Friday, December 23, 2005



This will be my last posting until Jan 6th, as I will be in Costa Rica on this actual beach in Montezuma for the next while...

Three great Artest Trade rumours:

1. Pacers send SF Ron Artest to Golden State for SG Mickael Pietrus and PF Diogu

2. Pacers send SF Ron Artest to Golden State, Golden State send SF Mike Dunleavy to the Clippers and Clippers send SG Corey Maggette to the Pacers.

3. Pacer send SF Ron Artest to Minnesota, T-Wolves send SG Wally Szczerbiak to Cleveland and Cavs send SF Luke Jackson and PF Drew Gooden to Indiana.

Why do we love Steve Nash? He reportedly spent the summer in New York City, where he regularly participated in pickup basketball games downtown and played soccer for a team sponsored by a bar in the East Village…

Wow…you’ve got to see the U of Miami NCAA hoops team this year if only to catch PG Guillermo Diaz play…this kid is easily the most explosive guard in college basketball. His vertical leap is well over 40” and his lateral quicks and handle are ridiculous…looks and plays like an NBA player. Shooting range is much improved…maybe more of a shooting guard than a point guard…but dude can jump…

The next centre to cash in? Portland center Joel Przybilla, who is having his best NBA season…here’s a look at Przybilla's value, compared with some other centers who already have had their paydays:

Player Contract p/year PPG RPG BPG
Joel Przybilla 2 yrs, $3M, $1.56M 6.9 8.0 2.67
Jerome James 5 yrs., $29M $5M 3.1 2.6 0.60
R. Nesterovic 6 yrs., $42M $6.72M 5.7 4.4 1.15
Adonal Foyle 6 yrs., $51.2M $7.3M 4.5 6.7 1.58
S. Dalembert 6 yrs., $60.6M $8M 8.5 9.9 3.08

Most remarkable player so far this year in the Nba has been Chris Webber…History suggests that he might eventually break down, but so far, 76ers power forward Chris Webber hasn't a game. Webber has played in all 26 games for the 14-12 Sixers. And he has averaged 39.8 minutes per game. Only twice during his previous 12 seasons has Webber averaged more minutes per game. In 1998-99, he averaged 40.9 minutes with Sacramento, and in 2000-01, he averaged 40.5 minutes with the Kings. That was before he had left-knee surgery that caused him to miss 50 games in the 2003-04 season. Last season, Webber looked like a shell of himself in 21 regular-season games with the Sixers and five playoff contests after being traded by Sacramento. He appeared to have limited mobility. Last year, he missed a total of 15 games while splitting time with the Kings and Sixers. Webber has never played in more than 76 games, and that came during his rookie season with Golden State in 1993-94. "I want to get up to 45-46 minutes a game," Webber joked after…I don’t know if it’s a coincidence but the Sixers practice on a court at the Philadelphia College of Orthopedic Medicine…

In a Mack Daddy not, A Philly newspaper yesterday reported that Chris Webber bought a multi-million dollar home in suburban Philadelphia down the street from where A.I. lives. The paper reported that C-Webb paid in cash…around $7 million in cash…

Uh oh, here they come again…West Virginia PF Kevin Pittsnogle scored 25 points as the Mountaineers in a 92-68 victory over number 7 ranked Oklahoma on Thursday night. Pittsnogle was 8-for-11 from the field and the Mountaineers (7-3) shot 66.7 percent to overcome a career-best 31-point performance from Taj Gray, who tried to single-handedly lead the Sooners (6-2) back from a 13-point deficit in the second half. "I've been at Oklahoma for 12 years, but I don't remember many times that I've left the court where I was embarrassed as I was tonight," Sampson said. It was Oklahoma's most lopsided loss since a 66-37 defeat at Texas on Feb. 8, 2004…

Someone asked if the Pistons, who are off to a very hot start at 20-3 can get to 73 wins, the NBA record…well the Bulls, who own that record, started the season 41-3. Wow. The Pistons are going to have to win 20 more in a row to accomplish that…

1) Peter Vescey with some dirt on the Rose to the Knicks rumours:

ROSE IN THE GARDEN?

IF the Raptors want to eradicate Jalen Rose's $16.9 million salary next season from their cap, they have but one viable option: Furnish the Knicks with the Nuggets' No. 1 pick stashed from the Nets' shoplifting of Vince Carter, along with Rose's Canadian passport for rising free agent Penny Hardaway. There ain't no more to it! Yes, the Lakers have interest in Rose, who turns 33 on Jan. 30. That's a confirmed fact. There might even be another team or two intrigued by the 6-8 swingman's cultured skill to score, pass and make plays. That's an unadulterated guess. Yet, according to a know-it-all scrutinizing Rose's relocation odds, there isn't a reckless NBA owner other than James Dolan willing to burden his bulging books with a contract that would cost currently luxury-tax capsized Camp Cablevision $33.8M. Still, as hopeless as the stammering Knicks look, and as depressed as their fans are, and as desolate as the Garden may become if their 6-18 record gets any shoddier, not even a filthy rich dunce like Dolan is going to hemorrhage that much currency for a player Isiah Thomas ran out of Indiana with Travis Best (reaping Ron Artest, Brad Miller, Ron Mercer and Kevin Ollie in exchange) unless the first-round pick is packaged. Don't get me wrong; it's not as if the Raptors are uncompromising. A Toronto source reveals the pick is on the table, but not without limits: "The unanswered question is how deep into the draft will it be protected from year to year." The same source doesn't feel an agreement or ultimate disagreement is imminent. I'm not so sure that's accurate. The Knicks must be hot to trot, otherwise the Raptors wouldn't have showcased Rose on Monday in Orlando. For the first time in weeks, he witnessed fourth quarter daylight (assisting on the clinching basket) in the heart of the hoopla. Aside from delivering an under-duress inbound pass to Mo Peterson, Rose also donated 15 points (averaging 9.4 and a combined six points in the last four), four rebounds and four dimes in 34 minutes. Any misgivings I might have had about Rose being placed in a displace case that evening were immediately dispelled when coach Sam Mitchell repeatedly complimented him afterward. I gave Rose about an hour to enjoy the moment before e-mailing him congratulations. After getting that out of the way, I asked him if he'd heard anything about his next destination. "Thanx a lot," he replied swiftly. "I promised myself early this yr dat I was gonna be a total PRO and let the chips fall where they may . . . by not taking this TOR situation PERSONAL . . . I feel something will happen soon . . . then bk 2 the States . . . talk 2 ya soon." The Rose Who Grew From Concrete finished with some strong Jadakiss lyrics: "DREAM LIKE U LIVIN' 4 EVER BUT LIVE LIKE U DYING 2 DAY." *** It's early yet in the season and already I've lost count how many times publicly Larry Brown has flogged himself for doing a poor coaching job. He usually only does this before or after cataloging his team's individual and collective deficiencies. Or after listing a litany of excuses following an up-to-the-minute defeat instantly after claiming there are no excuses.
I wonder, does Brown ever listen to himself talk? Just when you thought Brown had taken insincerity to new depths and run dry of escape hatches, he contrived a new one after the Knicks' disgraceful showing against the Spurs. "All we have is effort. When we don't have that we don't have anything," he said, in essence condemning Thomas' workmen and his construction job. Naturally, Brown also volunteered to accept a full share of the responsibility, noting how Gregg Popovich (the genius who allowed Toni Kukoc to inbound the ball minus any pressure to Andrew Bogut for the winning basket the other night in Milwaukee) badly out-coached him. Nothing new to report on that front; it's as if he's constantly telling the Knicks they hired the wrong coach and it's that time again for Home Town to starting looking for his Next Town. As one sideline star of stage and sage declared: "How about that! We are discovering Larry Bronze not only can't manage All- Stars [Athens], but can't coach normal players to the next level." By his own admission, Brown has been out- coached early and often. At the very least you'd think by this time he'd have returned some of his found money. ***Now I know the reason Pat Riley came back to the bench. It makes it so much easier for the Fourth Estate (and the Heat's two TV homers) to fawn over him. Phrases like "They play for him" and "They have to do it Pat's way" and "Pat wants to win" make me want to toss my Christmas cookies. Realizing the error of my ways, I plan to relocate the Hall of Fame from undeserving Springfield and set up shrines in Schenectady and South Beach. Even David Stern genuflected at Riley's genius when asked if Padre Riles' return to coaching was good for the league. In fact, to show how much he's prepared to stretch his homage the commissioner is pressuring Jerry Colangelo and Robert Sarver to name Padre Riles coach of the WNBA's Phoenix Mercury. "It's been way too long since we've screwed over Paul Westhead," Stern said.

2) Right on cue, Steve Aschburner of the Minneapolis Star Tribune reports on the future of former U of Minny C Joel Pryzbilla:

Joel Przybilla, fake thug? Try Joel Przybilla, real thug instead.

Actually, the amusing "fake thug" label was hung on Przybilla -- the former University of Minnesota center and hoops hero of Monticello -- by Timberwolves forward Kevin Garnett a few years ago after the two got into a shove-and-staredown under the basket one night. The real thug claim? OK, that might be stretching it. But Przybilla spent long hours last summer as a denizen of Duke Roufus boxing gym on Milwaukee's south side, sparring, throwing punches and feeling the adrenaline course through his veins. "A buddy [personal trainer Todd Troxel] told me: 'You'd be surprised how much it relates to basketball. The stances you use, the slides. Reaction time,'" Przybilla said earlier this week in a telephone interview. "And it was a total body workout. After doing an hour of that, I was beat. I felt like I had played 48 minutes." At 7-1, with no discernible look of menace, Przybilla in a boxing ring makes Kendall Gill look like Sonny Liston. Quickly, he established one ground rule. "I went one round with a sparring partner and said, 'I'm not taking no more hits, man,'" he said. "I'd take some jabs, hooks, things like that at him. I wanted to get a little workout away from basketball. I did one session to see if I'd like it, and I fell in love with it." Those hours in the ring, then, were part of Przybilla's development into a reliable, even formidable center for the Portland Trail Blazers. Six seasons and three teams into his NBA career, he is literally and figuratively a big part of the Blazers' youth movement and future, a team captain and a defensive-minded man in the middle averaging 6.9 points, 8.0 rebounds, 2.67 blocked shots and 27.2 minutes, while shooting 58 percent. If, that is, Przybilla sticks around. He will be a free agent next summer, so his regimen of sticking and moving, boxing style, could be replaced by the issue of sticking vs. moving. Because he will be coming off a two-year, $3 million contract, the Blazers will hold only "early Bird" rights on Przybilla, limiting them to a multiyear offer of about $29 million over five seasons. Thanks to the midlevel exception, all teams will have at least that much available to lure him. And given the market for proven -- heck, even unproven -- big men, he probably could do better in a sign-and-trade deal or by joining with a team that has salary-cap space. Which raises the obligatory question: What about the Wolves? Their starting center, Michael Olowokandi, has a contract that expires this summer, too. Przybilla, in some observers' eyes, is a better long-term bet. They share an agent, Bill Duffy, who pulled a center-switcheroo in 2003, moving Rasho Nesterovic to San Antonio and backfilling with Olowokandi to Minnesota. The KG factor? Actually, Przybilla would be thrilled to play alongside Garnett, at least in theory; he wasn't tipping his negotiating hand quite yet. "I don't think I'm going to turn down anyone," he said. "I'm going to look at every team, look at every option. It still is home for me, at the heart. If I do make a change, I want to win. ... I wouldn't mind playing with Kevin Garnett, one of the best players in the league. Who wouldn't want to?" There is a big "but" that has nothing to do with Garnett or the Wolves. Portland might have first dibs on Przybilla, simply out of loyalty. He and his wife, Noelle, keep their permanent home in Brookfield, Wis.; Przybilla spent his first 3½ seasons in Milwaukee, and she grew up in nearby Big Bend. They are expecting their first child, a son, in February and would love to be closer to family. But his time with the Bucks wasn't fun (he often was hurt), and he rode out the final 12 games in 2003-04 in Atlanta. Portland wanted him when no one else did. Now it has paid off for both. "It takes everybody his own time, but he's pretty solid now," said Wolves assistant coach Bob Thornton, who works with big men. "Most of the time, you've got to find yourself. 'How am I going to make myself effective? Am I going to defend more, am I going to score?' He's more aggressive than I've ever seen." Przybilla has four double-doubles this season, including 10 points and 12 rebounds against the Wolves two weeks ago. This is his second visit to Minnesota -- the teams met in the season opener -- but at this point, the Pacific Northwest feels more like home than home. Noelle, visiting today, will spend Christmas in Wisconsin while Przybilla practices and kills time in Portland. "I owe a lot to this organization," he said. "When I was down, coming off that season in Atlanta, there weren't too many offers out there. [Blazers GM] John Nash gave me a shot when a lot of people didn't." That doesn't sound like any sort of thug at all.

