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You have to live with your past mistakes in the NBA, more so than most people in a normal life.
There’s a book on the Dream Team coming out on July 10th by Jack McCallum, who writes for Sports Illustrated and who wrote ":07 Seconds or Less” and it’s incredible like you’d imagine.
Here are twenty observations about the 2012 NBA Finals through two games as the series shifts to Miami for a three-game set. 1.
Well, it won’t be the Knicks or Magic, but the old weirdo’s got another ride left in him.
I had serious questions about the Thunder defense heading into Game 1.
The most entertaining Finals of probably the last fifteen years begins Tuesday night in Oklahoma City.
The Dallas Morning News shared an interesting note about Brendan Haywood’s seemingly albatross contract that could be huge this summer. via Clause in Haywood’s contract could make him ‘sweetener’ in trade talks | Dallas Mavericks News - Sports News for Dallas, Texas - SportsDayDFW.
When Larry Bird was retained as President of Basketball Operations for the Pacers, there was an interesting wrinkle.
It’s possible, however remotely, that Miami’s 101-88 win in Game 7 wasn’t the end of the Big 3 era in Boston.
Heat coach Erik Spoelstra told reporters prior to Game 7 that Chris Bosh would not start but will play in Game 7.
Stan Van Gundy’s unfiltered these days.
With so much on the line in Game 7, what are the things that will decide this game?
You want to know the truth about this game, the hidden, ugly, “no one will talk about it because it’s like running a news report on the Disney Channel about how Santa isn’t real” truth?
You know, sometimes, when it rains, it pours.
Game 7 Saturday night between the Celtics and Heat would honestly be better had the Celtics not won the title.
It was always going to be like this.
The thing you have to understand is that I don’t think you can really study Erik Spoelstra and think he’s a bad coach.