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  1. #1
    License to Lillard tlongII's Avatar
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    Portland Trail Blazers
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    28,727
    http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/nba...ard/?mobile=no


    The Trail Blazers are only 18-18 since a 31-9 start, but they've won four consecutive games.

    LOS ANGELES -- Earl Watson has played for 14 coaches in 14 years, from Hubie Brown in Memphis to George Karl in Denver, P.J. Carlesimo in Seattle to Scott Brooks in Oklahoma City, Jim O'Brien in Indiana to Jerry Sloan in Utah, and that's not even half the list. For some reason, despite all the power plays and pink slips he has witnessed throughout an itinerant NBA career, Watson has decided he wants to be a coach. This season he is a backup point guard in Portland, but he is also something of an intern on the Trail Blazers' bench, sitting with assistants and relaying instructions to Damian Lillard. He often quotes John Wooden, whom he befriended at UCLA, in sideline conversation.

    On March 12, Portland lost at San Antonio, and a team that started 31-9 was confronted by the very real possibility of missing the playoffs. Power forward LaMarcus Aldridge, having recovered from an injured groin, dinged his back. Complementary players left their natural roles to fill the scoring void. The defense continued to lapse. Everything the Blazers accomplished in the first two-and-a-half months, when they masqueraded as Western Conference contenders, was coming undone. After the game, Watson rose in the visiting locker room at the AT&T Center, and suddenly the intern was on the job.

    "That was the moment of intervention," Watson said. "It wasn't planned. It was just all the emotion, all the frustration, coming out."

    He does not remember his exact message, but he recounts the gist: "We had so much success early and success is tricky. You have success and you start to feel good about yourself. We never lost our hunger, but we lost some of our humility. We started great and we never pushed ourselves to be greater. Sometimes you can inspire yourself and sometimes you have to be checked. We got checked. We have to take accountability for ourselves. If you have a problem with that, then don't be on a winning team. Go lose games and be cool heading home in April to watch everybody else in the playoffs. That's what I told the guys, with a lot of cuss words."

    He was not the only one who spoke -- Lillard and Mo Williams, the primary members of Portland's point guard triumvirate, also took the floor -- and he did not see immediate results. But now that the Blazers have won four games in a row, thumping the Bulls in Chicago and the Grizzlies at home, they are beginning to wonder if their second-half stumbles have steeled them for the playoffs.

    "It was needed," Aldridge said. "I think things came too easily for us. Everyone had to understand the value of winning games and taking nothing for granted. We got back to our old selves."

    More significant than any bit of locker-room oratory was Aldridge's return. Portland piled up those 31 wins by spacing the floor around its star forward, letting him command double teams and kick to open three-point shooters. The Blazers cooled as opponents ran their snipers off the perimeter, and then sunk into a deep freeze when Aldridge hobbled away, forcing spot-up experts to go one-on-one.

    Ball movement, important to every squad, is crucial for Portland. On Tuesday, the Blazers led the Lakers by only a basket at halftime, and Aldridge reminded them to commit to the extra pass. "With this team," he said, "if you move the ball we go from having a really good shot to a really great shot." They finished with 124 points, including 31 from Aldridge, who added 15 rebounds.

    The Blazers are not as potent as they seemed in January, nor are they as pathetic as they seemed in March. This is a club that did not even make the playoffs last season, added only Robin Lopez to their starting lineup and suddenly emerged as an insta-power. They won close games. They avoided major injuries. Most of their regulars set out on career years.

    "If you're Miami, San Antonio, Oklahoma City, getting off to that start is what you expect, and you're used to being in that position," Portland coach Terry Stotts said. "But we got off to that start."

    They defied NBA logic and, predictably, disappointment ensued. They lost some close games. They suffered some injuries. Field goal percentages and scoring averages dipped. But the net result, a 49-27 record on April 3, is still better than they envisioned in training camp. They are only one game behind Houston for fourth place in the West, so home-court advantage in the first round remains attainable, since the Rockets are currently without Dwight Howard and Patrick Beverley. Given the depth of the conference, and the Blazers' recent history, they are a team others want to face in the opening round. But their reliance on the three-pointer makes them unpredictable. If they swing the ball and hit open shots, they will be as lethal as they were at Christmas. If they don't, they'll be done by May Day.

    At this time three years ago, Stotts was an assistant in Dallas, and the Mavericks were trudging through the end of the regular season. They were the team others wanted to face. Then they got hot from three-point range for two months and won the championship. There is no comparing these Blazers to those playoff-tested Mavs, but they are similarly unpredictable. "At the beginning of the season we played better when we had an edge and something to prove," Stotts said. They proved everything in a hurry. Now they have to do it again. "I don't think we're the same as we were in January," Watson said. "I think we're better." He cites the energy they are expending on defense and the care they are taking with the ball. He might as well also point to Aldridge's fingernails.