2) Charley Rosen, who I absolutely can’t stand, actually has some nice things to say about the Raptors, so here he is for Foxsports.com:

Young Raptors offering signs of hope

Heading into Wednesday's game in Houston, Toronto was 1.5 games behind Atlanta and 2 behind New York in the dubious race for the worst record in the NBA. That's why the few remaining Raptors fans have taken to reading the daily standings upside down. Rob Babcock's list of blunders is both lengthy and well-known — from drafting Rafael Araujo to submitting to Alonzo Mourning's blackmail to giving away Vince Carter for virtually nothing. But, even though the Rockets were decimated by injuries, the Raptors' 94-81 victory in Houston on Wednesday night offered a few crumbs of hope and good news. Since it's all too easy to flay the downtrodden Raptors, this close-up ignores turnovers, bad decisions, ill-advised shots, limited skills, and botched rotations demonstrated by the Toronto players. Instead, the focus is on the positive virtues of those players who could some day lead the Raptors to the threshold of respectability. Chris Bosh is, of course, the cornerstone of the Raptors' future (7-12, 8 rebounds, 3 assists, 2 steals, 1 block, 17 points). Against the Rockets he showed the drive-right-spin-left move that he perfected last year. And since all players at every level of the game will always bite on a hard fake-right, Bosh was also able to drive his left hand hard into the middle for several scores. Bosh also unveiled a nifty step-back move that allowed him to nail an 18-foot jumper. But Bosh showed much more than just a knack for scoring. He set several solid screens, affected a number of timely defensive rotations, actively showed on the strong side of several screen/rolls (S/R), tipped a jumper by T-Mac, and stole an entry pass into him as well. All in all, Bosh was just as lively on defense as he was on offense. Should Bosh gain another ten pounds of muscle, and should he be paired with an authentic big man, he could easily become a bona fide franchise player. Mike James certainly had his chops up for his return to Houston (8-16, 5 assists, 2 steals, 19 points). None of the Rockets could keep James from hot-footing his way to the hoop. His shots were likewise characterized by range, a quick release going left (his preferred direction) and right, and enough shake-and-bake moves to create an opening under the most extreme defensive pressure. James' only successful 3-ball (1-2) came after the Raptors made five crisp passes. Indeed, James' inclination to make the extra pass set the tone for his teammates. (Toronto had 23 assists on 33 field goals.) On defense, James was totally under control as he rotated to, and effectively closed out, various of Houston's perimeter shooters. Should James learn to move the ball bit quicker and curtail his aimless dribblings, he could easily become a top-flight starting point-guard on a contending ball club. Morris Peterson didn't shoot particularly well (5-15, 18 points), but played a hustling and alert floor game (5 rebounds, 7 assists, 2 steals, 0 turnovers). He has terrific hands, great ups, and the quickest shot-release north of the border. Should Mo-Pete develop more consistency in his shooting (which, for him, means better shot selection), there's a high probability that he could develop into an All-Star caliber wingman. Jose Calderon's favorite maneuver is the drive-and-dish, which he executed a total of eleven times and thereby registered 5 of his total of 7 assists. Calderon was happy to initiate an offensive set by passing to a wing and then cutting through the middle in classic fashion. He can drive left and right with equal facility and, when dribbling right he has mastered the arcane art of whipping backhanded passes to any teammate who might be open on the perimeter. Among his passes that weren't tallied in the box score was a perfect entry into the posted Bosh, a handful of snappy reversals, as well as several skip passes. Calderon sees the floor well and is generally unselfish. His other numbers included 2-5, 2 steals, and 6 points. On defense, Calderon showed fast hands. He also threw his left hand at right-handed jump shots — a maneuver that results in better extension by avoiding having to reach across his own body to approach the ball, and that also keeps his shot-bothering hand in line with the shot release. Should Calderon learn to keep his dribble closer to the floor he wouldn't have so much trouble wending his way through a crowded lane. Joey Graham is a 6-7, 225-pound specimen with incredible athletic ability (3-3, 10 points). He showed flawless form in bagging a pair of 3-pointers. He was strong enough to bully a posted T-Mac out of his comfort zone, and quick enough to rotate out to David Wesley in time to transform a gimme open shot into a bad miss. Graham also set the screen-of-the-game, a cross screen that rocked Juwan Howard back on his heels. And Graham earned the Family Feud award when he jumped to grab a lob pass from Calderon only to be clobbered by his twin brother Stephen. Should J. Graham continue to play 20 or so minutes per game and allowed to develop in the shadow of Bosh, Jalen Rose, and Charlie Villanueva, the rookie has a good chance to play himself into a lengthy and productive NBA career. Rafael Araujo set a half-dozen sturdy screens, attacked the boards, executed a pair of nifty ball-reversals from the high-post, and was active on defense. In his stifling defense of Strromile Swift, Araujo held his ground and refused to be faked out of position. If Araujo failed to take a shot, he did nab 6 rebounds and block one shot. Should Araujo decide to go into show business his interesting array of body-tattoos would make him the star of any county fair. Charlie Villanueva has a lively body (2-5, 8 points). He refused to be intimidated by the sheer mass and muscle of Lonnie Baxter and rose up to block one of Baxter's jump hooks. Villanueva also made a number of assertive screens, and text-book defensive rotations. But his most impressive play occurred when he was creamed going to the hole on a fast break, but managed nevertheless to muscle his way through the foul to score the bucket. Should Villanueva develop more overall consistency, he could develop into a valuable player for a contending team. Jalen Rose likes to initiate his offense from a dead-stop, but the wily veteran knows how to score (2-5, 4 points). The surprise here was his savvy defense — overplaying any proffered screens and thereby forcing his man to dribble towards the sideline. Rose also drew a charge, and pulled down several big-time rebounds. Should Rose ever accept a role as the go-to scorer on a second unit he could easily win the Sixth Man of the Year award — for the Raptors or for whichever team he'll inevitably be traded to. Matt Bonner (4-5, 12 points) set strong-arm screens, knocked down all three of his home-run shots, made a powerful move in the low post, and was always on the spot in rotating to fill the middle. Should Bonner ever learn how to fly, he'd be cured of his chronic foul trouble and become a better passing, better shooting, more powerful version of Brad Miller.The Rockets were drastically short-handed because of injuries to Yao Ming, Dikembe Mutombo, Jon Barry, Rafe Alston, and Derek Anderson. But credit coach Sam Mitchell for taking full advantage of the Rockets' limited man-power by double- and sometimes triple-teaming Tracy McGrady (2-11, 11 assists, only 7 points). Conversely, Jeff Van Gundy insisted on having T-Mac operate in conjunction with a high S/R, a tactic that made easy work of doubling McGrady. Utilizing McGrady in a 1-4 set and in the high-post would have cleared the available passing lanes and made the Raptors' two-timings extremely vulnerable. Should Mitchell keep his necktie knotted until he reaches the post-game locker room, his natty attire might even rival the sartorial elegance of Pat Riley. So, the message is this: The Raptors played hard and played smart in a game they couldn't lose. With the continued growth of their youngsters, along with the addition of two or three players whose specific talents would fit the current mix — i.e. two bigs who can score, rebound and block shots, plus a wing who can defend and create — the Raptors will at least catch New York and eventually have a future worth waiting for.

3) Four former NBA players, Will Perdue, Tim Legler, Greg Anthony and Bill Walton, along with former NBA coaches Jim O'Brien and John Carroll, weighed the merits of the decision to sit Kobe with 62 points after 3 quarters for ESPN.com:

PERDUE: WRATH OF AVERY NOT WORTH IT - There's no doubt that Kobe Bryant could have probably gotten 75 or 77 points on Tuesday night. But the Lakers had the game well in hand and I'm not a big fan of a guy trying for records in a game that's already been decided. If the Lakers needed Kobe's scoring to win the game, by all means keep him in there, but not in this case. I would prefer to see him go for big numbers in a close game. I can see people wanting Kobe to go for it, but if I'm the opposing coach I want to make sure he's not going to do that. If I'm Avery Johnson, I'm putting all five guys on Kobe, just to make sure he's not going off against my team, because it shows up in the record books. The reality of the situation is that Kobe was in a no-win situation. He was badmouthed because he took himself out. If he had stayed in, he would have been criticized, too. It's a tough situation for him. He's very conscious of what people are saying about him and I think sometimes that affects his judgment.

LEGLER: SHOULD HAVE LET HIM START FOURTH - Phil Jackson made the right decision by not re-inserting Kobe Bryant into the game. However, I would have handled it a little differently. I would have allowed him to start the fourth and play for 5-6 minutes before making a decision. If he cooled off then it would be an easy decision to take him out and allow him to a bask in the adulation of the Lakers' fans. If he scored another quick 10-12 points, then no one would argue with allowing him to go for 80 points. There is always a fine line when it comes to record-breaking and individual accomplishments. I almost always fall on the side of allowing records to be broken in the natural flow of the game. The Los Angeles Lakers are attempting to restore their franchise to a championship caliber. Jackson was prudent in keeping his eyes on the bigger prize. After all, with a 30-point lead, and playing against a team that the Lakers may very well have to contend with in the postseason, there was no need to turn the game into a sideshow for Bryant's individual scoring spree.

ANTHONY: IF MAVS WERE MORE COMPETITIVE - If you want to blame someone for Kobe coming out of the game, blame Dallas. Because if the Mavericks had kept it closer, it would have been reasonable for Kobe to stay in and continue his huge night. Dallas is a team with title hopes, but you couldn't tell that from the way they played against the Lakers. So Kobe had to come out. The game was over. You don't want to risk injury, and you don't want to throw it in face of your opponent. There was already enough tension out there with Dirk Nowitzki getting hit hard and coach Avery Johnson ejected. You were starting to see some hard fouls out there, and you don't want to add to that by turning the game into strictly a point-scoring quest. The cons easily outweigh the pros of keeping him in. The Lakers have to think ahead, not antagonize the Mavs should they face them in the playoffs. For me, this game demonstrates his greatness. He has been criticized for exactly what makes him great. He gave us reasons to appreciate him even more Tuesday night.

O'BRIEN: CLASS ACTION - There really is nothing to say other than the fact that Jackson offered Bryant the opportunity to go back in the game and he declined the offer. I believe that was a very classy thing for Bryant to decide. The game is in the bag and there is never a reason to rub another team's nose in the dirt. If he reentered the game and got hurt, how could you ever justify why he went into the game up by over 30 points. It would have fallen on Kobe's shoulders more than Jackson's, and an absolutely spectacular performance would have turned into a negative. Now class was appropriately added to greatness. Which is a very nice combination.

WALTON: JACKSON THE AESTHETICS DIRECTOR - I think it was a good move for Phil not to play Kobe. I love the fact that it's happening now for the Lakers, that is, the team concept. In the beginning of the year, Kobe was on track to attempt the most shots ever. Kobe is learning that it is ultimately about the team. The team is playing a much more aesthetically pleasing game now. The encouragement, the teammwork -- because of all of this, Kobe is becoming a more likeable player. While people can respect the individual abilities of someone playing for themselves, this is a team game and the most popular players in history are the ones who play for others. The list is a long one. For the Lakers to acheive any level of success, they are going to have to listen to the words of their coach. I think the best coaching right now is being done by Phil Jackson.

CARROLL: RESPECTING THE GAME - Taking Kobe Bryant out in the fourth quarter was a no-brainer in my book. Kobe Bryant goes down and the Lakers might as well return their season ticket holders' money. If the game had been closer, let's say the Lakers were only up by 15 points or less, then Phil Jackson would have either kept Kobe in or reinserted him at some point in the fourth quarter. Coaches have a greater responsibility to the game of basketball and to their teams than to bettors, fantasy league gurus and statisticians. If a player is two points, or a rebound, away from a record then I can understand the concept of giving him a chance to break it. But to leave someone in the fourth quarter up 34 points just to see "how many he can get" borders on insanity. But in the sporting world we live in today it doesn't surprise me that some people are more interested in the moment than the big picture.

