Thursday, June 14, 2012

Heat survive late charge from Thunder to win Game 2


OKLAHOMA CITY – Just like they have throughout their dominating playoff run, the Oklahoma City Thunder made another relentless, furious push late in Game 2 of the NBA Finals. This time, LeBron James and Dwyane Wade put a stop to it.
Barely.
Kevin Durant missed a short baseline pull-up jumper over LeBron James and James followed with two free throws as the Miami Heat escaped with a 100-96 victory. The Miami Heat now return home with the Finals even at a game apiece.
The Thunder had reason to cry foul after the game. James appeared to have his arm hooked under Durant on Durant's shot in the closing seconds. There also was an apparent blown goal-tending call early in the game that loomed large in the final moments.
James led the Heat with 32 points while Wade shook off his Game 1 struggles to finish with 24.
Durant scored 32 points as the Thunder nearly pulled off another remarkable comeback. Miami controlled much of the game before Durant and Russell Westbrook led the fourth-quarter charge.
The Heat bent but appeared to have the game won after James buried a clutch bank shot with a little more than a minute left and Wade followed with a dunk. Thunder guard Thabo Sefolosha, however, deflected a pass that led to a 3-pointer by Durant to bring the Thunder with two with 37.8 seconds left. After James missed his own 3-pointer, Durant had a chance to send the game into overtime.
Durant lofted the short shot on the baseline, but James had his arm wrapped under Durant's right arm. The Thunder complained about the non-call after James corralled the rebound.
Heat coach Erik Spoelstra, as expected, made two key tactical adjustments for Game 2: He started Chris Bosh for the first time since Bosh's return from an abdominal injury; and he let James open the game guarding Durant. 
Bosh moves seemed to have their desired effect. Bosh had 10 points and 10 rebounds in the first half while Durant walked into halftime with six points and two fouls.
The Thunder admitted they were in awe of the bright lights of the Finals during the first half of Game 1. They also vowed that would not be a problem going forward in the series.
And yet the Thunder again found themselves in a big hole, trailing 18-2 a little more than midway through the first quarter. For the second straight game, Battier opened with a flurry, hitting a couple of early 3-pointers and three total in the first half.
Spoelstra also promised to lengthen his rotation after primarily playing just six players in Game 1. With Bosh starting, Udonis Haslem came off the bench. James Jones, who wasn't available in Game 1 because of migraines, and rookie guard Norris Cole both received minutes in the first half.
Thunder reserve guard James Harden, limited to five points in Game 1, was OKC's only dependable scorer in the first half. He had 17 points at halftime while Westbrook (2 of 10) and Durant (3 of 9) both struggled with their shots.
Unlike Game 1, the Thunder never made a significant push at the Heat before halftime. They shot just 34.1 percent in the first half and for all their athleticism and speed didn't have a single fast-break point.

Karl Malone ‘would have to start my team with Scottie Pippen,’ and not Michael Jordan. Wha?


