6 Thoughts
1) Ahhh, so relaxing. This was not a donnybrook like yesterday's game against Chicago at all. This was the exact opposite. It was a mariebrook! Sorry...Miami got down 12 early to an absolutely brutal New Orleans team, shook off a sense of (well-deserved) malaise after yesterday's battle, and pounded New Orleans the rest of the way, leading by 27 at one point in the second half. LeBron (30 minutes, 22, 11, 8) and Dwyane (24 minutes!, 22, 3, 5) both got to rest the entire fourth quarter. In a season where the games come so fast and furious, Paul Walker-style, this game was more like a siesta! More on that down in #4. Vamonos!
2) Play of the game, in a bad way: Look, it wasn't the worst alley-oop Mario Chalmers has ever thrown, not by a long-shot. But his slightly too-high, and slightly too-long alley-oop pass to Dwyane Wade in the second quarter, which resulted in Dwyane smashing the ball off the back iron, is worth mentioning if only to highlight the following, which has been said many times, but warrants repeating again: Mario Chalmers is the worst thrower of alley-oop passes since the legalization of the dunk shot, after John Wooden lost his decades-long battle to keep it banned from the sport. Dwyane and LeBron are two of the most athletic players in basketball. When they are running, full-speed, towards the rim, it is almost impossible to throw the ball somewhere that they can't adjust to, go get it, and dunk. Yet, time and time again, Emcee throws the ball too high, or too wide, or too low - too something. And since our only other true point guard of note in the past couple of seasons, the late, great Mike Bibby, hasn't participated in a fastbreak since 2004, you haven't really seen other guys on the Heat have the opportunity to throw alley-oop passes, so you might have been thinking, like, "Hey, maybe there is something tricky about it that doesn't translate, maybe it's a lot harder than it looks..." But then unheralded rookie Norris Cole comes to the team, and he's noted more for his scoring than his point guard skills, yet, immediately, every alley-oop he throws is perfect, right on the money, and gets dunked through the basket easily (with one notable exception when he threw a screamer off the board early in the season - but even that was impressive, just for the sheer velocity of it). So, then you are like, "No, I was right before: Mario Chalmers can not throw an alley-oop at all, and he is probably the worst alley-ooper in recorded history." It's to the point that when he gets out in transition, you hope he just pulls the ball back and runs offense (in Casa Dos, when he's out in transition, we just go, "ohhhhhhhhhh," until something happens). Or hope that he punts it into the crowd - set the defense!
3) Quick question: In pre and post game interviews, what is up with Coach Spo's shirt sleeves? He is always wearing a suit jacket, but his sleeves never show. Never - never, not one time. Are his sleeves too short, or are they rolled up inside his jacket? Or is he cutting his button-down off at the sleeves to show off his guns, like Stone Cold Steve Austin, if I knew at all who Stone Cold Steve Austin was, which I obviously don't because wrestling is for backwoods rubes...
4) Okay, so back to the siesta, which I believe means "party" in Spanish. So New Orleans has this rookie center named Gustavo Ayon, and he is from Mexico. Nice country, Mexico. I had never seen him play before, I don't even know if he went to American college - I just looked up his stats, he's already 26, so the future is "ahora" for Senor Ayon. Anyways, he was playing in garbage time, which was essentially the entire second half, and he made a couple of shots, was in there fighting with the Miami backups, and then he flipped in a nice little jumper, and I, very magnanimously in my opinion, commented, "Hey, this Mexican guy is pretty good!" M.Minutos didn't like it - felt that "this Mexican guy" was an inappropriate way to describe him: "He has a name, you know." Well, I see her point, and anyways, a minute later, when Eddy Curry caught the ball down on the block and faked Ayon right out of his pancho, leading to an easy deuce, I wish I hadn't made the comment at all. Gracias, M.Minutos, for helping me to see the light.
5) Well, it's over! It's all over! And guess who the 2012 "Hot Seconds With Jax" champ is? The longest of shots (in my mind), Mr. LeBron James! As we pointed out a couple of blogs ago, LeBron absolutely murdered his three questions, and recorded the only perfect score of the season. Defending champ Mike Mil-lar came up short tonight when it turned out he knew absolutely nothing about geography whatsoever (didn't know what made the Black Hills in South Dakota - where he's from - black; could only name two of the world's oceans). I, for one, could not be more stunned! LeBron is the very last guy on the roster I would have picked to win it. As has been pointed out in this blog many times, I am never more surprised than when LeBron knows anything that a normal person knows. Not because he is dumb, at all - only because I imagine him as a basketball playing cyborg who isn't programmed to have outside thoughts. The latest LeBron-ism that stunned me was just yesterday, when it was revealed that he rode his bike from his home in Coral Gables to the arena, in order to avoid the traffic jams caused by the marathon run in downtown Miami yesterday. How is it possible that LeBron knew how to get to the arena from his house? And I know it is only like 5 miles. How did he know there was a marathon going on in Miami? How did he know where to buy a bicycle? Where did he learn to ride a bicycle, for that matter? All things that I would imagine that LeBron has never had to worry about. This in spite of everybody who works for the Heat always pointing out how engaged LeBron is; in spite of me following his twitter feed and knowing that he seems to always be watching sports, or commenting on other large news stories; in spite of me seeing dozens of interviews with him the past couple of years where he repeatedly demonstrates a solid knowledge of the world around him (while I am continually stunned that he knows Jason Jackson's name). "You know what?" The Captain pointed out today, "Maybe you are the one who has no idea what is going on around him!" Honestly - I think that's probably true. In any case, you are the champ, LeBron, you are smart, and I exhort you!
6) Bieber was at the game. I don't have Bieber Fever, but I do like talking about it. In any case, let's rank the greatest teen idols of all-time. First: Leif Garrett. So beautiful and delicate as a teenager, almost feminine with his leonine grace. Last: Danny Bonaduce. The end.
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We're off tomorrow, then back on Wednesday in - oh, no - Milwaukee. That's still the worst game of the year we've played, a loss to Milwaukee. They are the new Bobcats: you don't score; they don't score; nobody scores! And, just like the Bobcats, they have Steffan Jackson! So much fun! By the way, don't get too excited, I mean you still need to get through the rest of the week, but I'll be slow-roasting a pork butt on Superbowl Sunday, and then writing about it here on the blog. Also thinking about live-tweeting the roasting process. Remember, don't get too excited, focus on the week, and Wednesday we'll give you a little sneak preview of what's ahead here, pork-wise. Adios!
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Monday, January 30, 2012
Sunday, January 29, 2012
Heat 97 Bulls 93
6 Thoughts
1) Wow, what a donnybrook! For an early season game, that was pretty intense - the Bulls play every possession of every game all season long like it's their last. It wasn't particularly well-played, and it was pretty poorly officiated, but the Heat survived a few bad offensive possessions late, two missed LeBron free throws, and two absolutely bizarre calls in the waning moments to win at home. What did we learn about the two teams? Nothing! Just like the regular season games last year won by Chicago. We already knew these were the best two teams in the East, by a mile, and they still are. Let's go!
2) LeBron was pretty amazing, right up until the moment with less than a minute to go, up two, when he missed two free throws (right after Derrick Rose had missed two of his own). Still, LeBron scored 35 on 12-23, had 11 rebounds, and 5 assists. Also, jumped over a guy (John Lucas) and dunked! Even more importantly, with Miami struggling to stop Derrick Rose halfway through the fourth quarter, they switched LeBron on to him, and shut him down. Rose stopped driving with the bigger LeBron on him, and Miami was able to regain some control defensively in the halfcourt. This is the same thing that happened in the playoffs last year - Derrick Rose is a phenomenally willful scorer. But LeBron is six inches taller than him. When a game gets in to crunch time, the odds favor Miami, because LeBron can check Rose, but Rose can't check him. Size counts.
3) Most interesting thing to come out of the game: the Bulls, who pride themselves on being absolutely relentless defensively, played a lot of zone against Miami. This was super-odd. A good defensive team - and Chicago is the best - is playing zone anyways. It's not like Richard Hamilton is guarding Dwyane Wade, and there's no help, and if Dwyane gets by him, it's an automatic layup. Big guys are always help-conscious on a good defensive team - that's zone. In the first half, they abandoned it pretty quickly when Mike Mil-lar hit a triple, then Dwyane Wade cut into the zone's middle, got a pass from LeBron, and found a cutting Joel Anthony for free throws. In the second half, the Bulls went to it again, with similarly disappointing results. It was weird to see such a fierce, proud defensive team go to a defense which, essentially, is for girls. I'm guessing that (virulent homophobe) Joakim Noah suggested it.
4) Best play of the game: you mean besides when LeBron jumped over another 6' human being and dunked? Probably when after LeBron missed his second free throw inside of a minute to go and Dwyane Wade slapped the offensive rebound to Chris Bosh, while one of the refs blew his whistle because the Bulls bench was calling a timeout (which is against the rules since they didn't have, you know, the ball), and then the refs huddled and decided that instead of Miami ball, there would be a jump ball at center court with like 20 seconds to go and Miami leading by 2. Both teams could select anyone to jump - LeBron went to jump, Dwyane and Chris Bosh (great game: 24 and 12) stood in behind him, and all three of them told Mario Chalmers, the Heat's best free throw shooter, to go stand fifteen feet behind Dwyane and Chris, who obviously planned to serve as a shield, and for LeBron to tap the ball hard back to the wide open Chalmers. Meanwhile, the Bulls are trying to decide whom to have jump, and there was general jostling going on, and Emcee Chalmers kept walking back up to the circle. And each time, Dwyane AND Chris AND LeBron would point farther back, and be like, "No, stay back there, LeBron is going to tap it back to you," and Chalmers would go back there, but then he would come back up towards the circle and be, like, "How about up here," and they would be like, "NOOOOOO!!!" Finally, he went back there, LeBron won the tap easily, and hit it right to Chalmers, who got fouled. LeBron and Dwyane and Chris never actually do anything collectively. You'll see Dwyane and LeBron talk a lot on the court, and Dwyane will talk to Chris a lot, but LeBron doesn't talk much to Chris, and the three of them never all talk. This time, they all talked, designed a strategy in crunch time, and then couldn't get it implremented because Mario Chalmers wouldn't listen to them! LeBron, Dwyane, and Chris: Next time you make a collective effort to design a key play in crunch time, don't prominently involve Emcee Chalmers! Emcee: when LeBron AND Dwyane AND Chris tell you to do something? Just do it! That should clear things up. (epilogue: this led to another insane call - Chalmers missed the second free throw and in the loose ball scrum, Derrick Rose grabbed the ball while staggering backwards, went about 8 steps without dribbling, and then was awarded another timeout - these refs loved giving the Bulls timeouts! - then he went down to the other end, shoved Udonis Haslem to the floor with a shoulder, missed an eight-footer, and we won. The End!)
5) How your eyes (and emotions) can lie to you: Great friend of the blog Snets and I were emailing after the game. We both felt like the Bulls dominated the glass, killed us on second chances, and that this is continuously happening to us this season. At one point in the third quarter, ABC showed the offensive rebounding totals: Miami 6, Bulls 6. If you had asked me at that moment, I would have guessed: Miami 6, Bulls 60. And I felt we got pummeled on the glass down the stretch, too. But the final totals? Miami 12 offensive rebounds (13 if you count the one Dwyane and Chris yanked which got wiped out by a phantom timeout); Chicago 12 offensive rebounds. Miami 48 total rebounds, Chicago 47. I think an offensive rebound is so discouraging: you play tough defense, you get a stop, then the other team gets another chance, and you are like, "Je-sus." (Or, "Dammit, Chris!!!!") But when your team gets an offensive putback, you are like, "Yeah, why wouldn't we do that? No big deal." So you feel like you are getting killed there, but you aren't. Something to keep an eye on.
6) Movie review: "Ideas of March." Wait, what? Oh, "Ides of March." Review: Ryan Gosling! RYAN GOSLING! The end!
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Back at it tomorrow against New Orleans. If you need me before then, I'll be re-creating Emcee Chalmers' refusal to go where LeBron, Dwyane, and Chris were telling him to go, with M.Minutos as LeBron, O.Minutos as Dwyane, and poor P.Minutos as Chris. Starring me as Emcee Chalmers, the role I was born to play (by the way, I've already done this six times, and the game only ended an hour ago)! See you tomorrow!
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1) Wow, what a donnybrook! For an early season game, that was pretty intense - the Bulls play every possession of every game all season long like it's their last. It wasn't particularly well-played, and it was pretty poorly officiated, but the Heat survived a few bad offensive possessions late, two missed LeBron free throws, and two absolutely bizarre calls in the waning moments to win at home. What did we learn about the two teams? Nothing! Just like the regular season games last year won by Chicago. We already knew these were the best two teams in the East, by a mile, and they still are. Let's go!
2) LeBron was pretty amazing, right up until the moment with less than a minute to go, up two, when he missed two free throws (right after Derrick Rose had missed two of his own). Still, LeBron scored 35 on 12-23, had 11 rebounds, and 5 assists. Also, jumped over a guy (John Lucas) and dunked! Even more importantly, with Miami struggling to stop Derrick Rose halfway through the fourth quarter, they switched LeBron on to him, and shut him down. Rose stopped driving with the bigger LeBron on him, and Miami was able to regain some control defensively in the halfcourt. This is the same thing that happened in the playoffs last year - Derrick Rose is a phenomenally willful scorer. But LeBron is six inches taller than him. When a game gets in to crunch time, the odds favor Miami, because LeBron can check Rose, but Rose can't check him. Size counts.
3) Most interesting thing to come out of the game: the Bulls, who pride themselves on being absolutely relentless defensively, played a lot of zone against Miami. This was super-odd. A good defensive team - and Chicago is the best - is playing zone anyways. It's not like Richard Hamilton is guarding Dwyane Wade, and there's no help, and if Dwyane gets by him, it's an automatic layup. Big guys are always help-conscious on a good defensive team - that's zone. In the first half, they abandoned it pretty quickly when Mike Mil-lar hit a triple, then Dwyane Wade cut into the zone's middle, got a pass from LeBron, and found a cutting Joel Anthony for free throws. In the second half, the Bulls went to it again, with similarly disappointing results. It was weird to see such a fierce, proud defensive team go to a defense which, essentially, is for girls. I'm guessing that (virulent homophobe) Joakim Noah suggested it.
