Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Miller, Love Star as Timberwolves Rout Bucks


Minnesota 117, Milwaukee 79

MILWAUKEE, Oct. 6 (AP) - Rookie Kevin Love scored 16 points and Mike Miller added 12, lifting the Timberwolves to a 117-79 preseason victory over the Milwaukee Bucks on Monday night that made Minnesota's draft day trade look promising.

Al Jefferson chipped in 18 points and eight rebounds in 19 minutes, and the new-look Timberwolves may have acquired enough offensive threats to improve on last season's 22-60 mark.

Minnesota selected O.J. Mayo with the third overall pick, but dealt him to Memphis for Love, who was picked fifth, and Miller in an eight-player trade hours after the draft concluded.

Jefferson, who'll still provide the bulk of the scoring, dominated inside despite wearing a brace on his right knee to protect a sprained ligament that's limited him the last three weeks. The Bucks, without most of their regulars, couldn't contain the smooth jumpers by Miller or Love, either.

Timberwolves coach Randy Wittman kept pulling Love aside for a little extra advice on the defensive end. He didn't need any help on offense, knocking down a shot high off the glass and hitting a 3-pointer as Minnesota took a 60-37 halftime lead that reached 45 points in the second half.

Rashad McCants scored 22 points and Randy Foye 11 for Minnesota. Charlie Villanueva scored 14 points and Matt Freije and Ramon Sessions had 11 each for Milwaukee.

Milwaukee, which added Scott Skilles as coach and John Hammond as general manager, only kept seven players from last year's 26-56 team.

Center Andrew Bogut, who signed a five-year contract worth up to $72.5 million this offseason, was a late scratch with a migraine headache.

Luke Ridnour (right knee tendinitis), Tyronn Lue (strained groin), Charlie Bell (left heel) and first-round draft pick Joe Alexander (abdominal strain) also didn't play for Milwaukee. Forward, Richard Jefferson acquired in a draft day trade with New Jersey, left after scoring four points in eight minutes with a strained left quad muscle.

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Bench Players Lift Hawks to Win Over Orlando

Atlanta 118, Orlando 101

ORLANDO, Fla., Oct. 6 (AP) -- The Magic are looking for a starting shooting guard. On Monday night they watched the player they let go after last season help beat them.

Maurice Evans, who left as a free agent last summer, scored 17 points and the Atlanta Hawks beat the Orlando Magic 118-101 in the preseason opener for both teams.

"(The Magic) didn't make any attempt to re-sign me,'' Evans said. "I really thought we had something special there so I was disappointed.''

Evans, with the help of fellow reserve Acie Law, keyed a 45-point third quarter for the Hawks. The pair combined for 20 points in that span as the Hawks turned a 51-49 halftime deficit into a 94-81 lead.

Rashard Lewis led Orlando with 22 points. Olympian Dwight Howard had 17 points, five rebounds and eight blocks. The block total matches Howard's regular-season best.

Evans averaged 9.3 points in 68 games for the Magic last season, but the team opted instead to sign free agent Mickael Pietrus. Pietrus scored nine points in 25 minutes.

Evans has apparently found a spot in the Hawks' rotation.

"I sat down with Mo earlier in the week when we started camp, and kind of spelled out some things that I would like him to do,'' Hawks coach Mike Woodson said. "And I thought tonight he came out and did exactly what we talked about.''

Howard arrived in camp vowing to lead the league in rebounding - which he did last year by more than a board a game - and blocked shots. He had six blocks in the first half alone.

"He got a lot of opportunities because of our inability to guard the ball off the dribble,'' coach Stan Van Gundy said. "If he has to do that all the time, it will have an effect on his rebounding.''

Though Howard didn't make any public proclamations about his free throw shooting, after making only 59 percent last year, he hit five of six tries Monday.

J.J. Redick, the former Duke star who has yet to crack the rotation, scored six of his 12 points in the first quarter.

Magic forward Tonny Batie, making a comeback from a shoulder injury that cost him all of last season, grabbed seven rebounds but missed his first four shots and finished with six points on 2-of-8 shooting.

The Hawks, who made the playoffs as the No. 8 seed in the Eastern Conference despite a 37-45 record, took eventual NBA champion Boston to seven games before falling in the first round. With a healthy Mike Bibby at point guard, Atlanta hopes to have the pieces to complement forward Marvin Williams and Josh Smith and shooting guard Joe Johnson.

"We're moving in the right direction,'' Johnson said. "We've got to build on what we did in the playoffs. ... We've got to stay hungry.''

