May 1, 2012 in Sports
Norman Chad
Frankly, Iâm tired of all the buzz around the NHL postseason. âThereâs nothing better than playoff hockey.â Oh, really? Iâll tell you whatâs better than playoff hockey: April in Paris, Ben & Jerryâs New York Super Fudge Chunk, my wife Toni and the NBAÂ postseason.
Yeah, the NBAÂ postseason.
Besides, who really is watching the NHL postseason? Ratings are way up, yet at any given time, twice as many people are watching âThe Real Housewives of Atlantaâ reunion show on Bravo than watching the NHL playoffs on NBC Sports Network. Heck, most prison TVs will put âStorage Warsâ on before they put on a Predators-Coyotes game.
Anyway, the NBA playoffs are under way â" my always-tainted money is on Oklahoma City â" and here are some of the fascinating story lines to follow:
For LeBron James, the Heat is on. Again. We all know how this tale ends â" no title in Miami. Ultimately, âThe Decisionâ will become âThe Disaster,â leaving post-LeBron South Beach with 423 singles bars and zero NBA rings. In King Jamesâ defense, when the Heat had that in-your-face Super Team celebration in July 2010 after LeBron, D-Wade and The Other Guy came together, it appears LeBron was misunderstood; he actually said the Heat would win ânot two, not three, not four, not five, not six, not sevenâ division titles.
With âAll My Childrenâ and âOne Life to Loveâ gone, the Lakers are now Americaâs No. 1 soap opera. (1) Will Kobe Bryant get his deeply desired sixth NBA title? (2) Will Andrew Bynum keep his shirt on this postseason? (3) Will Mike Brown â" a likeable fella â" eventually be known as the guy who didnât coach LeBron James or Kobe Bryant to an NBA championship? (4) Metta World Peace, I believe, is at war with his inner self.
Letâs take a moment to appreciate the San Antonio Spurs. Without much fanfare, Gregg Popovich and Tim Duncan have won four NBA titles since 1999. As Spurs coach, Popovich is 847-399 in the regular season and 108-73 in the postseason. Duncanâs been around so long, heâs played with David Robinson and George Mikan.
(Column Intermission: My good buddy, Mark Kram Jr., has written a sublime book, âLike Any Normal Day,â a heart-wrenching tale of two athletic brothers. As Larry King would say, âRush to your nearest Barnes & Noble to pick up this page-turner.â Keep the receipt: If you donât find it riveting, itâs on me.)
Speaking of knuckleheads, the Mavericks will not go back-to-back. Dallas acquired Vince Carter in the offseason, and I once again must cite The Vince Carter Rule: No team he plays on will ever win an NBA title. Fans sometimes forget his nickname, âHalf-Man/Half- Amazing/Half-Baked.â The Mavs are Carterâs fifth team in 14 seasons; he could play for all 30 NBA teams over 50 seasons and still not win a league title.
Can anyone in Clipper Nation protect Blake Griffin? Somebodyâs got to have his back other than opponents climbing it. Iâve seen most Clippers games this season, and Griffin has been tackled, waylaid, knocked down or horse-collared more than Bodacious the Bull, and, unlike Bodacious, Blake doesnât kick back. If I were the Clippers, Iâd trade for Metta World Peace and just have him run alongside Griffin for 48Â minutes.
Hereâs a pretty good team you probably never think about during the course of your workweek â" the Pacers. They had the third-best record in the Eastern Conference and the fifth-best record overall, yet 99 out of 100 Americans outside of Indianapolis cannot name a single Pacers starter.
Oh, yeah, letâs not forget about the Knicks. First here was Linsanity. Then Woodsonsanity, Melosanity, Novaksanity and soon enough maybe even Zenmastersanity. But now? Itâs time for Oneanddoneinthe playoffssanity. And let me say it again: Spike Lee, SITÂ DOWN.
(Column Postscript: Iâd feel bad if I left my readers hanging about the Pacers. Their five starters are George Hill, Paul George, David West, Danny Granger and Roy Hibbert. For those of you who guessed Reggie Miller, he retired seven years ago; for those who guessed George McGinnis, he retired 30 years ago. And the Pacersâ coach is Frank Vogel, who is unknown even within much of the Vogel family.)
Ask The Slouch
Q. Sailor Matt Rutherford was sustained on the tail end of his 10-month solo trip around the Americas by an 18-pack of PBR. How long would 18 PBRs sustain you? (Mike Burke; Virginia Beach, Va.)
A. That usually gets me through the last five minutes of any Big East basketball game.
Q. Can you give Andrew Luck some firsthand advice on how to deal with failing to meet expectations? (John Cain; Brookfield, Wis.)
A. Youâre sadly mistaken, sir â" who exactly had expectations for me?
Q. In its attempt to be the first to identify sleepers in the draft, how long until NFL Network goes to analyzing sonograms? (John Swope; Irwin, Pa.)
A. Pay the man, Shirley.
Norman Chad is a syndicated columnist. You can enter his $1.25 Ask The Slouch Cash Giveaway. Just email asktheslouch@aol.com and, if your question is used, you win $1.25 in cash!
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