Showing posts with label Los Angeles Laker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Los Angeles Laker. Show all posts

Monday, February 25, 2013

NBA News 2013: Magic already gave away Howard’s number


Well, that didn’t take long.

The Orlando Magic waited all of half a season to give away Dwight Howard’s No. 12 jersey. Tobias Harris, a second-year small forward acquired in the J.J. Redick trade from the Milwaukee Bucks, has donned the jersey of the greatest player in franchise history.

Wait, what?

Howard is the Magic’s career leader in points, rebounds, blocks, minutes and, if you like advanced stats, win shares. He was the best player on the team for eight seasons. But then he whined until he was traded in the offseason to the Los Angeles Lakers.

Harris, 20, has scored 358 points in his NBA career, almost 11,200 fewer than Howard scored with the Magic. He has some potential as a scoring combo forward, sort of a poor man’s Carmelo Anthony, which he showed in his one season at Tennessee.

He wore No. 15 for the Bucks. That number is taken in Orlando by suspended forward Hedo Turkoglu, so he needed to make a switch. He chose as high-pressure a number as was available.

“I’ve heard a lot about that because it’s Dwight Howard’s number,” Harris told the Orlando Sentinel in an excellent feature.

Orlando hasn’t retired any former players’ numbers, and there’s no reason to expect the Magic to hang Howard’s number from the rafters until a few years after he retires. It may be time, though, to get up spots for Shaquille O’Neal, Penny Hardaway and Nick Anderson, the core of the 1995 Eastern Conference champions.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/magic-already-have-given-away-dwight-howards-number/

Enhanced by Zemanta

Monday, August 27, 2012

NBA News 2012: Miami Heat Shouldn't Worry About L.A. Lakers After Dwight Howard Trade

LOS ANGELES, CA - DECEMBER 25:  LeBron James #...LOS ANGELES, CA - DECEMBER 25: LeBron James #6 of the Miami Heat looks on during warm-up prior to the NBA game against the Los Angeles Lakers at Staples Center on December 25, 2010 in Los Angeles, California. The Heat defeated the Lakers 96-80. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
Now that the Los Angeles Lakers have officially poached Dwight Howard from the Orlando Magic, the rest of the NBA should just give up, right?

Not so fast. The Miami Heat may have a qualm or two with such a hasty assumption.

You remember the Heat, don't you? That ol' superteam that hoisted the Larry O'Brien Trophy not two months ago. The one that still employs the best player on the planet (LeBron James), one of the top perimeter slashers in the game today (Dwyane Wade), and a skilled big man (Chris Bosh) who'd fit right in at Jurassic Park. The same one that lured Hall-of-Fame three-point specialist Ray Allen to South Beach to join its bench mob.

Yeah, the Heat are still pretty good and deserve to be the prohibitive favorites to defend their title until someone proves capable of knocking them off their perch.

To be sure, the Lakers could be the team to do it, what with the size and skill of Howard and Pau Gasol to punish Miami on the interior. At the very least, the Purple and Gold own a prominent seat at the table of contenders after swooping on Superman, and should leave most of the NBA trembling in fear as a result.

Just not the Miami Heat, and here's why.

Historically speaking, acquiring an elite big man one day doesn't necessarily guarantee ultimate success the next.

The Lakers know this as well as any franchise in the NBA. It took LA four full seasons to win a title with Wilt Chamberlain (in 1972), five for Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to take the team to the top (in 1980) and four for Shaquille O'Neal to come away with some serious hardware with Kobe Bryant by his side (in 2000).

Admittedly, this won't likely be of much concern when it comes to putting up points. These two are both such smart and savvy students of the game that they should be able to co-exist just fine (if not beautifully) offensively. Ideally, the Black Mamba will realize that he doesn't have to (and shouldn't) do it all by himself on the perimeter anymore, and, subsequently, will let Nash handle the ball while he settles in as a lethal scorer and slasher.

The more troubling stakes here are on defense. Kobe (soon to be 34) and Nash (38) will constitute the oldest backcourt in the NBA and, likewise, one that is supremely susceptible to younger, quicker players. The Mamba still garners respect for his D and is anything but a lost cause on that end, though he's a far cry from the shutdown-type guy he once was. Asking him to mark Nash's man like Grant Hill did for several years in Phoenix may be too tall of an order for Bryant at this point in his career.

