A FEW CHOICE WORDS: TONY KORNHEISER
Gamecocks Spurred by Ol' Ball Coach
Tuesday, November 15, 2005; Page E02
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This hourglass will serve several purposes here. First of all, it's my reminder to be brief. I might have left a voice mail message for a young lady that made it's way on to the Internet. If you're familiar, you know it's proof that I do get a little long-winded. And as a side note to the fellas, when in doubt, maybe a text message is nice...I'm just saying.
The more important purpose of this is that it is symbolic. When I was where you now are, I gave no thought to the passage of time, no thought to the sand in my hourglass, so to speak. But as I stand here today, I am painfully aware of how much sand is in the bottom and how quickly it piles up there. And if you believe nothing else that I tell you today, believe me that a year will become five, will become 10 and you wake up one morning and you don't recognize the bald-headed guy looking back at you in the mirror. For the ladies that analogy doesn't work quite so well, unless you marry a bald-headed guy, and you'll probably find him quite charming, because really we have no other option.
IMAGE: Courtesy of rightpundits.com
"I agree with the attorney general's statement that there is no credible evidence that Mr. Seligmann, Mr. Finnerty or Mr. Evans committed any of the crimes for which they were indicted -- or any other crimes against [the accuser] -- during the party," Nifong said.
Also see:
- Day 1: Bargnani debuts
- Day 2: Aldridge vs O'Bryant
LAS VEGAS, NV - Day three of the summer league was another five game special, but I focused my attention most squarely on the nightcap where the New York Knicks faced the Amare Stoudemire led Phoenix Suns. The key player to watch? Renaldo Balkman, the Knicks' controversial first round draft pick.
When David Stern announced that New York had selected Balkman with the 20th pick, a resounding chorus of boos broke out as the feisty audience let their feelings be known. Notable players such as Rajon Rondo, Marcus Williams and Josh Boone were selected immediately after Balkman, all of whom had typically been expected to go higher than Balkman in mock drafts, with many people expecting Renaldo to be an early second round pick at best.
So the question is, did Isiah Thomas make a clever move in bucking some of the conventional wisdom, or was it a bit of a reach? Some have called Balkman the next Ron Artest, which would certainly justify Thomas' faith in him if true.
First off, the official line
Player | ||||||||||
Balkman | 27 | 3-4 | 2-2 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 8 |
So, on a traditional box score level you'd say he did a bit of everything, including some efficient shooting. Ah, but that's not the 82games way...let's add some more detail into the mix. I should mention that my charting of his play disagrees slightly with the official scorer's take.
First up my unofficial plus/minus card (Suns won the game 89-70)
Balkman Q1: 10 mins, -10 Q2: 4:30 mins, -6 Q3: 8:08 mins, +2 Q4: 4:13 mins, -4 Total: -18 |
The Knicks didn't have tremendous success then when Balkman was on the court, but since he was matched up with the Suns starters for much of the time, he didn't have the easiest setup perhaps. However he was playing in arguably a more legitimate NBA lineup since the Knicks started Frye, Lee, Nate Robinson, Balkman and fellow first rounder Mardy Collins. Overall then, the plus/minus scorecard isn't pretty for Renaldo in this game.
Let's move on to his offensive touches. Now first I should note that Balkman spent most of the time on offense hanging out near the baseline, and as the Knicks roster included NBA veterans like Channing Frye, Nate Robinson, and David Lee, there were seemingly few plays run for Renaldo. He did serve as the primary inbounder for offensive sideouts however.
BALKMAN Offensive touches
Starting Zone | Touches | Paint | ||
Three-Point | 8 | 50% | 13% | two PF drawn |
Mid-range | 8 | 88% | 75% | 2-3 FG (dunk, layup), 2-4 FT, 1 T/O, 1 Assisted Missed Shot |
In the Paint | 3 | 33% | 100% | 1-2 FG (dunk, missed tip), 1 Assist (layup) |
Total | 19 | 63% | 53% | 3-5 FG, 2-4 FT, 1 T/O, Assist Passes 1-2 FG |
A couple of notes -- the Tip Shot miss, as with many tips, is a questionable play, especially given his tip of the ball on the offensive glass didn't exactly get too close to going in the basket! Finally on a fastbreak play in the first quarter I had him drawing a foul and missing the free throws.
