Tuesday, December 24, 2019

J-Speaks: Another Historic Night By Saints QB on Monday Night Football


Since joining the New Orleans Saints in free agency 14 seasons back, perennial Pro Bowl signal caller and Super Bowl champion Drew Brees has been known for history making nights, especially in the comfy confides of the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in front of the amazing fans of “The Big Easy.” Two weeks ago, he rose up another all-time NFL chart.

In leading the NFC South Champion Saints (12-3) to a 34-7 victory versus the Indianapolis Colts (6-8) on ESPN’s Monday Night Football on Dec. 16, Brees who was 29 for 30 passing for 307 yards and four touchdown passes without an interception, surpassed future Hall of Famer and two-time Super Bowl champion offensive signal caller with the Colts and Denver Broncos Peyton Manning (539) into sole possession of No. 1 on the all-time touchdowns thrown list with 540, which has increased to 544 with his work of 27 for 38 for 279 yards and three touchdown passes in the Saints’ 38-28 win at the Tennessee Titans (8-7) this past Sunday afternoon.

“Listen, it was special. Everything about the night,” Brees, who finished the night with 541 career touchdown passes said after the win postgame. “I don’t know how they pick them. Monday night football. Playing the Colts, right? The team that we won the Super Bowl against 10 years ago. So, the whole Super Bowl XLIV team is back for the 10th Anniversary and obviously national television, you know, big game and now that record in the balance as well.”

“Just kind of makes you shake your head, you know, are you kidding me? Not sure how we got here?”

This is not the first time the 40-year-old Brees made history on Monday Night Football. Last season, Brees broke Manning’s passing yards record versus the Washington Redskins as he went 26 for 29 passing with four touchdown passes.  

Brees’ 96.7 completion percentage against the Colts became the highest ever in a single game with a minimum of 20 pass attempts by a quarterback, completing 22 consecutive passes, which set a personal record, a streak that was still active entering the tilt at the Titans.

That completion percentage Brees had was just one-tenth point better than ironically enough the man who replaced Brees in now Los Angeles Chargers longtime signal caller Philip Rivers, who had the record at 96.6 done last season.  He also extended his own NFL record for games with at least 25 touchdown passes registering his 25th. Plus, Brees set another personal record by going 12 for 12 passing when targeting wideout Michael Thomas.

Brees tied Manning when his 539th career touchdown pass went to wideout Tre’Quan Smith, a 21-yard passing score that capped a 10-play, 85-yard drive at the 6:11 mark of the second quarter.

It was believed that Smith caught the record-breaking score in the final seconds of the first half, but he was called for offensive pass interference that nullified the touchdown and history, for the moment.

Brees finished the first half going an incredible 20 for 21, completing 95.2 percent of his passes, setting the best completion percentage on a minimum of 20 pass attempts in the opening half the last 25 seasons.

The record-breaking touchdown reception was caught by tight end Josh Hill, whose five-yard score capped a 12-lay, 75-yard drive at the 7:08 mark of the third quarter, where play-by-play announcer Joe Tessitore call was, “Touchdown pass 540 in the 504!”

The 541st touchdown pass by Brees went to the Saints swiss army knife on offense in Taysom Hill, who caught a 28-yard score to cap a three-play, 51-yard drive late in the third quarter.

“Pretty incredible moment,” Brees, who registered his 12th game throwing at least three touchdown passes on Monday Night Football, second all-time to Hall of Famer Brett Favre said to ESPN’s Lisa Salters on the field after the win. “To be able to share something like this with my team and the “Who Dat?” nation, and everybody in the Superdome tonight, my family and friends.”

“You don’t really think about these things, especially when you first enter this league. I can remember as a young player just trying to become a starter someday maybe. Maybe be able to make a little bit of an impact and its hard to believe we’re here are 19 years later having a chance to do some of these things but these special moments are special because of the people who are on this journey.” 

Brees got a chance to celebrate this historic moment with some of those people who have been on this journey with him like his offensive teammates and the fans got a rousing ovation from those in attendance from Saints fans to his wife of 16 years Brittany and their three sons Baylen, Callen and Bowen and their daughter Rylen and other family members. He then took a quick lap around the building where his emotions were very visible and then shared a warm embrace with head coach and offensive play caller Sean Payton, who have done quite a bit of record breaking and winning, together, including winning Super Bowl XLIV over the Colts and Manning in what was dubbed, “The Miracle in Miami” a decade ago as mentioned earlier.

“It just kind of makes your whole life and career flash before your eyes because I never thought I would’ve had a chance to be a part of something like this,” Brees who also holds the NFL record for passing yards and completion percentage said after the game. “And just looking at the entire journey., you know 19 years from five years in San Diego (now the Los Angeles Chargers) to 14 years here. All the incredible teammates and coaches that I’ve had the chance to play with and for, this team right here, it was very special and of course our fan base. The ‘Who Dat?’ nation. Everybody in the dome tonight. Everybody watching tonight. Loved ones, my family, my kids, both my college roommates-two of my best friends in the world, they were here.”

Everyone that was present or watching on their television or mobile device saw a performance to remember by Brees.

To put into context the kind of performance Brees had against the Colts, according to the NFL’s “Next Gen Stats,” he threw the ball at least 10 yards down the field 11 times and completing all 11 of them, setting the record for most passes without an incompletion.

Brees also completed passes in what are called tight windows, which is defined as tight passes attempts by a quarterback to a receiver where a defender is within one yard of the pass catcher going 7 for 7.

According to “Next Gen Stats,” no quarterback in the four years of this stat area has completed that many passes without an incompletion.

If that was not enough, Brees joined Hall of Famer Sammy Baugh as the only players in NFL history to simultaneously hold the records for yards passing, passing touchdowns and completion percentage at the same time.

One person who was very impressed with those numbers was Brees’ head coach and offensive player caller for the Saints Sean Payton, who said during his postgame speech in the locker room to his players while presenting Brees with the game ball, “The 13 years I’ve been here, he was magnificent tonight. Drew Brees.”

Payton, whose squad on 11-plus games for the third straight season said to the media during his postgame presser about his quarterback’s performance, “You know, it’s hard to do. You go back and evaluate each play and it’s just unusual.”

“He had a hot hand obviously. Guys were making plays but it’s awfully difficult to do, and I’m trying to think of the incompletion.”

Payton added with a smile about that one incomplete pass, “He’ll get a minus on that play. Gotta give one minus, right?”

Another person who was impressed with Brees setting the all-time touchdown record was fellow future Hall of Fame signal caller and six-time Super Bowl champion of the New England Patriots Tom Brady, who tied Manning for No. 2 on the all-time touchdown passing list at 539 with his lone passing score in the Patriots (12-3) 24-17 win versus the Buffalo Bills (10-5) on Saturday night.

Brady said in a tweet @TomBrady, “Congrats Drew!! Couldn’t be more deserving. Passing Peyton in anything is an incredible achievement and your records will be tough to beat! But it’s worth trying.”

Seattle Seahawks QB Russell Wilson, who also has a Super Bowl win on his resume tweeted @DangeRussWilson to Brees, “LEGEND! @DrewBrees.”

Favre, tweeted @BrettFavre, “Congrats @drewbrees on an amazing achievement.”

At the end of the Saints Monday night tilt versus the Colts and what he did on Sunday afternoon in Week 16 at the Titans, Drew Brees now stands as the all-time leader in passing touchdowns at 544 and counting, with Tom Brady right behind him at 539, which is tied with Peyton Manning, with Hall of Famers Brett Favre and Dan Marino right behind at 508 and 420 respectively.

Brees set another record and authored another memory for all Saints fans in New Orleans, LA and across the country. He did in front of his family and the people that meant a great deal to him along this journey.

While Brees has been making his mark on NFL history, the Saints have won at a high level since he arrived in “The Big Easy” 14 years ago and are positioning themselves for another serious run at the Vince Lombardi Trophy, which they captured in South Florida just a decade ago.