4) Marty Burns of SI.com thinks Tony Parker is it:

Tres magnifique - Spurs' Parker making move toward NBA's elite

Tony Parker has a confession to make. It seems the Spurs point guard isn't satisfied with his two NBA championship rings, his onetime status as one of People magazine's 50 Most Beautiful People and his high-profile romance with TV starlet Eva Longoria. Parker, it seems, wants to be known as one of the game's best point guards. He wants to be known as more than just a third wheel alongside Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili on the Spurs' championship machine. He wants to be included with Steve Nash, Allen Iverson and Jason Kidd on the list of top all-around floor generals. "Oh, definitely. Definitely," Parker says. "It's a big motivation." Parker, in his fifth season, appears to be on his way. Through Tuesday the 6-2 French flash was averaging career highs in five categories: points (20.2), assists (6.3), rebounds (4.1), steals (1.32) and field-goal percentage (53.8 percent). He led all NBA players in points in the paint (see box) and his shooting percentage ranked fifth in the league. The last point guard to finish in the top 10 in shooting percentage was John Stockton, 51.7 percent in 2001-02. Parker's hot shooting and all-around play have been a reason the Spurs have hung with the Pistons at the top this season despite nagging injuries to Duncan (foot) and Ginobili (foot). Parker's ability to pick up more of the scoring load, while also dishing the ball and playing his usual solid defense, has been critical. Coach Gregg Popovich even goes so far as to call Parker his team's "most consistent player" this season and ranks him alongside Detroit's Chauncey Billups as the two point guards who are making the jump to All-Star status this season. "I see Tony as somebody who's trying to prove a point," Popovich says. "He's been hellfire since the season started. All through training camp he was really focused on improving as player." Long known as one of the quickest players -- and best finishers - in the NBA, Parker this season has gone about trying to refine the rougher edges of his game. For example, he has worked extensively to improve his shaky jumper with Spurs shooting coach Chip Engelland, a former tutor for Grant Hill and Steve Kerr. This season he has spent the season coaching Parker on everything from his stance to where he places his thumb. The results have been modest but encouraging. While Parker's shooting from downtown remains a wreck ("We've sort of taken away his 3-point shot," Popovich jokes) he has shown a more reliable mid-range game. He knocked down several jumpers to help slay the Nuggets on opening night, and hit two big shots down the stretch at Milwaukee on Tuesday night to keep his team in a game that they lose in OT. "It's just how I hold the ball, and things like that," Parker says. "I'd been shooting the same way my first four years and it wasn't working like I wanted. I knew I had to take two steps backward and try to change some things. "It's just great to have somebody to correct me when I'm not doing well and to push me every day in practice. I'm trying to get better. That's one part of my game I'm trying to improve." Parker's ability to hit his outside shot is important because it might be the only thing holding him back from elite status. With his feline-like moves, he's already almost unstoppable going to the basket. He's also long been regarded for his "teardrops," the name given to those tricky short runners over taller players. For opponents, Parker is quicksilver in Spurs' silver and black. Tuesday night he slithered around Bucks point guard T.J. Ford and bounced off rookie center Andrew Bogut for a layup that left everyone one on Milwaukee's team shaking their head. As shocking as it might seem that a point guard could lead the league in points in the paint, the Bucks probably wouldn't be surprised. "We talked about it today [before the game], that he was shooting a lot of shots from outside last year and two years ago, [but] right now, with his quickness, he's making an effort to get to the paint and get lay-ups," Bucks veteran forward Toni Kukoc said.
"I'll say those were the two quickest guys in the league tonight, T.J. Ford and him. [Iverson's] right there, too, but I don't think even he's quicker than those two guys." That's not to say Parker is ready to join AI at the top just yet. The Spurs guard still tends to commit turnovers in flurries (3.2 per game), and he shoots free throws more like a 7-footer (66 percent) than a point guard. His shot selection, though getting much better, also could use some work. Against the Bucks he pulled up for a 3-pointer (a shot he's attempted only 12 times all season) with the score tied at 107-all and just five seconds left on the clock in overtime. He missed badly, and the Bucks were able to regain possession for what turned out to be a game-winning buzzer-beater by Bogut. On the sidelines Popovich's hair turned an even whiter shade. But Parker at least seems to be learning from his mistakes. Seated at his locker after the game, he took full responsibility. "I was trying to make sure we got the last shot," he said. "But I think I started my move too late and I was too far out." It was yet another confession for the little Frenchman with the worldly ambitions. And one that any truly great point guard -- like Nash, Iverson or Kidd - surely would be willing to make as well.

Parker in the paint - Quick, which San Antonio Spurs star leads the entire NBA in points scored in the paint? If you guessed Tim Duncan, you'd be wrong. It's Tony Parker. Yes, Parker, the Spurs' 6-2 point guard with the French flair and the killer teardrop, leads all NBA players in cashing in around the basket. Through Tuesday Parker had scored 328 points in the paint. That was six more than Duncan, who goes 6-11 (or 7-foot if you count his new mini 'fro). "A lot of people have told me that, but I didn't realize it," Parker chuckled Tuesday night. "They must be counting all my floaters. ... What can I say? I just try to create and get to the basket." While Parker's incredible quickness enables him to get to the basket almost at will, he's helped by the fact that the Spurs can surround him with good shooters to keep defenses honest. With three-point marksmen like Bruce Bowen (50 percent), Brent Barry (42.5), Robert Horry (40.4), Michael Finley (35.7) and Manu Ginobili (33.9), the Spurs create tiny cracks for Parker to exploit. "Obviously he's extremely fast and he has that teardrop that is so hard to make and so hard to block," Ginobili says. "At the same time, its hard [for our opponents] to help and collapse the paint because we've got Tim Duncan and so many great open shooters. "But he's so fast and plays so confidently that he's hard to guard no matter what. He can let it fly so quickly without jumping. He gets the shot blockers off guard."Adds Spurs coach Gregg Popovich: "Everybody's packing it in on him, because they know he's doing it, but he keeps doing it." Here's a look at the NBA's top five in scoring points in the paint (through Tuesday): 1. Tony Parker, Spurs 328, 2. Tim Duncan, Spurs 322, 3. Dwyane Wade, Heat 316, 4. LeBron James, Cavs 304, 5. Allen Iverson, Sixers 298

5) Will Purdue has lost his mind, for ESPN.com:

How LeBron is better than MJ

LeBron James came into "the House that Jordan Built" on Thursday night and showed Bulls fans why he just might be as good as or better than Michael ... some day. In the Cavs' 108-100 victory over the Bulls, LeBron displayed his MJ 2.0 game, totaling 37 points along with five rebounds, six assists and four steals. In his third NBA season, James appears to be a newer, bigger, heavier, stronger version of Jordan. James is overpowering NBA opponents with his size and speed. Guards can't check him because he's too big. When LeBron posted Chris Duhon in the fourth quarter, Duhon simply fell to the floor. Forwards can't check him because he's too quick. LeBron took Andres Nocioni to the wing, waved off a pick from Zydrunas Ilgauskas, and easily drove around Nocioni. The Bulls even tried to defend James with center Tyson Chandler. He rocked Chandler off balance, then rose up and nailed a jumper. He's one of the toughest covers in the league. LeBron is shooting more, making more and winning more this season. He's the only player in the NBA to average more than 25 ppg and shoot over 50 percent. For further evidence of his more mature game, have a look at John Hollinger's Player Efficiency Rating (PER). LeBron has a league leading 29.27 PER. His True Shooting Percentage, which takes into account 2s, 3s and free throws, is above 60 percent. And the Cavaliers at 15-9 have the fifth best record in the NBA. Bulls assistant Johnny Bach told me that the one big difference between Jordan and James is that MJ displayed more tenacity on the defensive end. When MJ didn't want to be screened you couldn't screen him. Jordan would push his man away from the screener or beat his man over a screen. LeBron will occasionally still get picked off by defenders. And LeBron might not have as good a mid-range game as Michael did at this stage of his career, though he probably has better range. LeBron's 3-point shooting has improved significantly this season. One area where MJ and LBJ are similar is their leadership. Like Michael, LeBron holds himself accountable and responsible for the Cavs' performance. If things continue the way they have been for Cleveland this season, LeBron will be able to take credit for their success as well.

6) SI.com’s Jack McCallum with his Xmas stories:

Christmas Day memories - Here are five NBA games that spiced up the holiday

Watching the NBA on Christmas Day has always been somewhat the guilty pleasure for me. My mother had a standing rule against watching sports on Christmas Day, formulated not on religious principles but on her absurd idea that the other 364 days of sports-watching could easily suffice. So my father and I would sneak into my grandmother's bedroom, where there rested a small TV that put forth video as if transmitted from the moon. (This was the 1950s, after all.) Dad would play around with the rabbit-eared antennae and, eventually, we could get a picture, usually one showing, as I recall, the old Boston Celtics putting a hurting on someone. In the spirit of the season, which Shaq and Kobe will no doubt demonstrate in the Miami Heat-Los Angeles Lakers doubleheader nightcap scheduled for this Sunday, here is a five-pack of NBA memories from Christmases past.

a) The 1970 Christmas Day game featured two of the most star-crossed players in NBA history. The Atlanta Hawks had a rookie named Pete Maravich, and the Phoenix Suns, in only their third year of existence, were powered by a veteran named Connie Hawkins, who had been deprived of the best years by trumped-up illegal recruiting charges. Pistol and the Hawk both had great games as the Suns won 127-115. My favorite video memory, though, is of the Suns' rookie head coach, Lowell Fitzsimmons, known to everyone as Cotton, patrolling the sideline. Cotton's death in 2004 deprived the NBA of one of its all-time great characters.

b) My favorite team from the late '70s was the colorful Philadelphia 76ers. They were led by Julius Erving, still an NBA novelty, and the great, underachieving George McGinnis, who could usually be found smoking a cigarette in the locker room after a game. On Dec. 25, 1978, they went up against the New York Knicks, still boasting Earl "The Pearl" Monroe, the last remnant from the championship teams of '70 and '74, and beat them 109-94. What I wonder, though, is whether the sons of two Sixers were playing with toy basketballs when their fathers left for the game. Probably not -- they were too young. Mike Bibby, son of Sixers guard Henry Bibby, was just seven months old, and Kobe Bryant, son of forward Joe "Jellybean" Bryant, was only four months old.

c) Of all the NBA's great scorers, Bernard King is possibly the most forgotten. On Christmas Day 1984, the knee injury that would keep him out of the latter part of that year, plus most of the next two seasons, had not yet occurred. With his variety of around-the-post moves-turnaround jumpers, baseline drives, lean-ins, etc. -- he scorched the New Jersey Nets with 60 points, still the all-time Christmas Day high. Alas, the Nets, led by their own star-crossed star, Michael Ray Richardson, whose basketball talent was eclipsed by his struggles with drug addiction, won the game 120-114.

d) An opening sequence to the 1986 Christmas Day game at Madison Square Garden showed Michael Jordan talking about opening presents on Christmas morning. Then in his third season, Jordan looked so young that one almost believed him when he said he wanted a new bicycle. Jordan had his first big Nike contract by then and could've made a nice down payment on an entire bike company. Four months hence, Jordan would be frustrated in the postseason as his Chicago Bulls would be swept by the Boston Celtics in the first round. The season would be even worse for his Christmas Day counterpart, Patrick Ewing, whose Knicks would win only 24 games. But despite 30 points from Jordan, this holiday belonged to Ewing. The second-year center's follow shot rolled around the rim and in as the buzzer sounded, giving the Knicks an 86-85 win.

e) The Christmas Day question last season was this: How would Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant, who had spent the summer torching each other in the press after a messy separation, greet each other at center court at the Staples Center? The answer: Hardly at all. Bryant appeared ready to give some love, but at the moment their paths crossed, Shaq appeared to find something of interest in the distant seats. Shaq did say hello minutes later when, on an early Kobe drive to the basket, he put the Lakers guard down with a hard foul. Bryant scored 42 points, but despite the fact that Shaq fouled out, he had the better Christmas as the Heat won 104-102 in overtime. Will they show some Christmas love on Sunday? My guess is that Shaq will again play Scrooge.

7) Mike Kahn of Foxsports.com thinks the real matchup on Xmas day will be the coaches:

