Grades v. Jazz 12/04

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Bricklayer

Don't Make Me Use The Bat
Well, after a night in which I clearly favored the women out there by posting sexy pictures of Greg Ostertag, tonight I feel like I have to do something for the guys to make up for it. Normally that would involve either explosions, or girls. Unfortunately I think its too early for me to sneak in another Pretty Girls theme, and sweet natured innocent that I am I would hate to be seen as promoting violence. Accordingly I am going to take another tact, and so guys, tonight the theme is:

Jane Austen for Dummies

Seriously. As the 1 male in 1000 in possession of this arcane knowledge, I would be remiss in not trying to pass it on in some fashion to my fellow man, for most of whom the very name is either terrifying, mystifying, or both. So pay attention guys -- many secrets of all those things you don't understand about the female of the species are buried herein.

Artest ( A- ) -- in the early going was slowed by one of the few guys who can handle him one on one in Kirlineko, but was displaying the full array of defensive skill on the other end, banging with the Jazz's big musclemen down in the post as well as guarding the Jazz's smaller musclemen out on the perimeter. Was hitting his FTs tonight, and began to get a little freer to do some things after AK47 first went to the bench and then had to guard Salmons after returning. Pattern repeated in the second half -- in the third struggled a bit against the freaky length of the lanky Russian, but with AK47 occupied elsewhere, the Jazz could not guard him down the stretch. Threw in some good battling down inside on the glass, and again led us in assists as the most important creator for us on offense. Been a huge start for Ron this year, throwing even more confusion into the difficult keep him/pay him meag contract/lose him as free agent/lose him to nuttiness/win too many games etc. etc. questions. One thing, Ron quit bleeping flexing when you do something good. Reminds me of that moronic head knocking the Clippers morons used to do, and frankly if somebody did something like that while I was on the court I would knock him on his *** the next time down the floor.
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Aunt Jane -- ok, a brief primer guys. The legendary Jane Austen lived about 200 years ago, and wrote her books in what is termed the Regency period in England in the early decades of the 19th century. She only completed six books, 4 in her lifetime, and two published after she died young (in her early 40s). And yet here we are 200 years later, with her name looming as one of the most famous authors of all time. And Jane, often accused of being a romance novelist (indeed she largely invented the romantic comedy) is not only considered perhaps the inventor of that genre, but also perhaps the first modern English novelist, one of the first of the British realists, one of the primary proto-feminists, and contrary to the sweet and syrupy image of her associated with the romance industry, a wickedly sharp and hilarious social critic who sliced and diced the social conventions and patriarchy of her day with a piercing intellect. In other words scary stuff if you are a man.

Moore ( B ) -- ack, started off the game looking like the old bad Mikki again, fumbling balls, getting shots knocked away, having rebounds ripped away, etc. Closed the first half strongly though, having some balls come to him on the glass and letting Ron set him up on offense. Was solid in the second half, still doing a few things including dropping in a hook over Boozer in the post, and cleaning up garbage. Was not rebounding though, and saw Reggie go to a variety of other people at the position for stretches, including even...Kenny Thomas! Ack!
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Pride and Prejudice -- and I will lead off here with perhaps Jane's most famous work, and one that has had a greater effect on the lives of the men still reading this than they might ever have conceived. The romantic comedy you got dragged to last week? Invented right here baby (and actually made sense in its original setting -- one of the reason so many modern rom coms are ridiculous is they try to slavishly imitate a formula which depends on class consciousness and miscommunication in an era when such things are far more unlikely with social mobility, telephones, email, text messaging etc.). Tall dark handsome and conventently rich? Bingo (the name is Mr. Darcy btw, and far more women have dreamed of him than have ever dreamed of you). And last but not least, Cosmopolitan's constant advice to women to abuse the hell out of men and play hard to get as method of getting their guy? Yep, you guessed it. And while you may never have heard of her, the story's heroine, Elizabeth Bennet, is one of the most famous, and most ardently admired of all female protagonists. Smart, sassy, feisty, pretty, but not as beautiful as her older sister, she gets the man of every woman's dreams in the end by beating the living tar out of him until he has no choice but to fall in love with her and sweep her away to his uber mansion to live happily ever after. And so that is what you have to measure up against -- you are competing with Mr. Darcy whether you know it or not. Other highlights of the book include an absolute guide of how NOT to propose to a woman unless you want her to slap you, some of the most hilarious letters ever committed to print, and an all time favorite character, the wonderfully droll Mr. Bennet (Lizzy's father) as the prototype henpecked husband/father of five daughters.

