, here's a screengrab from the Rocket forward's phone:

And Parsons' quip, in light of Lin's three-year, $25.1 million contract (that will pay him near-maximum money in the third year of his deal):

Sorry to bug u, Jeremy Lin, but you can afford a Motel 6. They'll leave the light on for you. And 13 basic cable channels.

Also, Jeremy? Sorry to bug u, but never change.

UPDATE: Lin's really pressing the issue, now.

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Tags: ascension, , Chandler Parsons, Fields, , , , new york knicks, , Sports Illustrated, ,
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Inside Rajon Rondo’s GQ internship (VIDEO)

14 Sep
2012

Last week, we hipped you to Rajon Rondo's latest offseason distraction: a brief internship at GQ during Fashion Week in New York. At the time of that post, we had little sense of what Rondo was actually doing for the magazine beyond a few photos. We could only assume that he was trying to turn this amazing jacket into a trend.

On Friday, GQ released a video of Rondo's activities at the publication, available for your viewing pleasure above (via TBJ). And while some of the scenes are likely staged — unless Rondo really did deliver the mail with behind-the-back passes — it appears that he did perfectly normal intern things like making copies (via Rob Schneider) and picking out shoes for photoshoots.

It also looks like he didn't smile once, which is also pretty standard procedure for an internship. I'm sure his boss him took him out to a nice lunch at the end, though.

Tags: , internship, Jacket, , , pleasure, , Rajon, rajon rondo, Rob Schneider, Rondo, ,
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76ers assistant coach Aaron McKie thinks the team needs ‘a dog’

14 Sep
2012

Whether you think the Philadelphia 76ers overachieved or underachieved last season, you've got room and evidence with which to make an argument. A glass-half-full type might look at the Sixers' 2011-12 campaign and marvel at the team's stingy defense (No. 3 in the league in points allowed per 100 possessions), balanced offensive attack (eight players averaged at least eight points per game) and run to the second round of the Eastern Conference playoffs, where they pushed the Boston Celtics to a deciding seventh game. A more pessimistic sort might get hung up on the 15-17 post-All-Star-break record that sent Philly crawling into the postseason as the East's eighth seed, the relatively punchless offense that finished 20th of 30 NBA teams in offensive efficiency and the lack of a go-to scoring option that could deliver buckets when the Sixers' sets bogged down.

Head coach Doug Collins sounded like a half-empty guy, telling Bob Cooney of the Philadelphia Daily News during a recent sitdown at the Sixers' practice facility that he "felt [last year's] team had reached its peak" and "we knew we were going to have to make changes." Philly certainly did that, letting sixth man Lou Williams and long-range shooting threat Jodie Meeks walk, amnestying starter Elton Brand, bringing in embattled center Kwame Brown to pair with the re-signed Spencer Hawes and, in the biggest move of all, trading cornerstone Andre Iguodala, second-year center Nikola Vucevic and rookie Moe Harkless in a monster four-team deal that sent Dwight Howard to L.A. and brought Andrew Bynum to the Sixers, who immediately welcomed him with open arms. Ch-ch-changes.

Assistant coach Aaron McKie would like to see something else change, too. The 13-year NBA veteran, who spent parts of eight seasons in Philly, told Cooney that he's somewhat troubled by "a sense that our guys don't want to step on each other's toes." The 2000-01 NBA Sixth Man of the Year wants to see Philly's players be a bit more willing to bare their fangs, so to speak:

We have nice guys, but I always say we need someone to turn into a dog, to get teeth into their belly. That's when we're going to take that next step. We enjoy these guys and there's nothing that they wouldn't do for you, but they have to get that mentality, that killer instinct inside of them.

First off, as a blogger who lived through the infamous Dirk Nowitzki/Carl Landry Tooth-Based Unpleasantness of 2009 and the David Lee/Wilson Chandler Tooth-Based Unpleasantness of 2010, I'd like to go on the record as saying I am 100 percent opposed to anyone getting "teeth into their belly." It seems excessive, dangerous, unsanitary and completely against the rules of basketball. So, please, no teeth in bellies.

That said, McKie's point is a valid one, and an extension of something Collins pointed at during the Celtics series when he implored point guard Jrue Holiday to shoot more and attack, if only just to get the ball on the glass for offensive rebounding opportunities — the Sixers really didn't have much they could hang their hat on offensively last season, and that often put them in precarious positions late in games.

While the Sixers' stout defense and many-hands-make-light-work scoring approach led them to a 35-31 record, they were not a good team in close games, going 5-10 in contests decided by five points or less and just 8-20 in games decided by 10 points or less. (Weirdly, 38 of Philly's 66 games were decided by 11 points or more, and they thrived in those wide-margin games, winning 27 and losing 11.) And while some look skeptically at so-called "clutch" statistics, they indicate that Collins' team performed poorly in close and late situations, going 7-20 in games in which they were up or down by five points in the final three minutes, according to NBA.com's statistical database.

