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Messages - RolandoBlackman

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1
NBA Discussion / Hasta la vista, Bynum
« on: March 19, 2011, 10:08:54 PM »
Hey wk!
   
Andrew Bynum, despite the hype he has received (hey, this IS la~la land) is deceptively good. As I watched him contain Dwight Howard in the Lakers' triumph over Orlando, one had to notice the size differential between Bynum and Howard ~ Andrew is noticeably larger than Dwight. Howard is not used to running up against an opponent of Bynum's size and athleticism...needless to say, he was less productive against Bynum's defense. However, because of his apparent susceptiblity to injury (penchant for visits to the Playboy mansion ~ another topic), Bynum is trade bait, especially now that he has demonstrated his prowess...I expect Mitch Kupchak to put together a deal immediately after the season ends while Bynum's stock is high. Kareem, ya done good!
   
~ RB
Shaq #1

2
Hey, y'all:
  
David Stern, after a particularly (to him, at least) rancorous diatribe recently by the even~normally shrill Stan Van Gundy had had enough guff from him. 'I don't think you will be hearing any more from him this year," replied a taciturn Stern when queried about Van Gundy's remarks. And guess what? Not a peep from anyone in Orlando, nothing since Stern's pronouncement. Now THAT is power...let's see if Stern can deal with the upcoming CBA tsunami better than Roger Goodell and the NFL have.
  
There can be little doubt that Stern wields greater power in the sport he presides over than anyone since Juan Antonio Samaranch (of Olympics fame)...I'm just sayin'!
  
~ RB
Shaq #1

3
NBA Discussion / THANK YOU DETROIT FOR PROVING ME WRONG!!!
« on: June 16, 2004, 07:57:19 AM »
Hey X3!!!

Props to the Pistons and their 'athletic supporters' - they kicked boot on the LAL like nobody's 'bidness'.  In particular, 'Big Ben' put it on 'Our Heroes' - he put his offensive arsenal on display with an impressive assortment of jumpers, drives to the hoop, and jams that sealed the series with for the Pistons.  Let's face it, Lakers fans - without Kobe's game-winning 3, it would have been a sweep!

What can a "TrueLaker" say but "Dang - that hurt."  A season that began with so much hype and promise ends with a thud, and with many hanging questions to add to the miserable 'drama' that has pervaded the LAL this year.  Who is coming back next season?  Phil? Kobe? GP? At this point I don't even care who is returning, other than Shaq - the only Laker star that played even halfway decently in the Finals.

I will post something more constrcutive after the pain (definitely NOT the 'shock') has dissipated somewhat - right now, it's still too fresh.  Dang.

-RB
Shaq #1

P.S. - FYI X3, I watched the game all the way to the bitter end - even my wife, who normally enjoys kibitzing about the LAL asked me "Why are you watching this?"  I watched because this series was like a bad freeway accident...you want to drive by without looking, but the carnage is too great to be ignored.

4
NBA Discussion / Golden opportunity blown Detroit
« on: June 09, 2004, 10:49:22 AM »
Hey WoW!!

I've seen bigger collapses...remember the "Showtime" Lakers being up by 6 in the Finals with 25 seconds to go, and Worthy making two quick turnovers in a row that resulted in making Gerald Henderson a hero for the Celtics?

How about Reggie Miller drilling those 3's in the ECF a few years back as time ran out to lift the Pacers to victory after being down by 6 with less than 20 seconds to go in the 4th?

It happens...and in my experience, usually it breaks down the will and resolve of the team on the receiving end of a knockout blow.


-RB

Shaq #1

5
NBA Discussion / spursfan101
« on: June 09, 2004, 10:42:35 AM »
Hey y'all!!!

Knowing my political orientation/affiliation already, I am sure no one here expects me to say anything good about Reagan - and, you are right!

