Jan
07
2010
5

BOOM-SHAKALAKA!!

Gore-tastic!

Clintastic!

In what’s sure to make the day of everyone alive in the mid-’90’s, EA Sports is set to announce the return of the greatest video game of all time, NBA Jam, for the Nintendo Wii.   If the thought of sharp-elbowed NBA player caricatures with Barry Bonds-sized heads on Kate Bosworth-sized bodies doesn’t get you pumped, then you were either a deprived child or just aren’t human.

There’s really no way the EA execs can screw this up if they stick with the original formula, down to the George Clinton-style P-Funk soundtrack and the endearingly repetitive, poor man’s Marv Albert announcer.  My only suggestion would be having at least one old school player (of the always interesting hidden variety, perhaps) on every team, because quite frankly, I need more of Tom “The Bomb” Gugliotta and Blue Edwards in my life.

Without further ado, I present the three players  – since starting with Tournament Edition, teams could make substitutions after each quarter — who  should be represented in NBA Jam 2010, along with one old school star in parenthesis.  I mean, just imagine Mark Price lobbying one up for LeBron James, or O.J. Mayo feeding one to “Big Country” Reeves.  Whoops, bad choice of words there.

(Note that since there were only 27 teams at the time of the original game’s release, I took the liberty of choosing a retired “legend” for Toronto, Memphis, and Charlotte — the Bobcats, that is, since the 1993-94 Charlotte Hornets once featured the epic and my personal favorite duo of Alonzo Mourning and Larry Johnson.  Well, aside from the phenomenal Rookie All-Star squad that included the likes of Bill Curley, Eric Montross, and Yinka Dare.)
(more…)

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Oct
28
2009
2

The Matt Carroll Saga - Episode 2: Refusal of the Call

(Previously on The Matt Carroll Saga..)

Cuban: Well, well, well! If it isn’t The Bobbsey Twins!

Carroll: (chortles)  What?

Cuban: Where do you two think you’re going? Gonna skip practice?

Howard: Fucks yeah!

(more…)

Jul
10
2009
0

Y’all Don’t Know! With Anthony Mason

Hello. And welcome to Y’all Don’t Know. I’m your host, Anthony Mason.

Y’all Don’t Know is an ongoing exploration into all that is sinister, weird, creepy-crawly and loosey-goosey around us.

Did you know that there are mysterious, unexplainable energies whirling all around us as we speak? NO! ‘Cause Y’all Don’t Know!

Today on Y’all Don’t Know, we’re gonna talk about Time Travel! (more…)

Jun
26
2009
0
Jun
19
2009
0

Dirk Wants His Baby Back..

Nowitzki: The baby is mine!

Taylor: Sho nuff ain’t, ya bitch-ass Nazi!

Povich: Tonight on The Maury Povich Show: The Spermin’ German & The Chipper Stripper.. (more…)

May
14
2009
1

Another Long Season In Dallas..

(The Mavericks arrive back in Dallas and gather their things from their lockers..)

Carroll: Hoo doggy. What a heckuva season. We got into so many gosh-darn hijinks this year. Frankly, I’m happy to see it come to a close..

Howard: Don’t call me ‘Frankly.’

Carroll: (chortles)

Howard: Ay man. Seriously. Don’t. (more…)

May
13
2009
1

Bob Ryan Also Sucks..

It’s been a while since we emotionally & physically destroyed a round Irishman..

In case you forgot: Bob Ryan is a pompous windbag.

To the zingers!..

Game-Changing Developments

Snappy title. Was “Basketball Game I Watched While Fumbling Through Cushions For Last Frito” already taken?

You’re an NBA rookie named Doc Rivers,

No I’m not. I’m a jerk who works for an insurance company (and makes fun of past-their-prime ovals) named Ethan Booker.

and someone tells you the day will come when you will be a coach in this league and the opposing team in a playoff series will have a starting front line as follows:

It will be 6-11, 6-10, 6-10.

Who is this magical shaman who uses his mystical powers to infer the size of my formidable opponent! He’s a witch! Off with his head!

