View Poll Results: Lakers or Celtics?
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Lakers in 4
0 0% -
Celtics in 4
0 0% -
Lakers in 5
4 13.33% -
Celtics in 5
2 6.67% -
Lakers in 6
5 16.67% -
Celtics in 6
11 36.67% -
Lakers in 7
2 6.67% -
Celtics in 7
6 20.00%
Results 4,181 to 4,190 of 9315
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January 24th, 2006 12:52 PM #4181
FXT - buti na lang hindi niyo siya dinale ng career-ending injury :evillaugh
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January 24th, 2006 12:56 PM #4183
Originally Posted by M54 Powered
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January 24th, 2006 12:58 PM #4184
na record ko din yung game...
peste, the replay game schedule was 12MN.... pero pinalabas na nila 1:45am na.
lecheng boxing replay yan...pati commercials buong buo din. :fire:
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January 24th, 2006 01:04 PM #4185
It could be a blessing in disguise for the Rockets if they can get the top pick in this years draft.
Alam mo naman si Isaiah Thomas, mahilig sa guards and undersized PFs :bwahaha: he has 3 very good rooks, why not develop them instead
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January 24th, 2006 01:11 PM #4186
M-V-P! M-V-P! M-V-P!
By Steve Kerr, Yahoo! Sports
January 23, 2006
More on Kobe: One-man Showtime
Sorry Chauncey Billups, Elton Brand, Steve Nash and Dirk Nowitzki – you're no longer in the hunt for the NBA's Most Valuable Player award. Kobe Bryant locked up the award Sunday night with his stunning 81-point barrage in the Los Angeles Lakers' come-from-behind victory over Toronto.
Think about that: 81 points! That's right, eighty-one. The second most points ever scored in a game in league history, behind only Wilt Chamberlain's record of 100. It was more than Michael Jordan ever scored and more than Oscar Robertson or Kareem Abdul-Jabaar ever had. It was as many or more than the Houston Rockets have scored 12 times this season.
Bryant's performance – especially since it rallied the Lakers from a second-half, 18-point deficit – ranks as the greatest show I have ever seen in the NBA. And I was in Cleveland back in 1990 with the Cavaliers when Jordan scored his career-high of 69. (I had two points.) I never thought I'd see anyone top that. But Kobe did.
The scary thing is that we all should have seen this coming. Since Dec. 20, Kobe is averaging 43.4 points per game. In his 62-point outing against Dallas, Bryant didn't even play in the fourth quarter. How much would he have scored had the game been close? On Thursday in Sacramento, he had an off night – and still scored 51.
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His point totals have been so ridiculous that his 37-point effort in Phoenix on Friday was barely noticed. For almost anyone else, 37 would be a career night. For Kobe? It's a subpar game.
The question now is how high the bar should be raised. Is 90 points a possibility? Think about how preposterous that sounds, yet Kobe has actually made it a valid question. What if the Lakers play the Suns – who scored 149 points Sunday night and still lost – and Bryant gets hot? Then what? Could he score 100?
The man is virtually unguardable. His shooting range goes way beyond the three-point line, and his ball-handling ability allows him to get to any spot on the floor. His strength and fearlessness puts him at the free-throw line time and again, and his steely nature at the end of games makes him lethal in the clutch. He is a basketball machine.
What this all means is that Bryant has to win the NBA's MVP award. Brand was the early-season favorite after his fast start, and Nash has been mentioned as a repeat winner for leading the Suns to first place in the Pacific Division. Nowitzki also deserves consideration for his play and for the success of the Mavericks. But Kobe has elevated his game to an entirely different level – one that has rarely been seen in the history of the NBA.
He is far and away the best player in the league, and he deserves to be honored. After the show he put on Sunday, can anyone argue that he's not the MVP?
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January 24th, 2006 01:15 PM #4187
hmm...the Indy natives are getting restless :hihihi:
Time to tinker is gone; trade O'Neal, rebuild
Bob Kravitz
Indianapolis Star
Today marks exactly one month before the NBA trading deadline, or 42 days since Ron Artest was put into permanent timeout. And the Indiana Pacers, now a bland, mediocre franchise doomed to middling status in the Eastern Conference, have left themselves with only two real choices:
Start the rebuilding process now, or wait until this summer?
Because unless somebody has a debilitating brain cramp and opts to send Kevin Garnett here for Ron Artest and a nail clipper, the Pacers are going absolutely nowhere. Fifty wins, at best. A second-round playoff ouster, at best.
What? You think Pacers president Larry Bird and team CEO Donnie Walsh, who so thoroughly botched the Artest situation from the start, are going to make a season-saving trade sometime in these next few weeks?
No.
Blow it up.
Start over.
http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dl...89/1004/SPORTS
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January 24th, 2006 02:24 PM #4188
I just caught the replay of Kobe's 81 pointer last night.
Needless to say, I'm impressed. If you'd asked me before that game who I thought was better, I'd have said Jordan, hands down. I'd have said "Kobe only shoots a lot because he's a ball hog", blah blah blah.
During the game, Kobe wasn't hogging all the shots at first, the ball went around, the Lakers scored an okay 49 in the first half, but Toronto just blitzed them with an 18 point lead... this is the Toronto, remember, that held Kobe to 11 last December, and broke Kobe's 40+ streak last year.
In the third quarter, with Odom and the others shooting pretty poorly, Kobe just took off. He outscored the entire Raptor team in the third quarter, and didn't let up. He also outscored the Raptors by himself in the fourth, too. Kobe wasn't just shooting, he was defending well, stealing the ball a couple of times, leading off fast breaks and finishing them, too.
And these weren't easy shots. He did have a couple of fast breaks and one or two pretty spectacular alley-oops, but almost anything he did inside the line had either someone's arms waving in his face or him sandwiched between two or three players. At one point, he got hit in the eye, but kept playing.
Kobe's got Jordan's fadeaway jumper nailed cold. And he did it from outside the line all throughout the second half. He did over 53% from 3-point range and 60% from the floor. It looked like he couldn't miss, and when he did, it was usually because the defenders were stuck to him like glue... that's the reason for him taking 20 free throws (making 18)... and a measure of the Raptor's desperation in the second half is that fact that some of those free throws were for a 3-point attempt.
You never foul someone that far out... but he was making so many 3's, they just had to try to stop him. By the middle of the third, Kobe was already over 40, and everyone was on their feet every time Kobe made a shot.
I used to be a Kobe hater. I'm still skeptical he can carry such a poor team to the playoffs by himself. But that game was magic, and the MVP flashing on the scoreboard? I believe it.
To think that a game like this is even possible in this day and age, with the tighter defense possible with the removal of the illegal defense rule.
Ang pagbalik ng comeback...
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January 24th, 2006 02:44 PM #4189
If you guys watched the Mavericks game, you'd think that the Mavericks where a poor defensive team the way Kobe shot the lights out. Yup this game was magical but Kobe's season has been magical, he started out slow but boy did he ever pick it up.
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Tsikoteer
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January 24th, 2006 02:47 PM #4190Originally Posted by BoEinG_747
ah yes CB34 my fav player...
the most quotable nba player also
Originally Posted by Charles Barkley
Originally Posted by Charles Barkley
parang some of the countdown timers along taft ave manila, aren't functioning today... or am i...
SC (temporarily) stops NCAP