Posted by Dan on January 3, 2009
Ah yes it’s a new year which means more time to discuss the saga that is the Stephon Marbury situation. The buyout talks between Steph and Donnie Walsh had reached a stalemate but there were rumors flying around that Walsh would start the talks back up in early January. Marbury also wrote a blog post for the New York Post that was somewhat bizarre to read. Everyone knows when Steph blogs, he really drops some knowledge:
I once heard it said that experience is not what happens to a man, experience is what a man does with what happens to him. That’s real science, so I’ll drop that one again. Experience is not what happens to a man, experience is what a man does with what happens to him.
He did even express the fact that he just wants to have a chance to play. He also claims he didn’t want to be a distraction despite the fact that he sat courtside for a Lakers-Knicks game in LA like a creepy stalker:
I didn’t want to be a distraction for the team first and me second. I honestly came to help the team win. Real talk. I was willing to put in the work necessary to earn my starting spot and humble enough to accept coming off of the bench.
It was unfortunate that the coach wanted to go in a different direction and didn’t want me to be part of the team. I just wish it had been handled correctly from jump. I could understand the fact they didn’t want Chris Duhon looking over his shoulder but if you don’t want me, just pay me and let me go. I just want to play basketball.
Now Marc Stein of ESPN.com is reporting that both the Celtics and Marbury are interested in a deal provided that he can secure a buyout from the Knicks:
Although it has been widely assumed that Celtics forward Kevin Garnett would resist a reunion with the controversial point guard — after Marbury broke up their Minnesota parternship in less than three seasons together by forcing a trade to New Jersey — one Celtics source insists that Garnett has voiced no opposition to the idea of signing Marbury for the rest of the season to strengthen Boston’s backcourt depth behind starters Rajon Rondo and Ray Allen.
When asked specifically about the likelihood of Marbury joining the Celtics this season, the source predicted that “it will happen.”
I’m still not entirely convinced that we will have a resolution to the situation anytime soon. For someone who claims to be desperate to just have another chance to play, he sure does not seem eager to part with any of the $20+ million that is owed to him this year. I just don’t think this buyout is going to be as simple as one might think. Donnie Walsh is very opposed to the idea of paying Marbury his entire salary, or close to it, and still have to watch him play on a winning team and contend for a title. The only question for the Knicks is how desperate they will be to free up the roster space.
From the perspective of the Celtics, I’m not really sure what to think. They do need to add some depth to their roster because the truth is that the Cavaliers and Lakers are deeper than them. Their bench could be what causes their downfall in the postseason if they do not address it. But they really could use some depth with their bigs as I think you can survive with Eddie House backing up Rajon Rondo. Plus with the way Rondo has improved this season, there will not be all that many minutes for the backup PG to have. Rondo has a PER of 19.93 which is 7th best among point guards.
I just don’t think it would be worth the risk to bring Steph in here when the amount of minutes for him to get will be fairly low. Marbury is also a guy that has quit on his team many times in the past, and who knows how his relationship would be with Kevin Garnett at this point. Plus I don’t buy the idea of Marbury being able to really help a team when he has never done that in his career. He has been shipped to a different team three times and each time that team has regressed. The Nets lost 12 more games with Marbury his first year, the Suns dropped 15 more games from the previous year, and the Knicks had a 4 game drop. The Celtics should be careful with this decision.
Even if the buyout doesn’t work out for Steph he still seems content with collecting his paycheck. Who can forget his memorable quote while being interviewed on television at the Lakers-Knicks game? “I’m still earning my check by doing nothing.” Classy as always.
