Sunday, May 31, 2009

Goodbye Cleveland

Orlando unceremoniously bounced Cleveland from the playoffs last night. I'll be having Mickael Pietrus 3-pointer nightmares all summer; did he miss a shot in this series? The only thing more harrowing is that Dwight Howard can now rule the East for the next 10 years and may have surpassed LeBron as the dominant player in the game. I'll be rooting for Orlando in the Finals, though.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Official adventures

Well, that was a close call. The Cavs somehow staved off elimination tonight. The death march will continue Saturday evening in Disney World.

I'm not the only one who thinks the officiating is totally wacko. Bill Simmons, ESPN's Sports Guy, agrees.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Anvil time

If the last Cavs' loss was crushing, tonight's is like it's raining anvils. Or Orlando Magic 3-pointers as it were. Sure, Orlando has been unconscious from 3-land all series. It's hard to believe this could keep up, but it may not matter at this point--Cleveland appears to be done. The series has shown that Coach of the Year Mike Brown has some growing up to do. As does LeBron James. Jordan, Magic and Bird wouldn't miss free throws and make careless turnovers down the stretch. And Brown completely got away from the ball-movement game plan in the latter stages of the game tonight. It will take a miracle for Cleveland to win now, and nothing indicates one is coming. The only miracle so far is that Cleveland even won one game.

Monday, May 25, 2009

Feeling Cavalier

Last night was a crushing defeat for the Cleveland Cavaliers, and it's time to reflect on the series to date. This series is beginning to feel a lot like the 2004 Pistons-Lakers matchup in the NBA Finals and the 2007 Mavericks-Warriors first-round matchup. The Magic is playing the role of the Pistons and Warriors: feisty teams that have taken the momentum from the more talented favorites. In 2004, the balanced and scrappy Pistons trounced the much-favored Lakers who had a star-laden roster with the likes of Kobe Bryant, Shaquille O'Neal, Gary Payton and Karl Malone. In 2007, the top-seeded Mavs, the best team in the league in the regular year, faced an upstart Warriors club that played a frenetic style with a bunch of half insane players.

I realized this last night when Mickael Pietrus made a number of big plays on both sides of the ball. Why Pietrus? He was a key player on the 2007 Warriors. The Magic remind a lot of those Pistons and Warriors: balanced scoring, decent defense and nothing to lose. They keep coming at you in waves, with similar players and matchup nightmares in Rashard Lewis, Hedo Turkoglu and Pietrus. All 6-9 or so and 3-point bombers.

The Magic have been laughing and smiling a lot, even in tense moments. The Cavs, court jesters when winning, look completely dejected. The Cavs won 66 games in the regular season and have home court advantage throughout the playoffs. And so they've played much tighter than Orlando, which came into Quicken Loans Arena with fearlessness for Games 1 and 2. Save for one miracle shot by LeBron James, the Magic would lead 3-0 right now. Winning 66 games takes a lot out of a team--especially one that has never done it before. Maybe fatigue is part of this, too.

Some are suggesting not to panic. For these grave-whistlers, everything's fine and Cleveland has Orlando right where it wants 'em. But these sanguine folks likely are in for a shock in the next few days. It's hard to picture a scenario in which the Cavs turn this around. I'll be pulling for them hard tomorrow night in Game 4, though.

P.S. The officiating in this series has been terrible. NBA refereeing has become a perverse, ass-backwards experience. These people actually relish making bad calls now. It seems to have become exacerbated in the playoffs. I've never seen so many obvious out-of-bounds deflections called the wrong way. And clean blocked shots called fouls. It's becoming routine.

Magic coach Stan Van Gundy raised a good point yesterday. Every time James dribbles it results in a score or a foul. I know James is great, and I'm rooting for him, but it is bizarre that this could be the case. Then again, last night, even the refs allowed the Magic to get two clean blocks on No. 23.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Little solace

I've been waiting a long time to post something about this. Browns receiver Donte Stallworth killed a pedestrian while allegedly driving drunk a couple months back. This is a sad, appalling story. But hopefully the NFL is taking this seriously, at least according to this article that just appeared on Yahoo. One of the biggest travesties of all time involves Rams defensive lineman Leonard Little, who was drunk 10 years ago when he killed another driver in a car accident. The NFL treated the incident with a shrug--Little served an eight-game suspension. He's since enjoyed a long career, the horrific accident increasingly becoming a footnote. Sure, he shouldn't be punished forever. But society shouldn't forget about it either.