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1. Right when he hit the league, people were building him up to be the next Michael Jordan.

2. But with no championships, no breakthrough games and no "Did he just do that?!" moments, he hardly was living up to the hype.

3. It hit me the other day, after LeBron put up 10 and 19 points, respectively, in back-to-back 79-76 losses

4. (not to mention choking on the last possession of both games) that the hype surrounding him and his relatively weak NBA resume captures perfectly my feelings about Barack Obama.

Atakuweza nani na ubishi wako wa manzese, ubishi ambao haukwenda shule. Huna authority yoyote ile ya kuzungumza kuhusu Basketball lakini kama kawaida yako siku zote hujifanya kujua kila kitu kama kawaida ya Mzee wa Dataz ha ha ha ha ha Sauti ya Koroboi ha ha ha ha LOL!. Nimekuwa namba ambazo ni ushahidi wa kutosha kuhusu performance ya KJ inayoonyesha kwamba he is not just a hype or overrated, lakini bado umeng'ang'ana na blah blah blah zako bila kuwa na supporting evidence yoyote ha ha ha ha Mzee wa Dataz!!!! Unataka kuwabishia hata legends wa basktball akina Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Barkley, Ewing ambao wote wamesema kwamba Lebron is a great player. Ujifunze kukubali kwamba wakati mwingine unaandika fyongo ambazo huba ushahidi wa kusupport argumnts zako bali ni blah blah blah ha ha ha Mzee wa Dataz. Lete kilichojiri katika kikao cha KAMATI KUU ya USANII, kama si USANII MWINGINE kama ambavyo tumekwishawazoea ha ha ha ha
 
Learning from LeBron James: Why I'm not for Barack Obama (yet)
guest column


By Curtis Haley of Eugene, Oregon. Curtis describes himself as "an incoming freshman at University of Oregon, former national president of DECA (student organization of 185,000 members), and an ardent Democrat." Previously, he contributed "Lane County: What we have here is a failure to communicate."

1. Right when he hit the league, people were building him up to be the next Michael Jordan.

2. But with no championships, no breakthrough games and no "Did he just do that?!" moments, he hardly was living up to the hype.

3. It hit me the other day, after LeBron put up 10 and 19 points, respectively, in back-to-back 79-76 losses

4. (not to mention choking on the last possession of both games) that the hype surrounding him and his relatively weak NBA resume captures perfectly my feelings about Barack Obama.




Atakuweza nani na ubishi wako wa manzese, ubishi ambao haukwenda shule. Huna authority yoyote ile ya kuzungumza kuhusu Basketball lakini kama kawaida yako siku zote hujifanya kujua kila kitu kama kawaida ya Mzee wa Dataz ha ha ha ha ha Sauti ya Koroboi ha ha ha ha LOL!. Nimekuwa namba ambazo ni ushahidi wa kutosha kuhusu performance ya KJ inayoonyesha kwamba he is not just a hype or overrated, lakini bado umeng'ang'ana na blah blah blah zako bila kuwa na supporting evidence yoyote ha ha ha ha Mzee wa Dataz!!!! Unataka kuwabishia hata legends wa basktball akina Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Barkley, Ewing ambao wote wamesema kwamba Lebron is a great player. Ujifunze kukubali kwamba wakati mwingine unaandika fyongo ambazo huba ushahidi wa kusupport argumnts zako bali ni blah blah blah ha ha ha Mzee wa Dataz. Lete kilichojiri katika kikao cha KAMATI KUU ya USANII, kama si USANII MWINGINE kama ambavyo tumekwishawazoea ha ha ha ha


- Mkulu Bubu heshima ni kitu cha bure ndugu yangu, hayo maneno nimeyatoa kwenye makala iliyoandikwa na huyo Mmarekani hapo juu, sio mimi mkuu, sikuandika neno hata moja langu zaidi ya ku-paste na kubandika kwa hiyo pole sana mkuu hayo yote uliyosema hayanihusu kumbe hukusoma article niliyoibandika ukadhani nimeandika mimi, pole sana mkuu na siwezi kukujibu kwa hiyo level yako uliyoionyehsa hapo maana I am too big for that!

Respect.

FMEs!
 
Learning from LeBron James: Why I'm not for Barack Obama (yet)
guest column


By Curtis Haley of Eugene, Oregon. Curtis describes himself as "an incoming freshman at University of Oregon, former national president of DECA (student organization of 185,000 members), and an ardent Democrat." Previously, he contributed "Lane County: What we have here is a failure to communicate."
lebron_and_obama.jpg
It's NBA Finals time again. When faced with the matchup of the Detroit Pistons and the Cleveland Cavaliers - the basketball equivalent of choosing between vanilla ice cream and vanilla BEAN ice cream - I'm with the superstar - 21-year old wunderkind LeBron James and the guys from Ohio (that a Pistons loss virtually guarantees ex-Blazer Rasheed Wallace threatening to kill the ref on any given night was just a plus).

