New Album & The Beginning of Basketball Season

I don't think I've ever seen Howard be so reasonable and humble. That's a good sign.
This is Howard’s last dance. He is in control of his own destiny. There is a tomorrow only if he performs and gives what’s expected of him. If not he’s gone and no money is due to him.
I agree he looked and sounded like a young mature adult now rather than the oversized kid he was before.

if he performs as in days gone by and Kuzma’s foot is not an issue it might be good for the Lakers.

does Kuzna mave the same foot problem that KD has that kept him out of so many games in OKC
 
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I like Russ as a player. Sometimes his chippy, flippant attitude gets in the way of his super star prowess.

It would be nice to see Westbrook and Harden together again but I'm not convinced they will finish any better in the standings.

Russell Westbrook calls James Harden pairing 'scary' for rest of NBA

http://www.espn.com/video/clip?id=27714508

HOUSTON -- Russell Westbrook offered something of a warning to the rest of the NBA regarding his reunion with James Harden.

"It's going to be scary, that's all I can tell you," Westbrook said during Houston Rockets media day Friday. "It's going to be scary -- not for us."

Seven years have passed since Westbrook and Harden last played together with the Oklahoma City Thunder in the 2012 NBA Finals. Harden and Westbrook, who have been friends since their childhoods in Los Angeles, have developed into perennial All-Star guards, and both have won an NBA MVP award.

But neither superstar has made it back to the NBA Finals since the Thunder's 2012 loss to the Miami Heat.

They pushed to reunite with the Rockets, who traded Chris Paul and a package of first-round picks to acquire Westbrook from the Thunder, in large part due to their desire to finally win a championship.

"We've accomplished a lot of individual accolades," said Harden, who led the league in scoring the past two seasons after Westbrook did so during his 2016-17 MVP season. "Now it's time to accomplish something together that we haven't accomplished before."

Some questioned the pairing of two of the league's most ball-dominant players, as Harden has elevated from a Sixth Man of the Year to perennial MVP candidate since he last played with Westbrook. Harden acknowledged that they would have to "figure it out" regarding ball distribution and how to complement each other offensively, but it's not a concern for him because of their friendship and mutual desire to win.

"If Russ got it going and Russ is having one of those games that we've all seen before, guess what I'm going to do: sit back and watch the show, and vice versa," Harden said. "It's just a part of basketball. So you can't sit up here and say, 'Oh, Russ is going to have the ball for the first half and I'm going to have the ball the second half.' No, things happen through the course of the game that you just flow with and go with.

"All of us in this locker room and this front office has one goal, and that's to win it. However that happens, it's going to happen, and we're just going to figure it out."

The process of figuring it out could be limited in the preseason by Westbrook's availability as he continues to recover from the arthroscopic knee surgery he had after the Thunder were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs last spring.

Coach Mike D'Antoni said Westbrook was only recently cleared for 5-on-5 work. The Rockets intend to proceed cautiously with Westbrook, who is likely to sit out some practices and preseason games.

"I feel like I'm in a good place," Westbrook said of his health. "I'll be ready to go on opening night."

The Rockets are optimistic that Westbrook, one of the game's premier penetrators, will greatly benefit by playing in D'Antoni's wide-open offensive system while being surrounded by the kind of perimeter shooters that recent Thunder teams have lacked.

Houston general manager Daryl Morey noted that guards historically have had career years playing for D'Antoni then chuckled when he added that it would be difficult for Westbrook considering his previous production. Houston also anticipates that Westbrook, the best rebounding guard in the league, will provide a turbo boost for a team that ranked 27th in pace last season.

"James Harden is, like, the best half-court player I've ever seen, honestly," Morey said. "And then Russell is maybe the best transition player, one of the best of all time, as well. If you put those things together, which I think we have a chance to do, now you've got something really special. We'll see how it all works out, but I think it could be really special."