While I do not hold Reagan himself responsible for the direction the nation was guided to during his administration (he was too old and tired for that), he was the figurehead of a tightly-coordinated G.O.P. 'cell' whose prime goal was to advance their right-wing agenda at all costs.  It is this "go for broke" policy, when combined with mountains of soft money contributions that has made the 'conservative' wing of the Republican so powerful and influential.  I am always amazed that Republicans are taken aback at being labelled as 'racists' - however, the mainstream Republican pandering to the 'Dixiecrat' wing of the party (symbolized by noted civil rights advocates Jesse Helms and Strom Thrumond, not to mention the infamous Louisiana Republican gubernatorial candidate, KKK Grand Dragon David Duke) cannot be ignored.  Any person who truly believes in the principles that this country is based upon cannot be a Republican, IMHO.

Man, I'm just getting started with this...hoo, boy.

"Give Hinckley a Second Chance" - 1980s bumper sticker

-RB
 

6
NBA Discussion / 'Monster Mode' a must in Motown
« on: June 09, 2004, 10:21:54 AM »
Hey WoW!  

I'm kind of with Ricko on this one...the LAL must win 2 of the 3 in Detroit.  This will give them back the home-court edge that may be needed for the Lakers' two-man game to be successful.  I still don't feel good about this series at all, yet - this was supposed to be a rout by the LAL at every level.  Not hardly!

-RB

Shaq #1

7
NBA Discussion / Ronald Reagan
« on: June 09, 2004, 10:08:49 AM »
Hey 101!!!  

While this article is undoubtedly over-the-top, ever since he was governor of Cal-eee-fornia (said with a heavy Austrian accent), 'Ronald Ray-guns' has polarized the electorate - you either loved him or you hated him.  As the writer of this article appears to be (seeing as how he was tear-gassed at U.C. Berkeley during Reagan's watch as Governator) a product of the '60s 'Revolution Against The Establishment', it is not surprising to see the ill feelings he still harbors because of Rondog.  

He's a drug store truck drivin' man
                                                                 
He's the head of the Ku Klux Klan
                                                                       
When summer comes rollin' around
                                                                       
We'll be lucky to get out of town.

-Roger McGuinn and Gram Parsons


Well...this IS the U.S.A., thankfully we all can deliver diatribes such as this with little fear of the sound of jackboots at the doorstep as a result.  Of course, Bush & Co. are doing everything possible to change this. "'The Usurper' must be ousted" - my mantra for 2004.

-RB
Shaq #1

8
NBA Discussion / 'Monster Mode' a must in Motown
« on: June 09, 2004, 09:47:21 AM »
Hey y'all!!!  

It is apparent to me that the upcoming Game 3 of the Finals will be the one that ultimately determines the eventual series victor...should 'Our Heroes' come away with the 'W' in Game 3, it will be exceedingly difficult for the younger, less-experienced Pistons to avoid the lengthening shadow of despondency that will surely be cast over them in the event of a defeat.

It is imperative that 'The Big Aristotle' come out with his game face on, as he did against SA in the famed 'Milk Money' 2000 WCF...as a Shaq-supporter, I know that he still has not yet put forth his best performance in this year's "winnin' time", even though for the most part he has played with energy and made major contributions to the winning ways of the LAL. Up to this point, I have not seen Shaq perform his "Godzilla Stride" in the playoffs this year,  as he does when he's really feeling it.  It's time to break out now - Shaq must rampage on Detroit just as Godzilla did on Tokyo, leaving only devastation in his wake. It's up to Shaq Daddy to deliver an M.D.E.-level performance for 'Our Heroes' to emerge from this series as 'The Champs'.  Nothing less will do, I think.  It has already been proven that the Pistons cannot contain 'The Pachyderm' - now the LAL must relentlessly feed the rock to him until the Pistons are battered into submission by the 'Unstoppable Juggernaut' that is Shaquille O'Neal.

I'll bet anything that Shaq is petitioning PJ for 'Luuuuuke' Walton to get more PT in the upcoming games...check out what 'The Big Historical' had to say about him in this L.A. Times article today:



This Kid Rocks as He Goes on Roll
By J.A. Adande, Los Angeles Time Staff Writer


Sounds the Detroit Pistons didn't want to hear:

• 19,000 fans in Staples Center chanting "Luuuuuke" and Luc Robitaille nowhere in sight.