Bibby, who joined the team midway through last season, finally appears healthy after struggling with thumb and heel injuries in 2006-07. He had 11 points and four assists in 21 minutes.

Note: Hawks guard Speedy Claxton did not play because of a hamstring pull.

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Mayo emerges for Grizzlies

Rookie's game blending well with team's veterans

He often talks barely above a whisper.

O.J. Mayo clearly wants his game to speak at a high volume.

And the Grizzlies like the tone from their 6-5 rookie guard after one week of training camp.

He arrives early and stays late. His competitive spirit never needs booster cables. Mayo is making a smooth transition so far.

"He's shown everything he's shown before," Griz head coach Marc Iavaroni said, referring to Mayo's offseason work.

"He's tremendous competitor. He pays a lot of attention to defense. He's got a balanced game. He's learning that he can be an assassin in this league."

That Mayo isn't trying to do too much is perhaps his best characteristic. He's delivered the wow factor at times with spectacular plays in practice, but Mayo seems to focus more on asking questions, learning and blending into a framework established by returnees Rudy Gay, Kyle Lowry and Mike Conley.

Asked what he's learned after one week of an NBA training camp, Mayo responded with "patience."

"I'm just being patient," he said. "That's an adjustment so I just try to stay in good with the team. I want to stay poised and find a rhythm. Everybody has been helping me get acclimated to the system."

Mayo is seeing most, if not all, of his time at shooting guard, where he'll likely start when Grizzlies play Tuesday at Houston in their first game of the exhibition season.

Last Saturday during a public scrimmage, Mayo showed his versatile scoring ability and was unselfish with the basketball. He wasn't mistake-prone when the second unit forced the ball out of his hands with double-team defense at the top of the key.

His elevation at the rim and on jump shots, along with deft 3-point shooting, has stood out.

On defense, Mayo's quick hands, good footwork and energy make him effective.

The desire to lead and refuse-to-lose attitude are traits as evident with the Grizzlies' complete cast as they were in summer league and pick-up games.

But Mayo hasn't been involved in any confrontations with teammates -- at least nothing like the altercation that required teammates to separate him from 7-footer Darko Milicic in a pick-up game two weeks ago.

"He's also understanding the need to have a balance to your competitiveness where you're always in control and thinking ahead," Iavaroni said. "That comes with time. He's young."

Still, Mayo, who will turn 21 in a month, is impressing teammates and coaches with maturity that seems to extend beyond his years. They say Mayo's basketball instincts distinguish him from most 20-year-olds.

If he seems unflappable, it's because Mayo draws from vast and high-end basketball experiences.

He was a part of the 2008 U.S. Select Team that helped the Olympic Team prepare for the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. Mayo often played opposite Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant in those Las Vegas sessions.

"I held my own," said Mayo, who was acquired by the Grizzlies in a seven-player, draft-night trade with Minnesota that sent UCLA forward Kevin Love and Mike Miller to the Timberwolves for Greg Buckner, Antoine Walker and Marko Jaric.

The trade was met with great approval and anticipation of Mayo becoming a star from the Grizzlies' fan base.

None of that is lost on Mayo. Right now, though, he's concentrating on being a lot more than hype.

"It's a long season," Mayo said. "I want to work hard, but I understand that this is a process. It's fun getting the team together and getting ready to go to war together. It's been really competitive. It's all about hard work right now."

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Monday, October 6, 2008

DKV Joventut: Ricky Rubio undergoes arthroscopy


DKV Joventut teenage superstar Ricky Rubio will undergo surgery in his right wrist, the club announced Monday. Rubio has been sidelined for the entire preseason due to this hand injury and will undergo a wrist arthroscopy as soon as tomorrow to investigate if ligaments are damaged. The arthroscopy will also allow DKV Joventut to estimate how long Rubio will be sidelined. Rubio helped Joventut to win the Spanish King's Cup and the ULEB Cup titles with Joventut last season, as well as reaching the 2008 Olympic final with Spain this summer.

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Hornets Win Preseason Opener Over Warriors



New Orleans 106, Golden State 103

NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 5 (AP) - David West scored 19 points, Hilton Armstrong added 14, and the New Orleans Hornets won their preseason opener, 106-103 over the Golden State Warriors on Sunday night.

Chris Paul had 13 points, six assists and a steal for New Orleans. Paul and West, the Hornets' two All-Stars last season, each played 22 minutes.

Marco Belinelli led Golden State with 14 points, hitting both 3-pointers he attempted in the fourth quarter to keep the game close.