D'Antoni plans to stagger the minutes of his star guards, as he did with Harden and Paul. He expects Westbrook to rest about 16 minutes per game and Harden about 13 per game, so they might play together for only about a quarter and a half.

That will include crunch time, with D'Antoni citing the final five minutes of games as the "most important thing" the Rockets need to figure out about the Harden-Westbrook dynamic. But D'Antoni emphasized that he will not ask Westbrook to drastically alter his playing style.

"It'll work itself out. You try not to overcoach it," D'Antoni said. "We need Russell to be Russell. We don't want to change him. He's an MVP. That's who we need. We need his bravura to be Russell. That's good enough."

Skeptics of the fit focus on how Westbrook, a career 30.8% 3-point shooter, will affect the Rockets' offensive spacing when he is playing off the ball. Westbrook waved away those worries by saying that he impacts the game in many ways.

"I don't have to have the ball to impact the game," said Westbrook, who has averaged triple-doubles in each of the past three seasons. "I don't have to score, I don't have to do anything. I can defend, I can rebound, I can pass, I can lead. Our main goal, main focus, is to win. I can go be scoreless, and if we win, that's the best thing that ever happened. That's all I cared about, and that's all I ever cared about.

"When it comes to me and James playing together, who's going to have the ball, who's not going to have the ball, it really doesn't matter. I don't have to prove I can score 30 points. I've done that before. I don't have to prove to average 10 assists. I've done that before. I don't have to prove to get 10, 11 rebounds. I've done that before. My goal is to win a championship, so whatever it takes to do that, that's what I'm going to do."
 
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Who is this guy playing for the Nets.I'm sure he has a bridge that he can sell to believers as well.....

Report: NBA won’t allow Nets guard Spencer Dinwiddie to sell shares in his contract
Ryan YoungYahoo Sports Contributor


Spencer Dinwiddie wanted to turn his contract with the Brooklyn Nets into a digital investment vehicle and go public, allowing investors to buy in — a move that would have made him the first professional athlete to turn his contract into a digital investment.

The NBA, however, shut that down.

The league told The New York Times’ Marc Stein on Friday that Dinwiddie’s plan would be a violation of the current collective bargaining agreement.

“According to recent reports, Spencer Dinwiddie intends to sell investors a ‘tokenized security’ that will be backed by his player contract,” the NBA said in a statement, via The New York Times. “The described arrangement is prohibited by the C.B.A., which provides that ‘no player shall assign or otherwise transfer to any third party his rights to receive compensation from the team under his uniform player contract.’”

Dinwiddie explained his plan to The Athletic’s Shams Charania earlier this week. He planned to go public with an “$SD8” token through his company, DREAM Fan Shares, which would allow investors to buy into his three-year, $34.4 million contract with the Nets.

Investors, and Dinwiddie, would benefit during his player option season in 2021, per The Athletic. He currently has a player option worth $12.3 million for that season. If he were to opt out and find a more lucrative deal, both he and his investors would earn big.

“What better way to be invested in a player as a fan than to have some level of skin in the game,” Dinwiddie said this week, via The Athletic. “With the way mine works, if I play well in that player option year and we split the profits up the first year of my new deal, it greatly appreciates the return on this investment vehicle. It allows you to get up in that 15-percent range in a return, like a growth stock, and that’ll be something most guys won’t beat.

“And you’re going to be invested in watching your favorite player. It’s something with a floor, guaranteeing you a floor, and obviously the cap on the return would beat most stocks in the economic climate that we’re going into. To make it as simplistic as possible, the real growth is for the third year, just like my contract is. You have the guaranteed premiums. You have the big-time fluctuation in the third year, with a floor. Everyone can appreciate it and make money.

“Establishing an asset class that is not correlated to the legacy markets and stocks that are going to get hammered when everything comes to fruition, it can help people save money and create a real fantasy sport. It enhances the real fan engagement. It enhances the NBA.”