Anyway, a few things jump out:
All told then the first impression was of a player who on offense will let the game come to him, won't demand the ball, and will generally drive at the first opportunity on his infrequent touches. |
His ability to finish was nicely on display with two dunks (one explosive) and a layup, as well as a missed reverse layup. He has then the makings of a low-usage, high efficiency shooter. That may fit very well on New York given he will likely be playing alongside Marbury, Francis, Nate Robinson, Crawford, Curry and other Knicks' players with free shooting tendencies.
Ah, but of course if people are comparing him to Artest it must be because of his defensive abilities.
BALKMAN on Defense
Role | |||||||
Initial/Switch defender | 5 | 2-2 | | 1 | 1 | 4 | |
Help defender | 4 | 1-2 | 2-2 | 1 | 1 | 4 | |
Fastbreak defender | 2 | * | 1-2 | 1 | 1 | ||
Total | 11 | 3-4 | 3-4 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 11 |
One of his switch defense moments was guarding Amare Stoudemire on the baseline, which after a fake got him in the air was an easy layup. On one of the fast break plays he went for a steal and missed, after which the ball handler dished out an assist for two points, so arguably Balkman should be charged for something there too.
The numbers add up to look a little less than tremendous (basically a wash with his own efficient offense) and twice he was faked into the air for baskets. The steal though was spectacular, coming when he was defending an inbounds and deflected the ball up whereupon he jumped and grabbed it. Generally though he didn't seem to have much of a presence on defense, and as with his offense was content to let the game come to him rather than be a force all over the court.
The next Ron Artest? No, I don't think so, not even a poor man's Artest. For one thing Balkman doesn't seem to have the same build -- Artest is a rock with that genuine boxer's son toughness, whereas Renaldo is lean and lithe at this point, albeit with seemingly long arms. In addition Artest is much more active, on each end of the floor and on the glass.
No, if anything the player who came to mind visually as a comparison, was ex-Knick Latrell Sprewell. The similarity evaporates quickly when you look at the college stats -- Sprewell scored 17 points a game in his last year in college, Balkman under 10, and the jump shooting, free throw shooting, and passing all seem to be areas of glaring differences. Both players though came with defensive reputations and were drafted in the latter part of the first round to some degree of surprise.
The Verdict: I can't fault a guy for being efficient on offense in limited chances and defering to his more experienced teammates, but I was a little surprised there was not more energy on display. Nevertheless as he acclimates to the NBA, he may well prove to be worth more than the typical #20 selection.
[Update: through three summer league games, Balkman is averaging 8 pts, 5 rebs, 1 stl, 1.3 blks...on 64% FG shooting, with good foul drawing but lousy 54% FT shooting.]
Wake Forest basketball coach Skip Prosser died Thursday. He was 56.
Prosser, 56, was at the Demon Deacons' Manchester Athletic Center and had apparently been jogging when he collapsed. Assistant Mike Muse administered CPR until emergency-medical technicians arrived to take Prosser to Baptist Hospital, according to the Winston-Salem Journal.
Prosser left Orlando, where the AAU national tournament is being held, this morning at 6 a.m. to return to Wake Forest for a basketball camp. Mark Prosser, Skip Prosser's son and a Bucknell assistant coach, received a phone call at about 2:40 p.m. ET this afternoon while watching games at the Milkhouse in Orlando. He left the gym immediately.Prosser took over at Wake Forest in 2001 after coaching at Xavier for seven seasons, including five straight NCAA Tournament bids. He coached for one season at Loyola (Md.) in 1993-94.
IMAGE: Courtesy of media.gatewaync.com
CLASSIC TRIBUTE |
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In 2005, Wake Forest was a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament, but lost to West Virginia 111-105 in double overtime. It was Chris Paul's final game at Wake Forest.
The 2004 team reached the East Region semifinals, losing to St. Joseph's. The year before, Wake lost to Auburn in the second round of the NCAA Tournament after winning the ACC regular-season title. He was the only coach in NCAA Tournament history to lead three different schools to the tournament in his first season at the school. Prosser was born Nov. 3, 1950, in Pittsburgh. A 1972 graduate of the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, Prosser earned his master's degree in secondary education from West Virginia in 1980 while he was a high school coach. He joined the Xavier staff as an assistant before the 1985-86 season, spending eight years on the bench there. Prosser is survived by his wife, Nancy, and two sons: Scott and Mark, both in their 20s. Information from The Associated Press and ESPN.com senior writer Andy Katz is included in this report.GOURETTE, France (AP) -- Tour de France leader Michael Rasmussen was removed from the race by his team after winning Wednesday's stage, the biggest blow yet in cycling's doping-tainted premier event.