If you don't watch a lot of basketball, don't worry. My point doesn't require you to actually give a crap about the NBA.
Here's the skinny on LeBron for those of you who don't know: The guy is good. Drafted straight out of high school, hailed as the savior of the perpetually lackluster Cavs, immediately the recipient of a fatty Nike contract that spawned a worldwide trend of "Witness" t-shirts and "The Lebrons" commercials.
Right when he hit the league, people were building him up to be the next Michael Jordan. But with no championships, no breakthrough games and no "Did he just do that?!" moments, he hardly was living up to the hype. It hit me the other day, after LeBron put up 10 and 19 points, respectively, in back-to-back 79-76 losses (not to mention choking on the last possession of both games) that the hype surrounding him and his relatively weak NBA resume captures perfectly my feelings about Barack Obama.
As written here on BlueOregon and on just about every other political blog out there, a lot of people have been touting Obama as "the truth" ever since his arrival on the scene at the 2004 Democratic National Convention. He is apparently garnering huge amounts of early support from young people and is playing the role of the knight on the white horse.
But aside from the hype, aside from the excitement, what exactly has Obama brought to the table?
Is it experience? Clinton obviously has more. Is it progressive ideas? Edwards has shown himself to be much more so on important issues such as health care, and certainly Iraq. Is it his ability to win? He is not currently leading in any of the states being polled.
I think it's something different than any of those things. The energy of Barack Obama's campaign is more idea than substance.
When LeBron entered the NBA, everyone WANTED to be excited about him the same way they used to get excited about Michael Jordan - he was young, talented, camera friendly and had a nice smile - best of all, he didn't seem to tout around all of the emotional baggage of the last "next big thing", Kobe Bryant.
What Americans, and especially people my age, see in Barack Obama is hope that we might be ushering in a new era of politics, filled with enough hope and change to undo the horrific amounts of damage eight years of George W. Bush has done to the American psyche. That he happens to be a younger guy, an African-American and from humble roots just nurtures the mystique and hope even more.
But the political world is a hard place - particularly as a Democrat running against a Republican hate machine that will throw anything at you without any regard for truth or morality. I look back at the painful memories of the 2004 campaign - John Kerry's deafening silence in regard to the Swift Boat vets; John Edwards smiling his way through his debate with Dick Cheney, possibly the easiest person in the world to make look bad - and I don't get hopeful. I get scared that progressives might build Obama up into the savior, only to have him torn apart like a paper lion once the primaries are over. Momentum will carry you far when the wind's blowing in your favor, but brick walls aren't as receptive.
I want to believe in Obama as much as anyone - the thing is, he does have the POTENTIAL to embody hope the way Kennedy or FDR did. But in my book he's still a lot of marketing and very little gametime cred.
So what would Obama need to do to make me a convert? Start by facing Hillary Clinton head-on. Enough playing coy. Enough saying things that sound good that don't mean anything. I don't want to support a candidate because I like his style - I want to support a candidate because I like what he has to say about health care, or education, or Iraq, or ANYTHING AT ALL. When the rubber hits the road, I want to know that the paper tiger has some roar and bite to him.
Three games after he choked, LeBron James went into the Palace at Auburn Hills, home of the Detroit Pistons, and put up 48 points. The last 25 points of the game. 29 of the last 30. Impossible shots being made on the biggest stage, in hostile territory, in two overtimes with the game on the line. Watch the highlights on YouTube and hear the commentator say the magic words: "This is Jordan-esque". He willed his team into the NBA Finals.
That's why I now consider myself a LeBron convert: A "Witness" to his greatness.
And it's why I'm NOT an Obamaniac - yet.

- Haya Mkuu Bubu, itizame tena hii article ili ujue kwamba matusi uliyorusha hayanihusu, pole sana mkuu mwenye akili sana na uwezo mkubwa sana wa kuchambua ishus, mimi mzee wa Manzese niachie na umanzese wangu, ila nimekusikia sana loud and clear!

Respect.

FMES!
 
Sotomayor »​
Barack Obama is the LeBron James of the Democratic Party

Posted by Guest Voice in Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Democrats, George W. Bush, Harry Reid, National Security, Politics, Senate on May 27th, 2009 | Comments | View comments
Guest post by Frankie Sturm
Frankie Sturm is communications director at the Truman National Security Project and a free-lance journalist. This piece originally appeared at The Huffington Post.
Barack Obama is the LeBron James of the Democratic Party. At least when it comes to national security. Republicans have dominated Democrats on the security question for decades, but according to a new survey by Democracy Corps and Greenberg Quinlan Rosner, President Obama is relegating that long-standing Republican edge to the history books - for now.
Obama's personal numbers on national security are mind-boggling. Although derided by his critics as a naïve idealist in a dangerous world, 55% of the public believes President Obama is increasing American security. More than 60% of respondents approve of the president's handling of Afghanistan, Iraq, piracy, representing America abroad, leading America's military, fighting terrorism, and improving America's standing in the world. Most shocking - voters give Obama higher marks on national security (64%) than on overall performance (58%).
President Obama's cachet has redounded to the Democratic Party as a whole. After suffering a 10-40 point gap over the last forty years, Democrats are now statistically tied with Republicans when respondents are asked which party is better for national security. In terms of working with allies, increasing respect for the United States, and "foreign policy," Democrats enjoy large double digit margins over Republicans.
Nevertheless, we're better off keeping the champagne on ice. These results warrant little more than cautious optimism. Republicans tower over Democrats on "ensuring a strong military" by an overwhelming 18 points. In terms of patriotism, Republicans carry the day by 17 points. Moreover, it's unclear whether positive perceptions of Democrats have a solid foundation outside of President Obama's own popularity. While 46% of respondents have a favorable opinion of Democrats (it's only 28% for Republicans), President Obama gets 59%. So we really don't know where Democrats' popularity stops and President Obama's begins.
That's why Barack Obama is starting to look like the LeBron James of the Democratic Party. The Cleveland Cavaliers have finally put together a strong enough supporting cast to bring an NBA title within the realm of possibility, but it still took a 3-point buzzer beater from LeBron for the Cavs to claim victory over the Orlando Magic in game two of their ongoing playoff series. A win is a win, but for the long-term prospect of the Cleveland Cavaliers - and the Democratic Party - this is a problem.

