by Ben on May 3 at 10:15AM

Barondavis3xv

As a whole, the first round of the 2007 NBA Playoffs have been terribly underwhelming. The eastern conference has seen 3 sweeps already in which the mighty central is 12-0 versus the crummy southeast division. This includes the defending champion (sad) Miami Heat who got dominated by the Bulls and set the blueprint for what the St. Louis Cardinals can expect in their "title defense." The Nets-Raptors series has been interesting, with an experienced Nets team showing some serious moxie in taking a 3-2 lead into the swamp tomorrow night. I'd comment further on Vince Quitter's WNBA inspired play in Canada, Jason Kidd's brilliance (I'd take Kidd and Nash over any point guard on the planet) and why Bostjan Nachbar is a poor man's Brent Barry but I will step aside and leave this series to my counterpart Becky.

 Out west, San Antonio and Phoenix have advanced in 5 games while the Houston-Utah series has been mediocre at best with the home team dominating the first 5 games. Overall, the level of excitement in these 7 playoff series is on par with AC Green's sex life during his playing days.

This brings us to Golden State-Dallas and our savior Baron Davis, the only man reliving the days of gangster rap’s prominence with his authentic Suge Knight issue beard. The Baron has been devastating in this series and the catalyst to all of Golden State's high-flying success in the first 5 games. He is putting up 26 points a game and getting to the basket at will attracting the attention of 2 or 3 defenders. While his assists are down in the series, his reckless abandon to the rim has opened up the court for the Warriors supporting cast in creating open 3s and easy put back baskets. It is no accident that Stephen Jackson and Jason Richardson are averaging 20+ points a game while the tattooed wonder Matt Barnes and Mickael Pietrus have been solid contributors from 3 point land. In addition to his offensive brilliance, The Baron has raised his defensive intensity and, like Stephon Marbury before him, has shocked us with his ability to defend one on one and force turnovers. He is averaging 2 steals a game this series and those steals more often than not have been turned into fast break buckets.

 Getting off The Baron's jock for a minute, Don Nelson and the entire Warriors team deserve a lot of credit. Defensively, the Warriors have been a revelation in the playoffs and their execution on offense has been superb. On defense the Warriors have 38 steals against the usually sure handed Mavs and have actually committed less turnovers on offense than their opponent. This is shocking given the Warriors’ chaotic style and the remarkably fast pace they play on offense in contrast to the Mavs’ more conservative ball control oriented offensive game. I think above all else, the turnover statistic has been the best indicator of Golden State's dominance over Dallas through the first 5 games.

The credit on defense must be given to Nellie. His delayed double teams on Dirk along with Stephen Jackson's in your face defense have totally demoralized the Hasselhoff enthusiast for the majority of the series (sans the final 2 minutes Tuesday night) and the excellent player placement in shading the passing lanes have allowed the undersized Warriors to utilize their speed on D and force countless turnovers. The old grizzly bear really knows the Mavs well and his disheveled mock turtleneck-blazer combinations will soon become the wardrobe of choice for old alcoholics forced to dress professionally in a formal setting. Lord knows, Nellie would rather show up to Oracle tonight in a loose fitting hawaiian shirt with comfortable shorts featuring a waistline-friendly elastic band and sandals.

Speaking of tonight's game, ESPN and their Maverick jocking analysts (no one picked Golden State to win the series) continue to play the "Dirk shifted the momentum of the series with his play in the final 2 minutes" card. Now, let's think about this for a minute. Game 5 had all of the classic makings of a Dallas blowout going in: high seed at home in an elimination game usually leads to a resounding win by the home squad and with Dallas up 21 in the second quarter it really looked like this wasn't going to be the Warriors’ night. Funny thing is Dallas once again imploded and GOLDEN STATE WAS UP 9 WITH 3 MINUTES TO GO IN DALLAS. Sure they ended up losing, but they dominated the final 28 minutes of that game on the road erasing a huge deficit in the process and had The Baron not fouled out, I am pretty sure Dallas would be finished. So my question is - How is this going to do anything but make the Warriors even more confident for game 6 in the absolutely insane Oracle Arena where Dallas has yet to win this year?? They have dominated Dallas at home and away and to imply as ESPN has that now the pressure is on Golden State is a complete joke. How could the pressure be on an 8 seed no one believed in other than Oakland residents and a certain man at Giggin’ On Ya, rather than a 67 win team that is close to being on the receiving end of the biggest upset/embarassment in NBA history? Exactly.

