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duncan228
06-06-2009, 02:22 PM
Today's national stuff.

Magic confident of better outing in Game 2 (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=ap-nbafinals&prov=ap&type=lgns)
By Tom Withers

Dwight Howard hasn’t been surprised by anything during his first trip to the NBA finals. It’s all seemed so familiar to Orlando’s center, like he’s been here before.

If it wasn’t June, it would be like any other game.

Sure, there’s more media. There’s “that big trophy everywhere you look.” There’s a stenographer sitting in on the press conferences.

“That’s new,” Howard noted. “Other than that, it’s just basketball.”

And as has been the case most of this season, the Magic appear to be in trouble.

Down 1-0 to the Los Angeles Lakers after being blown out 100-75 in Game 1, the Magic spent part of Friday watching film of their pathetic return to the finals after a 14-year hiatus. They got lit up by Kobe Bryant, who scored 40 points, and Howard and Orlando’s other big men were dominated on the boards by the Lakers’ frontline, which posted a 55-41 advantage in rebounding.

“Embarrassing,” Magic coach Stan Van Gundy snorted.

Orlando was out of its league.

Bryant scored almost at will, punctuating each bucket by extending his lower jaw to show his lower teeth—a menacing look underscoring the self-proclaimed Black Mamba’s drive at winning his fourth title. The Magic also hurt themselves by shooting 30 percent and missing open shots, and Howard was a non-factor on offense with 12 points and only one field goal, a 7-foot hook shot in the game’s first two minutes.

The NBA’s leading dunker didn’t dunk. He didn’t dominate. He didn’t do diddly.

Howard knows he and his teammates have to do much more in Game 2 on Sunday night.

“We just didn’t have any energy or effort,” Howard said. “We didn’t box out, all the little things. We can’t control Kobe scoring 40 points, but we can control boxing out, getting loose balls, stuff like that, and we didn’t do that. We have to come out with a better effort.”

Howard’s ineffectiveness was the main topic of conversation at Friday’s media gathering. One reporter wondered if the sleeve on his arm may have affected his shot.

“Man, I just wear the sleeve because I like how it looks,” Howard said, shaking his head in disbelief at the query. “It had nothing to do with making shots or anything. I started wearing it in practice, it felt good one day, and I thought, ‘Man, I should wear this in the game.’ It might make my shot look better.”

Being in a hole is nothing new to the resilient Magic, it’s where they’ve lived most of the season.

They made it to the finals despite losing All-Star guard Jameer Nelson for 42 games because of a shoulder injury, and they came from behind against Philadelphia and Boston to win previous series this postseason. Against Cleveland in the Eastern Conference finals, the Magic shot their way back from impossible deficits.

They’re down again, not out.

“It’s just one game,” said forward Hedo Turkoglu, who went just 3-of-11 from the floor. “It’s a long series. We’ve got a couple days to work on some things. We know how good we are, and we know what we need to do to win.”

A good place to start would be getting Howard more involved on offense.

Nothing came easy for him in Game 1. Like paparazzi swarming outside a nightclub for a magazine cover photo, the Lakers’ forwards and centers were everywhere he turned. Andrew Bynum, Pau Gasol and Lamar Odom pushed him, prodded him, poked him.

Superman’s cape got torn to shreds.

And when Howard got the ball deep in the lane, one of Los Angeles’ guards would dive down on a double team and force him to pick it up. By the time he passed out from inside to an open teammate on the perimeter, the lengthy Lakers were able to recover and contest.

“They’re going to make it tough to get Dwight rolling,” Van Gundy said. “We got him the ball a lot, but they’re always coming with another guy.”

Van Gundy admitted he made a mistake in playing Nelson for the entire second quarter. In his first action since Groundhog Day, Nelson sparked the Magic early but then tired and faded. Van Gundy still plans to use him off the bench in Game 2, but will monitor his minutes more closely.

The Lakers aren’t taking anything for granted. They may have won Game 1 without breaking a sweat, but their demeanor remained very businesslike during Friday’s workout.

Bryant, whose kids have been calling him “Grumpy” because of his sour mood of late at home, remained stone faced. He answered questions with short, measured responses and only cracked a smile once.