4) Best play of the game: you mean besides when LeBron jumped over another 6' human being and dunked? Probably when after LeBron missed his second free throw inside of a minute to go and Dwyane Wade slapped the offensive rebound to Chris Bosh, while one of the refs blew his whistle because the Bulls bench was calling a timeout (which is against the rules since they didn't have, you know, the ball), and then the refs huddled and decided that instead of Miami ball, there would be a jump ball at center court with like 20 seconds to go and Miami leading by 2. Both teams could select anyone to jump - LeBron went to jump, Dwyane and Chris Bosh (great game: 24 and 12) stood in behind him, and all three of them told Mario Chalmers, the Heat's best free throw shooter, to go stand fifteen feet behind Dwyane and Chris, who obviously planned to serve as a shield, and for LeBron to tap the ball hard back to the wide open Chalmers. Meanwhile, the Bulls are trying to decide whom to have jump, and there was general jostling going on, and Emcee Chalmers kept walking back up to the circle. And each time, Dwyane AND Chris AND LeBron would point farther back, and be like, "No, stay back there, LeBron is going to tap it back to you," and Chalmers would go back there, but then he would come back up towards the circle and be, like, "How about up here," and they would be like, "NOOOOOO!!!" Finally, he went back there, LeBron won the tap easily, and hit it right to Chalmers, who got fouled. LeBron and Dwyane and Chris never actually do anything collectively. You'll see Dwyane and LeBron talk a lot on the court, and Dwyane will talk to Chris a lot, but LeBron doesn't talk much to Chris, and the three of them never all talk. This time, they all talked, designed a strategy in crunch time, and then couldn't get it implremented because Mario Chalmers wouldn't listen to them! LeBron, Dwyane, and Chris: Next time you make a collective effort to design a key play in crunch time, don't prominently involve Emcee Chalmers! Emcee: when LeBron AND Dwyane AND Chris tell you to do something? Just do it! That should clear things up. (epilogue: this led to another insane call - Chalmers missed the second free throw and in the loose ball scrum, Derrick Rose grabbed the ball while staggering backwards, went about 8 steps without dribbling, and then was awarded another timeout - these refs loved giving the Bulls timeouts! - then he went down to the other end, shoved Udonis Haslem to the floor with a shoulder, missed an eight-footer, and we won. The End!)
5) How your eyes (and emotions) can lie to you: Great friend of the blog Snets and I were emailing after the game. We both felt like the Bulls dominated the glass, killed us on second chances, and that this is continuously happening to us this season. At one point in the third quarter, ABC showed the offensive rebounding totals: Miami 6, Bulls 6. If you had asked me at that moment, I would have guessed: Miami 6, Bulls 60. And I felt we got pummeled on the glass down the stretch, too. But the final totals? Miami 12 offensive rebounds (13 if you count the one Dwyane and Chris yanked which got wiped out by a phantom timeout); Chicago 12 offensive rebounds. Miami 48 total rebounds, Chicago 47. I think an offensive rebound is so discouraging: you play tough defense, you get a stop, then the other team gets another chance, and you are like, "Je-sus." (Or, "Dammit, Chris!!!!") But when your team gets an offensive putback, you are like, "Yeah, why wouldn't we do that? No big deal." So you feel like you are getting killed there, but you aren't. Something to keep an eye on.
6) Movie review: "Ideas of March." Wait, what? Oh, "Ides of March." Review: Ryan Gosling! RYAN GOSLING! The end!
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Back at it tomorrow against New Orleans. If you need me before then, I'll be re-creating Emcee Chalmers' refusal to go where LeBron, Dwyane, and Chris were telling him to go, with M.Minutos as LeBron, O.Minutos as Dwyane, and poor P.Minutos as Chris. Starring me as Emcee Chalmers, the role I was born to play (by the way, I've already done this six times, and the game only ended an hour ago)! See you tomorrow!
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Friday, January 27, 2012
Heat 99 Knicks 89
6 Thoughts
1) Fun! Finally! Wade was back and the Knicks were in town! All the slogging through the midwest against mediocre teams - that's not fun. This is fun! Get some!
2) People around the Heat have been saying for days that Miami held Dwyane out longer than they had to, and that he would be healthy and bouncy when he came back, not laboring on a sore ankle. So, right from the start, you wanted to see how he looked, see if he could run and jump freely, something he couldn't do in the west coast games he played before sitting down. This is how he looked: instantly stole the ball from Amare Stoudamire, steamed down the court at 90 miles an hour, and lofted an alley-oop for a crushing slam by LeBron; then cut down the lane in the halfcourt, received a pass from James, and reverse dunked; then came down the right wing in transition, Euro-stepped inside of Landry Fields, and backhand Euro-dunked it on him; then picked off a cross-court pass, and flew in for another dunk. All in the first five minutes! I guess he's okay! 28, with 5 steals and 2 blocks for Dwyane. He lifted everyone's energy, if only because they didn't have to do as much. LeBron still looked tired, but to his credit, made an effort to lower his head and barrel to the basket, especially in the fourth quarter: made 9-10 free throws, scored 31 points on only 18 shots, 8 rebounds, and 7 assists. He's a decent second option.
3) I feel like I have never seen a team shoot as many threes in a game as the Knicks did tonight. You know why? Because no team has ever shot as many threes in a game as the Knicks did tonight!!! The Knicks launched a mind-boggling forty-three triples against Miami, making 18 - both Miami opponent records. For three quarters, they were ridiculously hot, and it allowed them to hang around, despite the Dwyane and LeBron Dunk-tacular going on at their defensive rim. Fringe-y wing Bill Walker, in particular, was unconscious: made 7 of 10 from deep, including three in a row early in the third quarter, including one off a screen, backing up, turning the wrong way, never seeing the basket. They went icy in the fourth quarter, and had nothing else to go to with their one big-time halfcourt player, Carmelo Anthony, out. Before the game, Johanna Gomez asked Knick center Tyson Chandler what the team would be missing without Anthony, who isn't exactly noted for his defensive effort, or his passing: "He gives us so much on both ends," claimed Chandler with a straight face. Did he mean in the different halves? Like a lot of shooting at one end in the first half, and then another barrage of shots at the other basket in the second half? Or did he mean, like, shooting and dribbling?
4) Play of the game: well, I might be biased, but for me it was when former Heat great Mike Bibby hit back-to-back threes in the second quarter. I tried to keep it low, because I didn't want to upset M.Minutos, but I was cheering inside. Unfortunately moments later, Bibs caught a pass outside the line again, upfaked, took a hard dribble, and zipped a pass...right into the Knicks' bench. Don't try to dribble, Mike Bibby!!! Oh well. Also, got a thrill in the opening moments of the game when the camera surveyed the Knicks bench and I saw Bibby - sitting right in the same spot where he threw the towel and made Derrick Rose miss a free throw, my favorite moment of last season! I miss you, Mike Bibby! Please come home!
5) Late in the first quarter, the Heat had the ball out of bounds on the side in their own end with about 5 seconds to go. LeBron was going to receive the inbounds pass - Mike Miller came running back into the area to potentially set a back screen for LeBron to spring him up court. I could see combative referee, Joey Crawford, who loves to give players quick technical fouls, then challenge them to fight, eyeing Miller (yes - physically fight - this is the referee! the league once fired him for it, then re-hired him! why wouldn't they?). "Don't do it, Mike," I beseeched him, knowing Crawford was dying to call a bizarre illegal screen foul, then glare defiantly at Miller. Miller suddenly realized the same thing and retreated. LeBron threw the ball back to Miller, who dribbled it out of bounds as time expired. "Whew, that was close - you know that Crawford makes that call, then t's up Miller, then the Knicks make the technical free throw and hit a three at the buzzer! We just saved four points," I told M. Minutos triumphantly, "Crawford lives for that call - we'd actually be better off just punting the ball into the crowd rather than try that play!" This brings up a good point. Over the course of 82 games, then another 15-20 playoffs games, I probably call for the Heat to punt the ball into the crowd somewhere in the neighborhood of 600 times. Like, if LeBron throws a fastball to a cutting Joel Anthony, and he doesn't handle it cleanly, I'll be, like, "LeBron - next time, instead of doing that, just turn around and punt the ball into the upper deck. At least that way we can set our defense, instead of having the other team run out." M.Minutos? Not a fan of punting the ball into the crowd as a strategic move: "You'd be the worst coach ever," she pointed out for the approximately six thousandth time in our eighteen year relationship, "I mean, you'd be advocating guys to punt the ball into the crowd; you'd sub guys in and out of the game every time they threw an errant pass; you'd cut guys at halftime; and you would have murdered PJ Brown halfway through his first season in Miami. You'd be terrible!" My defense? I like to think outside the box...
6) We get a lot of emails here at Dos Minutos, but this was one of the best:
1) Fun! Finally! Wade was back and the Knicks were in town! All the slogging through the midwest against mediocre teams - that's not fun. This is fun! Get some!
2) People around the Heat have been saying for days that Miami held Dwyane out longer than they had to, and that he would be healthy and bouncy when he came back, not laboring on a sore ankle. So, right from the start, you wanted to see how he looked, see if he could run and jump freely, something he couldn't do in the west coast games he played before sitting down. This is how he looked: instantly stole the ball from Amare Stoudamire, steamed down the court at 90 miles an hour, and lofted an alley-oop for a crushing slam by LeBron; then cut down the lane in the halfcourt, received a pass from James, and reverse dunked; then came down the right wing in transition, Euro-stepped inside of Landry Fields, and backhand Euro-dunked it on him; then picked off a cross-court pass, and flew in for another dunk. All in the first five minutes! I guess he's okay! 28, with 5 steals and 2 blocks for Dwyane. He lifted everyone's energy, if only because they didn't have to do as much. LeBron still looked tired, but to his credit, made an effort to lower his head and barrel to the basket, especially in the fourth quarter: made 9-10 free throws, scored 31 points on only 18 shots, 8 rebounds, and 7 assists. He's a decent second option.
3) I feel like I have never seen a team shoot as many threes in a game as the Knicks did tonight. You know why? Because no team has ever shot as many threes in a game as the Knicks did tonight!!! The Knicks launched a mind-boggling forty-three triples against Miami, making 18 - both Miami opponent records. For three quarters, they were ridiculously hot, and it allowed them to hang around, despite the Dwyane and LeBron Dunk-tacular going on at their defensive rim. Fringe-y wing Bill Walker, in particular, was unconscious: made 7 of 10 from deep, including three in a row early in the third quarter, including one off a screen, backing up, turning the wrong way, never seeing the basket. They went icy in the fourth quarter, and had nothing else to go to with their one big-time halfcourt player, Carmelo Anthony, out. Before the game, Johanna Gomez asked Knick center Tyson Chandler what the team would be missing without Anthony, who isn't exactly noted for his defensive effort, or his passing: "He gives us so much on both ends," claimed Chandler with a straight face. Did he mean in the different halves? Like a lot of shooting at one end in the first half, and then another barrage of shots at the other basket in the second half? Or did he mean, like, shooting and dribbling?
4) Play of the game: well, I might be biased, but for me it was when former Heat great Mike Bibby hit back-to-back threes in the second quarter. I tried to keep it low, because I didn't want to upset M.Minutos, but I was cheering inside. Unfortunately moments later, Bibs caught a pass outside the line again, upfaked, took a hard dribble, and zipped a pass...right into the Knicks' bench. Don't try to dribble, Mike Bibby!!! Oh well. Also, got a thrill in the opening moments of the game when the camera surveyed the Knicks bench and I saw Bibby - sitting right in the same spot where he threw the towel and made Derrick Rose miss a free throw, my favorite moment of last season! I miss you, Mike Bibby! Please come home!
5) Late in the first quarter, the Heat had the ball out of bounds on the side in their own end with about 5 seconds to go. LeBron was going to receive the inbounds pass - Mike Miller came running back into the area to potentially set a back screen for LeBron to spring him up court. I could see combative referee, Joey Crawford, who loves to give players quick technical fouls, then challenge them to fight, eyeing Miller (yes - physically fight - this is the referee! the league once fired him for it, then re-hired him! why wouldn't they?). "Don't do it, Mike," I beseeched him, knowing Crawford was dying to call a bizarre illegal screen foul, then glare defiantly at Miller. Miller suddenly realized the same thing and retreated. LeBron threw the ball back to Miller, who dribbled it out of bounds as time expired. "Whew, that was close - you know that Crawford makes that call, then t's up Miller, then the Knicks make the technical free throw and hit a three at the buzzer! We just saved four points," I told M. Minutos triumphantly, "Crawford lives for that call - we'd actually be better off just punting the ball into the crowd rather than try that play!" This brings up a good point. Over the course of 82 games, then another 15-20 playoffs games, I probably call for the Heat to punt the ball into the crowd somewhere in the neighborhood of 600 times. Like, if LeBron throws a fastball to a cutting Joel Anthony, and he doesn't handle it cleanly, I'll be, like, "LeBron - next time, instead of doing that, just turn around and punt the ball into the upper deck. At least that way we can set our defense, instead of having the other team run out." M.Minutos? Not a fan of punting the ball into the crowd as a strategic move: "You'd be the worst coach ever," she pointed out for the approximately six thousandth time in our eighteen year relationship, "I mean, you'd be advocating guys to punt the ball into the crowd; you'd sub guys in and out of the game every time they threw an errant pass; you'd cut guys at halftime; and you would have murdered PJ Brown halfway through his first season in Miami. You'd be terrible!" My defense? I like to think outside the box...
6) We get a lot of emails here at Dos Minutos, but this was one of the best:
Hi,
I'm Amber Paley, owner of http://www.nursinghomeabuse.net, an educational resource for nursing home abuse. As you have a related site, I would like to write a guest post for your website http://miamiheatdosminutos.blogspot.com.
I am happy to write a unique article on any topic you suggest. In exchange, I would just ask to add a link to my website below the guest article.
If you have any article suggestions that you would like me to write or just prefer me to come up with one on my own, I would be happy to do so. Your article will be unique and not used on any other website.
Thanks so much, and look forward to hearing back :)
Amber Paley
I'm Amber Paley, owner of http://www.nursinghomeabuse.net, an educational resource for nursing home abuse. As you have a related site, I would like to write a guest post for your website http://miamiheatdosminutos.blogspot.com.
I am happy to write a unique article on any topic you suggest. In exchange, I would just ask to add a link to my website below the guest article.
If you have any article suggestions that you would like me to write or just prefer me to come up with one on my own, I would be happy to do so. Your article will be unique and not used on any other website.
Thanks so much, and look forward to hearing back :)
Amber Paley
Look – occasionally making fun of Juwan Howard's age does not count as “nursing home abuse.” You can go to hell, Amber Paley!
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Another fun one coming on Sunday: at home for the Bulls, and their openly homophobic center Joakim Noah. Always great to play an opponent who mixes effort and intensity with hatred for LGBT community! If you need me before then, I'll be putting on my headband, getting in even worse shape than I already am, and launching stationary threes in my driveway, in honor of Mike Bibby! Let's get pasty!
