Sunday, May 31, 2009

Well that game was a little anti-climatic. I was expecting Kobe to hurl up a 3-pointer that would rattle around the rim and eventually fall as the buzzer sounded. DJ Mbenga and Sun Yue would embrace on the bench-- maybe even share a kiss-- and Farmar and Shannon Brown would jump around like little girls, high fiving, as if they were friends and not competitors. That would've been cool, but this will do.

The Lakers are off to something like their 30th championship series in the 62 years of NBA existence--pretty wild, right? While I really really want to jump on the bandwagon, like ESPN and TNT, and just hand the trophy to Kobe, I, unsurprisingly, am a little incredulous (mark that as the sentence with the most commas in the history of grammar). It's not so much the two losses in the regular season that scare me--Jameer Nelson was the leading scorer in both of those games averaging 27.5 ppg--, nor is it the fact that our big men are far too soft to guard Superman. It's the vibe I get watching this Magic team. They have that "team of destiny" feel to them. Their game revolves around the 3-pointer yet they rarely go cold, and someone always steps up and makes them when they count. The bottom line is that this team just finds ways to win. A lot of this is a testament to Stan Van Gundy. The dude has gotten so much crap this year, yet now as his team heads to the finals no one gives him any credit. Let's not forget that in the course of the year he had to manage THREE big-time scorers, his starting point guard got injured for the year, and the Diesel called out his credentials. Fat Stan took the flack, didn't make a fuss, and continued coaching--and coaching well. The more I hear him talk in press conferences and in the huddle, the more I'm impressed with him.

Don't trivialize the fact that the Magic beat last year's champs and the team with the best regular season record to get to where they are--this is an unorthodox, but well-coached Magic team. I'm thinking this series will go 6 or 7.

Now for the Blue Crew. With about 30 games left until Manbone returns, it's time to start thinking about how Torre will adjust the line-up when he comes back. Entering play on Sunday, Juan-for-5 (name credit goes to Sean F.) is putting up ridiculous numbers (.394 Avg., .467 OBP, and leading the league in runs, steals, and hits since taking over for Manny 21 games ago). Joe Torre is calling him the "feel good story of the year" now, but in 29 games Pierre's presence is gonna give Torre all sorts of headaches. Assuming Juan's still productive and hot-hitting on July 2nd, you can't take him out of the line-up. If Manny came back today, my vote would go to giving Ethier the boot, and moving Pierre back to center, and Kemp to right. Ethier's been struggling and I wouldn't be too concerned about a defensive let-down. The other option is a trade. We have a big enough lead on the rest of the division that it might be a smart idea to deal Pierre while his value is high and play out the rest of Manny's suspension with a make-shift outfield. I'm sure we could wrangle some much needed help in the bullpen and a back-end starter for Juanito.

Not sunburnt anymore,

DB

Friday, May 29, 2009

The FINAL(S) Countdown

I woke up on the wrong side of the bed today. A throbbing headache, Lady Gaga,  and an uneasy feeling about the Laker game greeted me as the new day began.

 It's now 11:22 and the headache and music have subsided. The uneasy feeling about tonight's game, however, has not. I can guarantee these Pesky Pyrites are gonna come out with a level of intensity that the Lakers haven't seen in this series. That being said, there are a two scenarios I can foresee for the start of tonight's game:

a) The Pyrites come out over-hyped--chest pounding, gang sign flashing, and hard fouling--, struggle from the 3-point line, and get in foul trouble,. The Lakers' veterans take advantage of this, get a bunch of fast break points and backdoor cuts, and are up 12 by the end of the first.

b) The Nuggets' intensity manifests itself on the defensive end--blocking shots, dominating the rebounding battle, and holding the Lakers to a sub-40% field goal percentage.  The Lake Show becomes the Puddle Show as Kobe is forced to chuck up outside shots late in the shot clock, and the Nuggets lead by 10-18 by the end of the first quarter.

Either way, the game's going to come down to the fourth quarter. There's no way, as far as I can see, that it's going to be a blowout--these teams are too evenly matched. In order for us to put the Nug-jobs away, LO has got to match his game 5 performance, D-Fish has got to hit his open jumpers, and the Lakers have to get the Nuggets in foul trouble (read: attack the basket). 

Godspeed Laker Fans,

DB

PS The Dodgers are 5 games better than anyone else in the MLB.....DIrt Nasty

Baja, Eh, Fresh Enough

Baja Fresh has arrived in NYC. This is a good thing considering we have no Baja Buds here, no La Salsa, n0 Jack in the Box, and very few Taco Bells even. (OK, kidding on the last couple there, but only sorta.)

I stopped by the brand new Baja on 46 and Lex last night for a steak Burrito Mexicano + jack cheese + jalepeenyos. It was a decent enough meal. Far better than decent, even, if you consider Baja's cali/mex competition in NYC: Chipotle and Qdoba. Chipotle (CMG) is arguably the worst 'mexican' restaurant on the planet. Here's why:

1) Chipotle's chicken, pork and especially steak taste like windex.
2) Besides its pico de gallo, Chipotle's salsas taste like windex
3) Chipotle does not offer jalepeenyos
4) Adding guac to a burrito costs over $2
5) Chipotle's employees hate you
6) Millions of Americans think Chipotle is what Mexican food is all about

The one redeeming thing about Chipotle is that it's a great place to steal a bottle of Tabasco without feeling an ounce of guilt.

