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The Three Pointer: The Lakers Lay an Egg

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(AFP/Nicholas Kamm)

Game #2, NBA Finals: Los Angeles 102, Boston 108

Series to Date: Boston up 2-0

1. No D in Los Angeles Lakers

After watching the last 2 and a half quarters live and then the entire game on tape, I've got to say that for all my babble about the superiority of the Western Conference this season, the Celts lose last night's game if the opponent was the Cavs, and probably the Pistons too. What a dreadful, dreadful lack of defensive commitment shown by LA, beginning at the top with Kobe Bryant--has an all defensive first-teamer ever mailed it in so thoroughly at that end of the floor in a big game?--and extending down to poor Trevor Ariza, who needed GPS to figure out where Paul Pierce was on the court during his mercifully brief 7:19.

These were supposed to be the old, veteran Celtics, the team whose Big 3 have double-digit years in the league and who bring dinosaurs like PJ and Sam I Am off the pine. These were supposed to be the neo-Showtime Lakers, young and fleet, especially lanky big men Pau Gasol and Lamar Odom and the go-go backup backcourt of Sasha Vujacic and Jordan Farmar. So why did the Celts have more fast break points, 14-10? Why was Doc Rivers correctly telling his team at halftime that every time they forced a miss they could get layups and open treys if they pushed in transition? Yeah, the Lakers were embarrassed on the boards in Game One and determined not to let it happen again, so they hit their offensive glass hard and likewise posted up frequently in the first half. But how many times did we see whatever Lakers bothered to hustle back in transition necessarily play out of position to staunch that early flow, creating all sorts of chaos and mismatches if indeed the Celts had to wait for a second wave of offense on the controlled break--that is if they didn't score immediately?

Things didn't get much better when the tempo slowed and the Celts operated their half-court sets. The Lakers' pick-and-roll recognition and response was pathetic--if Kevin Garnett had hit half of the wide open midrange jumpers he usually knocks down, Boston would have been up 20 instead of 12 at the break. (And BTW, KG very rarely got those looks against Cleveland or Detroit or even on the road against Atlanta.) Of course Boston often didn't bother with the pick and roll because Vlad Rad and Ariza were totally stumped by the fact that Paul Pierce could put the ball on the floor--that newfangled dribble move! They must have been reading all the breathless hype about how banged up and incapacitated Pierce was from his 96 second absence in Game One. That's about as far from "the Truth" as if he'd had to tap out from a figure-4 leg lock from Ric Flair in wrestling. In any case, imagine how badly Radmanovic would have looked if Pierce had two good knees.

Kobe? It was hard to tell who he was guarding half the time, although twice running out to slap palms with Ray Allen on the latter's uncontested treys provided some clues. A couple of times Kobe was matched up on Leon Powe, and we know how that worked out--well, better than when hapless Luke Walton was forced to try and guard somebody.

You really could go right down the Lakers' roster. Odom totally allowed the wily vet PJ Brown to get in his head at both ends of the floor. Derek Fisher hasn't gotten the memo that you see if Rajon Rondo is hitting his jumper before you allow him to become a playmaker, especially if you are much slower than Rondo (who had just 4 shots versus 16 assists). RonyTuriaf was too slow for Powe--and for PJ Brown.

Put bluntly, the Lakers played shockingly bad defense, and that, to me, was the ballgame. Consider that the Celts shot 46% in the Atlanta series, 42.5% versus the Cavs, 45.8% against the Pistons, and even 42.1% in Game One against the Lakers. Last night they were 52.9%, including 9-14, or 64.3%, from beyond the arc, and that's with KG having an off night at 7-19 FG. Boston's bench shot 11-16 FG--69%.

If Jackson and his crew are smart, they will change their priorities for the next game. Put Kobe on Pierce and tell him to shut Pierce down. Kobe is capable of it and it would get his mind off trying to do too much at the other end. Pierce will try and get him in foul trouble but the refs will have heat on them for the free throw disparity in Game Two and won't call the borderline contact. Put Vujacic on Ray Allen and tell him that he is only allowed to shoot as often as he makes Allen miss. On offense, Kobe will be taxed from actually playing some defense, so Los Angles should play more inside-out with ball movement, posting up Gasol and running Odom off screens and forcing KG to decide which one he is guarding. Because if a dinged up Perkins or an ancient PJ Brown can stop Gasol in the low block, the series is pretty much over anyway.