Scottie Pippen and Karl Malone and basketball is pretty cool (Getty Images)
Ask any former Chicago Bulls teammate of Scottie Pippen, right down to the man whose NBA career he nearly destroyed before it started in Toni Kukoc, and they'll tell you that he was unequivocally their favorite teammate. Pippen's mix of all-around brilliance on both sides of the ball, coupled with his calm and steady on-court and practice court demeanor, make him the ideal leader. As a Bulls fan growing up outside Chicago at the time of Scottie's run with the team, I've for years remarked that I would end games angrier with the play of Michael Jordan than Pippen by probably a 20-to-1 margin. Though his missteps were legendary, he otherwise seemed to do everything right.
To take him, on a hypothetical team in what would be the Greatest Draft Ever, over Michael Jordan? Weirdly, if compassionately, that's what former Utah Jazz forward and fellow Hall of Famer Karl Malone says he would do (if not afforded the opportunity to select former Jazz teammate John Stockton, 'natch).
In an interview with "The Dan Patrick Show" on Wednesday, hyping up the fabulous "Dream Team" documentary that premiered that night, Malone had a pretty cool (if, to these scoutin' eyes, a little off) insight into why he'd go with No. 33 ahead of No. 23:
"I would have to start my team with Scottie Pippen," he said. "This is why I would take Scottie: Do you remember the time that Michael retired? I watched Scottie Pippen when the Chicago Bulls weren't really good and Scottie led that team in every statistical category, and I just remembered that. Plus, he's a guy who could care less about scoring. He wants to stop the best player on the other team. That would have been pretty cool, to see Scottie guarding Michael."
Yes, that would be cool. For years, fans have begged Team USA to release tapes of the Dream Team going back and forth in practice. For just as long, I've been begging Jerry Krause, Jerry Reinsdorf, or some mole at Deerfield, Illinois' soon to be redundant Berto Center to release tapes of Pippen and Jordan going at it in Chicago's closed practices. No player in NBA history was better suited to guard MJ than Scottie Pippen, and lucky for MJ Scottie actually played on Jordan's team.
It was Jordan's team, though. Even if Pippen ran the offense. He relayed direction from the bench, found the open man, found the man who hadn't seen the ball in a while and desperately needed to feel the bumpy leather between his hands, and guarded the team's best perimeter scorer nightly. He took endless amounts of charges before every bit of contact was designated a charge, throwing his back completely out of whack along the way. Also, his unanticipated "ability" to act as the game's 122nd-highest paid player in 1997 and 1998 allowed Michael Jordan to make in upwards of $30 million per season during his last two years with Chicago.
So, yes: Scottie Pippen, quite the dude. And maybe Pippen, 15 years on, is still in Karl's head.
Ahead of Jordan? Every bit of us wants to agree, because if we were to pick a player to return as in another lifetime it would be Scottie Pippen, but Patrick wasn't asking about karmic retribution and/or reincarnation. He wanted to know who you wanted to your side, and hurry up. And Karl chose Pippen.
With Karl on that team? Perhaps. Overall? Eh, not so much.
In an era even with two-handed hand-checking just about legal, Jordan dominated the game offensively with an efficiency at his position that no other NBA player has been able to come close to (check the shooting percentages, Kobe-fiends). You're making a deal with a nasty, brutish sort when you allow MJ to sign on your dotted line — you have to surround the man with men he respects, and men who aren't going to back down when Jordan's temper (and shot selection) gets the best of him -- but that's a wonderful luxury to have.
Either, with Pippen as the alternative, is a luxury to have. We're just not convinced — as rosy as our recollections are of The Greatest Teammate Ever — that The Greatest Teammate Ever would be the teammate we'd choose above all.
We wouldn't mind, in that hypothetical weirdness, a chance to build a team against Karl's featuring two of the finest ever. And, as Malone pointed out, finally able to bash each other around as opponents, and not teammates.
Man. We've just got to figure out a way to make it happen. Perhaps it's time to look into this whole Xbox thing.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

WBO to review Pacquiao-Bradley decision; Nevada attorney general might follow suit


