Saturday, January 23, 2010




Miami Heat had a bizarre week. Three nights after a 30-point win and two nights following a 39-point loss, they scored another lopsided victory.

The Heat’s worst losses this season have come in the second game of back-to-back games. After Friday night’s 112-88 rout of the Wizards , it was only natural Miami was looking ahead, and not resting on an easy win.

On Saturday, the Heat host Sacramento, and after a 1-6 record in those back-to-backers, coach Erik Spoelstra can’t wait to see how his team plays.

“It’s about honesty and us being real with each other,” Spoelstra said.” What we’ve done on back-to-back nights so far, we have to be real about it, it’s not been good enough.”

In those second games, the Heat have lost by 15, 29, 30 and 39.

They’re hoping to see more of what they got Friday night from Dwyane Wade. The All-Star guard led Miami with 32 points. Jermaine O'neal added 18 on an economical 8 for 10 from the field and Beasley had 15.

Wade who scored 40 and 41 in two earlier games against Washington, had his way against a team full of problems.

He was 12 for 19 from the field—including 4 3-pointers—and had 10 assists.

The Heat, despite all their ups and downs, are in much better shape than the Wizards, who lost for the sixth time in eight games.


Monday, June 15, 2009

Los Angeles Lakers won NBA Finals against Orlando Magic


No need for anything more personal, not on this night of nights for Bryant. Besides, he had new teammates to celebrate with, new memories to savor.

Shaquille O'Neal seemed another lifetime away. Bryant was the one with the NBA finals MVP trophy in hand, an old score finally settled.

"Well I don't have to hear that criticism, that idiotic criticism, anymore," he said. "That's the biggest thing."

Idiotic, maybe. Unfair, possibly.

But until Sunday night in Orlando it was never just all about Bryant. Like it or not, until he won a ring of his own his legacy was always going to be intertwined with the center he won with and feuded with until all of Los Angeles wasn't even big enough to contain their collective egos.

Bryant didn't like it, but he heard it. Heard it so often that it got to the point he couldn't stomach the thought of talking about it.

He doesn't have to anymore. These were Kobe's Lakers, and this is Kobe's championship.

He was determined to do whatever was humanly possible to make sure they didn't fail. And he delivered in a way that would have been unimaginable back in the days when his supreme talent was often obscured by his petulant ways.

The 30 points, six rebounds and five assists in the box score didn't begin to measure Bryant's claim to this game, just as his equally impressive stats in the four other games didn't begin to tally up to what he meant to his team. This was Bryant being Michael Jordan, willing his teammates on to great things because he expected nothing less than greatness from them.

They hopped on for the ride because they believed, just like Scottie Pippen, Steve Kerr, and, yes, even Dennis Rodman, believed in Chicago. They knew if they did their jobs the Lakers would be on top when it was all over and, even if they didn't, there was a good chance that Bryant would find a way to rescue the team anyway.

The champagne flowed in the locker room because the Lakers had just won the 15th title in the team's history, and even the Zen Master himself got soaked. But Bryant had even more reason to celebrate because there wasn't anyone who wanted this championship as desperately as he did.

LeBron James may have been this year's MVP. But Bryant was the MVP when it mattered most.

"It felt like a big 'ol monkey off my back," he said.

This wasn't a classic championship series, though few that end 4-1 are. The Orlando Magic had a nice run, but there was never the feeling that the Lakers would relax like they had done against other teams earlier in the playoffs.

Not with Bryant trying to make a claim to being one of the greatest players ever. Not with Phil Jackson sitting serenely on the bench while cementing his claim to being the greatest coach ever.

Jackson, of course, is famous for his philosophy of living in the moment, something Bryant embraced along the way, too. Neither allowed himself to think past the next game, and Bryant was so focused that he was still scowling after the Lakers won in overtime in Game 2 to go up a commanding 2-0 in the series.

Afterward, he was asked if he was happy with the win.

"What's there to be happy about?" Bryant asked. "The job's not finished."