2. Overrated: Referee Bias and Laker 4th Q Comeback

Anyone who cares about pro hoops intimately knows the feeling of believing your team is getting screwed by the refs. The violence you wish to do is totally out of proportion (hopefully) with the way you normally view setbacks and petty grievances and injustices in your non-fan existence. I've found myself rooting for the Lakers against the Nuggets and the Jazz, and rooting against them versus the Spurs. I favor the Celtics in this series due to my longstanding observation of KG during his time in Minnesota, and my growing respect throughout these playoffs for their team-wide commitment to defense. But I have affection for the Lakers too, and have found that you really detest the refs when you are not only pulling for someone to win, but equally pulling for the other team to lose, and the whistles therefore double down on your passion.

This long preface is meant to stake my claim as a slight, but certainly not blind, Celtic partisan here. To Laker fans screaming bloody murder about the free throw discrepancy, I understand--but don't feel--your pain. Remember, I'm the guy who claimed the Lakers' Game Four win against the Spurs was "tainted" due to the referees. Believe me when I say that the anger will subside and perspective will set in. And the perspective that is required here--as was true in the LA-SA Game Four--is that the refs weren't the difference here.

Let's get specific. Early foul trouble on Kobe Bryant was to my eyes (and I played back the tape a lot on my second viewing of the game) comprised of both legitimate and questionable calls. The first foul, when Pierce tried to rub him off on a screen and he reached around to keep contact with Allen, was an understandable call and a legit foul. It also could have been a no-call. The second foul--the arm-shove to Allen before he got the ball--was deemed by Van Gundy and Jackson as a cheap foul, but it looked pretty blatant to me and was in any case unnecessary. Whether or not it was called, it was a stupid move by Kobe and a tribute to Ray Allen, whose defense on Bryant has been something of a revelation this series. The third foul on Bryant was an obvious flop by Paul Pierce--that's not the way players fall, if they fall at all, when someone runs into them. It was a borderline flop if Kobe had the ball and was going to the hoop: that it was whistled as Kobe was trying to move through a pick (and Pierce is a master at slightly moving to the side on his picks) was a bad call, especially so because it was #3 and sent him to the bench. Ditto the technical on Kobe after the layup seemed like a rabbit-eared move. I'm all for ringing up technicals on blatant protests by players, but it is being enforced so haphazardly--hey, Kendrick Perkins could get a technical every single time he commits a foul, and ditto Gasol--that to whistle Kobe, especially when it looked like a Celtic reached in and raked him during his drive, was bad judgment by the official. Also, there was more than once when Kobe got hammered driving the lane--once Pierce knocked him so obviously that Kobe changed his hand and scored lefty--and no whistle was called. So, yes, I believe there was a pro-Boston bias on balance to the calls. I think even more than Kobe, Gasol got screwed, but some of this is Gasol's fault--he's just not very aggressive by nature down in the paint, and that matters to the refs. Nevertheless, I saw Gasol get fouled as often as I saw Leon Powe get fouled and Powe had 13 free throws to Gasol's one.

So why don't I think it swung the outcome of the game in which LA only lost by six points? Because the large lead caused the Celts to lose their focus, as happened at least twice before in the Pistons series. These lapses are a weakness, but thus far not a fatal weakness, with Boston. The smaller the lead, the tighter their focus, and while that was indeed an impressive scramble-back by the Lakers, it was that combination of one team's desperation and another's nonchalance that makes for second-rate, sort of novelty basketball. I don't believe that improbable comeback is any more successful if the refs call a totally balanced game.

The ending of that comeback, by the way, was to my eyes poetic justice. On the Celtic end, Boston put the ball in the hands of the person who is their crunchtime assassin, Paul Pierce. (A reader/commenter briefly convinced me that Kevin Garnett has an equal right to that claim for the Celts, but after reviewing some old crunchtimes for Boston in these playoffs, I reverted back to thinking that when it comes to the team needing a basket, Pierce is going to be their preference about 8 out of 10 times.) Pierce drew the foul and hit the crucial free throws. At the other end of the floor, the Lakers' and arguably the NBA's premiere crunchtime assassin never touched the ball because Sasha Vujacic mistakenly continues to believe he's the second coming of Manu Ginobili and got his ill-advised shot blocked by Pierce. Replays showed Kobe getting open on the weak side just before Vujacic launched. A fitting ending to a horrible game if you are a Lakers fan.

