Posts Tagged ‘Shaquille O’Neal’

About that 12-point home loss to Cleveland

January 10th, 2010 by Dwight Jaynes | 73 Comments | Filed in NBA, Trail Blazers

I’ve said this before but I have to tell you, the Trail Blazers really need to go out and get these guys some help. Inside. Like right now.

It’s not like you need — or you could even get — a big-time center. But really, you have to go find SOMEONE who is a real center. And if it forces the Blazers to finally make a personnel decision, that’s fine. At some point, somebody is going to have to be traded, anyway. You’re always going to want three centers here, as long as Greg Oden is your No. 1.

It’s just not fair to ask these guys to play so hard night after night for such long minutes and then be betrayed by the lack of any semblance of a big man. My goodness, outrebounded by 10 on a night when there weren’t that many rebounds available. And Shaq, even though he’s nothing but a comical imitation of what he once was, dominated them. It was a shame to see poor Juwan Howard out there trying to guard him.

It’s time to get serious about finding another center. Seriously. At this point, I’d settle for a stiff from the D-League.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Tags: , , , ,

A move that changed the lives of NBA beat writers forever

August 4th, 2009 by Dwight Jaynes | 9 Comments | Filed in Coaches, NBA, Trail Blazers

It was in the late 1980s when Bill Davidson, the late owner of the Detroit Pistons bought his team its own plane, which was christened “Roundball One.”

For years, NBA teams knew it would be a big advantage to be able to fly out of cities immediately after games. Not only did it lead to help with sleeping, it kept players off the streets, out of the clubs and in the air in the time from after the game to past closing time. And it even gave teams more control of their players’ diets. It was inevitable some team would do it and we all knew as soon as one team did it, the others would have to follow suit.

You play, you hop aboard your plane, you get to the next city and check in, and there’s time for uninterrupted sleep, rather than going to bed late after a game, then getting that early morning wakeup call the next day to fly to a city where you have to play a game the next night.

This doesn’t even include the bonus of having a plane customized for the size of your players and the traveling party. The luxury of it all.

Soon, other teams were jumping on the bandwagon — with free agency around you had no choice. Travel is a big thing to players. Well, teams weren’t all buying their own planes. That’s still rare. But luxury charters became the rule, to the point where you can’t remember it being any other way. My goodness, can you imagine trying to get Shaquille O’Neal or LeBron James through the crowds of an airport? Well, Larry Bird and Magic Johnson did it.

For the beat writer, though. The charters were extremely bad news. I was lucky, my time covering the Trail Blazers was pre-charter, for the most part. And they were some very, very good times.

Not only was the team on board, but all the other personnel was, too. Talk about a traveling party.  I was covering the players so while I got to know them very well, I didn’t become overly friendly with them. It was my job not to do that. But the team trainers — always your best friends on the road – became dear friends to this day, as did people like Dave Twardzik, Geoff Petrie — guys who have gone on from broadcasting jobs to do pretty well with their lives.

You get to know people like that pretty well when you travel for days on end with them and share all sorts of experiences. On other days I will share some of those experiences — at least the ones I can talk about.

I was blessed. The travel agent for The Oregonian was the same one the team used. My reservations always matched the team’s arrangements — so I was always on the same flights. There’s nothing quite like gobbling chili dogs in Houston’s old Hobby Airport with Caldwell Jones, I might add, at 6 a.m. Or discussing the news of the day during a crowded wait for a late airplane with Kiki Vandeweghe. Some golden moments.

Watching players deal with everyday travel aggravations in those days — things like delayed or cancelled flights, early wakeup calls, bad food on planes, all of it — was educational. And I think it was for the players, too. The guys in those days had a much better idea of what the real world was all about than the guys of today.

Players in the league now don’t even see the inside of airports. They know nothing of long lines at security checkpoints. They arrive at a smaller venue, park their cars near the plane, do a quick security check and walk right onto their plane. Luggage and such things are handled for them. Food is delightful and plentiful.

