by zike_42 » Fri Mar 15, 2013 11:15 pm
In the Conference Finals Detroit took out Washington 4-1 to no-one’s surprise but the surprise was the Kings and Spurs series went to another game seven. Ernest Jameson actually did something with 27 points and 14 rebounds as the #6 Spurs are going to the NBA Finals with a 112-95 game seven win.
2019 NBA Finals – San Antonio Spurs vs. Detroit Pistons
Game One
San Antonio 105 – Detroit 111 (DET 1-0)
Player of the Game – John Johnson – 39 points, 6 rebounds
Game Two
San Antonio 74 – Detroit 103 (DET 2-0)
Player of the Game – John Johnson – 38 points, 6 rebounds
Game Three
Detroit 113 – San Antonio 98 (DET 3-0)
Player of the Game – Greg Monroe – 27 points, 17 assists, 12 rebounds, 4 blocks, 4 steals (WOW)
Game Four
Detroit 76 – San Antonio 92 (DET 3-1)
Player of the Game – Ernest Jameson – 18 points, 17 rebounds
Game Five
Detroit 95 – San Antonio 111 (DET 3-2)
Player of the Game – Jamal Howell – 24 points, 8 rebounds
Game Six
San Antonio 84 – Detroit 110 (DET 4-2)
Player of the Game – John Johnson – 26 points, 5 assists
Well that didn’t surprise anyone, the 70-12 Pistons winning the championship which is their second in a row and third in five years. What did surprise me was Greg Monroe’s game three performance which will go down as one of the best of all time in an NBA Finals game.
It’s lottery time so let’s see if I can snag a team with a high draft pick.
14 – Atlanta (0)
13 – Boston (0)
12 – Brooklyn (0)
11 – Philadelphia (0)
10 – Golden State (0)
9 – Dallas (0)
8 – Chicago (-1)
Boston have jumped.
7 – Orlando (-1)
6 – LA Clippers (-1)
5 – Portland (-1)
4 – Miami (-3)
3 – LA Lakers (0)
2 – Phoenix (0)
1 – Boston (+7)
Congrats to the Celtics who now have a superstar in Raul Lopez.
The awards are announced and I would love to see Kenneth Faried and Dwight Howard get into the All NBA teams.
Most Valuable Player:
Kevin Durant, Oklahoma City Thunder – 31.5 points, 1.5 assists, 7.7 rebounds, 1.0 steal, 1.3 blocks
Second MVP in a row and third overall.
Defensive Player of the Year:
Anthony Davis, New Orleans Hornets – 17.7 points, 1.8 assists, 9.5 rebounds, 2.0 steals, 3.8 blocks
I really don’t see him giving this award up any time soon.
Sixth Man of the Year:
Iman Shumpert, Minnesota Timberwolves – 14.0 points, 5.1 assists, 3.9 rebounds, 2.8 steals, 0.2 blocks
Should be starting for the Timberwolves but good on him.
Rookie of the Year:
Brooks Badu, Philadelphia 76ers – 13.1 points, 6.7 assists, 3.0 rebounds, 0.9 steals, 1.0 block
Made a fool out of me and I’m happy for it. Hopefully he can continue his fine form.
Coach of the Year:
Lawrence Frank, Detroit Pistons – 70-12 (.854)
Obviously.
All NBA First Team:
Kyrie Irving, Cleveland Cavaliers
John Johnson, Detroit Pistons
Kevin Durant, Oklahoma City Thunder
Kevin Love, Minnesota Timberwolves
Andrew Bynum, Cleveland Cavaliers
All NBA Second Team:
Russell Westbrook, Oklahoma City Thunder
Klay Thompson, Charlotte Bobcats
Lebron James, Utah Jazz
Anthony Davis, New Orleans Hornets
Dwight Howard, Memphis Grizzlies
All NBA Third Team:
Jeremy Lin, Toronto Raptors
Bradley Beal, Washington Wizards
Paul Orvis, Toronto Raptors
Greg Monroe, Detroit Pistons
Joakim Noah, Washington Wizards
All Defence First Team:
Lewis Vines, New Orleans Hornets
Iman Shumpert, Minnesota Timberwolves
Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, Charlotte Bobcats
Anthony Davis, New Orleans Hornets
Dwight Howard, Memphis Grizzlies
All Defence Second Team:
Jrue Holiday, Detroit Pistons
Avery Bradley, Atlanta Hawks
Paul Orvis, Toronto Raptors
Serge Ibaka, Oklahoma City Thunder
Andre Drummond, Detroit Pistons
All Rookie First Team:
Brooks Badu, Philadelphia 76ers
Ron Winston, Indiana Pacers
Sam Jennings, Miami Heat
Emmett Smith, Portland Trailblazers
Bryce Metcalf, Los Angeles Lakers
All Rookie Second Team:
Jevin Lindeman, Dallas Mavericks
Tim Curry, San Antonio Spurs
Lavor Freeman, Brooklyn Nets
Tom Heide, Portland Trailblazers
Emmett Emerson, Phoenix Suns
I got the phone call I had been dreading ever since we lost that game seven against Sacramento.
“Hello Yaxley, how are you today?” Mr Hershey starts.
“Yeah, OK good to see the Celtics get the number one pick,” small talk on my end.
“Let me start, this team is not what I wanted. It costs way too much than I wanted and you didn’t even get into the NBA Finals! This team that is worth over $80 million couldn’t even beat a team that finished below .500 in the regular season. I am not happy with you, in fact I’m outraged that you thought that this would fly.”
I can picture a vein on his forehead starting to pulse.
“And you deliberately disobeyed me!” He continues. “I told you that I didn’t want to be in the luxury cap and you went there anyway. If we won the title then I could have let it slide but this is inexcusable. Clear out your office, you’re fired.”
With that he hung up and I wasn’t a part of the Memphis Grizzlies anymore. Oh well, I better hit the phones to see if anyone wants me.
[color="Red"]I get four messages from teams that want my services as the General Manager of their team – Indiana, Dallas, Seattle and Nevada. Again it’s up to you readers, who should I go with? Here are the pros and cons of each team.[/color]
Indiana Pro
-Great young talent – Ron Winston, Alexander Verhaeren, Kawhi Leonard, Jim Turner
-Great owner who sees this team as a basketball club, not an investment
Indiana Con
-No lottery draft pick
-Quite a few terrible contracts for average players
Dallas Pro
-Amazing owner who will stop and nothing to get a championship
-Bonefide superstar in Brandon Jennings
-Number nine draft pick
Dallas Con
-Terrible balance with way too many SFs
-Loads of nearly unmovable contracts
Seattle and Nevada Pro
-Blank slate as expansion teams
-High draft picks
Seattle and Nevada Con
-Starting from the very bottom
-Unknown owner status