More than a quarter of a century later, umpire Don Denkinger's mistake is available to be analyzed, over and over, on Major League Baseball's website.
A Philipines newspaper shows Manny Pacquiao's controversial defeat to Timothy Bradley. (Getty Images)Denkinger called Kansas City's Jorge Orta safe at first base in the bottom of the ninth inning of Game 6 of the 1985 World Series, and the Royals rallied to win. When they then won Game 7, they captured a championship they likely wouldn't have won had Denkinger correctly called Orta out.
In boxing, however, there is no such simple mechanism to prove a bad call – or a perceived bad call – no matter how much Jim Lampley or Teddy Atlas scream and holler about it.
Boxing is perhaps the most subjective sport to judge. Two people can, and often do, watch exactly the same fight and evaluate it in dramatically different ways.
Manny Pacquiao lost Saturday to Timothy Bradley in a bout most experts – though not all – felt he deserved to win. Judge Jerry Roth scored it 115-113 for Pacquiao, closer than most ringside reporters had it. He was overruled by judges Duane Ford and C.J. Ross, who each had it 115-113 in favor of Bradley.
On Wednesday, the World Boxing Organization announced it would review the verdict with a panel of five international judges. Normally that would be sanctioning-body code for "we're preparing to strip Bradley and give the belt back to Pacquiao," though WBO president Francisco "Paco" Valcarcel told Yahoo! Sports on Wednesday that is not the case this time.
The WBO decision to examine the outcome of the welterweight title fight at the MGM Grand Garden comes on the heels of promoter Bob Arum on Sunday calling for an investigation by Nevada attorney general Catherine Cortez Masto, a sentiment that was supported by longtime Arum (and Pacquiao) ally U.S. Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.). Arum is the promoter for both Pacquiao and Bradley.
Outraged Pacquiao fans have petitioned Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval to overturn the result.
Jennifer M. Lopez, the public information officer for the state attorney general's office, said via email it is office policy not to comment on potential or ongoing investigations.
However, Keith Kizer, the executive director of the Nevada Athletic Commission, told Yahoo! Sports that the attorney general's office had requested information from him regarding the selection of the officials, the boxers' licensing and the judges' records as it related to past Pacquiao and Bradley fights.
That would seem to indicate that Cortez Masto is at least considering an inquiry. Lopez, though, would not confirm that.
"On Monday, June 11 Bob Arum, with Top Rank Inc., submitted a complaint about the decision in the Pacquiao/Bradley fight," she wrote. "We are treating this complaint like any other complaint our office receives. We will review the information submitted and take appropriate action if necessary. Per standard office policy procedures, we do not confirm or deny if we have an ongoing criminal investigation."
Long-time commission member Skip Avansino, now in his second term as its chairman, declined to say how he scored the fight. He said he did not know if Cortez Masto would order an investigation but said he believed in transparency and would cooperate fully with whatever she asked of his office.
He said he had asked Kizer to watch video of the fight with the judges. Kizer said he was awaiting receipt of a DVD so he could do so.
"I wanted Keith to go through the fight with them and test and vet their determination round by round," Avansino said. "If [Kizer] sees something, we should be advised about – let's look into it. And then, of course, certainly, we always have to consider whether there was some untoward behavior, any corruption or any kind of undue influence.
"At this point, I haven't any evidence of any of that other than looking at three seasoned professionals who have done a lot of good championship bouts for us. That's where I stand on it and I have been supportive of those judges for that reason."
Arum wants the investigation largely to clear his own name. After the fight, he went to great lengths to point out he did not accuse the judges of corruption.
"I want to make very clear, there was no chicanery going on here," Arum said shortly after the bout.
On Sunday, though, in a telephone call to Yahoo! Sports, he demanded the investigation. This was the first major fight of the social media age to end in a decision the public overwhelmingly disagreed with. Arum was taking as much abuse as the judges and was accused, without any evidence, of tampering with the outcome.
Bob Arum has called for an investigation into the results of the Pacquiao-Bradley fight. Getty Images)The fact is Arum would have benefited more had Pacquiao won. Though a Pacquiao fight with Floyd Mayweather Jr. might still be made, it would have been far more lucrative had Pacquiao defeated Bradley.
Prior to the fight, Bradley had made faux credentials and posters touting a rematch. But clearly Top Rank had other plans. In attendance Saturday night was Juan Manuel Marquez, who after the fight Top Rank planned on announcing as Pacquiao's next opponent in November.
There was a rematch clause in the contract, but this isn't unusual. Mayweather, for example, had one against Miguel Cotto when they fought May 5. It is standard operating procedure for stars, in this case Pacquiao, to have one.
Valcarcel said his organization would not strip Bradley of the title no matter what its independent review found. He said he would simply order a rematch. That would only differ, he said, if corruption comes to light, but he said he did not expect that.
"I have known Roth and Duane and Cynthia [Ross] for many, many years and they are wonderful, honest people and excellent judges," Valcarcel said. "We just want Nevada to consider all of the judges. Nevada picks its judges and we want them to consider who we recommend. I gave them a list of 20 judges, from all around the world – New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, everywhere – and they were great judges.
"I think this is a great opportunity for the ABC [Association of Boxing Commissions] and the sanctioning bodies to work together. I am not saying there was anything going on here, but I just think it would be important for Nevada, and all the states, to work with us on the selection [of officials]."
As it stands, allegations of fraud have been leveled against Ford, Ross and Arum. These allegations will continue, which is why Cortez Masto is being pressed to launch a formal investigation.
Like Denkinger, the judges made a call in a high-profile, significant sporting event.
But unlike Denkinger, theirs isn't one that can be proven right or wrong by a replay.
An investigation should prove that. Then, the business of boxing can move on, Pacquiao and Bradley can fight again and all of the conspiracy theorists can look for another issue.