The 6-10 forwards will each be certified 3-point shooters.

It’s true. Stan Van gave them gold stars and everything.

Two of them will never have gone to college and the third will be a native of Turkey.

Oh yeah, and your lymphnodes will be the size of guava fruit and it’ll sound like you’re having a hernia every time you talk.

And your 1983 response would have been?

“Isn’t Turkey currently under a State of Emergency? How did he get out? I READ THE PAPER!”

“Not possible,” Rivers says. “I wouldn’t have thought that possible.

Whoa, holy shit. Bob actually went back in time to ask him? Maybe he still is a good journalist. Going to all that effort to create time travel and all..

If a guy like that took a three back in those days, he’d probably be suspended. I know he wouldn’t be playing.”

They’d probably just take him out behind the arena and shoot him.

“You’re tall! You don’t shoot threes! Stop it!”

Unfortunately for Doc, Orlando Magic counterpart Stan Van Gundy is not likely to be benching Rashard Lewis and Hedo Turkoglu before this series is over.

I don’t know. He’s getting that glint in his eye. I wouldn’t put it past him.

“My star player’s gonna push me out this summer. Fuck it! Battie, you’re running the point!”

They’re his guys, and firing up threes is a very big part of their games.

That and complaining about foul calls. That’s the other part.

As for Dwight Howard, he’s no 3-point shooter.

Or is he?..

Dum dum dummmm….

He’s just a modern version of an old-fashioned, butt-kicking, low-post center.

I can’t believe he never gets T’d up for kicking all those butts. Glen Davis’ ass is redder than a Cherokee in August. Not that I’ve been filming him change from across the alley..

If he’s shooting a three (0 for 2 this season, 1 for 12 lifetime), it means he has somehow been stuck with the ball in a very bad place with the shot clock running down.

Help me! I’m lost and I’m behind the three point line!

/shoots flare gun

The 23-year-old Howard and the 29-year-old Lewis were each drafted out of high school. The 30-year-old Turkoglu is a Turk.

You know what rhymes with Turk? Jerk! ‘Nuff said.

Easily my least-favorite Turk since this guy:

Neither of these phenomena would have been imaginable to the 1983 Doc Rivers, either.

It’s been recorded as fact that Doc Rivers didn’t develop an imagination until watching an episode of Murphy Brown in early 1991. After hearing another of Charles Kimbrough’s classic sass-backs, Doc was heard to exclaim, “Eureka!”

The Magic starting front line represents a microcosm of the 21st-century NBA.

Overrated & on steroids?

Actually that sounds about right..

The 3-point shot’s evolution is a fascinating story.

It didn’t exist. And then it existed.

FASCINATION!

In Doc’s rookie year of 1983-84, his Atlanta Hawks made 23 three-pointers all season.

Their team slogan that year was: Not Much Huckin’.

This season, Lewis made 226 and Turkoglu made 134.

That 226 (actually 220, Bob’s eyes are still recovering from the face explosion) looks good until you see the 554 he hoisted. DWIGHT HOWARD NEEDS HIS TOUCHES!

That Atlanta ‘83-84 total is a shocking revelation to a contemporary NBA fan,

I am shocked, and a little gassy.

but it was not out of line.

I am not as shocked!

That wasn’t even the lowest total in the league.

I am utterly unshocked!

The Bulls made only 20 threes.

Zounds! Statistics!

Other amazing totals: San Diego 24, Portland 25, Seattle 27, Philadelphia 29. The league leader, and by a wide margin, was Utah, with 101, the reason being Darrell Griffith, who had 91 of them.

Three-Hog.

(If you had been awarded extra points for shot arc, Griffith might have led the league in scoring.)

What other arbitrary aspects of peoples’ games can we come up with?

If you had been awarded extra assist totals for crotch-bunchage, John Stockton would still be the all-time leader.

If you had been awarded a better shooting percentage for having a poor shooting percentage, people with very poor shooting percentages would have better shooting percentages.

If you had been awarded cake for eating lots of cake, Bob Ryan’s belly would have exploded long before his face did.

