Bricklayer
Don't Make Me Use The Bat
Happy New Year folks!
As in, be happy its a new damn year: The Kings of 2007 went 31-52 combined, fired a coach, had several players arrested, broke our playoff streak, broke our sellout streak, and finished things off with an 0-4 holiday homestand. Blech!
Tonight's theme is very New Yearsy, but I'm not going to claim its necessarily a picker upper -- People We've Said Goodbye to in 2007
Cisco ( A ) -- scrambling first quarter with Cisco bouncing and flopping all over the floor to good effect, and this time while he made a number of shaky decisions, it never truly got out of control. The Suns just want to run and gun, and not stop you, and Cisco has loved every minute of that this season anmd put up numbers like he was back in summer league. Already weith his career high vs. the Suns a month back, he came up one shy of that (30) tonight. Was our main man really all game long, although perhaps predictably reverted a bit down the stretch and not able to close the deal. did not create much for his teammtes, but attacked with complete confidence and was very efficient himself. Also ventured inside to bang around with the Suns' bigs (who of course aren't very) and make some hustle plays around the glass. did make a big turnover (somehow not credited) in the midst of our usual late meltdown, but otherwise a relatively clean game (a few adventuresome moments, but generally able to play throuogh them this time). And of course all of this marks this as perhaps the exact polar opposite of his outing last time vs. the Sixers. Which in itself makes the two game set classic good/bad Cisco -- they should box these two up and have trhem serve as Exhibit #1 in the Cisco Hall of Fame after he retires. Or better yet, just box the Suns up and let him play against them every night and maybe he'd be in the real Hall of Fame.
Luciano Pavarotti -- opera is not remotely my thing. I have neither a natural affinity for it, nor a false one stemming from faked sophistication. Just not my thing. And yet still, to lose this most famous of singers was a noteworthy loss. He brought opera to the masses, adn came as close as any opera singer to crossing over as a pop icon. R.I.P. Luciano.
Moore ( A ) -- and two A's is pretty damn unusual for a game we lost, but really, what are you going to do this time out? Mikki had a poor first quarter, but came on strong for a stretch of the second where the Suns achilles' heel manifested itself in a big way, and we pounded them again and again on the glass inside, leading to numerous finishes by Mikki. Kept the same hustle and finishes going into the third, and while Shawn Marion is normally the vastly superior rebounder, he was completely absent on the glass tonight and seemed to be pointedly refusing to defend Mikki (or anyone at all for that matter). Mikki kept on hustling on the offensive glass right until the end, and the Suns never really did adjust. Unfortunately Coach Theus did, and made a mistake late in the game going smallball with Quincy and moving Mikki to center. Now Brad was playing poorly at that point, and Amare had been killing us, but once Mikki had to go against Amare on the other end rather than the oddly one-dimesnional Marion, his production largely dried up.
Benazir Bhutto -- this one obviously went down only a few days ago, but could end up being a huge blow to any hope for peace in that region. I wish I could say that I thought her motivations in returning to Pakistan were for anything more noble than a power grab while sensing a weakened regime, but her return, and now assassination, threatens to throw a nuclear armed nation into complete chaos. My guess is radical Islam did the deed -- they have oh so much love and respect for life, democracy, westernized women in power etc. -- in an attempt to frame and further weaken the dictatorship, and sow the chaos in which they thrive. But it could also be the other way around. And either way just another disaster for a region full of them. R.I.P. Prime Minister.
Miller ( D+ ) -- This grade is interesting, as was the first quarter where Brad was passing/running the offense brilliantly, but getting killed by Amare inside the other way. Missed three straight shots in the space of 20 seconds in the 2nd quarter as we kept on getting it back and giving it to him for another brick. The Suns inspired him to take the three point madness to a new height, or depth I suppose, and he was 1-4 in the first half alone, and finished 1-7. Made a few more assists in the third, but his game began to fall apart for him after half, and the incessant three point chucking, no doubt to the glee of the little knucklehead we call a color commentator, was getting ridiculous. Your center should rarely be 4-16, and 4-16 with 1-7 from 3pt is a Raef LaFrentz statline. Regardless, given the rounded stats -- 9pts 7rebs 7ast I might have held this above the Mendoza line were it not for Amare just creaming us back the other way to the tune of 31pts 17rebs. Not all of it against Brad. But more than enough of it to dwarf Brad's contributions and cause Reggie to experiment with a small lineup late in the game with Quincy in and Brad on the bench.
