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February 15, 2009

NBA

For the hell of it, I'm going to write about the NBA. The trade deadline is this Thursday at noon pacific, and if I remember properly, the days before the deadline were more or less wasted days for me as I kept refreshing Cleveland Cavaliers' beat writer Brian Windhorst's blog (now @ www.cleveland.com/cavsbeat) looking for updates instead of writing. So this year I assume it will be no different despite the fact that the Cavs may be lesser players in the trade market (let's hope Steve Kerr owes Danny Ferry something).

But the real subject of this post is ESPN "analyst" Jalen Rose, who went on the air tonight with the following information regarding trades: 

The Celtics need bench scoring. 

The Spurs need a young athletic big man and someone who can score from the wing. 

Look for both of these teams to make a deal. 

Okay, now I am not paid to watch the NBA, nor am I paid to write or talk about it, but this information is beyond useless. Everyone on the planet knows that the Celtics need bench scoring, but - and this is the key - they have no tradeable assets, which is why they were and maybe still are considering signing Stephon Marbury if he gets bought out by the Knicks. It's a desperation move. 

When it comes to San Antonio we can all agree that they, and pretty much everyone else in the league, would like a young athletic big man. The problem is that the teams that have these guys don't want to give them up or the guys are marginal players at best that would never fit in on a team like San Antonio (e.g. Tyrus Thomas). Secondly, why do the Spurs need someone to score from the wing? Last I checked Ginobli and Roger Mason were doing a pretty good job of that.

Now, Rasheed Wallace...that's a different story.

Ultimately, my point is that we should all be more skeptical of "experts" than we probably are. Oh, and hire my ass, ESPN. 

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December 05, 2008

Cleveland Cavs Coach Mike Brown Loves My Recommendation

Me and Coach Brown -

July 11, 2008

The Spirit of Competition

Because I spend a lot of time studying professional sports (basketball mostly, at the moment), I end up reading articles and blogs a normal person would never end up reading. My fascination with the competitive spirits of athletes hopefully drives my own competitive spirit with other writers and filmmakers...one of my greatest disappointments is that there is no way to outright beat another artist at his own game - box office doesn't count...the closest thing may be rewrites or adaptations, which is part of the reason I enjoy them but that's another blog post altogether.

This long preamble is a setup for the blog I read this morning from Eric Musselman, the former head coach of the Golden State Warriors and Sacramento Kings. It's a jack from an article in the Harvard Business Review discussing, in Eric's words, "how the best of the best get better." I've copied and pasted his post after the jump - or you can click on the link above.

Continue reading "The Spirit of Competition" »

April 22, 2008

How Do We Know the Playoffs Have Started?

Simba.jpg
The answer to the above question is the appearance of this guy, Simba -- when the playoffs start (NBA and MLB; we haven't seen any action in the NFL playoffs in quite some time) -- this bendy toy that I jacked from a Honey Nut Cheerio's box is flying around the room, courtesy of me...although, if the Cavs continue to play like they did on Monday night, my boy Simba doesn't have a lot to worry about. 

March 02, 2008

Inspiration

LJ, Game Winner, Game 5.jpg

Aside from one conversation about act two of our next script, THIS WORLD WAS MADE FOR ENDING (working title), Tim and I took the day off. We used some of our extra time to re-watch Game 5 of last year's Eastern Conference Championship Series between the Cavs and the Pistons, which has been saved on our TiVo for almost 9 months. This photo is of LeBron's game winning shot in the second overtime of that game.

Sometimes it's good to take some time out, experience some greatness, and hope that it inspires more greatness.