"Michael Rasmussen has been sent home for violating [the team's] internal rules," Rabobank team spokesman Jacob Bergsma told The Associated Press by phone.
The expulsion, which Bergsma said was ordered by the Dutch team sponsor, was linked to "incorrect" information that Rasmussen gave to the team's sports director over his whereabouts last month. Rasmussen missed random drug tests May 8 and June 28.
The 33-year-old rider, who won Wednesday's stage, had looked set to win the race, which ends Sunday in Paris. But Tour officials had questioned why he was allowed to take the start on July 7 in London, England.
"We cannot say that Rasmussen cheated, but his flippancy and his lies on his whereabouts had become unbearable," Tour director Christian Prudhomme told the AP.
The leader of cycling's governing body applauded the decision.
"My immediate reaction is, why didn't they do this at the end of June, when they had the same information," Pat McQuaid said. "The team decided to pull him out; that's their prerogative. I can only applaud that. It's a zero-tolerance policy, and it's a lesson for the future."
With Rasmussen out, Spanish rider Alberto Contador of the Discovery Channel team moved into the race lead.
"It's in no way a celebration on our end. It's the third piece of bad news," said Discovery Channel spokesman P.J. Rabice. "It reflects badly on our sport."
After the Tour's upbeat start in London, when millions of spectators lined the streets, bad news -- nearly all of it related to doping -- quickly claimed the spotlight.
On Tuesday, star cyclist Alexandre Vinokourov was sent home after testing positive for a banned blood transfusion, and his team pulled out of the race. Wednesday, it happened again when the Cofidis squad confirmed its rider Cristian Moreni of Italy had failed a doping test, prompted the withdrawal of the entire squad.
It wasn't immediately clear whether the 104-year-old Tour ever had lost its leader in such fashion so close to the finish.
"In the very old history of the Tour de France, I don't know, but the recent past -- never," said Tour spokesman Philippe Sudres.
Many NBA fans would love J.J. Redick's pro career to be a disastrous, swift collapse after he tormented their favorite college teams for four years. These fans thought their dream had come true last year - when Redick was glued to the Magic's bench. But "Not so fast my friend," as the atrocious Lee Corso says. Redick has dominated the
By John Denton
Special to ESPN.com
Updated: July 11, 2007, 3:52 PM ET
Then again, nobody would be surprised if he had done exactly that.
Redick is shooting with the confidence of his Durham days.Buried on the bench most of his rookie season with the Magic while Hill was still the coach, Redick has taken the Pepsi Pro Summer League by storm this week by once again resembling the cocky scoring machine who dominated college basketball slightly more than a year ago.
A day after torching New Jersey's summer league team for 30 points, Redick showed more of his all-around skills Tuesday in the Magic's 88-65 whipping of Indiana. He scored another 17 points, but more impressively worked his way to the free-throw line seven times, corralled five rebounds and set up his teammates with six drive-and-kick assists.
It's just the summer league, a forum filled mostly with rookies and vagabond free agents, but to Redick, the event is somewhat of a saving grace. After playing just 42 games and an average of only 14.2 minutes a night, Redick has used this week of games to try to get back the swagger that disappeared at times this past season when he never knew when he might play.
"I struggled a good part of the season. It was really frustrating, really draining to tell you the truth," Redick said. "It was a test in patience. But a lot of rookies have gone through that and really my case isn't that unique. A lot of guys have gone through what I did and turned out to have really good careers. I'm hoping to do the same thing."
Hill played Redick only sparingly even though the Magic clearly needed shooters around Dwight Howard and some punch in their shoddy offense. But in Hill's defense, Redick fell behind early with injuries, missing most of the summer with a herniated disc in his back and most of training camp with torn tissue in his foot.
His season high with the Magic this past season was 16 points, but he had more than that (18) by halftime Monday. Magic GM Otis Smith and new coach Stan Van Gundy are well aware that Redick can score from almost any spot on the floor, but they are watching this week to see whether he can defend well enough to contend for the starting job at shooting guard next season.