• The postgame interview room moderator announcing "Luke Walton will be next."

Those were the noises that accompanied Luke Walton's breakout performance of the playoffs.

Better to judge by the sounds than the numbers, because the statistics weren't mind-blowing — seven points, eight assists, five rebounds and two blocked shots in 27 minutes of play. But it was the timing of plays, the effect they had on the Lakers' 99-91 victory over the Detroit Pistons in Game 2 of the NBA Finals that led to these sound bites:

"Luke Walton was phenomenal tonight," Piston Coach Larry Brown said.

"He just came in and had a monster performance," said Laker guard Kobe Bryant, who sent the game into overtime on a three-pointer with 2.1 seconds remaining.

"You can talk about my shot all night long, but without Luke in the game playing as well as he did, we wouldn't be in that position."

He even was the topic of postgame conversation between Shaquille O'Neal's mother and Denzel Washington's wife.

"Luke was all right," Lucille Harrison said. "He did good. I'm happy for him."

The sounds of success.

The funny thing is, Walton isn't much for words himself. He doesn't talk a whole lot, just enough to get his point across.

When Jack Ramsay first met him, Walton didn't say anything at all. Bill Walton brought his son, about 14 at the time, to an All-Star game and introduced the kid to the coach of Walton's 1977 NBA championship team. The father said Luke — christened for the nickname of Portland teammate Maurice Lucas — would be the best player of all his sons.

Ramsay asked Luke whether he was going to play in the NBA one day. Young Walton just nodded. A big, emphatic nod.

It takes that type of confidence to make an impact in the NBA Finals when you're a rookie who hasn't played in the previous two playoff games, and spent a total of eight minutes on the court in the four games before that.

Walton stayed sharp, working hard in the three-on-three games the reserves play after practice, then sticking around to take extra jump shots with shooting coach Bob Thate.

Still, there's a big difference between playing half-court games in a gym while the media concentrates on interviewing other players and being called upon to save a team from falling behind two games to none in the NBA Finals.

"Of course" he was nervous, Walton said.

"But I love stuff like this. I've always loved big games and I was just hoping I would get my chance."

OK, that's what he was thinking. But what was Coach Phil Jackson thinking, sending the kid into the fray with the Lakers trailing by a point late in the first quarter? We said Jackson needed to make a radical adjustment after the Lakers lost Game 1, and this was it.

"Maybe insanity is the best excuse," Jackson said. "I just needed somebody in there that could move the ball and had the ability to create things off the dribble. And Luke is a kid, a rookie. Of course you always worry about them getting calls offensively, having things happen right for them. And then, the other end of the floor, that they don't get overmatched defensively. But he held his own and actually was the player of the game, really, for us tonight."

The defensive end was the key. Normally, teams try to exploit Walton by posting him up with bigger players or trying to beat him off the dribble, and they force him out of the game.

At first, the Pistons went at him with Corliss Williamson. But Walton drew an offensive foul against Williamson, who pushed him away. He also forced a turnover when he jumped into the lane to help on Richard Hamilton, who lost the ball. In the fourth, he tipped away a layup by Hamilton.

By holding his own on defense, Walton could stay in to help the offense. He always has a knack for doing that with his ability to find the open man — especially O'Neal.

"It amazes me how he can give me the ball and guys that have been playing with me four, five, six years can't give me the ball," O'Neal said.

Walton got the ball to everyone Tuesday night. He found Karl Malone, who was fouled and made two free throws. Then he dished to his buddy Kareem Rush for a three-pointer. He drove and reached around a defender to pass to O'Neal for a dunk. He also made a nice bounce pass in traffic to O'Neal for another slam.

Walton's final assist came on a pass to O'Neal. In overtime, the Lakers led by six with 1 1/2 minutes remaining when O'Neal passed to Walton in the corner. Walton dribbled down the baseline and just when it appeared he was going to get in trouble he threw a look-away alley-oop to O'Neal for a two-hand dunk that cemented the Lakers' victory.