The seven Sixers who played most frequently in crunch time — point guard Jrue Holiday (on the floor for 94 percent of Philly's "clutch" situations), Iguodala (94 percent), Brand (70 percent), Williams (69 percent), combo forward Thaddeus Young (65 percent), former No. 2 overall draft pick Evan Turner (35 percent) and Meeks (24 percent) — all posted net negative efficiency numbers (meaning the team fared worse with them on the floor) during the fourth quarter or overtime of games in which there were less than five minutes left on the clock and neither team was ahead by more than five points, according to 82games.com's statistics. Only four players on the roster who played any "clutch" minutes had a positive rating in those situations; of them, only Hawes (who was a +9 in net points while playing in less than one-fifth of Philly's close-and-late situations) returns to this year's team.

This, in and of itself, doesn't necessarily prove that Sixers players lacked some ineffable ability to be great under pressure. It does, however, indicate that nobody on last year's team was especially excellent in late-game situations. Making matters worse, the only 76er who ranked among the league's top scorers in "clutch" spots was Williams, who scored an average of 34 points per 48 minutes in crunch time (14th best in the NBA, according to 82games.com) and will ply his trade with the Atlanta Hawks this season. Philly's second-most potent option, Holiday, averaged just 23.1 points per 48 "clutch" minutes, good for 48th in the league.

Now, this is where you say, "Yes, well, that's why they traded for arguably the best low-post scoring center in the league — late in close games, now they can dump it into Bynum and let him go to work." And you'd be right — he played just over three-quarters of the Los Angeles Lakers' "clutch" minutes last season (in which the team was a sterling +74 with him on the floor), he averaged 28.1 points per 48 minutes of "clutch" time, hit 76.1 percent of his field goals, drew fouls on just under 18 percent of the late-game possessions he used and hit 81 percent of his free throws. He walks into the team as, without a doubt, its best late-game option.

But the burden of being The Man for the first time is a funny thing — we don't yet know for sure if Bynum's wired to "turn into a dog." If he is, and if he can reliably answer the call when games' outcomes are in doubt, then Philly could be a beast of a team come playoff time. If he can't, though, a season for which Sixers fans have high hopes could end with a whimper.

Tags: Aaron McKie, , , Jrue Holiday, , , , Sixers,
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Maurice Evans wants a job, will make sure young players don’t miss planes

14 Sep
2012

We're now close enough to NBA training camps that only a few unfilled jobs actually exist on the market. For the aging veterans and hopeful youngsters looking for work, those gigs become even more coveted than usual.

Long-time NBA swingman Maurice Evans, perhaps best known in recent seasons for his vest-with-no-jacket ensembles during NBPA lockout press conferences, is one of those players looking for a new job. After last season's work as a veteran presence for the lowly Washington Wizards, Evans has garnered little interest in free agency.

However, Evans doesn't only provide value for what he does on the court. In fact, he's willing to do pretty much anything to help the team, even if that involves making sure that rookies and second-year pros don't miss planes for road trips. From Jeff Zillgitt for USA Today:

"Given that I'm a veteran, I know where my value lies," Evans, 33, told USA TODAY Sports. "At this stage of the game and at this stage in my life, I'm waiting for the place I feel God has already marked for me. The impact I can make is not only on the floor, it's even more so in the locker room and the community. That's the marquee value I bring to the table." [...]

But it's his locker room presence that made an impact in Washington. Last season, Evans filled that leadership role as a mentor to guards John Wall and Jordan Crawford. One person with knowledge of the Wizards' season said Crawford would have been late to the airport for a handful of road trips had Evans not picked him up. The person, who requested anonymity because Evans is still trying to reach a deal, also said almost every player credited Evans for his leadership and advice during their exit interviews.

Evans goes on to explain that he can help a veteran team, too, but I think he is burying his most valuable contributions. If Crawford needed help making multiple planes, then clearly having someone to make sure he gets there on time was valuable to the team. Sure, the Wizards went an awful 9-24 on the road last season, but just imagine how few games they would have won if Evans hadn't been there to help out Jordan Crawford.

Really, it seems prudent for every team to have someone in this role. Sure, Anthony Davis might seem to have a good head on his exceedingly broad shoulders, but what would happen if he failed to show up for several media availabilities in the same week? These veterans don't only have to serve as babysitters, but surely they can help to acclimate their young colleagues to the life of the NBA.