Last year, Shaq-Kobe ... now, Riley-Jackson

The lines have been clearly defined for a generation. The NBA is focused on the players. College basketball is dominated by coaches. But the NBA has had too many issues to remain status quo about the players running the joint these days. From complaints about tattoos to attitudes and dress — prompting a dress code by commissioner David Stern this season — the marketing has changed. Entering this season, the two best stories entering the season were Larry Brown coming home to coach the New York Knicks and Phil Jackson returning to coach Kobe Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers after a year-long sabbatical. And the third-best story was the hypothetical watch of Pat Riley stepping out of the president's office and back to the coach's chair in Miami if things didn't go smoothly at the start of trusty lieutenant Stan Van Gundy's third season.Well, the season has indeed become an interesting saga of those three storied coaches. Brown still can't get the Knicks going, with trade rumors, benchings, and a revolving door inactive list rendering New York a tabloid dream. Jackson surprisingly has the Lakers chugging along on the cusp of the playoffs — with Bryant leading the league in scoring. And last week, with the highly regarded Heat stumbling around .500, Van Gundy resigned from the team Riley rebuilt around Shaquille O'Neal and Dwyane Wade, with Riles subsequently sparking them to a 4-1 run. Consequently, that leaves us with the big Christmas Day matchup being marketed by the NBA: Riley playing host to Jackson's Lakers — as opposed to the other game pitting last season's Finals matchup — the San Antonio Spurs and Detroit Pistons. This phenomenon reflects just how much the NBA has changed the past few years — particularly compared to last season. No way this game wouldn't have been focused on the Bryant and Shaquille O'Neal feud — the concept being that Bryant ran the Diesel out of L.A. Oh, that will be the undertone once the game starts ... it always is. And it's picking up steam: the Heat are 5-1 since O'Neal returned from a sprained ankle, and Bryant poured in an NBA-high 62 points in the Lakers' shocking 22-point win Tuesday night over the tough Dallas Mavericks. But the reason for the Riley-Jackson billing is obvious, beyond the two undoubtedly headed to the Naismith Hall of Fame in the future. They are both 60, werev unspectacular role players in the league who played on championship teams against each other, and two of the great coaches of this generation. Riley not only played for the Lakers, but won four titles as coach, most importantly eradicating the historic hold the Boston Celtics held over the Lakers. Seven times, the Celtics and Lakers had met in the Finals, with the Celtics winning all seven times until 1985, the year after Riley's first chance to exorcise the Celtics' demon fell in an odd turn of events. Then for good measure, the Lakers beat the Celtics again in 1987. Riley became a pop icon in Los Angeles, even being offered the role as Gordon Gekko in the film Wall Street, before it was given to Michael Douglas. But Riley lasted just three more seasons after beating the Celtics for the second time — finishing with four championship rings as coach — before taking a breather, and heading to New York to coach the Knicks. Meanwhile, Jackson, who was a member of two championship teams on the New York Knicks, had just begun building a dynasty in Chicago with Michael Jordan and the Bulls as Riley was finishing up with the Lakers and taking a year off. Like Riley, Jackson's strong personality permeated the premises around the Bulls — including early clashes with Jordan and non-stop issues with team president Jerry Krause that ultimately predicated the demise of the team. But that didn't happen until 1998, after the Bulls' run had wrought six rings, and he had become noted for giving books to players and earned the moniker "Zen Master" for his unconventional methods and interests. Riley headed to New York in 1991 and led the Knicks to three Atlantic Division titles, and a seven-game loss to the Houston Rockets in the 1994 finals — constantly butting heads with Jackson's Bulls during that time with frustrating results. In fact, the Knicks only beat the Bulls in a playoff series once — the '94 conference semifinals — when Jordan was off playing minor-league baseball. And even without MJ in uniform, the Knicks needed a late-game officiating blunder in Game 7 that still haunts Hue Hollins and retired Bulls star Scottie Pippen to pull off the win. But when Riles made a hasty exit in 1995 to rebuild and coach the Heat as a result of an acrimonious power struggle with Knicks, a new era was born. Even that didn't slow down the rivalry between the two men. In that landmark 1995-96 season, Riley coached the Heat to the playoffs for the first time in club history. The shadow of Jackson continued to chase Riley, however, as the Heat were swept by Jackson's Bulls. They met again the following year in the Eastern Conference finals, with the Bulls winning in five, and Riley never did get the Heat back to the conference final. A kidney disease prematurely caused star center Alonzo Mourning to leave the team and a knee injury cut short point guard Tim Hardaway's effectiveness, so Riley went into rebuilding mode in 2001, then resigned to focus on personnel as president moments before the 2003-04 season began. By that time, Jackson had already taken a year off and headed out to Riley's old stomping grounds with the Lakers, who had grossly underachieved with O'Neal and Bryant for three seasons. Undaunted, he coached them to three consecutive titles until egos and injuries began to break it down. They made it to the finals again in 2004, only to have them fall apart against the Pistons and that guy Larry Brown in an embarrassing five-game blowout loss for the Lakers. It ended with O'Neal demanding a trade, Jackson resigning and Bryant taking the brunt of the blame for the breakup. Well, O'Neal ended up in Miami. But the Lakers were still looking for a coach. And with Riley having bought property in Malibu recently, Lakers owner Jerry Buss tried to get him back. It was tempting, but in the meantime, Jackson's girlfriend Jeanie Buss — Jerry's daughter and the team's executive vice president of business operations — was busy trying to mend all the fences for Jackson's return. Despite a tell-all book that skewered Bryant, Jackson and Bryant made up and he's back coaching the Lakers instead of Riley. And just in time for the annual network premiere of the NBA, Riley is back on the bench. You want a soap opera worthy of drama? More than 32 years after the Knicks and Jackson torched the Lakers and Riley in the 1973 Finals, you've got the two NBA-lifers tap dancing around each other again. The first meeting of yet another era will fittingly be unwrapped on Christmas Day.

Wednesday, December 21, 2005



This is such a goofy picture of Bogut and his teammates celebrating his buzzer beater over the Spurs last night...

Kobe Bryant went bananas last night, scoring a career-high 62 points in just three quarters as the Los Angeles Lakers drilled the Mavs 112-90
Bryant shot 18-of-31from the filed, including 4-of-10 from 3-point range, and made 22 of 25 foul shots while playing only 33 minutes. When he left the game, he had actually outscored the Mavericks by himself, 62-61. "I was so frustrated by the loss the other night I was going to will us to victory," Bryant said, referring to a 76-74 loss to the Houston Rockets. "I was very angry, I felt like I wanted to come out and send a message, that we're going to dominate at home," he said. "We're going to hit you, we're going to bring it to you. I wanted to send that message."…"We had no answer for him," Mavericks coach Avery Johnson said. "We tried to double-team him, we tried to zone him, we tried to trap him in the backcourt, and nothing worked. He had his way with us tonight." Bryant scored 15 points in the first quarter, 17 in the second, and a franchise-record 30 in the third before taking a seat for good with the Lakers leading 95-61. "I just felt like I could continue to attack these guys," Bryant said. "It was just determination, take it to them. It's definitely the best scoring game I've ever had." With the 30 points in the third quarter, Bryant broke the previous Lakers record for points in a quarter was 24 shared by Bryant and Hall of Famers Jerry West and Elgin Baylor. For Posterity, the NBA record for points in a quarter is 33 by George Gervin for San Antonio in 1978. Denver's David Thompson scored 32 in a quarter the same season, and Wilt Chamberlain scored 31 in a quarter for Philadelphia in 1962, when he set the single-game NBA record with 100 points. Baylor scored a franchise-record 71 points on Nov. 15, 1960, at New York. Bryant's total is the sixth-highest in club history and the most for the Lakers since Chamberlain scored 66 at Phoenix on Feb. 9, 1969. The crowd was on it’s fet the whole 4th quarter chanting “we want Kobe!”, but Phil Jackson declined to put him back in…"We wanted to win the game, the game was in the bag, it was in the refrigerator," Bryant said. "There was no reason for me to go back in." Bryant became the first NBA player to reach 60 points since Philadelphia's Allen Iverson scored 60 in a 112-99 victory over Orlando last February. His total was the highest in Staples Center history, surpassing the 61 points Shaquille O'Neal scored against the Clippers on March 6, 2000 -- O'Neal's 28th birthday. "I've seen a few 60-point ballgames in my time, but none of them had been done by the third quarter," said Jackson, who coached Michael Jordan in Chicago. "His 30-point third quarter was incredible."

Funniest quote by an 80’s movie alien: "Kaman is that kind of guy, he's like a giant bass, you give him slack, and give him slack, then you reel him in," Cassell said. "I yell at him because I believe in him."

Wow, have some Eddie House…House scored 20 points on 9-of-13 shooting Tuesday night and Jones, back after missing four games with a sprained right ankle, added 16 in the Suns' 111-83 rout of the Seattle SuperSonics.

And some Andrew Bogut…who made a fadeaway jumper with 0.7 seconds left in the Bucks 109-107 OT win over the Spurs last night. The big aussie had scored the tying basket with 14 seconds left in overtime and finished with 19 points, including five in overtime. He added nine rebounds, seven offensive, and two blocked shots. "I've never had a buzzer-beating game-winner, but to do it in the NBA against the world champions is a great feeling," Bogut said. "The guy I've always looked up to is Tim Duncan. So, to do this against his team is a great feeling for me." Maurice Williams scored 28 points and Michael Redd added 20 for the Bucks, who had lost six of their last seven games against the Spurs. Duncan had a season-high 34 points on 15-of-28 shooting and grabbed 13 rebounds before fouling out with 22 seconds left in overtime. Tony Parker added 22 points and Nazr Mohammed 11 in the defending champion Spurs' second straight loss.

Football note: In the 14-year Bill Cowher tenure, Pittsburgh is now 98-1-1 when it holds a lead of at least 11 points at some point during a game.

Uncle Cliffy makes good…with his first basket of the Clippers-Nets game, Cliff Robinson moved past Scottie Pippen into 39th place on the NBA career scoring list with 18,942 points. Dale Ellis is next with 19,002 points. Robinson finished the game with four points. ...

Great stat from Elias sports Burean: Kobe scored 43 points against Dallas on Dec. 12. The last NBA player to score 105-plus points against one team over two games was David Robinson, who put up 112 against the Clippers in March-April 1994.

1) From Jim Armstrong of the Denver Post, Carmelo Anthony is crazy:

Artest the answer to Nuggets' questions

Back in the day, when Nene was talking breakout season and Kenyon Martin was going to prove he was worth the money, Kiki Vandeweghe had a vision. He wanted to use his two power forwards on the same front line with Marcus Camby. "Our three big guys are all flexible enough to play together in the front line," Vandeweghe said. "We certainly wanted to experiment with it so we could move Carmelo to the backcourt. But we haven't been able to realize that." Now is his chance. Vandeweghe not only has an opportunity to move Carmelo Anthony to the backcourt, he can significantly upgrade the Nuggets' defense in the same instant. All he has to do is risk every bit of team chemistry he has spent years trying to nurture. All he has to do is risk polarizing a fan base that isn't exactly breaking down the doors of the Pepsi Center for tickets. All he has to do is trade for Ron Artest. Sounds easy, trading for a player the Pacers want to unload, but nothing is ever easy with Artest. Even if the Nuggets can swing the deal - Nene and Earl Watson would be part of the package - there's the little matter of Artest's baggage. Did I say little matter? The guy has more baggage than Imelda Marcos. Depending on your point of view, Artest is at the top or bottom of the bad-boy food chain. Yao Ming is a foot taller, but Artest makes for a much better lightning rod. Why in the world would the Nuggets even consider dealing for Artest? You're right, it doesn't make any sense. The Nuggets would be asking for trouble. They would be begging for dissension among their ranks. It could turn out to be the NBA version of the Eagles-Terrell Owens nightmare. Yeah, but. The Nuggets are already in survival mode, to use Vandeweghe's term. Twenty-five games into things, they're below .500. What, Artest's presence might raise a few eyebrows in the locker room? A few outraged fans might boycott games? It's not like the team they've got is creating a buzz. They've had one sellout - on opening night. Sure, the Nuggets have had injuries, major ones. They all but hauled out the fife and drum the other night at Atlanta. But here's the thing about injuries: You can't let them be an excuse. And above all, you can't let them hide your real issues. Granted, the Nuggets don't have some issues other NBA teams do. They don't need two basketballs on the court. They don't have any undercurrents of tension in the locker room. They don't have any Shaq and Kobe "he said, he said" soap operas playing out in the papers. No, the Nuggets' only issue is talent. They don't have enough of it. They're bound to improve on their 12-13 record, what with eight of their next nine games at home, but there are telltale signs that Vandeweghe and George Karl don't believe the current cast is the answer. "Both of us feel that, talent-wise, this is a very good basketball team," Vandeweghe said. "We've had circumstances early in the season that haven't allowed us to emerge as a good basketball team. Ask Houston how difficult it was to play without Tracy McGrady. Ask Utah how difficult it was to play without Carlos Boozer and Andrei Kirilenko." Vandeweghe walked away a few moments later, presumably to start working the phones again. Even before all the injuries, he was talking trades with other clubs. Paul Pierce, Steve Francis and Al Harrington are just three of the names he has pursued. Now comes Artest. Forget those heart-to-hearts with teammates about wanting to rescind his trade demand. The Pacers' front office wants to deal him, and the Nuggets are interested enough to have initiated trade talks. Anthony is more than interested. If he can hook up with a 20-point scorer who doubles as the NBA's best perimeter defender, he'll do it and ask questions later. "He's got a clean slate if he comes here," Anthony said. "If we can get a guy like that, I don't really care about his baggage as long as I know what he's going to give me out there on the court, and it's self-explanatory what he's going to give me. "He's going to go to war with you every night." Anthony's willingness to accept him is just one reason the Nuggets should take a chance on Artest. Fact is, they're unique among the 20 teams that have inquired about his price tag. For one thing, they have a general manager whose future is anything but certain. With his contract expiring in August and no extension talks in the works, there's no next year for Vandeweghe. He needs to make a bold move, right here and now. Then there's Karl, who has a long history of getting the most out of troubled players. Gary Payton, Shawn Kemp, Anthony Mason, World B. Free. The list goes on and on. Artest would be Karl's biggest challenge yet, but it beats the heck out of scuffling along near the .500 mark. Go ahead, call any notion of acquiring Artest a panic move by a troubled team. Maybe it is. Then again, such a desperate move could turn out to be a stroke of genius. In this great unknown, the Nuggets could have everything to gain. We already know they have nothing to lose.

