Showing posts with label Dallas Mavericks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dallas Mavericks. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

NBA News 2013: Thunder reach deal to sign Derek Fisher


The Oklahoma City Thunder have reached agreement to sign veteran guard Derek Fisher for the remainder of the season, league sources told Yahoo! Sports.

Fisher arrived in Oklahoma City Sunday night and will sign his contract on Monday.

Fisher, 38, signed with the Thunder late last season and helped Oklahoma City make its push to the NBA Finals. He joined the Dallas Mavericks early this season and played nine games in December before suffering a knee injury. He asked the Mavericks to release him, so he could spend more time with his family.

The Thunder have room for another guard after trading Eric Maynor to the Portland Trail Blazers on Thursday. Reggie Jackson is receiving most of the backup point guard minutes behind Russell Westbrook.

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/nba--thunder-reach-deal-to-sign-derek-fisher-070039484.html;_ylt=AqIf.NdLr1wfnNtKVhFHo628vLYF;_ylu=X3oDMTRrNXAxaWM4BG1pdANMSVNUUyBNaXhlZCBMaXN0IE5CQSBFeHBlcnRzBHBrZwMwY2EzMjJiNi1mZGUxLTNjMjUtYmZiYS1lMDNmMmRjNGU5NGMEcG9zAzEEc2VjA01lZGlhQkxpc3RNaXhlZExQQ0FUZW1wBHZlcgM5NWFiMGU0My03ZjIxLTExZTItYjhkNy01YzYxMjc1NjA3MGM-;_ylg=X3oDMTFoNjVvZWVyBGludGwDdXMEbGFuZwNlbi11cwRwc3RhaWQDBHBzdGNhdANuYmEEcHQDc2VjdGlvbnM-;_ylv=3

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

NBA News 2013: Jennings Hoping for Deal with Dallas Mavs?

English: Brandon Jennings of the Milwaukee Buc...
English: Brandon Jennings of the Milwaukee Bucks during a game against the Detroit Pistons (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Now that J.J. Redick is a Buck and is going to get a long-term deal from the team this summer, what happens to Monta Ellis and Brandon Jennings? They could be gone. Jennings hopes to land in Dallas via a free-agent deal this summer and the Mavs would love to get him, but he’s restricted.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/jennings-hoping-for-deal-with-dallas-mavs/
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Monday, January 21, 2013

NBA News 2013: Would Mavericks Consider Rudy Gay Trade?

English: Jump ball before the Memphis Grizzlie...
English: Jump ball before the Memphis Grizzlies vs. Dallas Mavericks game, Dec. 23, 2008 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Just over a month away from the 2013 NBA Trade Deadline, trade winds are already stirring as one of the most controversial owners in sports has come out virtually guaranteeing his team makes a move. Dallas Mavericks’ owner Mark Cuban has come out and publicly stated that his team is going to be extremely active over the next month exploring trade options.

“There’s a 100 percent chance that we’re going to look to do something,” Cuban told Eddie Sefko of the Dallas Morning News recently.

Cuban wasn’t finished there.

Just a day later, Cuban reinforced that he’s committed to making changes to the Mavericks, who currently sit at 12th in the Western Conference with a disappointing 16-23 record.

“We’re letting everybody know the Bank of Cuban’s open,” Cuban told Brad Townsend of the Dallas Morning News. “And if it’s the right deal, we don’t mind taking back money. But we’re not going to do a trade just to do a trade. It’s got to be worthwhile.

“Every day, I’m going through rosters, trying to come up with ideas for [Mavericks' General Manager] Donnie [Nelson],”

Despite Dallas putting together a nice little three-game winning streak over the past week, it’s clear that the Mavericks owner hasn’t been a fan of what he’s seen from his team so far this season

Even Mavericks’ head coach Rick Carlisle has iterated recently that he believes this season is going to continue to be an uphill climb with the team currently in place.

