NBA MOST RECENT TRADES

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grishnak boss
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NBA MOST RECENT TRADES

Post by grishnak boss »

Things are happening fast. Here's a list of recent trade reports:

* Nazr Mohammed to the Thunder. :|
* Marquis Daniels to the Kings. :?:
* Aaron Brooks to the Suns for Goran Dragic. :?:
* Semih Erden and Luke Harangody to the Cavaliers. :?:
* Gerald Wallace to the Blazers. :|
* Jeff Green to Boston for Kendrick Perkins and Nate Robinson. :lol:
* Shane Battier to the Grizzlies for Hasheem Thabeet. :|
* Kirk Hinrich to the Hawks for Mike Bibby. :?:
* Baron Davis to Cleveland for Mo Williams and Jamario Moon. :shock:
* Deron Williams to the Nets. :shock:
* Carmelo Anthony to the Knicks. :|
* Carl Landry to the Hornets. :|
* Troy Murphy to Golden State for Brandan Wright and Dan Gadzuric. :|
* James Johnson to the Raptors. :|

A FEW OF THESE ARE WTF!!!



:idea:
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Re: NBA MOST RECENT TRADES

Post by Subhuman Yeti »

Anthony AND Billups went to the Knicks.
:lol:


Hey Denver, trade everyone you have that doesn't suck out loud to the NY Knicks for some random losers that haven't ever proven shit on an NBA court.

Nuggets: OK!



Nate Robinson

"Get that fucking cancerous asshole the hell off this team as soon as f-ing possible!" - team? (fill in the blank)
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Re: NBA MOST RECENT TRADES

Post by johnk5150 »

The Bulls stand pat, keep Asik and beat the Heat.
He's like the Liberace of bass & pot.

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Re: NBA MOST RECENT TRADES

Post by WTF »

Who the fuck would take Marquis Daniels? I guess the Kings didn'y give up much. Some cash and a 2017 2nd round pick.
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Re: NBA MOST RECENT TRADES

Post by Skate4RnR »

OKC's trade for Nate Robinson threw me for a loop. I don't think they have a goddamn uniform small enough for that lil' niglet.

GET BACK TO THE CIRCUS MIDGET!

ETA: Here's a site my buddy sent to me for a few laughs. :lol:

http://sadperk.tumblr.com/page/1
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grishnak boss
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Re: NBA MOST RECENT TRADES

Post by grishnak boss »

:lol: :lol: :lol:
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Re: NBA MOST RECENT TRADES

Post by Subhuman Yeti »

How do you think the Heat feel about their coach saying they were crying?

Don't care
18330 - 30%

Mildly upset
11250 - 18%

Very upset
23321 - 38%

Pleased
8643 - 14%


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Re: NBA MOST RECENT TRADES

Post by Subhuman Yeti »

Heat a crying shame
March 7, 2011 · 9:11AM


Following a trajectory roughly akin to Charlie Sheen’s “winning,” Erik Spoelstra’s “crying” went from stunning revelation to national catchphrase to beaten-dead-horse cliché in a span of about 12 hours.

Dwyane Wade, who might or might not have been among those blubbering in the locker room after the Miami Heat’s 87-86 home matinee loss to the Chicago Bulls, even dipped a toe into Sheen waters when it was over. “We’re competitors, we’re winners, we’re human,” the Heat shooting guard said, at the precise moment when that middle label seemed furthest from the truth. Four consecutive defeats. Five in six games. A team in disarray, a dressing room soggy now with tears.

When Spoelstra, the Heat coach, mentioned in his postgame media session that “a couple of guys are crying in the locker room,” he did so in an aside, almost. It was his way of telling the world that, beyond what any fan or critic might feel about Miami meltdown, his staff and the players feel it deeper. “This is painful for every single one of us going through this,” Spoelstra said. “There are a couple guys crying in the locker room right now. It is not a matter of want, it is a matter of doing. And continuing to put ourselves in this position until we break through.”

Continuing, the coach said: “There is nothing else we can do but stay together.”

Most of his points fell away with his disclosure that the Heat — beyond being about as resilient as a box of Kleenex at the moment — apparently need to start buying their tissues in bulk.

Eyebrows throughout the NBA immediately were raised. The social media ignited. First came a whole lot of “Really? He said that?” Followed rather quickly by jokes, snorts and mockery. “Forget Bobby Knight, Donald Trump or Warren Buffet,” one wise guy said. “These guys need a pep talk from Tom Hanks, who can tell them there’s no crying in basketball either.”

Sports-talk radio piled on, loading up bumper music like this and this and this out of their commercial breaks. At the Celtics-Bucks game at the Bradley Center, somebody speculated that the “couple” criers were Heat president Pat Riley and team owner Micky Arison. Then an actual NBA player walked by.