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Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Heat 101 Pistons 98
6 Thoughts
1) Oh, my. Where is Dwyane Wade? This is why I'm retiring when Dwyane Wade retires, if not sooner. This is no fun at all. Even winning isn't that fun without Dwyane.
2) In fairness to LeBron, he looks positively gassed. For two straight weeks, with Dwyane out, he's carried a huge, huge chunk of the team's load. He has to create most of the offense; he has to finish a good chunk of the offense; he has to get everyone else involved; he has to defend; and he has to rebound. For the second straight night, he didn't have his legs, but made just enough plays at the end to win the game: lowered his head and charged to the basket, getting to the line and making six straight free throws; and twice found Chris Bosh at the rim with brilliant passes leading to two hoops in the waning moments. And, he played the entire second half - team needed him. But, up one, with 20 seconds to go, in space dribbling up top against 6'9" 165 pound Austin Daye, who had tackled him on his three previous drives, to suddenly decide to rise up and shoot a triple off the dribble was pretty much mindless stupidity, and incredibly frustrating. It was the exact opposite of what I think we all wanted him to do. Miami got a stop, LeBron made two more free throws (capping a 13-14 night at the line), and the Heat escaped with a win. He had solid numbers: 32 points on 20 shots, 7 assists, and 6 rebounds, but he's clearly a little worn down. Probably could use a few days off. If you watched the last two nights, you know why he needs Dwyane. But Dwyane doesn't need him. All Dwyane needs is UD and me! Although, more down on that in #4 (but, shhhh, keep it quiet).
3) Chris Bosh, for the second straight night, was absolutely fantastic. Scored 17 in the fourth quarter last night, and opened the first quarter in this game 6-6 for 13 more. 30 points in a half of basketball for LeBosh! Cue the "La" Bosh jokes! He finished with 27 points on 15 shots, and up one on the last possession, played good d and forced a tough miss out of Greg Monroe in an iso. These last two games have probably been the best Chris has looked in a Heat uniform. The shots are going in - that's one thing. But it is the assertiveness of the shots, and the prudent mixing in of drives, which has been so impressive. This is more like the player he was in Toronto - get the ball, create a shot. Unlike LeBron, he doesn't look too tired, and I don't think he needs any special extra rest. You don't get as tired when you neither run, nor jump.
4) (Shhhhhh - I'm going to tell you something, but you have to promise to keep it a secret. I'm putting it in parentheses so casual bystanders can't see it..Promise not to tell? Okay: Udonis Haslem has been atrocious all season long. His rebounding numbers look great, but it's more a function of the Heat's lack of other big men who rebound than it is an indication of how he's played. His legs look gone - he can't jump. He can't finish shots at the rim, he hasn't made a jumper all season, and he has trouble protecting the rim defensively. This is bad. This is very bad. Shhhhhh.)
5) Checking in on Shane Battier's latest activities: first, he announced on Twitter last night that he will be going to the Jimmy Buffett concert at The Trip Saturday night, but that he won't be drinking at it. That is pretty much the opposite of what he should be doing, that's 0-2 where I come from. Second, Heat reporter Brian Windhorst reported on the Jorge Sedano Show this morning that when the team flies after a game, Shane wraps himself in a tight compression suit so that his joints don't swell up. Offfff course he does, I could have told you that without a doubt, that's a no-brainer. Back to the Buffett thing for a minute. Is it possible that Battier is gaming us, that the whole thing is a bit of a put on? I mean no player ever in the history of the NBA, at least not a useful one, has ever liked Jimmy Buffett. And it's one thing to be unique, I mean it's absolutely cool to be different (not for me, of course, but for others), but specific to Jimmy Buffett, you really, really have to despise music to like Jimmy Buffett, and I don't feel that Battier has that level of hatred in him. I don't know, I think it all may be a big ruse, that the whole NBA-nerd thing is totally calculated and deliberate. M.Minutos says, No - it's Shane Battier. She makes a good point. Tough call.
6) Not many things we have written at this blog have ever generated as much response as our review of the great Robin Williams film Awakenings. Some people - the smart ones - agreed with the review. Others thought we were a little harsh on Robin Williams. Several thought it was stupid to write that much about Robin Williams - those people are clearly insane. However, two separate people wrote in to point out that Robin Williams is not Jewish, and the blog inaccurately claimed that he was. First of all, to you two readers, Robin Williams, and Christians everywhere, I apologize for threatening your very beings by incorrectly painting someone with the scarlett "J." Didn't mean to offend: Shabat Shalom, I write in peace...Second of all: what? You have to be kidding me! Robin Williams is not Jewish? I googled it, and the very excellent and well-written Wikipedia article on him claimed that not only is he Christian, but he isn't even from New York, he's from Detroit! What the...? What the hell is he acting like that for?...Third of all, I mean, if Robin Williams isn't a Jew from New York, if people from other parts of the country can act exactly authentically like a Jew from New York, we have to question all the anti-Semitic stereotyping we've been doing all these years, don't we? This changes everything we know and think about Robin Williams, doesn't it? I mean, besides the crappy acting and comedy - that's absolutely still the same...Fourth of all, he is from Detroit, and he attended high school at Country Day, a prep school in suburban Detroit. Know who else went there? All-time NBA great power forward Chris Webber. Know who else went there? Shane Battier!!! OF COURSE HE DID!!! THIS IS NOT EVEN REMOTELY A JOKE, AND WORLDS, TERRIBLE WORLDS, ARE COLLIDING!!! GOOD NIGHT EVERYBODY!!!
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Don't have anything else to say. Friday vs. Knicks. Let's get it.
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1) Oh, my. Where is Dwyane Wade? This is why I'm retiring when Dwyane Wade retires, if not sooner. This is no fun at all. Even winning isn't that fun without Dwyane.
2) In fairness to LeBron, he looks positively gassed. For two straight weeks, with Dwyane out, he's carried a huge, huge chunk of the team's load. He has to create most of the offense; he has to finish a good chunk of the offense; he has to get everyone else involved; he has to defend; and he has to rebound. For the second straight night, he didn't have his legs, but made just enough plays at the end to win the game: lowered his head and charged to the basket, getting to the line and making six straight free throws; and twice found Chris Bosh at the rim with brilliant passes leading to two hoops in the waning moments. And, he played the entire second half - team needed him. But, up one, with 20 seconds to go, in space dribbling up top against 6'9" 165 pound Austin Daye, who had tackled him on his three previous drives, to suddenly decide to rise up and shoot a triple off the dribble was pretty much mindless stupidity, and incredibly frustrating. It was the exact opposite of what I think we all wanted him to do. Miami got a stop, LeBron made two more free throws (capping a 13-14 night at the line), and the Heat escaped with a win. He had solid numbers: 32 points on 20 shots, 7 assists, and 6 rebounds, but he's clearly a little worn down. Probably could use a few days off. If you watched the last two nights, you know why he needs Dwyane. But Dwyane doesn't need him. All Dwyane needs is UD and me! Although, more down on that in #4 (but, shhhh, keep it quiet).
3) Chris Bosh, for the second straight night, was absolutely fantastic. Scored 17 in the fourth quarter last night, and opened the first quarter in this game 6-6 for 13 more. 30 points in a half of basketball for LeBosh! Cue the "La" Bosh jokes! He finished with 27 points on 15 shots, and up one on the last possession, played good d and forced a tough miss out of Greg Monroe in an iso. These last two games have probably been the best Chris has looked in a Heat uniform. The shots are going in - that's one thing. But it is the assertiveness of the shots, and the prudent mixing in of drives, which has been so impressive. This is more like the player he was in Toronto - get the ball, create a shot. Unlike LeBron, he doesn't look too tired, and I don't think he needs any special extra rest. You don't get as tired when you neither run, nor jump.
4) (Shhhhhh - I'm going to tell you something, but you have to promise to keep it a secret. I'm putting it in parentheses so casual bystanders can't see it..Promise not to tell? Okay: Udonis Haslem has been atrocious all season long. His rebounding numbers look great, but it's more a function of the Heat's lack of other big men who rebound than it is an indication of how he's played. His legs look gone - he can't jump. He can't finish shots at the rim, he hasn't made a jumper all season, and he has trouble protecting the rim defensively. This is bad. This is very bad. Shhhhhh.)
5) Checking in on Shane Battier's latest activities: first, he announced on Twitter last night that he will be going to the Jimmy Buffett concert at The Trip Saturday night, but that he won't be drinking at it. That is pretty much the opposite of what he should be doing, that's 0-2 where I come from. Second, Heat reporter Brian Windhorst reported on the Jorge Sedano Show this morning that when the team flies after a game, Shane wraps himself in a tight compression suit so that his joints don't swell up. Offfff course he does, I could have told you that without a doubt, that's a no-brainer. Back to the Buffett thing for a minute. Is it possible that Battier is gaming us, that the whole thing is a bit of a put on? I mean no player ever in the history of the NBA, at least not a useful one, has ever liked Jimmy Buffett. And it's one thing to be unique, I mean it's absolutely cool to be different (not for me, of course, but for others), but specific to Jimmy Buffett, you really, really have to despise music to like Jimmy Buffett, and I don't feel that Battier has that level of hatred in him. I don't know, I think it all may be a big ruse, that the whole NBA-nerd thing is totally calculated and deliberate. M.Minutos says, No - it's Shane Battier. She makes a good point. Tough call.
6) Not many things we have written at this blog have ever generated as much response as our review of the great Robin Williams film Awakenings. Some people - the smart ones - agreed with the review. Others thought we were a little harsh on Robin Williams. Several thought it was stupid to write that much about Robin Williams - those people are clearly insane. However, two separate people wrote in to point out that Robin Williams is not Jewish, and the blog inaccurately claimed that he was. First of all, to you two readers, Robin Williams, and Christians everywhere, I apologize for threatening your very beings by incorrectly painting someone with the scarlett "J." Didn't mean to offend: Shabat Shalom, I write in peace...Second of all: what? You have to be kidding me! Robin Williams is not Jewish? I googled it, and the very excellent and well-written Wikipedia article on him claimed that not only is he Christian, but he isn't even from New York, he's from Detroit! What the...? What the hell is he acting like that for?...Third of all, I mean, if Robin Williams isn't a Jew from New York, if people from other parts of the country can act exactly authentically like a Jew from New York, we have to question all the anti-Semitic stereotyping we've been doing all these years, don't we? This changes everything we know and think about Robin Williams, doesn't it? I mean, besides the crappy acting and comedy - that's absolutely still the same...Fourth of all, he is from Detroit, and he attended high school at Country Day, a prep school in suburban Detroit. Know who else went there? All-time NBA great power forward Chris Webber. Know who else went there? Shane Battier!!! OF COURSE HE DID!!! THIS IS NOT EVEN REMOTELY A JOKE, AND WORLDS, TERRIBLE WORLDS, ARE COLLIDING!!! GOOD NIGHT EVERYBODY!!!
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Don't have anything else to say. Friday vs. Knicks. Let's get it.
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Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Heat 92 Cavs 85
6 Thoughts
1) The NBA, it's not all glamour, and dunks, and alley-oops, and groupies, and whatnot. Sometimes it is a sloggy mid-week game at home against an undertalented but spirited Cavaliers squad, coming off a terrible loss to Milwaukee, with Dwyane Wade still out nursing a sore foot, and LeBron suffering through one of his two or three games a year where he isn't at least "very good" (and still, it was 18, 5, 5 - for some players, that's "great"). And nobody's feeling it, and you just want the Cavs to roll over and die, but they won't, and you get ahead by 6, but they hit a triple, then you get ahead by 6 again, and you get the ball, but somehow you dribble it off your own ear, and they get it, and hit another triple. Sometimes it just goes like that...AND THEN THE MAITRE D' CHRIS BOSH STARTS RAINING IN BASKETS FROM ALL OVER THE COURT IN THE FOURTH QUARTER INCLUDING BACK-TO-BACK A TRIPLE FROM THE CORNER AND THEN A DRIVING AND-ONE HOOP TO PUT THE GAME AWAY FINISHING WITH 17 IN THE FOURTH AND 35 IN THE GAME ON ONLY SIXTEEN SHOTS AND I AM THE ONLY ONE WHO CONSISTENTLY DEFENDS HIM AGAINST THE BARRAGE OF CRITICISM CONSTANTLY THROWN HIS WAY YEAH BOY YOU RUN TELL DAT C'MON!!!
2) Whew...This here at # 2, this isn't even a joke, this is real. Johanna Gomez, the backup Heat sideline reporter - actually, at this point is Jax even a "sideline reporter?" Not really - he's more like the "host of the evening," and JoGo is the sideline reporter. Anyways, JoGo, she is super cute, and always smiling, and likable, but you haven't always felt that she exactly knows a ton about basketball, and it can result in some odd questions, especially in the pre-game interviews with opposing players that she now does. But today, I noticed, was her best interview ever, with Cavs forward Anderson Varejo. She sounded confident, asked him a good question about mentoring some of the younger players on his team, and then asked him a super-solid question about whether he has any family in Miami, since he's Brazilian - you could tell he liked that, he lit right up, and explained how his girlfriend is from Miami, how he spends every summer here, and how he had been out to dinner last night with her family at iconic Miami Beach restaurant Prime 112. That was seriously a great job by her. It made me wonder: do other teams put as much time into the production value of the broadcasts as Miami does? I see a lot of NBA games year-to-year, and I don't think so. And you can laugh about Tony Fiorentino being a homer, or Eric Reid obsessing over insignificant Heat record book minutiae, but, honestly, collectively they are putting on a pretty good show each night. And tonight, better than the Heat and Cavs did!
3) Staying with our "Tribute to Sunsports" theme, in the second quarter Eric recounted a pregame conversation he had with forward Omri Casspi, in his first year on the Cavs after being traded from - oh, no - Sacramento! "Tony, he told me he is happy to be in Cleveland after spending his first two seasons in Sacramento," Eric enthused. Look, Eric's a empathetic guy, and he doesn't want to see anyone ever have to spend any amount of time in Sacramento. It is the one place on Earth he despises - really, traveling to Sacramento is the only aspect of broadcasting Heat games that I have ever heard he and Tony express any displeasure with at all. Last year, if you remember, as if they didn't hate Sacramento enough already, a marathon routed right past their hotel woke them up too early in the morning. This year, the only positive element to come out of the lockout is that the Heat do not play a game in Sacramento. So, to be honest, I don't know if Omri Casspi was merely being polite when he said he loved being in Cleveland instead of Sacramento, but I do know if you put put Eric Reid in that spot, he'd happily spend a thousand freezing winter days ice fishing on Lake Erie before he'd spend a pleasant summer's evening in Sacramento. I'm just saying...