    Since Portland started this modest streak, which feels like an extended surge in light of their two-month malaise, Aldridge has declined to cut his nails. They have grown long enough that he broke one against the Grizzlies, another against the Lakers. But he won't get a manicure until the Blazers lose. As he left the locker room at Staples Center on Tuesday, he glanced down at his talons and laughed, a convenient symbol for a team trying to claw its way back.

  2. #2
    Derrick White fanboy FkLA's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
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    25,085
    no

  3. #3
    Banned
    My Team
    Los Angeles Lakers
    Post Count
    2,679
    TlongII is feeling confident, but he will disappear again soon like the chicken he is.

  4. #4
    Believe. jeebus's Avatar
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    San Antonio Spurs
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    20,005
    You answered your own question with the last two letters of this link.

  5. #5
    Spurs won't die! BoricuaSpursFan's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Post Count
    48
    Guests...

  6. #6
    Veteran Mel_13's Avatar
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    You can't get back into contention when you were never in contention to begin with.

  7. #7
    notthewordsofonewhokneels Thread's Avatar
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    Los Angeles Lakers
    Post Count
    91,195
    Sure, it's just that you haven't got a single in' inkling how to get beyond that point. You might as well be the Utah Jazz, t.

  8. #8
    Defense Wins Championships Texas_Ranger's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
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    13,364

  9. #9
    MORE LIFE SOON COME 313's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
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    11,595
    Back, tschlongII? You were never in contention.

  10. #10
    License to Lillard tlongII's Avatar
    My Team
    Portland Trail Blazers
    Post Count
    28,727
    We got this.

  11. #11
    Gorilla Warfare KoolAid Mans Brother's Avatar
    My Team
    Los Angeles Lakers
    Post Count
    1,230

  12. #12
    Set for life Budkin's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Post Count
    22,652
    You answered your own question with the last two letters of this link.

  13. #13
    Watching the collapse benefactor's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Post Count
    42,233
    http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/nba...ard/?mobile=no


    The Trail Blazers are only 18-18 since a 31-9 start, but they've won four consecutive games.

    LOS ANGELES -- Earl Watson has played for 14 coaches in 14 years, from Hubie Brown in Memphis to George Karl in Denver, P.J. Carlesimo in Seattle to Scott Brooks in Oklahoma City, Jim O'Brien in Indiana to Jerry Sloan in Utah, and that's not even half the list. For some reason, despite all the power plays and pink slips he has witnessed throughout an itinerant NBA career, Watson has decided he wants to be a coach. This season he is a backup point guard in Portland, but he is also something of an intern on the Trail Blazers' bench, sitting with assistants and relaying instructions to Damian Lillard. He often quotes John Wooden, whom he befriended at UCLA, in sideline conversation.

    On March 12, Portland lost at San Antonio, and a team that started 31-9 was confronted by the very real possibility of missing the playoffs. Power forward LaMarcus Aldridge, having recovered from an injured groin, dinged his back. Complementary players left their natural roles to fill the scoring void. The defense continued to lapse. Everything the Blazers accomplished in the first two-and-a-half months, when they masqueraded as Western Conference contenders, was coming undone. After the game, Watson rose in the visiting locker room at the AT&T Center, and suddenly the intern was on the job.

    "That was the moment of intervention," Watson said. "It wasn't planned. It was just all the emotion, all the frustration, coming out."

    He does not remember his exact message, but he recounts the gist: "We had so much success early and success is tricky. You have success and you start to feel good about yourself. We never lost our hunger, but we lost some of our humility. We started great and we never pushed ourselves to be greater. Sometimes you can inspire yourself and sometimes you have to be checked. We got checked. We have to take accountability for ourselves. If you have a problem with that, then don't be on a winning team. Go lose games and be cool heading home in April to watch everybody else in the playoffs. That's what I told the guys, with a lot of cuss words."

    He was not the only one who spoke -- Lillard and Mo Williams, the primary members of Portland's point guard triumvirate, also took the floor -- and he did not see immediate results. But now that the Blazers have won four games in a row, thumping the Bulls in Chicago and the Grizzlies at home, they are beginning to wonder if their second-half stumbles have steeled them for the playoffs.

    "It was needed," Aldridge said. "I think things came too easily for us. Everyone had to understand the value of winning games and taking nothing for granted. We got back to our old selves."