Who on the Lakers could even hope to keep that human freight train from bowling his way to the basket at will? Metta World Peace is certainly big enough and has quick enough hands to try, but, like the rest of his aging teammates, the 32-year-old isn't as fast on his feet as he used to be.

Much less fast enough to impede James.

Heck, it's a chore to find anyone on this Earth—much less someone who knows how to play basketball—with the combination of size, speed and athleticism to hang with LeBron on a regular basis.

Not that it can't be done, or that there aren't defenders out there with the chops to give King James trouble. Someone with the length, agility, young legs and lateral quickness of a player like, say, Kevin Durant would seem like a solid candidate to start.

If Dwight Howard were 100-percent healthy, these concerns about old dudes with slow feet on the perimeter wouldn't be so pressing. After all, if Wade were to get by Kobe, LeBron by Metta or even Chalmers by Nash, Superman would be there to save the day.

Problem is, he might not even be there when the season starts. He's still recovering from late-April back surgery, from which his doctor suggested he'd be fit to return to basketball-related activities in four months.

Well, it's nearly been four months since Dwight went under the knife, and the closest he's come to setting foot on the court was when he waltzed into the Lakers' practice facility in El Segundo for his Purple-and-Gold introduction this past weekend.

Forget about predicting how the Heat and the new-look Lakers match up on paper. Dwight Howard and his new buddies have plenty of work to do in the Western Conference before they can so much as kick dirt onto Miami's title turf.

They'll have to deal with the cross-hall Clippers, who still have Chris Paul and Blake Griffin and may (or may not) have improved with the additions of Lamar Odom, Jamal Crawford and Grant Hill.

They should be concerned about the Denver Nuggets, who added Andre Iguodala to a young, speedy, athletic group that nearly ran the Lake Show out of the playoffs last time around.

They certainly need be worried about the San Antonio Spurs, who return all of the principal players from a team that had the best regular-season record in the West and came within two wins of reaching the Finals.

And, of course, all roads to the Western Conference crown run through the Oklahoma City Thunder, who dispatched the Lakers in five games in the second round of the postseason and whose young core of Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook, James Harden and Serge Ibaka is still firmly on the upswing.


Enhanced by Zemanta

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

NBA News 2012: Why the Los Angeles Lakers Have the Best Starting Lineup in the NBA

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)
Three combined NBA MVP awards, 33 combined All-Star appearances, eight combined NBA championship rings and four combined Defensive Player of the Year awards make the starting lineup of the 2012-2013 Los Angeles Lakers the best in the NBA.

To put those 33 All-Star appearances among the starting five in perspective, the starting lineup of the Boston Celtics has 27 All-Star appearances, the Miami Heat’s starting five has 23, and the veteran San Antonio Spurs’ starters have 19.

Even before the Lakers’ impressive offseason—clearly the best offseason of any NBA team this summer—they sported an impressive core of Kobe Bryant, Pau Gasol and Andrew Bynum.

Now, with the additions of two-time MVP Steve Nash and three-time Defensive Player of the Year Dwight Howard, the Lakers are back to being serious championship contenders with the best starting five in basketball.

For the first time in over a decade, the Lakers have a true point guard. Even though Nash is at the tail end of his career at 38 years old, he’s still playing at an extremely efficient level. He led a supporting cast of role players to a .500 record last season, nearly leading the Phoenix Suns to an improbable playoff berth. Although Nash may no longer be considered a top-five point guard in the NBA, he’s certainly still among the top 10.

During his three MVP-caliber seasons with the Suns from 2004 to 2007 (within which Nash accumulated back-to-back MVP awards), the South African-born floor general led Phoenix to 177 regular-season wins.

If we estimate that the Charlotte Bobcats would have won nine games total had the NBA had a normal 82-game schedule last season (instead of winning seven in their 66-game season), it would still take the Bobcats 20 seasons to win as many games as Nash and the Suns did in three seasons.

Nash has simply made a living in the NBA by running an efficient offense, making all of his teammates better and winning games. If he’s given the same opportunity in Los Angeles, there’s no reason why that trend shouldn’t continue.