Qdoba is an abomination. If you ask for cheese in your burrito, the miserable 6 ft. Amazon behind the counter will dump a ladle-full of tart nacho cheese into your tortilla and then spend 3 minutes trying to figure out what your meal costs.

In light of the competition here, last night's dinner wasn't half bad. The steak seemed of a lower quality than usual, and the hot yellow peppers offered at the salsa bar weren't quite as hot as they should be (I ate 7, a sign of diminished freshness). But the fact remains: there IS a salsa bar at Baja Fresh. This alone raises the chain above its competition in NYC. Now it's only a matter of time before Baja Fresh comes downtown. I suggest right next to Chipotle on 8th and Mercer.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

While You Were Watching Soccer

While you were watching these guys (--->), I was eating Baja Fresh and watching the Dodgers' bullpen nearly blow another win for Kershaw. Big Baby Broxton needed 38 pitches to close the door and finish the sweep, but after a few walks, he got it done. James "Jar Jar Binks" Loney hit a key bases clearing double in the 7th, and Juan-for-5 went 3-for-5 with 2 RBIS.

But on to bigger things. The Lake Show finally played like, well, the Lake Show. I'm watching George Karl complain about the refs, but the fact of the matter is Lamar Odom stepped up, Sasha Fierce didn't play, and Shannon Brown is awesome. Without a doubt, the turning point in the game was SBs break away dunk over the nestling Birdman. It got the crowed into it, and fired up the rest of the squad. A couple minutes later LO regurgitated some kick ass all over our avian friend. It was great to see LO step up on the offensive and defensive end--he ended the game with 19 points and 14 rebounds. It's clear that Odom plays harder when he's gets off to a good start. When he's struggling on offense he begins to sulk, so here's to hoping that he hits his first couple shots on friday and we close out these pesky pyrites.

Casey Blake and the Los Angeles Sisters of Mercy

Well, I've made it to Los Angeles. In fact, I made it in time to catch Vin Scully make one of his brief monologues in the middle of the Rockies/Dodgers broadcast. That guy makes me so happy. 
 
I have nothing new to say about the Blue Crew except this: Casey Blake is the man. I'm sorry I haven't discussed him in an earlier post. I, like the rest of America, wasn't paying attention to him--he's not even among the top 5 three baggers in all star voting. Overshadowed by the newly acquired O-Hud, Manny taking birth control (or whatever), and Billingsly pitching like he's the best starter in the NL, Casey Blake has hit a quiet .308 (2nd on the Dogs) with a team high 8 home runs and 32 RBIs. All this AND he's got the grungiest beard in the NL West. Yet the only publicity he's gotten was due to that "mocking" gesture at the dude on the Giants. The fact is that he's been absolutely pivotal to our success, and he deserves some props outside the Chavez Ravine (where they gave out 20,000 CB bobble heads). So if you see CB around, be sure to buy him a beer and give him a pat on the back. Make sure he knows that we appreciate him. 
 
As far as the Lakers, I'm going to be brief. I think the Big Guy put it best when he said "the lakers just aren't street tough". We veil this truth in thrown elbows and tough-guy looks, but the fact is we're very soft. Granted, Phil's championship teams have always been a little fluffy, with the exception being the Bulls squad with Dennis "The Worm" Rodman, but this laker team has played like entitled, whiney brats this playoff series. I'm hoping someone--I'm looking at you Sasha Fierce--steps up and fouls Jones real hard tonight. Show the Nuggets, and Kobe, that we're not gonna take that stuff. I'm not saying we have to be the Detroit Bad Boys, but we certainly can't be the Los Angeles Sisters of Mercy. 

Still kinda sunburnt,

Doom Bizzle

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Tacos in The Hamptons

DUDES. I had these tacos at this place La Fondita in Amagansett, NY. They might be the best tacos I've ever put into my mouth while living in this state. Very authentic. Very delicioso. The menu offers both chorizo and lengua tacos, tho i opted for carne asada, pollo and carnitas. I was pleasantly surprised to find that the 'cos came topped with nothing but the meat, chopped onion and cilantro. The carne asada was grilled to perfection and the carnitas was tangy and sweet. They put a lot of love into the food at this place. I saw this one hombre in the kitchen padding down guac in a container for an unusually long time. I think he might have been insane. The insane you want your taco chefs to be. This place also makes its own hot sauce. Four varieties, in fact. I'm now friends with this place on Facebook. I'm not friends with Gosman's lobster shack.

Monday, May 25, 2009

VIVAAAA LOS LAKERS


Just got into Vegas. All I can think about is a) how sleazy this place is and b) how much it reminds me of the city in "Total Recall". I have no idea how Greg Maddux, or anyone else for that matter, can stand to live here. 

The big guy and I played 18 holes of crappy golf in St. George, Utah earlier today. Let's just say I shot around the temperature (read: around the century mark). I birdied the first hole and then my muscle memory kicked in and reminded me that I suck at golf. Afterwards we hopped in our cars and got some lunch at Roberto's Taco Shop--located in a booth at Fabulous Freddy's Car Wash. It was real delicious/cheap. I began to smile when I realized that the Taco Shop, along with the Liquor store, is probably the most recession-proof institution in America. I also thought of the name Djiboutian Revolution for an afro-funk band. But I digress....