4) Cleveland's rookie point guard Kyrie Irving was the # 1 overall pick in last summer's draft. I thought he looked good. He isn't hyper-athletic, but he clearly knows how to play, and since an injury in his only year at Duke limited him to just 11 games, he didn't have the time to develop the awful habits resulting from horrific coaching that most Duke players suffer from when they enter the league. He had 17 points, 4 assists, and 4 rebounds, and I think he is already clearly the Cavs' best player. Still, inevitably, halfway through the first quarter he drove the lane, tried to shoot a runner, and plowed over fellow Duke alumnus Shane Battier, committing an offensive foul. Of course he did - Battier lives for moments like this. The only question was how it took five minutes for that to happen - the over/under was set pre-game at 90 seconds.
5) Well, he might have been sub-par on the court tonight, but there was absolutely nothing sub-par about LeBron James' performance on "Hot Seconds with Jax" because he absolutely killed it. Nailed the two point question about the dollar menu at McDonald's: onion rings - they aren't sold at McDonald's. (Where all the people who claimed LeBron would never recover, marketing-wise, from The Decision, by the way? Man, they were spot-on - you can't turn on the tv without seeing a national ad with LeBron in it.) Then nailed the three pointer: how many Superbowls have his favorite football team, the Dallas Cowboys, won? (five) At this point, M.Minutos groaned and predicted that not only was LeBron going to run the table and win the game show, but that she knew she should have predicted he would win (she guessed Eddy Curry). I pointed out that was an easy supposition to make when he had nailed the first two with ease, but she ignored me, and was proven right when LeBron hammered the third question, too: Name 5 English Premier League soccer teams? (Man U, Man City, Chelsea, Arsenal, Liverpool) Still had 11 seconds to go - that's going to be a tough score for anyone to beat. While M.Minutos professed her faith in LeBron, it was stunning to me. For some reason, I am constantly surprised when LeBron knows anything about anything that a "normal" person knows. I think he's a reasonably bright guy, it just seems like he would be so busy being LeBron James that he wouldn't have time to know about other things. For instance, even though he has been on the team for a year and a half, and everyone in the Heat organization praises his easygoing, friendly nature, I am always flabbergasted that he knows Jax' name during postgame interviews. Sometimes he calls him "Jason," sometimes he calls him "Jax-" to me, it seems like LeBron would call him "Man" to his face, and then if he ever had to reference Jax to another person, would be, like, "You know, the happy dude who does the interviews after the games." This is all my own shortcoming as a human being, not LeBron's, obviously - I can't remember anyone's name, and I don't have anyhing to do but write this stupid blog. So this is a humbling night for me - I have to acknowledge that not only is LeBron very aware of what goes on around him, he might be the most aware person on the entire team! You are skilled at "Hot Seconds with Jax," LeBron. I exhort you!
1) The NBA, it's not all glamour, and dunks, and alley-oops, and groupies, and whatnot. Sometimes it is a sloggy mid-week game at home against an undertalented but spirited Cavaliers squad, coming off a terrible loss to Milwaukee, with Dwyane Wade still out nursing a sore foot, and LeBron suffering through one of his two or three games a year where he isn't at least "very good" (and still, it was 18, 5, 5 - for some players, that's "great"). And nobody's feeling it, and you just want the Cavs to roll over and die, but they won't, and you get ahead by 6, but they hit a triple, then you get ahead by 6 again, and you get the ball, but somehow you dribble it off your own ear, and they get it, and hit another triple. Sometimes it just goes like that...AND THEN THE MAITRE D' CHRIS BOSH STARTS RAINING IN BASKETS FROM ALL OVER THE COURT IN THE FOURTH QUARTER INCLUDING BACK-TO-BACK A TRIPLE FROM THE CORNER AND THEN A DRIVING AND-ONE HOOP TO PUT THE GAME AWAY FINISHING WITH 17 IN THE FOURTH AND 35 IN THE GAME ON ONLY SIXTEEN SHOTS AND I AM THE ONLY ONE WHO CONSISTENTLY DEFENDS HIM AGAINST THE BARRAGE OF CRITICISM CONSTANTLY THROWN HIS WAY YEAH BOY YOU RUN TELL DAT C'MON!!!
2) Whew...This here at # 2, this isn't even a joke, this is real. Johanna Gomez, the backup Heat sideline reporter - actually, at this point is Jax even a "sideline reporter?" Not really - he's more like the "host of the evening," and JoGo is the sideline reporter. Anyways, JoGo, she is super cute, and always smiling, and likable, but you haven't always felt that she exactly knows a ton about basketball, and it can result in some odd questions, especially in the pre-game interviews with opposing players that she now does. But today, I noticed, was her best interview ever, with Cavs forward Anderson Varejo. She sounded confident, asked him a good question about mentoring some of the younger players on his team, and then asked him a super-solid question about whether he has any family in Miami, since he's Brazilian - you could tell he liked that, he lit right up, and explained how his girlfriend is from Miami, how he spends every summer here, and how he had been out to dinner last night with her family at iconic Miami Beach restaurant Prime 112. That was seriously a great job by her. It made me wonder: do other teams put as much time into the production value of the broadcasts as Miami does? I see a lot of NBA games year-to-year, and I don't think so. And you can laugh about Tony Fiorentino being a homer, or Eric Reid obsessing over insignificant Heat record book minutiae, but, honestly, collectively they are putting on a pretty good show each night. And tonight, better than the Heat and Cavs did!
3) Staying with our "Tribute to Sunsports" theme, in the second quarter Eric recounted a pregame conversation he had with forward Omri Casspi, in his first year on the Cavs after being traded from - oh, no - Sacramento! "Tony, he told me he is happy to be in Cleveland after spending his first two seasons in Sacramento," Eric enthused. Look, Eric's a empathetic guy, and he doesn't want to see anyone ever have to spend any amount of time in Sacramento. It is the one place on Earth he despises - really, traveling to Sacramento is the only aspect of broadcasting Heat games that I have ever heard he and Tony express any displeasure with at all. Last year, if you remember, as if they didn't hate Sacramento enough already, a marathon routed right past their hotel woke them up too early in the morning. This year, the only positive element to come out of the lockout is that the Heat do not play a game in Sacramento. So, to be honest, I don't know if Omri Casspi was merely being polite when he said he loved being in Cleveland instead of Sacramento, but I do know if you put put Eric Reid in that spot, he'd happily spend a thousand freezing winter days ice fishing on Lake Erie before he'd spend a pleasant summer's evening in Sacramento. I'm just saying...
4) Cleveland's rookie point guard Kyrie Irving was the # 1 overall pick in last summer's draft. I thought he looked good. He isn't hyper-athletic, but he clearly knows how to play, and since an injury in his only year at Duke limited him to just 11 games, he didn't have the time to develop the awful habits resulting from horrific coaching that most Duke players suffer from when they enter the league. He had 17 points, 4 assists, and 4 rebounds, and I think he is already clearly the Cavs' best player. Still, inevitably, halfway through the first quarter he drove the lane, tried to shoot a runner, and plowed over fellow Duke alumnus Shane Battier, committing an offensive foul. Of course he did - Battier lives for moments like this. The only question was how it took five minutes for that to happen - the over/under was set pre-game at 90 seconds.
5) Well, he might have been sub-par on the court tonight, but there was absolutely nothing sub-par about LeBron James' performance on "Hot Seconds with Jax" because he absolutely killed it. Nailed the two point question about the dollar menu at McDonald's: onion rings - they aren't sold at McDonald's. (Where all the people who claimed LeBron would never recover, marketing-wise, from The Decision, by the way? Man, they were spot-on - you can't turn on the tv without seeing a national ad with LeBron in it.) Then nailed the three pointer: how many Superbowls have his favorite football team, the Dallas Cowboys, won? (five) At this point, M.Minutos groaned and predicted that not only was LeBron going to run the table and win the game show, but that she knew she should have predicted he would win (she guessed Eddy Curry). I pointed out that was an easy supposition to make when he had nailed the first two with ease, but she ignored me, and was proven right when LeBron hammered the third question, too: Name 5 English Premier League soccer teams? (Man U, Man City, Chelsea, Arsenal, Liverpool) Still had 11 seconds to go - that's going to be a tough score for anyone to beat. While M.Minutos professed her faith in LeBron, it was stunning to me. For some reason, I am constantly surprised when LeBron knows anything about anything that a "normal" person knows. I think he's a reasonably bright guy, it just seems like he would be so busy being LeBron James that he wouldn't have time to know about other things. For instance, even though he has been on the team for a year and a half, and everyone in the Heat organization praises his easygoing, friendly nature, I am always flabbergasted that he knows Jax' name during postgame interviews. Sometimes he calls him "Jason," sometimes he calls him "Jax-" to me, it seems like LeBron would call him "Man" to his face, and then if he ever had to reference Jax to another person, would be, like, "You know, the happy dude who does the interviews after the games." This is all my own shortcoming as a human being, not LeBron's, obviously - I can't remember anyone's name, and I don't have anyhing to do but write this stupid blog. So this is a humbling night for me - I have to acknowledge that not only is LeBron very aware of what goes on around him, he might be the most aware person on the entire team! You are skilled at "Hot Seconds with Jax," LeBron. I exhort you!
6) I have never in my life been happier than when, after a long day at Dos Minutos Int’l HQs, I returned to Casa Dos yesterday to find that amigos de la blog BH and TAZ had mailed me a blue ray copy of the classic Robin Williams film Awakenings, also starring Robert De Niro. I believe that I recently cited the movie while excusing a disengaged performance by LeBron James – I felt it was possible he had willed himself into a coma to escape Chris Bosh’s putrid play that evening, much like in Awakenings, when DeNiro puts himself back under to free himself from the constant overwrought acting of Williams. Let’s be clear: this isn’t the best Robin Williams movie. That, of course, is Patch Adams. How do we know this? Because Patch Adams is the best movie ever filmed! In that one, a forty-eight year old Williams enrolls in medical school and instantly declares that he doesn’t need to study biology, chemistry, or any scientific field of any kind, because the best cure for illness is, obviously, laughter. Thus, he dons a stupid clown nose, and despite continual reprimands from the administration to cease and desist, repeatedly sneaks into the children’s cancer ward at the university hospital and yucks it up with the unfortunate cancer patients. Bad enough they have cancer –now they are continually exposed to Williams' endless asinine behavior in the middle of the night. You can see the kids praying for the sweet release of death. Meanwhile, he falls in love with another medical student, who appears to be, conservatively, thirty years his junior. Also, she’s extremely attractive, and he looks like a middle-aged, Jewish werewolf. But, you know, whatever. Finally, because he simply won’t study at all, and then constructs a giant anus over a doorway welcoming a visiting conference of proctologists – and then is stunned when they don’t think it is funny – he is expelled from the school. So, he decides to open a hospital out in the woods somewhere, which he stocks by stealing supplies from the university. Of course he does – who wouldn’t? His girlfriend works at the clinic with him. Apparently laughter is not the best cure for mentally-deranged, homicidal patients, because he tries to help a guy like this at the makeshift hospital, it doesn’t work – surprisingly, because he’s not even a doctor, let alone a psychologist - and the mentally deranged guy flips out and murders Williams’ girlfriend. Of course, this leads to some deep introspection on Williams’ part, like: “Hey, you know what? Maybe I should leave practicing medicine to the, you know, doctors.” But then, after much thought, and a conversation with his arch-rival, Phillip Seymour Hoffman, he decides, “No, that’s insane - I’m going to continue to practice medicine without a license and steal supplies from the school.” Finally, he gets brought up on charges by the state, or the school, or someone, and he pleads his case by marching in the cancer kids to demonstrate how much better he has made their lives, although as far as we all know, they still have cancer. And somehow, the governing board of whatever body is trying him decides, “You know what? He’s right. He definitely should be practicing medicine, no matter what!” And he goes on to have a long career being a doctor in the backwoods of West Virginia , I believe. By the way, this movie is based on a true story – it is totally unbelievable to me, except for the part where the state of West Virginia let someone practice medicine for thirty years without a license – that’s totally plausible. To his credit, the real-life Patch Adams says: “I hate this movie.”
Awakenings is based on the true story of former Orlando Magic shooting guard Nick Anderson. In the 1995 NBA Finals, Anderson, a good player, missed four consecutive free throws to blow Game 1. The Magic would eventually get swept by the Houston Rockets, and Anderson’s career began a downward spiral. He could no longer make a free throw, as some kind of post-traumatic free throw stress disorder enveloped his brain – it reached the point where, through the first half of the 97-98 season, he was averaging only 6.5 points a game, and shooting a mind-bogglingly atrocious 36% from the free throw line. He was on his way out of the league. But suddenly, out of nowhere, after years in the wilderness, the fog lifted, and Anderson suddenly caught holy fire, and was one of the best players in his basketball over the second half of that season, averaging almost 23 points and shooting 67% from the line. It culminated in an all-time dramatic victory in Orlando over a Shaquille O’Neal-led Lakers squad, after O’Neal had bailed on Anderson and the Magic for the west coast. Three weeks earlier, before the revival, Anderson had scored no points at all in a game in LA. In front of a national tv audience in Orlando, he scored 30 points, had 8 rebounds, and was the best player on the floor. For those two and a half months, he was an early-day Dwyane Wade prototype – all athletic mid-range game, getting to the line, rebounding, and making winning plays all over the court. And then, just like that, “poof” – it was gone. He came back the next year, and wasn’t the same – his shooting percentages faded, he was no longer an effective player, and never was again. One of weirdest sagas in NBA history.
