Monday, March 21st, 2011 at 8:50 am  |  142 responses

Post Up: Kobe Leads Lake Show

L.A. downs Portland; Knicks knocked out in Milwaukee.

by Adam Figman | @afigman

Milwaukee 100, New York 95

Not long after the Bucks appeared ready to call it a season, they reignited fan excitement by defeating a Knicks squad that looked confused and, at times, overwhelmed. Despite all the talk and player admissions that the ‘Bockers need to man up on the defensive end, they were continually outworked by Milwaukee’s offense, which was led by a strong 30-point, 11-rebound performance from Carlos Delfino. The Knicks’ O didn’t exactly make up for the team’s defensive lapses, as it shot 38.6 percent and received just 26 collective points from every player not named Stoudemire, Billups or Anthony. Brandon Jennings‘ almost triple-double (14 points, 11 rebounds, 9 assists) was vital, and his clutch J in the final minute helped seal things up, as Milwaukee moved back to within a game and a half of postseason positioning.

Washington 98, New Jersey 92

So that mini Nets-could-make-the-Playoffs rant I had the other day is moot. Probably should’ve seen that coming. The Wiz shot 51.9 percent from the field and earned a decent home victory, led by John Wall (26 points, 8 dimes) and red-hot rookie Jordan Crawford (21 points). Nets forward Kris Humphries notched a nice 18-and-17 performance in the loss.

Atlanta 104, Detroit 96

Led by Al Horford (18 points), all Hawks starters scored in double figures as ATL held off Detroit and picked up the win. The Hawks’ six-game homestand ends tomorrow against the top-ranked Bulls.

Phoenix 108, L.A. Clippers 99

Something about this clip sums up the entire game. Or maybe I was just looking for an excuse to link to that video. Either way. Blake Griffin dropped 17, but was mostly contained, as he fouled out in the middle of the fourth and watched from the sidelines as his team was defeated by the Steve Nash-led Suns. Nash had 23 points and 13 assists, while Channing Frye contributed 19 points in the win.

Sacramento 127, Minnesota 95

I’m using this space for some much-needed Samuel Dalembert appreciation. Dude put up 26 points and 17 rebounds, leading the Kings over the Wolves with yet another fantasy hoops explosion. All I’m saying is, if Dalembert is a free agent in your fantasy league, your fantasy league isn’t much of a fantasy league at all. Sorry if that offends. Also, Marcus Thornton with the 23-8-9 near-triple-double. Pick him up while you’re at it, too.

Houston 110, Utah 108

Competing for the ninth spot and the rights to still not be in position to make the postseason, the Rockets knocked off the Jazz behind Kyle Lowry‘s first triple-double (28-11-10) of the year. Kevin Martin also added 34, and Houston pulled a W despite shooting just 40.2 percent from the floor. They also won despite allowing all five Utah starters to score in double figures, led by Paul Millsap, who dropped 35 and snatched 10. Also, Al Jefferson: 17 points, 19 rebounds.

Toronto 95, Oklahoma City 93

Putting himself in the right place at the right time, Amir Johnson finished a lay-in that fell through with just 1.3 seconds to go, which would turn out to be the game-winning bucket that closed a tight, back-and-forth contest in OKC. The Thunder attempted a counter by inbounding the ball to Kevin Durant (20 points, 5 boards), but his turnaround J was way off, and his squad fell to a weak Toronto team. Andrea Bargnani and James Harden both scored the game-high of 23.

Dallas 101, Golden State 73

The Mavs turned a 13-point lead into a 28-point one in the final quarter, cruising to the home victory and getting the team back on track after a rough loss to in-state rival Spurs. Dirk Nowitzki led all players with 20, while the Warriors were just dreadful in many, many aspects of basketball yesterday. (Though they did outscore Dallas in in the paint, 28-24, somehow.) The Mavericks have one more home contest against the TWolves on Thursday before they hit the road; the Warriors are off to San Antonio tonight.

L.A. Lakers 84, Portland 80

After sputtering during the second and third quarters, the Lakers—and Kobe Bryant, more than anyone—came alive in the final segment, making the needed stops and hitting clutch jumpers when they counted most. Derek Fisher drained a J with 10 ticks remaining that sealed it up, and the Lakers earned their fourth win in as many games. Kobe led L.A. with 20; Nicolas Batum dropped the game-high of 25.