I'm really looking forward to the game tonight--I think we have a good shot at stealing another one in Denver. If we do, it's over. I really like the way Luke Walton guarded Melo, and I hope we see them matched up a little more tonight. Maybe this is a stretch, but I'd also like to see Ariza guard C-Billups. D-Fish looks old and has been ineffective.  If he's not hitting his shots, Phil's gotta sit him on the pine. Also, we've got to feed it into Pau early and often. There was a stretch in game 3 where we gave it to him every posession and good things happened just about every time--Ariza hit a couple threes, Kobe got some open looks, or Pau made the Bird man lay an egg. 

On the Dodger front... I'm not too concerned about us losing the series to the Angels. I am concerned, however, about our inconsistent bullpen. With the exception of Broxton (who's sixth in wins and 3rd in saves in the NL...Takashi who?), our bullpen is pretty weak. I say we trade Xavier Paul or some other young outfielder for some fresh arms. As I'm writing we're spanking the Rockies 16-6 and the bullpen has held the score for two and a half innings, so maybe I'm overreacting. 

That's about it. I'm going to put 20 bucks on the Seahawks winning the NFC and hit the blackjack tables. 

Sunburnt,

Doom Bizzle

Saturday, May 23, 2009

I ran into Jeff Van Gundy at the Westin Hotel in Denver this morning. The dude was surprisingly built, and the bags under his eyes are as pronounced in real life as they are on the tube.  I ordered an iced coffee and then asked him for some tickets to the game. He told me he didn't have any and walked away briskly. It was awesome.

I'm now in Grand Junction, still deep in Nugget territory. I've actually got a pretty good feeling about the game tonight. I'm hoping these young nug-jobs become overconfident--much like the Cavs in game 1 of their series--and we get off to a hot start and win by 12. In reality, I don't think Chauncey's gonna let that happen. I'm still convinced that Bynum and Farmar need more minutes, and that Sasha Fierce is a dud.  

I could talk a bunch about Lebron's shot last night, or the Kobe/Lebron debate (which really isn't a debate at all) but I'm tired from the drive. 

Friday, May 22, 2009

Ouch Charlie, That Really Hurt!!

Tough loss for the Lake Show last night. For about a quarter and a half, our boys played nearly flawless basketball. They were feeding the post, rebounding, forcing turnovers and moving the ball. Then, for some inexplicable reason, Phil took out Kobe with about 5 or 6 minutes to go in the 2nd quarter. Up around a dozen at the time, with a chance to extend the lead and crack the trachea of the Nug-jobs, Kobe could be found on the bench, and a small, ineffective line-up was caught on their heels. Phil sat in his chair unfazed by the surging Nuggets, and by keeping Kobe on the bench, allowed the Nugs to get back in the game and go into halftime a confident bunch. The rest is history. The second half began with the Nuggets carrying all the momentum. The Lakers were on the defensive for most of the second half, constantly struggling to catch up and tie the game. Unfortunately, the Lakers' efforts fell short and they're going back to Denver tied up 1-1. 

While I haven't given up hope on the series, winning is gonna be a challenge. As every sportswriter in the country has repeated over and over, Denver is a very tough place to win. However, record-wise, we are the best road team in the NBA and you can never dismiss a team's chances in any arena, or on any solar system, when they've got the Black Mamba. In my opinion, we need to cut Sasha (Fierce) V's minutes. The dude couldn't hit the bright side of J-Lo's butt with a basketball. We also need to play our big guys when the Nugget's go small. They're don't have the speed or quickness to run on us, even when we've got Bynum and Gasol on the court at the same time. Lastly, let Kobe go all 48. I guarantee he won't mind. 

I'm here in Denver (boooooo) after driving through Kansas for about 300 hours. Denver has more breweries in their  downtown area than any other city  I've ever seen. Driving through Kansas I found a solid R&B station that played the likes of Silk and Keith Sweat. Needless to say, I felt pretty sexy listening to it. I also found a strictly new wave college station. I heard some groovy electro-jamz of which I can't remember the names. 

Live long and party,

Doom Bizzle

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Si querremos tacos, va a Colby, Kansas!!!

Hola, Amigos! I'm sitting here in the Holliday Inn Express in lovely Colby, KS. I just got back from a delicious mexican dinner at Dos Oros restaurant. The place was pretty authentic with one small exception--it was in the conference room of the Quality Inn right down the road. I ordered three carne asada tacos and the big guy (my father Josh) ordered the beef tacos. We were both very impressed. Mine came with a side of pico de gallo, some spicy salsa, and some sort of bean soup with a bacon-like meat sprinkled on the top. Josh's tacos had lettuce and cheese with a side of rice and beans. DELICIOSO!!!!! The restaurant was very generous with the salsa and the beer. All around, twas an unexpectedly solid meal. We're now getting settled to watch the Lake Show try and go up 2-0 on the mighty, tatooed Nuggets. Let's go gettum.

Doom Bizzle....out

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Kansas City likes to party!