In the film Awakenings, Anderson is played by Robert DeNiro, a super-odd choice, and the film is repositioned from mid-late 90s Central Florida to “olden-times” New York (you can tell by the knickers and caps). Instead of an NBA basketball player, DeNiro plays a post-encephalitis, semi-comatose, mental ward patient, and Williams, reprising his role from Patch Adams, is his doctor. Though he has been hired to be a caretaker for a group of patients who are virtually motionless and utterly non-communicative, Williams embarks on a mission to break down the walls between the patients’psyches and the outside world. He makes an accidental breakthrough when he realizes that an elderly woman who responds to absolutely no stimulae whatsoever can catch any object thrown in her direction no matter how hard, or how errant, the throw is. Not only that, so can all of these patients – there is a scene in which, still totally unresponsive to any other outside source, a group of patients play a robust game of volleyball in which the ball never even once comes close to touching the ground. These patients are like the Heat’s Joel “Butter” Anthony, only the exact opposite. Predictably, a female nurse has the hots for Robin Williams, because he is obviously incredibly good-looking, even with extremely furry hands. Williams tries an experimental drug to bring DeNiro out of his coma. It works – he is suddenly revived, like Nick Anderson, after thirty years of trance-like inactivity, but one suspects that during those thirty years someone has been showing him Al Pacino movies, because after two days, when the hospital staff won’t immediately release him into New York City to fend for himself, he stages a Pacino-esque “At-ti-ca” style uprising with the rest of the patients in an attempt to intimidate the doctors into setting him free. Arguably, the drugs begin to wear off – but it’s unclear whether DeNiro has perhaps tired of Robin Williams’ constant mugging to the camera (mostly overblown sighs, and furrowed brows of intense concentration) and is willing himself back into a vegetative state (which is what I theorized LeBron might be doing a few games ago in response to Bosh’s poor play); or, whether Williams himself grows agitated with DeNiro’s hyper-intense twitching as the drugs start to wear off, and he begins to lose control of his body. Either way, DeNiro slips away back into his impenetrable fog. Williams is sad, for a moment, but as in Patch Adams, he is able to quickly gather himself, and in the ending voice-over tells us that “the human spirit is more powerful than any drug, and that is what needs to be nourished,” as he goes off to nail the nurse who has a crush on him. Uplifting? Definitely. In fact, more so each time I see it. It is easy to blame Williams for how cheesy the film is, but, really, DeNiro is no better. Besides Taxi Driver and Deerhunter, has he ever been in a good movie, if you do not count Mafia movies, which I do not, since they are boring and unwatchable? As I popped it in last night, I was surprised to learn that M.Minutos had never seen Awakenings before – man, was she in for a treat! She claimed that she has heard a doctor named Oliver Sacks, who actually studied these types of patients, on NPR, and so she was familiar with the story. “Plus, I’ve told you about the movie so many times,” I pointed out. “Right, but Oliver Sacks was telling the truth about it.” Oh. Good point…Thanks for the movie, BH and TAZ. Sorry you are reduced to reading this stupid blog for entertainment!
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Wordy. Tomorrow night, in Detroit, we'll try to be a little less, you know, wordy. If you need me before then, I'll be reading my Strunk and White for tips. Later...
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Sunday, January 22, 2012
Bucks 91 Heat 82
6 Thoughts
1) What the hell was that? I mean, really, what the hell was that? That was like a wrestling match. The Bucks are limited offensively, I know they have to try to win the games on the defensive end, but that seemed kind of beyond what one would normally expect in a basketball game. There was clutching. There was grabbing. There was clutching AND grabbing. There was elbowing, there was arguing, there was pushing. I mean, that was incredibly, incredibly annoying. The Bucks won - it's good for them, it will be the best win they get all season, I assume - but I think, honestly, we are all losers for having to sit through that. How bad was it?
2) It was so bad that even Mario Chalmers lost his cool. We've seen a lot of wacky things from Emcee over the years, and tonight was not one of his better nights - somehow he kept ending up with the ball late in the shot clock, and made poor decision after poor decision. But one thing you can say about him is that he always keeps a level head - or, at least, whatever passes for level in his cranium. I'm not totally sure what's going on up there. Tonight, late, with the game having pretty much slipped away, Emcee, twice got thrown to the ground in scrums without a foul being called. The second one, a look-away cheap shot by Bucks point guard Brandon Jennings, sent Emcee over the edge. He jumped up off the floor, chased Jennings across the court, and then body-checked him into the crowd. Flagrant foul. And well-deserved.
3) It was so bad, that in the span of 90 seconds in the second quarter, after a series of Carlos Delfino and Ersan Ilyasova tackles on LeBron James, the Heat lost their collective crap. Mike Miller and Joel Anthony got back-to-back technicals arguing fouls and then the Heat bench, and specfically Ron Rothstein got a technical for, I believe, pointing out that Andrew Bogut had pitched a tent under his defensive rim, making it extremely tough to run offense. As a referee, you have to be out of control to t up Miller, Butter, and the bench back-to-back-to-back. It was a young crew: the crew chief Mark Davis isn't one of the more competent refs, and he's got two kids with him (Kane Fizgerald and Josh Tiven). And in fairness to those guys, the Bucks are incredibly difficult to officiate - they zone up in the paint, daring you to call illegal defense, and they contest every bounce of the ball with a bump, or a swipe, or a push. The game is either going to take four hours to play if you call every foul, or it is going to be a rugby match. Or, like, tonight, both! Nice job, kids!
4) How bad was it? No, really, you want to know how bad it was? Heat sideline reporter extraordinaire, Jason Jackson, took a subtle backhanded shot at Bogut and the Bucks in his postgame interview with the affable (off the court) Aussie! He asked Bogut, who had fouled out on a vicious forearm to LeBron's face - should have been a flagrant as well - something like "It's never fun to foul out - was it hard to get a rhythm going with all the fouling out there?" To Bogut's credit, he seemed to be somewhat in on the joke: "We know we are a defensive team." I'll say. I like Bogut, I think if he could escape this depressing, hellhole of a franchise, people would understand how good he is. He isn't, like, "make the Milwaukee Bucks a viable franchise" good, but he could be a starting center on a championship level team, no doubt.
5) Eddy Curry checked in early in the first quarter. He didn't play too well, but he produced a highlight nontheless when Tony Fiorentino, while listing his positive qualities, called him a "space eater." "Space heater?" asked M.Minutos, who must have been distracted by Carlos Delfino's constant tackling of LeBron, "What does that mean?" Haaaa! Eddy Curry, the Space Heater! Cuz he heats up on offense! Cuz he's too hot to touch! Cuz he warms up your cooold winter nights, and makes you feel all warm and cozy in bed!!!
6) Ok, whatever, the Heat lost one game after a supergood week, and I probably jinxed them by going out of town and missing last night's game. I was in Gainesville for the first time, and it is totally, totally awesome. It is a beautiful part of the state, with Spanish moss-y trees everywhere, and hills, and lakes, and a classic college campus, and everyone we met was incredibly friendly. Also, former stomping grounds of Mike Mil-lar and UD! We ate fancy pizza late at night, we snuck on to the football field, we took hokey pictures with the giant Tebow statue, and we watched the UF basketball team beat LSU, even sans Miller and UD! If you ever have a chance to go there, definitely, definitely go. Especially if you are an artist dude who knows who to make giant allligator sculptures - if you know how to do that, this town is for you, you can make a million dollars...
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We're off just one night, back on Tuesday for Cleveland. Oh, no, not Cleveland - a whole franchise "hates-what-they-did-to-me" game! If you need me before then, I'll be up in Gainesville - I've got an interview, I'm trying to get accepted for the Class of 2017! Go Gators!
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1) What the hell was that? I mean, really, what the hell was that? That was like a wrestling match. The Bucks are limited offensively, I know they have to try to win the games on the defensive end, but that seemed kind of beyond what one would normally expect in a basketball game. There was clutching. There was grabbing. There was clutching AND grabbing. There was elbowing, there was arguing, there was pushing. I mean, that was incredibly, incredibly annoying. The Bucks won - it's good for them, it will be the best win they get all season, I assume - but I think, honestly, we are all losers for having to sit through that. How bad was it?
2) It was so bad that even Mario Chalmers lost his cool. We've seen a lot of wacky things from Emcee over the years, and tonight was not one of his better nights - somehow he kept ending up with the ball late in the shot clock, and made poor decision after poor decision. But one thing you can say about him is that he always keeps a level head - or, at least, whatever passes for level in his cranium. I'm not totally sure what's going on up there. Tonight, late, with the game having pretty much slipped away, Emcee, twice got thrown to the ground in scrums without a foul being called. The second one, a look-away cheap shot by Bucks point guard Brandon Jennings, sent Emcee over the edge. He jumped up off the floor, chased Jennings across the court, and then body-checked him into the crowd. Flagrant foul. And well-deserved.
3) It was so bad, that in the span of 90 seconds in the second quarter, after a series of Carlos Delfino and Ersan Ilyasova tackles on LeBron James, the Heat lost their collective crap. Mike Miller and Joel Anthony got back-to-back technicals arguing fouls and then the Heat bench, and specfically Ron Rothstein got a technical for, I believe, pointing out that Andrew Bogut had pitched a tent under his defensive rim, making it extremely tough to run offense. As a referee, you have to be out of control to t up Miller, Butter, and the bench back-to-back-to-back. It was a young crew: the crew chief Mark Davis isn't one of the more competent refs, and he's got two kids with him (Kane Fizgerald and Josh Tiven). And in fairness to those guys, the Bucks are incredibly difficult to officiate - they zone up in the paint, daring you to call illegal defense, and they contest every bounce of the ball with a bump, or a swipe, or a push. The game is either going to take four hours to play if you call every foul, or it is going to be a rugby match. Or, like, tonight, both! Nice job, kids!
4) How bad was it? No, really, you want to know how bad it was? Heat sideline reporter extraordinaire, Jason Jackson, took a subtle backhanded shot at Bogut and the Bucks in his postgame interview with the affable (off the court) Aussie! He asked Bogut, who had fouled out on a vicious forearm to LeBron's face - should have been a flagrant as well - something like "It's never fun to foul out - was it hard to get a rhythm going with all the fouling out there?" To Bogut's credit, he seemed to be somewhat in on the joke: "We know we are a defensive team." I'll say. I like Bogut, I think if he could escape this depressing, hellhole of a franchise, people would understand how good he is. He isn't, like, "make the Milwaukee Bucks a viable franchise" good, but he could be a starting center on a championship level team, no doubt.
5) Eddy Curry checked in early in the first quarter. He didn't play too well, but he produced a highlight nontheless when Tony Fiorentino, while listing his positive qualities, called him a "space eater." "Space heater?" asked M.Minutos, who must have been distracted by Carlos Delfino's constant tackling of LeBron, "What does that mean?" Haaaa! Eddy Curry, the Space Heater! Cuz he heats up on offense! Cuz he's too hot to touch! Cuz he warms up your cooold winter nights, and makes you feel all warm and cozy in bed!!!
6) Ok, whatever, the Heat lost one game after a supergood week, and I probably jinxed them by going out of town and missing last night's game. I was in Gainesville for the first time, and it is totally, totally awesome. It is a beautiful part of the state, with Spanish moss-y trees everywhere, and hills, and lakes, and a classic college campus, and everyone we met was incredibly friendly. Also, former stomping grounds of Mike Mil-lar and UD! We ate fancy pizza late at night, we snuck on to the football field, we took hokey pictures with the giant Tebow statue, and we watched the UF basketball team beat LSU, even sans Miller and UD! If you ever have a chance to go there, definitely, definitely go. Especially if you are an artist dude who knows who to make giant allligator sculptures - if you know how to do that, this town is for you, you can make a million dollars...
---
We're off just one night, back on Tuesday for Cleveland. Oh, no, not Cleveland - a whole franchise "hates-what-they-did-to-me" game! If you need me before then, I'll be up in Gainesville - I've got an interview, I'm trying to get accepted for the Class of 2017! Go Gators!
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Heat 113 Sixers 92
Heat at Sixers
January 21, 2012
Welcome to the second issue of Deux Minutes I want to first take exception to Senor Dos for taking not very subtle shots of my advanced age. Truth be told I will be 61 on Tuesday but I still wear short pants to work and I still play in a rock and roll band. I have been watching the NBA for many years – and my big bitch is – what happened to the John Stockton shorts – I still wear ‘em or maybe that was Dos’s point – ok Allons-y!
Oh my – what’s with the rainbow coalition uni’s – Wow, they had to be designed by Craig Sager.
A’ight – gotta give props to Chalmers – I put him down last time I did this – maybe he read the blog – but he has looked a lot more mature, a lot more in control and his 3’s have been dropping. Cole on the other hand, not looking as good as he did. I still have high hopes for the rook though. He is fearless – we don’t have to worry about this guy passing up a shot – 7 points in the first half and some decent ball handling – just on the verge of out of control – he’ll get it. We have a keeper. Did you hear what his daughter’s name is?
We got Joel Anthony on Jax’s Hot Seconds – now I first want to dis my fellow World Class Journalist – Mr. Dos – why do you continue to put down my Homey, Joel Anthony – he played a solid first half – No calling him Butter anymore – at least call him Buerre – the guy’s from Montreal for criminiy’s sake. He sucks on Hot Seconds though – he should have called me for a lifeline – I would have got the Canadian questions at least. Jax – and I know you read this – next time call Deux Minutes for Canajun questions And speaking of people who played in Canada – Chris Bosh is carrying the team tonight with a nice 3 and a decent mix of drop step hooks, mid rangers and a drives to the hole.
On the 76’ers side Evan Turner having an excellent game – he learned something over the summer because they were calling him a bust – rookie center Voodoowich or whatever looks like he belongs.
Eric and Tony announcing Joe Paterno has died. What can you say – for all the ugliness coming out of Happy Valley, his resume would indicate he deserved a better end to his life.
When the HEAT have a fast break with LBJ throwing the ¾ court pass to, who? Joel Anthony – yes Joel Anthony - you have to be amazed. I mean WTF – we may never see that again – I’ll always remember where I was this night. He didn’t score but he hit his free throws – come on give the guy his props he was 9 points and 9 boards 3 blocks and I didn’t see him leaking any dairy products the whole game.
LBJ – the guy had a world class game – 28/9/5 but his defense was other worldy – along with 4 steals and 3 blocks the guy just kicked ass on both ends of the court and his strongest offensive quarter was the 4th.
Bench is stepping up – 33 points tonight with some great defense to boot – both Miller and Battier most notably.
Ok – why no Fed Curry tonight – can’t figure that – maybe because Spencer Hawes was out (spooky looking dude) and Voodoowich was hurt later in the game – maybe it’s because he saving his 6 fouls for Andrew Bogut tomorrow night – I would have loved to see him again.
Tony – only 1 Mount Vernon mention tonight – slow night.
Sorry I got nothing to say about the 70’s throwback fro’s wigs that they were wearing – except Mike Miller looked even goofier than normal. There will be more of this nonsense tomorrow night – I’m sure Dos will have something pithy to say about it tomorrow night.
6 games with Wade sitting 6 victories – how do you explain this. I don’t want to be Mr. Obvious but I think that they are simply picking it up, especially Bosh to make up for him. I also think that just generally the team is finding their groove and Wade will only make them that much more deadly. We beat a solid well coached team tonight that had the 2nd best scoring defense. Their previous high for points against was 108 and that was an OT game. I don’t subscribe to the Sir Charles point of view that LBJ regresses with Wade in the game. The rest of the league is taking notice let me tell you – can’t wait to see us against Chicago next week. Hate that team – Hate Rose Hate Noah Hate Oprah. Ok I don’t hate Oprah and I don’t hate anyone but I really dislike that team.