“It’s going to be work for us,” Carlisle said before Monday’s 113-98 blowout win over the Minnesota Timberwolves. “I’m not under any false presumptions that we’ve got it figured out and that’s not how this year’s going to be. Every game’s going to be challenging.”

Looking at the Mavericks’ roster, it may be easier said than done trying to put together enticing trade offers to propose to other teams around the NBA. As the “Bank of Cuban” statement alluded to,  Dallas has plenty of expiring contracts to allow another team to make a salary dump that includes a talent the Mavs are interested in. While that’s a solid starting point, the Mavericks don’t exactly possess the young talent to go along with expiring contracts that perspective teams generally covet.

One name that’s been thrown around quite a bit, not just with Dallas, but across the NBA has been Memphis Grizzlies’ small forward Rudy Gay. Despite featuring the fourth best record in the brutally talented Western Conference at 24-12, the Grizzlies have seemingly been dangling their budding young superstar most of the season.

For the Mavericks, a team looking for that second superstar to place next to former NBA Most Valuable Player Dirk Nowitzki now and hope he becomes the face of the franchise later. If Memphis were to find a group of players they covet on the Mavs that came close to his roughly $16.4 salary this season, the 26-year old Gay is seemingly an excellent fit.

Still, it’s difficult to see Memphis disposing of Gay in what would amount to nothing more than a salary dump. With a team that’s right in the thick of contention in the West, it’s mind boggling that the Grizzlies are even discussing a deal behind the scenes for one of the most talented players on the roster.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/would-mavericks-consider-rudy-gay-trade/

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

NBA News 2013: Cuban: Mavs won't trade Nowitzki

English: Washington Wizards v/s Dallas Maveric...
English: Washington Wizards v/s Dallas Mavericks October 9, 2009 at Verizon Center in Washington, D.C. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Mark Cuban says he plans to keep star Dirk Nowitzki even though the Dallas Mavericks have their worst record since a few months after he bought the team in 2000.

Cuban said before Saturday night's game against Memphis that he wanted to be clear with Nowitzki that he was committed "through thick and thin" to getting the team back in contention.

Dallas recently fell 10 games under .500 for the first time since Nowitzki's second season in 1999-2000. Since then, the Mavericks have made the playoffs 12 straight years and won the title in 2011.

The Mavericks are playing with a revamped roster for the second straight season after Cuban decided not to bring back several key players from the championship team.

http://www.nba.com/2013/news/01/12/cuban-says-mavericks-wont-trade-nowitzki.ap/index.html?ls=iref:nbahpts

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Sunday, November 4, 2012

NBA News 2012: Time To Fear The Beard

Houston Rockets logo
Houston Rockets logo (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

This is what the Houston Rockets have been missing for years, ever since Yao Ming started missing long stretches of games with foot injuries.

Houston fans have known it, too, even if they haven’t put it in so many words. They have seen team after team make great plays and stay tough down the stretch of games, often falling short by a basket or two, a mere handful of points making the difference between a playoff berth and a trip to the lottery.

What the Rockets have been missing is a closer.

Every great team has one. In fact, every playoff team has one. It’s that one player who shrugs off the toughest of defensive schemes to make basket after basket to pull his team ahead for a win. The Oklahoma City Thunder have Kevin Durant, the Miami HEAT have LeBron James, the Dallas Mavericks have Dirk Nowitzki and the Houston Rockets have James Harden.

It’s early, of course, and there is a lot of basketball to be played, but through two games the Rockets have had a presence that left the team when Yao retired.

Harden scored 37 points in Houston’s season-opener against the Detroit Pistons, and in his encore performance he was even better. Unlike the Pistons, the Atlanta Hawks fought back from a 14-point deficit to take the lead late in the fourth quarter. That’s when Harden put the team on his back and scored 18 of his career-high 45 points in the final frame.

Harden didn’t do it alone, of course, but then the Rockets have never been a team to stand around and watch. Jeremy Lin had 21 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists, Omer Asik chipped in a career-high 19 rebounds and Marcus Morris scored a career-high 17 points off the bench.


