Month: April 2006 (Page 15 of 20)

Mets aiming to snap NL East drought

The New York Mets are hoping this year will end differently than the past fourteen. After all, the Atlanta Braves have won the NL East title each year since 1992. With the new additions of Carlos Delgado, Paul Lo Duca, and Billy Wagner, the Mets are off to their best start in franchise history. They know it’s the Braves’ division until someone proves they can knock them off but are more than ready for the challenge.

“The important thing isn’t what we think about them, it’s what they think about us. It used to be if we beat them, they’d think, ‘No problem, we’ll get ’em tomorrow.’ Now we want them to think, ‘oh [expletive], we’re in trouble,'” said Cliff Floyd.

Look no further than the King for MVP

The criteria for the MVP award in the NBA: Is it the best overall player? Is it the best player on the best team? Is it the player who averages the most points? These three questions will yield you three different answers. Nobody seems to know exactly how the award is defined but everyone has an opinion as to who the MVP should be. This season the award can really be narrowed down to four candidates in my opinion: Kobe Bryant, Steve Nash, Dirk Nowitzki and LeBron James, with my vote going for the latter.

Kobe Bryant, the NBA scoring leader (35 pts/g), is a tremendous talent but leads the NBA in shots attempted and has the lowest field goal percentage of any of the four above candidates. Scoring 81 points in a game is great but unlike Nash and James, Kobe fails to make anyone on his team better. He jacks up shot after shot and you can’t give the award to the scoring leader when he brings nothing else to the table.

Steve Nash, last year’s MVP winner, is averaging 19 points and 10 assists on a team without their big man, Amare Stoudemire. Nash can carve up a defense as good as any point guard in the league and can create for his teammates, no doubt. Some may say Nash is the obvious choice because he’s putting up his numbers in the absence of Stoudemire. But don’t forget, another possible darkhorse MVP candidate, Shawn Marion, runs alongside him in Phoenix, taking some of the load off Nash.

Dirk Nowitzki has put up great numbers on one of the best teams in the league but falls a little short in my opinion.

And then there’s the man-child known as LeBron James. The fact that he’s putting up 31, 7, and 6.6 as a 21-year-old is a little disgusting to think about in and of itself. The guy has unbelievable individual numbers for a player his age. If that alone isn’t enough to convince you that LeBron should be the 2006 MVP, consider the fact that the Cavaliers have locked up the fourth seed in the playoffs and LeBron has the chance to lead his team to a 50-win season without having his right hand man Larry Hughes for half the season. LeBron is a physical freak who can get to the basket at will. Sure, he could be like Kobe and put up nearly 30 shots a game but he chooses not to because he loves getting everyone else on his team involved. He has really grown into the role of team leader this season and has not shied away from pressure situations. Answering his critics, he has finally proven that he can knock down game-winning shots as well as set them up for other teammates (Damon Jones, Flip Murray). LeBron has changed the face of the NBA and has resurrected the city of Cleveland. And, oh yeah, he’s only 21. LBJ for MVP!

Thomas, Gay headed to the pros

LSU freshman Tyrus Thomas and UConn sophomore Rudy Gay will declare for the NBA draft. ESPN has Thomas as the #2 overall pick (behind Joakim Noah) in their latest mock draft, while Gay, who was once considered a candidate to be the top overall pick, has slipped to #8. Gay’s performance in the tournament was unremarkable, and questions linger about his heart and his ability to take over games.

Thomas, on the other hand, showed a lot in LSU’s Elite Eight game against Texas. Matching up with LaMarcus Aldridge, he scored 21 points and grabbed 13 rebounds while holding Aldridge to just four points on 2 of 14 shooting. Otherwise, his tournament was unremarkable, as he averaged only 7.5 points and 7.5 rebounds in the other tournament games. In his defense, he only put up 4.3 shots in those four games.

Meanwhile, Joakim Noah appears to be the favorite to be the #1 overall pick. Only he’s staying in school. Overall, I like his game. He is a fierce competitor, a great shotblocker and is effective in the post. However, his jumper currently looks like that of a middle school girl and I’m not too sure how quickly this will improve. He really looks lost on the perimeter. Since he’ll probably play power forward early in his career, he’s going to need a face up jumper. Another year in school will help, but his stock isn’t going to be any higher than it is right now.

Couch Potato Alert

The NBA season winds down this week, and while the playoff teams are set, the matchups are not. For example, you can expect the Bucks to put forth a maximum effort against the Pistons as a win tonight makes it less likely that they’ll be facing Detroit in the first round. Unfortunately, TNT doesn’t have any games until the playoffs and ESPN’s doubleheader on Wednesday features two pretty meaningless games. (All times ET.)

NBA
Mon, 8pm: Detroit @ Milwaukee – local
Tues, 7pm: Milwaukee @ Washington – local
Tues, 8pm: LA Clippers @ Memphis – local
Wed, 7:30pm: Washington @ Detroit – local
Wed, 8pm: LA Clippers @ Dallas – local

MLB
Mon, 7:10pm: Atlanta @ NY Mets – ESPN (HD)
Wed, 12:37pm: NY Yankees @ Toronto – ESPN (HD)
Wed, 7:05pm: Cleveland @ Baltimore – ESPN2 (HD)
Thurs, 7:05pm: Tampa Bay @ Boston – ESPN2 (HD)

NHL
Mon, 7pm: Dallas @ Detroit – OLN
Tues, 7pm: Buffalo @ Carolina – local
Tues, 7pm: Ottawa @ NY Rangers – local
Tues, 8pm: Detroit @ Nashville – local

Bonds needs to sit already

Barry Bonds should be suspended from baseball until every allegation and charge against him is cleared up. I pick up the paper everyday and see a new story about Bonds and his “possible” wrongdoings. There is no way Barry can be innocent of every charge that is out there. I find it hard to believe that all of the accusers have a personal agenda against Bonds and they are just “picking on him”. I truly believe baseball is making a bad name for itself by allowing Bonds to chase and set new records with the all of the “possible” charges.
This is a great opportunity for the owners and league to take a stand against a very strong and selfish union in baseball and force Bonds to sit. As a fan, I really don’t want young kids to believe that the way to make the paper is by doing the “wrong thing”.

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