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 12/16/19 8 p.m. Monday Night Football game “Indianapolis Colts versus New Orleans Saints” on ESPN with Joe Tessitore, Anthony “Bogger” McFarland, and Lisa Salters; 12/16/19 11:15 p.m. edition of ESPN’s “Sportscenter With Scott Van Pelt;” 12/16/19 www.al.com story, “Tom Brady Reacts to Drew Brees Breaking Peyton Manning’s Career TD Passes Mark,” by Mark Heim; https://www.espn.com/nfl/player/gamelog/_/id/2580/drew-brees; https://www.espn.com/nfl/game/_/gameid/401128117; and https://www.espn.com/nfl/game/_/gameid/4001127898.

J-Speaks: Giants' Signal Caller Wins Final Game As Starter?


It has been a good two weeks for New York football Giants as they have won their last two games following a nine-game losing streak. They were led to victory on Sunday behind their signal caller of the future, but the past two weeks they were led to victory the week before by the guy who led them to two Super Bowl wins as in possibly his final home game as the starting quarterback.

As he took the field for possible the final time at MetLife Stadium, two-time Super Bowl champion of the NFL’s New York Giants Eli Manning was all smiles in what likely was the final start in front of Giants’ nation.

This final start had some good moments and it had some moments where moving on with the future in rookie signal caller Daniel Jones, who was out because of an ankle injury is likely to happen fully next season.

Manning, a two-time Super Bowl MVP in perhaps his final game in front of the home fans was 20 for 28 passing for 283 yards and two touchdowns and three interceptions as leading  the Giants (4-11) to a 36-20 win versus the Miami Dolphins (4-11) in Week 15 on Dec. 15, snapping a franchise record-tying nine-game losing streak as they outscored the visitors 29-10 in the second half.

The 38-year-old older father of four, brother of future Hall of Famer Peyton Manning and son of Hall of Famer, who played a majority of his career with the New Orleans Saints Elisha Archibald “Archie” Manning III and Olivia Manning received a standing ovation from the over 72,000 in attendance, who had signs that read, “Thank you Eli NY 10,” before the opening offensive possession and another as head coach Pat Shurmur substituted him for backup Alex Tanney with under two minutes left.

The 2016 Walter Payton Man of the Year recipient, whose overall record in his career is 117-117 received hugs from his teammates on the sidelines when he was substituted as he was serenaded with chants of “Eli Manning.”  

He met his wife of 11 years Abby, who he has known since their days at the University of Mississippi, three daughters Ava, Lucy, Caroline, and son Charles in the stadium tunnel as he walked off the field for more hugs and pictures.

“Obviously, the support of the fans and their ovation and their chanting my name form the first half until the end, I appreciate that,” Manning said during his postgame presser. “I appreciate that always and my teammates coming up to me. It was a special day, a special win, and you know, one I’ll remember.”

Considering how this season went for Manning and the Giants, this day meant the world to him and Giants’ nation.

Manning lost the starting quarterback job to Jones just three games into this season and got another chance because he sprained his right ankle. 

In his first game since Week 2, Manning was 15 for 30 for 203 yards and two touchdowns, both to rookie wide receiver Darius Slayton as the Giants had a 17-3 lead intermission. But were outscored 20-0 in the second half as they lost in overtime at the Philadelphia Eagles (8-7) 23-17 in Week 14.

Things were not looking good early on against the Dolphins as Manning did have three interceptions as mentioned in the game. The much-criticized Giants’ defense though did not break as two of those giveaways by Manning only resulted in field goals by Dolphins place kicker Jason Sanders.

Also, Manning as he has shown throughout his 234 career starts that he can get over those interceptions and he did in the second half as “Big Blue” put together three touchdown drives in their first five possessions of the second 30 minutes and thanks to the play of “Big Blue’s” much-criticized defense this season, and the running of second-year halfback Saquon Barkley who had 143 total yards, 112 of those yards rushing and two touchdowns as the Giants blew the game open in the 2nd half outscoring the Dolphins 29-10, which included a five-yard scoring pass to Slayton to cap a six-play, 70-yard scoring drive to open the second 30 minutes.

Veteran wideout Golden Tate, who caught a 51-yard score from Manning in the second quarter that cut the Giants then deficit to 10-7 said that Manning after the game refused to have the focus on him after the game keeping the focus on the win and its importance. Barkley had no problem after the game giving the one of the best players to ever play for the Giants his just due.

“If that is the last game and that’s the way we send Eli off, that’s the way we all planned and envisioned in doing it,” Barkley, who surpassed 100 yards rushing since Week 2 said after the win. “I wanted to go out there, play my tail off and I know those guys wanted to do the same, all for 10. He’s meant so much to this city, this franchise, organization for such a very long time.”

Tate echoed those same sentiments saying after the game, “He’s has been doing it for a long, long, long time and knows how to keep his emotions in check.”

“That doesn’t surprise me. He went back in and got that standing ovation he got. I think we all got chocked up. I would not be surprised if you guys got chocked up. What he has achieved and done for this organization is special and will go in the history book for the rest of time.”

As great as Manning was on the gridiron in his career for the Giants and the Mara and Tisch family, he was just as exceptional off of it.

In the wake of Hurricane Katrina in August 2005, Eli and Peyton assisted in the delivery of 30,000 pounds of supplies, that included water, baby formula and pillows to the people of New Orleans, LA. Eli after taking a tour of the University of Mississippi Medical Center’s Blair E. Baston Hospital for Children undertook a campaign of five years starting in 2007 to raise $2.5 million to construct “The Eli Manning Children’s Clinic” at the hospital.

In 2009, Eli, Peyton and their father Archie co-authored a children’s book entitled “Family Huddle,” that described through text and photos how the three played young boys.

For the past 11 years, Manning has hosted “Guiding Eyes for the Blind’s” Golf Classic, the oldest and largest charity gold event in Westchester County, NY that brings in money for the nonprofit guide dog school that serves the blind and visually impaired across the globe and for children on the autism spectrum.

That professionalism was on full display on Sunday as Manning gave way to a fully healthy Jones, who was back as the starter going and had the best game of his rookie season going 28 for 42 passing for 352 yards, five touchdowns and no interceptions in helping the Giants to a 41-35 overtime win at the Washington Redskins (3-12), their second in a row. Barkley was also sensational with 276 total yards from scrimmage, 189 of those rushing and two total touchdowns.

The last two weeks have been very special and important for the New York Football Giants, who have had a very rough season. They had a chance to pay respect to their past with Eli Manning starting the last two games in place of an injured Daniel Jones and we saw good and then the bad in the loss at the Eagles in Week 14. He got off to a rough start last week versus the Dolphins in his what was likely was going to be his final start in front of the home folks but finished with a flourish and got the send off he earned and deserved.

Then the Giants got a chance to hand the keys of the franchise back to their present and future in Jones, who led them to their second straight win at the Redskins.

This has been a tough season for the Giants and there will be some major changes this offseason and headed into the future. That said they at least know they for 16 years had the right guy leading them both on the field and off in Eli Manning and who they hope can lead them back to glory in Jones and Saquon Barkley, beginning with their season finale versus the Eagles and then the start of the 2020 season.

“You know, I’ve tried not to get too emotional, just because we still have a couple of football games left,” Manning said. “You know, I’ll still be back in the stadium. I don’t know if I’ll play that day, but I know I’ll get to run out one more time at least.”

“If it is the last one playing here where I’m starting and getting a win, you know, try to enjoy it and take it in for a moment.”

