Watson again is upstaged by Bibby

LMM

Starter
http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/12533063p-13388342c.html

Watson again is upstaged by Bibby



By Joe Davidson -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PST Wednesday, March 9, 2005


There's a tattoo on Earl Watson's arm that pretty much sums his duels with Kings guard Mike Bibby over the years.



"Trials and Tribulations." Is there room for "Despair"?



Watson is the Memphis Grizzlies guard who has seen Bibby's act before, up close and personal, with Tuesday night being the closest view and most personal.

He defended Bibby about as well as legally possible on the game's final, frantic play, when the Kings' floor leader eluded Watson near the baseline, raced to the top of the key, caught the ball and unleashed a 33-foot game-winning three-pointer at the buzzer.

And off the glass for good measure. The Kings prevailed 85-82 and kept Memphis at arm's length in a tightening Western Conference race.

"Another big shot by Bibby," Watson muttered later. "Wow. He's done that a lot."

Watson said last week his toughest assignment in college was Bibby, when he was the cool, collected leader of Arizona and Watson competed for UCLA. And his toughest assignment in the NBA? Bibby, again.

"He always hit big shots," Watson said, nodding. "His whole career since I've seen him play, so it was a total Bibby shot. That was huge off the backboard. I don't think he called glass."

Watson tied it at 82-82 with a layup with just under a minute to play, a score that stood until Bibby's last effort. And Watson knew who would receive that opportunity.

"No doubt it was going to be Mike," he said. "I wouldn't do anything different. Well, the only thing I'd do different would be to tackle him. But then he'd get free throws, and he makes those, too."

Grizzlies coach Mike Fratello was left to bite his tongue. He wondered why no one on the three-man officiating crew started the clock when the inbound pass was deflected by James Posey, with each man possessing a timer button on his belt. They didn't touch it until Bibby had the ball. A five-minute debate ensued at the scorer's table, to no avail, because officials can only rule if Bibby got the shot off in time.

"The game should have been over, and we should be in overtime," Fratello said. "But because we don't have the power to correct an incorrect decision, we have a team with a loss right now that should still be playing.

"You can't approximate how much time was lost by the time our guy deflected it. That's why the ball died like a quail and changed direction, and (Bibby) had to run to it."

Bibby never disputed that the ball was tipped, and he added "sometimes that happens." It goes down as another Twilight Zone finish at Arco Arena. There was the buzzer-beating block by Amare Stoudemire that allowed Phoenix to hold on. And later, there was the non-call goal-tend by Dallas' Erick Dampier, who pinned the ball against the glass in the closing minutes, allowing the Mavericks to rally and win.
 
LMM said:
http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/12533063p-13388342c.html

Watson again is upstaged by Bibby



By Joe Davidson -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PST Wednesday, March 9, 2005

There's a tattoo on Earl Watson's arm that pretty much sums his duels with Kings guard Mike Bibby over the years.



"Trials and Tribulations." Is there room for "Despair"?



Watson is the Memphis Grizzlies guard who has seen Bibby's act before, up close and personal, with Tuesday night being the closest view and most personal.

He defended Bibby about as well as legally possible on the game's final, frantic play, when the Kings' floor leader eluded Watson near the baseline, raced to the top of the key, caught the ball and unleashed a 33-foot game-winning three-pointer at the buzzer.

And off the glass for good measure. The Kings prevailed 85-82 and kept Memphis at arm's length in a tightening Western Conference race.

"Another big shot by Bibby," Watson muttered later. "Wow. He's done that a lot."

Watson said last week his toughest assignment in college was Bibby, when he was the cool, collected leader of Arizona and Watson competed for UCLA. And his toughest assignment in the NBA? Bibby, again.

"He always hit big shots," Watson said, nodding. "His whole career since I've seen him play, so it was a total Bibby shot. That was huge off the backboard. I don't think he called glass."

Watson tied it at 82-82 with a layup with just under a minute to play, a score that stood until Bibby's last effort. And Watson knew who would receive that opportunity.

"No doubt it was going to be Mike," he said. "I wouldn't do anything different. Well, the only thing I'd do different would be to tackle him. But then he'd get free throws, and he makes those, too."

Grizzlies coach Mike Fratello was left to bite his tongue. He wondered why no one on the three-man officiating crew started the clock when the inbound pass was deflected by James Posey, with each man possessing a timer button on his belt. They didn't touch it until Bibby had the ball. A five-minute debate ensued at the scorer's table, to no avail, because officials can only rule if Bibby got the shot off in time.

"The game should have been over, and we should be in overtime," Fratello said. "But because we don't have the power to correct an incorrect decision, we have a team with a loss right now that should still be playing.

"You can't approximate how much time was lost by the time our guy deflected it. That's why the ball died like a quail and changed direction, and (Bibby) had to run to it."

Bibby never disputed that the ball was tipped, and he added "sometimes that happens." It goes down as another Twilight Zone finish at Arco Arena. There was the buzzer-beating block by Amare Stoudemire that allowed Phoenix to hold on. And later, there was the non-call goal-tend by Dallas' Erick Dampier, who pinned the ball against the glass in the closing minutes, allowing the Mavericks to rally and win.

good article, thanks for posting!! I was very impressed that Bibby admitted that the ball was tipped, I think that shows class. I remember after the bad goal tending calls reading quotes from players of the other teams & thinking how can they NOT at least recognize what happened. It's not like they are going to change the outcome of the game.
 
LMM said:
"No doubt it was going to be Mike," he said. "I wouldn't do anything different. Well, the only thing I'd do different would be to tackle him. But then he'd get free throws, and he makes those, too."
LOL!!! :D I didn't know Watson was from UCLA... he must be annoyed with Bibby always hitting those game winners against him. Hehe.
 
Twix said:
LOL!!! :D I didn't know Watson was from UCLA... he must be annoyed with Bibby always hitting those game winners against him. Hehe.
I hope he doesnt turn into a manic and tries to kill Bibby for ruining his career soon :D
 
"Another big shot by Bibby," Watson muttered later. "Wow. He's done that a lot."

yeah thats going in the sig

as for Earl Watson...he did play great defense on Mike all the 4th quarter...but his great defense was outshawdowed by Mike's even better offense

Earl Watson was THE reason why the Grizz got back into the game (well that and the fact that we ice cold shooting wise)
 
love_them_kings said:
good article, thanks for posting!! I was very impressed that Bibby admitted that the ball was tipped, I think that shows class. I remember after the bad goal tending calls reading quotes from players of the other teams & thinking how can they NOT at least recognize what happened. It's not like they are going to change the outcome of the game.

yeah that bothered me too. amare of course said "it was a great block, i timed it perfectly." erik dampier said "it goes down in the books as a good block" so at least he was hinting to the fact that it was a goaltend. so yeah bibby has class... always has though.
 
yeah but it was VERY obvious that it was tipped once you seen the replay...there is NO WAY Mike could of actually said..."no nope that ball was not tipped"....besides they showed Mike looking the replay wondering why everyone was still looking the shot over...somebody pointed to the screen to show him exactly what the "controversary" was all about

BUT

for my own personal laughing sake i would loved Mike to have said

"It was just a good shot a good shot by me"

ya know a la Erick Dampier

LMFAO
 
^^ dampier's "block" was a VERY obvious goaltend, too, even without seeing the replay.
 
Back
Top