3. Worst Assist Ever Called

Hey, I grew up worshipping the Celtics, who won their first ring with Russell when I was five years old, growing up approximately 7 miles from the old Garden, and even I think all this "Celtic tradition" stuff is getting out of hand. Don't believe the hype.

And speaking of hype, does everyone recall the play that typified LA's brain dead, foot cobwebbed, approach to defense last night, when Leon Powe dribbled the length of the court and sank a layup while Gasol, Vlad Rad and others had garlands strewn in his path to the hoop? Perhaps you'll recall that Powe received the ball beneath the foul line in his own end, and thus had to dribble about 85 of the 94 feet. Well, the player who gave him the ball--it could have been an out-of-bounds pass, or perhaps just a "why don't you bring it up, Leon?" gesture--was Rajon Rondo. And the official scorer in Boston gave him an assist on the play. Sort of puts those 16 assists Rondo tallied, and the 31 allotted to the Celtics team, in a new, less favorable light.

31 Reader Comments

Cheezy B (not verified)07:14pm
Jun 9
What are the paramaters for an assist? I've always been confused by that.
Britt Robson07:59pm
Jun 9
Cheezy-- Couldn't find any NBA definition of an assist that seemed official. But the Official NCAA 2007 Basketball Statistician's Manual defines it as "the principal pass contributing directly to a field goal..." But then, under the heading "Philosphy," adds, "An assist should be more than a routine pass that happens to be followed by a field goal. It should be a conscious effort to find the open player or to help a player work free..." My source for this is this Basketball Prospectus article: http://www.basketballprospectus.com/article.php?articleid=14
JPFnotJPK (not verified)09:45pm
Jun 9
Chris Paul had a lot of those kind of "assists" this year. I'm pretty sure Nash was a beneificary of those kind, too, during his run as the best PG. Wouldn't be surprised if Kidd got that benefit, also. Basically, all point guards assist totals are inflated I'd say.
Britt Robson10:00pm
Jun 9
No, I understand that it is common for home scorekeepers to be generous in their estimation of assists for the local point guard. But putting one over on the abacus for what was essentially an inbounds pass at the opposite end of the court, that's something else altogether. Remember, Powe negotiated through at least three players, took at least a dozen dribbles, etc. This was an assist in the theater of the absurd.
izisharp (not verified)11:12pm
Jun 9
Speaking of the rulebook, has anyone ever seen such an egregious traveling violation as Radmanovic's breakaway dunk with just over a minute to go, which cut the lead to 4? If that's not called as a travel, why not just throw out the rule altogether? It's one thing for the refs to blow arguable calls on plays factored by defensive position, player contact, time-keeping, etc. But if an obvious, clear-as-day travel with championship altering potential isn't called, how can we even entrust the refs to make the tough, debatable judgement calls. The NBA should release a statement on this play, just as they did on the Fisher-Barry no-call in Game 5 in San Anton. That said, if the Lakers D isn't vastly improved in LA, Celts wrap this up in 5.
Britt Robson11:34pm
Jun 9
Izi-- I agree that it was a horrible non-call, especially given the timing, but I didn't mention it because I empathize with how Laker fans are feeling, not wanting to blame their players and coaches (Phil Jackson bringing in Ariza as first off the bench, and to guard Pierce?) and so going for the handy ref-hating, who were biased in favor of Boston overall, just not as much as the frustration-fueled fans currently believe. To point out the Vlad travel in the midst of minimizing their victimization would have caused more heat than light. I still think this series could turn suddenly--the Lakers aren't pretenders. But winning four out of five against a very confident and cohesive defense like Boston's is a very large hill to climb.
izisharp (not verified)08:42am
Jun 10
I agree -- the Celts aren't out of the woods yet. Even a novice NBA fan who began following the league only in April would have learned the lessons from San Anton/N.O., and even Houston/Utah -- holding serve, or failing to, is just as important as stealing one on the road. And just when one team appears superior, a single game outcome can turn the tide. Just another reason why that absolutely blown traveling call irks me so much -- even if the refs were inconsistent all game long it's hard to argue that any other blown call had some immediate game-changing effects, and the potential to turn the game to LA altogether. Who will control the boards and the tempo in Game 3? Will the Lakers close-out on shooters and keep Boston from 50% shooting, (and Leon Powe from 6-7 in the paint)? Can the Celts D stay locked in and keep the game close with a chance to win down the stretch? I guess I can't get any more simplistic in my analysis, but who ever is sharper and consistent on D wins the game. I'm throwing offense out the window on this one.
carlos (not verified)10:42am
Jun 10
I agree that the Celtics are not out of the woods. Even KG with his remarks after Game 2 knows this. Doc Rivers and Paul Pierce and the rest of the Celtics know this as well. But given Boston's performance in the playoffs, we've seen that their defense really goes down a notch when they go on the road. I think Gundy commented that he could understand that a team would suffer on offense on the road but not on defense. I don't know the reason why but I suspect that Boston relies more on verbal communication to be effective and maybe they can't hear as well on the road and their defensive rotations aren't as crisp as a result. Now Boston finally did prove that it could win on the road against Detroit but the Pistons are more of a half-court team and didn't really have Chauncey at 100% thus making them more offensively challenged. This parlayed neatly into Boston playin better D on the road against Detroit. The Lakers are going to come out firing on all cylinders. The first 10 minutes are key to this game. If Boston can survive the onslaught, settle down and continue doing what they did at home they'll have a chance tonight. And if not, they'll have two more games to get it right.
