PDA

View Full Version : Rockets Force Lakers To Season’s Edge



duncan228
05-15-2009, 12:49 PM
The national view.

Rockets force Lakers to season’s edge (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_ylt=AvbG.kixx_k3284MvfDUEdu8vLYF?slug=dw-lakersrockets051509&prov=yhoo&type=lgns)
By Dan Wetzel

HOUSTON – They kept saying they expected this, but no one believes them. Kobe said it. Phil said it. Pau said it. They were all lying.

The Los Angeles Lakers were supposed to roll to the NBA Finals, cruise to a waiting LeBron, and while it’s rarely as easy as dreamed, it wasn’t supposed to be the Houston Rockets that gave them a series, pushed them to the brink.

And that was before Yao Ming went down, and even Ron Artest admits, “I was pretty messed up in the head. I’m always messed up in the head, but I was even more messed up in the head.”

“We’re not talented enough to play with this team,” Shane Battier said, without a hint of humility. He was stating a fact and everyone knows it. The Lakers are better than the Rockets – except maybe they aren’t.

The Rockets won 95-80 on Thursday, evening the West semifinal at three games each, and now everything goes to L.A., this entire 65-win, championship-in-the-making season on the line for the Lakers, the final stop in a roller-coaster series. Here are these dang Rockets, who don’t know this is supposed to be a show, who think it’s a damn fight, who just may have figured out L.A.’s weakness.

Punch the Lakers first and maybe they don’t punch back.

The Lakers didn’t in Game 6, falling behind 17-1 and needing a monster effort just to make it a game before it wasn’t. This was everything the Lakers promised they would avoid, claimed they understood. You don’t let these Rockets hang around, you don’t give a puncher’s chance to a team with Artest and all these glue guys who don’t know any better.

“After Game 4 there was a lot of talk about how embarrassed they were,” Battier said of the Rockets’ 12-point victory. “I hope they weren’t too embarrassed tonight.

“There was a lot of hubbub,” he continued, enjoying every word of a faux concern. “They took a lot of flak. Their media was saying, ‘Are you embarrassed about that?’ Well, I hope it wasn’t embarrassing tonight.”

No, the Lakers weren’t expecting this. This wasn’t the plan. Battier is mocking them, wearing a confident look that comes with being on a nothing-to-lose team, 48 minutes to glory.

“The goal right now is to win the damn series, get out of this series and try to prepare for the next one,” Kobe Bryant said, and he was telling the truth on that one.

Kobe’s been respectful throughout, at least in front of the media. Battier and Artest have worn him down, though, and made him work, and there is nothing Bryant would like more than to just be done with the two of them.

Even if the Lakers win on Sunday, the game plan against them is so clear. Attack them and make them stand and deliver, make them prove they won’t descend into finger pointing and mass pouting.

“Don’t whine,” Phil Jackson told them during one timeout. “Don’t look disgusted. Just play.”

They didn’t play. They didn’t protect the rim. They didn’t hustle. They didn’t show up ready. Mostly, they whined and looked disgusted. They lead the Rockets in 7-foot starters 2-0 yet watched Houston win the first-quarter rebounding battle 14-9.

And if they think Houston is tough and relentless (and it’s tough and relentless enough to beat them), then what about Denver?

Kenyon Martin and the Nuggets are sitting at home watching this and licking their chops.

“I don’t know if we’re in their head,” Battier said. “I [just] don’t know that they thought this series would go seven games.”

They didn’t, and you could see Jackson trying to maintain his poise before everyone’s psyche came crashing down.

“No, I’m not [worried],” he said. “There’s nothing to worry about. It’s just a game.”

It’s not a game. It’s the season and this is the second round, and that’s way before a team with this many weapons and this much experience is supposed to fall. The Lakers haven’t shown the killer instinct, haven’t finished off anyone. They haven’t matched the intensity of the Rockets, at least during the last two games here in Texas.

“They don’t quit,” Bryant said.

“Hey, we’re part of the NBA, too,” Battier said. “We’ve got the NBA logo socks to prove it.”

Jackson only can fall back on his belief that he has the better horse in the race, not to mention home court. He has to believe that this can’t happen, not against a team that trots out Chuck Hayes and Von Wafer and Carl Landry. Not one without Yao and T-Mac. Didn’t the Lakers just crush the Rockets by 40?

“In our last game [at Staples Center] we beat them by whatever,” Jackson said of Tuesday’s blowout that was supposed to effectively end this series. “We play a different game on our home court, and that is pretty obvious to see.”

Back in the Lakers’ locker room, Sasha Vujacic noted that the Celtics went to a Game 7 in the first and second rounds last season and won the championship. Trevor Ariza said this was good because it “woke us up.” Luke Walton figured a deciding game was a litmus test worth getting out of the way, saying, “If we can’t win a Game 7 at home, then we are not a championship team.”

That much is undeniable for the Lakers. It’s about the only thing they can be certain of right now.

duncan228
05-15-2009, 12:49 PM
“Hey, we’re part of the NBA, too,” Battier said. “We’ve got the NBA logo socks to prove it.”

:lol

ratm1221
05-15-2009, 01:02 PM
Lakers are starting to collapse. Kobe is blaming his teammates. When Kobe isn't happy, the whole thing comes crashing down.

Duncanoypi
05-15-2009, 03:13 PM
Luke Walton figured a deciding game was a litmus test worth getting out of the way, saying, “If we can’t win a Game 7 at home, then we are not a championship team.”



pretty obvious...how you play in the championship round..if you're already in "gone fishing" mode because of game 7 lost.:lol

TheNextGen
05-15-2009, 03:14 PM
pretty obvious...how you play in the championship round..if you're already in "gone fishing" mode because of game 7 lost.:lol

lol

Indazone
05-15-2009, 03:25 PM
The wheels are beginning to fall off the Lakeshow bus and players are clamoring to get off.