Information, statistics, and quotations courtesy of 2/6/19 www.yourtango.com story “Who Is Eli Manning’s Wife? New Details About Abby Manning-And Their 4th Baby!” by Amy Lamare; 12/15/19 11:30 p.m. edition of WNBC-TV’s “New 4 NY at 11,” with Adam Kuperstein, Gilma Avalos, Matt Brickman with weather and Bruce Beck with Sports; 12/16/19 12:05 a.m. edition of WNBC’s “Sports Final,” with Bruce Beck; https://www.espn.com/nfl/game/_/gameid/boxscore/recap/401128060; https://www.espn.com/nfl/game/_/recap?gameid=401128013;  https://www.espn.com/nfl/boxscore?gameid=401127937; and https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eli_Manning#Other_ventures.

Monday, December 16, 2019

J-Speaks: The Passing of Well Respected First GM of Hornets


At the conclusion of last week, the National Basketball Association (NBA) Family said goodbye to the first general manager in the history of Charlotte Hornets and the inventor of an annual event that has taken place at NBA All-Star Weekend that began in the American Basketball Association (ABA) in 1976 and then in the NBA in 1984.

Carl Scheer, the first general manager of the Charlotte Hornets and the inventor of the slam-dunk contest, an annual event on Saturday night during All-Star Weekend for over three decades passed on Friday, one day short of his 83rd birthday from complications related to his dementia. He was 82 years old. He is survived by his wife of six decades Marsha, and their children, son Bob, his longtime business partner, and their daughter Lauren.

“The Hornets organization mourns the loss of Carl Scheer,” the team said in a statement on Friday. “As our first president and general manager, he built the franchise from the ground up and laid the foundation for our city’s love affair with the Hornets. Carl was a true pioneer whose innovative ideas such as the slam dunk contest changed the NBA. His contributions to professional basketball in the state of North Carolina are unmatched, having led not only the Hornets but also the ABA’s Carolina Cougars, and his knowledge and love of the game will be missed.”

“Our thoughts and our prayers are with his wife Marsha, son Bob, daughter Lauren and his entire family.”

Mr. Scheer’s family said that as his dementia caused him to become more forgetful and harder to get around, the Hornets continued to keep him employed for more months in early part of this decade until he was unable to work at all.

“I was his son, and then I became his business partner, and then his caregiver,” Bob, whose Vice President of Development at the McColl Center in uptown Charlotte said of his father. “So, it was sort of a full-circle thing.”

As his dementia took an even crueler tool on what was considered one of the sharpest minds on the business side of pro sports, Scheer sometimes believed he still ran the Hornets.

At the Sardis Oaks nursing facility in Charlotte, NC, where Scheer lived out the final years of his life, he convened fellow patients around a table to discuss potential trades.

Due to his dad’s long, slow decline the past few years from the dementia, Scheer’s son Bob had plenty of time to work on what he will say at his father’s memorial service at Temple Beth El in Charlotte, NC on Wednesday at 3 p.m. at 5101 Providence Road.

Mr. Scheer and his son even had discussions on the first joke that would be told at the service-it is “Carl-approved,” Bob said.

Mr. Scheer, who was known for changing the attendance figures for home games of the teams he directed (outside of the Hornets, who always sold out). Scheer liked to see the official attendance number first on a piece of paper. He would then cross that number out and write down a higher number before it was made public.

“So, at his funeral, I’m going to say, “I heard there was going to be a couple of hundred people here. That’s awesome,” Bob said. “My Dad would like to announce an attendance of 17,443.”

Along with being one of the main authors of the Hornets inaugural season in 1988-89, which many longtime fans still get nostalgic about, Mr. Scheer in his over five decades in pro sports served as director of two minor-league hockey teams in the Carolinas—the Charlotte Checkers and the Greenville (South Carolina) Growl, while also being the GM of the aforementioned ABA’s Carolina Cougars, while also shepherding the construction of a 14,000-seat multi-purpose arena in downtown Greenville, SC.

Scheer though will forever be remembered one of the primary authors that brought pro basketball to the “Queen City.”

In the expansion draft of 1988, Scheer chose unknown shooting guard Dell Curry, who would go on to become the team’s all-time leading scorer in franchise history, and that decision meant that two-time Kia MVP of the three-time NBA champion Golden State Warriors would spend his formative years in Charlotte, along with his siblings in current Dallas Mavericks’ guard Seth Curry and his sister Sydell Curry-Lee.

There were a few occasions that the elder Curry was involved in trade rumors but it was Scheer that made it clear that Curry was untouchable, which the current television color analyst for the Hornets for FOX Sports Southeast is grateful for to this day.

“Carl’s the reason I’m doing this interview. He brought me to Charlotte. And I was involved in so many trade scenarios. He’s the guy that kept me in Charlotte. So, I owe Carl a lot, and I always kept in touch with him when I left,” Curry said recently to The Charlotte Observer.

“Sorry to see his health deteriorate like it is but will always be a friend. I will always be indebted to Carl because obviously it changed my life coming here to Charlotte. If I hadn’t gone to Charlotte, who knows what would have happened? Where I would’ve been?”

“Obviously, my kids might have been raised somewhere else but what better place than to do it here in Charlotte. It was close to my family. Close to my wife’s (Sona) family. So, I will forever be indebted to Carl for bringing me here and absolutely changing my life.”

Curry was one of many lives Mr. Scheer, who was an attorney by trade changed for the better. He was a man that was known for being a gentleman that loved Hershey’s chocolate bars and other sweets and his ability to listen to others.

Scheer ran the basketball and business operations for each team he directed as GM, something that is impossible for just one in today’s era of professional sports to do.

“My greatest fear is that somehow or another we’ll not be able to sustain great enthusiasm for the NBA in Charlotte.”

During home games, which he watched from the players’ tunnel because he was way too antsy to sit down because he was in constant motion. Sometimes Mr. Scheer wound himself so tightly in the curtain that separated the tunnel from the court that he would need extrication assistance.

According to Bob, he would see his dad so involved in the game from screaming at the referees to marching out with Marilynn Bowler, one of Scheer’s most trusted lieutenants with the Hornets to the visiting team’s sideline during halftime and watch the halftime show. Mr. Scheer was so obsessed with the halftime show because it was part of the evening’s festivities and the entire entertainment experience.

“Carl made us all realize that nobody owed us anything,” said Bowler. “Instead we owed all those people sitting in those seats. And he used to say all the time: ‘Win or lose, when people walk out, what I want them to say that they had the greatest time and that they will be back.”

As much as he wanted to see those in attendance to attend home games of the team’s he was in charge of be entertained he wanted his team to win just as much.

When his team’s lost, his wife and their children would go to bed and leave a carton of Rocky Road ice cream to thaw on the kitchen table, with a spoon right alongside it. Mr. Scheer would come home and console himself with the ice cream, where he would at times eat an entire half-gallon of it.

He would then go on a seven-mile jog the next day to burn off the calories from that half-gallon of ice cream. 

“Anyone talking to Carl thought they were the most important person in the world,” Hornets public relations director in the early stages Harold Kaufman said. “He made you feel good about yourself. He motivated through positive reinforcement. You just didn’t want to let him down.”

After the Hornets inaugural season though, selling out almost every game in a 24,000-seat arena Scheer and the Hornets’ original owner George Shinn had a financial falling out, where he did not get a multi-year guaranteed deal as Shinn had a rule then he only guaranteed contracts to his players, even though he broke that rule several times later on his career.

Scheer ultimately left the Hornets in 1990 to become the general manager of the Denver Nuggets for the second time, being offered a five-year guaranteed contract.

Scheer and Shinn eventually did make up and Shinn ultimately hired Scheer to do consulting work in New Orleans, LA.

The one thing both men take great pride in is the Hornets’ streak of 364 consecutive sellouts at the no-longer 23,698-seat Charlotte Coliseum, a streak that started in the team’s first season 32 years ago.

“A lot of the things that were done right, I got credit for them,” Shinn said back then. “But I’ll admit most of them weren’t my idea…Once I got the team, it was all Carl.”