Dinwiddie wanted to go live with his “$SD8” token on Nov. 1. He also was planning to create a reserve system in case things went south, intending to secure a million in cash flow, a million in Bitcoin entity and a million in gold, per The Athletic.

The 26-year-old — who averaged 16.8 points and 4.6 assists per game last season in Brooklyn — hasn’t given up on his plan after the league’s decision, however. He said he plans to meet with the NBA in the near future and attempt to change their minds.

“When I was on the phone with the league, I told them it wasn’t an assignment,” Dinwiddie said, via The New York Times. “And they invited me to sit down with them and explain the offering, which is what I’m going to do.”
 
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The big question next year is will Giannis remain with the Bucks or bolt in spite of being offered a super max contract

The two possible futures of Giannis Antetokounmpo


Giannis Antetokounmpo and the Milwaukee Bucks will reconvene Monday for the first time since their season ended with a heartbreaking six-game loss to the Toronto Raptors in the Eastern Conference finals.

It also will be the first time this season Antetokounmpo will be asked about his future, but far from the last. It will happen again both times he plays in Los Angeles and all three times he visits New York. The same goes for when he travels to San Francisco. And Miami. And Chicago. And Dallas.

And, frankly, just about everywhere else.

There won't be a more discussed topic in the NBA this season, for good reason. The Bucks have already said they intend to offer Antetokounmpo a supermax extension on June 30, 2020. What Antetokounmpo decides to do once that extension is offered will have ripple effects across the league for years to come. This all hangs over the Bucks as they begin what they hope will be a season that ends with Milwaukee winning its second NBA title.

"We want to be successful over a long period of time and be competitive for a long time and be resourceful," Bucks general manager Jon Horst told ESPN. "That's the answer. That's the direction. That's the focus. Yes, I believe if we do that, that's what I think Giannis wants to be part of. Winning. A family environment. He's a loyal guy who loves Milwaukee, and Wisconsin, and the Bucks, and we want to continue to grow and sustain something that we want him to be part of and build."

The Bucks will spend the next 10 months building their case for why Antetokounmpo's future should lie with them.
 
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I'm starting to get a smell of Olympic Gold for the USA in Tokyo

Gold standards: Many NBA players considering 2020 Olympics

Tim Reynolds | The Associated Press

USA Basketball had a tough summer.

The outlook for 2020 is already much brighter.

Plenty of NBA standouts — elite names like Stephen Curry, James Harden, LeBron James, Kawhi Leonard, Damian Lillard, Anthony Davis, Draymond Green and Paul George among them — are clearly intrigued by the notion of winning Olympic gold in Tokyo next summer. And that’s thrilling to USA Basketball managing director Jerry Colangelo, who wasn’t pleased by some players backing out of commitments and the Americans ultimately finishing only seventh at this summer’s World Cup.

“In some ways, it’s what I expected — because I really, truly believed that the reason so many did not play this summer was because of the back-to-back competitions and FIBA moving the World Cup to a year before the Olympics,” Colangelo said Monday. “You might have even projected it would work out that way. Obviously, what they’re saying right now is appreciated.”

The Associated Press conducted an informal survey of possible U.S. Olympic candidates at their team media days, and of those approached none said they were not interested in playing in the Tokyo Games. Some issued stronger statements of interest than others, but playing for gold is clearly on the minds of many. Jimmy Butler, Klay Thompson and Andre Drummond all affirmed their interest at media days, as did plenty of others.

“Definitely, I want to be able to play USA Basketball next summer,” Washington guard Bradley Beal said Monday. “I want to play in the Olympics. That was definitely a goal of mine. ... If the opportunity presents itself then sure, that’s an automatic yes for me
 
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I'm starting to get a smell of Olympic Gold for the USA in Tokyo

Gold standards: Many NBA players considering 2020 Olympics

Tim Reynolds | The Associated Press

USA Basketball had a tough summer.