Or, you know, everyone could just learn how to operate and honor an alarm clock.

Tags: Crawford, , Jordan Crawford, locker, Maurice Evans, , road, , ,
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Russians prepare to invade Timberwolves (Yahoo! Sports)

14 Sep
2012

FILE - This Aug. 8, 2012 file photo shows Russian forwards Andrei Kirilenko, left, Sergey Monya, center, and guard Alexey Shved, right, during a men's quarterfinal basketball game at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. Kirilenko and Shved have enjoyed themselves in Russia ever since winning bronze at the Olympics. Now they're using that popularity to help grow the game in Russia and get ready to play for the Minnesota Timberwolves. (AP Photo/Mark Ralston, Pool)

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Andrei Kirilenko and Alexey Shved helped put Russian basketball back on the map after leading the national team to a bronze medal at the London Olympics.


Tags: Alexey Shved, Andrei Kirilenko, , bronze, map, minneapolis, , Russian basketball, Shved, Timberwolves, ,
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Dwyane Wade found the booing that met Miami’s Big Three ‘weird’ and ‘indescribable’

14 Sep
2012

Despite having to miss the 2012 Olympics following knee surgery and "struggling" (relative to his typical brilliance, of course) through an injury-plagued postseason, Dwyane Wade has been a cheery sort of late. Winning his second career ring and first with friend-o-mates LeBron James and Chris Bosh will do that to a person, as does the knowledge that he just about runs south Florida at this point even with James' increasing presence (and growing game) on hand.

Like a lot of people, though, Dwyane can't seem to get over the reaction to his team's 2010 inception, and the on-court fallout that came as the team trudged through the 2010-11 season as the NBA's decided Black Hats. You can tell as much after reading an interview with Wade from Maxim that has been bouncing around the internet on Friday:

What was it like to be the bad guy after so many years as one of the most popular players in the league?
It was weird. I mean, I'd never been booed before! And I felt like we'd done some­thing unselfish, so for fans to think we'd done something bad was indescribable.

Here's the issue, Dwyane, and we hope that 26 months on you'll start to understand it:

I'm going to make a handy list of what NBA fans tend to remember when they see you walk out on the court against one of the other 29 teams in the NBA other than the Miami Heat.

1). "The Decision."

2). A bloated and embarrassing spectacle, a celebration really, in the days the triptych of signings that brought LeBron James and Chris Bosh to Miami alongside a re-signed Dwyane Wade. One that promised in upwards of seven championships to Miami months before the team was to take to the court for its first game.

3). LeBron James' ill-conceived "The Decision" special.

4). The fact that the 2009-10 Player Efficiency Rating leaders at three different all joined one team under Pat Riley in Miami, possibly colluding for years on the way toward that meeting point, giving the rest of the NBA a wearying core to try and counter.

5). "The Decision."

6). That this team could be pretty awesome.

7). "The Decision."

(Moving down a bit …)

3,817). The fact that James, Wade, and Bosh all took slightly less than the maximum contracts they could legally get in order to all fit under the cap and save a little space to sign the ultimately disappointing Mike Miller.

3,818). "The Decision."

3,819). The fact that Dwayne Wade's shots per 36 minutes of play went down two and then one attempts per that time frame in the two seasons following the acquisition of Bosh and James, as he unselfishly stepped to the side to accommodate his new teammates.

3,820). "The Decision."

3, 821). Dexter Pittman.

Bad jokes aside, it must have been weird. But because those unselfish acts are so far removed from the over the top introduction the Heat staged following the acquisitions, it's only natural to forget that the team's three players took slightly less.

While still making eight figures a year. In a state with lax income tax laws.

Wade had taken in his fair share of league-wide catcalls since joining the league in 2003 and immediately vaulting to stardom; especially after he led a somewhat-reviled (aging Shaq, Antoine Walker, James Posey, a still-snappin' Gary Payton) Miami Heat team to the 2006 NBA title. Nothing met the sort of invective he took in following the formation of the current Heat incarnation, though, and as flip answers to laddie mags go calling this "weird" and "indescribable" isn't far off.

You kind of lose that footing, Dwyane, when you preen in front of thousands some 23 months before winning your first championship with that crew. Or 11 months, even, had the Heat pulled out the title in 2011. We at Ball Don't Lie have tried to be pretty understanding of the whole switch, continuously pointing out that all three members took less money to make things happen for a team that would only get a "so? They're supposed to win it" shoulder shrug had it combined to take the title, but this is sort of the payoff.

Booing would be the payoff, we're certain, even if the team had handled the acquisitions tactfully and respectfully and out of the public view. Miami — the franchise that greeted Shaquille O'Neal's arrival with a flat-bed parade through town with Shaq firing a Super Soaker into the crowd — just doesn't do things that way. That's why people boo.