Amid all the passing he managed to make all three of his shots — on a pass from Fisher, an open three-pointer and a coast-to-coast layup off a defensive rebound.

The Lakers outscored the Pistons by three points after he entered in the first quarter, and went from a tie game to an eight-point lead when he came in for the final 9 1/2 minutes of the second quarter.

The fans serenaded him after every basket, every assist, every loose ball that he knocked to a teammate.

"LUUUUUKE."

J.A. Adande can be reached at j.a.adande@latimes.com


-RB

Shaq #1
 

9
NBA Discussion / Too close for comfort.
« on: June 09, 2004, 09:02:20 AM »
Hey 101!!!

I think that this victory will positively affect the Lakers far more than it will be a downer for the Pistons.  After so many miracle plays in this year's "winnin' time", 'Our Heroes' by now must have begun feeling that this is a 'team of destiny' - we all know that at the pro level, attitude is a tremendous factor in determining who wins and who loses.

Hey, I don't want this to be a re-peat of the series that ended the chance for an 80's four-peat before it ever got started - of course, I am talking about the LAL-Houston series in the 1986 WCF in which (the VERY under-rated, IMHO) Ralph Sampson, one of "The Two Towers' of the Rockets' center-dominated team (with (H)Akeem Olajuwon being the Other Tower) hit a rainbow to end the Kareem-era of 'Showtime'.  The famous image of a stunned Michael Cooper laid out on the floor of 'The Fabulous Forum' in disbelief at 'Our Heroes' exit before the annual pre-ordained matchup could be enjoined against the (sound of lugy being hocked) Boston Celtics is still burned indelibly into my memory cells..."Never Again", I say!

It's great to see how involved Magic is with the Staples Center crowd - this guy will be Governator someday, if he wants...I hope he's a Democrat!!!  LOL

-RB

Shaq #1

10
NBA Discussion / Golden opportunity blown Detroit
« on: June 09, 2004, 08:36:10 AM »
Hey Reality!!!

First of all, yes, I'm still juicing and growing/juicing my own wheatgrass -  let me tell you, my fresh wheatgrass is MUCH stronger (in both taste (OMG) and effect) than whatever it is they sell you at Jamba Juice and the like.  My son can even  almost stand it now!

That game last night almost gave me heart failure - let's face it, this is the weakest of the four Lakers Shaq/Kobe-era Finals teams.  With Karl only a shadow of himself and Payton doing his 'The Glove is Off' routine, 'Our Heroes' have been exposed as now having only two legitimate scorers and defenders amongst the starting quintet.

Fortunately for LAL fans, those two offensive/defensive options compose what is arguably the greatest tandem ever set foot on the 94x47 chunk of hardwood (R.I.P., Chick)!!!  And when one of the bench contributes as solidly as Luuuuuuke Walton did last night, the LAL are difficult to defeat...BTW, as a Dad myself it was kind of cool to see the fatherly pride beaming from 'The Big Red-head', Bill Walton at his son's high-wattage performance.  That alley-oop from Luuuuuke to Shaquille in OT was as sa-weeet as they come!

Definite props to the Pistons and their fans...this ain't gonna be easy.  

Note to Shaq-bashers - guess who hit a crucial free-throw at the end of regulation when it counted?  You know that make got 'The Daddy' rolling and revved up for his dominant effort in the OT period...oh yeah!!!

-RB

Shaq #1
 

11
NBA Discussion / Hey, Rolando!
« on: June 07, 2004, 10:31:41 AM »
Hey JoeV!  

I am not sure that I have the time to be a Fantasy League member in good standing - during the school year, my one-and-only progeny and I are, for all intents and purposes joined at the hip so that he will have the academic standing necessary for entrance into the top universities.  If you noticed, it is only recently that I have begun posting regularly again - this is due to the school year being pretty much completed, and the targeted performance achieved (praise the LORD for summer vacation - we micro-managing parents need a break).  I could participate during the summertime, but that's pretty much it.  

Sorry, brah - this is a long-term project that I have to see through to successful completion.  I've never been in a fantasy league, and have only a dim idea of how they operate - since you are so enamored of it though, I'll have to check it out and get back with you.