Miller ( B+ ) -- strong start in there against an even softer player in Memo. Was on the glass, and played a strong solid first half keeping us clicking on offense and givin us some presence on the interior. Did not do as much after half, and there were stretches there where you forgot he was out there. Was willingly banging around with Boozer and pals though, which showed him more ready for this type of game than was Hawes, who got pushed around. Made me oh so happy by continuing to show the kid how a real center plays the game though by bombing away from the three point line.
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Pride & Prejudice (movie) -- and so onto the recent movie version of the above book. This was extremely well done. although not strictly faithful to the book. Jane Austen purists will note with some pride that she wrote "on a very small canvass", meaning that her books were really quite demure. None of the sweeping romaticism of the Bronte sisters (think Wuthering Heights etc.), but careful, nuanced character studies set in very similar settings amongst the landed gentry and lower nobility of her time. It was what she knew. Well this movie says screw that, and pumps Jane's book up steroids. Its beautifully shot, funny, very passionate (think men on black horses charging through the night, heroines on cliffs with the wind blowing through their haair etc.), and features a star-making Oscar nominated turn by Keira Knightly proving that she is a major actress, not just an action star. She is all dark flashing eyes and trouble spelled with a capital T. If you are going to see one of these, this might be the one. Note the irony that the biggest critics of this Jane Austen movie were often not manly men worried that it would emasculate them, but the ninnies over at the Jane Austen Society (yes there is such an thing) still breathing heavily over an earlier 6 hour miniseries version of the story in the 90's that featured Colin Firth in a wet T-shirt contest (and no, that was not in the book either). As I'm pretty sure that no male, including this one, has ever sat through a 6 hour Jane Austen miniseries, my suggestion for proving your sensitivity to your wife/girl is the relatively painless 2 hour running time of this one. Note as well that this same story has been adapted again and again in recent years, set in Bollywood, amongst mormons in Utah, and in the completely testosterone proof Bridget Jones series.

Martin ( B+ ) -- decent start, killed by Brewer in the early going, but the game settled down and Kevin started doing what he does...which is to say go to the line. Again and again and again. More on the refs at the end of these grades. In any case, drew foul after foul, got several continuations, and was scoring well on a night when Ron was as well, which is a novel combination. Wasn't much beyond the points, but all the fouls were piling up and causing problems for the Jazz. Had 25 points by the end of the third when disaster maybe struck -- did not see where it happened, but all of a sudden Kevin pulled up lame on the secodn to last play of the quarter. he hobbled around until the end of the period, but was then taken to the lockerroom and diagnosed with a pulled groin apparently. And that's an injury that can really linger and just take forever to come back from. Always a chance to reinjure it too.
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Sense and Sensibility -- and so we go off to Austen book #2, the other "and" novel. This one was not a huge favorite with me, and I think had as a central theme something very iimportant to Jane and her time, but not so much now. It features perhaps Jane's deepest exploration of the messed up circumstances women at the time had to live in -- at the time property was very frequently bestowed upon the eldest male in a family, even an extended family (often via a nasty legal device called a fee tail that is strongly disfavored or flat out outlawed in most jusridictions today). And the result was that the women in a family were often completely out of luck, and could be quickly reduced to poverty if they could not find a nice, rich, man to marry them. Hence the great "romantic" Jane Austen, often, as in this story, looks right through the romance to the pure practical effects of marriage -- a home, financial security, a future. Note that Jane herself never married and died a poor old spinster. In any case, its a major theme here, as is the obscure difference between "sense" (i.e. intelligence, groundedness) vs. sensibility (exactly the hyper-romantic overwrought I will kill myself for love stuff that jane had no time for), that at least for me did not really resonate, although at the time it was written Jane was criticizing other women's tendency toward hyped up "sensibility" in her books as much as she was attacking the patriarchy.
 