Power forwards knew their place, and it wasn’t out by the arc.

It was in the kitchen, making me dinner!

“Stop boxing me out and pass the carrots, woman!”

“Fours [power forwards] and 5’s [centers] were all bangers,” notes Rivers.

They were all British sausage? Oh my God..

“British sausage is people! Very large people!!!”

“We had Dan Roundfield at 4 and Tree Rollins at 5. Roundfield didn’t go very far from the basket [he was 0 for 11 on threes], and we didn’t throw Tree the ball at all.

Yeah, fuck you Tree!

“The skill level has changed, especially at the 4 spot. Now you run pick-and-rolls with 4’s and 5’s. And it’s not usually a pick-and-roll; it’s a pick-and-pop.

“Sounds like my herpes sore removal process!” - Delonte West

That’s all you hear: pick-and-pop. That’s essentially what Baby [Glen Davis] did to get that big shot in Game 4. It was a pick-and-pop.”

Danny Ainge feels all that business may have started right here with Larry Bird.

And then his heart exploded.

“Larry was a small forward, but he played a lot of power forward,” Ainge points out. “Larry wasn’t a guy who grew up shooting the three. He was just a great shooter, period. But guys now grow up shooting the three. It has become an integral part of the game. It’s a priority of many offenses.”

We call them “Shitty Offenses.”

We now have a totally different basketball world, one in which Cleveland has a 7-3 Lithuanian center (Zydrunas Ilgauskas) who’d rather launch an 18-footer than plant his large carcass down in the paint

Fuckin’ Lithuanians! They’re worse than the Turks!

and in which Dallas has a 7-foot German

(ahem) Nazi! (ahem)

(Dirk Nowitzki) whose 3-point shooting is a devastating weapon.

And notice, please, the nationalities.

Notice, please, that they’re all filthy Europeans.

“I couldn’t have envisioned that when I was a rookie, either,” says Rivers. “I guess I kind of knew some Europeans were legit,

Some were even too legit. And some would, in fact, not quit.

and you knew some would wind up playing in our league, but you couldn’t imagine it becoming as worldwide as it is.”

“When I was in college [BYU], we played the Russian national team, and they had some good players,” says Ainge.

If ya like dirty red Commies!

“I had respect for the good European players. But now it is completely global, with the best players from France, Germany, Canada, and China all playing here.

Doesn’t get anymore globaler than Canada.

That’s why this is the best league in the world.”

Better than that one full of extraordinary gentlemen? My!

Ainge and Rivers are reasonably contemporary, with the GM preceding his coach as an NBA player by two years. That was the in-between period, when no high school players were entering the draft. That small first crop (Moses Malone, Darryl Dawkins, Bill Willoughby, etc.) were making their mark,

And what a helluva mark ‘ol Bill WIlloughby made!

and the second wave, led by Kevin Garnett, had yet to materialize.

The world wasn’t yet ready for this level of intensity..

In the early ’90s, it was generally agreed that what those first three had done was an isolated phenomenon and the NBA would never have to deal with teeny-boppers again.

With their juice boxes and their cassette tape players and their complicated shoes!

Then came Garnett, a young man from South Carolina via Chicago who believed he was good enough to play in the league right now.

Wait, he thought then that he was good enough to play now? Why did he enter then, then? Why didn’t he wait ’til now?

“My first thought was, ‘No way!’ ” says Rivers,

And then I was like, “Oh no you din’n't!” And then I was like, “Awwwww sheeeeyitttt!”

who had entered the 1983 draft following his junior year at Marquette. “There’s no way you can play coming out of high school.”

Then he saw Garnett play.

“I actually did say, ‘OK, I was wrong. The kid can play.’ “

Lewis offered himself up for the 1998 draft after a successful career at Alief (Texas) High School. The Sonics took him in the second round, and he is now concluding his 11th season. He is a three-time 20-ppg scorer, and you’d certainly have to say his career choice was wise.