Laters
-RB

Shaq #1

12
NBA Discussion / jn I know you are unhappy about last night.....
« on: June 03, 2004, 07:57:03 PM »
Hey jn!

Take pride in your boyz' accomplishments this season - you may recall that before the WCF I stated that "Our Heroes" would have a much easier time of it vs. Sacto than Minn. - the Kings are already psyched out by "Our Heroes" after so many playoff losses...besides, 'TrueLakers' derive far more pleasure from defeats of the "Queens" than of KG & Co. at this point.  If Sam had been there for the T-Wolves, we all know the outcome could have been quite different.  Respect, brah...

-RB

Shaq #1

13
NBA Discussion / Bush's most hilarious choice of words yet.
« on: June 03, 2004, 07:47:47 PM »
Hey jn!

Thanks for this info...as a precinct chief in my locality for the Dems, I have already used this tidbit to energize my already somewhat-dispirited campaign workers.  Let's face it, John Kerry has all the appeal of a two-day-old Budweiser that has been left open, sitting in the hot sun - but ya run what ya brung, and that's all we've got.  Frankly, it looks pretty grim for this round of the Presidential election - however, you never know what can happen.  Maybe Vanity Fair will run another expose similiar to the one that broadsided Bush Sr. in '92 - that's about the best we can hope for.  There is no well-funded machine on the Dems' side to keep this sort of news in the public eye for long.

-RB
Shaq #1

14
NBA Discussion / News from L.A.
« on: June 03, 2004, 01:23:08 PM »
Hey y'all!

Check the "incentive clause" bit in here - good one!

June 3, 2004

NBA FINALS LAKERS VS. DETROIT
They're Feeling Quite Spirited
 Lakers praise the Pistons' defense, while Jackson warns them not to dismiss Detroit's capabilities on offense.

By Mike Bresnahan, Times Staff Writer

Cranky and edgy the last time they faced the media after a practice, the Lakers were decidedly more upbeat Wednesday morning, Shaquille O'Neal's going as far as to welcome the ever-growing throng by bellowing, "Hello, people and peoplettes."

The Minnesota Timberwolves, plucky to the end, are done, and a new sense of vigor seems to be moving through the Lakers, four victories from a fourth championship in five seasons, a first in 19 seasons for Karl Malone.

Their opponent now decided, the Lakers began Wednesday by breaking down film of the Detroit Pistons, who consider it a banner day whenever they break 75 points and have made it to the NBA Finals for the first time since 1990 primarily because of an active, smothering defense.

The Lakers said the right things after their short practice, praising the Pistons' defensive speed and acknowledging the need to control the boards.

Coach Phil Jackson even warned that the Lakers better not laugh too hard at the Pistons' low-scoring series with Indiana in the Eastern Conference finals.

"Perhaps the biggest concern of mine is that the players, simply because the scores were in the 60s or mid-70s, don't take for granted that this team's not a good enough offensive team to stay with us," he said.

Not without their bumps and bruises, the Lakers found their list of ailing continuing to multiply, with Malone, Derek Fisher, Rick Fox and Devean George experiencing injuries of various degrees.

None are expected to miss Game 1, but Malone's injury appears to be the most serious, a right knee that swelled up after Monday's Western Conference finale against the Timberwolves. He had fluid drained from it Tuesday.

George has a sore left knee and Fisher continues to recover from a tender right knee that he said limited him to 75% of his ability Monday. Fox, suffering from neck and shoulder pain, will visit a neurologist today.

Five full days between games has a way of healing those that need it, although Malone and Fisher could continue to be affected.

"Both Fish and Karl have injuries that are going to be debilitating somewhat," Jackson said. "I think it's going to be the wearing of the schedule that's going to be the telltale. I think they'll be able to push their way through these games early."

The NBA regular-season schedule matched the Lakers against the Pistons twice in the first 11 games of the Laker season, on Nov. 14 and 18, the only two times they would play each other unless they met in the NBA Finals.