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Sunday, August 12, 2012

NBA News 2012: Howard Knows Mavs Await Next Season?

If L.A. does not work out for Dwight (Howard), says source briefed on his thinking, he knows “Dallas will be there for him.” Mavs will have cap space.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/lakers-get-duhon-clark-in-howard-deal/

Friday, July 6, 2012

NBA News 2012: Ainge knows Big 3 not enough

10 years in the making10 years in the making (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
After deciding to bring back Boston's aging Big Three for another run at the NBA title, Danny Ainge knew he needed to surround it with more talent.

The Celtics general manager settled on former Dallas Mavericks shooting guard Jason Terry as one of the key pieces. Terry has reportedly agreed to a three-year deal for $15 million that is only waiting for the NBA's moratorium on free agent signings to be lifted on July 11 for the deal to be finalized.

Brandon Bass has reportedly agreed to a three-year deal that is also being held up until the signing date. That gives Boston back its third-leading scorer, a 6-foot-8 forward who averaged 12.5 points in his first season with the Celtics.

Terry, who is one of the league's top 3-point shooters, would not keep the Celtics from bringing back Ray Allen. The 36-year-old Allen has also met with the Miami Heat, but salary cap rules allow Boston to offer him more money.

''We really want Ray to come back,'' Ainge said this week. ''Time will tell.''

That would keep the Big Three intact to try for a second NBA championship - the 18th for the league's most-decorated franchise. Paul Pierce is under contract for two more years and Rajon Rondo for three.

Ainge nearly dealt away Allen, the top 3-point shooter in NBA history, at the trading deadline in a deal that would have signaled the end of the partnership that led the Celtics to the 2008 championship. The same group returned to the NBA Finals in 2010, losing to the Los Angeles Lakers in seven games.

After the Celtics lost to the eventual champion Miami Heat in seven games in this year's Eastern Conference finals, Ainge waited for Garnett to decide if he wanted to retire and considered rebuilding with a younger roster. But the 6-foot-11 star agreed to terms on a three-year, $34.5 million deal he can sign next Wednesday.

Terry, who is 34, doesn't make the Celtics much younger - especially not if Allen returns. But he gives them depth they needed when Allen was hobbled with bone spurs in his ankle.

The 2009 NBA Sixth Man of the Year and a member of the Mavericks team that won it all in 2011, Terry came off the bench to average 15 points per game for Dallas last season. In his career, he has averaged 16.1 points and 4.7 rebounds.

Over five years with Atlanta and eight with Dallas, Terry is a career 38 percent 3-point shooter who has made 1,788 of them over his career - fourth-most in NBA history. (Allen is first, with 2,718.)


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Thursday, July 5, 2012

Stock News 2012: Mavs May Pursue Steve Nash, Jeremy Lin

NEW YORK, NY - FEBRUARY 19:  Jeremy Lin #17 of...NEW YORK, NY - FEBRUARY 19: Jeremy Lin #17 of the New York Knicks and his teammate Amare Stoudemire #1 of the New York Knicks react during the game against the Dallas Mavericks at Madison Square Garden on February 19, 2012 in New York City. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
The Dallas Maverickspoint guard priorities are now shifting to 39-year-old and former Mav Steve Nash and one-time Mavs Summer League hand Jeremy Lin, sources told ESPN.com’s Marc Stein.

Sources say the Mavs will pursue Nash and the New York Knicks’ Lin, who is a restricted free agent. As such, the Knicks can match any offer made to Lin.


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NBA News 2012: Steve Nash to Lakers

PHOENIX, AZ - JANUARY 05:  Steve Nash #13 of t...PHOENIX, AZ - JANUARY 05: Steve Nash #13 of the Phoenix Suns handles the ball during the NBA game against the Los Angeles Lakers at US Airways Center on January 5, 2011 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Lakers defeated the Suns 99-95. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
In an unforeseen twist that could thrust the Los Angeles Lakers straight back into title contention, two-time NBA MVP Steve Nash has successfully negotiated a sign-and-trade deal from the Phoenix Suns to the Lakers that will team him up with Kobe Bryant, according to sources with knowledge of the deal.

