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Entries tagged as ‘New York Knicks’

The Rehab Diaries: Danilo Gallinari

November 19, 2008 · No Comments

It was said –- in fact we said it with one of the loudest voices (here, here, here and here) –- but Mike D’Antoni didn’t listen! When NBA fans and scouts alike feverishly typed Danilo Gallinari into Babelfish this past summer, only to see Fettucine Bustaola come up, the Count could smell a rat. And when recent news informed us that the Big Bustamental was going down for the rest of the season, we were neither surprised, shocked, nor sad.

Que?
Que?

On a recent fact-finding trip to NYC (where the Count saw Danilo’s one and only hit-out in an NBA game; 0/2 from the field and 1 foul in a heady 3 minutes, 32 seconds) we managed to pilfer the Italian Stallion’s iPhone, and came across his rehab schedule for that day.

10:00am – Hit the gym for rehab. D’Antoni has implemented the Italian system, meaning I will jump rope for 20 minutes, and smoke four cigarettes each time my back hurts. Working well, but chest is sore.

11:00am – Place call to Mr. Dolan, try and coordinate upfront payment of months’ salary in cash.

12:00pm – Look into the mirror, burst into tears.

14:00pm – Stephon calls me. I don’t pick up. He wants to go and see Quantum of Solace tonight; I bought it in China Town.

15:00pm – Head into Macy’s, I’m surprised that they don’t have a Street Clothes sections, as many websites say this is what I will wear for one year. Spend $2,000 on ties.

17:00pm – Note to self; Maccaroni in USA = different, but also good.

19:00pm – Watch The Godfather, part three. I can’t believe American’s don’t get the Andy Garcia / Sofia Coppola love story.

23:00pm - Switch to BET. I didn’t know that’s what Wilson meant when he was saying skeet the other day.

23:30pm - TiVO is a handy alternative for the time poor consumer.

24:00pm – Note to self: Hookers in America = different, but also good.

Posted by: James

Categories: Off The Court · Rehab Diaries
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The Count Preview: Atlantic Division

October 26, 2008 · No Comments

'Sunrise over the Atlantic.' Thanks, Google Images.

The Atlantic. Thanks, Google Images.

Considering nearly every basketball website in the world has kindly furnished you with extensive season previews (we recommend Skeets’ efforts at Ball Don’t Lie, and John Hollinger’s terrifically geeked out team-by-team analysis at ESPN), we’re going to keep this relatively short.

Besides, we just don’t have time to dedicate 1300 words to each and every franchise. We’re far too busy with extremely important matters, like looking at the facial hair of the NBA, or rifling through players’ trashcans to find their rehab diaries.

But as serious ball freaks, we couldn’t let a fresh season kick off without a preview feature. We’ll keep things comfortably brief, so your eyeballs don’t get tired (you owe my optometrist money, Hollinger).  We’ll kick things off with the Atlantic, one of the most oceanic of the six divisions:

Boston Celtics: Fearing his team may grow fat with self-congratulation, Kevin Garnett returns from an off-season spent researching new motivational techniques. He settles on Full Metal Jacket as his primary source of inspiration. Brian Scalabrine leaves the team in January with a Delonte-esque ‘mood disorder,’ after Garnett calls him an ‘orange-haired, mouse-toothed piece of jump-shootin’ shit.’

New Jersey Nets: The Nets become the richest sports team in the world, on the back of merchandise purchases from the 5.3 billion Chinese fans the NBA now boasts. (Interesting fact: there are 480 million Beijing residents watching a replay of the China-USA Olympic game right now).

David Stern further corners the Chinese market, and garners praise from Chinese president Hu Jintao, by instituting ‘the Double China rule’, whereby field goals scored by Chinese players are worth twice as much as those scored by non-Chinese players. Jintao goes wild for the idea, and insists Jianlian play at least 47 minutes a game, much to the chagrin of Lawrence Frank. Jianlian still averages just 14 points a game.

Philadelphia 76ers: Despite late-season injuries to Andre Miller and Louis Williams, the Sixers scrape into the playoffs on the back of strong frontcourt play from Elton Brand and Samuel Dalembert.

With their backcourt absolutely decimated, general manager Ed Stefanski figures disheartened Philadelphia fans would benefit from a familiar face, and brings in Donovan McNabb to man the point. McNabb is viciously booed and cruelly taunted instantly, and responds by committing 27 turnovers in his first game. He does briefly excite the crowd with a full-court alley-oop to Thaddeus Young.

I is shooting threes!

'I is shooting threes! Si!'

Toronto Raptors: Shocking the naysayers, the Jermaine O’Neal and Chris Bosh frontcourt combo really works, both players averaging double-doubles, both playing the full 82 games. And notorious racist José Calderon delivers a ridiculous 5.6-1 assist-turnover ratio, nearly earning him an All-Star nod.