Anthony Morow's late 3 cut the Hornets' lead to 105-103. After Ryan Bowen made a free throw for New Orleans, the Warriors had a chance for a tying 3 in the final seconds, but Morrow's attempt bounced off the rim.

Corey Maggette scored 13 points for Golden State, while Kelenna Azubuike added 12 and Al Harinngton 11.

Former LSU standout Anthony Randolph, the Warriors' top draft choice last summer, played nearly 18 minutes, going 3-of-5 from the field for six points.

Veteran Mike James, seeking to win the Hornets' backup role at point guard behind Paul, scored 12 points and had five assists. James Posey, New Orleans' top free-agent acquisition, received an ovation when he checked in and finished with nine points.

Hornets center Tyson Chandler played only the first 5 minutes of the game before leaving with a sprained right ankle. He watched the second half from the bench, still in his warmups, and stood to chat with teammates with no apparent pain during timeouts.

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Sunday, October 5, 2008

ARG – Hernandez ‘takes his time’ on decision to remain or go as Argentina coach


BUENOS AIRES (CABB) – Sergio Hernandez is mulling over an offer by the Argentina Basketball Federation to continue as coach of the national team.

Hernandez guided Albiceleste to a bronze medal at this summer’s Olympics.

“I will take some time to think about it,” he said.

“If it was down to willingness and pleasure, I would remain in the national team for life.

“But that is not the only thing. I want to be very honest, evaluate if I still have the energy to take a role that is sacred. I returned from Beijing and I didn´t rest much.

“If there isn´t (enough energy), then I should leave the place to someone else.”

Hernandez had a tough act to follow in Ruben Magnano, the Argentinian coach who guided the national team to a gold medal at the 2004 Olympics. Magnano then decided to coach Varese in Italy and that was not compatible with staying on as the boss of the Albiceleste.

At the World Championship in Japan, Argentina suffered a narrow defeat to Spain in the semi-finals when a potential game-winning three-pointer from a wide-open Andres Nocioni bounced off the rim at the very end.

They ended up losing to the United States in the battle for third place.

Last year, Hernandez’s team managed to win the silver medal at the FIBA Americas Championship in Las Vegas despite the absence of Ginobili, Fabricio Oberto, Andres Nocioni and other key players.

This year, Hernandez’s team lost Ginobili to an ankle injury in the first quarter of their semi-final to the United States but still hit back in the bronze-medal game to beat Lithuania.

“There are many good coaches out there,” Hernandez said.

“(Argentina Basketball Federation vice president German) Vaccaro already told me (about a possible contract extension) while having coffee but that was that.”

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With Bynum back, expectations are high for the Lakers

Andrew Bynum has gotten big, cinematically big, to the point that when he approaches, you can't help but do a slow pan from his toes to his head, like a dramatic movie shot. His chest and shoulders have filled out. He's a skinny teenager no more.

The question is: Is Bynum big enough to handle the extraordinary burden placed on him, to be the man to bring the Lakers from 2008 runners-up to 2009 champions?

Bynum doesn't sag under the expectations. He shrugs.

"I don't think it's putting a lot on my shoulders at all," Bynum said. "We have a team, a caliber of team, that's worthy and good enough to get back."

Lakers fans already have done the math. Kobe Bryant & Co. plus Bynum in the first two months of the 2007-08 season equaled the top team in the Western Conference. Kobe & Co. plus Pau Gasol in the second half of the season equaled the Western Conference championship. Therefore, Kobe & Co. plus Gasol and Bynum should equal NBA champs, right?

The equation isn't that simple. There are some additional facts and figures to throw in there.

For one thing, "We've seen Andrew play about 20 games in three seasons, and that's about it," coach Phil Jackson said.

Has so much ever been expected from someone who has done so little?

Maybe 20 is an arbitrary number. I doubt Jackson could cite a game-by-game tape breakdown for his arrival at that figure. But 20 is as good a number as any to use with Bynum. After all, 20 is, until Oct. 27, his age. Think about that. If he had been healthy all season and the Lakers had won the championship, he could not have sipped the champagne legally.

So he'll be 21 to start this season. That's not a bad number to describe him, either. It happens to be the total number of games in the two best months of his career.

In January 2007, he averaged 10.7 points and 6.4 rebounds -- both personal bests to that point -- in 15 games. Then he declined in both categories the rest of the season. In January 2008, he averaged 17.3 points, 9.3 rebounds and 2.3 blocked shots in six games before he dislocated his knee and was done for the season.

