Sunday, November 11, 2012

Lakers to interview D'Antoni, Dunleavy



By David Aldridge, TNT Analyst
Posted Nov 10, 2012 11:42 PM
The Los Angeles Lakers plan to speak with former Knicks and Suns head coach Mike D'Antoni and former Lakers, Blazers, Bucks and Clippers head coach Mike Dunleavy about their head coaching job in the coming days, according to a league source.
Those upcoming discussions will follow Saturday's meeting between Lakers officials and Phil Jackson, in which the two sides discussed the job but no official offer was made. "There is nothing to report," said a source involved with the discussions Saturday. Jackson, though, remains the overwhelming favorite to take over early next week. The 11-time champion, who won five of those rings in two stints with the Lakers, has the enthusiastic support of all of the team's star players, including Kobe Bryant, Dwight Howard, Steve Nash and Pau Gasol. Interim coach Bernie Bickerstaff, who took over Friday after the Lakers fired former coach Mike Brown, will coach Sunday's home game against Sacramento.
The Lakers next play at home Tuesday against San Antonio, but then have two days off before their next game, next Friday, at Staples Center against the Suns. Not making a hire until after the Spurs game would give the next head coach two days of practice before debuting against Phoenix, and give them a chance to interview other candidates. It is not believed that the Lakers have contacted former assistant coach and player Brian Shaw, who was Jackson's and Bryant's choice to succeed Jackson after Jackson's final season with the team in 2011. Shaw is now the associate head coach of the Pacers.
Former Jazz head coach Jerry Sloan told USA Today Saturday that he had not been contacted by the Lakers.
D'Antoni's camp was resigned earlier Saturday to the idea that Jackson would be the next head coach. The Lakers didn't contact D'Antoni throughout the day while interviewing Jackson. The Los Angeles Times reported that executive vice president Jim Buss and general manager Mitch Kupchak met with Jackson.
Jackson's longtime agents, Todd and Brian Musburger, said in June that Jackson was looking for a deal similar to the one that Pat Riley has in Miami if he were to return to the game. At the time, they said Jackson's inclination was not to return to coaching, but to seek a job where he would pick a coach and work with that coach and his staff. In Los Angeles, Jim Buss has the final say on basketball-related matters. But Buss did not have a very good relationship with Jackson, and after he left the team got rid of almost all of the people that had had any association with Jackson. Jim Buss chose Mike Brown to replace Jackson instead of other candidates like Rick Adelman, who subsequently took the head job with the Timberwolves.
Jackson, according to a source who knows him well, is in good shape after having a knee replacement last March. The likelihood is that if Jackson returns to coach, he'd want to bring back many of his longtime assistants, including Jim Cleamons, Frank Hamblen and Kurt Rambis. Most observers around the league think it would be easy for the team's current personnel that weren't in Los Angeles when Jackson last coached the Lakers to pick up the triangle offense Jackson has used since his days in Chicago in the 1990s. The offense would be especially good for Howard, who could thrive in the low post the same way Shaquille O'Neal did when the Lakers won three straight titles from 2001 through 2003.
D'Antoni, who resigned as head coach of the Knicks in March, is obviously familiar to Nash, who won back-to-back league MVP honors playing in D'Antoni's system in Phoenix. D'Antoni is also quite familiar with Bryant, whom he first met while he played--and Bryant lived--in Italy, and then coached as an assistant on the U.S. Olympic teams that won the gold medal in 2008 and 2012.
Dunleavy started his head coaching career with the Lakers, making the Finals in 1991 before losing to the Bulls in six games, before moving on to the Bucks, Blazers and Clippers. He last coached in 2010, getting fired with a 21-28 record with the Clippers. He put together a group that tried to buy the New Orleans Hornets and was thought to be the favorite before the team was sold by the NBA to New Orleans Saints owner Tom Benson.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Kobe Bryant Highlights




NBA HIGHLIGHTS


deos/This Season/All Teams
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Ty Lawson makes a clutch layup at the buzzer to give the Nuggets...
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With 3.1 seconds left in a tied game, Ty Lawson drives to the cup...
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Jerryd Bayless finds Rudy Gay who soars through the paint and...
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Jamal Crawford tosses a half-court lob to Blake Griffin who...
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Tony Parker dishes to a slashing Kawhi Leonard who takes flight...
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Check out the Top 10 plays from Saturday's preseason games.
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Andre Iguodala picks off the steal and takes flight for the...
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Watch the highlights from all four NBA preseason games on...
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JaVale McGee gets in the lane and rises up but is brought back...
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Eric Bledsoe drives baseline and makes an incredible circus layup...
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With 3.1 seconds left in a tied game, Ty Lawson drives to the cup...
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JaVale McGee gets in the lane and rises up but is brought back...
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DeAndre Jordan denies JaVale McGee's shot attempt.
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Blake Griffin plays the passing lane to get the steal and takes...
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Manu Ginobili and Gary Neal score 11 points each and the Spurs...
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Friday, October 5, 2012