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Beno ( D+ ) -- got killed by Deron all game long, and while Williams slowed down for a while in the first half while Salmons took him, Beno never did get much going in the himself. Took a hard fall on his elbow after Williams blocked his layup attempt, which was bracing (especially in light of the later Kevin injury) -- we simply have nothing behind him. But turned out I think to only be a funny bone type thing, and he was back after the break. Got lit up again by Williams in the third and threw some really mysterious passes for turnovers that were just headed off to nobody -- I mean bad enough you didn't know who he was even trying to reach. Finally broke free for a big layup late to make it a 4 pt game late. But overall kind of surprisingly unequal to this match. Beno is not a high level starting PG, but I'd kind of gotten used to him being competitive agianst even good PGs, and I was a little surprised at his inability to handle Deron's strength in this one (Beno himself having good size/strength for a PG).
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Sense and Sensibility (movie) -- and again, perhaps stemming from this being one of my less favorite Austen books, I felt that this quite famous 90's movie (from the heart fo the huge Jane Austen surge of that decade) was somewhat overrated. It was beautiful. And nuanced. And sad in spots and all that. But...I think some of it has to do with the pacing of the whole story. As 99% of women reading this have already seen it, and 99% of men will desperately strive not to, I have few quibbles wiht dropping the spoiler that the central love story is introduced in the first 15 minutes fo the story, and then disappears for two hours of longing and depression until the happy ending at the very end of the film. Another problemn is that Emma Thompson's much lauded performance here is very good, but she is far too old for the role (a common problem with Austen adaptations is that her characters are always in their late teens/early 20s -- any older was pretty mcuh not marriagable in an age when you were an old man/woman by 40 -- and yet her characters often are far wiser and more sophisticated than any 18-25 year old you will ever meet. Hence the tendency to often cast women old enough to express the sophistication, but who no longer make sense agewise for the story). In any case, Emma knew the character in and out, but was too old and that made the central romance seem less beleivable. I also had a hard time entirely buying Hugh Grant in a role where they did not allow him to crack even one joke. What's the point? However watching Alan Rickman (Professor Snape/the terrorist from Die Hard etc.) play a good guy and do well with it was fun though.

Cisco ( B ) -- came in firing in the first half and did some positive things, but also began to teeter on the edge there by the end, and with Ron and Kevin both scoring well, was pulled after only about 7 minutes of first half action. With Kevin gone in the 4th got some extended run. Struggled trying to battle with Harpring's power down inside, but came on to hit big shots down the stretch, including what may have been the backbreaking three. Continues to be the primary prqacticioner of the "no, no no!!! Yes!" shot -- even most of the ones he hit were bad shots that went in. But they went in, and so while he continues to terrify me, that same brainless fearlessness helped him help us seal this one.
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Emma -- ah, Emma. Probably my favorite Austen book, although I did like P&P a lot as well. This book is a different flavor for Jane, as her main character here (the aforementioned Emma) is not in the normal distressed circumstances facing her other heroines, and is instead a kind of country princess bestowing her beauty and wit and charity (she is super rich) to all the neighborhood around her. It is also I think Jane's funniest book, as the main character tries and fails to play matchmaker to all of her acquiantances, and is of course often woefully mistaken about things. By the end of the book she of course finds love herself, and its been sitting right in front of her the whole time. In fact by the end fo the story there have been no fewer than five weddings. Which is ultra-chicky of course. Very funny book though -- while I suspect she would have torn me a new one, I think it would have been a real hoot to know Jane Austen. She could be hilarious, and for a woman of her time was completely fearless in pillorying anything she found ludicrous around her.