For a beat writer, though, there’s nothing like the old way. Writers today travel commercial, by themselves mostly, and stay at different hotels than the team. It can be a very lonely existence and one I wouldn’t care for. In the old days, I even rode the bus with them from the airport to the hotel. And to practice, too. Oh, that’s right. No closed practice in those days, either. I went to every single practice for seven seasons. Watched the whole thing.

I do believe we didn’t need coaches to tell us who screwed up in those days. If you went to practice and paid attention, you knew who was supposed to be where on certain plays or defensive schemes. You got a basketball education, if you wanted it, from the likes of Jack Ramsay that college or high school coaches would have died for.

If you watched close at practice, you knew at games who was in the doghouse and who wasn’t. And you saw who could coach and who couldn’t.

It was all right there for you. But now it’s gone.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Did the Blazers try to get Shaq?

June 29th, 2009 by Dwight Jaynes | 14 Comments | Filed in NBA, Trail Blazers

Ian Thomsen of  Sports Illustrated says they did. And around that time such a move was discussed right here in this blog and at Blazers Edge. The reaction from Blazer fans wasn’t very positive — mostly outrage. I believe Portland did make serious inquiries about a deal for him. And I think Ian’s quotes from Shaq — there was no reason for him to say this stuff if it wasn’t true — verify that interest.

At the time, I felt two things about bringing him here would be positive: Someone to mentor Greg Oden and someone to insist that the ball be fed to the post more often that it has been around here. But I also wrote at that time that Shaq would have a “hissy fit” about coming here, which he apparently did. It’s just not his kind of town.

And by now, he’d have been politicking to get out of here and go play with LeBron, too. It might have been a move for just half a season.

But before you get all huffy about how horrible it would have been to have the Big Raindrop in Portland, stop and think a  moment. Do you think Houston could have beaten the Blazers if Shaq had been a Blazer? Do you think the Lakers or Magic could have? Honestly, I am not sure they could have.

Something to think about.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Tags: , , , , ,

Shaq to Cleveland

June 25th, 2009 by Dwight Jaynes | 5 Comments | Filed in NBA

One of the great gambles in modern NBA history.

The guy could likely mean a championship. But it’s just as likely for $20 million he’s going to be hurt and miss a good part of the season, tear the team apart with his own unique brand of locker room poison or get into a pissing match of some sort with LeBron James.

But one thing is sure: He might leave with the entire franchise upset with him, but the fans will still love him. Nothing much sticks to this guy.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Tags: , , , ,

Just make the damn free throw!

June 12th, 2009 by Dwight Jaynes | 25 Comments | Filed in NBA

Yeah, Derek Fisher was the hero. He made two monumental three-point field goals.

But come on, the whole NBA Finals went right down the drain when Dwight Howard couldn’t get just one of two free throws to go down with 11.1 seconds to play in regulation. Or, you could even say when Hedo Turkoglu couldn’t make more than one of four free throws during a stretch late in the fourth quarter.

I have never been able to understand this stuff. I mean, none of those guys “choked” the free throws. They weren’t short or way off — they just flat missed them. Professional players. GREAT professional players. Superstars. And a guy can’t get one out of two free throws to go in.

But this is nothing new in basketball. Folks, Wilt Chamberlain couldn’t make free throws, either. Shaq obviously never could. A lot of players — particularly big players — have trouble with free throws.

It’s all hard for average people like us to understand, though. Free throws. You can teach non-athletes to make free throws. It’s just practice. Repetition. Concentration. Focus. Whatever.

Dwight Howard – just make one of them and you have the NBA Finals tied at two games apiece and anything can happen. You have the Lakers doubting themselves. You have a real shot at this thing.

But you missed them both and the whole thing is pretty much finished. Oh, you’ll win Game 5, but the Lakers won’t waste any time wrapping it up in six, as predicted. But it all could have been different.

Just a free throw. Man, just make one out of two, Dwight.