So tonight, loyal Warriors fans, raise up in Oaktown. May the deafening support from the sea of yellow result in a Dirk Nowitzki charter plane leaving for Deutcheland Friday morning and more Baron to enjoy in round 2.


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by Ben on April 18 at 6:24PM

Now, let me start off by saying that I am not a Golden State Warriors fan nor do I pretend to be one. I am in fact a loyal fan of the New York Knicks and will continue to be until default. However, this is not the time to discuss my distaste for Jared Jeffries (basketball's version of a 0-tool player, in other words Rey Ordonez) or the fact that Mardy Collins has gone from being a carbon copy of Rick Brunson - an easily exciteable towel waving 12th man, limited to garbage time play - into a viable NBA-caliber point guard with upside in a span of a month. I will also choose not to elaborate on how, through consistent interaction with several unflappable and biased Knicks fans at work, I have talked myself into the "Isiah was handed a tough hand by Scott Layden and has made great strides in the past season" camp. I will discuss these things following the draft... that is, unless the Bulls get the 1 or 2 pick in the lottery. At that point, I can be found locked in a dimly lit room blasting "Go NY Go" on repeat while staring at my John Starks "The Dunk" poster all the while reconsidering my life desicions and gently weeping.

Anyway, enough of the Knicks talk because today, April 18, 2007 belongs to the Golden State Warriors and their "win and in" matchup with the Portland Trailblazers. It is well known that the Warriors havent reached the playoffs in 12 seasons (the longest playoff drought of any NBA team) making tonight the biggest game the franchise has played in a long time.

Throughout my time following the NBA, I have held an inexplicable fondness for the Warriors. Run TMC saw the rise of my favorite point guard of the early 90's in Tim Hardaway and Chris Mullin's flat top, which ranks as arguably the stiffest haircut ever worn by a white basketball player with apoligies to Greg Ostertag pseudo flat top-crew cut. The Warriors were also integral for me in the Sega Genesis era. They were my team in all EA sports basketball games from Bulls vs Lakers featuring Tim Hardaway's patented "UTEP 2-Step" special move to NBA Live 95 which saw Chris Mullin's left-handed majesty behind the arc and a young, innocent Spree taking it hard to the tin.

Even after the Warriors sank to the bottom of the NBA ranks, a process that began with the arrival of Syracuse "legend" the immortal Billy Owens and was cemented by the departures of Webber and Nellie, they remained interesting. No team held a more "intense" practice session then the lowly Warriors in the PJ Carlisimo era and when John Starks, my favorite Knick of all-time, was traded naturally he ended up in Golden State.

The arrival of Baron Davis - the man responsible for ruining 4 of my fantasy basketball teams in the last 3 years, but who will be drafted by me next year because of my unconditional love and "feeling" at the start of each year that this will be "his year" - in 2005 and his pairing with Jason Richardson got me back on board with this franchise. Now with Mike Montogomery's blank stare long gone and the cranky Don Nelson back in charge, the team is infinitely fun to watch and a consumate threat to drop or allow 130-140 points on any given night. A mid-season trade sending the blackhole known as Mike Dunleavy Jr. and the pride of the Irish Troy Murphy to Indy yielded two athletic scorers in Al Harrington and Stephen Jackson. Harrington and Jackson are great fits for Nellie's "run and gun system" and helped make the team more explosive and well-rounded. (Insert cheap Stephen Jackson "run and GUN" joke here, because I wont be the one to incite his crazy ass). In addition, Monta Ellis has emerged as a budding superstar and with a healthy J-Rich and Baron, this team has finished the season strong.

So tonight, in Portland, Oregon, the Golden State Warriors can erase 12 forgettable years with a win and give their loyal fans, weird mascot and ornery coach the playoff berth they so desperately desire. May the spirit of Run TMC be with you.


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