Sources told ESPN.com that Nash, with the New York Knicks also pressing hard to complete a similar sign-and-trade deal, was swayed to join the Lakers after a determined push from Bryant and because the move keeps him in the title hunt and allows him to stay in close proximity to his three children in Phoenix.

Nash will receive a three-year deal in excess of $25 million, sources said, because the Suns ultimately agreed to sign-and-trade him to the Lakers, who can absorb Nash via the trade exception they created by dealing Lamar Odom to the Dallas Mavericks in December.

The Suns will receive 2013 and 2015 first-round picks and 2013 and 2014 second-round picks from the Lakers, according to the Arizona Republic.

The deal can't be officially completed until July 11, when a leaguewide moratorium on new business is lifted.

The Lakers are no longer trying to retain point guard Ramon Sessions, who opted out of the final year and $4.55 million of his contract to become a free agent, a source told ESPNLosAngeles.com's Ramona Shelburne.

Sessions was hoping for the security of a longer term contract, but while discussions with the Lakers were positive, they never progressed toward a multiyear deal, the source told Shelburne.

Difficult as it is on some levels for the Suns to help the face of the franchise get to the Lakers -- especially after years of playoff battles with them in the Nash Era -- sources say team owner Robert Sarver finally agreed to the trade after yielding to a plea from Nash to send him to a destination where he could maintain the closest possible ties to his children and still chase the ring that has eluded him for 16 seasons.

The Lakers clinched the deal by surrendering the package of picks, but sources said that the Suns did decide to reward Nash for all the success he delivered over the past eight seasons.

Sending Nash to the team of his choosing ensures that the sides part on good terms after it became clear in recent days that the Suns left little doubt since free agency began Sunday at 12:01 a.m. that they were prepared to move in a different direction instead of trying to match the determined bids for Nash coming from the Toronto Raptors, Dallas Mavericks, Knicks and Lakers to retain the 38-year-old.

The Knicks were equally high on Nash's list in a sign-and-trade scenario -- he's an offseason Manhattan resident -- and the Raptors were initially seen as the favorite for Nash's services after quickly registering a three-year, $36 million offer. The Brooklyn Nets and Mavericks also pursued Nash, Dallas in particular after the Nets won the Deron Williams sweepstakes earlier Tuesday.

Yet, Nash ultimately decided that the chance to team with Bryant, Pau Gasol and Andrew Bynum, the three-year deal he had been hoping for, and ability to keep a West Coast base near his children could not be passed up.

Ironically, though, Nash said just last week in a radio interview with ESPN NewYork 98.7's Stephen A. Smith and Ryan Ruocco that it would be difficult on some levels to join Miami after the Heat just won the championship or sign with the Lakers after all their playoff battles the past eight years.

"The truth is I'm a bit old school," Nash said in the June 25 interview. "For me, it would be hard to put on a Lakers jersey. That's just the way it is. You play against them so many times in the playoffs, and I just use them as an example, and I have the utmost respect for them and their organization.

"I kind of have that tendency (to try to beat the best teams), so it is strange, but as a free agent you're free to go where you want, so I'd have to consider everything regardless of the past or the future."



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Wednesday, July 4, 2012

NBA News 2012: Celtics reach deal with Jason Terry

English: Jason TerryEnglish: Jason Terry (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
The Boston Celtics have reached agreement with Dallas Mavericks free-agent guard Jason Terry on a three-year contract, league sources told Yahoo! Sports.

The Celtics will use their $5 million mid-level exception to sign Terry. The total value of the contract will be $15.6 million.