Political gains that are heavily dependent on a single personality are easy to reverse. George W. Bush was America's most popular man for almost a year after 9/11. When his stock fell, so did that of the Republican Party. On the flip side, once the public comes to associate a political party with a particular issue, it's hard to disabuse the notion. Republicans have instant credibility on taxes and keeping the military strong. Democrats are easily trusted on education and the environment. Now that the two parties are tied on national security, the battle for issue ownership on that critical questions begins in earnest.

But Democrats also need to build their own brand as a party because, popularity aside, President Obama needs it. Watching the Democratic Senate vote 90-6 against allocating funds for the closure of Guantanamo Bay was an exercise in embarrassment for party and president alike. The criticism that President Obama has not outlined a real plan for shutting down Gitmo is perfectly legit; the spectacle of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid parroting Republican talking points on "releasing" the detainees is not.
Such incidents strengthen the popular notion that Democrats are fickle and lack clear beliefs, which is arguably the chief reason why Democrats have fallen short on national security for so long. After all, if a you can't follow through on an issue that has motivated your party (such as closing Gitmo) and stand up to a little political heat, how are you going to stand up to al Qaeda or Iran? For the American public, the answer to that question is very simple: you're not going to stand up to them, so we'll go with the other guy.
Popular presidents transform parties and redefine political eras. FDR did so for the Democrats in the 1930s, while Reagan did the same for Republicans in the 1980s. President Obama and the Democrats of today have a similar opportunity to transform the age-old perception that the Democratic Party is not to be trusted on national security. So far so good. But so far isn't good enough.
 
Mkuu FMES, kwanza nakushukuru sana kwa kunitumia PM kuelezea kusikitishwa kwako na kile nilichoandika hapa chini. Kama nilivyowahi kusema huko nyuma nisingeijua JF kama sikusikia sifa za Mzee ES siku hizo kabla ya kupandishwa chao na kuwa Field Marshall. Wakati mwingine mtu unajisahau na kuvuka mipaka katika uandishi hapa ukumbini. Nachukua nafasi hii kukuomba mkuu uniwie radhi kwa niliyoyaandika ambayo kwa namna moja au nyingine yamekusikitisha.

Nimeamua kuliweka hili hadharani ili kujenga utamaduni hapa ukumbini kwamba kama binadamu hatuko perfect tunafanya makosa makubwa na madogo lakini ni vizuri pia tukawa wepesi kukubali makosa yetu na kuomba radhi ili kudumisha uelewano na mshikamano miongoni mwetu. Kwa mara nyingine tena Mkuu FMES, nakuomba uniwie radhi maana hatuko hapa kujenga uhasama hata kama tunatofautina basi tunaweza kufanya hivyo kiungwana kabisa bila kutumia maneno ya kejeli kama nilivyofanya au matusi ya nguoni.



Atakuweza nani na ubishi wako wa manzese, ubishi ambao haukwenda shule. Huna authority yoyote ile ya kuzungumza kuhusu Basketball lakini kama kawaida yako siku zote hujifanya kujua kila kitu kama kawaida ya Mzee wa Dataz ha ha ha ha ha Sauti ya Koroboi ha ha ha ha LOL!. Nimekuwa namba ambazo ni ushahidi wa kutosha kuhusu performance ya KJ inayoonyesha kwamba he is not just a hype or overrated, lakini bado umeng'ang'ana na blah blah blah zako bila kuwa na supporting evidence yoyote ha ha ha ha Mzee wa Dataz!!!! Unataka kuwabishia hata legends wa basktball akina Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Barkley, Ewing ambao wote wamesema kwamba Lebron is a great player. Ujifunze kukubali kwamba wakati mwingine unaandika fyongo ambazo huba ushahidi wa kusupport argumnts zako bali ni blah blah blah ha ha ha Mzee wa Dataz. Lete kilichojiri katika kikao cha KAMATI KUU ya USANII, kama si USANII MWINGINE kama ambavyo tumekwishawazoea ha ha ha ha

- Mkulu Bubu, heshima mbele kaka, wewe ni mmoja wa members wachache sana ambao huwa ninawapa heshima hapa JF, sikutegemea no matter what kufikishana to this point, I am a liittle disappointed lakini it is okay nimekusikia sana mkuu.

Respect.

FMEs!
 
Bryant, Lakers eye Shaq-less title

Last Updated: Tuesday, June 2, 2009 | 1:14 AM ET

The Associated Press

bryant-k-get-090527-306.jpg

Kobe Bryant (24) and the Lakers haven't won a championship since Shaquille O'Neal was traded after their 2004 finals loss to Detroit. (Noah Graham/NBAE via Getty Images)

Kobe Bryant is about to share the court with Superman again. Only this time, it's Dwight Howard and not Shaquille O'Neal who's wearing the cape that Bryant wants to tug on.

Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers will be trying to win their first NBA title without O'Neal when the finals open Thursday against Howard and the Orlando Magic.

They failed to do so last year, losing to Boston in a humiliating Game 6 defeat.

O'Neal was traded after Los Angeles lost the 2004 finals to Detroit, leaving Bryant the undisputed leader of a team that won three straight championships at the start of the decade. Bryant still bristles at implications he had something to do with that departure.

"People that really know basketball know that that stuff means nothing," Bryant said Monday, deflecting questions on O'Neal. "It's nonsensical actually. You want to win, just to win it."

Bryant, who turns 31 in August, is completing his 13th season.

He kept to himself around his older teammates early in his career. Although he teamed with O'Neal to lead the Lakers to three straight championships, the two frequently zinged each publicly.