Just got back from the Royals/Indians game at Kaufman Stadium. Great game, decent stadium. The "K", as they call it, looks like it was designed in the 70s as a glimpse into what they thought future stadiums would look like--fountains that light up, a huge screen, a funky shape. As it turns out, the jumbotron looks like an enormous Burger King drive-through screen. The stadium also has a "Pepsi Party Porch" and a "Bud Light Party Deck". Clearly these dudes really like to party. The crowed was full of obese people, blonde children, and drunk college students. I ate a dog, a bratwurst, and a beer. Solid all around. Perhaps the best thing about the stadium was that they jad jalapenos at the codiment bar. I'd never seen this and I made good use of it.

Chad and Casey do America

We all know about the Lakers big W last night, so I'll only say a few things. First, we really have got to stop relying on the 3 point shot. Second, all 5 Lakers have to crash the defensive boards, especially in the fourth quarter. Lastly, great win.

Now for "the other" LA team. We now know why Billingsley has such thick legs--he's been carrying the Dodgers pitching staff on his back all year. This dude is a meast (man beast). After struggling to get through the first 3 innings last night, he finally settled down and got the win. The dude is not getting nearly the recognition he deserves. He's been overshadowed, and rightfully so, by Zack Greinke of Kansas City. However, his numbers are pretty staggering. He leads the NL in wins, has 63 Ks in 61 innings, and is sporting a 2.51 ERA. We've watched him transform from a baby-faced, thick-bottomed, middle of the rotation guy, to a potential all-star starter. I would really, really love to see C.C. Sabathia and Thick Billingsley kick box.

There's no debate that the Doggies are the NL's best team thus far. They've won series' against Philly, Florida and NY in the past week, PWNing the NL East. At this point haters can stop attributing our fast start to a weak schedule-- we're very, very good. Tonight, DreamWeaver gets the call as the Dodgers go for a sweep of the mighty metropolitans.

On another note, Manny looks terrific for a man in his second trimester.

The REAL Reason We Won Last Night

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

In the Lou and I'm proud

Just got back from the Cardinals/Cubs game here in the Lou. Great Stadium, bad food. I had nachos, a dog, and a braut--all of which were mediocre. The fans wore red and all the women looked like they were trying out for "Rock of Love".  Also, I saw way more people eating nachos than hot dogs (whooda thunkit?). My phone died in the 3rd inning and the Lakers had given up around 30 points in the first quarter. My heart dropped. However, I just got back to the hotel and it's 60-59 Nug-jobs. Let's gettur done Lakers. 

Riding Chauncey

I spent 2002-2006 in The Mitten getting an education/getting drunk/trying to get laid. If I wasn't busy writing this blog post I'd make a pie chart in Excel breaking down how I spent my time. The largest pieces of the pie would probably be Sleeping and Watching Animal Planet, one of the smallest would be Studying for BioChem, and somewhere in between would be a smallish but significant sliver called Watching Pistons Games. I was in Michigan surrounded by yet-to-be-devoted fans when Chauncey, an underperforming No. 3 pick, was signed in the summer of '02. I was there as the team came together, embarrassed the Lakers in '04 and established itself as one of the greatest units in NBA history.

And then Chauncey went to Denver. OK, Detroit's demise has more to do with the aging of Big Ben, Rasheed forgetting how good he could be, the starting five getting bored with eachother, and the rise of LeBron. But I'm pretty sure the Pistons could have competed with Cleveland this year if Joe Dumars didn't (wisely) swap him for A.I. Chauncey was the driving force of that very very good Detroit team (6 appearances in a row at the Conference Championships!). Everyone else got a bit of credit, and for good reason, but now it's obvious who made that team roll. And now he's doing it again, and this time with a team that's arguably more stacked than the Pistons ever were.

Danger. Denver is rolling. Melo is gonna put up a ton of points. Nene might prove his first two rounds and $10 mil salary aren't flukes. JR Smith's spark off the bench will be bright. Still, nothing presents more of a challenge to the Lakers than Chauncey's leadership. We had trouble matching up against lesser PG's. Now we have to buckle down against the second best PG in the game (Sorry Deron, you've been demoted). Billups is going to very quietly get 20 and 10. He's going to slash, stutter, and elevate over whoever LA puts on him to drain jumpers at the line. He's going to penetrate and dish to Kleiza and JR at the arc. He's going to slice razor passes into Nene and K-Mart on the low post. The most reliable point guard of the decade is going to get his, and he's going to give his teammates a great chance at getting theirs. We can only hope to find a strategy of keeping Mr. Big Shot from making any big shots. Or maybe we've just gotta put the Nuggets in a place where there's no such thing as a big shot... 10 points down with 2 minutes to go.

Tonight should be fun. NBA fans forget Chauncey over the course of the regular season and remember him when the post season rolls around. Prepare to get a lesson in how to ball. Hopefully tonight the Lakers will take his former lessons to heart.

DUM DUM DUM DUM

Here we go ya'll. Game 1, Staples Center, Nugs vs the Flakeshow. This is about as much of a must-win for the Lakers as any other game in this series is gonna be. We CAN'T give up home court advantage to our pesty, corn-rowed friends from the Mile HIgh city. During these playoffs it's been nearly impossible to beat these dudes in their own place. The altitude, atmosphere, and unattractive crowed make it hard to win. This series is gonna come down to energy and rebounds. Both of these teams are offensive juggernauts and both struggle on the defensive end at times. Look for George Karl to stick the Birdman on Kobe early in the game. His intensity, length and athletic ability scare me. Hopefully Odom will stay off the benedrill and start playing with some energy so he can match up with the ugly faux-hawked Nugget.

