Month: February 2006 (Page 4 of 14)

Knicks look to acquire Francis

The New York Times is reporting that the Knicks are close to finalizing a trade that would bring Orlando guard Steve Francis to New York.

The current proposal, according to the source, would send guard Jamal Crawford, forward Maurice Taylor and possibly the swingman Trevor Ariza to Orlando. The Knicks would obtain Francis and forward Pat Garrity.

Francis and the Magic have been on the outs since the team suspended the guard for two games last month for refusing to enter a game. Francis later apologized, but since the incident several teams have inquired about his availability.

This is really a Crawford for Francis swap, and the Knicks would be getting the better end of the deal talent-wise. Whether a Stephon Marbury/Francis backcourt would work better than a Marbury/Crawford backcourt is uncertain. Marbury and Francis are two of the most talented guards in the league, though I’m not sure I’d want either guy on my squad. I prefer Francis to Marbury, but both are shot happy and it is unclear that the two could co-exist successfully in the league’s biggest, most intense market. One possibility is that this is a precursor to a second deal that would send Marbury out of town.

NBA reconsidering playoff format

Since the NBA went to a six-division format, the top three seeds in each conference have gone to the three division winners. If the playoffs were today, the two best teams in the West, Dallas (41-11) and San Antonio (40-12), would potentially face each other in the second round of the playoffs. The league is considering its options to avoid such a situation in the future.

“I think the one thing there may be some interest in … would be to maybe look at how you seed the top four teams,” deputy commissioner Russ Granik said Saturday. “One thing that we have kicked around is whether you might say, all right, those same four teams are going to get the top four seeds, but maybe you do it in accordance with their records.”

I hear the argument that the Mavs, if they’re going to reach the NBA Finals, are going to have to beat the Spurs eventually, whether it’s in the second round or in the West Finals – so why bother changing the format? Well, for two reasons: (1) the playoffs should be set up so that the two best teams in each conference meet in their respective conference finals – that’s the marquee matchup that the fans want (2) if the Mavs have the #1 seed they should be rewarded by not having to face the #2 seed until the conference finals – the Spurs could lose their second round series.

In the end, you don’t want a second round series to be the biggest matchup in the conference playoffs. It’s too bad that the league won’t be able to avoid that this year.

Couch Potato Alert

This week is kind of light in both the college and pro basketball arenas. The week’s best college matchup – UT/Florida – isn’t even on national television. Oddly enough, the week’s best NBA matchup – Clippers/Mavs – isn’t either. Maybe the week’s most interesting matchup is on Thursday, when Ron Artest visits Kobe in LA.

College Hoops
Tues, 7pm: (8) Illinois @ Michigan – ESPN
Wed, 8pm: (11) Tennessee @ (9) Florida – local
Wed, 8pm: (12) Ohio St. @ (16) Michigan St. – ESPN Full Court
Wed, 9pm: (21) North Carolina @ (14) N.C. State – ESPN Full Court

NBA
Tues, 8:30pm: LA Clippers (30-21) @ Dallas (41-11) – local
Wed, 9pm: Milwaukee (27-25) @ Chicago (23-29) – ESPN
Thurs, 8pm: Indiana (26-23) @ Detroit (42-9) – TNT
Thurs, 8:30pm: Memphis (29-23) @ Dallas (41-11) – local
Thurs, 10:30pm: Sacramento (24-29) @ LA Lakers (26-26) – TNT

Bonds can’t retire soon enough

I hate Barry Bonds. There, I said it. You all feel the same way, or most of you do, anyway. What’s not to hate? The guy uses steroids while chasing down one of the most sacred records in professional sports, denies ever using anything illegal, then tries to convince us that his steroid use was unintentional after his grand jury testimony was leaked to the press, bashes the media for reporting the story (“You all have dirt in your closets. Clean out your own closet before cleaning out someone else’s.”), and plays the victim in front of cameras while rehabbing his knee (“You guys [the media] wanted to hurt me bad enough, you finally got there. You wanted me to jump off a bridge, I finally have jumped. You wanted to bring me down, you’ve finally brought me and my family down.”).

And now, there’s this quote from Bonds in a recent USA Today article:

“I’m not playing baseball anymore after this. The game [isn’t] fun anymore. I’m tired of all of the [stuff] going on. I want to play this year out, hopefully win, and once the season is over, go home and be with my family. Maybe then everybody can just forget about me.”

I would love nothing better than to forget about Barry Bonds, but that ain’t happening. In fact, it looks like Bonds may not even retire after this season, despite the above quote. Bonds later “clarified” his statement to USA Today in a phone interview with MLB.com:

“If I can play [in 2007], I’m going to play; if I can’t I won’t. If my knee holds up, I’ll keep on going. I’m playing psychological games with myself right now. I don’t want to set myself up for disappointment if things don’t work out this season. So I go back and forth. Back and forth every day. These are the things that are going through my mind. This is what I’m struggling with.”

Do us all a favor, Barry: next time you go back, don’t bother coming forth. Just go away. I’d love to see him walk away before getting the seven homers he needs to pass Babe Ruth, but that’s a pipe dream. So let’s compromise: Get your 715 home runs, and then go away. Forever. Nobody wants to hear from you anymore. Nobody wants to see you whining to a bunch of reporters that they’re the reason you’re unhappy. Nobody wants to be subjected to these kinds of quotes anymore:

“Baseball is a fun sport. But I’m not having fun. I love the game of baseball itself, but I don’t like what it’s turned out to be. I’m not mad at anybody. It’s just that right now I am not proud to be a baseball player.”

If you’re not proud of being a baseball player, maybe you should look at some of the decision you’ve made throughout your career instead of blaming the sport, the media and the fans.

Baseball is what it is today because guys like Barry Bonds think they are bigger than the game. The only way to cure that is for guys like Barry Bonds to just walk away.

Ricky Williams in trouble…again

Looks like we may have seen the last of Ricky Williams on the football field:

Miami Dolphins running back Ricky Williams has violated the NFL’s substance abuse policy for a fourth time and is facing a one-year suspension from the league, Denver television station KDVR reported on Sunday.

The Miami Herald, citing two sources of its own, confirmed the station’s report that Williams has violated the policy, although neither source would say whether Williams had failed a drug test or if he had missed a required test, which also is a violation.

In their Rumor Mill, ProFootballTalk.com reports the violation was indeed a missed test, not a failed one, but adds:

The difference is technical. Either action is a violation of the substance abuse policy, and a violation (for Williams) most likely will trigger a minimum suspension of one year. During the suspension, he still will be expected to submit to testing and other aspects of his treatment plan.

This is a tough one to understand. Why go through the hassle of coming out of retirement, talking to the media about everything, apologizing to your teammates, enduring a four-game suspension, and backing up a rookie, only to space on a drug test (Williams is reportedly in India right now) and earn a year-long ban?

At this point, it’s clear football just isn’t very important to Ricky Williams, which is a shame since he managed to raise his stock significantly last year and was likely on his way to a featured role with someone like Denver. Then again, if Ricky’s not interested in playing football anymore, then this is the perfect excuse to retire for good this time around. Of course, there’s a chance Williams could appeal the suspension since he didn’t actually test positive, but it seems like a one-year suspension is almost inevitable at this point.

« Older posts Newer posts »