midlife crisis (not verified)01:28pm
Jun 10
Yeah, the Celtics still have to play the games, but this could be the wasted one. I'm assuming, after getting so many calls during the last game, that even if things returned to normal, they would have an adjustment to go through. Because most people feel like this will be a make-up game for the refs, it will probably go completely to the other side. Now it will be the Celtics who look passive, settling for jump shots and not keeping people out of the lane. It's easy to talk about staying aggressive, but if your star has 3 fouls in the 2nd quarter, you need to adjust. My prediction, besides Perkins fouling out during the national anthem, is that KG and Allen will be in foul trouble during the first half. Also, once Kobe starts getting calls there will be breakdowns in the Celtics defense and LA's pretty interior passing will return.
JPFnotJPK (not verified)12:23pm
Jun 10
I should've clarified. I meant Paul, Nash, Kidd got a lot of - as you say - generous score keeping with their assists. As another poster mentioned, the West dribble dribble, post up that ended up as an assist for Paul. Obviously not as egregious as the Rondo assist, but still very generous score keeping.
carlos (not verified)10:15pm
Jun 9
I never really understood the rumbling about the assist in the first place. If Rondo was the last player to pass the ball to Powe before he scored, should he be penalized for the fact that the Lakers played pathetic defense on the play ? I give credit to Powe for having the vision to see the wide open floor and having the confidence to drive it the length of the court for the score. To the larger point, this was the signature play of the game because it symbolized both Powe's aggressively effective play as well as underscored the Lakers poor defensive performance. What I can't understand is why Powe hadn't played more in the playoffs. For whatever reason, Doc had decided to give him limited minutes in the first 3 rounds. Throughout the season, Powe not only provided energy off the bench but also proved he can be a pretty explosive scorer in the paint. How much high energy dunks did he have last night. I counted at least 3. Against the Lakers soft big men, he came up huge.
Britt Robson10:38pm
Jun 9
Carlos-- It is hardly penalizing Rondo to deny him an assist that he didn't deserve. If this counts as a dime then literally every basket that doesn't come off a putback should likewise have an assist, and then the stat is meaningless. The assists category was created to honor a player who arguably did as much or more to create the sequence where the ball went in the hoop as the shooter did: An alley-oop is a no-brainer assist, for example, as is the sort of snazzy cross-lane bounce pass Pierce made when he drove to the hoop and then fed Perkins (I think) for the slam. Merely transferring the ball from one player to another as they come up the court is, ah, not an assist.
antonymous (not verified)11:26am
Jun 10
Good point on Powe's confidence - granted they were up by 20 at the time, but that dunk was certainly something that most PFs, let alone a backup, would be benched for even thinking about. I've also wondered why Powe hasn't gotten more burn - he's a great energy player who is hard to keep off the glass - and those hustle plays really give your team a lift when you're in the midst of a drought. He's providing the energy that I'm used to seeing from Ronny Turiaf.
Stop-n-Pop (not verified)10:43pm
Jun 9
JPFnotJPK beat me to it with the stuff about Paul and Nash. The larger point I'd like to address is that assists are the most overrated of the "major" 3 stats: points, rebounds, and assists. I get that it's part of the whole ESPN-let's-talk-about-a-triple-double sort of thing, but it would be nice if they weren't given such importance by announcers and sports casters. Assists just happen to be the simplest form of ball movement to quantify and that's why they get counted, however there's no way to tell whether or not the most important pass on any given play was the pass to the scorer or the pass before that or the one before that. Point guards should be judged by team offensive efficiency vs pace, turnover ratios (possession based), and points/possession. Assists are right up there with blocked shots in terms of statistical importance.
Stop-n-Pop (not verified)10:45pm
Jun 9
I forgot to add that the score keeping of assists is subjective in nature...even more reason to not give them as much credit as they currently get.
Britt Robson11:54pm
Jun 9
S+P-- Please don't conflate your general disdain for assists as a stat with the notion that this particular assist awarded to Rondo is typical, and has been similarly done to boost Paul, Nash, Kidd, etc.. I understand your greater point about offensive efficiency, and I know that assists are like batting average in baseball, derided by those hip to on-base percentage. But that's a separate discussion from awarding someone an assist who gave a teammate the ball more than 80 feet from the basket. And I really can't believe I've had to rebut this thing four or five times already. Believe me folks, it is not typical.
stop-n-pop (not verified)08:00am
