New Album & The Beginning of Basketball Season

Lots of action last night

1. Clipps destroy the Bucks 153-119

2. Memphis continues to amaze as they beat the Suns .IMO the Grizz is the only team in the WC that can beat the Suns in a 7 game series.

3.. Thankfully the Lakers lost again as they have thrown in the towel. Beaten again by the Pels and SAS win so lakers are now in 11th and one game out of the playing. The season will be over for them in a few weeks. It's great to see the Lakers getting pommeled by their former players who were traded to get AD. It will be an interesting off season. They have to trade the snarl, the brow AND LeBron and start rebuilding or is that a word not in Pelinka's vocabulary

4. Cleveland who was a surprise early in the season has fallen into 7th place in the East
 
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Cleveland's had some injuries but obviously their quality of play has dropped. That said, I really like watching Garland play; he's really good now and I think will even get a lot better.
 
I thought it was an April Fools joke when I saw that the Clips pounded the Bucks 153-119......but it was not. o_O

Then I checked the box score and noticed a few starters for Milwaukee took the night off. Guess LAC scared them off.;)

Still a win...I'll take it!
 
Clipps look to me like they are capable of upsetting any team in the top four save Pheonix. How wrong I was about the Lakers. Like the rest of the betting public I had them as the favorite in the West. That blunder is almost as egregious as my favoring Simmons over Embiid LOL

I wish I had spotted Desmond Bane. I promise never to overlook a player with T-Rex arms again LOL!

Your Celtics are peaking at exactly the right time Phil. Happy for Leprechaun Nation!
 
Clipps look to me like they are capable of upsetting any team in the top four save Pheonix. How wrong I was about the Lakers. Like the rest of the betting public I had them as the favorite in the West. That blunder is almost as egregious as my favoring Simmons over Embiid LOL

I wish I had spotted Desmond Bane. I promise never to overlook a player with T-Rex arms again LOL!

Your Celtics are peaking at exactly the right time Phil. Happy for Leprechaun Nation!
Clippers were upsetting some 'higher' teams just before PG came back, so they're pretty good right now indeed. My son was telling me at the start of the season that the roster of the Lakers looked better than last year and the year before. So something must have gone horrible wrong, plus the injuries too. C's were being trashed when the new coach came in and they were losing games in the end quarters but I think Brad made his mark when he traded for Derrick White of the Spurs. The guy is a microwave of sorts on both ends, and big spark and he is still young. Tatum has learned more about passing, assisting, and Brown has learned not to outscore Tatum and let him carry the team. Now we have a good 1-2 sock. That young kid Pritchard has a lot of promise, he's the long bomb shooter that we needed years ago. :D
 
I said to Phil that the Celts could be the Cinderella team in the East. They are peaking when it counts most. Im excited for Phil

As for the Lakers, blow up the team and fire Pelinka. I have no beef with Vogel but under the circumstances he will become the scapegoat

The King decided to sit out again last night as he only needs to play in 2 more games to win the scoring title so I'm betting that's all that's on his mind.
 
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To me I feel the two Cinderella teams are the Celtics in the East and the Grizz in the West.Plus I also think the Grizz can go head to head with any team in the east as well as beat the Suns in a 7 game series

Only other team to watch in th East is the Raptors who also are finishing strong
 
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It's Chicago's gain.

"DeRozan instead went to Chicago in a sign-and-trade with the Spurs that only cost them Thaddeus Young, a future first-round pick and two second-round picks. If the Lakers had gotten DeRozan instead of Westbrook, they would certainly be in a better position than they are today. DeRozan wouldn't have cost L.A. the giant haul it took to trade for Westbrook, which included giving up Kyle Kuzma, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Montrezl Harrell."
 
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Great morning read esp for Phil as his Celtics are rated 4th in the league behind the Grizzlies

Lakers however are ranked 23 in a league of 30 teams. Oh man do I hope they fire Pelinka and hire someone who knows about building a tam from the ground up

Power Rankings, Week 25: Suns, Bucks hold top spots before final week

See where all 30 teams rank heading into the last 6 days of the regular season.


 
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Great morning read esp for Phil as his Celtics are rated 4th in the league behind the Grizzlies

Lakers however are ranked 23 in a league of 30 teams. Oh man do I hope they fire Pelinka and hire someone who knows about building a tam from the ground up

Power Rankings, Week 25: Suns, Bucks hold top spots before final week

See where all 30 teams rank heading into the last 6 days of the regular season.


The following weeks will determine if Tatum is the Celtics true franchise player. And Brown as his sidekick. They've been in 4 or 5 of the past playoffs but yet have to get into the finals itself.
 
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The following weeks will determine if Tatum is the Celtics true franchise player. And Brown as his sidekick. They've been in 4 or 5 of the past playoffs but yet have to get into the finals itself.
and on the flip side the "the King is dead, long live the King"....Lakers officially eliminated as they lose again to the Suns

I can hardly wait to read the exit interviews and to see all of the pink slips

Show Pelinka the door and remind Kendrick Perkins that this was the team he predicted would win 70 games

I never hated a Lakers team like I did this year. But as long as LeBron isn't going anywhere the Lakers will never be able to rebuild. They are doomed until he can play with Bronnie when he is a 40 yo has been in the league. It'll be years before the Lakers will be able to field a good team once again.
 