Douby ( B ) -- no real impact in a short first half stint, but his 4th quarter stint had a major impact though. Not with offense really, but by sliding over underneath Boozer to draw Boozer's 5th foul on a charge -- really hurt the Jazz and set the stage for Ron's late domination (Boozer could not afford to get a foul and so let him do whatever he wanted to). Tried to really harass Williams there for a few minutes as well. Got his only points at the, you guessed, line.
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Emma (movie) -- in the same way that P&P I think really made Keira a respected actress, and Emma Thompson got so much credit in S&S, this movie was the one that really launched Gwyenth Paltrow as something more than just Brad Pitt's girlfried (and how do you like Brad's life BTW? Get born pretty and go from Gwyenth Paltrow to Jennifer Aniston to Angelina Jolie...gee, tough life). In any case, it took me a while to adjust to Paltrow as Emma, because it was not how I had pictured the character. But it really was a great performance, and the sort of thing that Paltrow was born to play. Not to mention that she looked truly gorgeous. I have mentioned in the past that I find her pretentious when she is interviewed etc., but this was a very intelligent and funny performance. If Keira was trouble, Gwyenth in this one would be what my grandmother would have called a "pill." But a loveable pill, which is a tough thing to pull off. Also watch for the appearance of Obi Wan Kenobi in an odd bit of casting as Frank Churchill. Anyway, this movie took the book and moved it toward cute. Its funny, cute, not horrendously deep, but good light hearted fun. If you had to choose an alternate to Pride & Prejudice to prove your sensitivity, this could be the one. There is also another version that apparently came out at about the same time (late 90s) starring Kate Beckinsale. Nromally I would not, but since I rather like Kate (see first Pretty Girls thread) I might be tempted to see it to compare one day.

Salmons ( A ) -- quiet in the last few minutes of the first, but able to take advantage of Harpring's lack of lateral mobility in the early 2nd, and slowed Deron with his length and defense on the other end. But really came into his own after Kevin went down, and more than any other King won this one with his explosive play in the 4th. Got off to a big start to the quarter getting to the rim, and filled right in for Kevin on the FT parade, again assisted by the tweet happy refs. The Jazz could not seem to find a mtachup for him, although I have to express some confusion with their defensive schemes in general late. It would seem obvious to put Brewer on John, quickness on quickness, keep AK47 on Ron, and make everybody else beat you. But that was rarely the case. Anyway, Salmons played an inspired quarter, and led the charge to a ridiculous 43pt 4th quarter (and about 20 of them from the line)
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Clueless -- and here I thought I would include a 2nd movie adaptation of "Emma", but one of a much different sort. The hilarious mid-90's teen culture satire Clueless. It is Emma character for character, but updating the whole tale to 1995. Again its very funny -- great base material. And again it made a star (although temproarily) of its heroine Alicia Silverstone.
 
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Hawes ( D ) -- short stint in the late first/early second, and got a new lesson on the physicality of the NBA as he was pushed around in there. Came in briefly in the second half, got packed at the rim by AK47, and was gone yet again. Given little opportunity (basically one bad play each time and out), but looked overmatched in his brief appearances.
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Mandfield Park -- exists I think down there with S&S for me as a not-as-favorite. Here Jane is back on familiar ground with her less privileged relation finding love (and wealth) amongst her more privileged family (and yes, at the time and in the books marrying cousins was considered perfectly normal). I think what might make this a less favorite is the main character herself, who has less of quickness and wit than many of the others, and more of a timid moralizing self righteous bent. You want to fel sorry for her and her suituation, including some of Jane's classic Cinderella/sister who gets no respect stuff, but she is somewhat harder to warm up to than the others. Mansifeld Park is another one of Jane's stories though where her social commentary comes to the fore, as the poor relation is banished back to her impoverished family at one point after having grown up for years amongst the wealthy.