I'm not sure whether the last series taught me that the Lakers are very, very vulnerable or that they actually CAN just turn it on and off like the championship teams earlier this decade. Let's hope it's the latter, cause if it's the former, we're in beeeeig trouble.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Dodgers: Catching Up


It's been a week or two since we've devoted any words to the boys in blue. It's kinda like Doom and I are a ghey married couple - which isn't that far from the truth - and one of our adopted Philippino kids has made it to the semifinals of the world amateur jai-alai championship where we've joined him in Montevideo while the other has been stuck under the care of aunt Ruthie. We love you Dodgers, we just kinda love our other child a little more right now... well, as long as he keeps winning.

But let's check in. Dodgers, how are you? You won 2 out of 3 games against both the Phillies and the Marlins during your 6 game East Coast road trip. You're 5-5 since losing Manny (40 games to go). And you still have the best record in the bigs (26-13). We do still love you, Dodgers. And we love you no matter what you do.

Juan Pierre is straight up knocking oodles of booty in ManRam's place, hitting .465 during the last 10 games, scoring 11 runs and knocking in 9. You knew he was a marginal starter in the MLB, but no way was he worth the $10 million he's getting paid this year. For our own comfort, Dodgers fans, lets pretend the $7.7 mil we're saving on Manny is Pierre's bonus for holding down the fort while he's gone. That make sense? No? Whatever.

My good buddy Sean has been particularly impressed with Clayton Kershaw recently. On Sunday vs. the Marlins he threw 7 innings of 1-hit ball, striking out 9. Sean wrote this to me:

Mark my words, in 2 years, kershaw will be the best pitcher in baseball. his fastball hits mid 90's and his hook of a curve ball bends the laws of science. he is just starting to incorporate his change-up. when he masters the change-up, ala johan santana and pedro martinez, he will experience cy young worth success.

Sean goes on to write that the 21-year-old stud will definitely have his ups and downs in the coming seasons, and I wouldn't be too surprised to see one of those downs when he next gets on the mound Saturday vs. the Angels. Kershaw has yet to string together consecutive wins.

On the day of Manny's suspension, Ned Colletti was asked what most concerned him about the squad. "My concern on Thursday was the same as my concern was on Wednesday: pitching," he said. The Dodgers have given up an Oriole-esque 4.6 runs/game since Manny's departure (and scored 6.1). While our rotation isn't the worst in the bigs, there's no doubt it could use some help. That help might be on its way. Hideki Kuroda, who's making $12.4 mil this year, is about a week away from making his first rehab start since straining his oblique (see figure) five weeks ago. Jason Schmidt, who's making $15 mil and hasn't tossed in the majors since June 2007, threw 101 pitches against the Single-A Lake Elsinore Storm in a 7-3 win for the Inland Empire Sixers. He gave up 5 hits, striking out six and walking three. Sunnier times really are on the horizon for our rotation.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Drafting Old Dudes: The Safe Bet

The Rockets have adopted an incredibly effective strategy for drafting and signing young players--they take players with significant experience at the college level. The young players who have been instrumental to their success in the series (Aaron Brooks, Carl Landry, Shane Battier (sorta young), and Chuck Hayes) all played 3 or more years of college ball. WIth the exception of Shane Battier, none of them were first round picks and yet all of them are playing like studs. I don't understand why NBA GMs shy away from the old dudes in the draft. Sure these draft picks aren't sexy, but they're way safer than drafting dudes like DeAndre Jordan based on potential. When was the last time one of these "project picks" panned out?

Take this draft for example. Courtney Lee, the young Magic stud from Western Kentucky, played 4 years of college, setting the school's all time scoring records and playing in 128 games. Before the draft, scouts sang his praise describing him as a "safe pick". Yet he was taken after such "project" picks as Anthony Randolph, Javale McGee, Alexis Ajinca, and Marreesse Speights. NBA big wigs need to learn from their mistakes, sure taking a chance on a young, athletic, baby faced prospect might pay off, but it probably won't. College is where these players learn how to play basketball. College coaches are teachers, NBA coaches are strategists. All this being said, I can garuntee that players like Darren Collison, Sam Young, Dejuan Blair and Ty Lawson are going to find permanent rolls on whichever teams draft them. And to players like Jrue Holliday, BJ Mullens, and Demar Derozen, let me suggest that they get their asses out of the draft and back into the classroom.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Boo Ya!


The Lake show finally broke out of their little funk and opened a can of whoop ass on the Yao-less Rockets. We rebounded, attacked the basket and took advantage of our size--or their lack of size depending on how you look at it. The Lakers FINALLY picked up their defensive intensity, holding the Rockets to 32% from the field and winning the rebound battle by 7. Kudos Phil, for getting my message. I'm still not sure why Luke Walton is getting more minutes than Odom, Bynum or D-Fish, but the lakers were rotating on defense and moving the ball of offense. It's nice to see Farmar and J-Powell getting more minutes. Hopefully we can maintain our defensive intensity throughout the rest of the playoffs--we're definitely gonna need it against a much more offense-savvy Nuggets squad.