Jun 10
Fair enough. I just saw an opening for another one of my "assists are overrated and people should stop using them as a way of saying someone is really good" arguments. ;) That assist to Rondo was in no way, shape, or form typical...although Paul did have one to West where he dribbled twice between his legs, shimmied a bit and then hit a turnaround jumper. If that was Paul's 10th assist, everyone would gush about how awesome it was that he had a triple double. The one-eyeball guy on Sports Center would quote Ice Cube during the highlights. BTW: My prediction for the over/under on the Lakers' ref-enhanced free-throw superiority tonight is 9. I'm going with the over. Kobe will get all the elbow-nick calls he could possibly dream of. He could be looking at a 20 FTA game. And when it is all said and done, we'll know why they *really* call him the Zen Master...as the ying will have been yanged. I don't think you'll ever see a Phil Jackson protege run an NBA team to success with the ZM's coaching methods any more than you'll see another squad adopt the Triangle Offense (if such a thing really exists), but I also don't think you'll see a better manager than Mr. Jackson. He knows how to keep the stars in line (aligned?) and he clearly gets the ebb and flow of the refs.
Levi (not verified)04:37am
Jun 10
As you noted, Britt, Ray Allen's defense on Kobe Bryant in this series has been quietly noteworthy. Allen has been very determined to stay with the, ahem, (self-declared) "Black Mamba" as Bryant slithers around the court. Allen is basically doing a very good job of keeping the ball out of Kobe's hands whenever possible, denying the lane (with help from the rest of the Celts) and face-guarding Kobe's jumpers -- all without overplaying, or taking much risk. As far as the refs go, I found Game 2 to be very interesting. Dan Crawford and crew did not officiate according to Crawford's usual pattern of "letting them play" in the early part of games (followed by lost tempers and a slew of fouls later in the game as he asserts "control"). This game had many more fouls called early, and often for things that I thought would usually be no-calls. I've often thought that if one ref was a tool of the league, influencing games for a preferred outcome, it was Crawford. And Ken Mauer (also wearing stripes and wielding a whistle with deadly effect that night) often appears to have the capacity to be a stooge for Stern, too.
drza44 (not verified)08:08am
Jun 10
Allen has played his part to absolute perfection thus far. He is being an ideal glue guy...playing strong defense, hitting open shots, facillitating ball movement, helping out on the glass. Basically, unless your looking you never really notice Allen on the court, but when you think back to the key moments of the game he is often right in the middle of them. He's basically playing like a more talented, shooting guard version of what I expected from Fisher. If Allen keeps playing like this the Celtics will be hard to beat in this series.
drza44 (not verified)08:04am
Jun 10
Britt, looks like I got some of that come-uppance that you mentioned after my last couple of "successful" analysis points. If anyone but Pierce would have been making the clutch decisions/shots late in game 2 it'd have clearly been the wrong choice with the way Pierce was playing. That Lakers come-back was so surreal, though, that despite the final margin it just never felt like the Lakers really had a chance. That was the calmest I think I've ever been during what would have been a calamitous collapse had it played out. That said, if this series does have (m)any close games from here going forward, I'd be pretty surprised if KG doesn't play a featured role more times than not. Or at the very least, it'd be a departure from the way that the Cs crunchtime offense has been run through the playoffs for KG to not be a factor late. Who knows, maybe that's just wishful thinking on my part. I guess time will tell.
antonymous (not verified)11:50am
Jun 10
Didn't see any discussion of this below, but did you all see that Gasol dunk on KG in the first quarter? oh my. Gasol just catches on the block, backs down KG like he's a fifth-grader and turns and dunks on him, and KG picks up a technical just moments later. If KG hadn't gotten that tech, I think it would have been even more chippy between Gasol and Garnett. I don't know if anything after this led to Gasol's subpar performance, but we all know how much that play fired up KG. Anyway, I've just never seen KG (Defensive Player of the Year, mind you) get abused like that anywhere on the court. I'm seconding whoever said it didn't feel like a comeback. I never really felt that Boston was in danger, and I can't really explain it other than the Lakers were just not clicking. They weren't playing well on either end of the court (especially on D) and did not deserve to be rewarded. Also, remember the vaunted Lakers bench before this series started? Yeah, I don't either. Jackson made a risky call by leaning on the seldom-used (previously injured) Ariza, but when Walton is your other option and he's playing like garbage, you just can't win. Hindsight is 20/20, but Sasha and Farmar are completely ineffective when they're playing against superior closeout defenders (as opposed to Parker, Barry, Finley). Farmar in particular needs to get to the cup and finish (which he does well once his confidence is up), and Sasha will have to earn minutes with his defense and get spot-up shots when Kobe creates them.
Stop-n-Pop (not verified)11:38pm
Jun 10