Thomas ( INC ) -- a Kenny Thomas sighting out of nowhere in the third. You will have to explian that one to me sometime. Anyway, Kenny was Kenny. Grabbed a board, made some active swipes at the ball on defense. Turned it over with a terrible pass. Sat down.
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Mansfield Park (movie) -- and I just, as I went ot find a picture to introduce this movie with, saw that there was a new effort from the BBC to put this one to film this past year starring Billie Piper, who I thought was quite good on Dr. Who. That version might be out there as a possible watch, because I was not a big fan of the movie adaptation from 1999 (which is where the above picture is from). For one thing, they cast Fanny terribly. Another one of those too old actress things, but blatantly nonsensical this time as a 30 yr old who looked 30 playing an 18yr old or whatever, and in this book, the acharacter's age is absolutely key. And on top of that, they changed her character significantly, as well as several others. Far from timid or shy, Fanny is played almost as a pants wearing feminist in this one, and they throw in an ugly heavy handed slavery bent that is really better restricted to literary theory. All in all, not the one I would recommend if you were only to watch one. Billie Piper showed me (surprisingly) that she could act and be very likable in the Dr. Who series though, so maybe the new one will be a better effort.

Theus ( ) --
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Persuasion -- often called Jane's most "mature" book (it was not only her last one, and published after she died, but also starred the oldest of her heroines) I think it might be my favorite after P&P and Emma. In this one, her somewhat older (28!!! shocking!) heroine has already lost the "bloom" of her youthful beauty, and is leading a shrunken and somewhat sad life in the wake of rejecting true love some years earlier. So the story becomes whether she can regain her bloom, regain love etc. etc. before she becomes an old maid. It again finds Jane pillorying pompous wannbe noble types, as well as inroducing the usual Austen stock character of the charming/dashing scoundrel to distract the heroine from happily ever after (that character literally appears in every Austen novel, although he is not always entirely evil, the young man with a mysterious past and the happiest/livliest manners is inevitably a shady character of questionable morality set out as kind of an object lesson against superficiality compared to the more substantial true love interests -- think of the hot guy in the club who sleeps around vs. a guy who is stable and "good husband material"). In any case, solid book, just a bit depressing in bits as your heroine is kind of emotionally battered and downtrodden for a long spell of the book (oh yes, and Jane uses one completely horrendous deus machina coincidence/convenience at the end to make things all work out -- she was rarely clumsy, but that felt that way). Apparently there was a highly regarded movie made about this one back in the early 90's but I've never seen it.


Other Grades
Jarron Collins/Jerry Sloan ( A+ ) -- this is a grade well earned by the second worst big man in the league, and the coach who continues to play him. The worst big man in the league surprsingly does not play for us either, and is of course his even sadder sack brother. Wonder what HIS +/- is?

Joe Maloof ( F ) -- and whoa, just like magic all of a sudden Joe Maloof shows back up now that the coach who won over 300 games for him has left town. Well Joe, you know what they say about money not being able to buy you class.

Refs ( F ) -- okay, let's get this out of the way -- the refs handed us this game on a golden platter. If we were involved in a game where the other team shot nearly 50 FTs against us we would go ape**** (in fact Game 6 of the Lakers series may have been close). But the thing is, much as I frequently mention the flopamania which is hard to stomach for us, we really weren't doing much of that tongiht. Rather the issue, like it was for Bavetta's crew a few nights back, was an officiating crew just in love with the little whistle around their necks. Tweet tweet tweet. Touch fouls, breathing fouls, I actually thoguht it might actually have started to make the game rougher as guys were starting to get their whacks in anticipating that fouls were going to be called everytime anyway. In any case, I hate that. its garbage. No matter who benefits (and we normally do because of our finesse slashers). Nobody wants to watch a FT shooting contest you tools, and last time I checked this was still a contact sport involving full grown very healthy men.
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Northanger Abbey -- oops, and I just noticed that that is the same picture, no doubt of when these books were first published. This one is the other one (with Persuasion) published after Jane's death, and represents something of the bastard child amongst her books. Apparently it was actually the first one she completed, but it then sat unpublished on a publisher's shelf for years until the family bought it back after her death. In any case, as the bastard child, it is the one that I never bothered reading. Apparently it was somewaht of a failed experiment by Jane to parody the gothic novels that were popular at the time. And so there you have it -- all six Jane books, along with some of the more prominent theatrically released movies surrounding them. You are now ready to go out and wow your date by talking Jane Austen the next time you go out (or possibly just convince her you are gay). Either way, make sure to be "amiable" (nice/attrative/well mannered). Oh, and of course rich. Preferably handsome too. Oh, and....
 