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This says it all!!!!​

Lakers' early elimination may be embarrassing, but it's what this organization needed after miserable year

By Sam Quinn



If the Los Angeles Lakers made anything clear at the 2022 trade deadline, it was this: they don't want to do what it will take to fix this. This disaster of a season, the two-year-long effort to tear down a champion, this decade of nepotistic hires and the terrible basketball it has largely produced. None of these are problems that Lakers management seemed all that interested in addressing. They were problems that the Lakers hoped would fix themselves.

ESPN's Ramona Shelburne said it best in February when she argued that her interpretation of the team's inaction "was that the Lakers organization, from ownership on down, basically decided: 'You guys got yourself into this. This is the bed you have made. LeBron [James], Anthony Davis, Russell Westbrook, Carmelo Anthony, all the future Hall of Famers, this is your choice of roster and team, go make it work.'"

Well, they didn't make it work. On Tuesday, the Phoenix Suns ended the Lakers' season for the second year in a row. This time, they didn't even wait until the postseason. They knocked the Lakers out of the running for a meager play-in position with almost a week left in the regular season. The Lakers, preseason favorites in the Western Conference, can finish no better than 11th in the final standings.

And their front office wasn't willing to do a thing about it. Their 2027 first-round pick? Apparently off-limits at the trade deadline. Cheer up, Lakers fans. That rookie is going to be a huge help for James when he arrives a few months before LeBron's 43rd birthday. Adding extra luxury tax dollars to an already bloated payroll turned out to be unthinkable. You just can't ask a Lakers franchise with an estimated $3 billion local television deal to outspend the big-market Milwaukee Bucks. Their idea of a solution was the buyout addition of 34-year-old journeyman D.J. Augustin. He didn't score a point in the season-ending loss to Phoenix.

That loss, in the end, was probably for the best. After all, those same Suns would have awaited the Lakers in the first round if they'd somehow managed to squeak their way into the playoffs. The Lakers would have lost that series and they would have lost it badly, but just getting there would have given this front office an excuse, a myth of momentum. Sure, their season would have ended the same way, but with just enough oomph to justify further inaction. We've now seen where inaction takes this team.

No, the Lakers needed to be embarrassed. They needed this season to end in such a humiliating fashion that the franchise's power brokers could no longer ignore just how bad they've allowed things to get. Any notion that they could carry the same nonchalant attitude that informed their trade deadline into the offseason needed to be erased here and now. There is no momentum here. There are no positives to build upon. There is a fundamentally broken team in need of swift and decisive action from supposed organizational leaders in order to be fixed.

That probably means something different to you than it does to Jeanie Buss. All parties involved likely concede that a coaching change is necessary. It appears unlikely that the front office that failed Frank Vogel will be held similarly accountable, but any latitude it might have had to slow-play a rebuild is dwindling. Buss fired her own brother in 2017, and unlike his replacements, his years in the lottery never included James. The Rob Pelinka-led braintrust has now squandered three of his four seasons in purple and gold. He has now missed the playoffs as many times in the past four years as he made it in his first 15. He'd seemingly prefer to finish his career in Los Angeles. He used the All-Star break to hint that he's open to moving.

If he plays in two of the team's final three games, by no means a given considering their lack of stakes, there's a good chance he'll win the scoring title at the age of 37. Even after almost two decades in the NBA, he is still a viable centerpiece for a champion. Davis, when healthy, is a proven sidekick. Those are the only two components of this roster that have earned significant roles next season.

The Westbrook experiment has failed. So, too, has the roster-building philosophy that his acquisition represented. The Lakers cannot simply stack big names and hope that their star power will overcome a poor fit. James is wasted alongside a point guard who neither shoots nor defends. He and Davis can't carry a roster with 10 minimum-salaried players. The entire blueprint needs to be rewritten.

And that was only ever going to happen from the bottom. The Lakers never wanted to have to fix this. They don't want to spend what it takes in terms of dollars or picks to give James and Davis another realistic chance to win a championship. Frankly, they still might not. But if anything was going to motivate the Lakers to look in the mirror and re-evaluate the way they do business, it was going to be missing the playoffs. This season wasn't just an abject failure. It was an embarrassment. It was proof positive that the things that this organization believes in no longer win basketball games. Things needed to get this bad. Now, there's nowhere to go but up.


