Report: Allen Iverson reconsidering retirement
By Gaoban on 7:00 AM
Filed Under: Report: Allen Iverson reconsidering retirement, watch NBA Live Online
In what should come as a shock to no one, Stephen A. Smith is reporting that Allen Iverson is already considering a comeback.
"I think he just wants to feel wanted again," one of Iverson's confidants told Smith on Wednesday.
Look, let's cut right to the chase here. Will Iverson ever play again in the NBA? Yes, it's likely. He basically said, "I'm retiring, but I'm also telling you I can still play" in his goodbye statement, so why would we be surprised to see the future Hall of Famer sign on with the Boston Celtics or Orlando Magic or some other team in the near future? It's amazing he didn't include his cell number with the statement.
But for now, Allen Iverson is retired. So let's continue to give him the "farewell blog tour" he deserves.
To the YouTube machine!
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By J.E. Skeets
For those NBA players struggling at the charity stripe this season — I'm looking at you, Shaq. I'm always looking at you — two NC State engineers have figured out the best way to shoot a free throw.
Drs. Chau Tran and Larry Silverberg used hundreds of thousands of three-dimensional computer simulations of free throw trajectories to arrive at a number of major recommendations to improve your chances of throwing up a swish rather than a brick.
Go science!
First, the engineers say that shooters should launch the shot with about three hertz of back spin. That translates to the ball making three complete backspinning revolutions before reaching the hoop. Back spin deadens the ball when it bounces off the rim or backboard, the engineers assert, giving the ball a better chance of settling through the net.
Where to aim? Tran and Silverberg say you should aim for the back of the rim, leaving close to 5 centimeters — about 2 inches — between the ball and the back of the rim. According to the simulations, aiming for the center of the basket decreases the probabilities of a successful shot by almost 3 percent.
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By Kelly Dwyer
Tonight, the Atlanta Hawks take on the Orlando Magic in a
nationally televised game that, if I'm allowed comment, is quite compelling.
The
Hawks have completely and utterly turned things around. They have the best
record in their conference, the fifth-best point differential in the NBA, and
the team seems light years removed from the dull, jump-shooty mess that put us
to sleep in the playoffs last spring. Sure, they got off to a hot start last
year (winning six in a row to start 2008-09), but that felt like smoke and
mirrors.
This feels ... different.
And the Hawks are playing the Magic. The team that made it
to the Finals last year, and decided to replace all sorts of rotation parts
with all sorts of compelling, intriguing, new parts. The team that employs Stan
Van Gundy. The team that employs a center that can dunk on a 12 and a half-foot
goal. The team that employs a center just a few years removed from getting his
braces off.
Tell me you're not loving this. Then tell me that you don't
know where this is going. You should know by now.
The "what I'm thankful for" column is the third-biggest
gimmick of the calendar year for us, just behind "what I'll give _____ for
Christmas" and "New Year's resolutions for _____." It even carries over, past
the sports page. It's a cheap trick.
But if you're not thankful for the era you're living in, the
time and space you're spiraling through, and you're an NBA fan? There's
something wrong with you.
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Where Orlando gave us a flashback Behind the Box Score
By Gaoban on 6:54 AM
Filed Under: Behind the Box Score, watch NBA Live Online, where Orlando gave us a flashback
Precious memories. I'll never forget where I was on the
night that the Orlando Magic started playing defense again, and if you weren't
around to see it, the rebirth was quite the show.
After allowing the Hawks to score 51 points in the first
half, every member of the Orlando rotation put
on a defensive clinic in that second half, overcoming a 12-point deficit to Atlanta on its way toward
thrashing the Hawks by 17 overall.
Dwight Howard(notes) was fantastic (22 points, 17
rebounds, three assists, five turnovers, four blocks and a steal), moving his
feet and protecting the rim (showing, actual blocks, good closeouts, smart
contact with arms fully raised), but this was a true team effort.
Everyone dug in, and the Hawks didn't have an answer. Sure,
some of the jumpers that fell in that first half dried up, but every screen and
roll was met with menace, any bit of penetration was quickly made up for by the
Magic D, and the result was a 25-point second half. 25 points. And these are
the Hawks we're talking about.
With all those stops in hand, and an iffy offensive
rebounding night for the Hawks, the Magic offense was able to ease into its own
in the second half. Going through Dwight Howard helped, and though Jason
Williams(notes) didn't score in almost 27 minutes (a night after going off for 25
points against the Heat), Anthony Johnson(notes) came through with a knockout 17
points off the pine. In 21 minutes, with no turnovers. Spread the floor with
long range shooting, and drove. Anthony Johnson. Didn't see that coming.