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Clean Grades:

Artest ( A- ) -- in the early going was slowed by one of the few guys who can handle him one on one in Kirlineko, but was displaying the full array of defensive skill on the other end, banging with the Jazz's big musclemen down in the post as well as guarding the Jazz's smaller musclemen out on the perimeter. Was hitting his FTs tonight, and began to get a little freer to do some things after AK47 first went to the bench and then had to guard Salmons after returning. Pattern repeated in the second half -- in the third struggled a bit against the freaky length of the lanky Russian, but with AK47 occupied elsewhere, the Jazz could not guard him down the stretch. Threw in some good battling down inside on the glass, and again led us in assists as the most important creator for us on offense. Been a huge start for Ron this year, throwing even more confusion into the difficult keep him/pay him meag contract/lose him as free agent/lose him to nuttiness/win too many games etc. etc. questions. One thing, Ron quit bleeping flexing when you do something good. Reminds me of that moronic head knocking the Clippers morons used to do, and frankly if somebody did something like that while I was on the court I would knock him on his *** the next time down the floor.

Moore ( B ) -- ack, started off the game looking like the old bad Mikki again, fumbling balls, getting shots knocked away, having rebounds ripped away, etc. Closed the first half strongly though, having some balls come to him on the glass and letting Ron set him up on offense. Was solid in the second half, still doing a few things including dropping in a hook over Boozer in the post, and cleaning up garbage. Was not rebounding though, and saw Reggie go to a variety of other people at the position for stretches, including even...Kenny Thomas! Ack!

Miller ( B+ ) -- strong start in there against an even softer player in Memo. Was on the glass, and played a strong solid first half keeping us clicking on offense and givin us some presence on the interior. Did not do as much after half, and there were stretches there where you forgot he was out there. Was willingly banging around with Boozer and pals though, which showed him more ready for this type of game than was Hawes, who got pushed around. Made me oh so happy by continuing to show the kid how a real center plays the game though by bombing away from the three point line.

Martin ( B+ ) -- decent start, killed by Brewer in the early going, but the game settled down and Kevin started doing what he does...which is to say go to the line. Again and again and again. More on the refs at the end of these grades. In any case, drew foul after foul, got several continuations, and was scoring well on a night when Ron was as well, which is a novel combination. Wasn't much beyond the points, but all the fouls were piling up and causing problems for the Jazz. Had 25 points by the end of the third when disaster maybe struck -- did not see where it happened, but all of a sudden Kevin pulled up lame on the secodn to last play of the quarter. he hobbled around until the end of the period, but was then taken to the lockerroom and diagnosed with a pulled groin apparently. And that's an injury that can really linger and just take forever to come back from. Always a chance to reinjure it too.

Beno ( D+ ) -- got killed by Deron all game long, and while Williams slowed down for a while in the first half while Salmons took him, Beno never did get much going in the himself. Took a hard fall on his elbow after Williams blocked his layup attempt, which was bracing (especially in light of the later Kevin injury) -- we simply have nothing behind him. But turned out I think to only be a funny bone type thing, and he was back after the break. Got lit up again by Williams in the third and threw some really mysterious passes for turnovers that were just headed off to nobody -- I mean bad enough you didn't know who he was even trying to reach. Finally broke free for a big layup late to make it a 4 pt game late. But overall kind of surprisingly unequal to this match. Beno is not a high level starting PG, but I'd kind of gotten used to him being competitive agianst even good PGs, and I was a little surprised at his inability to handle Deron's strength in this one (Beno himself having good size/strength for a PG).