Last Call: The aforementioned Blake Griffin almost-highlight:

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  • MUBWAR

    I still don’t get how Bosh is below Amar’e. Before this year Bosh was feasting on Stoudemire’s so called STAT. Check NBA.com and let’s stop with the buffoonery.

  • http://slamonline.com zoom

    I agree that ALL the “big name” PF’s that got new deals last summer are overpaid. Stat should’ve gotten $80 million max. Not a penny over. Bosh too. Booz and Lee rebound but don’t defend. They’re overpaid too. Team owners are totally at fault, though.

  • http://www.twitter.com/TheDiesel Anton

    The Blazers game was like an entry pass to J.J. Hickson – they had it, but it slipped away.

  • http://slamonline.com zoom

    I’m all for players getting lucrative deals. I’m pro-player when it comes to the business side of the league, but tying up excessive amounts of money on one guy so that other players can’t get paid well to help the team win is silly. That’s on management’s shoulders. $100 million for STAT is excessive.

  • http://nobulljive.com/ Enigmatic

    zoom, if the Knicks hadn’t come away with someone last summer after basically being the favorites to land LeBron for the last two years until basically the offseason, it would not have been good for them.
    $100 million is too much, but I think they’d rather pay that than end up empty-handed like the Nets did (at the time).

  • http://nobulljive.com/ Enigmatic

    And can someone please explain to me why the fluck the Bulls signed John Lucas III and Jannero Pargo?
    Anyone? BC?

  • http://www.slamonline.com Sergio

    Are the Lakers still in trouble like everybody said a couple of weeks ago? That’s what I want to know.

  • http://slamonline.com/ Adam Figman

    Enigmatic..email me back! I’m trying to hook you up with this MJ jersey over here…

  • http://slamonline.com zoom

    @ Enigmatic: I totally understand the reasoning, but in reality they’d have ended up better if they got two really good players for his price.

  • http://nobulljive.com/ Enigmatic

    @Adam – Awesome!
    The email that shows up for me on here no longer works…I just use it on here due to the security issues with others occasionally being able to view your personal info.
    Anyways, please email me at enigmaticone47@yahoo.com
    Which also isn’t my personal email but I just opened it for this purpose.
    And thanks SLAM!

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    @AllenP *crickets* wow. u got nothing man. You band wagoned the Heat…. wow.

  • T-Money

    BC: I think MSG sells itself though – wasn’t it sold out too when they were absolutely terrible? Amar’e is a more exciting player than Bosh for sure but people don’t pay to see either of them, I think. I tought that Bosh was the better player last year when he was doing 24-11 and I think Bosh is still the better player now. / I think they both deserve the max. It’s just that guys like Wade and Bron can’t be paid at their actual value because of the cap.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    @BC – NYK was selling seats before Amar’e got there. THey were like top 10 in attendance every year since their last playoff appearance weren’t they?

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    Enigmatic, Pargo has been working out at the Berto rehabbing his knee for a while now, so he’s been around the team. And both him and Lucas are great locker room guys.
    They could be used to give guys some rest during the stretch run, but I don’t see any other value outside of those things.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Eboy

    Congrats on the win, Enig!

  • http://Philosophervision@blogspot.com The Philosopher

    Enigmatic:
    Congrats on the Jordan Jersey.
    I’m officially a hater. lol

  • http://nobulljive.com/ Enigmatic

    BC, I get that. But two point guards?
    Sure, Pargo can play off the ball, but he’s undersized at 6’1″.
    Anyways, ultimately I guess it doesn’t matter. It seems they’ll be playing the Jack Haley role.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    And I’m actually the one who is for charges, and still am, always will be. Refs enjoy calling a foul anytime a vertically challenged player attempts to block a shot. I’m not for flopping at all, but charges are part of the game, always have been, and always should be. Or else we would just have LeBron James running straight through everyone on every possession. The threat of a charge also keeps ball handlers mindful and under control. Charges as weird as it sounds, prevent injury

  • http://nobulljive.com/ Enigmatic

    @E and Philo – thanks, y’all.
    I’m already looking for a dope jersey frame or shadowbox and plan to hang it up next to my autographed Derrick Rose jersey.
    Go Bulls!