They also boo because you're good. Because your team can win by 25, every other night. That's not weird. That's to be expected. Expected, say, 41 times plus the playoffs starting about a month and a half from now.

There's not much else to the interview, but there are several pictures of half-naked woman at the link to the Q and A, in case you were having a tough time finding such things on the internet.

Tags: Bosh, court, Dwayne Wade, dwyane wade, , , , , , ,
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Dwyane Wade found the booing that met Miami’s Big Three ‘weird’ and ‘indescribable’

14 Sep
2012

Despite having to miss the 2012 Olympics following knee surgery and "struggling" (relative to his typical brilliance, of course) through an injury-plagued postseason, Dwyane Wade has been a cheery sort of late. Winning his second career ring and first with friend-o-mates LeBron James and Chris Bosh will do that to a person, as does the knowledge that he just about runs south Florida at this point even with James' increasing presence (and growing game) on hand.

Like a lot of people, though, Dwyane can't seem to get over the reaction to his team's 2010 inception, and the on-court fallout that came as the team trudged through the 2010-11 season as the NBA's decided Black Hats. You can tell as much after reading an interview with Wade from Maxim that has been bouncing around the internet on Friday:

What was it like to be the bad guy after so many years as one of the most popular players in the league?
It was weird. I mean, I'd never been booed before! And I felt like we'd done some­thing unselfish, so for fans to think we'd done something bad was indescribable.

Here's the issue, Dwyane, and we hope that 26 months on you'll start to understand it:

I'm going to make a handy list of what NBA fans tend to remember when they see you walk out on the court against one of the other 29 teams in the NBA other than the Miami Heat.

1). "The Decision."

2). A bloated and embarrassing spectacle, a celebration really, in the days the triptych of signings that brought LeBron James and Chris Bosh to Miami alongside a re-signed Dwyane Wade. One that promised in upwards of seven championships to Miami months before the team was to take to the court for its first game.

3). LeBron James' ill-conceived "The Decision" special.

4). The fact that the 2009-10 Player Efficiency Rating leaders at three different all joined one team under Pat Riley in Miami, possibly colluding for years on the way toward that meeting point, giving the rest of the NBA a wearying core to try and counter.

5). "The Decision."

6). That this team could be pretty awesome.

7). "The Decision."

(Moving down a bit …)

3,817). The fact that James, Wade, and Bosh all took slightly less than the maximum contracts they could legally get in order to all fit under the cap and save a little space to sign the ultimately disappointing Mike Miller.

3,818). "The Decision."

3,819). The fact that Dwayne Wade's shots per 36 minutes of play went down two and then one attempts per that time frame in the two seasons following the acquisition of Bosh and James, as he unselfishly stepped to the side to accommodate his new teammates.

3,820). "The Decision."

3, 821). Dexter Pittman.

Bad jokes aside, it must have been weird. But because those unselfish acts are so far removed from the over the top introduction the Heat staged following the acquisitions, it's only natural to forget that the team's three players took slightly less.

While still making eight figures a year. In a state with lax income tax laws.

Wade had taken in his fair share of league-wide catcalls since joining the league in 2003 and immediately vaulting to stardom; especially after he led a somewhat-reviled (aging Shaq, Antoine Walker, James Posey, a still-snappin' Gary Payton) Miami Heat team to the 2006 NBA title. Nothing met the sort of invective he took in following the formation of the current Heat incarnation, though, and as flip answers to laddie mags go calling this "weird" and "indescribable" isn't far off.

You kind of lose that footing, Dwyane, when you preen in front of thousands some 23 months before winning your first championship with that crew. Or 11 months, even, had the Heat pulled out the title in 2011. We at Ball Don't Lie have tried to be pretty understanding of the whole switch, continuously pointing out that all three members took less money to make things happen for a team that would only get a "so? They're supposed to win it" shoulder shrug had it combined to take the title, but this is sort of the payoff.

Booing would be the payoff, we're certain, even if the team had handled the acquisitions tactfully and respectfully and out of the public view. Miami — the franchise that greeted Shaquille O'Neal's arrival with a flat-bed parade through town with Shaq firing a Super Soaker into the crowd — just doesn't do things that way. That's why people boo.

They also boo because you're good. Because your team can win by 25, every other night. That's not weird. That's to be expected. Expected, say, 41 times plus the playoffs starting about a month and a half from now.

There's not much else to the interview, but there are several pictures of half-naked woman at the link to the Q and A, in case you were having a tough time finding such things on the internet.

Tags: Bosh, chris bosh, court, Dwayne Wade, dwyane wade, , , , , ,
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