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Oct 26

Renewed Rivalry For the Celtics And The Lakers This NBA 2010?

Posted on Monday, October 26, 2009 in Sports

A Boston Celtics-LA Lakers Finals match up for the second time in three years could be an interesting championship plot come June 2010.

The Celtics and the Lakers ruled the 2008 and 2009 respectively. And both teams are entering the 2010 NBA season with some changes to ensure their continuous competitiveness.

Rasheed Wallace Boston Celtics Press ConferenceBoston, as everyone already knows, made one of the biggest off-season moves after acquiring the services of veteran forward-center Rasheed Wallace, who finally burned ties with the rebuilding Detroit Pistons.

Wallace, the 6’10” flamboyant big man, has a mean jump shot, can play well on the post and could certainly be a big, big help to Kevin Garnett, who is coming off a successful knee surgery during the off season.

Compared to the Celtics’ line up two seasons ago, Boston has more depth this time since aside from Wallace, coach Doc Rivers also added scoring support with the arrival of Marquis Daniels, who averaged more than 14 points and 4.3 rebounds in 54 games with the Indiana Pacers.

He previously played three seasons with the running-and-gunning Dallas Mavericks, a team that reached the Finals in the 2006 season, which dropped a 2-4 decision to eventual champion Miami Heat.

The Celtics though remains the team of the Big Three—Garnett, Paul Pierce and Ray Allen, whose vast experience and passion to win revived Boston’s pride. Prior to 2008, Boston tasted its last NBA championship in 1986 when it swept Houston, 4-0 in the Finals.

Artest, A Plus Or A Minus To LA?

Meanwhile, the Lakers, learning from the painful championship series loss they took against the Celtics in 2008, reached the NBA’s apex in 2009 after finishing off the Orlando Magic in five games in the Finals.

Trevor Ariza played a huge defensive role for the Lakers aside from shooting timely three-point baskets during the Playoffs that helped LA in its successful title run.

This season though, the Lakers decided to let Ariza go via the free agency rout, where the long-armed 6’7” swingman signed up with the Houston Rockets.

LA, however, got what it believed was a better deal after hooking up with defense specialist Ron Artest.

Though a lot are wondering how Artest’s volatile ways could fit in to the Lakers’ triangle offense and proven championship formula, LA’s general manager Mitch Kupchak did say during the training camp that it’s not coach Phil Jackson and his coaching staff’s job to keep the 6’8” forward within the team’s scheme of things.

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Should Andrew Bynum finally be able to stay healthy all season long and click well in the painted area with Pau Gasol, the Lakers are sure to give any NBA team a run for their money.

The Celtics have Garnett, center Kenrick Perkins, Wallace and Glen Davis to lean on in the shaded lane, but a lot of Laker followers believe 2008 MVP Kobe Bryant and his vast championship experience will play a major role in LA’s title retention bid.

Interesting because though many considered him as the greatest basketball player of his generation, Kobe still had a work out with Hall of Famer and former Rocket great center Hakeem Olajuwon to teach him how to improve his pivot.

Olajuwon, who led the Rockets to the NBA titles in 1994 and 1995, was know for his “dream shake” moves that allowed him to dominate his opponents with ease.

Anyway, talking about a Celtics-Lakers Finals II (for this decade), remains too early to predict, considering that the East has a bevy of teams capable of giving the Celtics a run for their money.

There’s Cleveland and Lebron James, who finally got a helping hand with the entry of super star center Shaquille O’Neal; as well as Orlando Magic and Dwight Howard, who also got Vince Carter during the off season.

Over at the West, the Spurs are a team to reckon with as well as with the addition of swingman Richard Jefferson, veteran big man Antonio McDyess, Theo Ratliff and the return of a healthy Manu Ginobili.

Well, the NBA’s 2010 season appears to be exciting and filled with surprises.

Which team will end up king of the NBA hill?