I have been watching the HEAT since the Billy Cunningham days – these last 3 games are the best we have ever looked. Defense – post game, fast break, long range you name it – we even hit our freaking free throws tonight.
Dos went all political on us last game – I’m voting for Jed Bartlett. Finally – and I read this on the internet so it has to be true – what is Rio Chalmer’s daughter’s name – Queen Elizabeth – seriously.
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Dos says: "How dare you make fun of Spencer Hawes...Spencer Hawes!!! Otherwise, thanks for filling in - job well done!...I'm still in Gainesville, but I may be back for tomorrow night for our game against the Bucks, if I don't enroll in the University of Florida, Class of 2017. This place is like Heaven, but with more alcohol."
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January 21, 2012
Welcome to the second issue of Deux Minutes I want to first take exception to Senor Dos for taking not very subtle shots of my advanced age. Truth be told I will be 61 on Tuesday but I still wear short pants to work and I still play in a rock and roll band. I have been watching the NBA for many years – and my big bitch is – what happened to the John Stockton shorts – I still wear ‘em or maybe that was Dos’s point – ok Allons-y!
Oh my – what’s with the rainbow coalition uni’s – Wow, they had to be designed by Craig Sager.
A’ight – gotta give props to Chalmers – I put him down last time I did this – maybe he read the blog – but he has looked a lot more mature, a lot more in control and his 3’s have been dropping. Cole on the other hand, not looking as good as he did. I still have high hopes for the rook though. He is fearless – we don’t have to worry about this guy passing up a shot – 7 points in the first half and some decent ball handling – just on the verge of out of control – he’ll get it. We have a keeper. Did you hear what his daughter’s name is?
We got Joel Anthony on Jax’s Hot Seconds – now I first want to dis my fellow World Class Journalist – Mr. Dos – why do you continue to put down my Homey, Joel Anthony – he played a solid first half – No calling him Butter anymore – at least call him Buerre – the guy’s from Montreal for criminiy’s sake. He sucks on Hot Seconds though – he should have called me for a lifeline – I would have got the Canadian questions at least. Jax – and I know you read this – next time call Deux Minutes for Canajun questions And speaking of people who played in Canada – Chris Bosh is carrying the team tonight with a nice 3 and a decent mix of drop step hooks, mid rangers and a drives to the hole.
On the 76’ers side Evan Turner having an excellent game – he learned something over the summer because they were calling him a bust – rookie center Voodoowich or whatever looks like he belongs.
Eric and Tony announcing Joe Paterno has died. What can you say – for all the ugliness coming out of Happy Valley, his resume would indicate he deserved a better end to his life.
When the HEAT have a fast break with LBJ throwing the ¾ court pass to, who? Joel Anthony – yes Joel Anthony - you have to be amazed. I mean WTF – we may never see that again – I’ll always remember where I was this night. He didn’t score but he hit his free throws – come on give the guy his props he was 9 points and 9 boards 3 blocks and I didn’t see him leaking any dairy products the whole game.
LBJ – the guy had a world class game – 28/9/5 but his defense was other worldy – along with 4 steals and 3 blocks the guy just kicked ass on both ends of the court and his strongest offensive quarter was the 4th.
Bench is stepping up – 33 points tonight with some great defense to boot – both Miller and Battier most notably.
Ok – why no Fed Curry tonight – can’t figure that – maybe because Spencer Hawes was out (spooky looking dude) and Voodoowich was hurt later in the game – maybe it’s because he saving his 6 fouls for Andrew Bogut tomorrow night – I would have loved to see him again.
Tony – only 1 Mount Vernon mention tonight – slow night.
Sorry I got nothing to say about the 70’s throwback fro’s wigs that they were wearing – except Mike Miller looked even goofier than normal. There will be more of this nonsense tomorrow night – I’m sure Dos will have something pithy to say about it tomorrow night.
6 games with Wade sitting 6 victories – how do you explain this. I don’t want to be Mr. Obvious but I think that they are simply picking it up, especially Bosh to make up for him. I also think that just generally the team is finding their groove and Wade will only make them that much more deadly. We beat a solid well coached team tonight that had the 2nd best scoring defense. Their previous high for points against was 108 and that was an OT game. I don’t subscribe to the Sir Charles point of view that LBJ regresses with Wade in the game. The rest of the league is taking notice let me tell you – can’t wait to see us against Chicago next week. Hate that team – Hate Rose Hate Noah Hate Oprah. Ok I don’t hate Oprah and I don’t hate anyone but I really dislike that team.
I have been watching the HEAT since the Billy Cunningham days – these last 3 games are the best we have ever looked. Defense – post game, fast break, long range you name it – we even hit our freaking free throws tonight.
Dos went all political on us last game – I’m voting for Jed Bartlett. Finally – and I read this on the internet so it has to be true – what is Rio Chalmer’s daughter’s name – Queen Elizabeth – seriously.
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Dos says: "How dare you make fun of Spencer Hawes...Spencer Hawes!!! Otherwise, thanks for filling in - job well done!...I'm still in Gainesville, but I may be back for tomorrow night for our game against the Bucks, if I don't enroll in the University of Florida, Class of 2017. This place is like Heaven, but with more alcohol."
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Thursday, January 19, 2012
Heat 98 Lakers 87
6 Thoughts
1) Solid home win for Miami over the Lakers - pushed out by 15 at halftime, and the Lakers never made a run. It says something - good for Miami, I think - that it seemed like a big-game litmus test for the Lakers, and just another game for Miami. LeBron had the flu and looked a little tired, but filled up the boxscore: 31 points, 8 rebounds, 8 assists, 4 steals, and 3 blocks. He went to the mid-post often, created good looks for himself and others, and Miami won easily. By the way, appropriate for LeBron to have a big game during the Heat's first "Back in Black" night of the season, with fresh, new alternate black home unis, and a different player intro video - LeBron is pretty black. No white players allowed for Miami in this game. Except for Mike Mil-lar. Oh, and Battier. Wait, what?...
2) The game was never really close, so the most interesting thing that happened was the first official Eddy Curry sighting for Miami. For those who don't know, Curry was the top pick in the draft by Chicago a decade or so ago, a huge manchild with quick feet and a soft touch. He never had much of an appetite for defense and rebounding, although he did have an appetite for everything else and especially, he claims, Now and Laters, which caused him to balloon up to 400 pounds. That's a lot of Now and Laters. How much does a Now and Later weigh, like 1/100th of an ounce? Anyways, he pretty much ate his way out of basketball - languished on the Knicks bench for the last several seasons before being waived last year. Miami flirted with him down the stretch last season, but never signed him. However, they gave him a make-good contract coming into camp this year, pretended he got injured on the first day of training camp, and then have spent the last month pounding him into better shape, without putting him on the active roster. He is still a big boy, but honestly, doesn't even look like the same person - he's lost somewhere between 70 and 100 pounds. To me, it still seemed bizarre: even in his best seasons, he never really defended or rebounded, and so to me, it seemed like the height of arrogance by my dad, Pat Riley, to take the position that not only was it possible get Curry into basketball shape, but that it was also conceivable to teach him how to play hard, and play proper defense. I have estimated all season long that the odds of Eddy Curry ever contributing anything meaningful to this team were remote. Also, The Captain has been worried for weeks that Curry would land on Mike Mil-lar and break him. Yet, here Curry was, checking into the game in the second quarter, and instantly running a dive to the rim, catching a pass from LeBron, neatly sidestepping a defender in rhythm, and laying the ball in the hoop. There he was grabbing a rebound or two in traffic,and he looked smooth on a pair of free throws. It wasn't all great - he threw an outlet pass away, got caught off-balance on another drive, and didn't make one proper rotation on defense - but in two short bursts contributed 6 points and 3 boards in 6 minutes, contributing in a small way to a win over a pretty good team. He's already exceeded every expectation I had for him! He looked giddy on the bench after his second stint - it can't be easy to lose 100 pounds, and to start back up from the bottom. He should be proud of himself. Also, gives the home crowd something else to do: predictably got the "Ed-dy" chant going two or three times in the six minutes. At some point, we are going to have to have a chant-off between that one, and the "M-V-P" chants for Butter.
3) Best plays of the night: in the third quarter, Laker forward and self-proclaimed tough guy Matt Barnes (a Dos favorite) got out in space, went to the rim, and got his layup slapped out of the air from behind by LeBron. Moments later, Barnes got out again in transition, tried to take it around Joel Anthony, took a quick look back to see if LeBron was charging again, and instead got his shit slapped out of the air by Joel! Butter! M-V-P!!!
4) "Shoot, Kobe, shoot!": Laker guard Kobe Bryant claims to be nursing a sore wrist. I think we all know he's making it up and milking it for everything it's worth ("Kobe is so courageous!"), but let's humor him and go along with his charade for a moment. In a solemn pre-game interview, he told TNT that the sore wrist limits him, and that it is a situation where you "have to figure out what you can and can't do." Can do: Shoot more. And smirk. Can't do: pass to teammates...Kobe had a tough, tough night - he made three straight shots in garbage time to get to 8-21 for 24 points, but he spent most of the game at the elbow, stagnating the Laker offense by forcing bad jumpers over a draped-all-over-him-because-I-have-nothing-better-to-do-and-by-the-way-I-live-for-this Shane Battier. Battier also uncharacteristically quick on the trigger with the threes tonight, fired up seven, six in a short span in the first half (made 3). All the contested missed elbow jumpers by Kobe got him tooooo hype!
5) Speaking of toooo hype, Miami is now 1-0 at home this season when Luda sits directly behind Erik Spoelstra.
6) Quick update on the Republican nomination, Dos-style: My favorite candidate is the handsome young Lake Worth po-lice who doesn’t care where you park your car. He’s not currently campaigning, that I’m aware of, but I’m hoping there is still time. My second preference is Milt Romney, because he was the governor of Massachusetts , and I went to school in Boston , and he seems to have fairly progressive ideas regarding health care and abortion, even though now he says he doesn’t. Not too sure where he stands on parking. The Captain favors Newt Gingrich because he thinks he is the smartest guy running, and has written a lot of books, and has a jaunty, sweeping salt-and-pepper hairdo that The Captain admires (in fairness, he admits that Milt Romney also has great hair). Rick Perry (also, a very nice head of hair, if a little bit of an outdated hairstyle) dropped out today. He probably didn’t have much of a chance to win. He did seem kind of nice, but also, honestly, like a bit of a dope. In the general election, since I’m anti-Al Qaeda, and Obama killed Bin Laden, I’m going Obama. Also, since Obama has been elected, my tires have never been more properly inflated. But you shouldn’t vote for him just because I am going to - hey, if you’re pro-Al Qaeda, absolutely, you have to go Romney – he’s also a good choice, I’m not going to criticize it. …
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Okay, moving on, next game is Saturday against the superhot Sixers. I'll be out of town in Gainesville for the weekend, so Snets will be back to take you through that game. From what I've heard, he plans to discuss how LeBron James reminds him of Bob Petit, and detail some of my illicit drug use through the years. I should be back for a game against the Bucks Sunday night. If you need me before then, I'll be doing the Gator Chomp! Roll Tide (or something)!
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1) Solid home win for Miami over the Lakers - pushed out by 15 at halftime, and the Lakers never made a run. It says something - good for Miami, I think - that it seemed like a big-game litmus test for the Lakers, and just another game for Miami. LeBron had the flu and looked a little tired, but filled up the boxscore: 31 points, 8 rebounds, 8 assists, 4 steals, and 3 blocks. He went to the mid-post often, created good looks for himself and others, and Miami won easily. By the way, appropriate for LeBron to have a big game during the Heat's first "Back in Black" night of the season, with fresh, new alternate black home unis, and a different player intro video - LeBron is pretty black. No white players allowed for Miami in this game. Except for Mike Mil-lar. Oh, and Battier. Wait, what?...
2) The game was never really close, so the most interesting thing that happened was the first official Eddy Curry sighting for Miami. For those who don't know, Curry was the top pick in the draft by Chicago a decade or so ago, a huge manchild with quick feet and a soft touch. He never had much of an appetite for defense and rebounding, although he did have an appetite for everything else and especially, he claims, Now and Laters, which caused him to balloon up to 400 pounds. That's a lot of Now and Laters. How much does a Now and Later weigh, like 1/100th of an ounce? Anyways, he pretty much ate his way out of basketball - languished on the Knicks bench for the last several seasons before being waived last year. Miami flirted with him down the stretch last season, but never signed him. However, they gave him a make-good contract coming into camp this year, pretended he got injured on the first day of training camp, and then have spent the last month pounding him into better shape, without putting him on the active roster. He is still a big boy, but honestly, doesn't even look like the same person - he's lost somewhere between 70 and 100 pounds. To me, it still seemed bizarre: even in his best seasons, he never really defended or rebounded, and so to me, it seemed like the height of arrogance by my dad, Pat Riley, to take the position that not only was it possible get Curry into basketball shape, but that it was also conceivable to teach him how to play hard, and play proper defense. I have estimated all season long that the odds of Eddy Curry ever contributing anything meaningful to this team were remote. Also, The Captain has been worried for weeks that Curry would land on Mike Mil-lar and break him. Yet, here Curry was, checking into the game in the second quarter, and instantly running a dive to the rim, catching a pass from LeBron, neatly sidestepping a defender in rhythm, and laying the ball in the hoop. There he was grabbing a rebound or two in traffic,and he looked smooth on a pair of free throws. It wasn't all great - he threw an outlet pass away, got caught off-balance on another drive, and didn't make one proper rotation on defense - but in two short bursts contributed 6 points and 3 boards in 6 minutes, contributing in a small way to a win over a pretty good team. He's already exceeded every expectation I had for him! He looked giddy on the bench after his second stint - it can't be easy to lose 100 pounds, and to start back up from the bottom. He should be proud of himself. Also, gives the home crowd something else to do: predictably got the "Ed-dy" chant going two or three times in the six minutes. At some point, we are going to have to have a chant-off between that one, and the "M-V-P" chants for Butter.
3) Best plays of the night: in the third quarter, Laker forward and self-proclaimed tough guy Matt Barnes (a Dos favorite) got out in space, went to the rim, and got his layup slapped out of the air from behind by LeBron. Moments later, Barnes got out again in transition, tried to take it around Joel Anthony, took a quick look back to see if LeBron was charging again, and instead got his shit slapped out of the air by Joel! Butter! M-V-P!!!