2) John N. Mitchell of the Washington Times reports that Gilbert Arenas is not interested in having Ron-Ron on his team:

Arenas votes no on Artest

Whenever a team falls on hard times as the Washington Wizards have -- they're 4-13 over the last month -- people start wondering whether it's time to make a change here, a tweak there. Indiana's volatile Ron Artest -- one day calling for a trade, the next telling his coaches and teammates he wants to remain with the Pacers -- is on the market, according to team president Donnie Walsh. And because of his relatively low salary, teams are going to come calling. Wizards president of basketball operations Ernie Grunfeld certainly isn't satisfied with the Wizards in recent weeks -- they have lost all three of their games so far on this road trip. As a result, Wizards coach Eddie Jordan is expected to make a lineup change tonight against the Denver Nuggets, inserting forward Caron Butler into the starting lineup in place of Jared Jeffries. Butler, who has come off the bench in the team's first 23 games, is third on the Wizards in scoring (15.0) and rebounding (5.0). Jeffries has started all 23 games but is averaging just 5.3 points and 4.3 rebounds. The slide also means Grunfeld at least has to be considering the tenacious defense Artest could bring to the buttery-soft Wizards. But point guard Gilbert Arenas, for one, wants no part of Artest. "A guy like that can help any team," Arenas said when asked whether he would like to have Artest as a teammate. "But he's one of those guys where you're going to need someone like Phil Jackson who has dealt with a guy with that type of personality." Nobody questions what Artest brings to the court for 48 minutes. But a more important factor for any potential suitors is the havoc he's capable of creating off it. Rightly or wrongly, Artest always will be connected to last season's infamous brawl with abusive fans in Detroit that resulted in charges being brought against players and Artest receiving a 73-game suspension and losing $4.9 million in salary. Even before the brawl, Artest was guilty of questionable actions and infractions, not to mention his absurd desire to take an in-season hiatus to work more closely on his Tru Warier record label. "If you really look at it, the same reason they are getting rid of him is the same reason a lot of teams won't touch him: He can mess up a locker room," Arenas said. "It's a shame because if you look at what he does on the court, he's just as important as Jermaine O'Neal. But when you think about what he does, you'd rather have Jermaine O'Neal. With Ron, you just don't know what type of disturbances he's going to bring to the locker room." Even if the Wizards don't make a play for Artest, team captain Antawn Jamison knows trade rumors will grow stronger until the Feb. 23 trade deadline. Jamison, mired in perhaps the worst shooting slump of his tenure in Washington, is against the Wizards tinkering with a team that has seven new faces on the roster. "I'm happy with what we have," said Jamison, who has made just 18 of his last 72 field goal attempts. "I don't think they should make any changes -- they should just let it ride out. We're going to be all right."

3) Ian Thomsen of SI.com with an article on leadership:

Leaders of men - Richardson, O'Neal lead Warriors, Pacers by example

To understand how the Golden State Warriors have risen from hopeless to hopeful -- based on a 14-11 start, they're promising to make the playoffs for the first time in nine years -- you must appreciate the short, complicated career of Jason Richardson. He has grown up to be far more valuable than the selfish dunker he admits he used to be. The Warriors used to be one of those franchises that bred bad habits. When Richardson joined them as the No. 5 pick of the 2001 draft coming out of Michigan State, he was introduced to an upside-down locker room. "Guys weren't playing defense, guys weren't sharing the ball," says Richardson. "Guys were just worried about trying to get to the All-Star Game, just trying to get their points. You pick up those bad habits -- you come in and don't practice hard. I can see how young guys would be affected like that. And I was." Richardson recalls older teammates criticizing him for making them look bad in practice. "They'd say, 'Slow down rook, you're going too hard.' I fell into that my first year, but toward the end of the season I said, I'm not here to make any friends, I just want to win games. And if it cost me friendships with teammates then you really found out who the selfish ones were. If you're playing hard and practicing and you see guys who aren't working hard, you really find out who your true teammates are." The best thing that happened to Richardson was the arrival in '03-04 of veteran swingman Calbert Cheaney. "He's the prototype of what your approach should be," says Richardson. "He doesn't complain about playing time, he works hard every day, he's the guy talking to me about what I need to do to get better. If I was not playing as well as I should, he was the first one in my ear saying, 'Jason, you're not playing like an All-Star, you're not doing this or that.' He's the guy who helped me to get to the next level of my game, and he's doing that to this day. He says, 'Every time you step on the floor you've got to consider yourself an All-Star and you've got to play like one.'" Give GM Chris Mullin credit for holding onto Cheaney. Now in his 14th year, the former Hoosier is a 34-year-old averaging only 11.0 minutes and 2.0 points, and his $1.8 million salary is readily expendable. But look at what he has helped bring out in Richardson, who is averaging 22.4 points and 6.0 rebounds while willingly ceding the marquee to point guard Baron Davis. "He's not just helping me," Richardson says of Cheaney. "He's helping Mike Dunleavy, [Mickael] Pietrus and all the wing players on this team because he's been there scoring points on winning teams going to the playoffs. He knows what it takes." The Warriors aren't taking Richardson's improvement for granted. Among players who have scored at least 14 points per game as rookies, only four have raised their scoring average over each of the next four seasons -- Karl Malone, Stephon Marbury, Billy Cunningham and Jack Twyman. Richardson is on track to join them, which has prompted former critics to start appraising him as more than a former two-time NBA dunk champion. "People just looked at me as a dunker, they came to the games and that was all they wanted to see," Richardson said. "I always felt I could do something more." Among the more noticeable improvements in Richardson's game has been his shooting, which has dove-tailed with a growing sense of responsibility for the Warriors' success. After missing a pair of last-minute free throws that doomed a game against Sacramento last season, Richardson practiced late into the night. "I stayed in the locker room and waited for everybody to leave, then I was out there in the main arena shooting free throws," he said. "I was so mad at myself because we could have won the game. It was a rivalry we had with Sacramento -- it's not that big, but to me they're like the big brothers and they always beat up on us, and every time you get a chance to win you want to win those games." As of Tuesday, Golden State was in third place in the Pacific Division -- four games ahead of the last-place Kings, whom they have yet to meet this season -- and hoping to stave off pursuers such as Denver, Seattle and Houston in the Western Conference playoff race. Richardson is trying to meet the challenge by elevating his game at both ends. "He expends a lot of energy to score 24 or 25 points a game, and then to go back down and chase Kobe and Ray Allen and Tracy McGrady," says backup guard Derek Fisher. "He hasn't backed away from these guys. There were times last year when those guys would have a good game and Jason couldn't summon up the energy to do what he needed to do to help us. This year he's doing it on both ends to help us win."

The result has been that Richardson, 24, is on the cusp of his first All-Star appearance. "It would mean a lot to me," he says. "But last year I was more into it: I was telling newspapers I should be an All-Star and all that. This year I would rather be in the playoffs than be in the All -Star Game. That's what I'm really pushing for -- to get this team into the playoffs."

In his own words: Jermaine O'Neal - Pacers team captain and All-Star Jermaine O'Neal is among the most articulate players in the league. In the last week he's put his eloquence to use explaining why Indiana should not reverse course and reinstate small forward Ron Artest on the active roster after he demanded to be traded before asking for a reprieve a few days later. In this interview O'Neal explains his feelings about Artest, including his assertion that he could have accepted a lesser penalty for his part in the 2004 brawl at Detroit but was adamant about supporting his teammate. O'Neal was ultimately suspended 25 games for his role in the melee. Though the 6-11 O'Neal is a power forward, he's spent most of this season playing out of position at center (in place of the previously injured Jeff Foster). As of Monday night, O'Neal was averaging 22.4 points, 10.5 rebounds and 2.2 blocks for the Pacers (14-8), who won four of their first five games after Artest was placed on the inactive list while the team tried to trade him. "He's a legitimate MVP candidate based on how he's led the team and how he's played," says Indiana coach Rick Carlisle. "He's been the key guy to hold this group together through a tough first month, trying to find our way and find our chemistry

On how he supported Artest last season: "Right now we're dealing with a situation with Ron which made me a little bit bitter because of all the situations I've been involved in with Ron, especially after actually going to bat for him and doing what I did last year for him. I had a chance to not even [go] to arbitration; I could have just gone to the NBA and [by declining arbitration], my suspension would have been done with. So for him to speak about other players and other teams while wearing the uniform, after all that we've been through, is a little bit of a slap of the face."

On his rapport with Artest: "Our relationship in the past hasn't been the best. It's just been a work relationship, not a personal relationship. But this year was a little bit different -- actually it was a lot different. We talked all the time, we called each other, we came off a West Coast trip where we were together every single day. Then we got the word [about Artest's trade demand] when you guys got the word, and that was probably one of the most hurtful things. As a player you understand the nature of either wanting to be traded or you're going to be traded -- that one of the two is going to happen in your career. We would have understood it a lot more if he had just come to us -- the players -- because we're the guys who ultimately carry the organization. We win or lose games. It's one of those situations where I got upset about it, but at the end of the day I can't really dwell on that. I've just got to keep moving forward."

On winning a championship this year: "We were just talking on the bus about how you see so many different articles about how the Pacers 'need to retool now.' This Pacers team has dealt with me not being here, with Ron, with Jack (Stephen Jackson), with Reggie [Miller] not being here, and the fact of the matter is that we've never faltered. We've always found a way to stay afloat, even with six or seven guys, so we can't worry about people who don't want to be here. Ron is an afterthought now. It's more about what we can do to better ourselves. "We're not going to sit on our hands and wait on a trade. This is what is given to us. We have to go out and compete every single night. I'm sure whatever [team president] Donnie [Walsh] and [GM] Larry [Bird] do is going to be beneficial to the team, but our style has to be established now and whoever we get has to get in with the program. We can't wait to see what type of player we get; there're 14 other players on our team, so that [new] player has to adjust to what we're doing."

On the up-and-down nature of this year's Pacers: "This is probably the most frustrating time in my last four or five years because the bar has been set so high and when you underachieve there is no excuse. So don't talk about certain situations when we were tired or whatever, because every team goes through that. Every team plays the schedule. It's either we go out and we play hard or we don't play hard. That's it. When you make excuses you set yourself up for failure every single time. "Maybe it's time for management to find a group of players -- from me on down -- where there are no excuses. We have to come to the games, OK? So why not go out and play to win? It's only for two hours, so why not give your full ability to win? I'm going to put the blame on my shoulders, but one thing I do expect is for every player on this team to do what he's supposed to do. If between now and June we don't get certain players doing what they're supposed to do, then they shouldn't be here."

On the paradox of Artest: "As a player you just get tired of dealing with it, you get tired of talking about issues that have nothing to do with basketball. It never has anything to do with basketball. And it's the off-the-court stuff that wears you down. It's so puzzling because when you talk to Ron and you deal with him, he's perfectly fine and he's one of the hardest workers that you've ever seen. His desire to be the best is unbelievable. I admire that to the utmost. He brings that aggressiveness, that ability, that energy every single day, and it's hard to do that every single day, but he finds a way. But then there's another part of Ron that you don't quite understand. He does things, says things, and it's more on an individual level, where its just about Ron and it's never about the team. "We laugh and joke about it now because we shouldn't be surprised. Every year we've dealt with something.... From the bottom of my heart I hope that Ron Artest reaches every goal and gets everything that benefits him and his family from basketball. I genuinely hope for that. We just can't have any more issues that affect us.

On how Artest hurt his future earnings: "He probably is one of the rare Top-15 guys who doesn't get paid Top-15 money. But when something like this comes up again, after what he went through last year, you're not quite sure that he would ever get that max deal. That's probably the saddest thing about it, because for what he physically can do he deserves a max deal. But it's so much more -- it's not just playing the game. You have to be a very good person, also. And Ron is a very good person; he just has certain issues that he lets funnel over. And sometimes he says things, and I don't think he really means it, but once you say it, it's done. It's in ink."

On what he learns from his rivals: "San Antonio has a lot more talent. Detroit is not that talented. They have five really good players, and they have other guys who know their roles. Personality-wise, they're put together very well. It takes a team -- not necessarily a talented team -- but a team from 1 through 15 that wants to win, that's going to be happy for every player if they score a bucket. One thing I notice about the Spurs and the Pistons: When the team is making a run, you see guys up, waving towels, jumping up and down, [and they] haven't played one minute in the game. That's what it's about. That's a championship team. Our team, we're more of an emotional team. When things are going bad then you can tell. You can look at peoples' faces and you can tell."