Anna Nicole Smith -- this one is almost amusing as this is one of those classic cases of being famous for being famous. What really had Anna Nicole done to be of the top names on this list? She of course gained fame for having some very nice anatomies, and being kind and generous enough to share them with the world in a much appreciated humanitarian gesture. And she even parlayed that into a couple of crappy movie roles and one marriage for the money. But even all that was a decade ago at least. And yet she lived on and on in the tabloids, being famous just for being who she was. And then she died very young and passed away in as sensationalistic fashion as she lived most of her life. Well, R.I.P. Anna Nicole, and may the P. part finally find you.
Salmons ( B+ ) -- as expected a big first quarter just getting to the rim at will against the Suns "defense", with or without the ball (set up numerous times by Brad). Slowed down offensively in the second, but began to play a more compelte game, and finished this one wiht 7rebs and 3ast to avoid his sometimes one dimensional statliner. In the third quietly racked up points in the shadow of Cisco's big game, and had 23 going into the final stanza. Unfoirtunately had 23 coming out of the final stanza too, and was involved in a critical sequence as we began our nightly meltdown. Drove to the hoop and appeared to get fouled by Amare (Amare got ball, but followed through the arms and there was a lot of contact). John was upset, so was Reggie, and after the Suns scored, the next time down the floor John really forced a drive -- an angry drive -- got up in the air with noplace to go and through a bad pass for a turnover. And just liek that we basically go TO, Phx score, TO...and I don't remember if it was another Phoenix score, but it would not surprise me. Throw in some Tos by Douby and Cisco as well, and there is your ballgame.
Dennis Johnson -- those of us who have been basketball fans long enough will all remember D.J. as the freckle-faced PG of the Bird-era Celtics the last time they were a championship level team (those who are older still may remember him leading the Sonics to a title in the late 70s). And then he, like Red before him, shockingly passed away just before the franchise finally revived itself under his old teammate Danny Ainge, and never got to see the Garden filled back up (different Garden). R.I.P. D.J.
As in, be happy its a new damn year: The Kings of 2007 went 31-52 combined, fired a coach, had several players arrested, broke our playoff streak, broke our sellout streak, and finished things off with an 0-4 holiday homestand. Blech!
Tonight's theme is very New Yearsy, but I'm not going to claim its necessarily a picker upper -- People We've Said Goodbye to in 2007
Cisco ( A ) -- scrambling first quarter with Cisco bouncing and flopping all over the floor to good effect, and this time while he made a number of shaky decisions, it never truly got out of control. The Suns just want to run and gun, and not stop you, and Cisco has loved every minute of that this season anmd put up numbers like he was back in summer league. Already weith his career high vs. the Suns a month back, he came up one shy of that (30) tonight. Was our main man really all game long, although perhaps predictably reverted a bit down the stretch and not able to close the deal. did not create much for his teammtes, but attacked with complete confidence and was very efficient himself. Also ventured inside to bang around with the Suns' bigs (who of course aren't very) and make some hustle plays around the glass. did make a big turnover (somehow not credited) in the midst of our usual late meltdown, but otherwise a relatively clean game (a few adventuresome moments, but generally able to play throuogh them this time). And of course all of this marks this as perhaps the exact polar opposite of his outing last time vs. the Sixers. Which in itself makes the two game set classic good/bad Cisco -- they should box these two up and have trhem serve as Exhibit #1 in the Cisco Hall of Fame after he retires. Or better yet, just box the Suns up and let him play against them every night and maybe he'd be in the real Hall of Fame.

Luciano Pavarotti -- opera is not remotely my thing. I have neither a natural affinity for it, nor a false one stemming from faked sophistication. Just not my thing. And yet still, to lose this most famous of singers was a noteworthy loss. He brought opera to the masses, adn came as close as any opera singer to crossing over as a pop icon. R.I.P. Luciano.