Does he remember the Lakers’ attitude before the finals last season?

“No,” he said.

Is he driven to win a title to prove anything to LeBron James and Shaquille O’Neal?

“Not at all,” he said.

So why the frosty attitude?

“I’m just focused and ready to go,” he said. “I’ve been pacing myself all year waiting for these playoffs to come around. The table is set.”

angel_luv
06-06-2009, 03:42 PM
Go Hedo! Go Magic! :D

duncan228
06-06-2009, 06:52 PM
Howard shares time with Bill Russell at NBA finals (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=txnbafinalsnotebook&prov=st&type=lgns)
By Beth Harris

Dwight Howard shared some time with Hall of Fame center Bill Russell before the Orlando Magic lost Game 1 of the NBA finals.

Howard has long admired Russell, even though his career ended well before the 23-year-old big man became a star. One of the few books Howard said he’s ever enjoyed reading is “Russell Rules.”

“It brought me a little bit closer to him just by reading that book and knowing who he was off the court and how he approached the game of basketball,” Howard said Saturday. “He was always about team first, and basically I’m the same way. My team, that’s the only thing that matters to me.”

The Magic reached the finals by defeating Russell’s old team, defending NBA champion Boston, in seven games of the Eastern Conference semifinals.

“Him and Wilt (Chamberlain) were the only two big men that I always wanted to meet besides Patrick (Ewing),” Howard said. “I never had a chance to meet Wilt, but probably the closest person to Wilt was Bill Russell.”

—-=

HELPING RICKY: Ricky Rubio can count on an assist from Olympic teammate Pau Gasol after the NBA draft.

The Spanish teenager has decided to enter the June 25 draft, where he’s projected to be one of the top picks. Rubio has averaged 9.9 points and 5.7 assists this season for Spanish club DKV Joventut.

Rubio, a 6-foot-2 point guard, turns 19 in October, meeting the NBA’s minimum age requirement.

He and Gasol helped win a silver medal for Spain at the Beijing Olympics.

“I wish that he picks the right option and the right team picks him,” Gasol said. “If he decides to come over, I wish him luck, and then of course I’ll try to advise him and help him out in any way I can. He’s extremely mature for an 18-year-old, but he’s still 18 years old.”

—-=

SUPERMAN SLAM: The NBA player first known as Superman isn’t too crazy about his younger namesake.

Shaquille O’Neal, who played for Orlando, has said everything that current Magic superstar Dwight Howard has done he copied from O’Neal right down to Howard’s Superman nickname.

“For me to get my eyes wide open about another big man, he’ll have to do something that I haven’t seen before or something that I haven’t invented,” O’Neal said earlier this season.

Howard has never spoken individually with O’Neal, and he’s unsure why the Phoenix Suns center has singled him out.

“I can’t tell you why he’s said a lot of discouraging things,” Howard said. “I wish he wouldn’t say it because he’s one of the few guys that we all look up to. But you can’t control what he says. I’m playing for the finals right now, so my focus is not on what Shaq says or anybody else. It’s getting my team a trophy.”

Before the finals began, O’Neal tweeted on his Twitter feed that he was rooting for former Lakers teammate and rival Kobe Bryant to win the title, which would be his first without O’Neal. Together, they won three consecutive championships from 2000-03.

Asked what he made of O’Neal’s support, Bryant said with a smile, “I don’t make much of it.”

—-=

HELLO, INDIA: For the first time, media from India are covering the NBA finals in person.

A record number of media from Spain (32), Poland (14) and Turkey (8) are reporting on the best-of-7 series. They’re here to cover Lakers forward Pau Gasol of Spain, Magic swingman Marcin Gortat from Poland and Orlando forward Hedo Turkoglu from Turkey.

The Lakers’ Sasha Vujacic of Slovenia and DJ Mbenga of Congo, and Orlando’s Mickael Pietrus of France add the other international flavor. A total of 55 TV and radio stations and Web sites from overseas are covering the finals, with 14 of them doing live commentary.

The Middle East hasn’t been left out, either. The finals are available with Arabic commentary on Al-Jazeera Sport.

The league’s Web site, NBA.com, provides live game audio in 10 languages. Among the more diverse are Dutch, Flemish, Hebrew, Mandarin and Tagalog.