Yeah, he duped the Magic out of hundreds of millions of dollars and has never been out of the second round; when he could’ve gone to a school like Texas for four years, taken them to a couple Final Fours and come into the NBA as one of the premier forwards in the league and still gotten all that money and probably have taken a team to the Conference Finals by now and not been such a whiny immature bitch every time a ticky-tack foul is called. Wise career choice.

Howard was the ultimate, the first pick in the 2004 draft. The Magic had to choose between this sculpted kid from Southwest Atlanta Christian Academy

Whoa, easy there Bob.

“And you should see his ass. Cut. Out. Of marble.”

and the best college player on the best college team, Connecticut center Emeka Okafor.

God bless you.

The latter has had an OK career for the Charlotte Bobcats,

The Charlotte What-Nows?

and he keeps getting better, but he’s not close to an All-Star.

Actually, he’s sorta very close. If Ree-Shard Lewis can be an All-Star, Emeka can.

Howard is, by acclamation, the best center in the league,

Bold statements, brought to you by the Boston Globe: In business for the next three months.

a shot-blocking and rebounding machine who can also get you 30 points if not monitored properly in the low post.

Thanks for the plug, Bob. Much appreciated.

He has had five great seasons in the league, and he won’t turn 24 until Dec. 8.

And he smiles a lot. Don’t forget the smiles!

Turkoglu began playing professionally in Turkey at age 17.

Ugh, Turkey? Might as well play in a trash dump.

At least he didn’t play in that whore factory known as Lithuania! Or Nazi Germany, for that matter!

He was a 2000 No. 1 pick (16th overall) by the Sacramento Kings. He has been a mainstay of the Turkish national team, and his entire profile is that of a modern player, from the extensive international background to his proficiency with the three.

Howard-Lewis-Turkoglu: It’s the quintessential futuristic NBA front line, except that the future is now.

The Future Is Now.