During his time as the GM of the Nuggets during their time in the ABA, Scheer signed Hall of Famer David Thompson, who starred for the North Carolina State Wolfpack to a five-year contract, outbidding the NBA’s Atlanta Hawks for his services. He also signed Monte Towe, Thompson’s friend, and point guard at N.C. State.

Thompson and fellow Hall of Famers in Julius “Dr. J.” Erving of the New York Nets; Artis Gilmore of the Kentucky Colonels; and George Gervin, and his teammate Larry Kenon of the San Antonio Spurs participated in the first-ever Slam Dunk Contest, that was held at halftime of the 1976 ABA All-Star Game on Jan. 27, 1976 at the now demolished McNichols Sports Arena in Denver, CO. Erving won that contest.

The original contest, which was conceived by Scheer with help from a few other staffers, where Erving, Gilmore, Gervin, Thompson, and Kenon competed for $1,200.

Thompson guarded Erving for much of the first half of the All-Star exhibition and then had to go against him in the finals of the dunk contest. Thompson completed a 360-degree dunk that was so unknown at that time, the public address announcer called it a, “twist-around slam dunk” twice.

Erving won the contest when he took off from the foul line on his final attempt-a move that the great Michael Jordan copied in the 1988 Contest in Chicago, IL after the NBA adopted the popular ABA attraction in 1984 and has grown in popularity ever since.

“Carl was a marketing genius,” Thompson said, “and he was great at making everyone feel special.”

“When I went out to Denver for the first time, he wined and dined me-gave me a real red-carpet treatment. When I went to see the Hawks, it wasn’t like that. I met them at a McDonald’s. The money was about the same in both places, but Carl had a way of making you feel wanted.”

Jordan, the Hornets owner today and Fred Whitefield, the Hornets’ current president brought Mr. Scheer back for a second stint with the Hornets to help them reach out to the community after the organization’s tumultuous years under former owner Bob Johnson.

Whitfield said that Scheer helped to lead an initiative by the Hornets that donated $250,000 to Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools nine years ago to keep middle school sports than have the district go to “pay-to-play” participation fees.

“He had sat in my seat before,” Whitfield said in reference to Scheer’s years in management of the Hornets, “and he became a great friend and supporter for me. Almost like a father figure. He was such a cheerleader for our organization.”

Curry concurred those same feeling saying, “I thought it was great he came back to the organization what he did.”

On Friday, the Charlotte Hornets lost a very important figure in their history. A man who cared about everyone that worked in the organization from people he worked alongside in the front office to the players and coaches of the team to the fans. To Carl Scheer being part of a sporting was something special and that it was something that those in attendance should enjoy to the point that you wanted and looked forward to attending again.

He for sure did that with helping to create a contest that has become a major part of All-Star Saturday night at NBA All-Star Weekend for over three-and-a-half decades with the Slam-Dunk contest. He also played a major role in bringing the All-Star Game twice to Charlotte, NC in 1991 and in 2019.

Along the way, he brought a positive vibe that made everyone he came into contact with feel better and be better.

“Charlotte owes Carl Scheer a debt of gratitude,” former NBA Commissioner Emeritus (1984-2014) David Stern, Scheer’s friend for more than four decades to The Charlotte Observer Feb. 2019. “The All-Star Weekend coming up there is very exciting. Carl Scheer provided a lot of reasons why a weekend like this can be in Charlotte at all.”  

Information and quotations are courtesy of 12/14/19 NBATV news crawl; 02/18/19 www.charlotteobserver.com story, “Dementia Is Stealing Carl Scheer’s Memories, But not His All-Star Basketball Legacy” and 12/14/19 www.charlotteobserver.com story, “Carl Scheer, First GM of Charlotte Hornets and Slam -Dunk Contest Inventor, Dies at 82,” by Scott Fowler; 12/15/19 www.nba.com story, “Carl Scheer, First GM of Charlotte Hornets, Dies at 82;” https:en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slam_Dunk_Contest.

J-Speaks: The Return of 2019 Finals MVP to Toronto


Last season, the Toronto Raptors took a major gamble in acquiring a former Finals MVP from the San Antonio Spurs in hopes he could lead them to their first championship in franchise history. He did just that but decided to move on in free agency going home and signing with L.A.’s other basketball team. On Wednesday night he returned to city to play against the team he led to that first title and received a very warm reception. Then a game happened and said players current team won against his former one.  

Before tip-off of the Los Angeles Clippers at the Toronto Raptors before a national television audience Wednesday night on ESPN, which the Clippers (20-8) won over the Raptors (17-8) 112-92, last season Finals MVP Kawhi Leonard, who led the Raptors to their first championship last June when they took down the five-time defending champion Golden State Warriors in six games received his 640 diamond-studded championship ring and the Canadian faithful that packed Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, Ontario Canada gave him a well deserved standing ovation before the game.

That love and respect began when Leonard, who had had 23 points, six assists, five rebounds and two block shots in the win took the floor for pregame warmups as many fans in the building rocked his No. 2 jersey from last season and his Clippers No. 2 jersey this season.

That respect stems from the fact that Leonard as mentioned led the Raptors to a 16-8 mark in the 2019 Playoffs resulting in their first title in their 25-year history behind averages of 30 points and nine rebounds.

More than anything, Leonard the Raptors organization the validation that they have been seeking for nearly a decade.

What can get lost in Leonard’s journey is how hard it was to reach the top again. This is a man that did the unthinkable and wanted out from the Spurs, one of the best run organizations not just in the NBA but in the four major North American sports (NHL, NFL, MLB) because of how they handled the three-time All-Stars and now two-time Finals MVP’s quad injury that kept him out all but nine games in 2017-18.

He was traded to the Raptors, a new organization in a new city very foreign to the California native. Leonard not only came to the Raptors and delivered but he put not just the Raptors but all of Canada on the map as they became the first pro sports team outside the United States to win a pro sports title since the 1993 Toronto Blue Jays.

That is why when he took the court, he was greeted with a rousing applause of those in attendance in the arena. The organization after the introduction of the Clippers starters, the Raptors did a video tribute of Leonard’s stellar play last regular season and his epic run in the 2019 postseason and the championship parade, where over two million people attended that followed. 

To thank the fans for their support during last season, Leonard and New Balance took out a billboard in downtown Toronto ahead of Wednesday night’s contest that read, “Thank you Toronto.”

Leonard, who was 8 for 14 from the field on the night making two made threes and going 5 for 5 from the free throw line in the win on Wednesday night added when asked about the billboard said, “The fans were amazing last year. They rolled with us through the ups-and-downs. We were down ever series. They stuck through it with us. They brought great energy to every game and helped us. So, to them I say thank you.”

Following the Clippers intros, Leonard’s former teammates, along with head coach Nick Nurse and his assistant coaches and members of the Raptors front office like team president Masai Ujiri gathered in a circle at center court where Leonard walked over and embraced each player before All-Star lead guard Kyle Lowry presented him with his diamond-studded championship ring as the crowd chanted “MVP! MVP! MVP! MVP!”

“He helped this franchise do amazing things and he got his ring,” Lowry, who had just six points on 1 for 8 shooting, including 0 for 7 from three-point range in the Raptors third straight home loss said.

During that moment, Leonard after taking the moment in raised his arms and waved to the crowd.

“As far as winning a championship, you know, it pretty much comes full circle now,” Leonard said postgame. “Being able to get the ring, you know, see what the hard work came from. But it’s more than that. It’s just a journey, but you know, for me as far as playing, you know, for the city that chapter been kind of closed once I came over with the Clippers.”

“But still love the city, you know? Those guys on the team, the players, the coaching staff. Still got love for them and wish them the best.”

When Leonard, who scored a then season-low 12 points on 1 for 11 shooting in the Clippers 98-88 win versus the Raptors in L.A. in the first meeting on Nov. 11 received the ring on all the way before the game but spent more time with it afterward saying, “I sat in the locker room with it for a bit, just admiring it and just remembering all the memories and all the hard work that went into it.”