Both Hills are gone -- Grant Hill is off to Phoenix to chase a championship, and Brian Hill is expected to join New Jersey's staff as an assistant after being fired by Orlando -- and Redick knows there's a huge opportunity for him to become a key player for the Magic. He's keeping his summer league success in perspective, though, knowing it's what he does in October that really will decide whether he will get some meaningful playing time.
"In the big scheme of things, I'm not sure this week really means a lot," Redick said. "Travis Diener had an incredible summer league last year [including a 34-point game], and it didn't help him much. Coach [Van Gundy] is going to play the guys he feels the most comfortable with. I'm just hoping to be one of those guys."
Tuesday, November 15, 2005; Page E02
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NOTE: An earlier version of this item contained a quote attributed to P. Diddy, which turned out in fact to be the creation of a blogger. My apologies to the readers and to P. Diddy, for attributing it erroneously to him.But I don't see a link, the name of the blogger or the exact place you took it from. Geez, guys, man up and give credit. It could've been one of those, "Oh ha ha ha, I misread," but now it's more like, "We're never wrong and readers won't know otherwise." Not cool SI.com, not cool.
Updated: July 1, 2007, 4:29 PM ET
Advantage Federer!
On the eve of Week 2 at Wimbledon, Roger Federer has to be liking his chances more than ever. He is obviously in fine form as is the norm every year on the grass, not to mention every week of every year. Federer already is the best player in the world and has asserted himself even more robustly on grass, dominating the surface for the past four years.
Weather and a walkover have made Roger Federer even more of a favorite to win Wimbledon for a fifth straight year.
Being a bit of a traditionalist (some might say a "rigid" traditionalist), I have a soft spot in my heart for the way Wimbledon operates. However, when considering what is on the line every year at the All England Club, one has to take into account competitive fairness and the need for a tournament to provide an even playing field for all its participants. All it takes is one day of bad weather in the first week to create an untenable competitive environment for half the men's field. Each year half the draw is scheduled to play their third round on Saturday of the first week. If the rain hits hard that day, the tournament moves those matches to Monday of the second week, the same day the other half of the draw plays its fourth-round matches. Despite the challenges the weather presented this past week, if it was clear on Saturday, the men's singles competition would be right on track. What a difference a day makes.
I believe it is time for Wimbledon to address this issue. This traditionalist believe there should be greater willingness to play on the middle Sunday of Wimbledon. In this year's scenario, it would be automatic, as none of the eight third-round matches were completed Saturday. It is the only way to preserve some element of fairness. Yes, the roof going on Centre Court by 2009 will help in the completion of some matches, but even that improvement won't allow for all of the early-tournament contests to conclude. Wimbledon can't control the weather, but it can react to it and do what is right for everyone involved.
Let me touch on a peculiar dilemma for Federer. Tommy Haas has defaulted their fourth-round match. Now, Federer has to figure out how to keep himself sharp during a four-day layoff in the middle of a tournament."By Eric Crawford
ecrawford@courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. -- Rick Pitino said it best after his University of Louisville basketball team came from 20 points down to to beat West Virginia 93-85 in overtime yesterday.
"Greatest comeback ever," the coach scrawled on the board in the locker room. "You are now part of legend."
Legend follows Pitino, who is now the first coach to take three schools to the Final Four. It has followed him to U of L, which waited 19 years since its last national championship to return to college basketball's biggest stage.
Image also courtesy of Courier-Journal
The Cardinals (33-4) were expected to win the Albuquerque Regional final in The Pit, but they had to survive -- and take part in -- the greatest three-point shooting display in NCAA Tournament history to do it. The 29 three-pointers made by the two teams broke the tournament record of 28 set by Loyola Marymount and Michigan in a 1990 game.
West Virginia made 18 of 24 three-point attempts in regulation, then finally missed all three in overtime. The Mountaineers (24-11) had missed only seven shots in the first half and eight in the second.
"I've never beaten a team that played that well," Pitino said. "This is the gutsiest, most phenomenally tough group that I've ever been around."
They needed every bit of those qualities. When Kevin Pittsnogle hit the Mountaineers' 10th three-pointer of the first half -- and seventh in a row -- the Cardinals trailed 38-18. And they hadn't played badly.
They scrapped within 40-27 at halftime, and as they huffed their way up the long ramp to their locker room, Pitino told them, "To be down only 13 after a display like that, that's the best thing I've seen since I've been a coach."
In the locker room, he told his players this was nothing. He retold tales of comebacks past. He told them he was sure they were going to win -- even if he wasn't really sure.