Cisco ( B ) -- came in firing in the first half and did some positive things, but also began to teeter on the edge there by the end, and with Ron and Kevin both scoring well, was pulled after only about 7 minutes of first half action. With Kevin gone in the 4th got some extended run. Struggled trying to battle with Harpring's power down inside, but came on to hit big shots down the stretch, including what may have been the backbreaking three. Continues to be the primary prqacticioner of the "no, no no!!! Yes!" shot -- even most of the ones he hit were bad shots that went in. But they went in, and so while he continues to terrify me, that same brainless fearlessness helped him help us seal this one.

Douby ( B ) -- no real impact in a short first half stint, but his 4th quarter stint had a major impact though. Not with offense really, but by sliding over underneath Boozer to draw Boozer's 5th foul on a charge -- really hurt the Jazz and set the stage for Ron's late domination (Boozer could not afford to get a foul and so let him do whatever he wanted to). Tried to really harass Williams there for a few minutes as well. Got his only points at the, you guessed, line.

Salmons ( A ) -- quiet in the last few minutes of the first, but able to take advantage of Harpring's lack of lateral mobility in the early 2nd, and slowed Deron with his length and defense on the other end. But really came into his own after Kevin went down, and more than any other King won this one with his explosive play in the 4th. Got off to a big start to the quarter getting to the rim, and filled right in for Kevin on the FT parade, again assisted by the tweet happy refs. The Jazz could not seem to find a mtachup for him, although I have to express some confusion with their defensive schemes in general late. It would seem obvious to put Brewer on John, quickness on quickness, keep AK47 on Ron, and make everybody else beat you. But that was rarely the case. Anyway, Salmons played an inspired quarter, and led the charge to a ridiculous 43pt 4th quarter (and about 20 of them from the line).

Hawes ( D ) -- short stint in the late first/early second, and got a new lesson on the physicality of the NBA as he was pushed around in there. Came in briefly in the second half, got packed at the rim by AK47, and was gone yet again. Given little opportunity (basically one bad play each time and out), but looked overmatched in his brief appearances.

Thomas ( INC ) -- a Kenny Thomas sighting out of nowhere in the third. You will have to explian that one to me sometime. Anyway, Kenny was Kenny. Grabbed a board, made some active swipes at the ball on defense. Turned it over with a terrible pass. Sat down.

Theus ( ) --

Other Grades
Jarron Collins/Jerry Sloan ( A+ )
-- this is a grade well earned by the second worst big man in the league, and the coach who continues to play him. The worst big man in the league surprsingly does not play for us either, and is of course his even sadder sack brother. Wonder what HIS +/- is?

Joe Maloof ( F ) -- and whoa, just like magic all of a sudden Joe Maloof shows back up now that the coach who won over 300 games for him has left town. Well Joe, you know what they say about money not being able to buy you class.

Refs ( F ) -- okay, let's get this out of the way -- the refs handed us this game on a golden platter. If we were involved in a game where the other team shot nearly 50 FTs against us we would go ape**** (in fact Game 6 of the Lakers series may have been close). But the thing is, much as I frequently mention the flopamania which is hard to stomach for us, we really weren't doing much of that tongiht. Rather the issue, like it was for Bavetta's crew a few nights back, was an officiating crew just in love with the little whistle around their necks. Tweet tweet tweet. Touch fouls, breathing fouls, I actually thoguht it might actually have started to make the game rougher as guys were starting to get their whacks in anticipating that fouls were going to be called everytime anyway. In any case, I hate that. its garbage. No matter who benefits (and we normally do because of our finesse slashers). Nobody wants to watch a FT shooting contest you tools, and last time I checked this was still a contact sport involving full grown very healthy men.
 
