It's often said that the tenets of great defense revolve not around blocks, steals, or shot clock violations, but the ability to force your opponent into taking bad shots. The Spurs have won all of their titles around this principle. Instead of allowing layups and open threes (you know, the shots they take and hit), they coerce you into settling for your poor range forward taking 18-foot jumpers from the wing while boxing your bigs into the next county. Tonight, after alternating between streaks of brilliant defense, forcing contested jumpers and off-step leaners, and terrible defense, pretty much letting Anderson Varejao dunk on every other possession, the Orlando Magic were up one point and decided to play good defense.
They denied the interior pass, they stayed with their man, and on the screen and roll, they played it perfectly. Spread the floor to deny the pick and pop, step over to cut off the baseline drive but don't step up too much to let the ball handler by you. As long as the ball-handler doesn't nail a pull-up three pointer, in motion, with two defenders in range, the Orlando Magic were going to win the ballgame and pull within three games of the top spot in the East, and hand Cleveland only its second loss at home. It would take a miracle. It would take an anomaly. It would take a heroic effort.
Or it would take just another night at the office for LeBron James.
As you've probably deduced at this point, James nailed just such a three to put the Cavs up two, the Magic would get whistled for a three-second violation (no, I'm not kidding) inside of a minute for what may be the second time in NBA history (I haven't checked), and the Cavs effectively put a nail in Orlando's top-seed hopes, 97-93.
It was a back and forth affair, with both teams rattling off long runs. Every time one side would gain an advantage, the other team would roar back. Orlando had a nine-point lead late in the third and a chance to burn a hole in the building. Then, just as he would do at the end of the fourth, James went out and calmly stroked two jumpers to kick start the Cavs comeback.
If it sounds like James was a one-man show, well, 43 points, 12 rebounds, 8 assists, and 4 steals will kind of give that impression. James was a one-man wrecking crew, and every time the Magic would pull away, he'd coral them back with long jumpers. His first half was spent mercilessly attacking the rim, including a blurring layup at the end of the 2nd quarter as time expired. It speaks to the strength of his MVP candidacy that LeBron has put together this year, and offers a response to the recent surge by Dwyane Wade. When James puts his mind to it? The league is caught under his boot, unless you play for the good West Coast team.
For the Magic, this has to be a remarkably frustrating loss. On the one hand, they got huge contributions from Rafer Alston and rookie Courtney Lee, who showed tremendous savvy. They had their offense clicking. Dwight Howard was a block machine (6 swats). And they managed to have the lead with less than a minute, forcing LeBron James into a long-range, pull-up jumper. Yet for all of that, they walk away empty-handed and staring at a likely second-round matchup with the Boston Celtics. On the other hand, they definitely proved that they can stand toe-to-toe with the best in the league on their floor and take it to the wire. Unfortunately, they don't hand out trophies for people who keep games close. There's a lot to consider in the Magic Kingdom.
Before we go, here's a quick question. Mr. Official man? You allow travels of epic length (like James' blatant three-step trot before dishing to Varejao late in the third). You let Howard set moving screens. You don't fall for Delonte West or Hedo Turkoglu's flop antics. But you decide the best way to handle this game is to call a three-second violation on the offense in a crucial possession under a minute? Really? I'm all for consistency, I really am. But ... really?




















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
3-18-2009 @ 7:51AM
Nate said...
LeBron will likely get away with travels for the rest of his career, so I'm not really sweating that. And anytime he plays, his team will get the calls and the opposing team will not, with an added tinge of "cheap", like off. and def. 3-second calls (not sweating that either). In all, I expect LeBron to have great games all the time, yes, and I expect him to be in the Hall of Fame a few years down the line.
(I'll just chuckle to myself when the next big "Refs Are Cheating" scandal pops up)
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3-18-2009 @ 8:02AM
demzrdopes said...
Basketball is all about matchups, and there are no 6'9" 275 lb freaks out there to check LeBron. Ron Artest is really the only player who can call LeBron his Beeotch. Kobe has an even size matchup (which he wins) every night..