I'm currently eating some nachos and watching the Dogs drop a deuce on the Phillies. The Doggies are playing a really exciting brand of baseball--we're bunting, stealing and hit-and-running. I really dig O-Dog in the 3-hole, he can spread the ball all over the field and he gives us the fastest top of the line-up in the bigs. Furthermore and henceforth, I was wrong about Randy Wolf. I predicted he would struggle to hold onto his spot in the rotation, but the dude throws a lot of strikes and he's got 4 solid pitches.

Yours Truly,

DB

The Machine's Amazing

I don't know who made this and I don't really care. Usually NBA humor is really just not funny - see the comics that show up on Ball Don't Lie every week or so. This video is an exception. Or maybe I'm just a sucker for Borat humor.

Shout out to Arik who got sloshed at Paris Hilton's Hollywood Hills palace last year, bumped into Sasha, and spoke to the prized Lakers reserve at length about how he should read some novel about Bosnia. Later that night Arik did a little droogling (drunk Googling) and discovered Sasha's from Slovenia. Don't worry, A-Rock, everyone gets a second chance. Maybe Sasha will come to the Knicks when his contract is up after 2011 and you'll run into him at Bua. Maybe not.

Corie Blount Gets Slammed On

Last December cops intercepted 11 lbs. of weed sent in the mail to Lakers legend Corie Blount. They waited at the post office for the 6'10" former superstar to pick up his prize and quickly arrested him. It is unclear if the dank contraband was zip-loc'd, wrapped in spools of Fabreeze sheets, stuffed into hair conditioner bottles, and cushioned by dirty gym wear. After taking Blount into custody, police searched the 11-year NBA vet's Cincinnati home and found 18 more lbs. of headbangin' boogie shit. They also found $30k in cash, and 3 firearms. Blount argued in court that the weed was for his own personal use, but Judge Craig Hedric didn't buy it. "Cheech and Chong would have had a hard time smoking that much," he said during Blount's hearing today. He slammed the legend with a one year sentence behind bars.

Blount has career averages of 3.6 PPG, 4.2 RPG, and .41 BPG in 644 games in the NBA. He helped the Lakers lose early in the playoffs every year during the celebrated Del Harris era, and in '99 he was waived after the team acquired J.R. Reid and Glen Rice. The next year the Lakers won the title.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Lakers vs. Rockets: Game 5 Preview

I walked away from our overwhelming Game 3 victory thinking this series was over. I thought we might not win game 4, and who knows, maybe the series would go 7, but the Lakers were a lock. Then Yao went down, I cried a little inside, cried a little on the outside when I saw him sitting there at the end of the bench during the beginning of game 4, and I was sure the Lakers would do it in 5. Look at that depleted roster. You couldn't hit 100 points if you added that starting 5's career highs.

But then on Sunday it was proven again why I love basketball. This game really is about chemisty, motivation, history, personalities, and more than any other sport, synnergy. The Rockets on Sunday were more valuable on the court than the sum of their parts. There was a little bit of NBA Finals 2004 in the air. A team came together with a higher calling to destroy a super power, and we crumbled, ashamed of ourselves.

“We didn’t understand the type of energy Houston was going to come with,” Kobe said after Game 4. “We didn’t have that type of energy.” Will they find it tonight for Game 5? A better question might be whether the Rockets bring the same level of energy to Staples that they summoned on Sunday. Personally, I don't think it's possible. Neither does Vegas, which has put the line at Lakers -12. Yes, you read that right. The Lakers are the overwhelming favorite despite L.O.'s uncertain status following Sunday's flying hip flop onto the court. Phil and the trainers are calling it a bruised back, and I'd give the man a %50 chance of playing tonight. I'd give Kobe a %97 chance of playing like an MVP tonight. He was out-scored 23 to 15 by Shane "The Kobe Impeder" Battier on Sunday, and if you know Kobe, you know he's not going to let that happen again.

But who else is going to show up? Can we even play Bynum more than 9 minutes against a team that rocks a 6'6" starting Center? Probably not. But we will play Pau and play him hard. We sorta tried to do that on Sunday but very quickly abandoned our strategy once the Houston electrons started spinning us in circles. You better believe Pau will put up at least 20 points tonight, perhaps 40 if Lamar doesn't play. But hope he does. Especially if you put your money on the Lakers -12.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Really, Lakers?


Is anyone else getting fed up with Phil Jackson's zen nonsense? I don't know about you, but watching him sit on his high chair (literally) emotionless and unconcerned is starting to piss me off. Through the first 4 games of this series he has been thoroughly outcoached by Rick Adelman-- a man who clearly has a little animosity towards the Lake Show left over from his days with the Kings. The Rockets are playing harder, executing better, and hustling more. While we can attribute some of the Lakers' lazy, uninspired play to the players themselves, at some point we have to point our fingers at the coach. It's the coaches job to motivate the players and to put people on the court who can execute. Clearly, Phil hasn't been doing his job. I'm sick of seeing Kobe shoot over two Rocket players after a timeout.