LeBron James faded in fourth quarter, ESPN graphic claims, in defiance of math


Shortly after Game 1 of the NBA finals ended late Tuesday night, I found myself clicking around and looking for the postgame press conferences of Oklahoma City Thunder coach Scott Brooks and Miami Heat coach Erik Spoelstra. (I know, I should've just gone to NBA.com and streamed it, but I didn't think of that right away.) In the search, I landed on ESPN's postgame coverage, which at that time featured the following graphic (captured by CBSSports.com's Will Brinson) breaking downLeBron James' Game 1 performance:
Wait ... carry the one ... hmm. (Screencap via @willbrinson)
The intent is to seize on the notion that James shrinks late in big games, a widely held belief that certainly has some basis in reality but is also somewhat overblown, since "clutch" remains a pretty problematic construct that tends to ignore the critical non-highlight plays that can lead to wins in favor of harping on missed shots. But when the Heat lose, that means LeBron lost; when LeBron lost, that means we're going to be talking about whether or not he shrank late. Hence, the graphic.
Except ... look at the graphic. What part of the information there indicates that James "didn't finish how he started"?
The graphic tells us that through the first three quarters, James scored 23 points, while in the fourth, he scored only seven. Well, if you divide 23 by three, you get 7.66. His scoring average dropped off by a whole two-thirds of a point in the final 12 minutes.
It tells us that through the first three quarters, James hit 9 of 18 field-goal attempts, compared to just 2 of 6 in the fourth. Umm ... the average there is 3 for 6 through the first three quarters. So, one fewer make in the same number of attempts. OK.
It tells us that he went to the foul line nearly as many times in the fourth quarter alone as he did through the first three, finishing with nine total attempts for the game, and that he hit 3 of 4 from the stripe in the final frame.
It tells us that after bringing in seven rebounds through the first 36 minutes, he only had two in the final 12. Which, y'know, is a pretty precipitous drop from the 2.3 rebounds per quarter he'd averaged before the Big Bad Fourth. (He also had one assist in the fourth, right in line with the three he'd notched through the first three quarters; they didn't have room for that, I guess.)
It doesn't tell us that Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh had awful shooting nights from the floor, combining to go 11 for 30 and scoring just 29 combined points, sending James out there to match baskets with Durant and Russell Westbrook mostly by his lonesome. It doesn't tell us that matching baskets against an Oklahoma City team that came into this series leading the playoffs in offensive efficiency isn't a recipe for success, which the Thunder proved in outscoring the Heat 83-65 after the first quarter and shooting 53.4 percent from the field after starting out 9 for 19 in the opening stanza. It doesn't tell you a lot of things.
What it tells you is that LeBron James didn't finish how he started in a game that Miami led at half and lost late, and it's not telling the truth. It's putting big numbers next to small numbers and saying "Look how different they are!" without noting that ... y'know ... there's a completely valid reason why one side's bigger than the other. And it's not even doing a really good job of it.
That's a really huge bummer, because an awful lot of people in an awful lot of phases of ESPN's operation often or always do a really good job of helping us understand the game. Read Henry Abbott on how remarkably easy Kevin Durant makes scoring look, or Tom Haberstroh on how Miami'sinability to get stops short-circuited its offense, or Sebastian Pruiti on literally anything he writes about X's and O's. You'll be smarter at the end, I promise. You'll learn something.
From this, though? All we learned is that it's easier to get and keep eyeballs if you say LeBron's a choker, even if the facts of this particular case don't back it up. The evidence is right there on your TV screen; you just might need to do a little quick mental math to figure it out. And when you're done, remember that Chris Webber's breaking it down on NBA TV just up the dial.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Thunder rally past Heat to win Game 1


OKLAHOMA CITY – Kevin Durant continued his torrid march through the NBA playoffs, carrying the Oklahoma City Thunder past the Miami Heat in the opener of the Finals on Tuesday night. 
Durant rallied the Thunder after they lost the first two games of the Western Conference finals to the San Antonio Spurs and he brought them back against the Heat in Game 1 of the Finals, scoring 17 of his 36 points in the fourth quarter. The Heat led by as many as 13 in the first half, but couldn't hold back the young Thunder after halftime. Russell Westbrook scored 18 of his 27 points after halftime.Kevin Durant's first NBA Finals game was a smashing success. (Reuters)He added 11 rebounds and eight assists.
LeBron James led the Heat with 30 points, but it wasn't enough to keep the Thunder at bay. Not with the other two members of the Heat's Big Three struggling. Dwyane Wade missed 12 of 19 shots and Chris Bosh missed seven of 11.
The Thunder didn't take their first lead until less than 15 seconds remained in the third quarter. Westbrook, who struggled in the first half, sparked the surge, scoring 12 points in the quarter. To a man, the Thunder picked up their aggression in the second half.
The Heat were expected to get strong play from their small forward. And they did initially – from Shane Battier, not James.
Heat coach Erik Spoelstra kept Battier in the starting lineup over Chris Bosh, despite Bosh's strong play at the end of the Eastern Conference finals. The move paid off early: Battier made three 3-pointers in the opening quarter. Heat guard Mario Chalmers also hit a pair in the quarter to help stake the Heat to a 29-22 lead.
Thunder coach Scott Brooks had worked to treat his team's preparation just like any other week in the playoffs – even if he knew that wasn't true.
"Obviously, it's the Finals, it's not an exhibition game, it's not any other game," Brooks said. "We know that. We understand where we are. But what we do every day is we do the same routine. We focus on improving, we focus on studying what they do …
"Nothing changes. It's basketball."
Still, the Heat led by as many as 13 points in the first half as some of the Thunder's young players needed a little while to settle into their first Finals appearance. That included point guard Russell Westbrook, who missed seven of his first nine shots.
Westbrook's lay-in with 31.4 seconds left in the first half brought the Thunder within seven. Whatever remaining frustration Westbrook had, he let it out by screaming toward the crowd.
James had 14 points at halftime with Battier contributing 13. Durant had 13 points while Westbrook had nine. The Heat shot 51.2 percent in the first half while making 6-of-10 triples and shooting just four free throws (all from James)