I give you…FUTURE ORLANDO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Bob Ryan is a Globe columnist and can be reached at ryan@globe.com.

~~~

Random Bob Ryan Face ‘Splodin’ pic:

If the Magic frontline is the future I’m getting in Bob Ryan’s time machine back to 1983 lickity-quick.

Besides, Future Orlando’s always under constant surveillance for the ongoing threat known as Space Bear.

SPACE BEAR!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

May
03
2009
1

When It All Falls Down

We’ve seen some epic collapses in the sports world, from the Houston Oilers’ overtime meltdown against the Buffalo Bills in 1993 to the Boston Red Sox historic comeback against the New York Yankees in 2004. While no team in NBA history has ever blown a 3-0 series lead, eight teams have battled back from a 3-1 deficit, and an eighth seed once made it all the way to the Finals. Let’s take a look at some of the biggest choke jobs in recent NBA playoff history.

1. Seattle vs. Denver (1994): Yes, it was a five-game series, but no one gave the eighth seed Nuggets any chance of beating the 63-win Sonics. Seattle went up 2-0, and then had approximately 1,243 shots blocked by Dikembe Mutombo in the next three games.  And of course, we’ll always have that wonderful image of Mutombo clutching the ball while laying on the court; it sexed him later on that evening.

2. Dallas vs. Golden State (2007): The Warriors became the first eighth seed to beat the one seed in a seven-game series, though it wasn’t completely unexpected after Golden State matched up so well against the Dallas during the regular season.  Still, there’s no question that the Mavs fell apart and lost their confidence, especially MVP Dirk “No-win-ski,” who scored 8 points on 2 or 13 shooting in the deciding Game 6. But please, Nellie, control yourself!

3. New York vs. Indiana (1995): The Knicks held a six-point lead with less than 20 seconds left in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Semifinals, before Miller hit a three, stole a sloppy Anthony inbounds pass, and tied the game with another three-ball. John “2 for 19″ Stars then missed two free throws, before Miller, inexplicably fouled by Mason, hit both foul shots and ran into the locker room screaming, “Chokers! Chokers!” Yep, that about says it all right there. And if you’re wondering, this game just barely edges out Teresa Witherspoon’s half-court buzzer beater in the 1999 WNBA Finals for my favorite playoff finish of all-time. I’m completely serious.

4. Orlando vs. Detroit (2003): The eighth-seed Magic took a shocking 3-1 series lead over the heavily-favored Pistons, leading Tracy McGrady to note that it was “nice to finally be in the second round.” Maybe he didn’t know about the rule change? Orlando lost the next three games by an average of twenty points and T-Mac has still not played on a team that has advanced past the first round. Tracy, it’s not on you, and maybe it’s time to give it up?

5. Portland vs. Los Angeles Lakers (2000): You can find Portland under “choke” in the dictionary — no, really, you can. The Blazers held a 15-point lead at the start of the fourth quarter in Game 7 of the 2000 Western Conference Finals and threw it all away. Wait, does anyone realize that we were minutes away from the Jail Blazers going to the Finals and likely winning the championship? And watching Kobe and Shaq man-hug and pretend to like each other was awkward back then, but it’s on a whole different level now.

6. Los Angeles Lakers vs. Boston (2008): The Lakers led by 24 points in the third quarter of Game 4, but lost the game after the Celtics completed the biggest comeback in the NBA Finals since 1971. After winning Game 5, Los Angeles missed their flight to Boston and forfeited Game 6. Oh, right, Kobe and company were drubbed by 39 points, the biggest margin of victory in an NBA championship-clinching game (laughs manically).

7. Dallas vs. Miami (2006): The Mavs won the first two games of the Finals, and Mark Cuban started planning a championship parade. Dallas was up by 13 points with under seven minutes left in Game 3, but ended up blowing the lead and the next three games on a series of missed free throws and botched timeouts. And Dwyane Wade may have gotten a call or two in South Beach…along with herpes.

7. Los Angeles Lakers vs. Phoenix (2006): After losing Game 1, the seventh-seed Lakers won the next three, and looked to close out the Suns in five games. Raja Bell would have none of that, and became the hero of Laker-haters everywhere after clothes-lining Kobe Bryant in Game 5. Kobe, afraid of another ass-kicking, took only three shots in the second half of the deciding seventh game, a 31-point Phoenix win (continues to laugh).

9. Miami vs. New York (1999): The Knicks made an improbable run all the way to the Finals as an eighth seed, defeating the Heat in the first round on an Allan Houston running jumper, though it should be noted that this happened during the fat player lockout shortened season. It’s a little ironic that Latrell Sprewell was on the other side of the choke. And was it all worth it when you consider that it led to Houston’s cap-killing contract? I say, no.

10. New Jersey vs. Boston (2002): The Nets were leading by 21 points in the fourth quarter of Game 3 of the Eastern Conference Finals, and were then outscored 41-16 by the Celtics the rest of the way.  It’s ranked lower because New Jersey surprisingly rebounded to win the series after going down 2-1, and earned a trip to a Finals sweep at the hands of the Los Angeles Lakers (stops laughing).

Honorable Mention:

*Sacramento vs. Los Angeles Lakers (2002): Conspiracy theories aside, the Kings were visibly nervous in Game 7 and missed 14 out of 30 free throws. I’d rather not talk about this.

*Orlando vs. Houston (1995): More of an individual career collapse since the Magic were woefully outmatched in Finals, but has there ever been a more stunning breakdown than Nick Anderson missing four consecutive free throws in the closing seconds of Game 1?

May
01
2009
4

Combos® Playoff Previews: #2 Nuggets vs. #6 Mavericks

The Combos® Playoff Previews are a series of analytical breakdowns of every matchup in the 2009 NBA Playoffs. They are sponsored by Combos..

Round 2: #2 Denver Nuggets vs. #6 Dallas Mavericks.. (more…)

Apr
16
2009
0

Combos® Playoff Previews: #3 Spurs vs. #6 Mavericks

The Combos® Playoff Previews are a series of analytical breakdowns of every matchup in the 2009 NBA Playoffs. They are sponsored by Combos..

Round 1: #3 San Antonio Spurs vs. #6 Dallas Mavericks.. (more…)

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