4) "Shoot, Kobe, shoot!": Laker guard Kobe Bryant claims to be nursing a sore wrist. I think we all know he's making it up and milking it for everything it's worth ("Kobe is so courageous!"), but let's humor him and go along with his charade for a moment. In a solemn pre-game interview, he told TNT that the sore wrist limits him, and that it is a situation where you "have to figure out what you can and can't do." Can do: Shoot more. And smirk. Can't do: pass to teammates...Kobe had a tough, tough night - he made three straight shots in garbage time to get to 8-21 for 24 points, but he spent most of the game at the elbow, stagnating the Laker offense by forcing bad jumpers over a draped-all-over-him-because-I-have-nothing-better-to-do-and-by-the-way-I-live-for-this Shane Battier. Battier also uncharacteristically quick on the trigger with the threes tonight, fired up seven, six in a short span in the first half (made 3). All the contested missed elbow jumpers by Kobe got him tooooo hype!
5) Speaking of toooo hype, Miami is now 1-0 at home this season when Luda sits directly behind Erik Spoelstra.
6) Quick update on the Republican nomination, Dos-style: My favorite candidate is the handsome young Lake Worth po-lice who doesn’t care where you park your car. He’s not currently campaigning, that I’m aware of, but I’m hoping there is still time. My second preference is Milt Romney, because he was the governor of Massachusetts , and I went to school in Boston , and he seems to have fairly progressive ideas regarding health care and abortion, even though now he says he doesn’t. Not too sure where he stands on parking. The Captain favors Newt Gingrich because he thinks he is the smartest guy running, and has written a lot of books, and has a jaunty, sweeping salt-and-pepper hairdo that The Captain admires (in fairness, he admits that Milt Romney also has great hair). Rick Perry (also, a very nice head of hair, if a little bit of an outdated hairstyle) dropped out today. He probably didn’t have much of a chance to win. He did seem kind of nice, but also, honestly, like a bit of a dope. In the general election, since I’m anti-Al Qaeda, and Obama killed Bin Laden, I’m going Obama. Also, since Obama has been elected, my tires have never been more properly inflated. But you shouldn’t vote for him just because I am going to - hey, if you’re pro-Al Qaeda, absolutely, you have to go Romney – he’s also a good choice, I’m not going to criticize it. …
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Okay, moving on, next game is Saturday against the superhot Sixers. I'll be out of town in Gainesville for the weekend, so Snets will be back to take you through that game. From what I've heard, he plans to discuss how LeBron James reminds him of Bob Petit, and detail some of my illicit drug use through the years. I should be back for a game against the Bucks Sunday night. If you need me before then, I'll be doing the Gator Chomp! Roll Tide (or something)!
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Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Heat 120 Spurs 98
6 Thoughts
1) Mike Mil-lar: Triple. Mike Mil-lar: Triple. Mike Mil-lar: Triple. Mike Mil-lar: Triple. Mike Mil-lar: Triple. Mike Mil-lar: Triple. Did. Not. Hit. The. Rim. Six straight triples in 11 second half minutos as Miami somehow went from seventeen down halfway through the third, to up twenty-eight halfway through the fourth quarter. Let's not go - let's stay right here, just for a minute, and be, like, Damnnnn, Mike Miller!......Okay, now let's go!
2) Rumor was, this morning, that Coach Spo was finally going to activate Miller, out to this point after suffering a hernia and having surgery just before preseason began. The Captain and I have been willing Spo to let him play (Miller has been saying he has been ready for a week or more): "If Spo doesn't put him out there, how is he ever going to get injured again?" I pointed out this morning to Cap that Miller couldn't just go out there and get a "normal" injury. Not after a season which saw him break both thumbs, suffer two concussions in a week's time, and shoulder surgery. "He can't go out there and just sprain an ankle," I told Captain, "I predict a cracked pelvis, or Lyme disease." He can't sprain an ankle? Ohhhh, yes he can - and did! Three minutes into his first stint of the season, in the second quarter, Mike flew through the air on the offensive glass, plucked a rebound out of mid-air, flipped it back out to Emcee Chalmers on the perimeter, and somehow landed with his foot wedged up into the basket stanchion, twisting his ankle back towards the floor, and causing him to limp back down the court, after he got up, which was a good, long while. Also, managed to get the air knocked out of himself twice, once on another offensive rebound, and once when he got okey-doked into the air defensively, and took a hard shoulder to the sternum area. Then he made six triples in a row and the Heat won going away. The end, we all lived happily ever after...
3) Things that only happen when you turn a 17 point third quarter deficit into a 28 point fourth quarter lead: Chris Bosh gets a defensive rebound in traffic (no, seriously, there's more!), spins up court dribbling, crosses the foul line at full-Bosh speed (which is about 60% of a normal person's speed), sees no resistance, keeps going, gets to the foul line area still going full speed, spins through two Spur big men off the dribble, splitting their double-team, elevates with a two-footed power jump while getting tackled from behind by Tiago Splitter, and thunderrrs the ball through the basket! Now I have seen everything. And I mean everything...Like everyone else, Chris had a slow start, and a strong finish. 30 and 8 - all I want him to do is keep shooting. Don't hesitate, just shoot it. Especially with Dwyane out. Just shoot. The Ball. Shoot it. THEY CAN NOT STOP YOU! (just trying to give the kid some confidence - they can probably stop him)
4) So Mil-lar and Bosh were nice, but LeBron won the game. After a sleepwalk of a first half which included 4 more missed free throws, three or four missed layups, one turnover where he threw an entry pass directly to a cutting Matt Bonner, and one skip-pass turnover that he threw seventeen rows up into the stands, LeBron shook off a bleary-eyed cold after halftime and dragged Miami back into the game with a flurry of jump shots, including one stretch with three triples sandwiched around a Chalmers triple (on a pass from LeBron) that pushed Miami out in front, before letting Miller and Bosh stretch it out and bring it home. 33 in only 3 quarters from LeBron. He (and Dwyane) have been so conscious about not shooting threes, about pounding the ball to the rim, that he hadn't really been giving himself a chance to get hot from the outside. Yes, LeBron should attack the rim; yes, LeBron should post up. But he should also shoot jumpers when he is feeling it - his 4-6 from deep seemed to empower Miller and Chalmers, and Miami shot 12-15 from beyond the arc in the second half. Holy Sudafed!
5) This game started when the players milled around before the opening tip, shaking hands, and renewing old acquaintances, except with Spurs starting power forward DeJuan Blair, whom absolutely nobody could possibly like, and referee Kenny "Slick" Mauer called for the official game ball, received a pass from the scorer's table, then spit in his hands and rubbed it all over the ball! What the...?!!! Kenny "Slick" Mauer, what in the hell is wrong with you? This is a league in which the instant someone gets a scratch over the eye, or a hangnail, or sneezes, the refs stop the game, make the offending party go to the bench, change his uniform, get immunization shots, and check his medical records before letting him back on the court. And you are going to start the game by hocking a huge loogie into your hands and rubbing it all over the ball? Before, when Chris Bosh did the whirly-dunk thing, and I said I had seen everything? That was nothing. Now, now, I have seen every-thing!
1) Mike Mil-lar: Triple. Mike Mil-lar: Triple. Mike Mil-lar: Triple. Mike Mil-lar: Triple. Mike Mil-lar: Triple. Mike Mil-lar: Triple. Did. Not. Hit. The. Rim. Six straight triples in 11 second half minutos as Miami somehow went from seventeen down halfway through the third, to up twenty-eight halfway through the fourth quarter. Let's not go - let's stay right here, just for a minute, and be, like, Damnnnn, Mike Miller!......Okay, now let's go!
2) Rumor was, this morning, that Coach Spo was finally going to activate Miller, out to this point after suffering a hernia and having surgery just before preseason began. The Captain and I have been willing Spo to let him play (Miller has been saying he has been ready for a week or more): "If Spo doesn't put him out there, how is he ever going to get injured again?" I pointed out this morning to Cap that Miller couldn't just go out there and get a "normal" injury. Not after a season which saw him break both thumbs, suffer two concussions in a week's time, and shoulder surgery. "He can't go out there and just sprain an ankle," I told Captain, "I predict a cracked pelvis, or Lyme disease." He can't sprain an ankle? Ohhhh, yes he can - and did! Three minutes into his first stint of the season, in the second quarter, Mike flew through the air on the offensive glass, plucked a rebound out of mid-air, flipped it back out to Emcee Chalmers on the perimeter, and somehow landed with his foot wedged up into the basket stanchion, twisting his ankle back towards the floor, and causing him to limp back down the court, after he got up, which was a good, long while. Also, managed to get the air knocked out of himself twice, once on another offensive rebound, and once when he got okey-doked into the air defensively, and took a hard shoulder to the sternum area. Then he made six triples in a row and the Heat won going away. The end, we all lived happily ever after...
3) Things that only happen when you turn a 17 point third quarter deficit into a 28 point fourth quarter lead: Chris Bosh gets a defensive rebound in traffic (no, seriously, there's more!), spins up court dribbling, crosses the foul line at full-Bosh speed (which is about 60% of a normal person's speed), sees no resistance, keeps going, gets to the foul line area still going full speed, spins through two Spur big men off the dribble, splitting their double-team, elevates with a two-footed power jump while getting tackled from behind by Tiago Splitter, and thunderrrs the ball through the basket! Now I have seen everything. And I mean everything...Like everyone else, Chris had a slow start, and a strong finish. 30 and 8 - all I want him to do is keep shooting. Don't hesitate, just shoot it. Especially with Dwyane out. Just shoot. The Ball. Shoot it. THEY CAN NOT STOP YOU! (just trying to give the kid some confidence - they can probably stop him)
4) So Mil-lar and Bosh were nice, but LeBron won the game. After a sleepwalk of a first half which included 4 more missed free throws, three or four missed layups, one turnover where he threw an entry pass directly to a cutting Matt Bonner, and one skip-pass turnover that he threw seventeen rows up into the stands, LeBron shook off a bleary-eyed cold after halftime and dragged Miami back into the game with a flurry of jump shots, including one stretch with three triples sandwiched around a Chalmers triple (on a pass from LeBron) that pushed Miami out in front, before letting Miller and Bosh stretch it out and bring it home. 33 in only 3 quarters from LeBron. He (and Dwyane) have been so conscious about not shooting threes, about pounding the ball to the rim, that he hadn't really been giving himself a chance to get hot from the outside. Yes, LeBron should attack the rim; yes, LeBron should post up. But he should also shoot jumpers when he is feeling it - his 4-6 from deep seemed to empower Miller and Chalmers, and Miami shot 12-15 from beyond the arc in the second half. Holy Sudafed!
5) This game started when the players milled around before the opening tip, shaking hands, and renewing old acquaintances, except with Spurs starting power forward DeJuan Blair, whom absolutely nobody could possibly like, and referee Kenny "Slick" Mauer called for the official game ball, received a pass from the scorer's table, then spit in his hands and rubbed it all over the ball! What the...?!!! Kenny "Slick" Mauer, what in the hell is wrong with you? This is a league in which the instant someone gets a scratch over the eye, or a hangnail, or sneezes, the refs stop the game, make the offending party go to the bench, change his uniform, get immunization shots, and check his medical records before letting him back on the court. And you are going to start the game by hocking a huge loogie into your hands and rubbing it all over the ball? Before, when Chris Bosh did the whirly-dunk thing, and I said I had seen everything? That was nothing. Now, now, I have seen every-thing!
6) So M.Minutos and I went out to dinner in Lake Worth over the weekend at a small, outdoor gourmet pizza bistro – I had the country ham and fried egg pizza, and a Narragansett beer. As we were walking back to our tweaked-out Prius, two normal-looking dudes had parked their car in what seemed like a legitimate spot on the street – maybe they were sticking out a little too close to the curb, but they didn’t seem to be obstructing anything. As they locked their doors and started to walk away, a young, handsome po-lice came striding by. He wasn’t paying any attention to them, really, but it spooked them – as you know, it is my long-standing theory that the po-lice make almost any enjoyable activity worse. Like, there is no situation in which you are chilling with your friends, having fun, doing whatever, and anyone ever says: “You know what would make this evening even better? If the po-lice showed up!” That never, ever happens. So anyways, these two dudes probably feel like I do, so, kind of in a guilty tone, they go, “Is it okay if we park here?” Personally, I figured the po-lice would probably make them move the car, just on the general principle of acting like a jackapple, but to this po-lice’s eternal credit, he never broke stride, and never even looked at them or their car, but he smiled and called back over his shoulder, “Park wherever you want. Traffic’s not my thing, man. Neither are parking tickets.” What? This po-lice is my hero! You mean it is okay to simply park in a logical spot, where you aren’t obstructing anyone, and everyone can continue on with their lives happily? What is this, America? Yo, everybody here knows I love Milt Romney more- what? – oh, Mitt Romney more than my own dad, but now I’m out on Romney for the Republican nomination, and in on this Lake Worth po-lice! It’s the dawning of a new day in America!!!
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Next game Thursday, vs. Lakers. Shoot, Kobe, shoot!!! If you need me before then, I'll be at the big liquor store down on the corner seeing if they carry Narragansett beer. Ohhh, that shit was smooth, like Chris Bosh's booty! See you Thursday!
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Friday, January 13, 2012
Nuggets 117 Heat 104
6 Thoughts
1) There are a few games every year that are absolute torture to watch - this was the first one of this year. On the third game in four nights, out west, after blowing the first two in overtime because we couldn't make a free throw, at altitude in a building where we haven't won in a decade or so, it was apparent about three minutes into the game that the Heat had no legs, weren't feeling it, and were going to get killed. From that point, the game became a grueling endurance contest of trying to stay awake past 1:30am for the third time in four nights, while being assaulted by extra-long tv timeouts, since the game was also on ESPN. But, at least Dwyane Wade got hurt. Let's speed through this and get to bed!
2) I'm not even sure why Dwyane has been playing the past two or three games. He clearly hasn't felt well enough to move fluidly on his bruised foot, and has looked slow, been a turnover machine, and settled for a lot of bad jumpers. He limped around all night again in this game, before rolling his ankle at some point in the second half. Not sure what quarter - at a certain point I lost focus, watched Beverly Hills Cop during a timeout, and then started wondering why I never thought Eddie Murphy's standup was very funny, while half-heartedly watching the game. What was funny about the "I want some ice cream" bit? What is the joke? All my little friends used to say that over and over. He was a little kid that begged for ice cream - why is that funny? I don't get the joke. Anyways, Dwyane rolled his right ankle, so now he has a hurt left foot and sprained right foot. Still, arguably faster than Shane Battier. We'll see how bad it is - and this time, let's let him get healthy before he comes back. He's either healthy for the playoffs or he's not - can't see how it matters how many games he plays now.