At shooting guard, ho hum, the Lakers have one of the best players in the NBA. Bryant has five rings to his name, two of which he won as the Lakers’ unquestioned alpha dog, and three more from when Shaquille O’Neal was on board.

Even though Bryant will turn 34 years old on August 23rd, he’s still the Lakers’ leader and is always hungry to win.

At small forward, Metta World Peace sticks out as the Lakers’ lone weak link in the starting five.

Even though World Peace hasn’t had his best NBA seasons in Los Angeles and his name change didn’t make him any more peaceful, he’s still a former NBA Defensive Player of the Year who prides himself on locking down opponents. Sure, he was rumored to be amnestied this summer, but at least the Lakers upgraded with the trigger-happy Antawn Jamison off the bench.

At power forward, Gasol has become one of the most underrated and underappreciated players in the entire NBA by a mixture of trade rumors, his “soft” label and a minor tendency to fade statistically in the postseason.

Even though Gasol’s stats (17.4 points and 10.4 rebounds per game) last season were seen as a down year, 90 percent of players in the NBA at his position would love to be able to call those numbers a “down year.”

Also, fans often forget just how dominant Gasol was in the NBA Finals in 2009 and again in 2010 when the Lakers won back-to-back titles. Over the course of those two series, Gasol averaged 18.6 points, 10.4 rebounds and 2.2 blocks per game. So much for fading in the clutch.

Finally, although he’s currently recovering from back surgery, Howard brings a dominant post presence that Lakers have gotten used to seeing over the decades (joining a list that includes Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Wilt Chamberlain and O’Neal).

Last season, Howard ranked No. 1 in the NBA in rebounds (14.5 per game), No. 2 in field-goal percentage (57.3 percent) and No. 3 in blocks (2.16 per game). He was the only player in the NBA to rank in the top five in all three categories.

Howard is simply a dominant interior presence who has already shown the ability to carry a team to the NBA Finals. He did so in 2009 with the Orlando Magic.

On paper, the Lakers have the best starting five in the game. But that’s the problem. Right now, the Lakers’ success is only reflected by names and numbers.

Nash and Bryant are getting up there in age, while Howard’s health is very much a question mark coming off of back surgery. Howard may not start the season healthy, and there’s sure to be some growing pains along the way (a la the Miami Heat when they first assembled their Big Three).

At the moment, we can only speculate as to what this band of superstars can do out on the court. Even so, this team’s championship odds are right up there with the Miami Heat and Oklahoma City Thunder.

If they fall short of winning the Larry O’Brien Trophy, the season will undoubtedly be viewed as a failure. But regardless of what happens at season’s end, this team will be fun to watch.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1301017-breaking-down-why-la-lakers-have-the-best-starting-lineup-in-the-nba

Enhanced by Zemanta

Saturday, August 11, 2012

NBA News 2012: Howard goes to Lakers in four-team deal

English: Andrew Bynum playing with the Los Ang...English: Andrew Bynum playing with the Los Angeles Lakers (Photo credit: Wikipedia)Following a drawn out and at times tenuous process, the Orlando Magic have finally said goodbye to Dwight Howard.

The All-Star center has been officially sent to the Los Angeles Lakers in a complicated four-team, 12-player swap. The deal was consummated after NBA officials reviewed all aspects on Friday.

The Magic get guard Arron Afflalo and forward Al Harrington from the Denver Nuggets, center Nikola Vucevic and forward Moe Harkless from the Philadelphia 76ers, and forward Josh McRoberts and guard Christian Eyenga from the Lakers. They also receive a conditional first-round pick from each of the other three teams involved.

Philadelphia also ships guard Andre Iguodala to Denver, and receives center Andrew Bynum from the Lakers and guard Jason Richardson from Orlando.

Got it?

“A primary goal for our basketball team is to achieve sustainability while maintaining a long-term vision,” Magic general manager Rob Hennigan said. “We feel this deal puts us in a position to begin building in that direction. In addition to the six players joining our team, we will be in a position to maximize our salary cap flexibility in the near future, as well as utilize the multiple draft picks we have acquired going forward.”

The Lakers also received guard Chris Duhon and forward Earl Clark from Orlando, while Orlando receives five draft picks over five years.