Photo Source: http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_42w5-R0zz2g/SlayCbVHadI/AAAAAAAAH0E/D8oCGhluaJ4/s400/Rasheed+Wallace+Boston+Celtics+P

Jun 15

Adversity Brought The Best Out Of The Lakers This Year

Posted on Monday, June 15, 2009 in Mind blogging

The Los Angeles Lakers finally nailed their 15th NBA championship following their masterful 99-86 victory against the Orlando Magic to clinch the Finals series, 4-1 before a silent Amway Arena crowd just today.

lakers-2009

For Kobe Bryant and the Lakers, there is definitely no "I" in the team.

 

And there are so many lessons we can derive from the Lakers chase for the championship.

Beaten up badly by Boston (39 points in Game 6) last season in the Finals, Los Angeles, led by this year’s Finals MVP Kobe Bryant, believed that had to be the turning point of their 2009 campaign as they vowed to win it all this year.

And the Lakers didn’t disappoint.

Several players were criticized for their performance in last year’s Finals.

Pau Gasol was labeled as “too soft” for a frontline man of LA. Lamar Odom, the subject of numerous trade talks in the past, has had his own struggles offensively and defensively, while Derek Fisher was said to be “aging fast that his three-point shooting wouldn’t drop anymore”.

But the seven-foot Gasol worked hard after that Finals debacle in 2008, upping his inside game, rebounding and defense several notches, more. Odom, meantime, learned to come out strong off the bench throughout this season to provide the energy LA needed.

Fisher, on the other hand, reserved his best game of the season with his heroic effort in Game 4, nailing a game-tying triple to send the game into overtime. Before hitting the go-ahead three-point shot in the extra five-minute session to cement his place among the NBA clutch shooters, while pushing LA to a 3-1 series lead.

And of course, Kobe Bryant has the biggest smile among these Laker players.

Long dismissed to be just a good player following the disintegration of his partnership with All-Star center Shaquille O’Neal at the end of the 2004 Finals defeat against Detroit, Bryant worked his way back to the top.

He sure, had his down moments during the post-O’Neal era of the Lakers.

But LA coach Phil Jackson gave a “capsulized” description of the Lakers 2009 edition.

“This (Laker) team is a learned team. They have learned from last year’s Finals (against the Celtics),”  said Jackson, who is now the winningest coach with 10 NBA titles, surpassing Hall of Fame coach Red Auerbach’s achievement.

And here’s O’Neal’s twitter message to Kobe.

“When you’re together, you can withstand adversity. Congratualtions Kobe, u deserve it. You played great. Enjoy it my man enjoy it.

The Laker land ain’t a Kobe show anymore because Bryant spells Los Angeles as TEAM.

Jun 12

Admiring Stan Van Gundy's NBA Finals Approach

Posted on Friday, June 12, 2009 in Mind blogging
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Unintimidated though Orlando is facing a platoon of veterans in the Lakers, not to mention his one-on-one coaching duel with multi-titled NBA coach Phil Jackson

I admire Orlando head coach Stan Van Gundy’s approach to the NBA Finals.

As I watch him answer questions fielded in by the NBA press in the aftermath of the Magic’s stinging 91-99 overtime defeat that gave Los Angeles a commanding 3-1 series lead, Van Gundy said he doesn’t believe at all in championship experience coming to play for the Lakers.

As a former sports writer, sports slants (on articles) like an experienced team going up against a young, inexperienced one sells (which is what’s happening now in the ongoing NBA Finals) sells.

But Van Gundy was quick to point out that basketball is a game of five players. The game boils down to execution. It boils down to making the right plays and having the proper frame of mind.

Which is why, even though Orlando is the clear underdog talent-wise when matched up against Los Angeles, the Magic play like they’ve been to the Finals every year.

The intensity, the youthful zest, the impeccable shooting in the face of a tough Lakers defense (just take a look against at their Game 3 performance of 63 percent shooting)—all these were extracted by Van Gundy because his basic approach in the Finals is, we can match up against LA.

The biggest difference in the Magic’s Game 4 loss was their inability to hit their free throws (22-of-37 overall), their poor defense during regulation and eventually in the extra five-minute session—all of which cost them the game, and perhaps, the NBA title (should LA win Game 5).

Now, down 1-3, Van Gundy and his rather confused Magic are staring at a deficit that no team in so many years, have ever been able to overcome.