Chauncey Billups goes through drills


PLAYA VISTA, Calif. -- Los Angeles Clippers guard Chauncey Billups didn't anticipate he would be ready to return to the court until November when training camp started last week. But Billups participated in contact drills Thursday for the first time since he had season-ending surgery to repair a torn left Achilles tendon in February.
Billups
Billups
"Chauncey practiced a little bit more today, which was good," Clippers coach Vinny Del Negro said. "He actually went through a couple of contact drills that we had. Not long, but more than in the past."
Billups, who this summer had hoped to be ready by opening night, is still a long shot to start on Oct. 31, when the Clippers open the season against theMemphis Grizzlies. But he could be back in the starting lineup soon after if he doesn't have any setbacks.
"He feels good," Del Negro said. "He's moving good. You can be in condition but the body contact and the up and down things, he's got to get in shape, but he's got plenty of time. As long as he keeps on, not having any setbacks and keeps on working, as he's been doing, he's going to be in good shape."Billups has been working on the side during camp with Chris Paul, who underwent surgery to repair a torn ligament in his right thumb on Aug. 21. Paul said he's still on pace to start at least one preseason game before the season opener.
"I'm pretty close," Paul said. "The trainers let me know what the protocol is every day."
While he has been unable to participate in contact drills, Paul said working out with Billups has made going through practices easier for him.
"It makes it a lot easier because we both can't do any live action," Paul said. "We do 5-on-0 and all that different type stuff. It makes it a lot easier on me knowing I can shoot with him and work out with him."

Peyton Manning part-owner in NBA


Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning isn't allowed to own a piece of a football team per NFL rules, but that doesn't mean he can't own a piece of another team in another sport.
Sources have confirmed to ESPN.com that Manning is part of the proposed ownership group led by Robert Pera, who agreed to buy the Memphis Grizzlies from Michael Heisley for about $350 million this summer.
The news of the involvement of Manning, who played collegiately at the University of Tennessee, was first reported by Chris Vernon of ESPN Radio Memphis. The ownership stake is actually in the name of Manning's wife, Ashley, but one source confirmed that Peyton Manning is involved. The Manning's stake in the team and how much they paid for it is not known.
"While my focus is on playing quarterback for the Denver Broncos, I look forward to watching her become involved with her hometown team," Peyton Manning said.
Ashley Manning is very excited to commit to the Grizzlies' new ownership group.
"As a native of Memphis, it was important to me that the Grizzlies remain in Tennessee and continue to have a positive impact on the community," she said.
Manning's involvement will not be a conflict for the quarterback with the NFL, according to league spokesman Greg Aiello.
Through last week, Manning has earned more than $178 million on the field and tens of millions of dollars more off it as the most popular endorser in the NFL.
Since Pera agreed to the deal, shares of his company Ubiquiti Networks has been hard hit. On a single day in August, Pera lost $365 million on paper when the company's stock plummeted. Shares since have rebounded modestly.
In recent months, Pera has added local partners, including AutoZone founder J.R. "Pitt" Hyde and financier Staley Cates, who were minority owners under Heisley. In September, Pera scored pop star and actor Justin Timberlake on the ownership roster. Sources also confirmed Thursday that former NBA player Penny Hardaway -- who grew up in Memphis and played at Memphis State -- has joined the group.
A source with knowledge of the sale told ESPN.com's Marc Stein that the transfer of ownership from Heisley to Pera and his high-profile partners remains on course to be approved by the start of the regular season later this month. The NBA Board of Governors is scheduled to have its meeting Oct. 24-25 in New York City.
Grizzlies guard Mike Conley said Tuesday that the ownership change will not affect the players themselves or change what they have to do on the court. But they all have heard about Pera, the former Apple engineer who left in 2005 to start Ubiquiti Networks, a communications technology company that makes WiFi networking equipment.
"We've heard a lot of good things about him, and his intentions are all good," Conley said. "I know the city of Memphis should be excited. As a team, we are excited. It's going to be a different expectation for us, and we're just looking forward to taking it on."

Barkley: LeBron better than Jordan?



EW YORK -- Charles Barkley thinks LeBron James can be better than Michael Jordan.
Jordan is considered by many the best player in NBA history, but Barkley believes his teammate with the Dream Team can be surpassed by James.

"I do think he can be better than Michael," Barkley said. "I thought I would never compare somebody to Michael Jordan. But this guy, LeBron James, he does everything well. Michael did everything well. LeBron James is just bigger, stronger, faster. That's the only difference."
Barkley makes his comments on the first episode of NBA TV's "Open Court," to debut Tuesday at 11 p.m. ET. The series features a round-table discussion of NBA TV and TNT commentators. They include Shaquille O'NealReggie MillerKenny SmithSteve SmithChris WebberSteve Kerr and Ernie Johnson.
James won his first NBA title and third MVP award last season, joining Jordan as the only players to win the NBA title, regular-season MVP, NBA Finals MVP and Olympic gold medal in the same year.
Jordan won six championships during his Hall of Fame career.
"Unfortunately for LeBron, now that the monkey is off his back, he is going to be compared to two people: Kobe Bryant and Michael Jordan," O'Neal said. "So now the question is how many championships can he get? We all know he is a competitor."