Thursday, December 31, 2009, by Chuck McGannon
Memorable Performances of the 2000’s
Kobe Bryant, Jan, 22, 2006 (81 points)… Bryant scored 81 of the Lakers’ 122 points in a victory against the Raptors, the second-highest-scoring game in NBA history, behind Wilt Chamberlain’s 100-point performance in 1962.
LeBron James, May 31, 2007 (48 points)… The Cavs’ 109-107 double-overtime victory in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference finals… James finished with 48 points, nine rebounds and seven assists… He scored Cleveland’s final 25 points and 29 of its last 30.
Allen Iverson, June 6, 2001 (48 points)… The 76ers, a heavy underdog, stunned the host Lakers in Game 1 of the 2001 Finals thanks to Iverson’s tour de force.He finished with 48 points, including a seven-point flurry in a 58-second stretch of overtime, as Philadelphia won 107-101 to hand the Lakers their first loss of the playoffs.
Tracy McGrady, Dec. 9, 2004… McGrady scored 13 points in the final 35 seconds to rally the Rockets past the Spurs 81-80.
Dwyane Wade, June 13, 2006 (42 points)… Already in a 2-0 hole in the NBA Finals, Miami trailed Dallas 89-76 midway through the fourth quarter of Game 3. But Wade scored 12 of his 42 points during a game-ending 22-7 run as Miami won 98-96, the first of its four consecutive victories en route to the franchise’s first championship. Read more ->
Monday, December 21, 2009, by Chuck McGannon
Beauty of Flight
Here’s a block to enjoy. Sit back, relax, enjoy… LeBron’s timing, elevation, the way he sent the ball into the stands. Yes, this is the kind of a block which goes against Bill Russell’s art of blocking, tap-it-to-yourself (not send-it-to-the-stands) kind, but even that can’t take away from its power and beauty.
Monday, December 14, 2009, by Isaac Merwin
Triangle Offense
An interesting article was published in the New York Times on December 13th, 2009, written by JONATHAN ABRAMS. It talks about triangle offense. We all know that Phil Jackson used this offense with Michael Jordan, then with Kobe Bryant (also with Shaq while in LA) to win some championships. The article talks about Kurt Rambis (reference, picture ) who’s trying to implement this offense with the Timberwolves. Read more ->
Friday, December 11, 2009, by Miroslav Ladan
What’s Wrong with the NBA All-Star Concept
I’ve been reading Bill Simmons’ Book of Basketball in recent days, and he’s been rambling against the NBA All-Star Teams and the way they are picked. It’s become similar to the regular season MVP selection – a popularity concept. Simmons is stretching a lot of things in his book to make them sound funny or to keep your attention through a 700-page behemoth. Among other things he is recommending that NBA selects two best players, one from the East another from the West, and that they pick the teams for themselves to compete in the All-Star Game.