Though history is completely against the Magic at this point, I’m sure Van Gundy will do everything he can to prepare his players mentally and emotionally as they battle it out against the Lakers in Game 5 on Sunday (Monday morning in Manila).

Whatever happens to this Finals series, Van Gundy and his Magic are sure to benefit in the long run because of the battle scars they’ve gained.

And so Boston and Cleveland, better watch out because Orlando will be a dominant squad, a “beast in the East” in the years to come.

Jun 8

Lakers Better Close It In Orlando, Florida Or Else…

Posted on Monday, June 8, 2009 in Mind blogging

Lakers bench explode in celebration during game one of the 2009 playoffs vs_ the JazzTwo down at home, two more on the road and the LA Lakers’ journey for their first NBA title in the post-Shaquille O’Neal-Kobe Bryant tandem will soon be complete.

Though Pau Gasol is not as strong and as quick as O’Neal in the middle, the seven-foot Spanish center-forward has proven his effectiveness in playing a great support role to Kobe on offense.

After scoring 14 points and grabbing 10 rebounds in LA’s 100-75 Game 1 rout over Orlando, Gasol finished with 20 points and eight rebounds in Game 2, which saw the Lakers escape with a 101-96 overtime win.

Kobe had a “quiet” 29 points after exploding for 40 in the Finals opener.

But Kobe downplayed LA’s 2-0 series lead, saying they haven’t achieved anything yet.

Going into Games 3-5 which will all be played at the Amway Arena in Orlando, Florida, the Lakers need to beat the Magic two of three games there to wrap up their 15th NBA title in 30 championship appearances.

But the visit to the Amway Arena won’t be easy. Lebron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers knew how difficult it is to play there, having lost three straight games there that cost them the Eastern Conference title.

But history is on the side of LA.

Since the NBA adopted the 2-3-2 format in 1985, 11 of 12 teams winning the first two games went on to win the championship.

The only team that failed to win the NBA title after starting off 2-0, was Dallas, which lost the next four games to Miami. The Heat clinched the championship and the series, 4-2.

The Lakers, though just can’t rely on history. They have to continually play with consistency on defense and offense to wrap up the title.

Or the Magic, known for their resilience and ability to bounce back could turn things around, and who knows, Orlando could find itself back in the series.

Jun 5

Kobe Bryant & the Lakers' Unfinished Business

Posted on Friday, June 5, 2009 in Mind blogging

The LA Lakers destroying the Orlando Magic in the Finals series opener was a complete surprise for a lot of people I know.

The NBA Trophy

Who'll hoist the NBA's Larry O'Brien Trophy this year?

I was also surprised with the way the game went easily for the Lakers, who had to go through the wringer against the Houston Rockets and the Denver Nuggets during LA’s road to the NBA Finals.

And against the Magic, the Lakers were supposed to have found an even tougher assignment considering the presence of Orlando’s own “Big Three” version—Dwight Howard, Hedo Turkoglu and Rashard Lewis.

 

But Game 1 was a sleeper of a game, especially as the Magic appeared lost while playing before a Hollywood star-studded crowd at the Staples Center.

The 100-75 LA rout over Orlando was made easy through the explosive plays of Kobe Bryant, who finished the game with 40 points, eight rebounds and the same number of assists in his return trip to the Finals with the Lakers.

 

Some Kobe critics say should the Lakers go on to win the NBA title this season, this would officially mark his “first” league championship since his “professional breakup” with long-time partner Shaquille O’Neal after the 2004 season.

But even with all those criticism, Kobe and the Lakers have treated the NBA Finals with business-like attitude. Certainly, the 2009 NBA Finals edition gives LA a second opportunity to erase the stigma of its embarrassing championship loss to long-time bitter rival Boston Celtics last year.

 

That’s why it’s no surprise for Kobe and the Lakers to show what they can really do against a talented Magic squad. With a 1-0 Finals head start, LA is gunning for no less than a 2-0 lead as the series shifts to the Amway Center in Orlando, Florida for Games 3-5.

A 2-0 lead would be commanding at some sense, but for sure, nothing short of an NBA championship is what the Lakers will try to accomplish in the remaining days of the 2009 season.