If it were as easy as extrapolating the numbers from a small sample set, they'd be making a bust for Priest Holmes for the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Let's slow down a little bit and look at what Bynum has done. The supposed savior scored 20 points in a game all of five times last season. He had double-digit rebounds 21 times (about two-thirds of the time).

By comparison, Tim Duncan averaged 21 and 12 as a 21-year-old rookie in 1997-98.

Everything Bynum gave the Lakers last season was a bonus. The Lakers did like him enough to select him with the 10th pick in the 2005 draft. And they valued him enough to hold onto him when Jason Kidd was on the trading block in 2007. But through two seasons, after 128 games and career averages of 5.6 points and 4.4 rebounds, they couldn't realistically expect the performances he put on last season, when he turned into an offensive focal point, when Kobe Bryant went from disparaging him to continuously feeding him the ball.

The easiest thing to do in the NBA is break out. Even Willie Burton has a 50-point game to his credit. The hardest thing is to sustain greatness. That is the challenge before Bynum.

"We'll see if he can get to that level where you compete every moment you're on the floor," Jackson said. "That's something Andrew was just getting ahold of when he was injured last year.

"He reached a certain potential point of what we saw, a light go on somewhere. He realized, 'This is what I have to do to be competitive.'"

Bynum welcomes the expectations. He even adds to them. He says he wants to be an All-Star, to average 20 points and 10 rebounds. He says his knee injury is behind him, that it even withstood a low-bridge during a pickup game and he realized he didn't have to worry about it anymore.

Jackson calls the 20-point wish "not possible," not as long as Bryant, Gasol, Lamar Odom and Derek Fisher are around, for starters. He thinks 10 rebounds are feasible. He'd like three blocked shots per game as well.

"What I ask Andrew to do in this offense is to rebound offensively and set picks," Jackson said. "And to be a pivotal point in our offense. I'm not asking him to be a one-on-one scorer or asking him to get a lot of points, but he's a guy that's going to shore up the defense, which I think is the most important aspect, and rebound, which I think is the second-most important aspect."

Which sounds just like what Bynum wants to do.

"I've seen how I can help out," he said. "Just being a big presence.

"We have to develop a toughness. If somebody gets beat by Paul Pierce, for example, somebody's there to take the charge."

It's no coincidence he cited a Celtic, since it was Boston's overpowering of the Lakers in the NBA Finals that made Bynum's absence so glaring. He also used Kendrick Perkins as an example of a big, tough center who can hold it down in the middle.

So maybe that's the scale Lakers fans should use to weigh Bynum. Not Shaquille O'Neal or Hakeem Olajuwon or Patrick Ewing. Kendrick Perkins. Hey, it worked for Boston.

On offense, Bynum still needs to develop a signature move. He needs to generate more points on his own, rather than depending on lobs and drop-offs as he did so often last season. It wasn't as if Bynum simply overpowered people on the block or swung left and lofted a sky hook, to use the preferred methods of two great Lakers centers of the past, Shaq and Kareem.

And he'll need to find his game while learning about Gasol's game. They've never played together, so they'll have to figure out who likes which side, who should spin and head to the hoop, who should play outside. This should work just fine. Gasol likes to slide out along the baseline and shoot. Bynum is comfortable taking the ball at the high post, and he's an underrated passer.

If it takes a while for them to get in synch, that falls under the category of "nice problems to have." Remember, it wasn't that long ago that the Lakers entered the playoffs with Kwame Brown as their starting center.

"I think it will play out really good," Gasol said. "We're both very talented, we both have a lot of size and ability. We should be a very dangerous couple."

Sometimes we forget English is Gasol's second language, so we'll excuse him for that last phrase. With the exception of Bonnie and Clyde, we don't think of "couples" as being "dangerous." Dangerous duo, maybe. Terrifying tandem.

Which brings up a good point: What exactly should we call this pairing of Lakers big men?

"Pau and Bynum," Bryant said. "How about that?"

Hmmm, don't think that will move a lot of product out of the team store. But get ready to hear those names a lot this season -- Pau on offense, Bynum on defense -- most likely all the way into June.

The one thing Bynum has managed to do in each of the past two seasons is exceed expectations. This year, he only has to meet them. His ambition and attitude are properly aligned. The Lakers can make his life easier by granting him an $88 million extension by the end of the month, and it probably won't take much for them to feel comfortable with those numbers … or something close.

Standing next to Bynum -- seeing him and listening to what he has to say -- can make you believe. This is a team that could win it all.