Building a legacy
Adding a fourth NBA championship to the gold medal he helped the United States win at last year's Beijing Olympics would burnish Bryant's still-developing legacy.

"You're thankful to be in this position," he said. "A lot of players never get to this position once in a career and I've been fortunate to be here for six times now. [I've] been very, very lucky."

Like O'Neal, Lakers coach Phil Jackson departed after the 2003-04 season and later wrote a book in which he called Bryant "uncoachable." Jackson then returned after taking a season off and has had a seamless relationship with Bryant ever since.

But there have been big bumps in the road.

Bryant implored the Lakers to surround him with better players in the summer of 2007, then demanded a trade.

The team responded by adding Andrew Bynum and Pau Gasol, and Los Angeles reached the finals last year for the first time since 2004. Bryant also won his first league MVP award a year ago.

Attitude changed
Jackson initially noticed a change in Bryant's outlook two years ago.

"He ended up just racing away with the scoring championship on an incredible run of about 15 games in a row," the coach recalled. "When we came back the next year we just said we don't want that type of ball to happen again.

"We want more inclusiveness. There was a whole issue about us getting better talent around him and that's happened over the last two years and here we are."

Bryant often talks about his love for his teammates and the ways in which he has counselled them on improving their games.

Derek Fisher's return last season clearly benefited Bryant on and off the court. They were teammates on the Lakers from 1996 to 2004 before Fisher left for three years.

"He's continued to recognize that in order for him to accomplish some of his individual goals, the team goals have to match or exceed his own goals," Fisher said. "That means other guys around him have to perform at a high level.

"Things he can share with them, he knows how important that is, and how well we take it when he does. He's done a great job at it the last couple of years."

And when his teammates struggle, well, Bryant can always just take over games himself. He did so in the Western Conference finals opener against Denver, scoring 40 points and making six free throws in the final 30 seconds to clinch the victory after the Lakers trailed most of the game.

"He's just gotten more comfortable with where he is, in terms of what he's capable of doing on the floor, and knows he can always come back to that," Fisher said.

After losing the 2004 finals, the Lakers didn't make the playoffs the following season. They failed to get out of the first round in 2006 or '07, increasing Bryant's feelings of frustration and impatience.

"It's been a long haul to get back here for all of us," he said. "I certainly appreciate it even more. Once you have that celebration and that feeling of winning, of accomplishment, you want to have it again."

 
Hivi NBA ndiyo imeshakwisha?...Nani sasa kachukua ushindi maana sioni wakicheza tena kwenye ABC channel!....
 
Mkuu FMES, kwanza nakushukuru sana kwa kunitumia PM kuelezea kusikitishwa kwako na kile nilichoandika hapa chini. Kama nilivyowahi kusema huko nyuma nisingeijua JF kama sikusikia sifa za Mzee ES siku hizo kabla ya kupandishwa chao na kuwa Field Marshall. Wakati mwingine mtu unajisahau na kuvuka mipaka katika uandishi hapa ukumbini. Nachukua nafasi hii kukuomba mkuu uniwie radhi kwa niliyoyaandika ambayo kwa namna moja au nyingine yamekusikitisha.

Nimeamua kuliweka hili hadharani ili kujenga utamaduni hapa ukumbini kwamba kama binadamu hatuko perfect tunafanya makosa makubwa na madogo lakini ni vizuri pia tukawa wepesi kukubali makosa yetu na kuomba radhi ili kudumisha uelewano na mshikamano miongoni mwetu. Kwa mara nyingine tena Mkuu FMES, nakuomba uniwie radhi maana hatuko hapa kujenga uhasama hata kama tunatofautina basi tunaweza kufanya hivyo kiungwana kabisa bila kutumia maneno ya kejeli kama nilivyofanya au matusi ya nguoni.



Atakuweza nani na ubishi wako wa manzese, ubishi ambao haukwenda shule. Huna authority yoyote ile ya kuzungumza kuhusu Basketball lakini kama kawaida yako siku zote hujifanya kujua kila kitu kama kawaida ya Mzee wa Dataz ha ha ha ha ha Sauti ya Koroboi ha ha ha ha LOL!. Nimekuwa namba ambazo ni ushahidi wa kutosha kuhusu performance ya KJ inayoonyesha kwamba he is not just a hype or overrated, lakini bado umeng'ang'ana na blah blah blah zako bila kuwa na supporting evidence yoyote ha ha ha ha Mzee wa Dataz!!!! Unataka kuwabishia hata legends wa basktball akina Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Barkley, Ewing ambao wote wamesema kwamba Lebron is a great player. Ujifunze kukubali kwamba wakati mwingine unaandika fyongo ambazo huba ushahidi wa kusupport argumnts zako bali ni blah blah blah ha ha ha Mzee wa Dataz. Lete kilichojiri katika kikao cha KAMATI KUU ya USANII, kama si USANII MWINGINE kama ambavyo tumekwishawazoea ha ha ha ha

- Mkulu Bubu, heshima mbele kaka, wewe ni mmoja wa members wachache sana ambao huwa ninawapa heshima hapa JF, sikutegemea no matter what kufikishana to this point, I am a liittle disappointed lakini it is okay nimekusikia sana mkuu.

Respect.

FMEs!

- Mkulu Bubu kwa kawaida huwa ninaheshima sana na Premium members, huwezi kukuta hata mara moja nimewavunjia heshima popote pale humu JF, ni kwa sababu nyingi sana ambazo siwezi kuzisema hapa wazi, ndio maana nikashitushwa sana na hiyo response yako, ni hayo tu mkuu!

Respect.

FMEs!
 