The Lakers look like an entitled group of softies who think the Western Conference title is going to be handed to them. They need to realize that their "soft" title doesn't come from their inability to fight or throw elbows, but from their inability to rebound or contest lay ups. Game 5 is make or break. Hopefully they'll get the message.

P.S. Dodgers are on national tv for the first time all year on Wednesday

Friday, May 8, 2009

Follow Derek Fisher's Twitter Throughout the game

http://twitter.com/derekfisher

NBA Inspired Libations

A couple NBA-inspired cocktails came to my attention today. The weekend is upon us, so no time to waste, time to get wasted, straight to the chaser...

Thanks to Sean "Big Ballz" Frieds for hooking me up with the recipe to The LeBomb James.

The ingredients:
- 1 Shot Crown Royal (cuz he's the King, duh [though he's not Canadian])
- Red Bull
- 3 packs of Splenda

Instructions:
Drop the Crown in the Red Bull, throw it down your throat, tear open the Splenda packs, dump the contents into one hand, smack your hands together and throw that shit into the air. (Unless you're in a Cleveland sports bar, girls will think you're a real douchenozzle after tossing artificial sweetener in the air. Practice the LeBomb with caution.)

Adam K at Vanity Fair introduced the world to The Black Mamba today, in honor of what's sure to be a big game out of Kobe tonight.

The ingredients:
- 1 oz. Beefeater gin infused with Early Grey tea
- 1 1/2 oz. Domaine de Canton ginger liqueur
- 1/2 oz. lemon juice

Instructions:
Combine, shake, serve over ice, drink. (In Adam's hasty attempt at convincing Max B us he's a man's man, he neglected to take note that the Black Mamba is so named for the pitch-blackness of its inner mouth. More like the Albino Black Mamba here. Ummm, maybe stick to Fashion Week?)

Lakers vs. Rockets: Game 3 Preview

Lakerland is nervous. The team isn't what you thought it was 2 months ago, huh? Thankfully, Stu Jackson is of the same mind. Kobe prob would've gotten the game suspension he deserved under the rules had the Lakers gone into Houston with a 2-0 advantage. But the Lakers need him. The NBA needs Kobe. This is a business first, an entertainment medium second, and a fair competitive platform 141st.

So are we going to win tonight? Vegas thinks so. Lakers are -1.5 on Bookmaker. I'm not quite so sure. There are too many questions about this team, not enough answers. For the first time in a long time, Phil doesn't seem to have them. He's been mum on who's gonna take D-Fish's spot in the starting lineup. Does he know? Farmar's seniority and experience vs. former Pac-10 rival Aaron Brooks makes him the frontrunner, and you know how we feel on that issue here at this very pro-Farmar blog (btw dave, we need to change this blog's name). Do the Lakers stand a chance against this team if he doesn't step up? Do we stand a chance against the Nuggets without him? No. I don't think there's a better candidate to match up with Houston's littles, and to provide that spark off the bench we'll need to combat a barrage of points from J.R. Smith. With Lamar in the starting lineup, Sasha looking nothing like The Machine, and.... shit our bench is weak! Farmar needs to play hot tonight, and work up some confidence in himself and in Phil for the next few weeks.

Besides the PG situation, the key to tonight's game will be limiting Yao's effectiveness. That means putting him in foul trouble. That means taking it to the rim. But who's going to get into the paint? You've probably heard all about how Kobe just isn't the slasher he used to be. Via Bill Simmons' game 1 diary:

Kobe has attempted a total of 44 FTs in six playoff games (7.2 per game). Last spring, he attempted 194 FTs in 22 playoff games (8.8 per game). For the regular season, his FT attempts dropped from 10.2 (2005-06) to 10.0 ('06-07) to 9.0 ('07-08) to 6.9 ('08-09). So, no, Kobe doesn't go to the hole as much. Let the record show MJ averaged 10.6 FTA in the '98 playoffs and Wade averaged 10.9 FTA in the '06 playoffs. I'm just sayin'.

It's Lamar time. We've heard so much about how Lamar is the man when it comes to creating mismatches, but where is it this series? I haven't seen it. LO is a combined 6-15 in the first two games here. WTF is up with that? Who's been guarding him? Scola? Landry? Whatever. The point is his effectiveness has been severely limited by the mere presence of Yao. We can't win on jump shots. No team can. It's time to take it to the rim.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

NOOOOOOOOOO...Ok, Wait


This sucks. This really, really, really, really sucks. Manny has let down an entire city and tons of little kids who were in the process of growing out their dreadlocks.

The first thing that came to my mind after hearing the news was, "how is this shit show better for baseball than having the more lenient/limited drug testing that they had in the '90s". The MLB's strict testing, while giving some distorted sort of moral credibility to the league, is destroying its product and ostracizing its most charismatic and talent players--A-Rod, Bonds, Clemens, and Manny. Can you imagine if baseball fans had never found out about any of these players' steroid usage? The league would be in the best shape economically, and in terms of its popularity, ever. These test are merely speed bumps, if a player wants to juice, he's going to. What they need to do is make adjustments to the cars--make stadiums bigger-- or change the speed limit so that these players go unpunished and the league can watch the money come pouring in. Also, is anyone else surprised by how out of the blue this news is? It makes me think that there was a serious investigation for a substantial amout of time. If this is the case, the MLB needs to stop the witch hunt and move the f@#$ on. We know everyone is on steroids!