Howard’s Lakers’ debut may have to wait, since he’s expected to miss the start of the regular season while he recovers from back surgery, sources told ESPN.com.

In a coup for the Lakers, they acquired Howard without giving up forward Pau Gasol.

“It looks like Superman has found a home,” Lakers star Kobe Bryant posted on his Facebook page. “I wish nothing but the best for Big Bynum. I hope he follows what was a great season last year with an even better one next year. I know LA is excited about the deal and rightfully so. The Lakers landed a piece that will hopefully carry the franchise long after I’m gone. I have spoken to Dwight Howard already and we are locked and loaded to bring back the title.”

For their part, Denver was thrilled to acquire the 28-year-old Iguodala. The 6-foot-6, 207-pounder has averaged 15.3 points, 5.8 rebounds and 4.9 assists in eight seasons with the 76ers.

“It’s not often you get the opportunity to improve your team by adding an All-Star player like Andre Iguodala,” Nuggets Executive Vice President Masai Ujiri said. “He’s an Olympian, a great defender and a great all-around player. We think he fits in really well with the type of system coach George Karl runs and the team we have here in Denver.”

Philadelphia was also happy to land Bynum, who grew up about an hour from Philadelphia, in Plainsboro, N.J. He could sign a three-year, $60 million extension this season or wait to become a free agent after the season and be eligible for a five-year, $102 million deal.

“We’re very excited to welcome Andrew Bynum, one of the league’s best, young centers, and Jason Richardson, a proven, respected veteran, to the Philadelphia 76ers,” managing owner Josh Harris said. “As we stated from the outset, our ownership group is committed to exploring every option available to us in order to improve our team. This trade is the culmination of a very active off-season, one that we believe positions the Sixers for success this season and for many years to come.”

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

Monday, July 9, 2012

NBA News 2012: Would Brandon Rush Be a Good Fit for the Lakers?

OAKLAND, CA - MARCH 27:  Kobe Bryant #24 of th...OAKLAND, CA - MARCH 27: Kobe Bryant #24 of the Los Angeles Lakers goes up for a shot while defended by Charles Jenkins #22 and Brandon Rush #4 of the Golden State Warriors at Oracle Arena on March 27, 2012 in Oakland, California. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
It has only been a couple of days into free agency and the rumor mill has been in high gear around the league. While other teams, notably the Brooklyn Nets and the Atlanta Hawks, have had a productive few days of making roster moves, the Lakers have remained quiet. In fact, the only confirmed deal has been the re-signing of second-year point guard Darius Morris to a one-year deal worth $962,195 on July 2nd.

Free agency in 2012 is proving to be very challenging for the Lakers, who are already are trying to trim the financial fat of their player contract costs. In a perfect world, the Lakers would have been able to acquire free agent Deron Williams. Heck, forget a perfect world. In the previous collective bargaining agreement, the Lakers could have easily afforded to offer a max deal to Williams. However, with a new severe luxury tax system and a dramatic increase in revenue sharing, the Lakers simply cannot afford to go after whoever they want and entice whoever they want with max, guaranteed contracts.

Welcome to the new CBA era of professional basketball.

The truth is the Lakers cannot afford to pay more than their $3.09 million mini mid-level exception to any potential free agents. With a lot of teams, such as the Phoenix Suns, Houston Rockets, and the Toronto Raptors, emerging from the list that are able to offer free agents more money and even max contracts, the Lakers are essentially working to make financially savvy moves with their hands tied, while still aiming to improve the team as a whole.

Whether or not you are willing to take Jim Buss’ word of a plan to not make any major changes to the core of the team, we can all agree there needs to be improvement to some area of the roster because getting ousted in the second round of the playoffs is getting old to me, and I bet you would agree. Since, we could all use a break from the Dwight Howard saga, let’s look at a move that would help a definite need to the Lakers: their bench.

Anyone familiar with the Lakers understands that the bench was dismal last season. In fact, improving the Laker bench is widely considered the team’s top priority to address during this off-season. When news broke a few days ago that the Lakers were interested in the Golden State WarriorsBrandon Rush, it appeared as if Mitch Kupchak and Jim Buss were taking a step towards enhancing the Lakers bench.