Pelinka has to go....instead Vogel will become the patsy and another coach will be appointed as yet another savior to the Lakers. Trade their assets which are an aging James who now only cares about overtaking Kareem as the scoring leader and to play with his son..and I would also dump AD who had a terrible year and seemed out of shape and as a big man he sustained several foot injuries during the year. It reminds me of the end of Bill Walton's career. I would blow up the team as well as Pelinka who has no clue..so if Vogl is going, Pelinka should be out the door before Vogel

Where the hell is Jeannie Buss and the Lakers front office
 
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This says it all!!!!​

Lakers' early elimination may be embarrassing, but it's what this organization needed after miserable year

By Sam Quinn



If the Los Angeles Lakers made anything clear at the 2022 trade deadline, it was this: they don't want to do what it will take to fix this. This disaster of a season, the two-year-long effort to tear down a champion, this decade of nepotistic hires and the terrible basketball it has largely produced. None of these are problems that Lakers management seemed all that interested in addressing. They were problems that the Lakers hoped would fix themselves.

ESPN's Ramona Shelburne said it best in February when she argued that her interpretation of the team's inaction "was that the Lakers organization, from ownership on down, basically decided: 'You guys got yourself into this. This is the bed you have made. LeBron [James], Anthony Davis, Russell Westbrook, Carmelo Anthony, all the future Hall of Famers, this is your choice of roster and team, go make it work.'"

Well, they didn't make it work. On Tuesday, the Phoenix Suns ended the Lakers' season for the second year in a row. This time, they didn't even wait until the postseason. They knocked the Lakers out of the running for a meager play-in position with almost a week left in the regular season. The Lakers, preseason favorites in the Western Conference, can finish no better than 11th in the final standings.

And their front office wasn't willing to do a thing about it. Their 2027 first-round pick? Apparently off-limits at the trade deadline. Cheer up, Lakers fans. That rookie is going to be a huge help for James when he arrives a few months before LeBron's 43rd birthday. Adding extra luxury tax dollars to an already bloated payroll turned out to be unthinkable. You just can't ask a Lakers franchise with an estimated $3 billion local television deal to outspend the big-market Milwaukee Bucks. Their idea of a solution was the buyout addition of 34-year-old journeyman D.J. Augustin. He didn't score a point in the season-ending loss to Phoenix.

That loss, in the end, was probably for the best. After all, those same Suns would have awaited the Lakers in the first round if they'd somehow managed to squeak their way into the playoffs. The Lakers would have lost that series and they would have lost it badly, but just getting there would have given this front office an excuse, a myth of momentum. Sure, their season would have ended the same way, but with just enough oomph to justify further inaction. We've now seen where inaction takes this team.

No, the Lakers needed to be embarrassed. They needed this season to end in such a humiliating fashion that the franchise's power brokers could no longer ignore just how bad they've allowed things to get. Any notion that they could carry the same nonchalant attitude that informed their trade deadline into the offseason needed to be erased here and now. There is no momentum here. There are no positives to build upon. There is a fundamentally broken team in need of swift and decisive action from supposed organizational leaders in order to be fixed.

That probably means something different to you than it does to Jeanie Buss. All parties involved likely concede that a coaching change is necessary. It appears unlikely that the front office that failed Frank Vogel will be held similarly accountable, but any latitude it might have had to slow-play a rebuild is dwindling. Buss fired her own brother in 2017, and unlike his replacements, his years in the lottery never included James. The Rob Pelinka-led braintrust has now squandered three of his four seasons in purple and gold. He has now missed the playoffs as many times in the past four years as he made it in his first 15. He'd seemingly prefer to finish his career in Los Angeles. He used the All-Star break to hint that he's open to moving.

If he plays in two of the team's final three games, by no means a given considering their lack of stakes, there's a good chance he'll win the scoring title at the age of 37. Even after almost two decades in the NBA, he is still a viable centerpiece for a champion. Davis, when healthy, is a proven sidekick. Those are the only two components of this roster that have earned significant roles next season.

The Westbrook experiment has failed. So, too, has the roster-building philosophy that his acquisition represented. The Lakers cannot simply stack big names and hope that their star power will overcome a poor fit. James is wasted alongside a point guard who neither shoots nor defends. He and Davis can't carry a roster with 10 minimum-salaried players. The entire blueprint needs to be rewritten.

And that was only ever going to happen from the bottom. The Lakers never wanted to have to fix this. They don't want to spend what it takes in terms of dollars or picks to give James and Davis another realistic chance to win a championship. Frankly, they still might not. But if anything was going to motivate the Lakers to look in the mirror and re-evaluate the way they do business, it was going to be missing the playoffs. This season wasn't just an abject failure. It was an embarrassment. It was proof positive that the things that this organization believes in no longer win basketball games. Things needed to get this bad. Now, there's nowhere to go but up.


Pelinka has to go....instead Vogel will become the patsy and another coach will be appointed as yet another savior to the Lakers. Trade their assets which are an aging James who now only cares about overtaking Kareem as the scoring leader and to play with his son..and I would also dump AD who had a terrible year and seemed out of shape and as a big man he sustained several foot injuries during the year. It reminds me of the end of Bill Walton's career. I would blow up the team as well as Pelinka who has no clue..so if Vogl is going, Pelinka should be out the door before Vogel

Where the hell is Jeannie Buss and the Lakers front office
Excellent read!
 

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