Original post

Atakuweza nani na ubishi wako wa manzese, ubishi ambao haukwenda shule. Huna authority yoyote ile ya kuzungumza kuhusu Basketball lakini kama kawaida yako siku zote hujifanya kujua kila kitu kama kawaida ya Mzee wa Dataz ha ha ha ha ha Sauti ya Koroboi ha ha ha ha LOL!. Nimekuwa namba ambazo ni ushahidi wa kutosha kuhusu performance ya KJ inayoonyesha kwamba he is not just a hype or overrated, lakini bado umeng'ang'ana na blah blah blah zako bila kuwa na supporting evidence yoyote ha ha ha ha Mzee wa Dataz!!!! Unataka kuwabishia hata legends wa basktball akina Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Barkley, Ewing ambao wote wamesema kwamba Lebron is a great player. Ujifunze kukubali kwamba wakati mwingine unaandika fyongo ambazo huba ushahidi wa kusupport argumnts zako bali ni blah blah blah ha ha ha Mzee wa Dataz. Lete kilichojiri katika kikao cha KAMATI KUU ya USANII, kama si USANII MWINGINE kama ambavyo tumekwishawazoea ha ha ha ha

Kuomba radhi


Mkuu FMES, kwanza nakushukuru sana kwa kunitumia PM kuelezea kusikitishwa kwako na kile nilichoandika hapa chini. Kama nilivyowahi kusema huko nyuma nisingeijua JF kama sikusikia sifa za Mzee ES siku hizo kabla ya kupandishwa chao na kuwa Field Marshall. Wakati mwingine mtu unajisahau na kuvuka mipaka katika uandishi hapa ukumbini. Nachukua nafasi hii kukuomba mkuu uniwie radhi kwa niliyoyaandika ambayo kwa namna moja au nyingine yamekusikitisha.



Wewe unataka kutuambia hayo yote uliyoandika hapo juu kwa madaa na kejeli nyingi ulipitiwa? Haaa hahaha
 
Original post



Kuomba radhi



Wewe unataka kutuambia hayo yote uliyoandika hapo juu kwa madaa na kejeli nyingi ulipitiwa? Haaa hahaha

Mtu hupitiwa akiongea tu. Mtu ukiandika kitu tena ukaki post ina maana ulikua na muda wa kufikiri. Kama unge pitiwa unge gundua hilo kwenye process ya kuandika au kabla ya kupost.
 
Mr President's Prediction Lakers in Six

Barack Obama thinks the Los Angeles Lakers are going to win the NBA crown. Asked yesterday his opinion o the series the US President said "Lakers in Six, I think." Obama correctly predicted the University of North Carolina mens' Basketball team would win the NCAA championship earlier this year.


Mr President you are going down this time. My prediction Orlando in Six.
 
Bubu-Ataka-Kusema,

..kuna jamaa hapa ameandika kuhusu King James vs Kobe Bryant.

..yeye ana mawazo tofauti na kina Barkley,Magic,...

..kumbuka kwamba Barkley ni rafiki mkubwa wa Jordan. Magic naye hampendi Kobe kwasababu kuna uwezekano Kobe akachukua nafasi ya Magic as the best Laker ever. sasa utaona kwamba hao wawili siku zote wanajaribu kumkosoa-kosoa Kobe hata mahali pasipostahili.

Kobe Bryant: At the Top of HisGame - Silver Screen and Roll


LeBron had to take his stats and go home. Kobe got the only numbers he cares about: 4 wins.

View full size photo uploaded June 3, 2009

Kobe Bryant is 30 years old. In August, he'll be 31. In basketball years, that's getting pretty high up there, and as a result, the consensus among sports writers is somewhere between "he is not the player he once was" and "he can't continue to play at this level for much longer." The problem? He's been as good as ever, and he shows no signs of slowing down.
I believe the problem here is that people are evaluating Kobe based on expectations, rather than reality. It's like a referee who expects a foul to occur in a certain situation; when that situation occurs, he immediately calls the foul – not because there was one, but because he was already predisposed, be it consciously or subconsciously, to the idea that a foul would occur in that situation. Much like that ref, who is officiating based on expectations rather than based on what he sees in front of him, many in the sports world are judging Kobe Bryant based on their expectation that his performance should be declining, if not now then soon.
But what is right there in front of their eyes tells a very different story. And not only is Kobe Bryant playing amazing basketball in his own right, but even when compared to LeBron James (whose individual performance has fans, bloggers, and media types raving) Kobe Bryant has been better - both in terms of individual performance and end result.