THE THUNDER VS MAIM HEAT THE FINALS





http://www.nba.com/playoffs/2012/finals/index.html?ls=st&ls=iref:nbahpt1

Kevin Durant vs Lebron James


OKC VS HEAT THE FINALS



OKC VS HEAT THE FINAL

                                                                   THE FINALS


Let's start with what we know: The 2011-12 edition of the New York Knicks was the best team the franchise has put on the floor in 12 years. You can argue that a fact like that doesn't say a whole hell of a lot, given the dilapidated decade the Knicks turned in to kick off the 21st century, but that doesn't mean it ain't true.
This year's 36-30 record, .545 winning percentage and 101 defensive rating (which estimates how many points you allow per 100 possessions) were not only better than last year's model, but also better than anything the Knicks have managed since the 2000-01 season, Jeff Van Gundy's last full year of stalking Madison Square Garden's sidelines. They had the league's fifth-most-efficient defense, thanks to Defensive Player of the Year Tyson Chandler, its seventh-best point differential and the NBA's eighth-best expected win total based on Pythagorean winning percentage (basically, a measurement of how well you scored versus how well you defended, intended to show how lucky or unlucky you got in the final analysis).
This team — this often-maddening, at-times thrilling, ceaselessly rambling wreck of a seventh seed — was not half-bad.
The problem, of course, is that "better than before" and "not half-bad" don't equate to championship contention, a fact that has and will continue to depress the many, many Knicks fans still stinging from a second straight first-round exit at the hands of a better team with better stars.
On some level, that's OK; it's understandable that fans want to see their squad compete for championships after suffering through such a disastrous spell and watching the team bring in marquee names expected to do big things. But on another level, it's just not realistic, given the construction of New York's roster, the state of the conference and the assets at the Knicks' disposal going forward. Next year's team might be better than this year's, but Knicks fans heading into the offseason expecting a tectonic shift in the team's complexion and prospects will likely be sorely disappointed.
Despite what I thought heading into the season, this year's Knicks did not contend for a top-four playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. To be sure, injuries played a role; nine players, including stars Carmelo Anthony and Amar'e Stoudemire and surprising short-term savior Jeremy Lin, missed a total of 144 regular-season games due to injury or illness, the second-highest total among playoff teams, according to one analysis.
So did the internal struggle over the direction of the team between Anthony and coach Mike D'Antoni, a rolling beneath-the-surface boil that manifested itself frequently in stagnant offense, lackadaisical effort and subpar results from Jump Street as the Knicks stumbled to an 8-15 start before Lin's emergence in D'Antoni's spread pick-and-roll (while Anthony nursed an injured groin, natch) brought the team back to life for two magical weeks in mid-February.
The clash between coach and star escalated after Anthony's return, as the team went 1-6 following the All-Star break, resulting in D'Antoni's resignation and the elevation of assistant Mike Woodson to the role of interim head coach. The isolation-loving former Atlanta Hawks coach handed the team's reins back to Anthony, leading to 'Melo's finest run of form since coming to New York and a renewed (or, really, just new) commitment on the defensive end that helped the Knicks end the season on an 18-6 run and grab the No. 7 seed.
Mike Woodson is expected to return as New York's head coach. (Getty Images)That "interim" tag could disappear in fairly short order; the Knicks are expected to reward Woodson for his finish, and for winning the franchise's first playoff game since 2001, with a contract extension. This, to me, seems unnecessary and premature.
While respected for his work in bringing the Hawks to the middle of the East's pack after years as an NBA laughingstock, Woodson has no top-level work on his resume, and often looked badly overmatched against Erik Spoelstra's Heat. Woodson went a full five games without devising a plan to effectively counter Miami's strategy of fronting Anthony in the post, figuring out how to generate favorable offensive opportunities for Stoudemire or putting a leash on shot-happy sub J.R. Smith.
Beyond that, depending on how the next few weeks shake out, there could be top-tier coaching talent on the open market — including Rick Carlisle (who did quite well for himself with Chandler and a ball-dominating iso threat named Dirk in Dallas) and Stan Van Gundy (all but certainly out of Orlando, though he'd be very unlikely to sign up to work for Jim Dolan, considering the horror stories he's surely heard from his brother) — at whom the Knicks could take a run. That said, Woodson's got co-signs from 'Melo and Amar'e, he ended the season well, he won that pesky playoff game and he's already here, so re-signing him seems like the most likely and safest scenario.
(A new paragraph, to make a point: I do not believe that Phil Jackson will be the head coach of the New York Knicks next year. It might be the smartest move the Knicks could make; he might be the best coach the Knicks could theoretically hire; he's certainly the most qualified prospective candidate for the position. But it's not going to happen.)
After the Knicks' Game 5 elimination on Wednesday night, Anthony told reporters he felt New York is a top-three or top-four team in the East going forward. He's got a chance to be right, though, to be honest, that's not really due to anything the Knicks are doing.
While you can probably pencil the Heat, a Chicago Bulls team with a healthy Derrick Rose, and a solid, still-developing Indiana Pacers side with talent and the flexibility to import more into the top three slots, the East's next tier could be ripe for a shakeup, with the Big Three-era Boston Celtics about to undergo renovations, the Dwight Howard-SVG Orlando Magic all over but the shoutin' and the Hawks making noise about moving stud power forward Josh Smith. Shoot, somebody has to finish fourth; might as well be the Knicks.
The real issue, of course, is getting beyond that second level and into position to legitimately contend for a title. And as it stands now — and as it's stood for the lion's share of the last dozen years, save the couple where Donnie Walsh chopped, slashed, clipped and saved to restore fiscal and roster sanity in the Garden — the problem the Knicks face is flexibility. They just don't have much, thanks to the mint they're paying their front line.