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    T-Money & nbk, the buzz and the excitement in New York was ridiculous when Amar’e signed with the Knicks. Yeah the Garden still had sellout crowds when the team was bad, but I think that’s just because New Yorkers love basketball and they really know the game, more than anything else.
    Fans are diehard in NYC, not fairweather at all.
    Like Bryan stated earlier, and he’s a HUGE Knick fan, the hope for the franchise was restored when STAT signed, and to me, that’s what a max guy SHOULD do.
    You can’t sit here and tell me that Knick fans would’ve been just as excited had Chris Bosh signed. No way…

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Why wouldn’t they have been just as excited? If Walsh got his way that’s who they would have signed, and before this season it was a consensus that Bosh was a better player both now and in the future. So why wouldn’t they have been just as excited about Bosh? Because he doesn’t revel in the spotlight like Amar’e does? Serious question

  • http://www.slamonline.com Eboy

    Idiotic comment, Bron. You’re Heat hate knows no bounds….even when they’re used in hypothetical situations.

  • http://nobulljive.com/ Enigmatic

    I think they woulda been hella excited for Bosh too.
    I won’t lie. He was my top choice at PF for the Bulls last summer.

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    Because New York likes big name guys. Stars, if you will. It doesn’t matter what the “consensus” said about who the better player was, the Knicks wanted/needed a star(s) to re-energize that franchise and the fan base.
    Chris Bosh could barely handle the scrutiny in Miami, do you honestly think he would’ve been able to make it in New York? Come on…

  • http://www.slamonline.com Eboy

    If anything (and I’m not defending Bosh here since I’m not too thrilled with him this season)Bosh would have the “swag” to talk a ton of sh*t about how he could change a lousy franchise (since he did in Toronto)and make them a playoff team, as the lead guy. STAT had none of that on his resume…he worked in tandem with Nash to make Phoenix a perennial playoff team. There was no doubt who ran the ship there…and his 4 letter name didn’t start with an “S”.

  • http://Philosophervision@blogspot.com The Philosopher

    Bosh would have sold tickets.
    Even if for the fans to give him the “Isiah Thomas” treatment if things got rough.
    I could be wrong, but I believe that New York fans would have loved to clown Bosh. The press in my opinion, would have loved to get in on him too.

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    I didn’t mention the Heat one time, nor was I thinking about them. I don’t know where that came from…
    And I wasn’t really that high on Bosh at all for the Bulls this summer. I just think he’s too soft. I really wanted DWade. But I was pleased with the Boozer signing because even though he doesn’t play D, you can’t go wrong with a guy who gets 20 & 10 nightly.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    THere is no logical reason to think NYK is having or would have more success with Amar’e then with Bosh. None. They are barely over .500, Toronto was less talented last season then NYK is/was all year this year, and they finished 40-42. Unless you think Bosh would have folded under the pressure, I mean like he ever folded as the man in the past? Wait a second, about 22 and 9 for 5 straight years like clockwork until he got to Miami? your probably right

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    I just feel like it takes a certain type of player/person to run in New York. Amar’e has that swag, Chris Bosh doesn’t.
    Not to me.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Eboy

    Don’t play dumb, B.

  • http://slamonline.com The Fresh Prince of Nsam

    Kobe Bryant = Kevin Garnett!

  • http://www.slamonline.com Eboy

    Amar’e is playing his swag cards incredibly well leading his team and barely playing .500 ball.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    I see

  • http://nobulljive.com/ Enigmatic

    I just wanted Bosh because I knew he was the least injury-prone and the youngest of the three (Bosh, Boozer, STAT).

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    Miss me with those stats, nbk. I swear man, a lot of you dudes are just numbers CRAZY. As if that’s the only thing that matters in this game.
    And since when is the pressure in Toronto the equivalent to the pressure of NYC? Whatever…

  • MUBWAR

    So New York is all about HYPE and PERSONA more then actual talents and hard work. That seems about right since they signed Amar’e and Melooooo

  • http://slamonline.com The Fresh Prince of Nsam

    @Bryan 10:36 : Amen!