Terry spoke with Celtics president Danny Ainge and coach Doc Rivers on the first day of free agency Sunday. Rivers told Yahoo! Sports he hopes Boston can still re-sign Ray Allen, in addition to adding Terry. The Celtics have also already reached agreement with Kevin Garnett on a three-year, $34 million contract.

Free agents can sign contracts on July 11.

Terry averaged 15.1 points and 3.6 assists while shooting 37.8 percent from 3-point range last season for Dallas. Terry, 34, often expressed frustration about not being signed to a contract extension after being a key member of the Mavericks' 2011 NBA championship team.


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Monday, June 18, 2012

NBA News 2012: Thunder can't match the resolve or hunger of LeBron James and the Heat

LeBron James #23 of the Cleveland Cavaliers in...LeBron James #23 of the Cleveland Cavaliers in action against the Washington Wizards at the Verizon Center on April 2, 2009 in Washington, DC. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
The championship is waiting for LeBron James now, within his grasp, a confluence borne of configuring his mind and body with the scattered state of these Oklahoma City Thunder. He thinks about those Dallas Mavericks and the NBA Finals, the way the moment made him reluctant, afraid, and something’s hardened with him. He doesn’t cower. He doesn’t scare. Finally, LeBron James is coming.

All these mistakes, all these regrettable moments, belong to someone else now. James pushes for his destiny, two victories away, and a collapse now would be the most colossal of all. He is too wise to lose to the Thunder. He’s too great. Beyond James’ genius, Oklahoma City gave Miami Game 3 on Sunday night, an avalanche of AAU offense, inexplicable turnovers and foolish fouls conspiring in a 91-85 loss.

James delivered his 29 points and 14 rebounds for a 2-1 series lead, and he made Thunder star Kevin Durant miss everything on two telltale possessions late in the fourth quarter. He pushed Durant deep into foul trouble. James obliterated Durant the way his two trips to the NBA Finals, his three MVP awards, his successes and failures, demand he devour everything between him and the celebratory podium.

LeBron James has relentlessly attacked Kevin Durant and the Thunder in the Finals. (Getty Images)

"He’s just totally a different player," Miami’s Dwyane Wade said. "Up until the Finals last year, he was having an amazing playoffs. He had a game where he struggled and he kind of let that get into his mind a little bit – and he was thinking too much.

“Now he’s playing. He’s on attack. When he puts his head down to go to the rim, you have no other choice but to foul him or he’s going to finish."

All these Heat stars have come to embrace the failures of a year ago, come to let it wash over, coat them with resolve. The Mavericks taught them about poise and treating the Finals moment with the respect it deserves. The Mavericks were the perfect storm to beat the Heat a year ago: Stars understanding this was a final chance, replete with a rim-protecting center, spectacular shooting and a great coach.

"We’ve got to understand that over there in the locker room, there’s a team that really wants it," Perkins grumbled. "They’ve got a couple guys over there who want this. … They want it. Nothing’s going to be given to us, we’ve got to go take it. We were just careless and sloppy. … We’ve got to know that we are in the Finals.

"We’ve got to trust each other. Tonight, we got back to 'I' basketball, the individual shooting over two and three people."

James has transformed his game to take advantage of these unfocused Thunder. He is in perpetual attack mode, unabashedly assaulting the rim, daring mere mortals to step between the basket and his 6-foot-9, 270-pound locomotive. Once, he played the part of the contrarian, refusing to use his Karl Malone physique in the low post simply because, well, everyone told him he should use it.

As one former member of the Cleveland Cavaliers staff texted, "We tried to post him and he had great success at times, but he wouldn’t commit to it." He used to live on the perimeter in isolations and pick-and-rolls for the Cavaliers, but his championship destiny was forever following this blueprint. He had to take the path of most resistance, a fitting completion to his jagged journey to glory. The Dallas debacle lingers for these Heat, but mostly for James. He was the reason Miami lost a year ago, and he’d be the reason that they win this time. In the way James backed down a year ago, he’s hurtling himself forward now. In the way he shrunk, he’s rising now. Chris Bosh insisted, "We carry that pain with us. We think about it every day."