On playing center: "Centers have had an awful lot of problems guarding me. Even when we played in Miami [in November], Shaq picked up three quick fouls trying to guard me because I'm able to catch and face. Miami really has a lot of problems with me in the pick and roll. "Obviously Shaq is the most dominant player ever, and I think he's the only center who would give me issues -- and that's as far as foul trouble. But as far as any center guarding me, there's no center that can guard me. Period. As far as Yao Ming, he fades later in the game, he gets tired. So I'm strong enough to hold him up, and if he's not making that turnaround shot, he's in trouble. He's going to find problems catching and facing because he can't move his feet quick enough. "My motto is: If you're too big, I'm going to face you; if you're too small, I'm going to post you. And I give a lot of credit to Rick Carlisle and his system."
4) From the AP, the General is still at it:

Knight's still feisty as career winds down

It's been quite an unusual 40th season for Texas Tech coach Bob Knight so far: His successor has already been picked, he's off to his worst start in a decade, but he's still got the same intensity that helped him win three national championships with Indiana. "I'm still coaching. My name is still on there as the coach," the 65-year-old Knight said. "My name's on there, then that's what I'm doing." Knight, with 860 career wins, needs 20 to overtake Dean Smith for No. 1 on the all-time list. But with a team that's struggling and 19 games remaining before postseason play, passing Smith seems like it will have to wait for next season. After last year's team made a surprising run to the round of 16 in the NCAA tournament, this year's Red Raiders (6-5) are the most inexperienced team Knight has ever coached. There are seven freshmen and one junior college transfer on the roster. The influx of new players and the fact that several interior players have been hobbled by injuries means Knight is off to his slowest start as a coach since 1995 at Indiana. "We've got an awful lot of work to do to be competitive," Knight said. "Forgetting the injuries, we're not where I had hoped we would be at this point." Knight said he's "disappointed" so far by this team, which plays Arkansas (8-2) for the first time since 1991 Wednesday in Dallas. Knight pointed to a leadership void and the departure of former walk-on Ronald Ross, one of the sparks during the NCAA tournament, as major factors in the team's struggles. "That has been a huge," Knight said. "I did not think that replacing Ronald, as good as he was and as much as he meant to that team, would be as difficult as it is." Pat Knight, who signed a contract in October that designated him as his father's successor as Texas Tech's coach, said the team has been inconsistent without a leader. "We told our team it doesn't need to be one guy," he said. "It can be the whole team, just as long as somebody takes the burden off the coaching staff." Tech started 10-1 in each of Bob Knight's first two seasons, and the Raiders have won at least 20 games all four years since he arrived - a first for the school. Despite Knight's first slow start in Lubbock, some who have watched him for years see him utilizing the same techniques he's been doing since 1965, when he became the youngest coach in Division I history when Army hired him at age 24. "I don't see any changes since they made the (successor) announcement," said Tech senior associate athletic director Steve Downing, who played for Knight in 1972-73 at Indiana and followed him to Lubbock. "He's doing exactly the same things that he did when he was at Indiana when I was a player." Tech athletic director Gerald Myers said he believes that "gradually" his longtime friend and colleague would shift some of the head coaching responsibilities to his son. For now, though, Pat Knight is helping his father in much the same way he always has, though some of the players may view him differently. "I would think that they would look at him as a person with a little more authority than maybe they thought he had, as far as having a lot of input in the program," Myers said. "He's always been active in workouts and practices." The line of succession has "already had a positive effect" in recruiting, both for the players and Pat Knight, Myers said. "The players can feel comfortable in that they would still be part of the program as far as why they were recruited," Myers said. "I think that now he will have a bigger interest in the players he's evaluating, not only trying to evaluate for his dad as the head coach, but also looking at it from his own perspective." Myers believes Bob Knight probably will stay in Lubbock after he retires. His contract, which was extended in September, expires in 2009. "He likes it here," Myers said. "A lot of good recreation that he likes. Plus, his son will be coaching. He'll want to see him coach some."

Tuesday, December 20, 2005



NCAA game of the month: La Salle took 4 OT’s to beat Central Connecticut, 107-106 last night. LaSalle PG Darnell Harris hit two free throws with no time remaining to win it for the Explorers, who got 41 points and 11 boards from soon to be NBA lottery pick Steven Smith. Toronto kid Tristan Blackwood (pictured here) had 28 and 9 dimes for the Blue Devils…Speaking of Toronto kids…I watched UCLA beat Michigan 68-61 on the weekend and Mississauga’s Ryan Wright, who’s a freshman at UCLA played well getting 8 points and 8 rebounds on 4-5 shooting from the floor with two very big dunks to boot…as well as Wright played, Toronto’s own Javohn Sheppard who playes for Michigan got 2 minutes og burn recording no points…

Too Funny: Sonics point guard Luke Ridnour received three stitches to his forehead after being hit by the teeth of teammate Vitaly Potapenko during a pregame huddle before Friday night's win over the Blazers. ...

Reason # 87495 Isaih Thomas is an idiot: The Knicks draft pick in the Curry trade was not lottery protected…so if the Knicks end up with one of the top picks, which they're headed toward, they'll just hand it over to Chicago…but hey they still have San Antonio's pick from the Malik Rose trade…

Worst sports talk show ever: Quite Frankly, the hour-long interview show hosted by Stephen A. Smith started on Aug. 1 and has averaged an 0.18 rating or 161,000 households since its debut. The ratings for males 18-and-over is 0.12. The figures are through Dec. 14….why? It’s the worst show ever…honestly, bring on the re-runs of Magic Johnson’s talk show instead…this one is that bad…

Yao…Ow…Houston center Yao Ming is expected to miss several games after undergoing surgery Monday on his infected left big toe. The 7-foot-6 Yao, who is averaging 19.9 points and nine rebounds has a toe infected with osteomyelitis, a common inflammation of the bone caused by bacteria, the Rockets said. The Rockets said that Yao will require antibiotics and rest for several weeks in order to allow the infection to properly heal.

Raps win…after going 9-of-16 from behind the arc, including Morris Peterson 's winning 3-pointer with 8 seconds left, the Raps beat the Magic 92-90 last night. The Raptors are now 4-1 on the road in December. ''I guess we have the attitude that we're in unfamiliar territory and we have no one but ourselves, so we stick together,'' said point guard Mike James , one of five Toronto players in double figures with 13 points. Peterson and Chris Bosh each scored 19 points for Toronto, which snapped a three-game losing streak. Steve Francis scored 20 points and Jameer Nelson added 14 as the Magic lost for the seventh time in nine games. ''That's my bread-and-butter spot,'' Peterson said. ''If you get an open look like that in this league, you've got to knock down the shot and we were knocking them down tonight.'' ''With 2 seconds left you just try to get your best look and Jalen made a great pass to Mo,'' Toronto coach Sam Mitchell said.

Just like Tom has been telling us: Morris Peterson, who hit a 3-pointer from the left corner to give the Raptors a 92-88 lead over the Magic on Monday, called that his "bread and butter spot." Entering the game, Peterson had attempted 113 3-point field goals this season, 46 of which he shot from the left corner (41 percent). Another 23 attempts, 20 percent, have come from the right corner.

NCAA is fun exactly because you never know…DePaul beats Wake Forest by three in Winston-Salem and then loses to Old Dominion by 44…and ODU loses by 21 at Drexel and then, a week later, beats DePaul at home by 44…

Ouch…Washington Wizards guard Jarvis Hayes is out indefinitely after fracturing his right kneecap again. Hayes was diagnosed by team doctors on Monday. He was sent home from the Wizards' western road trip Saturday after feeling discomfort during the first quarter of Friday night's loss to the Los Angeles Lakers

1) Kelly Dwyer of Si.com reports that the Hawks and Hornets are cooking:

The meek shall inherit the NBA - Hawks, Hornets hint at methods behind the madness

The nights are long, the days are cold, but at least we have Zaza Pachulia's jump hooks to keep us warm. Call in the kiddies, light a candle and gather 'round for some the week's best and worst ...

Champs - First, a cold shower: the Hornets and Hawks probably aren't on the road back to respectability, despite some impressive wins recently. Both teams boast young and intriguing rosters full of developing talents alongside dubious ownership groups that employ beleaguered heads of personnel. It's hard to expect great things from both franchises with the lack of leadership coming from on high. As it stands, however, both squads are playing some of the best basketball in the NBA right now, and they deserve a little recognition, however fleeting. The 6-17 Hawks have won four of five, and while they haven't exactly developed a team-wide sense of cohesion and purpose, their possession-by-possession focus has improved immensely over the last week. Atlanta has some solid parts, and when coach Mike Woodson shortens the rotation and attacks mismatches with isolation play (shades of Don Nelson's finer days), the team can thrive. The team is winning with yin and thriving with yang, pulling out Ws in a couple of different ways. Though the Hawks registered just 12 assists in a win over the Spurs on Dec. 10, they've averaged 21.8 assists per game (up from 16.5 after San Antonio win) in the games since. And after missing nine of 10 3-point attempts in wins over the defending champs and the Cavaliers three nights later, they've gone on a tear in the three games since, hitting 60 percent of their 50 attempts. And yet, this probably wasn't what GM Billy Knight had in mind when he put this team together. Knight probably envisioned a series of like-minded, multi-talented players sharing the ball and creating matchup mismatches without having to dribble themselves into oblivion. Sadly, a group like that needs a point guard to make it all work, and while Knight has done a masterful job securing talents like Pachulia and John Edwards off the scrap heap, he's also given up way too much for free-agent signee Joe Johnson and missed on draft picks such as Josh Childress (drafted before Luol Deng, Andre Iguodala and Al Jefferson) and Marvin Williams (drafted ahead of Chris Paul and Deron Williams). Williams is only 19, but averaging 5.4 points and 4.4 rebounds in 22.6 minutes isn't going to cut it. Compare that with the similarly talented Shareef Abdur-Rahim, who averaged 18.7 points and 6.9 rebounds in 36 minutes as a 19-year old rookie. The 11-13 Hornets may not share Atlanta's overall talent level, but they've become a joy to watch and won three of five last week. Check out Chris Paul's numbers over the last five games: 18.4 points on 49 percent shooting, 7.2 rebounds a game with 8.4 assists, 3.2 steals and just 2.2 turnovers a game. The 6-foot tall Paul is boarding (6.2 per game this season) at a rate similar to Knicks wunderkind Channing Frye (6.5 caroms a night this year), and Frye might be the next Bob McAdoo. Among those helping Paul is 20-year-old J.R. Smith, who averaged 18.8 points over his last four contests before twisting an ankle in a Hornets win over the Spurs on Sunday. Although Smith could use his time more wisely than hoisting five 3-pointers a game in December, he appears poised to become a Rashard Lewis-lite. And speaking of poise, forward David West is developing far ahead of schedule (even after he lost 2004-05 to injury). It may just be me, but the Hornets' orthodox rotations seem built for longer term success than Atlanta's phalanx of swingmen. I'd love it if a group of 6-8 all-around types could take over the NBA, but until it happens, I'm sticking with what brought me here. As expected, the 10-13 Houston Rockets have gotten their act together, and have won six of seven. Even though he's still rounding into shape, Tracy McGrady has been a godsend in his return from a back injury, averaging 26.8 points per game alongside 12 combined assists and rebounds in a little more than 40 minutes a night. With the intangible pressure off him, Yao Ming averaged 21.9 points on 54 percent shooting with 9.3 rebounds over his last 10 games, before the real pressure of an inflamed big toe put him on the shelf as of Sunday. Worst case scenario? Yao is out for 10 days, which hurts, but the Rockets can survive. They play only four times during that span, with games against the Raptors, Nuggets (losers of three straight), Jazz and Hornets. I maligned them last week, but the forward duo of Ryan Bowen and Juwan Howard has improved, though not enough to warrant playing the minutes they're playing. Over the last five games, "Ry-Ju" has combined to average 13 points and 9.2 rebounds in 49.5 minutes per game. And, yes, I will continue to call them "Ry-Ju" because the name sounds like a character from those "Street Fighter" video games, and I like to yell "Ha-dooken" whenever Ry-Ju uncorks one of his nasty-looking jump shots.

Chumps - The Nuggets won just two of six games on their Eastern Conference road trip, following up a promising win over the Shaq-less Heat with losses to the Magic, Hawks, Nets and Cavs. Missing at various times has been Marcus Camby, Kenyon Martin, Earl Boykins and Greg Buckner. Boykins had played in 253 consecutive games before hitting the pine on Dec. 13 with a strained left hamstring. But Boykins seemed as if he could use the break; the Nuggets' spark plug was shooting just 37 percent in the nine games leading up to his trip to the inactive list.
Even with injuries burning holes in the roster, Carmelo Anthony has improved considerably over the last 10 months, while Andre Miller has continued his yeoman's work at the point guard slot. George Karl, by and large, has done a fantastic job with this team, but he wasn't brought in solely to win with a Nuggets team at full strength; almost any coach not named Michael Cooper could do that. Karl has to find a way to slog out wins even with important cogs missing in action, and so far, he's not getting the job done. This is still a good team, especially on the defensive end, but that hasn't prevented them from suffering breakdowns in late-game situations. In the fourth quarters of their last four losses, the Nuggets have been outscored by a total of 10 total points, which speaks to the importance of taking care of each possession in the clutch. Denver will play five of their next six at home to end the year, but this run includes games against the Spurs, Rockets, Sixers and Wizards, split up by a trip to Golden State. The Knicks are a mess, and Larry Brown has nobody but himself to blame -- though he's trying his damnedest to absolve himself of any blame for the team's 6-17 start. Clearly, this was a mismatched roster from the start -- something LB must also have known -- but even with this disparate group of talents, a .261 winning percentage is unacceptable. New York is losing in brutal fashion. Last week's run included defeats at the hands of the Bucks (by 20), the Magic (by 15), the Hawks (by 11) and the Ron Artest-less Pacers. Not exactly a murderer's row, especially when you play three out of four at home. To top it, every Knick outside of the rookie trio of Channing Frye, Nate Robinson and David Lee looks uncomfortable with their teammates. Each and every one of the veterans expects the veteran to his left and to his right to be the next to be shipped out, and if you watch this team's body language, it appears as if none of these Knicks think they are to blame for these pitiful showings. This issue probably deserves more than a pithy one paragraph, but the trend of calling either a block or charge on any drive that results in a lick of contact needs to stop. The NBA's referees did a tremendous job cleaning up the game last year, but these flops and fits are getting out of hand. It is possible for a player to drive the lane, brush past a stationed defender, and not have a foul committed. And this isn't to rail against the Derek Fisher-types who hit the deck at any given instant. There are just as many needless block calls going on this season as there are silly charges. The flow of the game is interrupted, players are limited by having to play through foul trouble and slashers are starting to worry about driving the lane -- which will wipe out any progress the league made last year when it started to enforce hand-checking rules.