Final free throw tally: 34-22 Lakers. Kobe gets 18. I was spot-on with the over under call but I was 2 short on Kobe's total. Did anyone catch Stern's pre-game comments about the Donaghy mess? When does it become appropriate to call for the guy to step down? From the non-denial denial to the casual dropping of new (and newsworthy) items like the fact that the NBA has briefed members of Congress on the proceedings and that the FBI knew about the playoff fixing allegations, the guy...well, I get that he makes a lot of money for the owners, but this is just silly. From the Seattle relocation mess to the in season nonsense trades to this, as a fan, I'm ready for him to be gone. Speaking of the Kings/Lakers Game 6 and free throws... http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=3436401 "The Lakers attempted 40 free throws to the Kings' 25 in that game, and Los Angeles made 21-of-27 from the line while Sacramento converted 7-of-9 in the fourth quarter alone. In addition, a foul was called against Mike Bibby of the Kings after he was shoved and elbowed by Kobe Bryant, denying the Kings an opportunity to try for a tying basket. Also in that game, Kings centers Vlade Divac and Scot Pollard fouled out, and Kings coach Rick Adelman was highly critical of the officiating afterward. "My first thought [upon hearing Donaghy's allegation] was: I knew it," Pollard said Tuesday night. "I'm not going to say there was a conspiracy. I just think something wasn't right. It was unfair. We didn't have a chance to win that game." The Lakers went on to win the 2002 NBA championship." ...look, I'm not a conspiracy guy. I go the Bull Durham route in regards to believing in single shooters and moon landings, but that game has never sat right with me. As soon as I heard the words "playoff fix" and "Donaghy", I thought of that series. It was the single worst reffed sporting event I have ever seen.
RhinoLove (not verified)08:45am
Jun 11
I realize that ABC/ESPN have a duty to report the news, but why in the hell did they think that the halftime show was an appropriate venue for discussing the Donaghy allegations? Talk about shooting yourself in the foot. What is the message to fans? You just wasted an hour and a half watching a potentially fixed game? I'd rather enjoy the Finals in blissful ignorance. Agree, Stern should step down. True or not, his legacy is tainted, and enough shit has happened that a fresh slate is needed. On to the game...Boston played terribly and still had a chance to win. I don't foresee another shooting night like that from Pierce or Garnett, and now fully expect that Boston will take one of the next two in LA.
stop-n-pop (not verified)09:02am
Jun 11
I think ABC was obligated to make note of the situation on account of having JVG in the booth. He was the coach in one of the games cited by Donaghy...the losing coach, and he was fined 100k for saying that he was told by an NBA official that...well, let's just say it's a bit too close for comfort for the NBA and ABC found itself sitting on one of the primaries in the action and if he didn't talk, then it would have been on par, news-wise, with the Gibson/Stepholofugus prez debate. The way I understand it, JVG said something to the effect of Yao being cracked down on by the refs because Mark Cuban complained to the league. JVG parsed his words a bit at half time (saying "an NBA official" ...i.e., not a ref), but he was fined for saying what amounts to pretty much the same thing Donaghy is alleging: Cuban got involved and the game was called in a questionable manner. It will be interesting to see if any news outlet follows up with Cuban today. JVG kind of backed down from his initial statement after being hit with a 6 figure fine (changing his statement to one of a long-term frustration of Yao getting fined) but you could kind of tell it was 1/2 hearted and he believed his 1st story. It would also be interesting to see the full results of the NBA investigation into this matter and to find out whether or not it was turned over to the FBI. I'm surprised they didn't send Tafoya over to Scott Pollard to get his reaction in real-time.
stop-n-pop (not verified)09:13am
Jun 11
The dumbest thing the NBA did here was try to stick Donaghy with the legal bill. Apparently he made this public because the NBA asked him to spring for the $1 mil in legal costs. Holy crap, pay the $1 mil and let him go quietly into the night. Talk about a bad decision.
RhinoLove (not verified)10:21am
Jun 11
I don't know if I agree. Making JVG comment was the most awkward piece of that extremely awkward segment. Really, what was the guy supposed to say? He was forced to either refute Donaghy's statement, thereby contradicting his own 'on the record' beliefs, or say "see I told you so" and make a mockery of the league and the game his was in the process of calling. The whole exchange just made me squirm. By the way, I love JVG in the booth. Is there a smarter, more funny commentator out there? And so glad that we don't have to listen to that jack-ass Bill Walton.
Stop-n-Pop (not verified)10:30am
Jun 11
It was definitely awkward.
JPFnotJPK (not verified)11:20am
Jun 11
Whoa Whoa Whoa....Bill Walton is a national Treasure. A Saint. the man dances naked in the woods with Jerry Garcia while 'shroooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooming. What more can you ask for?
Stop-n-Pop (not verified)11:31am
Jun 11
http://youtube.com/watch?v=AEJG06qEwLA I love the Walton impression.
Jim (not verified)12:10pm
Jun 11
Donaghy could have conveniently picked that game because he knows a lot of people remember it as being called poorly. It's hardly evidence that the league is trying to manipulate games. In every sport there are badly called games. In a Steelers-Colts playoff game a couple years ago an interception was ridiculously overturned after a Colts challenge. So if an NFL ref winds up in jail for gambling troubles in a year or two, don't be surprised is he says that game was fixed.