Moore ( A ) -- and two A's is pretty damn unusual for a game we lost, but really, what are you going to do this time out? Mikki had a poor first quarter, but came on strong for a stretch of the second where the Suns achilles' heel manifested itself in a big way, and we pounded them again and again on the glass inside, leading to numerous finishes by Mikki. Kept the same hustle and finishes going into the third, and while Shawn Marion is normally the vastly superior rebounder, he was completely absent on the glass tonight and seemed to be pointedly refusing to defend Mikki (or anyone at all for that matter). Mikki kept on hustling on the offensive glass right until the end, and the Suns never really did adjust. Unfortunately Coach Theus did, and made a mistake late in the game going smallball with Quincy and moving Mikki to center. Now Brad was playing poorly at that point, and Amare had been killing us, but once Mikki had to go against Amare on the other end rather than the oddly one-dimesnional Marion, his production largely dried up.

Benazir Bhutto -- this one obviously went down only a few days ago, but could end up being a huge blow to any hope for peace in that region. I wish I could say that I thought her motivations in returning to Pakistan were for anything more noble than a power grab while sensing a weakened regime, but her return, and now assassination, threatens to throw a nuclear armed nation into complete chaos. My guess is radical Islam did the deed -- they have oh so much love and respect for life, democracy, westernized women in power etc. -- in an attempt to frame and further weaken the dictatorship, and sow the chaos in which they thrive. But it could also be the other way around. And either way just another disaster for a region full of them. R.I.P. Prime Minister.
Miller ( D+ ) -- This grade is interesting, as was the first quarter where Brad was passing/running the offense brilliantly, but getting killed by Amare inside the other way. Missed three straight shots in the space of 20 seconds in the 2nd quarter as we kept on getting it back and giving it to him for another brick. The Suns inspired him to take the three point madness to a new height, or depth I suppose, and he was 1-4 in the first half alone, and finished 1-7. Made a few more assists in the third, but his game began to fall apart for him after half, and the incessant three point chucking, no doubt to the glee of the little knucklehead we call a color commentator, was getting ridiculous. Your center should rarely be 4-16, and 4-16 with 1-7 from 3pt is a Raef LaFrentz statline. Regardless, given the rounded stats -- 9pts 7rebs 7ast I might have held this above the Mendoza line were it not for Amare just creaming us back the other way to the tune of 31pts 17rebs. Not all of it against Brad. But more than enough of it to dwarf Brad's contributions and cause Reggie to experiment with a small lineup late in the game with Quincy in and Brad on the bench.

Anna Nicole Smith -- this one is almost amusing as this is one of those classic cases of being famous for being famous. What really had Anna Nicole done to be of the top names on this list? She of course gained fame for having some very nice anatomies, and being kind and generous enough to share them with the world in a much appreciated humanitarian gesture. And she even parlayed that into a couple of crappy movie roles and one marriage for the money. But even all that was a decade ago at least. And yet she lived on and on in the tabloids, being famous just for being who she was. And then she died very young and passed away in as sensationalistic fashion as she lived most of her life. Well, R.I.P. Anna Nicole, and may the P. part finally find you.
Salmons ( B+ ) -- as expected a big first quarter just getting to the rim at will against the Suns "defense", with or without the ball (set up numerous times by Brad). Slowed down offensively in the second, but began to play a more compelte game, and finished this one wiht 7rebs and 3ast to avoid his sometimes one dimensional statliner. In the third quietly racked up points in the shadow of Cisco's big game, and had 23 going into the final stanza. Unfoirtunately had 23 coming out of the final stanza too, and was involved in a critical sequence as we began our nightly meltdown. Drove to the hoop and appeared to get fouled by Amare (Amare got ball, but followed through the arms and there was a lot of contact). John was upset, so was Reggie, and after the Suns scored, the next time down the floor John really forced a drive -- an angry drive -- got up in the air with noplace to go and through a bad pass for a turnover. And just liek that we basically go TO, Phx score, TO...and I don't remember if it was another Phoenix score, but it would not surprise me. Throw in some Tos by Douby and Cisco as well, and there is your ballgame.

Dennis Johnson -- those of us who have been basketball fans long enough will all remember D.J. as the freckle-faced PG of the Bird-era Celtics the last time they were a championship level team (those who are older still may remember him leading the Sonics to a title in the late 70s). And then he, like Red before him, shockingly passed away just before the franchise finally revived itself under his old teammate Danny Ainge, and never got to see the Garden filled back up (different Garden). R.I.P. D.J.
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