Lakers, Timberwolves Try to Avoid Historic Collapse

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Lakers, Timberwolves Try to Avoid Historic Collapse
Last Season's Conference Finalists Might Be Lottery-Bound
By STEVE ASCHBURNER, AOL



LOS ANGELES - A former clash of the titans might be reduced to a battle over an extra Ping-Pong ball.

The Lakers and Timberwolves, who square off Thursday night, have far different teams than last spring's squads that collided in the Western Conference finals.

Never before has a pair of NBA conference finalists, one year later, missed the playoffs entirely. Never before, as well, have two pretend contenders mapped out such divergent routes leading to the same dreary place: Secaucus, N.J., site of the annual draft lottery.

The Timberwolves never asked for this. The Lakers all but begged for it. One has suffered this season from corrosion. The other, of course, from explosion.

Minnesota, still convinced it can catch and pass Denver or even Memphis in the West standings (despite a troublesome bulge in the loss column), assumed that what worked in 2003-04 was good enough to work again in 2004-05. Especially with bit players from last year's top-seeded team - Wally Szczerbiak, Troy Hudson, Michael Olowokandi - healthy and available for a new 82. More figured to be better, with added depth around the league's reigning Most Valuable Player Kevin Garnett and, in Sam Cassell and Latrell Sprewell, a couple of salty compadres.

Minnesota assumed wrong. Sprewell and Cassell took the relative success of last spring - the Wolves never had advanced past the first round until they arrived - as a mandate to seek contract extensions. Owner Glen Taylor and vice president of basketball Kevin McHale chimed back a la Stevie Wonder, "You haven't done nothin'," and took a more prudent view, factoring in the two aging backcourt stars' combined 69 years and the $17 million Taylor had just lost to the luxury tax rules.

Rarely has being right felt so wrong: Sprewell's scoring average is down by more than four points to 12.6, a career low. Defensively, Sprewell has lost a step and the NBA's new hands-off policy makes him look slower.

As for leadership, hey, how can a guy lead when he's worried about feeding the family, to paraphrase Sprewell's notorious preseason comment. That PR disaster set the tone for Minnesota this season.


Cassell, on the heels of his first All-Star season, is averaging six points and two assists less than a year ago (13.8, 5.3) and has missed 23 of 71 games, mostly due to a recurring right hamstring strain. He's also been slowed by offseason hip surgery.

There have been other problems: Hudson played most of this season as if still hurt, or convinced he was. Szczerbiak, in his sixth season, still doesn't fit with this team. Olowokandi remains a tease in the middle who looks good enough, once every fortnight, to keep himself handsomely employed. The Wolves aren't especially quick or athletic or strong or tough, and even Garnett sagged for much of February when his aching right knee yipped at him louder than usual.

There was one more lingering issue, a sense from within the Minnesota locker room that, at any point, the team could flip a switch and start playing at a championship level, rather than the 8-5 of November, the 8-6 of December, the 8-9 of January and the look-out-below 4-9 of February. It was as if the Wolves were ready for those best-of-7 series, but not the 82 games that preceded them.

So instead of flipping a switch, Minnesota switched a Flip, dumping coach Flip Saunders at 25-26, then going 12-8 with in McHale's first 20 games on the bench. That doesn't look, right now, as if it will be good enough.

Still, whatever disappointments the Timberwolves have thrown at their fans, the Lakers have loaded up double. Minnesota's streak of eight consecutive playoff appearances is in jeopardy; the Lakers almost certainly will snap a 10-year string. This is a franchise that, dating back to its Minneapolis roots, has missed the postseason only four times in 57 seasons and just once in the past 28.

But what else could anyone have expected, with Kobe Bryant wielding his free agency like a club last summer? Using - or rather, abusing - the Clippers for leverage, Bryant waited until it was clear that coach Phil Jackson would not be back and center Shaquille O'Neal had been traded to Miami before re-upping as owner Jerry Buss' chosen one.