The Lakers are in dire need of capable and consistent shooters, especially off the bench. Last season with Golden State, Rush averaged 9.8 points, 3.9 rebounds and 1.4 assists per game. He had his best season in terms of field goal percentage and three-point percentages at 50.1 and 45.2 respectively. In fact, his 45.2 percentage from the three-point line was good enough for sixth best in the league. Compare that to the Lakers’ team three-point percentage of 32.6 or Steve Blake’s three-point percentage of 33.5, and he would be regarded as the Lakers’ best three-point shooter.

Most importantly, the presence of Brandon Rush spreads the floor, which would greatly benefit the Lakers offense. However, there are of course some negatives that come with Rush’s game. He lacks speed and a defensive mentality, as he has shown struggles to defend wing players in his four years of NBA experience. Rush is currently ranked 217th in the league in total defense. Rush also limits his game to knockdown shooting and, unlike Matt Barnes who isn’t expected to return to the Lakers, does not cut or drive to the basket.

The Warriors have reported that they want to keep Rush and have made the first move in proving that. Last week, the Warriors’ made a qualifying offer to the 6’6″ guard of $4,089,058 to make Rush a restricted free agent. This means that the Warriors can now match any offer from other teams for Rush in order to retain him if they wish to do so. This stands as an obstacle for the Lakers if their interest in Rush turns into serious talks, but the opportunity to acquire the twenty-six year old is still alive.

For the Lakers, this means implementing a sign-and-trade in order for Rush to wear purple and gold. The positive news for the Lakers is that the Warriors, among several other teams, have expressed interest in the Lakers unrestricted free agent Jordan Hill. Hill declined his option of $3,362,527 in order to test the free agency market. The Lakers do hold partial Bird-rights for Hill, which allow them to exceed the salary cap in order to re-sign Hill.


Enhanced by Zemanta

Friday, July 6, 2012

NBA News 2012: Steve Nash choosing Lakers instead of Raptors promotes misconceptions

photo taken by flickr user The CJM. source is ...photo taken by flickr user The CJM. source is here: http://flickr.com/photos/thecjm/84033610/ (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
On Wednesday night, Steve Nash orchestrated a sign-and-trade deal that sent him to the Los Angeles Lakers. The Raptors made the high offer to the 38-year-old Canadian point guard, but missed out on him anyway. That the Raptors could not land this particular player is promoting some pretty egregious misconceptions:

1.  The Toronto Raptors cannot sign free agents: The last time the Raptors went after a marquee free agent with an expensive offer, they ended up signing him. Just because Hedo Turkoglu’s season in Toronto was a colossal failure does not erase the fact that they beat out overtures from other teams to land him. They overpaid, sure, but so do most teams in free agency. Moreover, the Raptors got their two best players in franchise history, Vince Carter and Chris Bosh, to sign second contracts with the team.

2. NBA players don’t like Toronto: In fact, Toronto is frequently mentioned as one of the favourite cities of many NBA players. For one, Milwaukee Bucks point guard and Los Angeles native Brandon Jennings: “I just love the city of Toronto, man. It’s a great city. The people are great here. There’s always something to do. It’s a great city.” Meanwhile, Raptors restricted free agent Jerryd Bayless is looking into buying a home in Toronto, regardless of whether he comes back to the Raptors next year: “Some of my closest friends are here. They’ve shown me, and I’ve fallen in love with it. I want to make it my home.”

3. The Raptors will always be as unattractive as they are now: The Bulls have been the best regular season team in the Eastern Conference for two years. How did they do it? Not by making a bunch of free agent signings and spending themselves into contention. In 2007, the Bulls landed Joakim Noah in the draft. In 2008, the Bulls landed Derrick Rose with the first-overall pick in the draft. In the 2009 playoffs, the Bulls pushed the Celtics to seven games in an entertaining first-round series. In 2010, the Bulls then hired Tom Thibodeau to coach and had enough in place to get Carlos Boozer (who has been a disappointment, by the way) to come to Chicago. In that order, that is how they became good. After Michael Jordan retired, the Bulls struck out repeatedly in free agency, missing out on Tracy McGrady, Grant Hill, among others. Does anyone want to argue that Chicago is not a desirable city? There are only a handful of teams that will consistently be able to draw free agents: the Lakers, Knicks and Heat. Recently, the Nets and Clippers were able to encourage star players to force trades to them (and Brooklyn has still failed to land Dwight Howard). In both cases, they already had one star in place (Deron Williams, Blake Griffin). Everybody else has to do it the same way: by drafting well, trading well, hiring good coaches and getting really lucky. The Raptors have never been good enough for long enough (one playoff series victory in 17 years) to jump to the above conclusion. Saying that they have is a self-pitying lie.