    More significant than any bit of locker-room oratory was Aldridge's return. Portland piled up those 31 wins by spacing the floor around its star forward, letting him command double teams and kick to open three-point shooters. The Blazers cooled as opponents ran their snipers off the perimeter, and then sunk into a deep freeze when Aldridge hobbled away, forcing spot-up experts to go one-on-one.

    Ball movement, important to every squad, is crucial for Portland. On Tuesday, the Blazers led the Lakers by only a basket at halftime, and Aldridge reminded them to commit to the extra pass. "With this team," he said, "if you move the ball we go from having a really good shot to a really great shot." They finished with 124 points, including 31 from Aldridge, who added 15 rebounds.

    The Blazers are not as potent as they seemed in January, nor are they as pathetic as they seemed in March. This is a club that did not even make the playoffs last season, added only Robin Lopez to their starting lineup and suddenly emerged as an insta-power. They won close games. They avoided major injuries. Most of their regulars set out on career years.

    "If you're Miami, San Antonio, Oklahoma City, getting off to that start is what you expect, and you're used to being in that position," Portland coach Terry Stotts said. "But we got off to that start."

    They defied NBA logic and, predictably, disappointment ensued. They lost some close games. They suffered some injuries. Field goal percentages and scoring averages dipped. But the net result, a 49-27 record on April 3, is still better than they envisioned in training camp. They are only one game behind Houston for fourth place in the West, so home-court advantage in the first round remains attainable, since the Rockets are currently without Dwight Howard and Patrick Beverley. Given the depth of the conference, and the Blazers' recent history, they are a team others want to face in the opening round. But their reliance on the three-pointer makes them unpredictable. If they swing the ball and hit open shots, they will be as lethal as they were at Christmas. If they don't, they'll be done by May Day.

    At this time three years ago, Stotts was an assistant in Dallas, and the Mavericks were trudging through the end of the regular season. They were the team others wanted to face. Then they got hot from three-point range for two months and won the championship. There is no comparing these Blazers to those playoff-tested Mavs, but they are similarly unpredictable. "At the beginning of the season we played better when we had an edge and something to prove," Stotts said. They proved everything in a hurry. Now they have to do it again. "I don't think we're the same as we were in January," Watson said. "I think we're better." He cites the energy they are expending on defense and the care they are taking with the ball. He might as well also point to Aldridge's fingernails.

    Since Portland started this modest streak, which feels like an extended surge in light of their two-month malaise, Aldridge has declined to cut his nails. They have grown long enough that he broke one against the Grizzlies, another against the Lakers. But he won't get a manicure until the Blazers lose. As he left the locker room at Staples Center on Tuesday, he glanced down at his talons and laughed, a convenient symbol for a team trying to claw its way back.

  14. #14
    Banned
    My Team
    Los Angeles Lakers
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    2,679
    By the TlongII theory, the Lakers were in contention the first week of the season.

  15. #15
    Believe. Otaku's Avatar
    My Team
    Portland Trailblazers
    Post Count
    838
    Blazers can end in 4th place in the West and give Houston a run for their money with HCA or even get to the 2nd round, but that's it.

  16. #16
    Believe. elmanutres's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
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    2,983
    ejaculating in november

  17. #17
    Board Man Comes Home Clipper Nation's Avatar
    My Team
    Los Angeles Clippers
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    54,257
    http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/nba...ard/?mobile=no


    The Trail Blazers are only 18-18 since a 31-9 start, but they've won four consecutive games.

    LOS ANGELES -- No.
    fify

  18. #18
    #ThankYouTD smaka's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
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    2,611
    By the TlongII theory, the Lakers were in contention the first week of the season.
    And Sixers!

  19. #19
    The Timeless One Leetonidas's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
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    29,609
    Never contenders to begin with

  20. #20
    License to Lillard tlongII's Avatar
    My Team
    Portland Trail Blazers
    Post Count
    28,727
    We are BIG TIME contenders!

  21. #21
    Banned
    My Team
    Los Angeles Lakers
    Post Count
    2,679
    For guests of the year, along with Indiana

  22. #22
    Scarlett our Goddess4ever
    My Team
    Dallas Mavericks
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    12,836
    they'll only claw their way back to the cow's mouth and stomach, tbh.

  23. #23
    Ur a fkn wanker Venti Quattro's Avatar
    My Team
    Los Angeles Lakers
    Post Count
    29,402










  24. #24
    leveled up sook's Avatar
    My Team
    Houston Rockets
    Post Count
    9,632

  25. #25
    Spur-taaaa TDMVPDPOY's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Post Count
    41,384
    latest 300movie quote "die on ur legs or live on ur knees"???

    we all know what those players picked...lol quests

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