The parts that Miami sent back in the O'Neal trade were just that, parts, tooled primarily for a perimeter team with none of the inside-out dominance Bryant enjoyed with the big man. Coach Rudy Tomjanovich, stepping in for Jackson, proved to be a temp worker, stepping down after a 24-19 start. Then Frank Hamblen took over, dusted off Jackson's triangle offense to further confuse matters and went 8-18, losing eight in a row - the second-longest losing streak in team history - before beating New York on Tuesday night.

"They're starting to erode my immune system, I'll tell you that," Hamblen said last week after No. 7 in the skid.

Bryant? He's doing fine, averaging 28.1 points and a career-high 41.7 minutes. But his assists are down, he's chasing the ball more than ever defensively and you've got to go down to No. 48, among the league's Top 50 scorers, to find another Laker (Lamar Odom, 15.2 ppg). The Lakers are one of eight teams giving up more than 100 points per game, and rank dead last in forcing turnovers.

The lid on all this seemed to blow Sunday, when guard Chucky Atkins, quoted in the Los Angeles Times, made remarks critical of Bryant. Asked before a game against Philadelphia what type of moves the team needed to make, Atkins responded: "I ain't the GM of this team. Kobe's the GM of this team. Ask Kobe. You've been watching this [stuff] all year. You've been watching it and I've been playing in it."

But Atkins' status as that one honest man lasted only a day. By Monday, the veteran guard had backed off his initial comments, and rather peevishly at that. "They wrote the wrong thing and they know what's up," he said. "Guys have been taking shots at Kobe Bryant all year. He hasn't broken, and he ain't going to be broken."

Why should he be? Bryant won't be the one sitting at the draft lottery in May with the embarrassed look on his face. That will be GM Mitch Kupchak, seated not so far from McHale (or, if McHale can't stomach it, Wolves GM Jim Stack).

Secaucus, they'll find out, can be lovely in May. It's the six months leading up to it that stink.

Steve Aschburner covers the NBA and the Timberwolves for the Minneapolis Star Tribune.



http://aolsvc.news.aol.com/sports/article.adp?id=20031023224209990004
 
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The lid on all this seemed to blow Sunday, when guard Chucky Atkins, quoted in the Los Angeles Times, made remarks critical of Bryant. Asked before a game against Philadelphia what type of moves the team needed to make, Atkins responded: "I ain't the GM of this team. Kobe's the GM of this team. Ask Kobe. You've been watching this [stuff] all year. You've been watching it and I've been playing in it."

But Atkins' status as that one honest man lasted only a day. By Monday, the veteran guard had backed off his initial comments, and rather peevishly at that. "They wrote the wrong thing and they know what's up," he said. "Guys have been taking shots at Kobe Bryant all year. He hasn't broken, and he ain't going to be broken."

---------------

Jeanie Buss: "Phil is coaching in NY next year."
 
I have noticed of late (late in his career) Chuck has become quite the bigmouth. I have the feeling he was the vocal one in the Carlisle fireing. He now doesn't realize that he is not nearly as beloved in LA and is messing with a player whom has all the power...
 
EmKingsFan4 said:
Minnesota, still convinced it can catch and pass Denver or even Memphis in the West standings

*laughes*

you keep thinking that you woofs.

i love seeing both these teams going down
 
Im watching the Minny LA game right now and it occured to me that if an Ace can be both one and eleven then why cant both teams loose... you know if neither team can break 100 then they both take an L?
 
lets be reasonable here guys anything can happen the wolves are currently the 9th seed in the west 2 games out of the PO picture....Denver has moved up to the 7th seed after the win over Utah last night leaving Memphis to fall back into the 8th spot...anybody seen Memphis's remaining schedule??? They easily have the worst remaining schedule out of all 30 teams in the league...just think of all the top teams in the west those are who they have to play and in a lot of those situations TWICE TWICE! Also includes two HUGE games against the Denver the team they are battling with...anything can happen over the next 3 weeks or so...Minny is playing okay ball right now...and win over the Lakers tonight would make them just 1 game out...so...
 