And that’s so important for these Heat, so much a part of why for the sluggish intervals – the wildly up-and-down performances of everyone but James and Shane Battier in these Finals – they’re fueled with a ferocity that ultimately manifests itself into execution and performance. James has come out of a place of accountability, out of the realization that it wasn’t his teammates, his coaches, his critics responsible for flaking out in past pressure situations. It was him, and it will be on him to elevate himself into something more, into the kind of champion that his talent demands he become.


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Monday, June 11, 2012

NBA News 2012: LeBron James returns to NBA Finals with purpose and poise

MIAMI, FL - MAY 31:  LeBron James #6 and Dwyan...MIAMI, FL - MAY 31: LeBron James #6 and Dwyane Wade #3 of the Miami Heat hug alongside teammate Chris Bosh #1 of the Miami Heat after the Heat defeat the Dallas Mavericks 92-84 in Game One of the 2011 NBA Finals at American Airlines Arena on May 31, 2011 in Miami, Florida. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
The defiance, the childish petulance, was gone. LeBron James sat on the dais on the eve of his third NBA Finals Monday and spoke in the same measured, self-assured tone he's carried for much of these playoffs. No gnashing of his fingernails. No giggling with Dwyane Wade. He was, in his own words, "at ease," and that's different from a year ago.

Three hundred sixty-five days earlier, James sat on a similar stage and taunted the world. He had collapsed under the weight of expectations as the Dallas Mavericks eliminated the Miami Heat in the Finals, and his insecurities came pouring out. "All the people that was rooting on me to fail," James said, "at the end of the day they have to wake up tomorrow and have the same life that they had before they woke up today."

Laugh at me now, James seemed to tell his critics. You still have to go back to your crummy jobs, your crummy lives. I'm still better than you.

LeBron James is making his third trip to the NBA Finals. (Reuters)

One longtime NBA official, watching the venom spill out of LeBron's mouth that night, shook his head and said what many in the room thought: "He'll never get it."

Now, maybe LeBron does get it. Exactly one year has passed from the end of last season's failure to the start of these Finals, and the 12 months in between have been a journey of introspection. He's a different player, a different person. His focus is sharper. His priorities have changed.

"I played too much to prove people wrong last year," James said.

This, more than any other reason, is why James can finally deliver his first championship. He's changed and so can his Heat. The Oklahoma City Thunder are younger, faster, deeper, more athletic. They've fallen in line behind Kevin Durant and they have home-court advantage. But if James plays with the fury he brought to the Eastern Conference finals? Anything is possible.

For much of the world, James' reconstruction won't be complete until he wins a title. This is his third trip to the Finals in nine seasons. A closet full of MVP trophies is nice, but you can play the role of Buffalo Bills for only so long before even Nike begins to wonder why it's paying you $100 million. These Finals are one more opportunity for LeBron to fulfill his mandate.

"I'm sure he will try to seize it a little bit better than he did the first two times," Wade said.

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/nba--lebron-james-returns-to-nba-finals-with-purpose-and-poise.html;_ylt=Apx6OYlsla7Oa5GrFmLccmq8vLYF

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Friday, June 1, 2012

NBA News 2012: David Stern Shows Los Angeles Lakers Fans at 2012 NBA Draft Lottery

President Barack Obama makes remarks at servic...President Barack Obama makes remarks at service event with 2010 NBA Champion Los Angeles Lakers at the THEARC Boys and Girls Club in Washington, District of Columbia. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Fans of the Los Angeles Lakers have good reason to dislike David Stern after what he did to them by nixing the Chris Paul trade, but it was the results of the 2012 NBA draft lottery on Wednesday night that gave the rest of the league a reason to join them.