The week ahead - The 9-13 Washington Wizards have hit a low point. They're a game and a half out of the Eastern playoff bracket, and they're coming off a nasty road loss to the money-makin' Portland Trail Blazers. Still stuck on the road, the Wizards will face the SuperSonics, Nuggets and Suns this week. If they're not careful, they'll celebrate "holiday" with a 9-16 record, with games against the Lakers, Suns and Heat looming. A loss to the Rockets on Sunday hasn't tempered the Lakers momentum, but they'll have a tough stretch over the next seven days. The Mavericks will be in town on Tuesday, ready to avenge a home loss the Lakers put on Avery Johnson's bunch last week. Statistically, this Mavericks team is one of the slowest in the league, and they'll force the Lakers out of their transition game with zones off of missed shots and nary an attempt at pulling in offensive rebounds. Things will slow down even further as the Lakers head to Orlando on Friday, before games against the Heat and Washington on Sunday and next Monday. The Lakers are going to have to rely on Phil Jackson's structured offense more than ever this week. The 13-12 Philadelphia 76ers have but two games (against the Warriors, in Atlanta) from now until Dec. 27. That's a lot of practice time, so will this be the week that coach Maurice Cheeks implements a balanced offensive attack that will take the ball out of Allen (33.4 points and 7.4 assists) Iverson's hands? Stop laughing. With Andrei Kirilenko (15.2 points, 10.8 rebounds, five assists, 4.8 combined blocks and steals over his last five games) and Mehmet Okur starting to kick a little ass, we'll get a good idea of just where the Utah Jazz stand among the Western playoff contenders this week. Though they're at 11-13 now, Utah is just two games behind the eighth-place Lakers, and they're looking at three winnable road games in Cleveland, Boston and New York. After an exciting start, the 6-18 Charlotte Bobcats have fallen past the Hawks and into the dregs of the Southeast Division, but they could pull off a solid week. The Bobcats have games against the Kings, Bulls and Clippers -- three teams that, for a variety of reasons, chafe at having to play against pressure defense. Don't be surprised if the Cats pull two of three. On the other end, don't be surprised if Charlotte's opponents use the extra pass to shoot the Bobcats into their 19th, 20th and 21st losses. The Bucks have just two games between Dec. 18 and 25, and we're really looking forward to how they hold up at home against the San Antonio Spurs on Tuesday. San Antonio has given some games away over the last week with poor execution (!) and poor free-throw shooting from Tim Duncan and Brent Barry (!!), so the champs are pretty peeved. The last time the Spurs out-rebounded an opponent was Dec. 9, and the big ol' Bucks could have their way on the glass.

2) Mike Kahn of Foxsports.com with his weekly 10 things column:

10 things we learned this week

It took a little longer this year, but it's always impossible not to get excited about Grant Hill being activated and back on the floor for the Orlando Magic. After missing the first 19 games of the season with a sports hernia, it's a heck of a lot more encouraging to see him back now as opposed to playing in just 47 out of a possible 328 games from 2000-04 when he suffered through four ankle surgeries.

1. Item: The Magic have been struggling to keep their heads above water with the ninth best record in the Eastern Conference so far, but remain in striking distance due to Steve Francis, Dwight Howard, Hedo Turkoglu, DeShawn Stevenson, Jameer Nelson and a handful of role players. What this really means: They split the first two games upon Hill's return, but the simple fact that he had 28 points, six rebounds, three assists and two steals in his debut at Dallas is a reminder of how we've really missed one of the great players of this era in his prime. They pushed the Mavericks before losing by six, then crushed the Knicks in New York in his second game. Now, 33, Hill was essentially non-existent for the Magic the first four seasons of his maximum contract, and just got his feet back on the ground last season. To have lost the prime years is a travesty not only for Hill, but for the league. With all the negative publicity the NBA has gotten about its stars, they really missed perhaps the brightest and classiest player representing them off the floor because he was rarely capable of stepping foot on the floor. So for however long we have him, let's appreciate it … no doubt Magic coach Brian Hill will.

2. Item: The Minnesota Timberwolves entered the week having lost four in a row since winning nine of 11, but at 12-10 they are the only team in the Northwest Division playing above .500. What this really means: Let's leave the rest of the division for another time — the Nuggets, Sonics, Jazz and Blazers all have their own problems. Meanwhile, back in the Twin Cities, the Wolves lost the first three games of their present losing streak by a grand total of five points. They lost by a point in overtime to Philadelphia — highlighted by the showdown between Kevin Garnett and Chris Webber, with Webber making a clutch block on Garnett late in the game. They lost by two to San Antonio, and lost by two to Sacramento on a Bonzi Wells 3-pointer at the buzzer. In other words, the T-Wolves are playing everybody close, and they're just figuring out how to consistently execute offensively down the stretch of games for new coach Dwane Casey. But clearly Casey has gotten through to them on the defensive end. Besides, with Garnett averaging 21.3 points, 12.3 rebounds and 5.0 assists during the losing streak, this reversal of fortune figures to be temporary, doesn't it?

3. Item: Speaking of Webber, he just completed a three-game run of averaging 26.3 points, 12.0 rebounds and 3.0 assists, looking a lot more like the pre-knee surgery Webber who was an All-NBA forward. What this really means: Webber could be the poster player for recovery from micro-fracture knee surgery … we're now into the third season. Perhaps more importantly, Webber, All-Star guard Allen Iverson and Sixers coach Maurice Cheeks are starting to figure it out. Sure, they're still hot and cold, struggling to get above .500, but they've already had some good runs and Samuel Dalembert is still getting into the floor after beginning the season on the injured list — initially with a hip strain, followed by a quad strain. Nonetheless, the Sixers do have the tools to win the weak Atlantic Division, and for the first time this decade, it is more contingent on somebody else than Iverson — and that would be Webber. As the best passing power forward of this generation and maybe ever, if the Sixers run their offense through him, he'll go a long way toward making the game easier for Iverson and everyone else around him. It would be refreshing if the buzz about Webber were positive for a change.

4. Item: On second thought … Part II of the latest preposterous episode of Ron Artest, NBA nutcase, has Artest and his agent publicly reconsidering his desire to be traded by the Indiana Pacers because he didn't like coach Rick Carlisle's offense. What this really means: The days of giving Artest the benefit of the doubt are over for the Pacers. The sooner Donnie Walsh finds a deal — any deal – he's comfortable with, the better. The chemistry will change because they'll obviously get players worthy of minutes. More importantly, the toxic spirit of Artest from the locker room can only benefit this team. This is particularly disconcerting for All-Star forward Jermaine O'Neal. Say what you want about O'Neal, but not only is he a top-10 player in this league, but he's a top-10 standup guy. Despite a glowing public image, he put his reputation on the line and sullied it for Artest in the Palace Brawl last year. It cost J-O 15 games, plenty of money and even today severely damages one of the best franchises in the NBA. Now he wants out? Those days are over and the Pacers would be better off even if they dealt him to the San Diego Clippers for a 1983 first round draft choice.

5. Item: That ominous feeling everybody in the Eastern Conference has right now doesn't appear to be temporary. It's almost as if Miami Heat owner Micky Arison called in the cavalry to rescue his teetering team when Shaquille O'Neal returned from an 18-game absence with an ankle injury and Pat Riley replaced Stan Van Gundy as coach beginning in Chicago on Dec. 13. What this really means: It now no longer matters how deep the love is between Riley and Van Gundy, his trusty lieutenant. Van Gundy tired of the situation and let Riley have it with his resignation Now we'll see. They were 10-10, then won O'Neal's first four games back and Riley's first three as coach before losing to LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers to temporarily spoil the fun. There is no doubting the spectacular play and game-winning capability of Dwyane Wade every night. The question is how Riley's controlling nature will affect O'Neal, along with veterans Antoine Walker, Gary Payton, James Posey and Jason Williams. Riley is a tough guy and he does bring four championship rings to the table. Alonzo Mourning is the only player really familiar with what it's like to play for him. But keep in mind Riles, now 60, was really burnt out when he left the team to Van Gundy seemingly minutes before the 2003-04 season and climbed into the front office. He's 60, needs hip replacement surgery, has won only two playoff series the past 10 years. Nonetheless, it's doubtful he is willing to bend to O'Neal's silliness about his weight or anything else. Consequently, the most exciting and controversial 24 months in franchise history are unfolding right now.

6. Item: The New Orleans/Oklahoma City Hornets played their first game in Louisiana this season when they lost 101-88 to the Phoenix Suns at the Pete Maravich center in Baton Rouge before 7,302 — nearly 10,000 less than capacity. What this really means: The future of the Hornets in New Orleans continues to remain dicey unless the NBA promises to subsidize the franchise. Even though the game was the first of six to be played at Baton Rouge, not New Orleans, the issues surrounding the recovery from Hurricane Katrina have the Hornets so far down the totem pole that it just may not be financially viable. It's so touchy for commissioner David Stern and even for the people of Oklahoma City, nobody can breathe a word about the obvious. Of course, it would seem like they are kicking a city when it's down, but the Hornets weren't working there anyway — even after just five seasons. The Hornets are an exciting young team coached by Byron Scott and they're averaging 18,500 in Oklahoma City, a growing city clamoring to become major league. What isn't fair is to keep moving this team around. This is the third city in six seasons and it's impossible to build long-time commitments until this team gets settled. It's too early for the big decision, but it's also naïve to exclude Oklahoma City from the big picture equation.

7. Item: The Los Angeles Lakers won three out of four and eight of 11 to move a few games over .500 and gain at least some traction in the Western Conference playoff picture. What this really means: The effect of coach Phil Jackson's return is beginning to take hold, even if they are limited with talent and depth. This is his ultimate test … not only getting Kobe Bryant to buy into his scheme and actually execute what he professes, but developing Lamar Odom and coaxing the rest of the team to grow around those two players. For his entire career, Jackson has been dodging shots from the peanut gallery because he had great teams there for him with the Bulls and Lakers, but the fact of the matter is they didn't win before he came and they didn't win after he left. But this team is considerably less talented than either previous stop. This will show not only his basketball IQ, but teaching and motivational skills. Here's guessing those nine rings he won as a coach (not to mention two with the Knicks as a player) will hypnotize this group of Lakers and carry them into the playoffs. After all, he's one of the most underrated defensive coaches of this generation.

8. Item: The Houston Rockets now are 10-5 with Tracy McGrady in the lineup after going 0-8 without him. What this really means: Funny, how they suddenly look like a playoff team again after everybody was writing them off with the query: "What's wrong with the Rockets?" Well, let's see, it's like taking Kobe off the Lakers, LeBron off the Cavs, Dwyane off the Heat … you get the picture. This guy is the key to the team. That's not to underestimate the value of Yao Ming, without whom they are 1-0 since he hurt his BIG right toe and is out indefinitely. But Yao is just a key component. McGrady is the electricity that makes the team run. So much of the West is mediocre this season that they didn't lose too much ground in the playoff hunt, but it all but eliminated them from getting homecourt advantage in the first round. And one new face who might benefit more than anybody else is rookie Luther Head, who might just be the answer their looking for at the other backcourt position. But the face that matters most is clearly McGrady's.

9. Item: Don't look now, but the woebegone Atlanta Hawks entered the week having won four of five, including wins over the Spurs, Nuggets, Cavaliers and the Knicks. What this really means: They're not quite as bad as everybody says, just incredibly young and inexperienced. Joe Johnson the lightning rod for change of personnel and ownership after a sign-and-trade from Phoenix with a maximum contract, has been extraordinary. The past two games, he's averaged 33.0 points, 7.0 assists and 4.5 rebounds — while making 12-of-18 from 3-point range. Over the five games he's put up 24.6 points, 6.6 assists and 5.2 rebounds. Yes, he can play. So can Al Harrington, the free agent to be and the subject of trade rumors. Whereas Johnson had 36 points on 6-of-7 from beyond the arc in the 11-point win over the Knicks, Harrington had 35, including 6-of-6 from 3-point range. And young Josh Smith added a whopping eight blocks in that game. So when you toss in solid center Zaza Pachulia, second-year wing Josh Childress and rookies Marvin Williams and Salim Stoudamire, maybe we should all be listening to general manager Billy Knight, sit back and be patient. Let's give coach Mike Woodson at least a full season with this group to see what kind of progress can be made. As it is, they're obviously dangerous.

10. Item: Although the New Jersey Nets are just one game out of first place in the Atlantic Division, they are 11-12, and as unpredictable from night to night as the process that has them moving from the Meadowlands to Brooklyn. What this really means: The Nets have won two in a row, but had lost five of eight before that. It's just hard to fathom in the Eastern Conference when you have Jason Kidd, Vince Carter and Richard Jefferson to build around — plus very talented young 7-footer Nenad Krstic — that you can't get the team to play better than .500 ball for any length of time. Carter has averaged 26.8 over the last five games, but the bumps and bruises always take their toll on him. He remains among the most talented and exciting players in the league, but he's not playing at the same level as he did at the end of last season when he led them to their unlikely playoff appearance. But a lot of this falls on coach Lawrence Frank. Sure, his defensive principles are important, but let's be frank, Lawrence. With Kidd, Carter and Jefferson, the only chance this team has to win big is to run like the Phoenix Suns and dare teams to outscore them. Slowing them to a defensive-oriented, halfcourt team is like asking Bobby Labonte, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon to race on bikes.