Posted in General NBA, Rumors | Tagged: Boston Celtics, Donnie Walsh, Eddie House, Kevin Garnett, NBA, New York Knicks, Rajon Rondo, Stephon Marbury | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Dan on December 29, 2008
Posted in Power Rankings | Tagged: Atlanta Hawks, Boston Celtics, Charlotte Bobcats, Chicago Bulls, Cleveland Cavaliers, Dallas Mavericks, Denver Nuggets, Detroit Lions, Golden State Warriors, Houston Rockets, Indiana Pacers, Los Angeles Clippers, Los Angeles Lakers, Memphis Grizzlies, Miami Dolphins, Milwaukee Bucks, Minnesota Timberwolves, NBA, NBA Power Rankings, New Jersey Nets, New Orleans Saints, New York Knicks, Oklahoma City Thunder, Orlando Magic, Philadelphia 76ers, Phoenix Suns, Portland TrailBlazers, Sacramento Kings, San Antonio Spurs, Toronto Raptors, Utah Jazz | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Dan on December 26, 2008
Let’s go coast to coast with the stories and views from around the league:
- Steve Dilbeck of the LA Daily News: “The Lakers came into their showdown with the Celtics an impressive 23-5, and very much needing to beat Boston down. Needing reason to truly believe they are as good they like to think they are, that they are that much better than the team Boston drummed in the NBAFinals last June. The Celtics came into Staples Center on a roll, having won a franchise- record 19straight games. Still looking focused and determined, and playing with a mature consistency that has eluded the Lakers. But the Lakers needed this one more, needed to brush aside the perception they were soft, too weak mentally, just too inferior to the mighty Celtics. Despite the great run the Celtics were on, despite the glare of a nationally-televised Christmas Day game, this game was more important to the Lakers, and ultimately they played like it. They may not have been dramatically better, but it was the Lakers who answered the challenge, who made plays down the stretch and came away with the 92-83 victory that reeked of playoff intensity.”
- Terry Pluto of the Cleveland Plain Dealer: “Which brings us to the Cavs, the surprise team of the NBA after Thursday’s 93-89 victory over Washington. The 25-4 Cavs are right behind the 27-3 Celtics in the race to be the best in the Eastern Conference. Was it reasonable to expect the Cavs to win 50 games this season? Of course, assuming LeBron James stays healthy. But a 25-4 start with only five players remaining from this time a year ago? It’s a product of chemistry…make that trust…much like Boston a year ago.”
- Mark Heisler of the LA Times: “Yet to be determined is whether the Lakers have undergone an actual attitude adjustment and will play hard all the time. On the other hand, when you think of their fans booing them off the court at halftime in their last game here, when they trailed the New York Knicks by 15, followed by losses in Miami and Orlando and a rally from five points behind in the last 3:30 to win in Memphis, Christmas marked some turnaround. The Lakers defended energetically, if not always well. They showed that their physical advantages over the Celtics in size and depth matter.”
- From the Detroit News: ”Chris Paul of the Hornets saw his league-record string of 108 games with at least one steal end in the Hornets’ 88-68 loss to the Magic on Thursday. Paul, the NBA steals leader (3.7 average), and most of the starters came out early in the fourth quarter with the Magic up by at least 20. “Half the time when I got a steal I didn’t even know it,” said Paul, who was unaware his streak ended until after the game. “It was going to end at some point so why not Christmas?”“
- Eddie Sefko of the Dallas Morning News: “The NBA went all out to make the late-night portion of its Christmas Day extravaganza a real yuletide experience. The uniforms were green for the Mavericks, red for Portland. Given the festive atmosphere, you half expected the teams to come out wearing Santa hats. But by the third quarter, good tidings were officially over. A flurry of technical fouls and some elbows-first kind of play turned the game into a nasty, rugged affair devoid of any Christmas cheer. That was just fine with the Mavericks, since they ended up grinding out a 102-94 victory over the Trail Blazers in probably their most commendable victory of the season.”
- Mike Monroe of the San Antonio Express-News: “Irate, Duncan grabbed Stoudemire so that referee Jason Phillips was forced to call a foul, and that gave Duncan time to give the whistle blower his opinion. Fifty-nine seconds later, Duncan rued the momentary loss of his stoic demeanor. Whistled for bumping O’Neal as the Suns center looked for a cutting teammate, Duncan knew he was one foul shy of disqualification. Somehow, he managed to avoid a sixth personal while stopping three drives to the basket by Stoudemire in the final 1:53, each time rebounding the miss. It was a clutch performance Popovich called “absolutely spectacular.” Duncan’s defense kept things just close enough for the dramatic ending. Spurs guard Roger Mason Jr. launched a 3-point shot from the left corner that beat the buzzer as it left his hand and beat the Suns when it went in the basket.”
- Paul Coro of the Arizona Republic: “Being plucked from a bad franchise and put into a successful one two weeks ago was like a Christmas present for Jason Richardson. The new Sun wants so badly to help. Too badly. His decision to help on defense Thursday against San Antonio’s Tony Parker made the NBA’s third-ranked 3-point shooter, Roger Mason, look as alone in the corner as a Christmas tree once the presents are gone. Mason, subbed in for that play, made good on the 3-point shot to beat the buzzer and the Suns, 91-90, at US Airways Center.”