Or, I did, actually. It was just really, really slow.
Not sure what the Hawks could have done better. There's a
lot to love about this team, but the Magic are really this good. Even without
Jameer Nelson(notes).
The Hawks had trouble getting to the line, only seven
attempts, and that really was their downfall. Yes, they missed 12
three-pointers, but hitting for 21 points on 19 possessions used up by
three-pointers is solid enough. Perhaps they could have tried to find Al
Horford(notes) a bit more, made Dwight Howard work. I do know that finding Zaza
Pachulia(notes) in both screen and roll and under the hoop didn't really work out all
that well — Zaza managed to miss six of nine shots against Howard and Marcin Gortat(notes).
Also, it's November. There is so much to learn from a game
tape like this if you're the Hawks. So many counters to figure out, so many
ways to try and pick apart what was a suffocating Orlando defense. No matter how great the D
is, it can always be taken advantage of. There are always holes. Go find them.
***
There's so much wrong with the Bulls that it's hard to know
where to start. The team doesn't seem to understand that they are constantly
shooting themselves out of games because of the continued insistence on pulling
up for low percentage 20-footers, shot by players who aren't all that hot to
trot shooting-wise.
Now, for all we know the team's coaching staff could be
putting the team through the ringer every time it turns in another jump
shooting contest, but let's face it — if this was any sort of insistent
priority for Chicago's coaching staff, are the players that stubborn and/or
daft that they refuse to listen?
Or, perhaps it's safe to assume that the ears of these
players aren't ringing enough. That the overmatched coaching staff might be
telling them to be aggressive in generic terms, but not enough to make any real
difference. As it stands, the team plays some of the least-cerebral basketball
in the NBA. It's these coaches' job to teach, and while players are certainly
to blame in a lot of cases around this league, this sort of inefficient,
uneducated basketball usually isn't all on the shoulders of these players.
Chicago
also lost by a ton for the fourth straight game in a row to another Western
powerhouse. Yes, they're supposed to lose, but they're also supposedly to play
smarter (and, by extension, "better") than this. Because right now? I'm aware
of the rotation holes, but this is some awful, awful basketball.
Utah,
meanwhile, is really playing well. Screening well, slapping at things
defensively, working great counters on the offensive end, and anticipating well
defensively (not that this is hard when Chicago
lopes into yet another guard-around screen).
Chicago had no answer for Carlos Boozer(notes), who was quick with
the shot when someone like Brad Miller(notes) didn't want to get out, better with the
footwork when Taj Gibson(notes) hustled his way into yet another poor defensive
showing, and smart off the ball when Joakim Noah(notes) got caught overplaying on the
perimeter.
28 points, eight rebounds, five assists, and — get this —
three blocks for Boozer. That's two weeks' worth for him.
With all the long rebounds, Chicago
started quite a few defensive possessions crossmatched, and Utah took advantage. 29 assists on 45 field
goals, it felt like a lot more, as the
Jazz shot 60.8 percent from the floor. It was a clinic, one you'd like to see
maintained. Utah
is just two seasons removed from working as the best regular season offensive
team in the NBA, and there's no reason they can't get back up there.
On the other hand, I've no idea how Chicago has won six games at this point.
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Watch Cleveland Cavaliers VS Charlotte Bobcats LIVE Online Streaming - November 27, 2009
By Gaoban on 6:46 AM
Filed Under: 2009, Watch Cleveland Cavaliers VS Charlotte Bobcats LIVE Online Streaming - November 27, watch NBA Live Online
Watch Cavs vs Bobcats Live Online Stream - Replay - Scores - Highlights (11/27/2009). Tonight's game will be the second of four meetings between the Cleveland Cavaliers and the Charlotte Bobcats this NBA regular season. The Cavs took the first game of the series with a 90-79 win on premiere week LIVE from the Q. The next game will be hosted by the Bobcats in Charlotte, where they won all their five games of the season. For the Cavs (11-4), they can't afford to lose any game this early as the East have a tight competition on top, with the Cavs, Celtics, Magic and Hawks all the first spot. Expect another highlight realm performance from LeBron James and the Cavs as they visit the young and talented Bobcats.
Watch Cleveland Cavaliers VS Charlotte Bobcats LIVE from FSO, FSCR TV streaming and NBA League Pass Broadband online stream. You may also listen to the Cavs vs Bobcats NBA game which tips off at 7 PM ET, exclusively from WTAM, WFNZ radio stations and league pass audio.
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