Spursfan092120
05-15-2009, 03:27 PM
Where the hell is the fire in the Lakers? Do they not give a shit? This is not me bashing them..I'm serious. Damn..if it was Game 7, and I was playing on a team, and we just got curbstomped by a team that didn't even belong in the same gym as us...I'd be pissed as hell. Can Laker fan please tell me what they think of this situation?

Spur-Addict
05-15-2009, 04:15 PM
:lol

I definetly laughed as well when i read that line.


Where the hell is the fire in the Lakers? Do they not give a shit? This is not me bashing them..I'm serious. Damn..if it was Game 7, and I was playing on a team, and we just got curbstomped by a team that didn't even belong in the same gym as us...I'd be pissed as hell. Can Laker fan please tell me what they think of this situation?

Oh they care, they just don't want anyone else to know they care. And if they find themselves in a close one trailing in the fourth, you may see them unravel their true emotions. Don't buy this for one second.

duncan228
05-15-2009, 08:12 PM
Resilient Rockets pushing Lakers to the brink (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=ap-resilientrockets&prov=ap&type=lgns)
By Chris Duncan

The Houston Rockets have played their best this season when everything seems ready to fall apart.

They were virtually dismissed as a playoff threat in late February, when Tracy McGrady had season-ending knee surgery and Rafer Alston was traded to Orlando.

They fumbled away home-court advantage in the first round with a 95-84 loss to Dallas in the regular-season finale.

They lost backup center Dikembe Mutombo during the Portland series and leading scorer Yao Ming a week ago against the Lakers.

Yet the Rockets are still playing, pushing Los Angeles to Sunday’s Game 7 in their Western Conference semifinal series with the resiliency that has become their defining trait.

“We’re surprising a lot of people,” said 6-foot-6 forward Chuck Hayes, who became Houston’s starting center when Yao, who is a foot taller, broke his foot in Game 3. “I’m sure a lot of people had us written off. But if you did that, then you really haven’t been watching basketball for the past month, because we’re underdogs and we surprise people.

“People least expect it,” Hayes said, “but somehow we get the job done.”

The day after learning Yao was out for the rest of the postseason, the Rockets routed the Lakers 99-87 in Game 4. Los Angeles won Game 5 by 40 points, a loss that had many believing Houston’s spunk had finally run out.

Then came Game 6 on Thursday night. The Rockets raced to another big lead, staved off a Lakers’ rally and won by 15 points.

“We’ve been through so much, that’s been the story of this season,” forward Ron Artest said. “We’re down, but we never fall and we’re never counted out.”

The Rockets found out on Feb. 18 that McGrady, the face of the franchise since he arrived in 2004, would miss the rest of the season. The two-time scoring champion was bothered by knee problems from the start of training camp and caused a stir when he announced that he was going to have risky microfracture surgery.

Coach Rick Adelman lashed out at McGrady for not properly informing the team and general manager Daryl Morey said he wanted to talk to McGrady about his apparent decision.

In the midst of that, Houston traded Alston to Orlando on Feb. 19, a deal that brought Kyle Lowry to the Rockets. The move turned Aaron Brooks into Houston’s starting point guard, and many questioned if the second-year pro could handle the job.

The upheaval could have easily become a distraction, but the Rockets won 11 of 13 games between Feb. 11 and March 9, including victories over Portland, Cleveland and Denver.

A week later, reserve forward Carl Landry was wounded in the left calf in an early morning shooting in Houston. He missed eight games, and the Rockets won five of them while keeping in constant contact with their injured teammate.

No matter what’s happened on the court or off, the Rockets have kept an even keel, a reflection of both Adelman and strong team chemistry.

“We win by two, or win by 10, the locker room is still joking,” Artest said. “That helps us stay mentally stable, with this long season of grueling playoffs. It’s hard enough playing the game. When the game’s over, you’ve got to go back to being family, no matter what happens, win or lose.”

Morey has built a roster of a good mix of veterans willing to mentor and share experience and young players who have accepted their roles without argument.

Artest has found a niche after signing with the Rockets last summer. He admitted his intensity didn’t mesh with the team early, but he’s settled down and tried to make Houston’s more impressionable players see the possibilities he didn’t early in his career.

“I took my legacy for granted, so I’m trying to continue to build a legacy,” Artest said. “I told the guys, they’re young, ‘You’ve got a chance to build a legacy. And when your career is over, you can look back at everything you’ve accomplished and don’t take anything for granted.”’

The reward could come Sunday, if the Rockets can stamp themselves not only the feel-good story of the playoffs, but a legitimate championship contender.

Few are expecting them to beat the Lakers at the Staples Center, where Los Angeles went 36-5 during the regular season.

But the way this season has gone and the team has come together, the Rockets wouldn’t have it any other way.

“We’ve been through a lot this year. A lot,” said forward Shane Battier, who missed 16 of the first 18 games with inflammation in his left foot. “It has galvanized the group to the point where, when you have something as small as no one believing in you, it’s really a minor thing. It doesn’t even faze us.”

Ice009
05-15-2009, 09:52 PM
Well this is not good for the Lakers.

Phil Jackson said they are a different team at home. Does that mean that if the make the finals and play the Cavs they are going to get rolled because they don't have homecourt advantage.

Indazone
05-16-2009, 01:43 AM
Difference now is, the Rockets believe!

quickerblade
05-16-2009, 04:00 AM
rockets are paying $9 for win, not a bad investment..i got $200 on em, and im a laker fan

Ice009
05-16-2009, 04:15 AM
rockets are paying $9 for win, not a bad investment..i got $200 on em, and im a laker fan

Wow Laker fans betting against the Lakers?