Jump to content
Sign in to follow this  
ThisIsTheYear

Gamethread: Magic @ Hollywood 1/16/08 10:30 p.m.

Recommended Posts

 

Watching in high quality is a must, people!

 

250px-Orlando_Magic_logo.png

 

@

 

lakers_logo_1991_alt.gif

 

quote:
The Los Angeles Lakers are the NBA's highest-scoring team, but they've been known to have a defensive lapse or two. The Orlando Magic, meanwhile, having been making plenty of teams look foolish defensively.

 

Coming off an historic performance from behind the 3-point line, the Magic will look to run their winning streak to six Friday night at Staples Center against the Lakers, who will try to bounce back from a crushing last-second defeat.

 

Kobe Bryant's 27.2 points per game rank third in the NBA, and with the reigning MVP leading the way, the Lakers (31-7) are averaging a league-best 107.8 points.

 

Orlando scores 102.0 ppg, but is pacing the NBA in another offensive category. The Magic (31-8) have hit 407 3-pointers this season, easily the most in the league.

 

What they did from beyond the arc in their latest game, however, has never been done before. Orlando made an NBA-record 23 3s on Tuesday in Sacramento, sparking a 139-107 rout of the Kings.

 

"No disrespect to the other team, but we're excited about getting the record, an NBA record,'' said Jameer Nelson, who knocked down all five of his 3-point attempts. "Everyone is going to have trouble guarding the 3 against us because Dwight (Howard) is so tough to stop in the middle.''

 

Howard routinely dominates the paint, averaging an Eastern Conference-best 13.8 rebounds in addition to 20.2 points. On the perimeter, Orlando has Rashard Lewis, the league leaders in 3-pointers made (114). Lewis' 41.8 shooting percentage from beyond the arc, though, is only fourth among the team's regulars.

 

Among those shooting a higher percentage are rookie Courtney Lee and the previously little-used J.J. Redick. The third-year guard had barely gotten off the bench thus far in his career, but he's averaging 13.8 points and shooting 65.0 percent (13-for-20) from 3-point range in his last four games.

 

Yet perhaps the biggest reason for the Magic's impressive first half - they're an NBA-best 15-5 on the road - is Nelson. He's averaging 16.6 points, up 5.7 from last season, and his 50.6 percent field-goal shooting leads all NBA guards.

 

"All season, I've been just trying to make the right play and not trying to force things," Nelson said.

 

The Lakers certainly don't need any reminder of Nelson's improvement. He was the undisputed difference when Los Angeles visited Amway Arena on Dec. 20, scoring 15 of his 27 points in the third quarter as the Magic came from behind to win 106-103.

 

The Lakers lost just once in their following 11 games, as Bryant led the way with 30.4 ppg in that stretch. He was brilliant again on Wednesday in San Antonio, scoring 29 points and adding 10 assists, but that wasn't enough in the Lakers' first game against the Spurs since last season's Western Conference finals.

 

Bryant put Los Angeles up by two when he hit a 3-pointer with 12 seconds left, but Roger Mason's 3-point play at the other end wound up being the difference as San Antonio won 112-111.

 

"Both teams shot the heck out of the ball,'' Bryant said. "I mean, it's tough to lose a game like that.''

 

An encouraging sign for the Lakers recently has been the play of Andrew Bynum. The 21-year-old center struggled earlier this season while making his way back from a knee injury, and from Dec. 9-Jan. 6 he failed to reach double figures in eight of 14 games.

 

In his last five contests, though, Bynum is averaging 18.2 points.

 

He'll face a tough test in the middle against Howard - a challenge he wasn't ready for in last month's loss, when he had three points and five fouls in just 12 minutes.

 

Bryant scored 41 points against Orlando on Dec. 20, and had 28 in the Magic's last visit to Los Angeles, a 104-97 Lakers loss on Dec. 2, 2007.

 

Link

 

PG: Jameer Nelson

NELSON.jpg

 

SG: Courtney Lee

1210054157.jpg

 

SF: Hedo Turkoglu

lg_peja_7369.jpg

 

PF: Rashard Lewis

Rashard.jpg

 

C: Dwight Howard

p1_dwighthoward_Damian%20Strohmeyer.jpg

 

Magic Coach

 

18stanvan.jpg

 

VS

 

PG: Derek Fisher

171960_480_art_R0.jpg

?????

 

SG: Kobe Bryant

Kobe+Bryant.jpg

 

SF: Vladimir Radmanovic

2004351853.jpg

"Radmanovic auditioning for Grease 3"

 

PF: Pau Gasol

51Vps3ABP1L._SL500_.jpg

"Second 'Ultra' not mentioned in add"

 

C: Andrew Bynum

nba_g_bynum_jabbar_395x265.jpg

Kareem: "Sky hook? Check. Next step, Pyrokinesis."

 

Lakers Coach

 

kfc_logo.jpg

 

TV: ESPN

 

Radio: http://nba.com/broadband_itsOnTV

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

Watching in high quality is a must, people!