Each team took its separate path to get this far, the Lakers via armloads of discord and disharmony that finally seemed to recede in San Antonio with Fisher's last-millisecond heave, the Pistons via a sound defensive scheme and a save-the-season deadline trade involving, of all people, Rasheed Wallace, who has taken the term "reinvented" to an entirely different plane.

It was Wallace who used to rack up technical fouls as if they were part of an incentive clause in his contract, few games passing consecutively without him annoying a referee enough to get whistled.

Since joining the Pistons after a one-game stay with the Atlanta Hawks, Wallace has been a model citizen, understanding his place in the offense — Option No. 2B, behind Richard Hamilton and usually Chauncey Billups. He has even slapped on a set of headphones after games to give insightful TV interviews on occasion, a clear deviation from his anti-media days.

It's enough to wonder if the Pistons are really as intimidating and irritable as the ones who swept the Lakers in the 1989 Finals.

"They're pretty lightweight," Jackson said with a wry smile. "They don't have the [Rick] Mahorn, [Bill] Laimbeer, [John] Salley, etc., group, that were pretty vicious. Dennis Rodman, all those guys packed a real good punch."

At the same time, Jackson said his assessment was less an indictment of the current-day crop of Pistons than the current NBA rules, rife with harsher penalties for flagrant fouls and the like.

"The rules were different in the game [in the late 1980s]," he said. "This was a [Detroit] team that if you went in there and took a shot, they were going to pound you a couple of times if the whistle was blown just to make sure you even thought about coming back. Those types of things don't exist in today's game.

"You can't do those activities that Detroit was doing at that time any more in the game. That part of it has changed. The fact that they're a very good defensive team … the Pistons of the '80s were a very good defensive team."

O'Neal, for his part, said the past Pistons were "hard-nosed and played hard, much like this Detroit team." He boiled the series down to the "Fantastic Four against the Wallace guys," elaborating on Ben and Rasheed Wallace's importance by implying, once again, that he needs the ball to keep them at bay.

"We definitely have to get the ball inside, get those guys in foul trouble," O'Neal said. "We just can't let them roam around and block shots and get rebounds. Those two guys are determining factors in their game. They're going to go at our big guys, we'll have to go at their big guys too. They're going to use their fouls and do whatever everybody else has been trying to do. But if we keep playing the way we've been playing, I like our chances."

Previous Encounters

The Lakers and Pistons split their two meetings this season — held in a span of four days — with each team winning on its home court. A closer look at the games:

LAKERS 94, PISTONS 89

NOV. 14, 2003

High scorers: Lakers, Shaquille O'Neal, Gary Payton, 21; Pistons, Chauncey Billups, 29.

Recap: The Lakers extended their home winning streak to 19 games with the victory that was sealed when O'Neal made two free throws with 20.2 seconds left. O'Neal also had 15 rebounds and eight assists. Payton had a three-point basket late and Kobe Bryant and Karl Malone each scored 16 points. The Lakers, who outrebounded the Pistons, 57-41, held Richard Hamilton to six points.

PISTONS 106, LAKERS 96

NOV. 18, 2003

High scorers: Lakers, O'Neal, Malone, 20; Pistons, Billups, 24.

Recap: The Lakers gave up 33 points in the fourth quarter and went scoreless during a stretch of almost eight minutes. Bryant held Hamilton to 14 points and the Laker guard made all 11 of his free throws but only four of 14 shots. O'Neal picked up three fouls in the first 5:58, had his rhythm disrupted and played only 31 minutes. The Pistons shot 56.8% from the field.


-RB

Shaq #1
 

15
NBA Discussion / How are EITHER team in the EC . . .
« on: June 03, 2004, 01:09:55 PM »
Hey y'all!

I agree with the contention that Ron Artest is over-rated - his defensive game rests on a foundation of intimidation.  This idea has been well-established in everyone's mind from the get-go - remember him as a rookie breaking MJ's ribs in a practice before he even stepped on an NBA court?  

I have tried to think of any other player in the past or present who has an over-all game (nasty) like Artest at his position...I drew a blank.  Artest is definitely on my 'detest' list, as this point.

-RB

Shaq #1

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