That hard work, focus, and dedication Leonard brought to the Raptors last season he has brought over to the Clippers and it was on full display on this night as the Clippers outscored the Raptors 85-60 the final three quarters, leading by as many as 24 points.

The Clippers outrebounded the Raptors 50-47, to improve to 14-0 this season when they outrebound their opponent. They held the Raptors to 35.2 percent shooting on the night, including a season-worst 8 for 36 (22.2 percent) from three-point range, and forced 18 turnovers to square their road record at 6-6 and improve to 3-1 on their six-game road trip.  

Last season, the Toronto Raptors took a major gamble in acquiring Kawhi Leonard from the San Antonio Spurs in hopes he could bring them a title without the guarantee that he would re-sign with them regardless of last season’s results.

Leonard led the Raptors to the top of the NBA mountain, and then left in free agency to return home to California and signed with the Los Angeles Clippers.

He returned to Toronto on Wednesday night and received his championship ring and warm pleasantries from the players, front office personnel of the Raptors that he led to the top of the NBA mountain as well as Raptors fans and all Canadians from superfan and entertainer Drake to those watch him at Scotiabank Arena last season and on television.

Leonard has talked openly about the number of Canadians who have come up to him that reside in Southern California from places like Calgary, British Columbia, Victoria, and Saskatchewan Canada to say thank you.

While the Raptors and their fans suffered a loss Wednesday night to a former player and his new team, they did get a chance to say thank you to Leonard, who in his one season in Canada made a lasting impact that will be remembered for a long time.

“It meant a lot,” Clippers head coach Glenn “Doc” Rivers said of the warm reception Leonard got from the Raptors faithful. “Some players just don’t let you in but I can tell you that ovation, to him, was very heartfelt. There’s no question about that.”

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of https://www.nba.com/games/20191211/LACTOR#/recap/boxscore/matchup; 12/11/19 7 p.m. ESPN’s “NBA Courtside” and “Los Angeles Clippers versus Toronto Raptors,” presented by State Farm with Mark Jones, Doris Burke, Richard Jefferson, and Jorge Sedano; 12/12/19 12 a.m. edition ESPN’s “Sportscenter,” with Scott Van Pelt; and 12/12/19 1:30 a.m. NBATV’s “Gametime,” with Matt Winer and Dennis Scott.    

Saturday, November 30, 2019

J-Speaks: Davis' Triumphant and Historic Return to "The Big Easy"


There was one game that Los Angeles Lakers’ perennial All-Star Anthony Davis new he had to be at his best. The first game against the team that drafted him No. 1 overall in 2012 and who he demanded to be traded from last season. He was booed throughout the game but would have the last laugh as he had a game for the history books.

Those boos did very little to distract Davis, a six-time All-Star as he went for a season-high 41 points on 15 for 30 from the field and 10 for 12 from the free throw line with nine rebounds and three steals in leading the Lakers (17-2) to a 114-110 win at the New Orleans Pelicans (6-13) for their ninth straight victory on Wednesday night, tied for their longest winning streak in last 10 seasons.

Davis, who spent seven seasons with the Pelicans capped off his stellar performance by intercepting All-Star guard Jrue Holiday’s inbounds pass in the final five seconds remaining and connected on a pair of free throws that sealed the win.

“Man, it feels good,” Davis said to ESPN’s Jorge Sedano after the victory. “I’m glad we got the win.”

“They (Pelicans) was on it the whole game, you know. They made shot after shot, big shots. They’re a great team. A young who plays hard, plays together, and likes to run. And they was shooting lights out and they gave us a run for our money and we just a resilient team. We showed our resiliency tonight and was able to bounce back and get the win.”

The Lakers needed every bit of what Davis gave them at the offensive end on Wednesday night because the Pelicans as he mentioned were at the top of their from the opening tip as they hit a franchise record nine three-pointers in the first quarter as they led after the opening period 38-25 and trailed 64-54 at intermission.

The Lakers used a 9-0 scoring run to start the fourth period led by four-time Kia MVP LeBron James who had 15 of his 29 points in the fourth quarter to go along with 11 assists and five rebounds on 10 for 18 shooting and reserve forward Kyle Kuzma chipped in with 16 points, hitting two key triples in the final period as the Lakers outscored the Pelicans 35-21 in the fourth quarter.

If there is anyone who understands the situation that Davis went through on this night in returning to a team that once loved you and at that moment despises you for leaving is LeBron James who went through far worse in his first game against the Cleveland Cavaliers in Dec. 2, 2010, where he was not only booed but simply got hatred like nothing seen before. James, who sat out the fourth quarter scored 38 points in leading the Heat to a blowout win on 15 for 25 shooting.

“It’s the only reason I’m here. The only reason I came to New Orleans” James, who had his eight 25-point, 10-assist game so far this season, second only to the nine by Luka Doncic of the Dallas Mavericks said after the win.

“Anytime you can go back to a place where you made a mark and you started your career. You’ve played significant minutes and gave a lot to the community and gave a lot to the franchise you want to come back and play well, and you want to win because at the end of the day that’s what its all about. So, we knew that as his brothers and we want to try and fulfill that goal that he had set.”

In achieving that goal, Davis, according to the Elias Sports Bureau set a new NBA record for most points in first game versus his former team, amongst active players with those 41 points. The previous mark was 39 held by current Brooklyn Net in 2014 Kia MVP and two-time Finals MVP Kevin Durant, who scored that in his first game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Nov. 3, 2016. Durant had been tied with former All-Star guard and then New Jersey Net Stephon Marbury and current general manager of the Boston Celtics Danny then of the Sacramento Kings each scored 39 points in their first game against their former teams in the Minnesota Timberwolves and Celtics in 2000 and 1989 respectively. 

Davis achieved this performance as mentioned as he was constantly booed from the moment he took the court from warmups by the fans who packed the Smoothie King Center to every time he touched the ball during the game.

He was very loose during warmups as he shared a happy moment with his former teammate in Holiday, who had 29 points and 12 assists on 12 for 23 shooting, including 4 for 6 from three-point range in the Pelicans third consecutive loss.

That said, according to Marc J. Spears, Senior Writer for ESPN’s “The Undefeated” Davis was what he called “nervous, nervous” to where he was wrapping out loud on the team bus heading to the arena. He also had a lot of extra security, according to Spears.  

That looseness along with Lakers head coach Frank Vogel telling him to just go out there and have fun, and how his teammates played in the comeback Davis said was a big help to him.

“They said in the timeout when we cut it to like four that we not losing this game,” Davis said to Sedano. “You know, all night they was making sure that we didn’t lose this game for return here. It was a hell of a night. You know I love these guys that I played with last year. They like to battle but overall this was a fun night.”

“Coming in, knowing what was going to happen with the boos, I just tried to play through it, calm my nerves and just play basketball. I know they passionate about their team and, you know, when everything went down last year it was tough for both sides. You know, oth sides moved on and both sides are happy.”

The reason for both sides being happy is when the trade between the Lakers and Pelicans was done over the summer, the Lakers acquired in Davis that second superstar to pair alongside James in their pursuit of that 17th championship in franchise history. The Pelicans got three young players in Brandon Ingram, who had 23 points and 10 rebounds in the loss, along with Lonzo Ball, who was out because of injury, Josh Hart, and draft picks as they try to build for the future.

That moment that Davis and Holiday shared before the game also carried after the game where the two exchanged their jerseys. Davis also payed a visit to the Pelicans locker room after the game, where at first, he was nervous about walking into the locker room to give a signed jersey to Holiday and to a security guard’s nephew. Before Davis walked into the locker room, according to Spears, Pelicans’ No. 1 overall pick in June’s draft Zion Williamson, who is still out recovering from knee surgery came and embraced Davis.