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    I don’t think they care any less about winning, Mubwar, but yeah, I tend to think that’s their mindset when it comes to signing players.
    The Isiah Thomas era notwithstanding…

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Bryan Crawford when ever has a guy who put up all star numbers every year of their career ever switched cities and become a bum? Numbers tell you a lot whether you want to admit it or not, like for instance I knew Amar’e was overrated because of how inefficient he is on defense. I have known for 5 years now that Amar’e is not a max guy, and one of the worst defensive 4′s in the NBA. And watching every game of his career for the first 9 years is not what told that, its numbers. Numbers are what have to be used against people who think their opinion is superior to facts to show everyone else that just because one person has a strong opinion doesn’t mean its even close to right. You keep your opinion that’s based on how you think a person you have never met would perform in a situation that is likely no more stressful then the one he is in now. But whatever, your right, stats are completely useless, its not like they have a yearly conference that is the biggest non-player related basketball event of the year, which is attended by a representative by all 30 teams focusing on just stats….

  • http://nobulljive.com/ Enigmatic

    They really have “a yearly conference that is the biggest non-player related basketball event of the year, which is attended by a representative by all 30 teams focusing on just stats”?
    Damn, bunch of nerds…

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    If it can be manipulated into saying whatever you want it to say to prove your point, then no, I don’t put a whole lot of stock into that. You can if you so choose, but I’ll just go with my instincts. I’ve had to rely on those since way before this anyalytics crap in basketball hit the scene and became all the rage.
    And I think it’s widely accepted amongst anybody who follows sports that New York is one of the toughest places that you can play as a professional athlete. To dismiss that as being nothing more than my opinion is foolish.
    And I could care less about that nerd conference you speak of. A room full of guys that couldn’t make a layup if you gave ‘em a basketball is hardly impressive to me.

  • http://slamonline.com zoom

    It also had a lot to do with the fact that Amare WANTED to come to NY badly. Even before he was a FA I remember him being extra public with the hints (the whole Yankee thing etc). The city would have embraced Bosh if he wanted to play here but his (I hate this term) swag wouldn’t have been the same as Amare. Although I think Bosh is a slightly better player, he’s too soft and his personality is too blah to generate the same buzz Amare did.

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    Word to zoom, the NEW YORKER…

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Well first of all Bryan most of those guys work for an NBA team, and you work for Slam Magazine. I’m pretty sure you wouldn’t hold most of their jockstraps, and if you could with some of them, I’m sure they would find someone with their use of their nerd brains that would wipe the floor with you and your opinion. And I didn’t pass NY off, I said it can’t be much more stressful then where he is playing now, you know, in Miami, where he is just barely less efficient then in years past and being booed everywhere he goes on the road, and barely has anyone showing up before the 2nd quarter at home. And regardless, I’m pretty sure I have more basketball playing experience then you, and I would absolutely love to get a player/scouting perspective from anyone at the Sloan conference, but hey, I also don’t think that a job where you give your opinion about basketball means you actually know what your saying better then people who have been playing it literally their entire lives, so what do i know.

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    Absolutely nothing…

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    The only Sloan Conference I’d go to is the one that involves Jerry.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    wew I was worried for a second, I knew I couldn’t possibly know anything, I just got a little confused when you said you’d rather have an often injured money hungry, struggles against anyone tall 4, over a player 3 years younger, that plays some semblance of defense, and isn’t in it just for the overpriced paycheck. I must be crazy

  • MUBWAR

    Here is the Stats STAT allowed opposing PF or C this year:
    Love 31 and 31
    Griffin 44, 15 and 7 dimes
    Love(again) 35 and 15
    B. Lopez 36 and 36
    Howard 25 and 18
    Howard 30, 16 and 6 swats
    Psycho T dropped 59 points on Amar’e

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    I never said I’d like to have a player like that, I said New York would. Lay off the algorithm’s for a sec, will ya, and let’s try reading for comprehension.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Actually that’s Carlos Boozer I just described all knowing OZ

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