As far as what this means for the Dodgers.... Juan Pierre is popping champagne and running around naked. He will finally get his chance to be the everyday left fielder for the Dodgers. This isn't so bad. Let's not forget that he has batted over .300 four times in his career and was the spark plug for the 2003 Marlins (who won the World Series). We now have three players in our lineup who can steal 50-60 bases in a year. We also are going to bring up Xavier Paul, a kid with a lot of power who could've been in the majors a long time ago. So what does this mean? Torre needs to re-evaluate our style of play. I'm convinced you'll see the Doggies execute more hit and runs, be more agressive on the base paths, and bunt a helluva lot more. It's also important to note that we still play in the NL West--the worst division in baseball. I'm very confident that, come July 3rd, the Dogs will still be sitting on top of the NL West.

Lastly, Fat Colletti needs to take advantage of this, shitty, situation. We need to extend Manbone's contract while he's suspended. Rather than wait for him to come back and start right where he left off, we need to tack on a couple cheap years. Trust me, Dodger fans are going to embrace him when he gets back, and he's way too aloof to let this ordeal get to his head. Tack on 2 years for 11 million. By taking a paycut Manny might save face a little, and the Dodgers keep their money and production machine for a couple more years.

Depressed,

Doom Bizzle

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

WE WANT TACOS


Seriously, if we can't hold Ron Ron, Yao and the Rockets' pupu taquito platter under 100, we're in trouble.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Uh Oh


Perhaps I spoke too soon. The Rockets looked like a formidable opponent in their 100-92 win over the Lakers. As I had feared, the two polar opposite figures in the NBA, took a crap on the Lakers last night. To begin, if there is a quicker player in the NBA than Aaron Brooks , I haven't seen him. Brooks (no, not you mom) looks like he's 3 steps quicker than anyone on the Lakers. And what's worse? He can shoot. Phil threw a ton of different bodies at him-- even going so far as to resurrect Farmar from the depths of the bench-- to no avail. As for Yao Zedong, he is a warrior. I have to give him props. Seeing him go into the tunnel and then, in that deep, resonant Chinese accent, tell his trainers "I must go back," gave me goosebumps. He is a scary, scary player. Not only is he 7'13'', but he can shoot the 17 footer, and he shoots 100% from the free throw line. Look for him to continue to give the Lake Show fits throughout the series.

As for our Lakers, that was a shitshow. Phil didn't coach, Kobe shot too much, Pau didn't get enough touches, our role players didn't make shots, and I didn't brush my teeth cause it ended at 1:30 AM. A team as talented as the Lakers can probably win with one or two quarters of settling for mid-long range jump shots, but after that it becomes Phil's responsibility to make sure the Lakers attack the basket. Sure, Kobe was sick, but seeing him settle for jumpers all game gave me pharyngitis--something my girlfriend couldn't do two weeks ago when she had it. We (read: Kobe and Pau) have got to attack Yao and get him in foul trouble. That's our only chance of slowing the China Problem down. Last night, we looked like the soft, scared Lakers from last year. I'm not so worried about Artest shooting 50% from the three point line, I'm pretty confident that was a fluke (although with his new do' he is by far the coolest looking dude on the court). My new prediction: Lakers in 6.

As for our puppies I only have one observation. This team has something that no Dodger team has had in recent memory, something that is absolutely vital in successful teams, SWAGGER. Anytime a team goes 1-10 with runners in scoring position, hits into a triple play, and still manages to put 7 runs on the board and win by 5, you know they're special. This team KNOWS they're gonna win-- at least at this point in the season-- and it shows in the way they carry themselves. All the credit in the world goes to Joe Torre.

p.s. I finished college today

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Chad Gaudin has funny facial hair


Things are sweet on the left coast.

At the Chavez Ravine, the Dodgers (17-8) are going for their 10th straight home win to start the season, a franchise record. We're sending our thick legged stud, Billingsly, to the mound against this dude --> , so needless to say, I'm feeling pretty good. The Dogs keep on finding ways to win, and once Kershaw gets on track and we get Kuroda back, they should be the team to beat in the NL.

The Lakers kick off their series against the Rockets tonight in LA. Ronnie Artest is talking smack saying that Brandon Roy, not Kobe or Lebron, is the toughest player to guard in the NBA. Not sure that calling out the Black Mamba and the stud they'd match up with in the finals IF they get past the Lake Show is the smartest move. I'm feeling pretty good about the series. We have 2 legit 7 footers to throw at your royal Yao-ness and Scola, Ariza and Kobe to throw at Batier and Ronny A, and Odom is playing like he deserves a fatty contract next year. Aaron Brooks might cause some matchup problems, but I think we have enough quick little dudes to throw at him. Unless Yao can completely dominate the series, the Rockets don't have a chance. Secretly, I'm hoping Artest runs into the stands and gets in a fight with Timberlake or Denzel--I think that would make the series a lot more interesting. Prediction: Lakers in 5

On another note, look for the Hawks to take the Cavs to 6 or 7. These dudes can ball and remind me a lot of the 2004 Pistons. They're deep, athletic, long, have a good point guard, and some good big men. Mark my words, either the Magic or Hawks -if not both- will be in the Eastern Conference Finals.