The outlook for 2020 is already much brighter.

Plenty of NBA standouts — elite names like Stephen Curry, James Harden, LeBron James, Kawhi Leonard, Damian Lillard, Anthony Davis, Draymond Green and Paul George among them — are clearly intrigued by the notion of winning Olympic gold in Tokyo next summer. And that’s thrilling to USA Basketball managing director Jerry Colangelo, who wasn’t pleased by some players backing out of commitments and the Americans ultimately finishing only seventh at this summer’s World Cup.

“In some ways, it’s what I expected — because I really, truly believed that the reason so many did not play this summer was because of the back-to-back competitions and FIBA moving the World Cup to a year before the Olympics,” Colangelo said Monday. “You might have even projected it would work out that way. Obviously, what they’re saying right now is appreciated.”

The Associated Press conducted an informal survey of possible U.S. Olympic candidates at their team media days, and of those approached none said they were not interested in playing in the Tokyo Games. Some issued stronger statements of interest than others, but playing for gold is clearly on the minds of many. Jimmy Butler, Klay Thompson and Andre Drummond all affirmed their interest at media days, as did plenty of others.

“Definitely, I want to be able to play USA Basketball next summer,” Washington guard Bradley Beal said Monday. “I want to play in the Olympics. That was definitely a goal of mine. ... If the opportunity presents itself then sure, that’s an automatic yes for me

Wasn't that obvious that the USA had to fail in the WC for the stars to find their ambition and especially their patriotism again? ;):p
 
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We here just got an advisory from our long time NBA TV service provider, that there will be no more broadcasts of the NBA starting Oct. 1 (pre-season and regular) because the contract of the previous provider has expired. Oct 3 now, and blank channels. Nothing bright in sight. :(
 
Ouch

Can you subscribe to NBA-TV and stream it through your smartphone
 
Ouch

Can you subscribe to NBA-TV and stream it through your smartphone
I can do the first but not the second as my TV is not smart phone ready. I may have to rely on Facebook live feeds
 
Facebook has live streaming???


How about Youtube
 
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Can't believe it. The talk and all the hype is over. It may be pre season but what a way to start. The GSW play host in their new digs in San Francisco to the Lakers.

What can I say. The Lakers played The King and The Brow in the first half and Steph played briefly . I saw a bunch of young kids and whole new Lakers team.

I was impressed with what I saw.as Lakers win 123-101

If AD and LeBron stay healthy there is some excitement ahead. LeBron and AD bond very well

Dwight Howard has a whole new look. He has slimmed down and looked just OK but certainly another big up front for the Lakers

Le Bron is going to be point guard . He and AD combined for 33 points

It's only game one of the preseason but it looked reassuring to see the Lakers win their opener at Chase Center
 
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16 days until "tip off" to the regular season. I watched the Lakers last night defeat a depleted warriors team and everyone is already proclaiming them champion contenders

EXCEPT...........so what do you guys think?

To me they will stick around for most of the season assuming they all stay healthy but IMO LeBron as great as he is has probably seen his last champonship ring while playing last in Cleveland. Then when they fail to live up to expectations one has to wonder what the Brow will do when he enters free agency. He could just move down the hall to the Clippers locker room and give the Clippers a dynasty for years to come. Steve Ballmer has the money and would likely pay the luxury tax to the league as it is only pocket money for him

Hot takes we might actually believe: The Lakers are wildly overrated
Ben Rohrbach


The 2019-20 NBA season is almost upon us, but Hot Take SZN is here, and at the end of another eventful summer we will see how close to the sun we can fly and still stand the swelter of these viewpoints.

We began this series last summer by considering that the Los Angeles Lakers would not make the playoffs, and almost every single one of their red flags — a hapless supporting cast chief among them — materialized in a dumpster fire of a season.