3) Greg Anthony of ESPN.com thinks Elton is it:

Choosing the leading Brand

To me, the Most Valuable Player award should always go the player who has the greatest impact in making his team a winner. Individual stats can be deceiving -- the MVP isn't necessarily the best player statistically. But my current leader in the MVP race is impressive by any measure of numbers, and he's boosting a team to some newfound winning ways. That kind of combination is tough to beat. So here's how the chase stacks up:

1. Elton Brand, Clippers forward -- The Clippers are in first place. I don't think anybody in their right mind would have said that coming into the season. Brand's scoring at a career-high average (25.0), but what's most impressive is his turnovers are down to a career-low 2.0 per game. He's an undersized (6-8) power forward who never takes a night off. I think he can keep up this MVP pace; the question is, can his team keep pace with him?

2. Allen Iverson, Sixers guard -- The most intimidating ballplayer at 6-foot to ever play the game has matured. He's got his team in first in the worst division, but that still means a playoff berth. The NBA's leading scorer (33.4) is shooting better than he ever has (45 percent). And he's flirting with a career-low in turnovers (3.0). Impressive.

3. Steve Nash, Suns guard -- You couldn't have an MVP list without last year's winner. Nash has kept his team in the thick of things without Amare. And I think he's playing much better D this year than in years past.

4. Tim Duncan, Spurs forward -- His numbers (20 ppg, 12 rpg) never blow you away, but his game does. When you look at his overall impact, you've got to put him on the list. He's the best power forward to play the game when you judge him on what he's done -- win, and win a lot.

5. LeBron James, Cavaliers forward. He and his team are obviously getting better, and the offensive numbers show it. But he's been poor defensively since he's come into the league. He's got to become more dominant defensively. When he does that, that's when his whole team goes to another level.

ON THE FIVE FRINGE - Mavericks forward Dirk Nowitzki and Lakers guard Kobe Bryant are two guys who have stood out, and one of them could end up winning it. It's not like a top five and big drop. The Lakers' team is playing great D, much better than they did than did a year ago. Dirk has continued to take his game to another level as a leader. Statistically he's always been there.

MVP-LIKE SEASONS, BUT WITH LITTLE CHANCE TO WIN - Celtics forward Paul Pierce is having a phenomenal season. Now if he played on better team with a point guard…Nuggets center Marcus Camby changes a game defensively. This is his best season ever for rebounds (NBA-leading 13.3 per game). Where would Denver be without him? And of course, Timberwolves forward Kevin Garnett is exceptional. What else is new? Finally, how about the MVP for the Detroit Pistons starting five? The durabilty and the teamwork they put out is worthy of the game's highest individual honor.

4) Peter Vescey of the New York Post rips on Isaih as usual:

DOUBTING THOMAS

AS someone once splen didly stiffed by Peter Kalikow during his transitory overcast ownership of The Post, I urge Transport Workers' envoys to make damn sure they're properly inoculated against highbrow reptiles. Then again, if I were union boss Roger Toussaint I'd refuse to negotiate with the MTA Chairman, any of his representatives, even Kevin Spacey. The only New York executive I'd agree to bargain money, years, medical benefits and other perks with is Isiah Thomas, who's making a luxurious living as Knick president of basketball operations Doling out or assuming corpulent contracts. What's absolutely alarming is Thomas' President Bush-like assertion over the weekend. Out of one tonsil he claims he wouldn't change any of 350-odd personnel moves since replacing Scott Layden two years ago this Thursday. Out of his other tonsil Thomas says had he known Larry Brown would be the team's coach he may have altered some offseason alterations. "There are players on the team he probably wouldn't have wanted or wouldn't have picked," Thomas said on WFAN without a ripple of retort. In other words, Thomas is telling us his hand-picked, pedestrian players would've been just groovy for Phil Jackson or P.J. Carlesimo or Herb Williams to coach. On the other hand, some fail to meet the snobbish standards of Brown, who's supposedly an expert at turning mincemeat into filet minion. What, it's OK to stick another coach with a bunch of slop and expect him to make the best of the situation, but Brown should be better provided for? Either Thomas is convinced those he's rounded up during the renovation of his first roster renovation can compete at the NBA level/playoff plateau, or he admits he has misjudged his accrued talent a wee bonnie bit. Either Thomas wanted the players or they're all about under-the-table deals with agents for celestial clients in the future. Either they can ball or they should be ordered to take their balls and go home. Either Thomas is completely in charge of overseeing personnel decisions or he's going to defer to a hired hand; in that case, hopefully the door will hit him on the way out of Two Penn Plaza. What's it gonna be, Isiah? You can't have it both ways. You're oscillating at an unsafe speed and rapidly losing all remaining credibility. Either Brown can coach or Stephon Marbury's contract isn't the only bloated one Camp Cablevision is going to wind up ingesting. Either Brown can make a difference where others have proved inferior, or his reputation is a fable of a myth of a fairy tale. Either Brown's a great teacher or he's not. Anybody can stand up in front of a classroom of smart students and take credit for the results. If his slower students aren't learning, why should he be considered a great teacher? Either Brown, as advertised, can make the most of the least (from what I saw against the Pacers there's a lot more competence in supply than Brown is letting on), or all these years you've been operating under false pretenses. Either you've been fakin' it or you're for real. Which is it, Larry? It can't be both ways. THIS JUST IN: The Knicks are such a bad watch, President Bush has no interest in spying on them. Just so there's no misunderstanding, Ron Artest's apology to one and all in Pacer Place has been for naught; Donnie Walsh and Larry Bird are committed to trading him as quickly as possible, which isn't helping them in their pursuit of Al Harrington in a three-way deal. Sources say Hawk GM Billy Knight is in hurry to move his rising free agent. That's true more than ever now that Atlanta has won four out of five and appears to be playing unselfishly. A Sonic source says Seattle, for all intents and purposes, bailed out of the bidding for Artest when it categorically declined to stuff Nick Collison in the stocking. After eyeballing Danny Granger for the first time in person, I'm calling out Rick Carlisle (again) for not giving the rookie forward the quality minutes he earned in training camp and the exhibition season. He shouldn't have had to wait for Artest to be sent to his room to get regular daylight. All it took was just one look (dozen points, half dozen rebounds, three fourth-quarter blocks, from a small forward, no less) to comprehend the acreage of Granger's boundaries. He's not good, he's really, really good: He's a lethal shooter inside or out; an uncompromising defensive force; quick to find the open man, particularly when that man is hot (Sarunas Jasikevicius) and deadlier than him. No wonder Pacer management isn't flinching about trading Artest. THIS JUST IN: Artest's agent just called and claimed his client wants to remain a Bull.

5) Brian Schmitz of the Orlando Sentinel with an enlightening article on Steve Francis, who for the record I can’t stand:

Francis continues to make amends

Before we tell you why in the world a bleary-eyed Steve Francis would get up at 7 a.m. in New York for a meeting he requested at NBA headquarters, we first must go back in time. Seven years ago, Francis, in effect, thumbed his nose at the Vancouver Grizzlies, extremely sensitive Canadians, Brian Hill and a man named Stu Jackson. The Grizzlies had selected Francis in the 1999 NBA draft with the No. 2 pick, but he refused to report. Vancouver had no choice but to trade him to the Houston Rockets. At the time, Hill was the Grizzlies coach and Jackson was the general manager. Francis and Hill talked about their past this summer after Hill returned as the Magic's coach. Jackson left Vancouver and has been in the NBA's front office since 2000 as senior vice president of basketball operations. He has been the league's top cop, doling out fines and punishment. Francis generally kept his distance from Jackson, although Steve-O's rap sheet with refs has kept them linked indirectly through the years. Whether real or imagined, Steve-O has believed Jackson has been out to get him. That Jackson worked behind the scenes to torpedo his bid to play in previous Olympics. That Jackson has been harsh in dealing with his technical-foul-filled blowups with refs and other indiscretions, such as his suspension for kicking a courtside photographer last season. Veiled vengeance for Vancouver, Francis figured. "There's been so many incidences where I had no other choice but to think something like that," Francis said. But the Sentinel has learned that last Wednesday morning, before the Magic's shoot-around in New York, Francis met with Jackson at his office for their first heart-to-heart. Francis asked for the sit-down and said he's glad the air is cleared. "Yeah, man. It was a good conversation with Stu," he said. "I went to him to voice some things. "He gave me straight-up answers. I only have one NBA career -- that's what I told him -- and he's going to probably be in that office forever, and hopefully we can co-exist." Francis said he and Jackson talked about his past and present on-court behavior. A perennial league-leader in technical fouls, he has been whistled for two this season. Francis said he also made it clear to Jackson that he wants a chance to represent the United States in the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. "I definitely want to be a part of that," Francis said. "Stu was telling me about the commitment you have to make." Francis didn't "bring up" the Vancouver snub with Jackson, but Steve-O conceded his virtual cold war with him can be traced to his draft bailout. "I think so . . . of course," he said. He wanted Jackson to know he's not the "old Steve Francis" anymore and not to hold past transgressions against him. Francis said that five years ago he didn't have the maturity to "talk to that guy," meaning Jackson. The new Steve Francis is growing. It's just the latest in a series of positive changes Francis has made in his life. He became a father this summer and turns 29 in February. He's still a work in progress, however, facing a multimillion-dollar civil suit stemming from a June bar brawl. Francis' agent, Jeff Fried, said Francis was not involved in the incident. "I'm making strides to be a better person on and off the court," Francis said. "I'll keep surprising you."***20-Second Timeout: Catching up with . . . Darrell Armstrong - Darrell Armstrong has played the past two seasons with the Dallas Mavericks, but he became a hustling fan favorite when he joined Orlando in 1994. He played nine seasons with the Magic, earning Sixth Man of the Year and Most Improved Player awards in the 1998-99 season. At 37, Armstrong hopes to play another season, retire and get into coaching. Magic Confidential: You're a guy everybody wants to see play forever. How tough is it in the twilight? Armstrong: You start reflecting on everything. It's going to be hard for me. I'll miss the locker room and the camaraderie. MC: You made the most of your career after getting a late start. Armstrong: I was undrafted and didn't break in until I was 26. Couple semi-pro leagues, overseas . . . It was meant for me to be here in the NBA. MC: Do you think your legacy will be as a guy who collected floor burns? Armstrong: That's my trademark. Everybody knows I try to leave it all on the floor Everybody remembers Michael Jordan and Karl Malone, the Hall of Fame guys. Fans and coaches remember guys who gave hustle to the game. It's not about all-stars, points. . . . It's about playing hard, the way the old-school guys played it. They didn't wear sweatbands, rubber bands, headbands. MC: You'd like to become a coach? Armstrong: My ideal thing? Be a head coach in the WNBA. The season is perfect, 30-some games, summertime . . . Plus, I have a 14-year-old daughter who's playing. MC: I take it you'll always feel like a Magic player. Armstrong: I'll always have that team in my heart. ***Tuesday's Two Cents - Freedom of speech obviously is not recognized by the NBA. It has fined Indiana Pacers swingman Ron Artest for a lot of things, but why $10,000 for simply saying he wanted to be traded? Sometimes voicing your unhappiness to the media is a player's only outlet. Artest can't go to the union and gripe, however. It agreed to punishment for players making disparaging remarks when it signed the collective bargaining agreement . . . Memo to trade-niks: The Magic are better off without Artest. He's Dennis Rodman, only better-dressed. I'll spare you all the new-age psychobabble euphemisms regarding the troubled Artest. It's like Chris Rock joked: "Whatever happened to crazy?" . . . I think Knicks Coach Larry Brown is trying to figure out his exit strategy from New York. . . . Can Miami Heat Coach Pat Riley now get a Viagra and a Vitalis endorsement? Scoop Dogg I -- When the time comes, former Magic guard Darrell Armstrong will ask the club if he can sign a one-day contract and retire as a Magic player. II -- Former Magic forward Dennis Scott has been approached about coaching in the WNBA. ***At the Arena - The first 2,500 fans who attend the Magic game against the New Jersey Nets on Wednesday night will receive an autographed photo of Travis Diener, Keyon Dooling or Hedo Turkoglu. Wednesday: New Jersey Nets at Magic. Former N.J. assistant Brian Hill brought the Nets' "Princeton" offense to Magic. Apparently, it no longer works for Princeton. The Tigers recently scored just 21 points against Monmouth (N.J.), matching their lowest total in 70 years. Friday: L.A. Lakers at Magic. Phil and Kobe. It's been so sweet I expect Kobe to jump up and down on Oprah's couch. Monday: Milwaukee Bucks at Magic. After scoring 30 in a 20-point rout of the Knicks recently, Michael Redd will arrive with his shooting arm in a locked-and-upright position.