4. You can’t win a championship without being able to land marquee free agents: Exactly two teams have been spurred on to title runs by signing superstars in free agency: The 2000-02 Los Angeles Lakers, via the 1996 signing of Shaquille O’Neal, and the 2012 Miami Heat, via the 2010 signings (acquisitions, technically) of LeBron James and Chris Bosh. Nearly every other championship team has been built on the foundation of draft picks and trades: the 2011 Dallas Mavericks, the 2009-10 Lakers, the 2008 Boston Celtics, the San Antonio Spurs, and so forth. In the case of the Lakers and Celtics, they were able to trade for stars (Pau Gasol for Los Angeles, Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett for Boston) only because they already had other stars on their rosters (Paul Pierce, Kobe Bryant). Additionally, the Celtics had been bad enough for long enough that they had significant assets (draft picks, past, present and future) to trade.

5. There is no way Bryan Colangelo can recover from this: Colangelo is in a precarious position, but the general manager is nothing if not resourceful. The Raptors will try once again to pry Kyle Lowry from Houston, which will be more difficult now that former Rockets point guard Goran Dragic is off to Phoenix. The Raptors could make a play for Knicks point guard Jeremy Lin, although it is tough to envision a scenario in which New York does not match an offer sheet. The Raptors will also be active in the trade market, kicking the tires on players such as Jennings and Memphis’s Rudy Gay. Colangelo is in a very tough place, but that does not mean he has no move left to make.


Enhanced by Zemanta

Thursday, December 23, 2010

NBA News 2010: Lakers perimeter defense to challenge Heat

DSC02142Image by bridgetds via Flickr
At times, Ron Artest feels bored on the court.

He says playing on team with scorers such as Kobe Bryant, Pau Gasol and Lamar Odom can cause him to lose interest on the offensive end. It's the life of the forwards Artest and Matt Barnes, the Los Angeles Lakers' two defensive stoppers. While the Miami Heat's superstars are arguably their best defenders, the Lakers will counter in Saturday's game with a pair of players whose priority is defense.

Tough defense.

"It's kind of cool because I get the chance to still be effective on the court rather than just be a scorer," Artest said. "But it's also kind of boring. I'm such a good defender but sometimes I'm not scoring and scoring is fun, especially when you can score."

He and Barnes, the backup small forward, will spend the bulk of the game defending Heat star LeBron James. The two have earned reputations as being aggressive defenders throughout their careers. Artest has twice made the NBA's All-Defensive first-team, with many feeling he was snubbed last year.

"It's just as exciting on defense because when I get stops and steals, it's kind of an adrenaline rush," Artest said. "I know that I'm doing things on the court that no one else is doing on the court."

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sports/miami-heat/fl-heat-lakers-1224-20101223-5,0,4828786.story


Enhanced by Zemanta

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

NBA News 2010: Will It Come Down to Heat-Lakers in the NBA Finals?

NBA Finals FloorImage by frankgumola via Flickr
When LeBron, D-Wade and Bosh announced their unholy union, thoughts immediately turned to their natural Western Conference foils, the two-time defending champion Los Angeles Lakers. If we thought the Lakers versus the Celtics' geriatric Big Three made for great NBA Finals drama, what about Kobe and Co. versus the newest, best Big Three in the league?

Obviously, David Stern and the NBA front office will be dreaming, praying and according to conspiracy theorists, rigging the league so a Heat-Lakers Finals matchup will come to fruition. Until then, all the casual NBA fan can do is sit and hope that the Lakers' newest dynasty has one more run left and that the Heat develop the chemistry it takes to make a championship run.


Enhanced by Zemanta