Posted in Coast to Coast, General NBA | Tagged: Basketball, Boston Celtics, Chris Paul, Cleveland Cavaliers, Coast to Coast, Dallas Mavericks, Jason Richardson, LeBron James, Los Angeles Lakers, NBA, Phoenix Suns, Portland TrailBlazers, Roger Mason Jr., San Antonio Spurs, Tim Duncan | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Dan on September 23, 2008
Let’s push the ball up the court as we go from coast to coast with the stories from around the league.
- The biggest news of the last 24 hours has to be the retirement of Shareef Abdur-Rahim as the USA Today is reporting. He played 12 seasons and averaged 18.1 points, 7.5 boards, and 2.5 dimes for his career. ”I came to grips with the fact that, health-wise, I won’t be able to get back to the condition and level that is needed to play in the NBA,” Abdur-Rahim said. “My right knee has become arthritic over the years, and is to the point where it won’t allow me do the things and play at the level at which I’m accustomed to playing. As tough as it is to come to grips with, it’s the reality.”
- Hoopsvibe is reporting that the Spurs have signed former Hawk Salim Stoudamire. This is a good move by the Spurs to bolster their bench. Their lack of depth and age was exposed in the playoffs against the Lakers. Stoudamire can shoot it as well as anyone and can become their three point sniper off the bench.
- The Boston Globe is reporting that the NBA has confirmed that Darius Miles will be suspended for the first 10 games of the season. Miles’ contract is nonguaranteed but the Celtics want him to contribute and help fill the void left by the departure of James Posey. Do not expect Miles to make any significant contributions. You just can’t count on him at the moment.
- The Oklahoman is reporting that the Thunder is expected to reveal the official team uniforms on Monday. The rumor is that the road unis will be sky blue and the home ones will be white.
- Chris Herrington of the Memphis Flyer on Mike Conley: “Rudy Gay is the best player the Grizzlies have, and rookie O.J. Mayo will likely be the most talked about. But I tend to think that second-year point guard Conley is the most important played on this year’s team.” I agree somewhat but I do believe that O.J. Mayo will become a star and end up being the best player from this past year’s draft.
- Chad Ford of ESPN.com is reporting something interesting about the draft class of 2009. ”NBA scouts continue to offer dire warnings about the NBA draft class of 2009. After two stellar years, thanks to amazing college freshman classes, a draft drought may be on the way. ”Even if you assume everyone declares for the draft next June,” one longtime NBA executive said, “you’ll struggle to find much star power or depth next year. My scouts are walking around depressed already and it’s September.”"
- Mike Bibby of the Atlanta Hawks on last year’s playoffs, from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution: “I think we definitely could have beaten them,” Bibby said. “We just didn’t play well on the road at all, and I mean at all. But things happen for a reason. Maybe that was the start for us to excel this season.”
Posted in Coast to Coast, General NBA | Tagged: Atlanta Hawks, Boston Celtics, Darius Miles, James Posey, Memphis Grizzlies, Mike Bibby, Mike Conley, NBA, O.J. Mayo, Oklahoma City Thunder, Rudy Gay, Salim Stoudamire, San Antonio Spurs, Shareef Abdur-Rahim | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Dan on August 18, 2008
The NBA has released this season’s upcoming schedule and the Knicks will start the seasonon October 29th by welcoming Dwayne Wade, Michael Beasley, and the Miami Heat to Madison Square Garden. Also Larry Brown, the new coach of the Charlotte Bobcats, will make his return to the Garden on November 5th. As is always true for each year, there are some very good matchups at MSG that will be sure to be hot tickets. Lebron James and the Cavs are visiting on November 25th, the Detroit Pistons are in on December 7th, Carmelo Anthony and the Nuggets are scheduled for December 28th, the defending NBA Champion Boston Celtics visit on January 4th, Mike D’Antoni’s former team, the Phoenix Suns, come in on January 21st, and Kobe Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers come to Broadway on February 2nd. The Knicks will close the regular season with a home game against division rival New Jersey on April 15th. It would be thought of as a good season if that game has any significance.
Of course the Knicks will be playing in six preseason games in the first couple weeks of October. However, those games have yet to be announced. Click here to see the entire schedule. So it appears we are only a little over 2 months away from the opening tip of the regular season.
Posted in Misc. NYK Notes | Tagged: Boston Celtics, Carmelo Anthony, Dwayne Wade, Kobe Bryant, Larry Brown, Los Angeles Lakers, Miami Heat, Mike D'Antoni, NBA, New York Knicks | 2 Comments »