(AND A SIDEBAR: What irks me, too, is that now we’ll have to forever hear that the Magic didn’t win this series because they didn’t have the go-to player who can get his own shot on offense . . . the guy who can run that clear-out, 1-4 thing at the end of games… yeah — that’s why they didn’t win. Uh, no — don’t overthink this thing. They missed 15 FREAKING FREE THROWS to lose Game 4 and they missed a layup at the buzzer to lose Game 2.)

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Screaming at guys on the bench who don’t even play meaningful minutes is NOT leadership

March 27th, 2009 by Dwight Jaynes | 12 Comments | Filed in NBA

Just so people understand, Shaquille O’Neal getting in Robin Lopez’s face last night was a joke. Very similar to the KG and Big Baby deal in Boston earlier in the season.

At the time Shaq decided to come down on Lopez, the Suns were absolutely getting their asses handed to them on a platter. So time to yell at Robin Lopez for something.

Got a scoop for you Shaq, if you really want to make your mark as a leader, why weren’t you yelling at Steve Nash to get his tail in gear during his five-assist, three-turnover stint? Or screaming at Matt Barnes for his 1-for-8 snoozefest? Why not say something to somebody who plays, somebody who had an impact on the loss that virtually eliminated the Suns from playoff contention?

Oh, what the heck. Just go ahead and get in the face of the guy with bad hair who doesn’t play much and really had NOTHING to do with the outcome of the game. Easier that way. Now THAT’S leadership.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Tags: , , , ,

The Blazers were humming Thursday night

March 27th, 2009 by Dwight Jaynes | 18 Comments | Filed in NBA, Trail Blazers

During that great Portland run late in the third quarter, I remembered something Rick Adelman used to say when his Blazer teams in the early 90s played a great game.

“We were really in tune,” he’d often say. “The guys were really in tune with what we wanted to do.”

That’s what I thought I saw last night. Man, there were times when Portland played together about as well as it has all season. Really solid. Some thoughts:

– Sergio Rodriguez is really stepping it up. He’s penetrating and finding people and you can’t convince me he doesn’t see the floor better than any Portland point guard. He had about three passes last night that were eye-popping and logged eight assists and just one turnover in less than 15 minutes.

– When Rudy Fernandez is on a roll like that, it’s something. I’ve said it a thousand times, but you can have all your dunkers in the world, for me the biggest excitement in basketball is when one of these pure shooters gets on a run where the basket looks bigger than the double Jacuzzi in my bedroom. I mean, that three at the end of the third quarter — was there any doubt?

– The officiating sure got better in the second half, didn’t it? Sorry, just kidding. Great to see Joey Crawford in the building for the first time this season. He’s old school but nobody controls a game the way Joey does. Alvin Gentry got banged with a technical foul so fast he didn’t know what hit him.

– You will never, ever see a game again where Greg Oden gets 1 rebound and Joel Przybilla gets 1 rebound. Ever.

– It kind of irks me to hear from so many people how much better Phoenix is now that it’s back playing a running style. What a bunch of BS. Terry Porter was right. This team can’t play that way anymore and it ought to be tightening down on defense. The Suns were giving up tons of open shots last night and that just doesn’t work. Plus, Portland nearly doubled them in fast-break points, 19-10. For the record, Porter had the Suns five games over the .500 mark. Gentry has them three over. And really, if Porter hadn’t slowed the game down early in the season, Steve Nash, Shaq and Grant Hill would all be on crutches by now from trying to play uptempo basketball.

– Portland still gave up a ton of points in the paint — 68. The Blazers aren’t where they need to be on defense yet, by any measurement. The Suns shot 50 percent from the floor.

– Forget about magic numbers. The Blazers are in. The Suns are out.

– Nobody noticed it much, but Nic Batum had another solid game. 10 points, five rebounds and three assists. I watch the kid shoot prior to the game and I can tell you, he’s going to be a very good shot-maker at some point. Right now, he’s not bringing it to the game all the time, but eventually he will.

– Oden had three terrific blocks and continues to find ways to score. Shaq’s a load, but Oden wasn’t afraid.