“If Riley’s crying today,” the player said, “Spoelstra’s going to be crying tomorrow.”

Had Spoelstra stressed how “upset” and “frustrated” the Heat players were or simply circled the verbal wagons with a stiff upper-lip, no one would have blinked. Toothpaste out of the tube, though: The mental toughness and maturity of his star-anchored roster now is being questioned along with everything else, including stuff that actually matters:

* Miami is 1-9 against the top five teams in the NBA, including 0-3 each against Eastern Conference rivals Boston and Chicago.
* Against a sampling of the league’s elite point guards – with center, one of two positions where the Miami club is seriously overmatched — the Heat are 2-13. That group: Derrick Rose, Deron Williams, Chris Paul, Tony Parker, Chauncey Billups and Jason Kidd.
* Miami has failed at a staggering rate in late-game situations – the exact opposite of what a bystander might expect, given the individual heroics through the years of both Wade and LeBron James. Updated by ESPN’s terrific Heat chronicler Brian Windhorst, that crew has shot 1-for-18 in the final 10 seconds when it has a chance to tie or win in the fourth quarter or overtime. And the one that worked out — a dunk by James that sent Miami into overtime in Memphis — got thwarted in the end by Rudy Gay’s own clutch shot.

If one definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over while expecting a different result, the Heat aren’t just crying. They’re crazy.

Four times now in the five-out-of-six losing streak — at Chicago on Feb. 24, then against New York, Orlando and the Bulls since then — James has tried to succeed late. Four times (from the perimeter twice, while attacking the rim twice) he has failed. After getting stymied by Chicago big Joakim Noah Sunday, James promised his team — “my team” sure sounds different from “my teammates,” doesn’t it? — that he will be getting it right in the future.

But getting it right might mean getting out of the way. Wade is the player most adept at creating and making game-winners. Wade is the one who, sitting right next to James at the front table in that interview room, basically pleaded for the chance to be the go-to guy, at least in those late moments.

It’s not clear, however, if allowing that is part of James’ Adonis DNA.

You almost wish these guys would have their Scottie Pippen-Toni Kukoc moment, where Pippen took himself out of a Chicago playoff game vs. New York with 1.8 seconds left in 1994 because Phil Jackson drew up the final shot for Kukoc rather than him. That moment did sort things out and clear the air.

The Heat need that desperately.

It all comes down to fit in Miami. What caused some to question Riley’s insta-team approach was the overlap in James’ and Wade’s ball-mandatory, alpha-dog styles. Those guys did the same things, played the same way, craved the same roles. Complimenting each other, as pals who wanted to hang together through 82 games and the presumed postseason romps, isn’t the same as complementing each other.

Other teams heavy with stars – the teams that have won – have had players who fill each other’s voids, add to each other’s strengths. The San Antonio Spurs, for instance, are the epitome of team in today’s NBA because Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker all do different things (Sunday’s loss to the Lakers not withstanding).

Even the current Bulls – whose kinda-big three of Rose, Noah and Carlos Boozer barely glimmer compared to Miami’s star power – blend better than James and Wade, with Chris Bosh loitering outside, hoping for kick-outs.

Because of the similarities and because Spoelstra has not found a way to pair James and Wade in enough action (beyond transition), Miami basketball devolves into a my turn-your turn approach that instantly makes life easier than it should be for opposing teams. Really, the toughest thing so far about facing James and Wade on the same team is that there is no respite in 48 minutes; at least one of them can be on the floor at all times.

They play together — they are on the floor together — plenty. It’s the playing together that needs work.

Unless, that is, we’re missing the point entirely and the play as drawn up Sunday was to get the ball to Wade by having him frantically chase down James’ miss over Noah, avoid stepping on the right baseline and hoist a hurried turnaround before the buzzer.

http://hangtime.blogs.nba.com/2011/03/0 ... ef:nbahpt1
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Re: NBA MOST RECENT TRADES

Post by Subhuman Yeti »

Wade, Heat continue insisting, 'We're fine'


Posted Mar 7 2011 5:49PM

MIAMI (AP) -- Having LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh together was supposed to be the Miami Heat formula for many championships.

And it might. Someday.

Right now, it isn't. With the playoffs a little more than a month away, time is running out.

So maybe it was fitting that Heat coach Erik Spoelstra had his back to the wall of Miami's practice court Monday when trying his best to clear up "Crygate.'' Here was his clarification: He saw glossy eyes, but heard no whimpering.

Ultimately, little of that matters. A day after Spoelstra said there was "a couple guys crying in the locker room'' in the moments that followed Sunday's 87-86 loss to the Chicago Bulls - the latest entry in a growing list of last-second chances gone awry - whether tears were falling or not is irrelevant.