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Blogs

Sports

Baseball:
Warning Track Power by Alex Halsted
Sports:
On the Ball by Britt Robson

Society

Weather:
Dude Weather by Jimmy Gaines

A&E

Fiction:
Write Now! by Terry Faust

Retired

Hockey:
Spazz Dad by Todd Smith
Style:
Hook & Eye
Misc:
Is This News?
Fiction:
Yo, Ivanhoe by Brad Zellar
Food:
Consider the Egg by Stephanie March
Wine:
Beyond the Cask
Food:
Food Fight!
Media:
To the Slaughter
Misc:
Outrage by Staff
Food:
Chef's Table
Guest Commentary:
Just Passing Through
Humor:
Spazz Dad by Todd Smith
Cars:
Road Rake by Chris Birt
Commentary:
Read Menace by Tom Bartel
Society:
The Adventures of Melinda by Melinda Jacobs
Politics:
Defenestrator by Rich Goldsmith
Food:
Breaking Bread by Jeremy Iggers & Ann Bauer
Books:
Cracking Spines by Max Ross
Music:
Hear, Hear by Staff
Art:
The Vicious Circle by 6 Critics
Secrets:
Secrets of the Day by Kate Iverson
Theater:
Seen in the City by Staff
Film:
Talk About Talkies by Staff