Anthony, Stoudemire and Chandler will combine to make a touch over $54 million in 2012-13, $58.2 million in '13-'14 and just under $62.4 million in '14-'15. Both Anthony and Stoudemire have early termination options they can exercise in that final season; while I'm skeptical that Amar'e will tear up a $23.4 million check in pursuit of a longer-term deal at age 32 with his lengthy injury history, it's possible that a 30-year-old 'Melo would pull that trigger, especially if the next two years in Gotham don't go so well and he stays healthy enough to seem a sound bet for another max or near-max deal. But I'm getting ahead of myself a bit — the point is that they're all locked in for next season and, taken collectively, put the Knicks right up near the expected $58 million salary cap all by themselves.
Beyond that, their positions seem fairly intractable. The Knicks won't trade 'Melo after moving sun and stars to get him, re-upping him and entrenching him, especially if they extend Woodson, since Woodson's iso-heavy offensive philosophy makes zero sense without someone to take all those shots. The Knicks won't move Chandler because he's the most financially reasonable and best-performing asset of the three, the one that can clean up all the messes that the Knicks' multiple subpar defenders create amid all that switching on the perimeter, and contribute offensively without needing to get in the way of 'Melo's isolations. And the Knicks can't jettison Stoudemire because nobody's going to give the Knicks what they'd perceive to be fair value just for the chance to pay $41.6 million to watch a man with uninsurable knees, a surgically repaired retina, two years of lower-back problems and declining athleticism turn 30 and 31.
Fire up the trade machine to your heart's content, Knicks fans, but the smart money seems to suggest that the majority of the team's minutes at the three, four and five spots will again go to these three men. Whether the Knicks can evolve beyond a lower-rung team in the East will depend on whether whoever's running the team can find ways to effectively utilize them (and especially Anthony and Stoudemire) in different spaces on the offensive end of the floor without rendering them utterly ineffective. On that score, the song remains the same.
Another familiar refrain: Beyond Anthony, Stoudemire and Chandler, the Knicks roster is a Lesko suit.
Will the Knicks re-sign Jeremy Lin? (Getty Images)People's champ Steve Novak, the NBA's best 3-point shooter during the regular season, is a free agent, and now that he's shown himself to be able to regularly produce from beyond the arc in the actual context of NBA games during a run to the playoffs, it's difficult to imagine him not having multiple suitors. Jared Jeffries, who has gone from punchline to second-unit defensive linchpin (and, OK, still sort of a punchline), is also up for a new deal and could bolt.
The contracts of reserve big men Josh Harrellson and Jerome Jordan are both unguaranteed for '12-'13, casting their futures in doubt ... though you'd have to imagine New York would want to try to keep them in the fold, if for no other reason than, at present, the only other guys definitely signed up for next year are Iman Shumpert (who will likely start the season on the sideline rehabilitating his injured left knee) and Toney Douglas (whose fourth-year option the team picked up back in January despite him being near-unusable this year). So, y'know, the Knicks have a lot of work to do to fill out this roster. That's especially true in the backcourt, where it wouldn't be surprising if four contributors who logged more than 4,000 combined minutes this year started next season somewhere else.
Baron Davis, who started at point guard for the Knicks down the stretch, is not under contract for next season, and even if he was, he wouldn't be playing. Starting shooting guard Landry Fields is a free agent, and though the Knicks can match any offer Fields might get from a competitor, they probably won't feel compelled to go out of their way to bring back his poor stroke (25.6 percent from 3-point land, 56.2 percent from the line) and seemingly constant on-court discomfort if the Stanford product gets a multi-year offer from another team (and he probably will).
Mike Bibby's a free agent, too, and likely out the door unless his ol' pal Woody cajoles the about-to-be-34-year-old point guard into one more limited-minutes run off the pine. J.R. Smith entered the postseason as a good bet to decline his 2012-13 player option in search of greener pastures, even before Knicks fans were mean to him on Twitter, and while he was staggeringly bad against the Heat (averaging a field-goal attempt every 2.3 minutes despite hitting 31.6 percent of them and going a dismal 5 of 28 from 3-point land over five games), he's probably not wrong to think he could get more than $2.5 million to hoist shots elsewhere.
On top of that, the Knicks' 2012 first-round draft pick is owned by the Houston Rockets thanks to the Jordan Hill-Tracy McGrady deal that helped the team shed Jeffries' Isiah-inked contract to create cap space for the Summer of 2010 (which worked out great), leaving Glen Grunwald with just a second-round selection to deploy in the search for rookie labor in this summer's draft. No savior coming there.
So how do the Knicks get better next year? The answer sure seems to be, "At guard." But what do they do? Is making a run at Steve Nash, as Amar'e openly wants, the answer? The two-time MVP is easily the most attractive free-agent point guard on the market not named Deron Williams, but that means he's likely to have multiple suitors eager to pay him heaps of cash on a short-term deal (including rumored destinations like Miami, Portland and even a potential return to the Phoenix Suns).
The best the Knicks could do would be to offer Nash their non-taxpayer mid-level exception, a contract starting at $5 million, and Nash could likely do better elsewhere. Plus, if the Knicks target Nash with their MLE, it's all but certain they'll lose Lin, which would be borderline unthinkable given the potential for growth and development (and, sure, marketing and sales) inherent in the 23-year-old point guard. (Provided he's allowed to run things off ball screens and not just dump the ball into the bully block for 'Melo 35 times a game, per Woodson's instructions, but I digress.) It seems much more likely that the Knicks re-up Lin with the mid-level and say goodbye to the dreams of Nash running point, especially now that D'Antoni's not the Knicks' coach, considering the financial constraints within which Grunwald will be operating this offseason.
And none of that's bad. A Knicks team that features Anthony, Stoudemire and Chandler, plus a healthy Lin and an eventually healthy Shumpert, can beat a lot of teams in this league. That team can make the playoffs. That team can make life difficult for a first-round opponent. That team can be better than this year's, and maybe even better than not half-bad. But it can't win a championship. Knicks fans are going to have to spend their summers coming to grips with that. 