star-divide.v5547.jpg

Let's review, shall we? We'll breeze right on through the first two rounds of the playoffs, where Kobe was "just" pretty great, and then spend some time on the Western Conference Finals, where he was truly magnificent.
In the first round, Bryant started slowly. He took only two shots in the first quarters of each of the first two games, and an average of only five shots by half. In the third game, he shot poorly, as did most of his teammates. In Game 4, however, Kobe changed his approach. He had been looking to facilitate his teammates early in the game, looking for his shot more and more later on. In that fourth game, he took eight shots in the first quarter, making six of them, and then hit four of five shots in the second quarter. He went into the half with 24 points on 10-13 shooting. He finished the game with 38 points on 16-24 shooting (67%), along with six rebounds and two steals. His True Shooting Percentage (TS%) for that game was an astounding 72.5%. In the next game, he scored 31 points on an excellent 62.1% True Shooting, adding four steals and four assists, to lead the Lakers to an 11-point win to close out the series.
A slow start, perhaps, but after a necessary adjustment, I'd say that's not too shabby.
In the second round, Bryant faced the defensive duo of Shane Battier and Ron Artest. In these two players, the Rockets had what no other team has ever been able to throw at Bryant: not one, but two elite perimeter defenders on the court at the same time, whose primary purpose was to make Kobe's life difficult for 48 "minutes" every other day. Rarely has Kobe has to work so hard on the offensive end, and yet, this was nothing like LeBron James vs. Boston. Artest and Battier "held" Bryant to 27.4 points on 45.3% shooting (just 1.4% below his season average), 34.4% from distance, 5.0 rebounds, and 3.7 assists per game. Not exactly basement-dwelling numbers. In addition, Kobe turned the ball over only 1.57 times per game, while collecting 2.0 steals per game on the other end.
Not his best series ever, but when that's the best that two premier perimeter defenders can do against Kobe, it seems counter intuitive to suggest that Bryant is playing anything other than excellent basketball.
And now we get to the good stuff, because the Western Conference Finals against Denver was one of Kobe Bryant's best series ever. He didn't waste any time, dropping 40 points on the Nuggets, on 59.3% True Shooting, along with six rebounds, four assists, and only one turnover. Most importantly, the Lakers won, and mostly thanks to Bryant. In a two-point victory, Kobe scored the Lakers' final six points. He scored a total 18 points in the fourth quarter, coolly hitting all nine of his free throws along the way. He also doled out two assists in the final frame, making him responsible for 23 of the Lakers' 31 fourth quarter points.
In Game 2, another contest decided by a single possession, the Lakers lost, but Kobe Bryant still continued to perform. He scored 32 points on only 20 shots, good for 65.6% True Shooting. He also had five rebounds, three assists, a block, and a steal, and by (questionable) design, he never got the chance to take potential game-tying shot.
In Game 3, Kobe Bryant continued his otherworldly performance, scoring 41 points on only 24 shots, continuing his incredible efficiency with 65.1% True Shooting accuracy. He added six rebounds, five assists, and two steals, versus only one turnover, as he led the Lakers to a closely contested come-from-behind win. Not surprisingly, Kobe scored 10 of the Lakers final 13 points.
Game 4 was a Nuggets' blowout, and while Bryant never gave up, I have come around to ascribe Chris's theory that Phil Jackson intentionally conceeded this game in exchange for much needed rest – leaving Kobe Bryant, never one to simply surrender, to go into desperation mode, throwing up tough, low-percentage shots in an unlikely effort to shoot the Lakers back into the game. Even still, Bryant shot a very decent 53.6% True Shooting, adding seven rebounds and five assists to go with only a single turnover.
In Game 5, the Lakers came back with a vengeance, and Kobe Bryant led the charge – but not in the way you'd expect. He scored 22 points, but he took only 13 shots in the game (an impressive average of 1.7 points per shot), but it was his passing that secured yet another hard-fought win for the Lakers. In this game, the Nuggets double teamed and trapped Bryant more aggressively than they ever had before, and he made them pay. With the game on the line, he resisted the urge to do it all himself, instead making every right decision. He let the double team come, and rather than passing out early, he made them commit. As a result, his passes out of the double teams were unbelievably difficult, but he hit them with precision and made them look easy. With two Nuggets fully committed to Bryant, his teammates were left to play 4-on-3, and they took advantage of their numbers over and over again.
If Bryant was brilliant in Game 5 – and he was, even without posting gaudy individual numbers – he was godlike in Game 6. The Lakers absolutely dominated this game, and once again, it started with Kobe. He scored 35 points on only 20 shots (1.75 points per shot), posting an absolutely unbelievable True Shooting Percentage of 73%. He also had 10 assists, six rebounds, one huge block, and yet again, only one turnover.
Once again, the Nuggets aggressively trapped Bryant in Game 6, and once again, he made all of the right decisions. He never forced his shot, never attempted to play one-on-many, and consistently found the open man for an easy score. Along the way, he provided some very solid leadership, encouraging Gasol to be aggressive with his own shot, diagramming plays during timeouts, and instructing players like Shannon Brown during free throw breaks. As a result, the Lakers rolled to a 27-point blowout to close out the series.
In the six games of the Western Conference Finals, Kobe Bryant made 48.1% of his shots from the floor, averaging 34 points, 5.8 assists, and 5.8 rebounds per game. Very importantly (as we will soon see), he shot 93.1% from the free throw line, making 67 of 72 attempts. He was incredibly efficient with his own shot, averaging 1.56 points per shot and scoring at an insanely great clip of 62.7% True Shooting over six games.
Throughout the Conference Finals – and even now that they are over – the general consensus has been that Kobe Bryant has been "not bad," and LeBron James has been incredible. Clearly, Bryant's performance by itself should be regarded as truly incredible. But beyond that, the disparity in how Bryant and James were seen in their respective Conference Finals series demonstrates the different predispositions with which people evaluate each player.
Consider the following:
  • LeBron, a (very big) small forward whose primary advantage over Kobe is his supposedly unstoppable ability to get to the rim, shot 48.7% from the field, nearly identical to Kobe's 48.1% from the field.
  • LeBron's True Shooting Percentage was a very solid 59.1% for the series, but Kobe's was an incredible 62.7%.
