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 ->
Tuesday, May 19, 2009, by Isaac Merwin
John Wooden on Teaching
Here’s John Wooden, at his best, talking about teaching. His life principles supported his basketball coaching views. In today’s world it is so often the other way around.
Friday, November 28, 2008, by Editor
Autistic Hoops Star Going Hollywood…
Autistic hoops star going Hollywood, Associated Press, NBC Sports
His play drew national attention, and a flood of calls from Hollywood. His parents have received inquiries from about 25 production companies ranging from The Walt Disney Co. and Warner Bros. to independent documentary filmmakers. [...] “I don’t know what I’m walking into,” McElwain said. [...] In his team’s final home game of the season, McElwain entered with four minutes to go. It was his first and only appearance for the Athena varsity team in this Rochester suburb. The 5-foot-6 manager hit six 3-point shots and a 2-pointer and was carried off the court on his teammates’ shoulders.
Monday, September 15, 2008, by Isaac Merwin
Issue #32
Contents Highlights (Download From FIBA Website)
- Fatigue Shooting Drills by Kevin Sutton
Kevin Sutton is the Head Coach of Montverde Academy in Florida and he is considered one of the best high school coaches in the USA. During the summer he also coaches at some of the best basketball camps, such as the Nike Skillz Academy, the Five Star Camp and the basketball camps of Lebron James, Kobe Bryant and Steve Nash. - Playing Near the Basket by Carlo Recalcati
After a prestigious career as a player, Carlo Recalcati began coaching at Bergamo, Italy, bringing the team from the B to the A1 Serie. He then coached in Reggio Calabria, Ambrosiana Milan, Bergamo again, Varese (winning an Italian Serie A title in 1999), and Fortitudo Bologna, the following year, again winning the national title. Moving to Montepaschi Siena, he won his third title and the SuperCup in 2004. Since 2002, he has been the head coach of the Men’s Italian national team, winning the bronze medal at 2003 FIBA European Championship, and the silver medal at the 2004 Olympic Games. Read more ->
Wednesday, June 18, 2008, by Editor
Boston Celtics, World Champions
One after another. Rhythm, release, splash. Nothing but net.
[...]
Ray Allen tied an NBA Finals record last night with 7 three-pointers in Game 6 against the Los Angeles Lakers, each dagger a tug of the rope raising Boston’s 17th NBA championship banner to the rafters at the TD Banknorth Garden. When it was all said and done, Allen joined Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett, and Doc Rivers in a group hug celebrating the accomplishments of the Big Three on the sideline.
[...]
“We just [said] we loved each other,” said Rivers. “They all said, ‘Thank you,’ and I said ‘Thank you’, back.”
[...]
But, above all, believe it.
[...]
The Boston Celtics did not just win franchise championship No. 17 last night. They snatched it. They swallowed it. They demanded it.
The smell was unmistakable, wafting through the air some 15 feet from the Celtics’ bench as Paul Pierce joined in on the Gino dance and Kevin Garnett bounded up and down with joy. [...]
There were still two minutes and 21 seconds remaining in a Game 6 that for all intents and purposes had been over for at least an hour, the fans were chanting "Se-ven-teen" and coach Doc Rivers was still a few moments away from being doused with a bucket of orange Gatorade.
[...]
Security guards were already lined up along the perimeter of the court, holding a long rope that would serve as a crowd control device for any ruffians who dared try to rush the celebration, and a fan nearby was holding up a sign that read: "Light One Up for Red."
[...]
Somebody had already lit one up, though the source of the cigar smoke could not be located. And to me, that was just as well, because I’d like to close this season with just the slightest belief that the source of that smell was a ghost, a ghost with nine championship rings who will be able to rest in peace a little longer knowing that the man chasing ring No. 10, Lakers coach Phil Jackson, would be flying back to Los Angeles without the record for most NBA championships by a coach.
Kevin Garnett got the cover of the new Wheaties box, Breakfast of Champions edition, which was getting passed around the bowels of the New Garden long before the final buzzer, all thanks to the most laughable score in the history of championship clinchers. [...]
Ray Allen took a sharp first-half poke in eye, when he was already playing with the weight of a family crisis on his shoulders, but rebounded by tying one NBA Finals record for hitting triples and breaking another.
[...]
Paul Pierce?
[...]
Even on a night when the Boston Celtics might have been able to back up Allen’s claim that this team actually has a "Big 15" as opposed to just a supersized trio, with waves of Game 6 heroes lifting the fallen giants of basketball back to a perch they hadn’t graced for more than two decades, Pierce still found a way to be the face of it all Tuesday night.
[...]
The night belonged to Garnett, Allen and even James Posey.
[...]
A night they’ll never forget in Green Land might have belonged most to Rajon Rondo.
[...]
Doc Rivers and Danny Ainge had a claim, too, when Boston set a new standard for how to finish off the Finals: Celtics 131, Lakers 92.
[...]
Yet it was Pierce who deservedly swept all nine ballots in the Finals MVP voting. It was Pierce who fittingly clinched possession of two trophies with 17 points, 10 assists and what is believed to be the NBA’s first sideline sneak attack and sports-drink shower of a title-winning coach.
[...]
Garnett sighed Tuesday night, too, and even talked about it. Only this time, it was different. This sigh was welcome, a rite of passage, mission accomplished, an exhale to blow away the critics and the demons and the very large monkey on Garnett’s back, once and for all.
[...]
And then, another whew! Along the way in the giddiness at TD Banknorth Garden, Garnett gave shout-outs to his roots in "’Sota,” Chicago and South Carolina, kissed the team logo at center court on the parquet floor, hollered "Anything’s possible!” to the rafters and laid his head on a staffer’s shoulder for what looked to be a few silent sobs — cries, like sighs, matter too. He even went gangster, a la Jimmy Cagney at the climax of White Heat, by yelling to his mother, Shirley, "Ma, top o’ the world! Top o’ the world!”