Tacker
06-06-2009, 06:56 PM
The Middle East hasn’t been left out, either. The finals are available with Arabic commentary on Al-Jazeera Sport.

The league’s Web site, NBA.com, provides live game audio in 10 languages. Among the more diverse are Dutch, Flemish, Hebrew, Mandarin and Tagalog.

:tu

duncan228
06-06-2009, 07:00 PM
Magic need more effective Howard in Game 2 (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=txnbafinalsmagic&prov=st&type=lgns)
By Brian Mahoney

Hubie Brown first tried positioning two recorders and a knife on the table in front of him. When that didn't work, he grabbed a reporter's notebook and sketched his idea on paper.

Orlando coach Stan Van Gundy has his own equipment and undoubtedly spent his Saturday doing what Brown was doing: Trying to draw up ways to make Dwight Howard more effective.

After a lackluster start to the NBA finals, the Magic need Howard to play better - and maybe smarter and harder - when they face the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 2 on Sunday night.

"I don't think I was patient enough in the post. I don't think that they caused a lot of problems for me. I think it was just rushing and wanting to do so much without being patient," Howard said. "I think out of all the games I've had in the last two playoff series, I was probably the most impatient the last game."

Howard was limited to six shots - six Orlando players took more - made only one, and scored 12 points in the Magic's 100-75 loss on Thursday.

After dominating the Cavaliers and averaging 25.8 points in the conference finals, Howard found things much more difficult against the Lakers, whose post players are stronger and much more mobile than Cleveland's.

Zydrunas Ilgauskas and Anderson Varejao played behind Howard, who bulled his way into good position down low and often just had to spin around and dunk. The Lakers put a defender in front of Howard, and when he was able to catch it, they further threw him off his game by sending double and even triple teams.

"Just by fronting this kid the other night, Howard got absolutely frustrated," said Brown, the former coach turned ESPN commentator.

"When your center doesn't get the ball, he stops rebounding and stops blocking shots. You see the kid the other night? He puts his head down and you sulk as a big guy."

Van Gundy refused to single out Howard, saying his entire team played poorly in the opener.

"I wasn't happy with anything we did on the floor," Van Gundy said. "I don't think our effort and intensity was great. I'm not pointing fingers at anybody. I think it was all of us. But to say I was satisfied or happy, no, not at all. I don't think you can be after a game like that. But that's not to lay it on one guy."

Brown said one adjustment Howard could have made was to post up further away from the basket, making it harder to front him because teammates would then have more room to pass him the ball going toward the baseline. But he was more alarmed by Howard's work rate once the Defensive Player of the Year started realizing things weren't going his way.

"After just watching him six times against Cleveland, if he does not get the ball when he's running hard - when he thinks he's running hard - then he has a tendency to slow down," Brown said. "If he does not get the ball, he's just like most young, big guys. I'm not running hard if you're not going to throw me the ball."

Howard called out Van Gundy for not getting him the ball enough after an Orlando loss to Boston during the second round. And while six shots is far too few for a team's leading scorer, ESPN analyst and former coach Jack Ramsay thought Howard got the ball enough, just didn't make good decisions with it.

"When he couldn't get it, or when he got it, he didn't read the defense. That's on him," Ramsay said. "He got enough touches early on to establish a game for himself, but didn't read the defense. The defense was very good and it took him out of his game."

Howard led the NBA in dunks, but his offensive repertoire is limited.

"I think he still needs to develop a little more into a better post player because that's going to help him," Lakers forward Pau Gasol said. "That's just going to help him be more unstoppable. Develop a little bit more of a shot, face-up shot, and turnaround jumpers will help him, too. I just think it's a weapon that you can use for double teams."

Howard won't have all that in time for Game 2, but he knows there are plenty of other things he can do better.

"I have to slow down, slow down. When they come down and double, pass it out to my teammates and trust that they'll make the shots," Howard said. "And also when I have the ball in the post, really just read where the help is coming from."

"I don't think I did a good job of that during the game. I've talked with the coaching staff and I've talked with the players who have seen what was going on on the floor. I've seen it, and the think the biggest thing for me is just being patient."