Chad Ochocinco agrees to terms with the Miami Dolphins



Chad Ochocinco at a store opening in Miami on June 1. (Getty Images)Well, that didn't take long. Unlike his old buddyTerrell Owens, former Cincinnati Bengals andNew England Patriots receiver Chad Ochocincofound a new team very quickly after his recent release from his old one.
Chad will jump AFC East franchises from the Pats, who released him last week, to the Miami Dolphins, who agreed to terms on a one-year deal with the productive and mercurial receiver on Monday. The move was made after Ochocinco worked out with the team.
The news was officially released on Chad's own website, OCNN (The Ochocinco News Network), with the following statement:
We just got confirmation from Chad Ochocinco that he has just signed with the Miami Dolphins. The 6-time Pro Bowler will now get a chance to finish his career in his home state. More details as they arrive.
Ochocincoone of the more adept tweeters in any field (in April of 2011, CNBC named him the most influential athlete in social media), has already adjusted his Twitter profile with "Miami Dolphins WR" in his profile and a new cartoon version of himself, wearing the Dolphins' uniform.
The Dolphins later confirmed the signing. Ochocinco didn't do much in one season with the New England Patriots after the Bengals traded him up north -- he caught just 15 passes for 276 yards and one touchdown. It is believed that he struggled with the team's complicated system of option routes, and he wouldn't be the first player to do so. With the Dolphins, things are likely to be different -- there's a three-way quarterback battle with a relatively inexperienced rookie at the head (first-round pick Ryan Tannehill, who played quarterback for less than two years in college), so it's doubtful that every route will have four or five possible permutations right away.
Chad drives Dolphins CB Vontae Davis nuts in 2010. (Getty Images)
In addition, Chad brings his expertise to perhaps the most receiver-starved team in the NFL. With former No. 1 receiver Brandon Marshall off to the Chicago Bears in an offseason trade, the Dolphins' leading receiver from last year's roster is possession man Davone Bess, who caught 51 balls for 537 yards and three touchdowns. Before his relative drought in New England, Chad had caught at least 53 passes in each of the last nine seasons. In seven of those seasons, he gained at least 1,000 receiving yards, though he last did that in 2009. But even if Chad can't bring himself in his prime to Miami, what he has left in the tank should help an offense desperate for assistance.
New Dolphins head coach Joe Philbin said that the acquisition was "not an indictment of any of the players that we have," but there's no doubt that the current receiver corps has underwhelmed in the 2012 preseason, just as it had before.  "I think we have to catch the ball more consistently at every position on offense, because it's not quite where it needs to be," the coach concluded.
"I definitely feel like he can be a help, just from a veteran standpoint, with his wisdom and his knowledge," running back Reggie Bush said of Ocho after Monday's practice. "I personally think he still has a lot left, and knowing him, he would still want to prove that he can do it at his age and that he can still play the game."
The 34-year-old Ochocinco, a Miami native, had recently been working out with T.O. in the Sunshine State. The move is certainly a media bounty for a team in need of a national awareness upgrade. The Dolphins agreed to appear in this year's "Hard Knocks" show after a half-dozen other teams turned NFL Films down. Chad appeared in the 2009 version of the popular program when the sCincinnati Bengal were profiled. He also hosted his own show ("The T.Ocho Show") on the Versus Network, played himself in the latest iteration of the "American Pie" movie franchise, and did a star turn on the VH1 dating show, "The Ultimate Catch." So, he'll be able to show the more camera-averse players how to ham it up.