Pelicans head coach Alvin Gentry during intermission shared an embrace with Davis and told him after the game to come to the locker room. Davis ask if all was going to be okay?

All was okay as Davis came into the Pelicans locker room and took some time to be around some people that were a big deal to him during his time in New Orleans.

Wednesday night’s contest between the Los Angeles Lakers and New Orleans Pelicans was a big deal with the return of Anthony Davis to the place he called home for seven seasons.

The Pelicans faithful at the Smoothie King Center booed Davis throughout the game for wanting to be dealt to the Lakers and join forces with LeBron James in pursuit of a championship.

He responded with as mentioned 41 points and led the Lakers to their ninth straight win and improved to an NBA best 4-0 this season after trailing by 15 points or more, being the only team to be undefeated when facing that kind of deficit this season.

Davis also got a chance after the win to say hello to as mentioned some people that meant a lot to him like Holiday, who was his teammate for six years and who he still keeps in touch with.

“I love him. That’s my guy,” Davis said to Sedano about Holiday. “You know, six years together…He’s a guy who competes. He competed tonight. He made it tough for us. Anytime I get a chance to play against him now, it’s nothing but fun. He was guarding me, you know, I had to guard him.”

“It’s a brotherhood. You know, it’s bigger than basketball. And I know some people didn’t like it but me and him have a bond that, you know, that’s not just the game of basketball. It’s outside of it. We have a real friendship and it showed tonight.”
Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 11/27/19 9:30 p.m. “Los Angeles Lakers versus New Orleans Pelicans,” on ESPN, presented by State Farm with Mark Jones, Jeff Van Gundy, Mark Jackson, and Jorge Sedano; 11/27/19 12 a.m. and 6 a.m. editions of ESPN’s “Sportscenter,” from Los Angeles, CA with Neil Everett and Stan Verrett; https://www.nba.com/games/20191127/LALNOP#/boxscore/recap; https://www.espn.com/nba/team/schedule/_/name/lal; and https://www.espn.com/nba/standings.    

Friday, November 29, 2019

J-Speaks: Good Signs For Trail Blazers With Addition of Future Hall of Famer


It has not been a solid start for the Western Conference Finalist from a season ago in the Portland Trail Blazers. They have dealt with injuries to key personnel. Their new additions have so far not panned out like they had hoped and the addition of future Hall of Famer did very little to quiet their critics. They did show some signs of improvement after two close losses to close out last week and this week seemed to have turned a corner winning two games against inferior opponents.

The Trail Blazers (7-12) snapped a four-game losing streak with a resounding 117-94 win at the Chicago Bulls (6-13) on Monday night led by their newest addition in future Hall of Famer Carmelo Anthony, who signed a non-guaranteed contract with the team last week led the way with 25 points, with 12 points coming in the opening period and eight rebounds, on 10 for 20 shooting, including 4 for 7 from three-point range in his fourth game.

CJ McCollum was second in scoring with 21 points, while starting small forward Rodney Hood had 16 points with six rebounds. Starting center Hassan Whiteside contributed a double-double with 13 points and 12 rebounds with two block shots. All-Star lead guard Damian Lillard had 13 points with 12 assists and reserve big man Skal Labissiere had 12 points and eight boards off the bench to help the Trail Blazers conclude their six-game road trip at 2-4.

“I’m starting to get my feel and flow back,” Anthony, who was 15 for 44 shooting (34.1 percent) in his first three games with the team said to NBC Sports Northwest’s Brook Olzendam after the win. “I told you before, I’m just taking it one day at a time, man.”

“The last game in Cleveland I was flat. For me it was like three games in four nights come off of a year of vacation. But tonight, felt like I had my bop. I had my bounce, had my pop. We got it going. Tonight, was a game we had to win. It was a great game to end the road trip.”

Head Coach Terry Stotts’ squad continued their good vibes they got from their time in the “Windy City” as in Anthony’s home debut with his new team tallied 19 points on an efficient 9 for 11 shooting in 25 minutes as the Trail Blazers registered a 136-119 win versus the struggling Oklahoma City Thunder (6-11) on Wednesday night.

Lillard, who had missed a couple on the road trip due to back spasms led the way with 27 points going 5 for 9 from three-point range with five rebounds and five assists. McCollum chipped in with 22 points on 4 for 7 from three-point range. Whiteside had another double-double of 21 points and 16 rebounds, while second-year reserve guard Anfernee Simons scored 14 off the bench.

“I think guys are just starting to feel a little big more relaxed and at ease,” Anthony said after the win. “When I first got here last week, and met those guys in New Orleans, I think it was the hype of the excitement of me coming to the team, guys not really knowing how this was going to play out, how this was going to fit in, how I was going to fit in.”

As from the fact that the Trail Blazers registered two wins against two opponents that they better than, at least on paper it was a sign that they had a focus and determination to get out of the hole they dug themselves in to start this season.

For Anthony, these two games displayed the kind of work the 35-year-old 10-time All-Star has put in to get back into “The Association” after an unplanned year hiatus after he was basically casted off by the Houston Rockets after they could not, or seemed unwilling to fit him into their pecking order behind All-Stars James Harden, the 2018 Kia MVP and nine-time All-Star Chris Paul, whose now with the Thunder.

Anthony had already had a difficult divorce from the Thunder two seasons back after acquiring him from the New York Knicks in the summer of 2017. He was dealt to the Atlanta Hawks in a massive three-team deal in late July 2018, who waived him five days later.

When Anthony got into the doghouse with the Rockets, he was basically banished from the team for more over two months until he was shipped to the Bulls in a financial sweeping. The Bulls, who wooed Anthony in the summer of 2014 when he was an unrestricted free agent, gave him the pink slip after just a week.

Even after all that, Anthony kept himself in shape by working with his personal trainer and sometimes playing pickup ball with current and former NBA players in the summer and getting up shots at Sky Lifetime Athletic in New York, NY.

In his first game with the Trail Blazers, where he started at power forward in their 115-104 loss at the New Orleans Pelicans (6-12) 10 days ago, Anthony played like a he was off for more than a year scoring 10 points on 4 for 14 shooting in 24 minutes, though he was 2 for 3 from three-point range.

He looked much better two nights later scoring 18 points with seven rebounds and four assists on 6 for 15 shooting in the Trail Blazer’s 137-129 loss at the Milwaukee Bucks on TNT in 29 minutes of work.

Anthony though seemed to take a step back in the Trail Blazers’ 110-104 loss at the Cleveland Cavaliers (5-13) last Saturday night where he had just 11 points on 5 for 15 shooting.

It was not just the fact that he consistently made shots on his way to the stellar night he had at the Bulls on Monday, it was the fact that Anthony took the shots that he wanted to, like from the mid-range, which has become a frown upon shot in “The Association” today. Also, that he as mentioned had a bounce to his step to where he even had a monster dunk that came off of a right baseline drive that he threw it down with two hands.

Also, on this night, Anthony (25,634 career points) passed Alex English (25,613) for No. 18 on the NBA’s all-time scoring list.  

Midway point of the fourth quarter when Anthony exited the game for good when the outcome was decided the Bulls fans in the United Center chanted, “We want ‘Melo!’ We want ‘Melo!’

“The support is unreal,” Anthony said to Olzendam about receiving that support from the fans in the arena. “I think everyone kind of appreciates me just staying humble. Remaining who I am. Remaining true to myself.”

“The work I put in is leading me to this moment and it’s one night, you know? I take it with a grain of salt but we move on and we go home. It’s a long way back home.”

Along with the support he has gotten from his peers and loyal fans, two people who have been in Anthony’s corner throughout this long road back to playing in the league are his wife in actress and entrepreneur Alani Nicole “La La” Anthony, who was in town working on the Showtime series “The Chi” was at the game and on her phone facetiming with their son Kiyan. At one point in the game Mrs. Anthony showed her phone to her husband while he was on the sidelines during a timeout so he could say hello.