  • LeBron took more three-pointers than Kobe did, but while Kobe made his at a respectable rate of 34.4%, LeBron shot a miserable 29.7% from distance.
  • LeBron took more free throws than Kobe did, but he hit only 74.5% of them, whereas Kobe hit 93.1% of his. (Important: In the fourth quarter of Game 3, LeBron missed 5 free throws that may have cost him the game. More on this later.)
  • LeBron turned the ball over 4.17 times per game; Kobe only turned the ball over 2.17 times per game. (Important: In the fourth quarter and overtime of Game 4, LeBron committed 7 turnovers that may have cost him the game. More on this later.)
  • LeBron scored 4.5 points more than Kobe during the Conference Finals, but he needed 4 extra shots per game to do so (and 5.3 extra shooting possessions, when shot attempts that result in free throws are accounted for).
Considering all of the above, it baffles me that the talking heads continue to underrate Kobe Bryant's performance in the Conference Finals, while ranting and raving to no end about LeBron James' brilliance.
Even more important than all of the above, however, was the result of the six Conference Finals games that each player participated in. While LeBron James was statistically and individually impressive, he also dominated the ball for his team. When Kobe has done the same thing in the past, he has been criticized for taking his teammates out of the game. Why is it that now, with LeBron doing the same, he doesn't receive the same criticism?
During the Eastern Conference Finals, the Cavaliers' offense essentially reverted back to that old "give it to LeBron and let him do something" offense. Is it really any surprise that the productivity of LeBron's teammates suffered while they were standing around watching and waiting for him to do something with the ball? It shouldn't be; an offense so completely dominated by one player can only be so effective. And yet, somehow, LeBron's teammates are receiving all the blame for their unexpected playoff exit. LeBron deserves his share, as well, for dominating the ball and taking his teammates out of the game. It worked once, in Game 5; the rest of the time, it hurt his team.
Some will point to LeBron's assists: he averaged an impressive eight assists in the Eastern Conference Finals. Again, I ask you, is it any surprise that he is collecting assists when the majority of the Cavs' possessions end in LeBron making a play with the shot clock winding down? The "give it to LeBron" offense does not encourage ball movement. That extra pass? There isn't time for it, and even if there was, players aren't moving enough to make it worthwhile, because they have been too busy standing around waiting for LeBron. Shoot enough, and you will score plenty of points; pass enough in situations where additional passing is not encouraged, and you will rack up plenty of assists. None of that makes an offense built on waiting for LeBron to do something late in the shot clock anything close to efficient.
On the other hand, while LeBron was dominating the ball and putting up incredible stats, all the while stifling his team's offense and taking his teammates out of the game, Kobe Bryant was on the other side of the country, worrying more about winning than statistics. While LeBron was taking over at the end of games, dominating the offense, Kobe Bryant was gladly giving up the ball to facilitate ball movement and the creation of incredibly easy shots. While LeBron was busy putting on individual performances that would end in losses, Kobe was sharing the ball and allowing his teammates to share the moment with him. As a result, that moment was much more enjoyable, both for Bryant and for his teammates.
The key statistic: In six games, Kobe Bryant took 131 shots; LeBron James took 154, also in six games. Adjusting to account for shooting possessions that ended in free throws, the disparity grows even larger, with LeBron (195) using 32 more shooting possessions than Kobe (163) – an average of 5.3 additional shots per game. Impressed by LeBron's 38.5 points per game? Consider that Kobe sacrificed his own shots to get his team wins, but if he had taken as many shots as LeBron, he would have averaged 41 points per game.
And that's not where it ends. As the bullet points above show, it's quite a stretch to actually suggest that LeBron James was better than Kobe Bryant in the Conference Finals – but if you're still not convinced, consider this. As I mentioned above, LeBron James committed 4.17 turnovers per game to Kobe's 2.17; in Game 4, he committed seven turnovers in the fourth quarter and overtime alone. Orlando won the pivotal game by two points, putting Cleveland in a hole they would never be able to dig out of. Had LeBron been able to control the ball in the fourth quarter, the overtime period would never have been necessary; had he gotten control in overtime, the Cavs might still have won the game.
And how about Game 3? LeBron missed five free throws in the fourth quarter alone. The Magic won by 10, but before the final 34 seconds, in which they increased their lead by five points due to "garbage time" fouling, Orlando had only a five-point lead. Had LeBron made those five free throws - the way Kobe made all nine of his in the fourth quarter of Game 1 (decided by two points) - the game would have been tied with 34 seconds left, and the end-of-game fouling would have been unnecessary. Again, the Cavaliers would have had a great chance of winning that game.
Here's the point: A look at Kobe Bryant's performances should tell you that he has had a stellar playoffs, and that the Western Conference Finals was among the best series of his career (which, in his case, is saying a lot). His incredible numbers for the Western Conference Finals only reinforce this observation. And if you're still not convinced, an honest evaluation of his performance compared to that of LeBron James, whose individual play in the Conference Finals is being lauded as some of the best basketball ever seen, will show you that Bryant has actually been better than James. He has been more efficient offensively, he has avoided key mistakes like missed free throws and hordes of turnovers that potentially cost LeBron two games, and he has kept his teammates involved and made all the right decisions in close, important games. In the end, only the final result matters, and while LeBron was busy playing his own game and racking up his own statistics, Kobe Bryant was sacrificing some of his own production in order to collect the most important statistic of all: Wins.
By any measure, Kobe Bryant has been as good as ever in these playoffs. LeBron's Eastern Conference Finals performance may be hailed as one of the greatest of all time, but Kobe's Western Conference Finals performance was even better. And while LeBron is back at home, trying to convince us that his refusal to congratulate the Magic or talk to the media wasn't poor sportsmanship, Kobe Bryant and the Lakers are heading into the Finals at the top of their games.
The "big three-oh"? It means nothing to Kobe.
 