 

250px-Orlando_Magic_logo.png

 

@

 

lakers_logo_1991_alt.gif

 

quote:
The Los Angeles Lakers are the NBA's highest-scoring team, but they've been known to have a defensive lapse or two. The Orlando Magic, meanwhile, having been making plenty of teams look foolish defensively.

 

Coming off an historic performance from behind the 3-point line, the Magic will look to run their winning streak to six Friday night at Staples Center against the Lakers, who will try to bounce back from a crushing last-second defeat.

 

Kobe Bryant's 27.2 points per game rank third in the NBA, and with the reigning MVP leading the way, the Lakers (31-7) are averaging a league-best 107.8 points.

 

Orlando scores 102.0 ppg, but is pacing the NBA in another offensive category. The Magic (31-8) have hit 407 3-pointers this season, easily the most in the league.

 

What they did from beyond the arc in their latest game, however, has never been done before. Orlando made an NBA-record 23 3s on Tuesday in Sacramento, sparking a 139-107 rout of the Kings.

 

"No disrespect to the other team, but we're excited about getting the record, an NBA record,'' said Jameer Nelson, who knocked down all five of his 3-point attempts. "Everyone is going to have trouble guarding the 3 against us because Dwight (Howard) is so tough to stop in the middle.''

 

Howard routinely dominates the paint, averaging an Eastern Conference-best 13.8 rebounds in addition to 20.2 points. On the perimeter, Orlando has Rashard Lewis, the league leaders in 3-pointers made (114). Lewis' 41.8 shooting percentage from beyond the arc, though, is only fourth among the team's regulars.

 

Among those shooting a higher percentage are rookie Courtney Lee and the previously little-used J.J. Redick. The third-year guard had barely gotten off the bench thus far in his career, but he's averaging 13.8 points and shooting 65.0 percent (13-for-20) from 3-point range in his last four games.

 

Yet perhaps the biggest reason for the Magic's impressive first half - they're an NBA-best 15-5 on the road - is Nelson. He's averaging 16.6 points, up 5.7 from last season, and his 50.6 percent field-goal shooting leads all NBA guards.

 

"All season, I've been just trying to make the right play and not trying to force things," Nelson said.

 

The Lakers certainly don't need any reminder of Nelson's improvement. He was the undisputed difference when Los Angeles visited Amway Arena on Dec. 20, scoring 15 of his 27 points in the third quarter as the Magic came from behind to win 106-103.

 

The Lakers lost just once in their following 11 games, as Bryant led the way with 30.4 ppg in that stretch. He was brilliant again on Wednesday in San Antonio, scoring 29 points and adding 10 assists, but that wasn't enough in the Lakers' first game against the Spurs since last season's Western Conference finals.

 

Bryant put Los Angeles up by two when he hit a 3-pointer with 12 seconds left, but Roger Mason's 3-point play at the other end wound up being the difference as San Antonio won 112-111.

 

"Both teams shot the heck out of the ball,'' Bryant said. "I mean, it's tough to lose a game like that.''

 

An encouraging sign for the Lakers recently has been the play of Andrew Bynum. The 21-year-old center struggled earlier this season while making his way back from a knee injury, and from Dec. 9-Jan. 6 he failed to reach double figures in eight of 14 games.

 

In his last five contests, though, Bynum is averaging 18.2 points.

 

He'll face a tough test in the middle against Howard - a challenge he wasn't ready for in last month's loss, when he had three points and five fouls in just 12 minutes.

 

Bryant scored 41 points against Orlando on Dec. 20, and had 28 in the Magic's last visit to Los Angeles, a 104-97 Lakers loss on Dec. 2, 2007.

 

Link

 

PG: Jameer Nelson

NELSON.jpg

 

SG: Courtney Lee

1210054157.jpg

 

SF: Hedo Turkoglu

lg_peja_7369.jpg

 

PF: Rashard Lewis

Rashard.jpg

 

C: Dwight Howard

p1_dwighthoward_Damian%20Strohmeyer.jpg

 

Magic Coach

 

18stanvan.jpg

 

VS

 

PG: Derek Fisher

171960_480_art_R0.jpg

?????

 

SG: Kobe Bryant

Kobe+Bryant.jpg

 

SF: Vladimir Radmanovic

2004351853.jpg

"Radmanovic auditioning for Grease 3"

 

PF: Pau Gasol

51Vps3ABP1L._SL500_.jpg

"Second 'Ultra' not mentioned in add"

 

C: Andrew Bynum

nba_g_bynum_jabbar_395x265.jpg

Kareem: "Sky hook? Check. Next step, Pyrokinesis."

 

Lakers Coach

 

kfc_logo.jpg

 

TV: ESPN

 

Radio: http://nba.com/broadband_itsOnTV

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

After watching the Warlock video, i'm scared to think what someone might do to top that...

 

I've purposely stayed away from making game threads, but I might just have to go crazy on one of these things eventually.

 

Nicely done.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

quote:
Originally posted by Give Me Redick All Day:

We MIGHT win?

 

No

 

"We 'WILL' Win"

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
Sign in to follow this  

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    No registered users viewing this page.

×