“I mean sometimes we don’t cherish these moments, right? We take these moments for granted,” Anthony said, “but my wife being here, my son is on facetime-I mean there here. The support is here with my family…Just to have here, and my son on the facetime like that goes a long way. Anytime we can get to share that, we will do it.”

It is not just Anthony that has found joy again with this chance to finish his career on his own terms, the Trail Blazers have found joy again, which is what winning will do for a team.

This is a team that has dealt with the loss of starting big man Zach Collins, who injured his shoulder in the team’s 121-119 win at the Dallas Mavericks (11-6) on Oct. 27, that required surgery that will have the former Gonzaga Bulldog on the shelf for four months. They are also still without the services of starting center Jusuf Nurkic, who is still recovering from a major leg injury sustained last March and there is no timetable for his return.

The Trail Blazers were in need of just another scorer to go alongside Lillard and McCollum, but they needed a spark and Anthony has given that to them these last two games.

What has also been a major help for the Trail Blazers is Anthony has come into this opportunity just simply wanting to be part of a team again. He wanted to as previously mentioned have the chance for a final chapter of his Hall of Fame career. To fit in with a team to where he is not the star attraction. That he can play a role, whether he starts or comes off the bench. Whether be played 35 minutes or 10 minutes.

It took Anthony doing a lot of self-reflection and simply putting in the work as mentioned earlier and just being ready for when that phone call came, which it did from the Trail Blazers.

“It was an embarrassment. It was an echo hit. It was a pride hit,” Anthony said to TNT’s Allie LaForce before the Trail Blazers contest at the Bucks last week about the dark feelings he had about not being in the NBA. “You know, I felt like I didn’t want to be around nobody. It was definitely an ego hit for me, and I think that was the hardest part to just swallow my ego and let that go. And it went to do I really want to do this anymore?”

Anthony also added that he asked that question when he sat down with his family and with himself asking if putting himself out there was worth it?

It clearly was to Anthony because he put the work in not just in the gym staying in shape but getting his mental and spiritual makeup right and getting the right people around him that wanted to see him back on the NBA hardwood.

One person who has been in his corner over the years, especially during his climb back into “The Association” is Anthony’s good friend and former teammate Paul.

“‘Melo’s’ tough. Especially on that mid-post where he’s built a career,” Paul, who had 16 points for the Thunder in the loss on Wednesday night said. “He’s one of the best to ever play right there so I love defending him. That’s my brother right there. We went to dinner last night. I always want to see him do well, except against us.”

From the Trail Blazers side of things, they have done something for Anthony that he clearly did not have in his last two stops with the Rockets and Thunder, transparency of what his role was going to be.

“I’ve approached the game differently. I talked to Coach Stotts and I said, ‘Look, the only thing I would like for you to do for me is just be transparent with me,” Anthony said to LaForce. “If you want me to do XYZ, I don’t have no problem doing it. Just let me know up front and we both can be transparent, and we can make this thing work.”

Coach Stotts was transparent with him letting Anthony know what his role was going to be, what is expected of him and that they were ready for him to join up like “yesterday.”

It took some time, a very long time over a year. But Carmelo Anthony is back on the NBA hardwood with the Portland Trail Blazers and they are counting on him big time to help them get back on track.

After a rough beginning where they lost their first three games with him in the lineup, they have won their last two and seem to be finding their rhythm.

Whether that will equate to them first getting back above the .500 mark and into the playoff picture in the stacked Western Conference remains to be seen.

The Trail Blazers at least have given themselves some hope of this season and for Anthony, he has gotten that chance to finish his career however this opportunity with his new team last on his own terms.    

“I’m gonna be patient. I know what I can still do from a basketball standpoint. It’s just I have to humble myself. I have to get rid of my ego. I have to get rid of my pride,” Anthony said.

He also added after the Trail Blazers’ win versus the Thunder on Thursday, “I wanted to come in, just play basketball and find my joy again, and the excitement of playing basketball, what it should be. I’ve found that early on so far. I’ve found that happiness, that joy, in the way guys were able to open this up to me with open arms and bring me in here as one of their own.”

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 11/22/19 1 a.m. edition of “Inside the NBA,” presented by Kia on TNT with Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, and Shaquille O’Neal; 11/22/19 www.nba.com story “Carmelo Anthony Hoping To Craft Own Ending To Career,” by Steve Aschburner; 11/25/19 8 p.m. “Portland Trail Blazers versus Chicago Bulls” on NBC Sports Northwest with Kevin Calabro, Lamar Hurd, and Brooke Olzendam; 11/26/19 6 a.m. edition NBATV’s “Gametime,” presented by Kia with Matt Winer, Dave Joerger, and Kevin McHale; 11/28/19 2:30 a.m. edition NBATV’s “Gametime,” with Matt Winer and Dennis Scott; https://www.nba.com/games/20191125/PORCHI#/boxscore; https://www.nba.com/games/20191127/OKCPOR#/boxscore;  https://www.espn.com/nba/recap?gameid=401160907;  https://www.espn.com/nb/standings;  https://www.espn.com/nba/team/schedule/_/name/por; and https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carmelo_Anthony#Personal_life.  

Friday, November 22, 2019

J-Speaks: More Triple-Double History For Lakers' LBJ


After a stellar rookie season in which he won Kia Rookie of the Year for the 2018-19 NBA season, the question was for the new sensation of the league in Dallas Mavericks’ swingman Luka Doncic is how will his game improve in his sophomore season? By what he displayed this week, it is only getting better, and better and better.

In the Mavericks (9-5) 117-110 win versus their interstate rivals in the five-time champion San Antonio Spurs (5-10) on Monday night, Doncic registered his sixth career triple-double with a career-high of 42 points, 12 assists and 11 rebounds on 14 for 27 shooting, including 5 for 13 from three-point range and 9 for 13 from the charity stripe.

Right from the start of the game, Doncic was on scoring a career-best 17 in the opening period in route to his career-high scoring performance, but he was also had his fingerprints on the outcome of the game in the final minutes.

Doncic said to FOX Sports Southwest’s Jeff “Skin” Wade after the win that recently he had a dream that he scored 16 points in the first period and said, “So, I scored 17. So, dreams do come true. But no, an amazing win. Just amazing.”

The 20-year-old Slovenian hit a three-pointer with 26.5 seconds left that put the game out of reach at 115-110. He also outfought three Spurs in Rudy Gay and All-Stars LaMarcus Aldridge and DeMar DeRozan for a loose ball in the closing seconds that he got to Seth Curry for the final points of the night and gave the boys from “Big-D” just their third win in their last 17 chances against the Spurs the past four seasons.

This was also the first time the Mavericks scored at least 110 points against the Spurs since registering a 112-103 win at their rival’s building on Jan. 8, 2010. A span of nearly 38 games in succession.

To put into context how big that three-point shot that Doncic made over Spurs guard Bryn Forbes that put the home team ahead by five in the closing moments of the fourth period, in the first three quarters the Mavericks were 16 for 34 from three-point range, but went just 1 for 7 from long distance in the fourth period, while committing five turnovers.

The Doncic express did not let up as two nights later he was at it again as he authored another triple-double of 35 points, 11 assists and 10 rebounds on 10 for 11 shooting, including 6 for 7 from three-point range and 7 for 8 from the charity stripe as the Mavericks blew out the depleted five-time defending Western Conference champion Golden State Warriors (3-13) 142-94 on ESPN.