Shots aren't falling.

That's the bigger issue for the Heat, who have lost four straight and are early in their toughest stretch of the season. Portland, hardly a slouch from the suddenly surging Western Conference, visits on Tuesday. Kobe Bryant and the two-time defending champion Lakers, who just happened to roll a San Antonio team that embarrassed the Heat last week, stop by Thursday. The Spurs visit next Monday.

Even with that, the Heat confidence remains.

"We're a team that no one wants to see in the first round,'' Wade said. "We lose every game from here on out, somebody's got to see us in the first round. And the Miami Heat isn't really a team you want to see in the first round.

"We're fine.''

That's debatable.

Despite the "Big Three'' averaging a combined 69.9 points, 22.4 rebounds and 13.3 assists, the Heat have clear issues, including consistency at point guard and center along with the bench. In the public eye, every loss seems almost cataclysmic. There's often speculation over Spoelstra's security with the Heat, especially with a Hall of Famer in Pat Riley still looming over the franchise.

They're 43-20, the league's sixth-best record - not the pace James grew accustomed to when he was the lone true superstar with the Cleveland Cavaliers, who had been among the league's very best. They've had their moments, like a big Christmas win against the Lakers, a late-game rally to win at Oklahoma City, a run of 21 victories in 22 games from Nov. 29 through Jan. 9. That run started after James bumped Spoelstra on the way to a huddle in Dallas and speculation started raining that the Heat were already finished.

Take that stretch away, though, and the Heat are 22-19.

Not the stuff from which titles are made.

"At the end of the day, we're in a good position right now, in the Eastern Conference and in the whole league,'' James said. "We get a win, we'll be all right.''

James was saying the other day that he'd rather get blown out in a game than lose at the buzzer, and at this point, it's easy to see why he thinks that way.

The Heat have lost 11 games already this season in which they had a chance to take the lead or tie the score in the final 12 seconds of regulation or overtime. The team is shooting 1 for 19 in those situations, and the one make - a dunk by James against Memphis way back in November to tie the game - came in a game the Heat lost on a Rudy Gay jumper as time expired.

James is 1 for 8 in those situations. Wade is 0 for 3, as is Mike Miller. Eddie House and Mario Chalmers are 0 for 2. Bosh is 0 for 1.

"Growing pains,'' Wade said.

That wasn't a case of self-loathing from Wade when he sarcastically said Sunday that "the world is better now that the Heat is losing.'' This team has known from the very beginning that opponents would get up for them and they would be booed in every road arena in which they play.

Bulls forward Joakim Noah says the contempt for Miami may cut even more deeply.

He relayed a story about walking on Miami Beach Saturday, getting recognized by some fans who had a message.

"I was pretty amazed ... so many people saying 'Beat the Heat' in their own hometown,'' Noah said. "In Chicago, I don't think that happens.''

What Spoelstra dubbed "Crygate'' was the talk in the New York locker room Sunday night after the Knicks beat Atlanta. And on Monday, former Heat coach Stan Van Gundy weighed in on the state of Miami during his morning availability with reporters in Orlando.

"My suggestion would be if you don't want the scrutiny,'' the Magic coach was saying, "you don't hold a championship celebration before you even practice together. ... I think the players thought it was going to be easy and they were going to roll over everybody. It hasn't materialized that way.''

For the record, the Heat say they accept the scrutiny.

"I find it kind of humorous,'' Spoelstra said.

James said he feels the same way, at times.

Go back to what the NBA's two-time reigning MVP said when asked on July 9 - the night of their rock-star-esque welcoming ceremony at the Heat home arena - which one of the he, Wade and Bosh trilogy would be taking the last shots at the end of games.

"One game or one possession,'' James said that night, "is not going to define who we are.''

True.

A defining moment, however, is coming. And at this point, the Heat can't feel great about their chances when it arrives.

http://www.nba.com/2011/news/03/07/wade ... ef:nbahpt2

Is it OK for an NBA player to cry after a loss?

Yes
9626 - 64%

No
5318 - 36%

nba.com
:lol: :lol: :lol:



Artest said it's OK to cry, but then he wants hugs and ice cream.
Funny Ron!

http://www.nba.com/video/channels/nba_t ... ef:nbahpt1
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Re: NBA MOST RECENT TRADES

Post by johnk5150 »

Subhuman Yeti wrote:
Artest said it's OK to cry, but then he wants hugs and ice cream.
Funny Ron!

http://www.nba.com/video/channels/nba_t ... ef:nbahpt1
I loved Artest as a Bull. He said he'd routinely sneak out of the UC and run across the street to the liquor store and grab a pint of brandy at halftimes. Which has to be bullshit, but it's still really funny he'd even say it.
He's like the Liberace of bass & pot.

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