Awful game. Minny leads at the half 42-38... just look like tow teams going through the motions out there.
 
HndsmCelt said:
Awful game. Minny leads at the half 42-38... just look like tow teams going through the motions out there.

Minny still has an outside shot at the 8th seed and have won 4 of 5. LA is playing ping pong, so you're right about that part. Dirty little secret is that Odom is fine, but probably won't play another minute this year (probably similiar in circumstances to Boozer). High probability that both of them are playing elsewhere next year.
 
Minny and L.A. out of the playoffs. T'Wolves are a cautionary tale for Kings fans that assume talent alone gets you into the playoffs (in other words, props to Rick Adelman)
 
Thats 5 in a row for Minny. Don't count them out yet... I don't like them but they are making a charge. With Memphis on the decline I predict Minny will make it.

The Kings are not a lock yet. I hope we are not all getting complacent (hope I spelled that right) about it all.
 
BigWaxer said:
The Kings are not a lock yet. I hope we are not all getting complacent (hope I spelled that right) about it all.

I don't want you guys in the lottery. I'll pull for Sac insofar as that is concerned.
 
Gargamel said:
I don't want you guys in the lottery. I'll pull for Sac insofar as that is concerned.

Garg -- your team does know that no matter how many it loses its a long shot for the #1 pick, right? :p
 
Bricklayer said:
Garg -- your team does know that no matter how many it loses its a long shot for the #1 pick, right? :p

I just want high enough to nab Felton or Jack. If they get pick 1-3 thru divine intervention (or Stern intervention), Kupchak is taking Bogut and I'm gonna have to squirm in anger when Chris Paul or Marvin Williams hit their primes.
 
wow... chucky couldn't buy a jumpshot today. neither could most of them anyway :( ugly game in the first half 'specially
 
Evenstar said:
*laughes*

you keep thinking that you woofs.

i love seeing both these teams going down
Amen to that! Oh how the mighty (and cocky) have fallen!....I am not someone who delightes when someone else is down but this team had it coming...dynasties have to fall at some point. Also they have to be seriously delusional to think that they can pass up Denver! :rolleyes:
 
iheartBrad said:
lets be reasonable here guys anything can happen the wolves are currently the 9th seed in the west 2 games out of the PO picture....Denver has moved up to the 7th seed after the win over Utah last night leaving Memphis to fall back into the 8th spot...anybody seen Memphis's remaining schedule??? They easily have the worst remaining schedule out of all 30 teams in the league...just think of all the top teams in the west those are who they have to play and in a lot of those situations TWICE TWICE! Also includes two HUGE games against the Denver the team they are battling with...anything can happen over the next 3 weeks or so...Minny is playing okay ball right now...and win over the Lakers tonight would make them just 1 game out...so...
As far as Memphis goes I have a lot of respect for the Grizz...they are the only NBA team that seems to have cracked the Spurs.. they are 2-0 in their Spurs series. I think they'll make a real run in the playoffs...or maybe I'm just in a generous mood today! ;)
 
Man the Lakers are 1-9 in their last 10 games, unbelievable. Even I didn't think they could collapse down the stretch like this, they really got off to a good start this year. Odom is hurt, but even before that they just couldn't come together as a team... I wonder why?
 
KP said:
Man the Lakers are 1-9 in their last 10 games, unbelievable. Even I didn't think they could collapse down the stretch like this, they really got off to a good start this year. Odom is hurt, but even before that they just couldn't come together as a team... I wonder why?
Repeat after me...

Kobe Bryant.
 
insyder said:
Repeat after me...

Kobe Bryant.
Nah... Don't you know thats just the media saying that?? The Lakers didn't even really go 1-9 in the last ten, It's all a conspracy by Jim Rome.
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