3) Highlight of the game: None. There was absolutely nothing that you could consider a highlight. I mean, maybe - maybe - when Joel "Butter" Anthony won an offensive rebound in a scrum, suddenly had it squirt up out of his hands to the Nuggets, they came down in transition, lost the ball themselves right back to Joel, who promptly had it squirt away from him again, before somehow re-securing it - incredibly - in the crook of the back of his knee. Not sure I've seen that before. Lowlight: when you are out on the road for a long trip like this one, dudes' hair starts to get unkempt and peasy. Dwyane, LeBron, and Pitt, especially, were looking curly, and Butter's baldness was pronounced because the patches where he does have hair had grown in. Let's get peasy!!! Get back to Miami, boys - get back to those barbers!
4) I thought Mario Chalmer actually had a very nice road trip. We say enough mean things about him here - let's give him some credit. He's shooting the ball well, making pretty good decisions, and seems to have matured a little bit. Good job, Emcee. Everyone can blame this blog when we go home and he stinks the joint out next week.
5) In a related story, I believe - and it's hard to tell because Jax does not give standings updates after halftime - that Emcee Chalmer no longer leads this season's "Hot Seconds with Jax." Battier (who else?) matched Emcee's seven points, but I think he did it with a faster time, which would make him the leader in the clubhouse. After I predicted Juwan Howard to win, and M.Minutos went with longshot Eddy Curry, it took us both about three seconds to look at each other and say simultaneously, "Uh-oh: Battier." Battier ripped through all the Duke ACC Defensive Players of the Year in about a nanosecond after using his timeout to think about it - finally, someone else beside Chalmer who knows the rules! I'm already out because Juwan went second and got smoked. M.Minutos and Curry are still alive. I knew, knew, knew I should have asked Jax who won behind M.Minutos' back. I'm not above cheating. By the way, last night, the Heat's resident brainiac, James Jones, did not know who wrote the epic World War II classic novel From Here to Eternity, which, literally, is my favorite novel of all-time. Author? You got it: James Jones. Less well-known: From Here to Eternity's James Jones? Better in space defensively than Miami's.
6) My maternal GPs are here visiting this weekend from the west coast of Florida. GrampsMinutos: 100 years old. GramsMinutos: in her 90s. They are so awesome, and I am so lucky to still have them arond at their - and my - advanced ages. We took them out for Thai food, which they had never really heard of (they're originally from Ohio), and they love Harry S. Truman. He dropped the Big One. After dinner, GramsMinutos attempted to murder M.Minutos by asserting there were no nuts whatsoever in the chocolate chip cookies she had baked and brought with her, only to send M.Minutos into spasms of highly-allergic retching discomfort when it turned out the cookies did, indeed, contain nuts. Well, she's 90, she can't remember everything. Goodnight, and God Bless America, everybody, and especially Douglas Fairbanks Jr!
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Finally get to play home games next week, at a reasonable hour - 8 of next 9 at home. Tuesday is Spurs (San Antonio, I believe, not Tottenham Hot-), and Thursday is Lakers. Sweet week of games! If you need me before then, I'll be trying to think of anything possible to entertain a 100 year old dude and his 92 year old whippersnapper wife. Tonight me and the boys played them "Back in Black" by AC/DC on our instruments. Not totally convinced that Grams and Gramps are fans...Cheers!!!
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1) There are a few games every year that are absolute torture to watch - this was the first one of this year. On the third game in four nights, out west, after blowing the first two in overtime because we couldn't make a free throw, at altitude in a building where we haven't won in a decade or so, it was apparent about three minutes into the game that the Heat had no legs, weren't feeling it, and were going to get killed. From that point, the game became a grueling endurance contest of trying to stay awake past 1:30am for the third time in four nights, while being assaulted by extra-long tv timeouts, since the game was also on ESPN. But, at least Dwyane Wade got hurt. Let's speed through this and get to bed!
2) I'm not even sure why Dwyane has been playing the past two or three games. He clearly hasn't felt well enough to move fluidly on his bruised foot, and has looked slow, been a turnover machine, and settled for a lot of bad jumpers. He limped around all night again in this game, before rolling his ankle at some point in the second half. Not sure what quarter - at a certain point I lost focus, watched Beverly Hills Cop during a timeout, and then started wondering why I never thought Eddie Murphy's standup was very funny, while half-heartedly watching the game. What was funny about the "I want some ice cream" bit? What is the joke? All my little friends used to say that over and over. He was a little kid that begged for ice cream - why is that funny? I don't get the joke. Anyways, Dwyane rolled his right ankle, so now he has a hurt left foot and sprained right foot. Still, arguably faster than Shane Battier. We'll see how bad it is - and this time, let's let him get healthy before he comes back. He's either healthy for the playoffs or he's not - can't see how it matters how many games he plays now.
3) Highlight of the game: None. There was absolutely nothing that you could consider a highlight. I mean, maybe - maybe - when Joel "Butter" Anthony won an offensive rebound in a scrum, suddenly had it squirt up out of his hands to the Nuggets, they came down in transition, lost the ball themselves right back to Joel, who promptly had it squirt away from him again, before somehow re-securing it - incredibly - in the crook of the back of his knee. Not sure I've seen that before. Lowlight: when you are out on the road for a long trip like this one, dudes' hair starts to get unkempt and peasy. Dwyane, LeBron, and Pitt, especially, were looking curly, and Butter's baldness was pronounced because the patches where he does have hair had grown in. Let's get peasy!!! Get back to Miami, boys - get back to those barbers!
4) I thought Mario Chalmer actually had a very nice road trip. We say enough mean things about him here - let's give him some credit. He's shooting the ball well, making pretty good decisions, and seems to have matured a little bit. Good job, Emcee. Everyone can blame this blog when we go home and he stinks the joint out next week.
5) In a related story, I believe - and it's hard to tell because Jax does not give standings updates after halftime - that Emcee Chalmer no longer leads this season's "Hot Seconds with Jax." Battier (who else?) matched Emcee's seven points, but I think he did it with a faster time, which would make him the leader in the clubhouse. After I predicted Juwan Howard to win, and M.Minutos went with longshot Eddy Curry, it took us both about three seconds to look at each other and say simultaneously, "Uh-oh: Battier." Battier ripped through all the Duke ACC Defensive Players of the Year in about a nanosecond after using his timeout to think about it - finally, someone else beside Chalmer who knows the rules! I'm already out because Juwan went second and got smoked. M.Minutos and Curry are still alive. I knew, knew, knew I should have asked Jax who won behind M.Minutos' back. I'm not above cheating. By the way, last night, the Heat's resident brainiac, James Jones, did not know who wrote the epic World War II classic novel From Here to Eternity, which, literally, is my favorite novel of all-time. Author? You got it: James Jones. Less well-known: From Here to Eternity's James Jones? Better in space defensively than Miami's.
6) My maternal GPs are here visiting this weekend from the west coast of Florida. GrampsMinutos: 100 years old. GramsMinutos: in her 90s. They are so awesome, and I am so lucky to still have them arond at their - and my - advanced ages. We took them out for Thai food, which they had never really heard of (they're originally from Ohio), and they love Harry S. Truman. He dropped the Big One. After dinner, GramsMinutos attempted to murder M.Minutos by asserting there were no nuts whatsoever in the chocolate chip cookies she had baked and brought with her, only to send M.Minutos into spasms of highly-allergic retching discomfort when it turned out the cookies did, indeed, contain nuts. Well, she's 90, she can't remember everything. Goodnight, and God Bless America, everybody, and especially Douglas Fairbanks Jr!
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Finally get to play home games next week, at a reasonable hour - 8 of next 9 at home. Tuesday is Spurs (San Antonio, I believe, not Tottenham Hot-), and Thursday is Lakers. Sweet week of games! If you need me before then, I'll be trying to think of anything possible to entertain a 100 year old dude and his 92 year old whippersnapper wife. Tonight me and the boys played them "Back in Black" by AC/DC on our instruments. Not totally convinced that Grams and Gramps are fans...Cheers!!!
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Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Clippers 95 Heat 89 ot
6 Thoughts
1) "Yo, yo, yo, LeBron, nahhh, yo - when everyone said you need to be more aggressive at the ends of games and attack the rim, what they had meant to say was, 'Be more aggressive at the ends of games and attack the rim, and then, when they foul you, make the free throws!' Our bad, our bad - should have made that clear!" LeBron was 9-17 from the line, team was 20-34. He was incredibly aggressive down the stretch, pounding the paint, and taking hard fouls - just didn't make the free throws. For the second straight night, the game was lost because of poor free throw shooting. Say whatever you want - fatigue from the road trip, and back to backs, and multiple overtime games - but whatever, junk happens in the NBA. You make some free throws, you're 10-1. You miss a bunch, you're 8-3. What does it matter, in the end? Not much; but at 1:45am for the second straight night, you'd rather just see the free throws made and win the game.
2) The best and worst thing about the NBA is how emotional the games are...for the fans! Twitter was on the verge of spontaneously combusting as Miami missed all the free throws, and I'll get a gaggle of emails tomorrow to trade LeBron for Mike Beasley. People get frustrated - emotionally frustrated - when their teams lose. The players are generally able to get a better perspective on it. Case in point: with 1:40 left in overtime in what was a close (but very poorly played) game, LeBron stood on the sidelines waiting for the refs to discuss some issue or other - there was a lot of "ref-discussing" tonight. As he did, his former teammate Mo Williams, who claimed he almost had to retire because he was so distraught when LeBron left Cleveland (that is not a joke - he said it, multiple times), sidled over to him, and they shared a short conversation, both of them relaxed and laughing. Fans lose their minds - players play, that's what they do, and they handle the ups and downs of a game, and a season, much more rationally...
3) Play of the game: No doubter, for sure, it was when Coach Spo completely lost his shit when the refs didn't call a foul the Heat tried to give with a few seconds left, down 3. The game was pretty much over at that point, and no one actually did give a definitive foul; Spo was actually mad about a crucial no-goaltending call on DeAndre Jordan about a minute earlier. That was a blown call - okay, it happens, especially on the road, and Spo knows that. But the combination of the no-call, and the missed free throws two nights in a row was enough for Spo, and he charged out on the court and let it all out, getting ejected. Can't remember Spo doing that before - it was funny. Go get'em, Spo!!! Runner-up: also an easy call. It was when, two plays in a row, late in the game, the refs had to go to the monitor to check an out of bounds call, ESPN (also broadcasting the game) somehow didn't have good angles of the plays, and the refs came over to use Eric and Tony's Sunsports monitor. And this was after the refs had to do the same thing earlier in the game. Over the years, there is nothing in an NBA game - not a DWade dunk, not a UD drawn-charge, not winning a title - that makes Eric Reid as excited as getting personally involved in viewing a replay with the refs: "Right there, Wade clearly hits the ball off Jordan," Reid shouted at the refs as they watched the replay with him, "Heat ball!" Eric is the most die hard of Heat fans - he'll take the two straight losses tough. But getting to be involved in three replay calls will definitely take some of the sting out of the night for him.
4) From Snets, via email, regarding last night’s post in which he says we incorrectly characterized his comparison of Heat rookie point guard Norris Cole to one-handed-dribbling, small, white, eighty-year old former Celtic great Bob Cousy:
I never said Cole’s style of play was reminiscent of Bob Cousy – I said he ran with the ball like Bob Cousy – that weird straight up style – I demand a correction.
Oh, yes, I totally see the difference – that’s a lot clearer, I was way, wayyy off! Correction granted! Worth noting: not one of our other readers has ever even heard of Bob Cousy, who retired in like 1962.
5) So it looks like we have a few new readers after Jax repped the blog on tv last night. Just so those new readers know, we don’t usually write a running blog during games like we did last night. That was a one time-change-it-up for a late night, West Coast game. I hated it, so we won’t be doing that again. Usually what we do is offer six thoughts. The first two or three summarize the game, then we usually make fun of Chris Bosh in one, irrationally praise Mario “Emcee” Chalmer(s) in another, and, if we have time, check in on the loquacious Shane Battier’s latest activities. Down in thought # 6, we offer an album review, or answer questions from friends of the blog, or anything else on our mind –there are no rules down there. Just know that it will probably be stupid, and not that entertaining…So, a few long-time friends of the blog emailed to ask if Jax repping the blog was the greatest moment in blog history. Oh, no. It was nice, and I appreciate the love, but I am pretty used to being on tv, believe me. Growing up, MyMommaMinutos was the Executive Director of our small town’s local tv access channel, which beamed out to several hundred households throughout West Hartford, Connecticut . So I’ve been around “the biz” all my life. Still, it’s a great question. Obviously, the greatest moment in the history of this blog was when we reverse-jinxed the Heat into last year’s Finals by writing a blog during the fourth quarter of Game 5 against the Bulls, writing off that game as a loss before it ended, thus spurring the team to one of the most improbable comebacks in playoff history. Runner-up: when we reverse jinxed LeBron onto the team by saying “he is not welcome here.” Second runner-up: when we accused Jax of stealing a turkey during a Heat Thanksgiving charity event, and then he emailed us to say, essentially, “How dare you!” He took it in good spirit (I think). In retrospect, that was wrong. But, man, there was something about the way he was eyeing those turkeys in the halftime video highlights of the event…
6) Both O.Minutos (guitar) and P.Minutos (piano) are taking musical lessons. I was psyched when I returned home from a typically grueling, yet rewarding, day at Dos Minutos International Headquarters last week to discover that O.Minutos had learned the riff to AC/DCs “Back in Black,” which is super-easy to play, and also super-awesome. He is 9, so he has no idea who AC/DC is, but he likes the song, and the three of us can play it together, which is cool (not sure AC/DC utilizes a lot of live keyboards in their songs, but don’t tell P.Minutos that). I had the exact opposite reaction a couple of days ago when I walked in the door, saw P.Minutos tickling the ivories, and then heard the horrific lilting gruel that is Simon and Garfunkel’s “Scarborough Fair” droning insistently from his piano. Oh, my heavens! If I had known there was a chance that one of my kids was going to learn a Simon and Garfunkel song, I never would have let them begin instrument lessons. I wouldn’t have even told them about music in the first place! As I related this story to The Captain back at the safety of Dos M. Int’l HQ’s, he shook his head for the umpteenth time at my hatred for Simon and Garfunkel, in general, and that song, specifically. “Oh, yeah, it’s a real rocker,” I told him. “It’s not supposed to be, it’s a folk song. It’s not a rocker,” he insisted. No...no, it isn’t.
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It is 2:28 am, that's a wrap. Back Friday night for another late game - balls. That's alright, get them all out of the way early. If you need me before then, I'll be sleeping. Zzzzzzz....
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It is 2:28 am, that's a wrap. Back Friday night for another late game - balls. That's alright, get them all out of the way early. If you need me before then, I'll be sleeping. Zzzzzzz....
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