Everyone was happy on this night because the job was finally finished. Bryant's long road to redemption from last year's embarrassing loss to the Boston Celtics was finally over, and Jackson's record 10th coaching title — in just 19 years — was finally secured.

Jackson donned a yellow cap made by his children with the Roman numeral X on it and the years of his 10 titles, a rare display for a coach who even to the end gave all the credit to his players. He and Bryant had a long embrace and, later in the locker room, Bryant orchestrated a surprise champagne shower for his coach.

Jackson would later remember back to a different time and a different Bryant. It was early into his first stint as coach of the Lakers and Bryant had gotten caught up in a shooting display in a game in Toronto one night, neglecting his teammates and turning it into a one-man game.

He brought Bryant in for a chat and told him he needed to be a leader. Bryant declared he was ready to become captain right then.

"Yes, but nobody is ready to follow you," Jackson told his star.

They are now, and they're NBA champions because of it. And while Jackson may just decide to call it quits after this one and go off in search of inner peace, you get the feeling that winning this one may make Bryant even more hungry for the next.

For now, though, all he has in mind is a vacation in Cabo, where he can relax and savor the one he wanted most.

"It's tough to say it's a little sweeter," Bryant said. "But it kind of is."

Friday, June 12, 2009

Fisher's clutch give Lakers 3-1 lead over Magic


To this day, it is referred to simply as 0.4, the last-second shot that first made Derek Fisher famous. In Game 4 of the NBA finals, Fisher may have topped it. Twice.

Fisher hit two key 3-pointers — one with 4.6 seconds left in regulation, the other with 31.3 seconds to go in overtime — as the Los Angeles Lakers moved within one win of their 15th championship by beating the Orlando Magic 99-91 on Thursday night to open a 3-1 series lead.

The 34-year-old Fisher, in his second stint with the Lakers after stops in Golden State and Utah, was best known for his turnaround fling with 0.4 seconds left in the 2004 playoffs against San Antonio. He's got two more shots that rank right with it.

"Maybe 100, 101, something like that," the 13-year-veteran joked. "No, I mean, obviously, it's at the top. You know, even greater than 0.4 because I feel like we're as close as possible to what our end goal is."

The Lakers can wrap up their first title since 2002 on Sunday in Game 5. If necessary, Games 6 and 7 would be back in Los Angeles at Staples Center.

The only way the Lakers, who overcame a 12-point halftime deficit in Game 4 and improved to 7-0 after a playoff loss, can be denied a crown is if they lose three straight.

That hasn't happened all season.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Magic wins 108-104 over Lakers


Missing for two games, Orlando found its Magic touch. Making easy shots and tough ones from everywhere, the Magic won their first game in two visits to the NBA finals as Dwight Howard and Rashard Lewis scored 21 points apiece in a 108-104 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 3 on Tuesday night to pull within 2-1.

Orlando shot a finals record 63 percent — including another finals record 75 percent in the first half — to snap a six-game finals losing streak and avoid falling into an 0-3 hole that no team in postseason history has been able to escape.

Kobe Bryant, seeking a fourth title and his first since 2002, scored 31 points for the Lakers but the superstar had just 10 points in the second half and went only 4 of 15 from the field after the first quarter. He also missed five free throws, points that could have given the Lakers that 3-0 lead.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Lakers take 2-0 lead over Magic in NBA finals



The Los Angeles Lakers have taken a 2-0 in the NBA finals, beating the Orlando Magic 101-96 in overtime Sunday night.

Kobe Bryant scored 29 points, and Pau Gasol had a big overtime and finished with 24 points and 10 rebounds as the Lakers moved within two wins of their 15th championship.

Rashard Lewis had 34 points and 11 rebounds, and Hedo Turkoglu had 22 points. But rookie Courtney Lee missed a layup at the buzzer that would have won it in regulation for the Magic, who have still never won a finals game.

Game 3 is Tuesday in Orlando.