Unfortunately, Andrea Bargnani sabotages any playoff hopes by jacking up half-court threes, constantly screaming ‘I no go in this paint! No paint for Andrea!’ He averages 3.2 points on .071% shooting, and refuses to collect a rebound (‘Is no rebound! Mi rifiuto!’). Coach Sam Mitchell insists the Bargnani era is over, citing his wretched performances. General manager Jerry Colangelo disagrees, telling the media ‘he’s a number one pick. He’s good. I know he’s good. I drafted him. Sam will start him, and Sam will play him.’

Sam starts him, Sam plays him, and the Raptors win 21 games.

New York Knicks: With a 1-27 record, and Quentin Richardson averaging 32 field goal attempts a game at a .223% clip, the D’Antoni experiment is chalked up as a terrible failure just two months into the season.

Like a scene from an Oliver Stone-directed remake of Eddie, Rudy Guiliani is controversially named head coach, boasting that the legendary leadership skills he developed in the days and months after 9/11 will hold him in good stead. Jerome James, who spends each September eating prawn cocktails on his yacht, asks ‘what the fuck is 9/11?’

Guiliani does a much better job than Vinny Del Negro.

Posted By: Anton

Categories: On The Court · Sport Count Guide
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The Starbury Stock Exchange

October 23, 2008 · 1 Comment

Posted by: James

Categories: NBA Mysteries · On The Court
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Draft 2008 Update: Why White Is Still Not Right

October 20, 2008 · No Comments

Minnesota #42 Kevin Love waits on the team bus after fouling out ludicrously early.

After fouling out ludicrously early, Minnesota #42 Kevin Love listens to Harry Potter on audio book while his teammates finish playing Denver.

Some might suggest it is too early to arbitrate on whether this year’s crop are busts, but we are not those.

This isn’t even so much a matter of opinion. It is observation. Back in June of this year, The Sport Count was vociferous in its warnings to all NBA General Managers: do not draft Kevin Love, we said. Do not draft white ever, especially with a high pick, because this happens. We were unequivocal about this, and it seems we have been vindicated. It’s not even like we’re happy about it. We’re more just mystified: if three Australians can see these simple truths, why can’t GMs on million-dollar salaries?

Before we get even more upset, let’s have a look at recent developments in 2008 Rookie news.

Minnesota’s boxscore against Denver (19 October) from NBA.com:

It’s a little difficult to make out, but yes, that does say Kevin Love fouled out after 11 minutes. After contributing 5 points, and an earth shattering single rebound. Bad numbers can be the result of a bad game, but in a game where not a single one of your teammates picked up more than 3 fouls, in a full quota of minutes, fouling out is not having a bad game – it’s being a draft bust.

However, full credit to Kevin for actually playing in the NBA Preseason. The same can’t be said for our favourite Eurobust, Danilo Gallinari. After missing all of the Knicks’ preseason games, the New York Post is now reporting that Gallinari will likely be starting in the D-League. This is the 6th overall pick, starting in the D-League. Isiah Thomas’ strong recommendations about an unproven Italian didn’t work out — who’d have guessed?

Posted by: Alex, Anton & James

Categories: Draft Talk · NBA Mysteries · Off The Court · On The Court · Whitey Watch
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ESPN Covers All Bases: Signs A Genius & A Lovable Doofus

October 14, 2008 · No Comments

Brilliant basketball mind, left; Hilarious outbursts, right.

Brilliant basketball mind, left; Hilarious outbursts, right.

Over at NBA.com, they’ve announced that ESPN has signed Magic Johnson on as an analyst, to complement Stuart Scott, Mike Wilbon and Jon Barry. ESPN has also reportedly signed Jeff Van Gundy to a multi-year deal as an analyst.

This is a happy day for the staff over here at The Sport Count offices. We are proud supporters of Magic: absolute bandits for any footage of his incredible on-court skills; complete suckers for his charm and courage; and total freaks for the insight he gives about the game. It’s no secret that the man’s basketball IQ matches his ability, and his presence on the panel will only make the Countdown analysis even more enjoyable. We can’t wait.

The Van Gundy signing is the icing on the cake. Although we’ve never understood quite how JVG managed to convince people he was The Man For The Job at New York and Houston, and then how he segued into commentary, one thing we do get is this: he enjoys basketball. He loves it. He loves ball perhaps more than anyone on the planet. He loves the game, he loves the history, and most of all he loves the players. If sheer enthusiasm can be the criterion on which he was hired first by the NBA, and secondly by ESPN, we can totally dig that. His analysis is not quite what you get from a Mike Breen, or a Hubie Brown, but Lord knows he’ll say what he thinks. And that’s exactly why we love him. Bring on the broadcast.

Posted by: Alex

Categories: Off The Court · Signings & Firings
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