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Jane Austen is like the ultimite chick topic. You are really going to owe the guys after this. Otherwise, I'm so far very impressed with your knowledge regarding her bio, novels, and the numerous adaptations of her work. My favorite is "Emma" but I hated Gwyneth Paltrow as Emma (she's the perfect Jane Fairfax in my opinion).

I haven't seen a Kings game yet this year, but from the sounds of it Ron has been playing like "the best player on the team". Where was this last year? And what gives?
 
I liked the film version of Sense and Sensibility, but the type of character that is the protagonist of P&P gives me the "Kenny Thomas On the Bench' face.
 
A little culture never hurt anybody. How about significant philosophers/theologans throughout history? Let's hear it for edutainment!
 
Sensible grades and great book reports, too! I would like to emphasize what I took from Ms. Austen's novels (along with most English authors) and that was the underlying current of class consciousness. There is always an effort to describe the social pecking order and, in fact, the rise of the merchant class in this era often found merchants better off financially than some of the "blue bloods", but still lower in the pecking order. It was this sense of status that was woven into her novels that really made things interesting...at least to me.
 
Bricklayer, I cannot believe you did not include this summers movie with the enchanting Anne Hathaway and James "I show my naked rear end in every movie" McEnvoy. As a guy who has seen his fair share of chick movies I thought it was very well done, and the pace moved fast.

As to the game have you ever seen a coach not fix a match-up that has been more exploited then Salmons vs. Harpring? Everyone knows what's coming, but Sloan refuses to do something different. Also as to the free throw disparity, the odd thing is we are #1 in the league in drawing fouls, but the Jazz are #3. I think the rookie refs really helped us in this game.
 
I liked, for the most part, the job Theus did last night. I suspect the KT sighting was an attempt to see if he could use him for something/anything to change things up. I was very glad he only lasted for a few possessions before disappearing back into the crowd of onlookers.

Now my question - for Brickie... Does Theus get a grade?

;)
 
Joe Maloof ( F ) -- and whoa, just like magic all of a sudden Joe Maloof shows back up now that the coach who won over 300 games for him has left town. Well Joe, you know what they say about money not being able to buy you class.
You aint kidding! Can you say, true colors?
 
Now my question - for Brickie... Does Theus get a grade?

He should get an A for last night I think...he's going to have to work REALLY hard these next 15 games or so without Kevin...should be a very good thing for Reg, I think he's getting a crash course in NBA coaching this year, with all the injuries and suspensions and stuff, which can't hurt his maturation as a coach.
 
Jarron Collins/Jerry Sloan ( A+ ) -- this is a grade well earned by the second worst big man in the league, and the coach who continues to play him. The worst big man in the league surprsingly does not play for us either, and is of course his even sadder sack brother. Wonder what HIS +/- is?

Jarron has NOTHING on his brother Jason. According to Hollinger's rankings, Jason Collins is actually the least efficient player in the ENTIRE NBA. And somehow he manages to start for the Nets...I swear he must be sleeping with Lawrence Frank. He literally can;t do anything except play one on one post defense (and that means not blocking shots or even getting the rebound if he causes a miss due to his defense). It is so funny when the commentators compliment him when he actually gets a rebound. No player on the Jazz, the Kings, or any other team is as frustrating to watch as Jason Collins.
 
Jarron has NOTHING on his brother Jason. According to Hollinger's rankings, Jason Collins is actually the least efficient player in the ENTIRE NBA. And somehow he manages to start for the Nets...I swear he must be sleeping with Lawrence Frank. He literally can;t do anything except play one on one post defense (and that means not blocking shots or even getting the rebound if he causes a miss due to his defense). It is so funny when the commentators compliment him when he actually gets a rebound. No player on the Jazz, the Kings, or any other team is as frustrating to watch as Jason Collins.
This boggles me to no end. Why is Jason Collins starting, while Jamaal Magloire is on the end of the bench? Magloire isn't an All-Star anymore, but he'll certainly provide more production than Collins, at least in rebounds and blocks.
 
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