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3-18-2009 @ 11:02AM
Rich Cantwell said...
Why are fans and media so accepting of NBA super stars getting preferential treatment from officials? If they are THAT good, they shouldn't need it! No other sport does this that I can see. Jordan's push & shoot against the Jazz in game 7 of the finals was the most blatant ever. Am I the only one sick of this? The NBA needs to level the field and reduce the egos! Is it any wonder that D. Stern and assoc. are suspect as far as controlling the outcomes of games/seasons?
Anyway, Kobe will get his Shaq-less title and Lebron (deserving) will be MVP. I believe it is pre-determined.
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3-18-2009 @ 11:51AM
cantstopdrinkin said...
Demzdopes are you kidding me? Thats a little strong talkin about Artest can make Lebron his "Beeotch". Lebron is 6 years younger, 2 inches taller, and around 15-20 pounds heavier. While i agree Artest is the best built SF in the league to handle Lebron , he in no way can make Lebron his Beeotch (maybe for a game but not consistently) .... no one can. The best bet is great TEAM defense but no one man can stop Lebron. He's almost like a varsity starter playing against a bunch of junior varsity players....
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3-18-2009 @ 1:44PM
gernjewels said...
Yeah right...excuse me Mr. Artest, but umm, your Beeotch has his nuts in yo face, and he's elbow deep in the rim again!heh,heh...
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3-18-2009 @ 1:46PM
gernjewels said...
gernjewels said...
Yeah right...excuse me Mr. Artest, but umm, your Beeotch has his nuts in yo face, and he's elbow deep in the rim again!heh,heh...
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3-18-2009 @ 1:47PM
gernjewels said...
So funny I had to post it twice!
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3-18-2009 @ 3:06PM
demzrdopes said...
It's not so much a physical thing as a mental one with Artest, and his son, LeBron. Check out their body language next time they play. LeBron looks like he's coming in late, and his crazy alcoholic father is waiting up for him..
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3-18-2009 @ 6:03PM
cantstopdrinkin said...
No actually its more of a physical thing. Artest is the only SF that is near Lebrons weight in the league and that weight is one of the big reasons Artest has always been considered a great defender. If you know and have played basketball then you know using your weight and shoulders is how you create a lot of shots but since he weighs more when offensive players try that his weight limits the amount of room an offensive player can create by doing that. Lebron gets a lot of space to get all his shots in traffic off and since he weighs so much more then most people that are guarding him he can bump guys off him and make close shots. He cant do that as much with Artest because of the body masses being much closer then his usual comp and is forced to shoot more jumpers and try to use his speed (thats where the age difference i talked about in the previous post comes in) to score.... Lol you sound like you are more of a watcher for entertainment then actually being knowledgeable about the sport and understanding how the things that happen on the court happen...
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3-18-2009 @ 6:33PM
demzrdopes said...
nice try son. LeBron is afraid of Big Ron. Physically, he could wear Ron out, but Ron is in his head. Ron shuts down his mental capacity to create. He knows Ron is the only player in the league who will break his nose, and laugh about it..
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3-19-2009 @ 7:23AM
rjw6683 said...
Dude honestly Ron is a dildo that should have been booted out of the NBA after attacking fans.
3-18-2009 @ 6:55PM
cantstopdrinkin said...
Your definetly not my dad so dont call me son. He's a lot smarter then you sound . It has nothing to do with Lebron being afriad of him , its just he is Lebrons worst matchup because of like he said he is the only one even near Lebron in weight at that position and also because Artest and always been an elite and physical defensive player. Lol so you claim he would break Lebrons nose but that Lebron could wear him out.... makes no sense. Artest is a very physical player and Lebron scores 70% or more of his points by going to the rim and being physical because he is so much bigger then whoever guards him..... except Artest. Artest has the strengh and roughness to not allow Lebron to get those easy scores (and plus almost all of Houston's role players play good team defense and all buy into the system and that helps shut Lebron down , and having a 7'6" guy around the rim helps too) he gets against everyone else. You sound retarded gramps and your over thinking the mental part, its just Artest matches up the better against Lebron then anyone else can in the league. He has the strength without giving up to much quickness....
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