This comes in the wake of the New Orleans Hornets winning the first pick in the 2012 NBA Draft despite having just a 13.7 percent chance of doing so. There is plenty of skepticism going around that Stern and the NBA had something to do with the Hornets obtaining that pick and effectively winning the Anthony Davis sweepstakes. The NBA still owns the team, thus perpetuating this fundamental problem. Even though it's unlikely that there was actually any attempt by the league to fix the draft, there remains a modicum of doubt.

It's not completely unfounded, though.

Yahoo! Sports' Adrian Wojnarowski reported that several league executives felt that there were too many signs of deception to completely ignore the possibility of a fix. When professionals that deal in league matters for a living have suspicions, fans have every right to hold their own reservations.

For Lakers fans, they have to be wondering just how good the team could be today if they had Paul and Kobe Bryant in the backcourt along with a healthy Andrew Bynum at center. For fans outside of Los Angeles, the spirit of the vetoed trade was at the very least unsettling.

The trade that never was hurt the team and the league more than anyone could have imagined. Not only did the Lakers fail to acquire a major upgrade at a position it desperately needed, but also lost its Sixth Man of the Year in Lamar Odom for essentially nothing -- the pick acquired in the trade to the Dallas Mavericks was later given to Cleveland in the deal for Ramon Sessions.

The Lakers now are stuck in a situation where they are over the salary cap and luxury tax threshold with no virtually no money for free agency. With Paul, the team would have had a legitimate future and heir-apparent to Bryant. Now, the team has no first round pick in one of the deepest drafts in recent memory. Ironically, depth is exactly what the Lakers need in order to improve.

This is why fans in Los Angeles have every right to be crying foul after the results of the draft. Even if the argument itself is somewhat of a stretch, it's understandable.


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Thursday, June 16, 2011

NBA News 2011: Mavs' champion parade set

Image representing Mark Cuban as depicted in C...Image via CrunchBase
Police closed the plaza outside the American Airlines Arena after it reached its capacity of 3,000 people. Fans began staking out their favorite spots hours before the parade's scheduled 10 a.m. Thursday start.

More than 250,000 people were expected to cheer on a fleet of three floats, 10 convertibles and a dozen trucks featuring star player Dirk Nowitzki, club owner Mark Cuban, team founder Don Carter and the Larry O'Brien Trophy statue given to the NBA's top team.

http://sports.espn.go.com/dallas/nba/news/story?id=6667655


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Friday, June 10, 2011

NBA News 2011: LeBron teeters on ultimate Finals failure

LeBron JamesImage by Keith Allison via Flickr
Everything promises to be sheer torture now, the worst basketball nightmare of LeBron James unfolding one mocking, ridiculing jeer stacked upon another until the world comes crashing down Sunday night. Biggest game of my life, James proclaimed, and the final minutes of Game 5, the final score, still belonged to someone else. Beyond failure, this felt so much like a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Biggest game of his life, James proclaimed, and his good was unacceptable again. Greatness is demanded for a global icon. Greatness is the burden. Back to the brink for LeBron James, back to the dizzying, dumbfounding edge of his chaotic, careening planet.

All hell crashed down upon James and the Miami Heat in a confounding 112-103 loss to the Dallas Mavericks, an avalanche of Mavericks 3-pointers conspiring with one more pedestrian performance from James in the fourth quarter. From Dirk Nowitzki to Jason Terry, the Mavericks humiliated him in the clutch and moved within a victory of an NBA championship. Nothing out of James in the fourth quarter, nothing to honor and validate a talent that ought to be controlling these Finals.

These Dallas Mavericks go to great lengths to mess with him, hurling insults and insinuations with regularity that they never would’ve dared with different superstars. Why? Because they believe it messes with his mind. They believe the words will fester within him, keep him thinking when he ought to be reacting. Terry says James can’t guard him, and so far he’s been right. DeShawn Stevenson essentially called him a quitter in Game 4. Shawn Marion appeared to call him much worse on the floor, too.

http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_ylt=Am7.8NmGcAOVwREs8J5GceW8vLYF?slug=aw-wojnarowski_lebron_james_nba_finals_game5_061011


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