After joining four-time Kia MVP and three-time Finals MVP in LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers as the only players in NBA history to have a 40-point triple-double before the age of 21 on Monday night, Doncic, who did it at 20 years and 263 days old set a new record against the Warriors for registering a triple-double in the least amount of minutes on the hardwood at 25:30. James had his at 20 years and 100 days young and his 30-point triple-double in under 30 minutes was done in 27:46 in a game last season, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. Houston Rockets perennial All-Star and 2018 Kia MVP James Harden also had a 30-point triple-double in under 30 minutes at 29:34 seconds as well last season. The reigning Kia MVP in three-time All-Star Giannis Antetokounmpo of the Milwaukee Bucks (12-3) became the latest to join this exclusive club earlier this season when he registered 30 points, 13 rebounds and 11 assists in his team’s season-opening 117-111 win at the Rockets (11-4) on Oct. 24 on TNT.  

“Oh, he was awful. He didn’t impress me at all,” Warriors head coach and eight-time NBA champion as a player and coach Steve Kerr jokingly said after the loss about Doncic. “He was fantastic. Tough to lose by 48 points but, you know, a break here or there and it only would have been 42 points. Nobody caught the sarcasm? I was trying to be funny.”  

As he did on Monday night, Doncic put his stamp on the right from the jump with 33 points, six assists and five boards in the opening half, falling one point shy of tying the franchise record for points in a half (34) set by the recently retired future Hall of Famer Dirk Nowitzki in the Mavericks 96-85 win versus the Utah Jazz on Nov. 3, 2009.

In the opening period, Doncic set a new career-high for points in a quarter with 22, with five assists and five rebounds saying after the win, “I see (the stats), but I don’t know what to say. It’s great to ready about. I just enjoy the basketball.”

One person who is enjoying the kind of basketball Doncic is playing right now is his head coach Rick Carlisle, who said after the win versus the Spurs on Monday night “It’s not surprising to me,”

“You know, this guy can do anything he wants to on a basketball court. And, you know, he’s having one of those magical runs right now.”

“It’s a phenomenal thing to be part of. And, you know, his teammates we’re all just, you know along for the ride here.”

Doncic’s teammates are more than just along for the ride. They are a huge reason he registered the 14th and 15th triple-doubles of his young career these last two games.

As incredible as Doncic was in the victory versus the Spurs on Monday night, the Mavericks do not send the Spurs to their sixth straight defeat without the career-high night of 22 points on 8 for 10 shooting buy fourth-year forward Dorian Finney-Smith out of the University of Florida. 

While Doncic’s aforementioned three-pointer in the final seconds were that sealed the victory, Finney-Smith’s off-balance 20-foot jumper at the expiration of the 24-second shot clock after picking up a loose ball lost on a shot attempt by Kristaps Porzingis, who had 18 points and 10 rebounds on the evening put the Mavericks ahead 112-107.

“I mean, it’s all special. You know, it’s a rival, you know? We always want to win every game, but I will say Dorian Finney-Smith. That’s it,” Doncic, who became the first Maverick to author a 40-point triple-double said to Wade about his teammate’s performance.

What made the Mavericks win versus the Warriors even more impressive beyond Doncic’s triple-double is they had six guys score in double-figures on Wednesday night as opposed to getting just three including from Doncic’s previously mentioned 35.

Tim Hardaway, Jr., whose father in former Warriors’ All-Star lead guard Tim Hardaway, Sr. was in attendance at the American Airlines Center had 20 points, going 4 for 4 from three-point range. Reserve guard Jalen Brunson had 15 points, five assists and five rebounds off the bench, while Porzingis had his second straight double-double of 14 points and 10 rebounds with two block shots. Veteran guard Courtney Lee had 12 points, going a perfect 4 for 4 from three-point range while fellow reserve center in Boban Marjanovic had 10 points and six rebounds.

That offensive balance is how the Mavericks shot 56.7 percent on the evening, outscoring the Warriors 44-16 in the opening period, with Doncic as mentioned contributing half of the scoring with 22, marking the seven straight game he has scored at least 10 points in the first quarter. They made a franchise-tying record 22 threes in 38 tries, shooting 57.9 percent from distance on the night. They had 33 assists on their 51 made field goals, committing just 11 total turnovers, outrebounding the Warriors 50-34, and recording seven block shots.

It is very rare for a player to have the kind of performances that Doncic has put up in the last two games is special, and it has gone on the last 10 games.

To bring into context, Doncic joined James, the Houston Rockets’ 2017 Kia MVP Russell Westbrook, and Hall of Famers great Michael Jordan, and Oscar Robertson as the only players in NBA history to average a 30-point triple-double in a 10-game stretch. Westbrook and Robertson are the only ones to do it twice.

Of the seven triple-doubles Doncic has registered this season, five of them he has scored 30 or more. He is the youngest player in NBA history with consecutive 35-point triple-double performances and is the only player in “The Association” averaging at least 29 points, 10 boards and nine assists.

In the latest segment of ESPN’s “NBA: The Jump” “Something, Nothing or Everything,” on Thursday, ESPN.com’s Zach Lowe said what Doncic did on Wednesday night “everything.”

He added, “This is ridiculous what this guy’s doing. Luka Doncic looks not a star. Not an All-Star. This version of Luka Doncic looks like a generational superstar, and that frankly is unexpected at this stage of in his career…. This is not just an All-Star. This looks like a generational superstar.”

Hall of Famer and former Rocket Tracy McGrady agreed saying that Doncic is becoming his “favorite” player to watch.

“I actually like tuning in watching this kid because he does everything and it’s crazy that the pace he plays with, he’s able to be so effective. He’s not the quickest. He’s not the fastest. He’s not the most athletic, but he’s just such a cerebral player. And with Steph (Curry) being out. I know Kyrie (Irving) is out right now, Westbrook is still playing. I’m gonna say this-He’s the best point guard in the game right now, with Steph being out. He’s the best point guard.”

Last season, Luke Doncic of the Dallas Mavericks showed in winning Kia Rookie of the Year that they are in very good hands with the retirement of Dirk Nowitzki. What he showed in this past week with back-to-back triple-doubles scoring 42 and 35 points respectably, they have a generational player who not only can lead them to championships if he remains healthy and productive but he can be the future face of the National Basketball Association.

What we have to remember is that he is doing this at just 20 years of age and it is just as important that the team be constructed well around him by owner Mark Cuban and head coach Rick Carlisle moving forward.

“In the big picture this is an awful lot to ask of a guy 20 years old,” Coach Carlisle said on Monday night. “It’s hard to fathom how much that kind of production takes out of you in an NBA game. It’s a lot emotionally. It’s a lot of weight to carry.”

“As we move along, finding balance just to help, you know, Luka with the load is important and I’m looking at that all the time.”

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 11/18/19 8:30 p.m. “San Antonio Spurs versus Dallas Mavericks,” on FOX Sports Southwest with Mark Followill, Derek Harper, and Jeff “Skin” Wade; 11/18/19 11 p.m. edition of “Mavs Live,” presented by Frontier Communications with Dana Larsen, and Cedric Ceballos; 11/19/19 5 a.m. edition NBATV’s “Gametime,” presented by Kia with Matt Winer, Wes Wilcox, and Kevin McHale; 11/21/19 3 a.m. edition NBATV’s “Gametime,” with Matt Winer and Dennis Scott; 11/21/19 2:30 a.m. FOX Sports 1 news crawl; 11/21/19 3 p.m. “NBA: The Jump” on ESPN, presented by Michelin Wiper Blades with Rachel Nichols, Zach Lowe, and Tracy McGrady; 11/22/19 1 a.m. edition of “Inside the NBA” on TNT, presented by Kia with Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, and Shaquille O’Neal;  https://www.basketball-reference.com/teams/DAL/2010_games.html;  https://www.nba.com/games/20191120/GSWDAL#/recap/boxscore;  https://www.espn.com/nba/recap?gameid=401160836; https://www.espn.com/nba/player/gamelog/_/id/3032977/giannis-antetokounmpo;  https://www.espn.com/nba/player/stats/_/id/3945274/luka-doncic; and https://www.espn.com/nba/standings.