Anderson Silva vs Chael Sonnen


Anderson Silva vs Chael Sonnen for the UFC MIDDLEWEIGHT.Last time Silva and Sonnen were in the octagon Sonnen  stumped Silva for 4 ROUNDS.

But Silva puts Chael away with a triangle choke and Chael taps.


                           Was that luck or skill? We will find out at UFC 148 rematch for the titleChael said he will do it again and win.I think Silva will win    again.What do u think?

DTotD: 12 red cards in kick-happy Brazilian brawl


Votuporanguense beat Fernandopolis 2-1 in a Campeonato Paulista second division (the fourth tier of the Sao Paulo state championship) match that ended with a brawl and 12 red cards. The unrest began when the winning side's striker was taken down by Fernandopolis' goalkeeper on a one vs. one. The keeper was shown the first red, then everyone got angry.
There were punches and flying kicks that mostly didn't connect, but enough did to cause a few injuries and one Fernandopolis player threatened to file a police report against his opponents/attackers. Once things calmed down, the referee handed out 11 more red cards (including one that looked like it was for a riot cop) before ending the match and ruling Votuporanguense the winners.

Monday, June 11, 2012

Josh Koscheck Knocks Out Matt Hughes

    Matt Hughes Get Knocked Out By Koscheck

Los Angeles Kings win first-ever Stanley Cup championship, beat New Jersey Devils in Game 6


LOS ANGELES – For 45 years, the Los Angeles Kings were anything but royal. Though they had the Miracle on Manchester and the Wayne Gretzky era, though they had appeared in the Stanley Cup Final in 1993 and made hockey cool in Hollywood for a while, they won virtually nothing. They won only one conference and one division title.
The Kings ended 45 years of frustration with their first Stanley Cup title. (Reuters)Then came Monday night, and finally, somehow, the throne.
Crown the Kings.
With a 6-1 victory over the New Jersey Devils, the Kings won the series, 4-2, and hoisted their first Stanley Cup. They won their first 10 road games – setting the playoff record for a road winning streak, tying the playoff record for total road victories – and went a stunning 16-4 overall.
And they did it as an eighth seed, by far the lowest to win the Cup. Since the NHL started seeding its conferences one through eight in 1993-94, only one bottom-four seed had ever won it all – the 1995 Devils, a fifth seed in a lockout-shortened season.
These Kings were commoners for much of 2011-12, underachieving in a league of salary-capped equality. General manager Dean Lombardi fired coach Terry Murray and brought in Darryl Sutter in December. He acquired sniper Jeff Carter before the trade deadline in February. Despite a talented roster that had been expected to contend, the Kings ranked second-to-last in the league in scoring. They grabbed the final playoff spot in the West.
But suddenly, it all came together in the playoffs. Jonathan Quick continued be the best goaltender in the game and the defense stayed tight as the Kings started scoring more. They knocked off the first, second and third seeds in the West before exorcising the Devils.
The Kings' other homegrown stars broke out – Drew Doughty, Anze Kopitar, Dustin Brown. The dynamic duo dumped by the Philadelphia Flyers last summer – Carter and Mike Richards – rebounded better than anyone could have imagined. The depth players contributed, from rookie Dwight King to biggie winger Dustin Penner to … well, almost everyone chipped in at least one goal.
Making this run in this era was a miracle, no matter how well the Kings should have played all along or where they were seeded in the end. It was a bigger miracle than the Miracle on Manchester, when the Kings turned a 5-0 deficit into a 6-5 overtime victory over Gretzky's 1982 Edmonton Oilers at the Forum on Manchester Blvd. That was just Game 3 of a best-of-5 first-round upset. This run was certainly a bigger triumph than making the '93 final; Gretzky's Kings couldn't complete their quest.
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/nhl--kings-take-the-nhl-s-throne-with-first-ever-stanley-cup-championship.html