The trade for Anthony Davis certainly addressed the most pressing concern in L.A., providing LeBron James with a co-star and forming one of the great tandems in NBA history, at least on paper. But reasons remain to be skeptical of the roster, especially as the Lakers enter this season with the second-best odds to win the 2020 title, behind only their Staples Center bunkmates.

If you believe the Lakers belong among the championship favorites, you are wildly overrating them as currently constituted.

How could this season become its own trash fire? Let us count the ways.

First, we were already worried about LeBron’s mileage before the worst injury of his career — a groin strain that ultimately ended his 16th NBA season — and I sure don’t feel better about it in a year he is expected to surpass Tim Duncan and Kobe Bryant on the all-time minutes list (regular season and playoffs combined), moving behind only Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Karl Malone.

There is an argument to be made that LeBron’s 55-game season and his first playoff-less spring in 14 years will rejuvenate him, much like Michael Jordan’s venture into baseball spring-boarded him to three more championships in his mid-thirties, but Jordan was four years younger with 25,797 fewer minutes — or the equivalent of almost eight fewer NBA seasons — on his legs.

The best argument in their favor is that the arrival of Davis will allow LeBron to idle through the regular season, even more so than usual for a guy who has “perfected the art of resting while playing,” so he is fresh for a playoff run. This theory presumes two more things: 1) That LeBron is comfortable ceding control of his team, and 2) that Davis is capable of bearing that burden.

Everyone is saying the right things in training camp, and skill-wise we know Davis can be that anchor, at least for a second-round playoff team that does not also have the best player of his generation on the roster. If LeBron and Davis stay healthy, it is almost impossible to imagine this Lakers team missing the playoffs, but AD’s injury history — a laundry list of mostly leg and shoulder ailments that have claimed at least 15 games in four of his seven seasons — is somehow even more concerning.

The bigger question is how the revamped supporting cast will fare if and when the Lakers reach the playoffs, because as remarkable as the LeBron-Davis billing is, the Western Conference alone has at least two other superstar pairings with superior depth. The new role-playing Lakers are certainly more playoff proven than the last batch, but they carry their own baggage.

Danny Green and Jared Dudley are now north of 30 and seemingly play even older. Rajon Rondo and Avery Bradley were the starting Boston Celtics backcourt for the first half of the franchise’s worst season of the decade — a full six years and however many injuries ago. Any analysis of Quinn Cook and Troy Daniels begins and ends with a debate over whether their defensive limitations negate their 3-point shooting prowess. And Dwight Howard’s career is a series of failed chemistry experiments.

Kyle Kuzma is still on the team, and there is hope that both his continued development and less reliance on him as a primary option will address his efficiency and defensive issues. That hope is somewhat mitigated by the fact that his opportunities to improve with USA Basketball and build chemistry with his new Lakers teammates are limited by a stress reaction that will cost him a good chunk of the summer, maybe the entirety of training camp and perhaps even the start of the regular season.

There is always Alex Caruso. “But Alex Caruso!” Lakers fans will shout from the Hollywood Hills. He is better than most of us give him credit for, if only because most of us cannot imagine that a player with a hairline similar to mine could be all that good. But how comfortable are you riding a closing lineup of LeBron, Davis, Kuzma, Green and Caruso? Mighty comfortable, many will argue, and perhaps even rightfully so, but this assumes all of them are performing at their optimal levels come playoff time.

None of this even accounts for the drama that has followed the Lakers for years now and only increased since LeBron’s arrival. How will the powers that be respond in the ebbs of the season? Will LeBron undermine the locker room by privately or publicly pushing for more help? Do you trust Frank Vogel, Jason Kidd and a coaching staff forced into a strange partnership to broker the peace? And is general manager Rob Pelinka the man you want pulling the strings when the roster requires some tweaking?

A lot has to go right for the Lakers to join a list of contenders as long as we can ever remember, and practically all of it has to go right for them to emerge from that field. I will believe this Lakers power dynamic can put out the dumpster fires when I see it.
 
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