Bryant puts game face on for NBA final

bryant-kobe-090603.jpg

Kobe Bryant takes a breather Wednesday at Lakers practic

(Chris Carlson/Associated Press)Kobe Bryant has gotten deadly serious.

Last Updated: Wednesday, June 3, 2009 | 9:21 PM ET
The Associated Press


His smile has vanished, replaced by something closer to a scowl. His days of joking around are seemingly on hold.

He has that look - you've seen the one. It's the cold-blooded, get-out-of-my-way-or-pay glare he'll shoot at a teammate who messes up or an opponent who dares to try and stop him.


The Black Mamba is poised to strike. The NBA final is in his sights.

After a humbling loss to the Boston Celtics in last year's final, Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers will be seeking atonement and a 15th league championship when they face the resurrected Orlando Magic in Game 1 at the Staples Center on Thursday.

For Bryant, the game's greatest late-game closer since Michael Jordan, it's a second opportunity at shutting up some of his loudest detractors.

He has won three titles but hasn't been able to win a fourth since Shaquille O'Neal was traded to Miami in 2004.

Bryant was asked Wednesday if he needed a post-Shaq title to enhance his legacy.

"Not at all," Bryant said. "It means nothing.

"To me, it's about winning another one just because I want to win another one."


Before catching his breath, Bryant, who had been loose and relaxed earlier this week, then took a verbal swipe worthy of a flagrant foul at O'Neal, his former teammate with whom he famously feuded.

"People think Shaq would have won a championship without me on that team," he said. "They're crazy."

This is Bryant's chance, and he doesn't want to waste it.

O'Neal, a seven-foot timeline connecting final appearances by both franchises, posted a tweet saying he is pulling for Bryant.

"I am saying it today and today only," Shaq tweeted. "I want kobe bryant to get number four, spread da word."

From the moment Bryant dejectedly walked off the floor in Boston last June following L.A.'s 39-point loss in Game 6, he has been focused on a return.

He helped restore U.S. basketball's world supremacy by leading the Americans to an Olympic gold medal in China last summer.

That was the Redeem Team. He's on another one.

"My next goal is winning the NBA championship," he said. "We don't want to fall short of that."

Los Angeles would seem to have everything - history, experience, star power, coaching, A-List celebrities - over Orlando.

The Lakers have won 14 titles; Orlando, zero.

The Lakers have won 61 finals games; Orlando, zero.

Los Angeles head coach Phil Jackson has nine championship rings. Orlando's Stan Van Gundy has one, but he got it as an assistant and doesn't know where it is.

Yet the Magic, making their first appearance in the finals since 1995, won both regular-season matchups against the Lakers and are capable of an upset.

"They've beaten us three of the last four times," Bryant said. "So we're very, very concerned."

They should be.


'We've always been overlooked'
Dwight Howard, Orlando's fun-loving Superman of a centre, is the league's latest incarnation of Shaq.


He can bend backboards, take over a game at both ends and crack up his teammates with a killer impersonation of the frumpy and grumpy Van Gundy.

In Game 6 of the Eastern Conference final, Howard scored 40 points with 14 rebounds as the Magic finished off Cleveland and sawed the Kobe Bryant-LeBron James dream finals matchup in half.

On their way to the finals, the three-point-happy Magic (they made 62 three-pointers against the Cavaliers and are averaging 8.6 per game in the post-season) have knocked off the favoured Celtics, Cavaliers and can now dispatch the Lakers.

That would be quite a trifecta. No team has ever beaten three 60-win teams in the same post-season.

Superman doesn't mind his role as Underdog.

"We've always been overlooked," Howard said. "We were overlooked in the first series against Philly.

"We were overlooked against Boston. We were overlooked against the Cavs, and we're still overlooked.


"We don't want to be a team that everybody picks to win because I think, as a young team, once everybody starts saying, 'OK, you're this or you're that,' sometimes you tend to forget what got you there. Everybody picking against us motivates us and drives us to do something greater."

The Magic's season seemed doomed when all-star point guard Jameer Nelson went down with a shoulder injury in February.

The team survived the adversity and now may get a recovered Nelson back for the finals.

Van Gundy was still weighing whether to play Nelson, who averaged 27.5 points in the two wins over Los Angeles.

He isn't worried about Nelson disrupting Orlando's chemistry, and Van Gundy is not convinced his return would provide any goose bumps.

"It's not like he hasn't played with our guys, and I don't really think our guys need an emotional boost," Van Gundy said. "I don't think it's going to be a Willis Reed moment or anything."

The overriding theme during the Lakers' post-practice availability on Wednesday was how last season's finals lessons will help them this time.

"We're upset about losing in the final," Lakers forward Pau Gasol said. "We should have given it a better shot than we did.

"It didn't happen and now we're here again. We can give it a much better shot and really get it done."

 
Tusubiri SuperMan anaweza fanya mambo,wengi wanawapa Lakers nafasi zaidi lakini Magic si wa kubeza kabisa,itakuwa shughuli,nadhani wanatawapost Odom na Binum against Howard "Superman" TUrkoglu nadhani itakuwa shughuli yeye na Gasol,Rashad Lewis,Pitreus vs Kobe,game itakuwa safi,used to be KObe's fan,but wont mind magic's win it all.
 
Natabiri a nervous series ..a lot of fouls due to commmitment. Its going to be neck to neck, physical. I will put my monies on LAL, they have depth in their squad, good defense and they know how to get themselves out of trouble when it really matters. They have cool heads too and best coach..
 
Hehehehehehehee....wanaona watu wanadandia Lakers train...

I'm picking the down south hommies to win it all....and Atlanta's own Dwight Howard will be the finals MVP
 
Superman all the way baby! I admire Kobe, but I'd like the overlooked Orlando to be the Champs. Magic in 7. Dwight Howard the Finals MVP.

Queen SheBron the crybaby maumivu!
 
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