"By the time we left that locker room," junior Francisco Garcia said, "we believed we were coming back, no problem."
But it was a problem. U of L scored on 19 of its final 25 possessions and still didn't pull even until its next-to-last possession in regulation.
"The only thing that surprised me was that it took so long to come back," junior Taquan Dean said. "That shows how well they were playing. We were playing great, and they never folded. We had to take it from them."
After taking the U of L job four years ago, Pitino met with his players in a small upper room at the Kentucky International Convention Center, introducing himself to them one by one as they entered. When they were all seated, he lowered the boom. He said, "You don't know me, and I sure as hell don't know you, because not one of you bothered to tell me your name."
Ellis Myles is the only one of those guys still on the team, but the Cardinals are no-names no more, having written themselves into school history.
Dean did it with the guttiest performance of a career already marked by stout efforts. The last time the Cards were in the Elite Eight, in 1997, they lost to North Carolina when a sprained ankle hobbled high-scoring guard DeJuan Wheat. Dean wouldn't be hobbled yesterday.
Even in a game where he started off cold, he drained seven three-pointers and scored 23 points. Cramping up in the late stages, he winced in pain with every move but continued to lead the team after Garcia fouled out with about four minutes left in regulation.
Senior guard Larry O'Bannon, scoreless and a non-factor in the first half, finished with 24 points and was named MVP of the regional, joining fellow Male High School alumnus Darrell Griffith and Pervis Ellison as the only U of L players ever to earn that honor.
Garcia spent the most crucial moments of the game on the bench after fouling out, but he kept the Cards in contention early and finished with 13 points and eight assists.
Myles, sidelined by a twisted ankle for a stretch of the second half, dominated the defensive lane late with a major blocked shot and several big rebounds.
And there were heroes whose names have not been prominent all season.
Pitino said that at halftime he told his players: "There is greatness in all of you, and we need it from every one of you, even if you are only on the court for a minute."
For a team that has been adjusting all season, the second half was a study in adaptation and survival. The Cards abandoned their zone defense and sacrificed their bodies in the 5,300-foot altitude with pressure man-to-man defense all over the court.
They pulled within nine in the early minutes of the half, then fell back by 12. They clawed within three with 10:29 to play, but the Mountaineers made back-to-back threes to lead by nine.
O'Bannon's three-pointer brought the Cards back within six, but Johannes Herber hit a three falling out of bounds on the other end, and the Cards seemed to sag for a moment.
But they kept coming. Beginning with Myles' tip-in with 8:39 left, U of L missed only five shots the rest of the game.
It took that kind of offensive brilliance to beat West Virginia. Back-to-back baskets by Garcia pulled the Cards within 71-67 with 4:09 left, but seven seconds later he fouled out trying to set a trap. O'Bannon's putback got the Cards within 74-71 with 3:03 left, and Otis George drilled a shot in the key to make it 74-73 with 2:04 left.
Pittsnogle answered with a three, and West Virginia led 77-73 with 1:44 left in regulation. But the Mountaineers wouldn't score again in regulation. Juan Palacios connected in the post with 1:27 left, and O'Bannon's layup in traffic tied it with 38 seconds left.
Looking to win it in the final seconds, West Virginia point guard J. D. Collins drove the lane and pulled up for a jumper, but Brandon Jenkins blocked it. Dean got the ball on a fast break but missed an off-balance 12-footer at the buzzer.
Pitino charged onto the court, pumping his fist.
"We felt at that point there was no way we were losing," Dean said.
He drilled a three 1:13 into the overtime to give U of L an 82-78 edge, and the Mountaineers began to fade. Their shots stopped falling, Myles and Palacios cleaned up the misses and the Cards put it out of reach at the foul line.
"I've been a part of some great comebacks," Pitino said, "but none has ever been so big or satisfying as this one."
Said West Virginia coach John Beilein: "This was a lifetime experience for us. The only place we lost was on the scoreboard. I don't know that we could have played better."
Before every game this season, each U of L player has touched a sign before heading onto the court. The sign bears the Final Four logo and the words, "March to the Arch."
Now they'll get to touch the real thing.
They've already touched their fans. In the stands, many were in tears.
"The character of this team, it leaves a lump in your throat," Matt Ferreri said. "These guys, they are not All-Americans, they aren't pros. But I can already tell you, the city of Louisville will never forget them."