– Just wondering when Shav Randolph doesn’t dress down for a game like this, rather than Michael Ruffin. Randolph’s actually not bad and is bigger than Ruffin. Just wondering.

– I love how Przybilla stands up to Shaq. Love it. Man, it’s a shame two guys in the NBA can’t even stand nose to nose and tell each other what they think without drawing technical fouls. Good stuff. There’s too many hugs in basketball today and not enough of this stuff.

– Brandon Roy and LaMarcus Aldridge were every bit as good as you’d want them to be. When they shoot and rebound well, Portland’s halfway home.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Shaquille O’Neal is worth the wait

March 27th, 2009 by Dwight Jaynes | 5 Comments | Filed in NBA, Trail Blazers

He always keeps you waiting after the game. And if there’s a big crowd around him it’s impossible to hear him, because of all his constant mumbling. But he’s often worth waiting for, like he was last night.

Asked what he thought about Greg Oden, Shaq said, “I don’t.” In other words, he doesn’t think about him. “I’m the Shogun. I don’t think about low-level ninjas. I’ve got Yao Ming, Dwight Howard and Tim Duncan to worry about. Don’t ask me about low-level ninjas.”

He flat-out admitted that after a collision with Joel Pryzbilla, an offensive foul on O’Neal, that he threw the ball in Przybilla’s face. “I said to him, yes, that’s what I did. Do something about it.”

I asked him if he was worried he’d be fined for that and he quickly changed the story. “I didn’t throw it, I dropped it,” he said.

Shaq doesn’t like flopping centers any more than I do. “Not at all,” he said. “The game is different now. Guys don’t like to bang and fight. But it’s OK with me, I don’t go through people. I’ll go over them or around them.”

Sure.

O’Neal sang the praises of the Trail Blazers. “Those guys are good,” he said. “They’re going to grow up together. What do they need? Nothing. I think they have it all. They’re young, but they play together.”

Can they win a playoff series?

“Yes,” he said. “No reason they can’t.”

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Tags: , , ,

The Shaquille O’Neal Experience

February 16th, 2009 by Dwight Jaynes | 6 Comments | Filed in NBA, Trail Blazers

Yes, yesterday’s All-Star Game was really all about Shaq. All-Star Games are perfect for the Big Cactus, of course. The game’s relaxed, the weekend is nothing but a big stage and he can run around all weekend with a built-in audience and do what he does best — con people into thinking he’s one big funny teddy bear.

And this was a perfect All-Star Weekend for him this season. He got the ball, he got to dance during the pre-game and his coach got fired. What a hat trick! Sorry, but I really have never “gotten” this guy. Yes, in the beginning, he seemed real. Just a big kid who liked having fun and being the center of attention.

But over time, I’ve grown weary of the whole act. I’ve seen the surly side. I’ve seen what happens when it doesn’t go his way and then it can turn real ugly. That’s when his true colors come out. I loved the fact that he was wearing a mask during his dance routine because there’s no more of a two-faced player in the league. Look at him make nice with Kobe now, probably somehow dreaming that the Suns will trade him back to the Lakers to finish his career.

It was appalling how he weaseled his way out of Miami when things started going bad — blaming the medical staff for his own laziness and failure to get himself into shape. He single-handedly tore the Lakers apart for a season or two.

He’s left a trail of bitterness behind wherever he’s been and it won’t change in Phoenix.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Tags: , ,

Terry Porter out?

February 13th, 2009 by Dwight Jaynes | 8 Comments | Filed in NBA

That’s what Pete Vecsey is reporting in the New York Post.

Talk about being set up to fail. They trade Shawn Marion for Shaquille O’Neal, they’re playing with a 35-year-old point guard who doesn’t seem to realize he’s not the player he used to be and yet, nobody can accept the fact that this isn’t a running team any longer. Terry never had a chance there.

Yeah, fire the coach. It’s HIS fault. If you do that, Steve Kerr, you ought to be ashamed of yourself.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Tags: , , , , ,